Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five A fifty five KRC the talk station.
Friday Eve.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
S call Kenny Loggins because you're in the danger zone.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Yes, indeed, very happy Friday Eve you Thursday if you
like to call it that. Brian Thomas right here, glad
to see jo Just Chrecker, Roy Blongs in the executive
producer booth and a great lineup this morning, starting with
guests at six point thirty. Dan Hill's former f OP president.
He is putting his Frontline Advisors hat on. That's the
organization he's involved with. We'll be talking about the Fairfield
(00:55):
Police Department having some retention issues problem that is uh
probably farmed broader than just the Fairfield Police Department. Anyhow,
fast forward to seven oh five George Brnneman along with
Keith Tennenfield with their Restore Wellness hats on. Yeah, all
about you know, sort of this making America healthy again phenomenon,
(01:15):
doing a great job and spreading the great information about
health and wellness. They've got to Restore Wellness meeting taking
place at of course the Farm March twenty six. We
get the details on that and where they which direction
they're going with their initiative. Seven to five in studio
Love when they have been Studio eight o five Fast forward.
Then there's an empower use seminar coming up, the legacy
(01:37):
of Herbert Hoover Hunter Oswald conducting that seminar. We'll talk
with him about that. Get a little insight into the
empower use learning opportunity empower Youamerica dot org. Check them out,
great great opportunities to learn something about a whole diverse
group of topics. Excuse me, my cough button, it's early.
(02:02):
Andrew Pappis, former Anderson Township trustee, had a bit of
a problem the other day with a liberal online social
media liberal got him an altercation with him. They had
a little shouting match back and forth, and lo and behold,
the guy shoved him. Apparently the police had to be called,
and the video is online. You can watch it on
Facebook if you're friends with Drew Pappis. I am. I
saw it. I even put a comment in there on there.
(02:26):
I awarded him the biggest issue of the universe. Joe No.
The guy that shoved him, he referred to him as
the D word. So I just put a link to
the song from YouTube in response to the comment about
that along those lines, feel free to check it out
yourself if you're friends with Drew on facebooks. Anyway, Drew
(02:46):
joined the program at eight twenty to talk about that
interaction and what happened if the police were called left
is unhinged, I angry, And you know it's this behind
the scenes organized these left wing funded groups. You know,
this day and age, with the Internet, it's easy to
(03:06):
get people out there on the fringe to show up
in what appear to be large numbers when they otherwise
wouldn't do it. I don't think they represent a dominant, predominant,
overwhelming majority of the people. They just come across as
that screaming unhinged left as a just no, no, no no,
And yeah, you can look at the whole Tesla thing
(03:27):
is an illustration of this. And I'll start I have
quite a few articles on that. I mean, Attorney General
panbanis calling it domestic terrorism and they're investigating it as
well as investigating the groups that are organizing these protests,
which is good. And I have some more details on
(03:48):
that in a minute. But here here's practical reality. And
this was mind blowing to me. You're a Tesla owner
out there, what are you paying for insurance? And apparently
the insurance premiums are going to go up because of
the use acts of vandalism against Tesla Automobiles, Tesla dealerships,
Tesla charging stations, and the Tesla owners themselves. In fact,
(04:10):
there is a doge quest. It's a website out there
doage Quest. They have posted what they claim of the
personal information of Tesla owners across the entire United States.
The website claims, too, in their words, empower creative expressions
of protests through exposing the names, addresses, phone numbers, and
(04:32):
email addresses of Tesla owners, and the website says it
will remove the Tesla owner's identity identifying information if they
provide proof that they've sold their Tesla vehicle. Report from
four OHO four Media says this doxing site includes the
(04:52):
map that purportedly shows what it claims of the address
of Tesla dealerships, the approximate location of Tesla supercharges, and
the person information of employees at the Department of Governmental Efficiency.
They're inviting people to attack anything related to Tesla and doge.
What prompted that and why are they so angry about
(05:16):
getting rid of fraud, wasted abuse. I mean, there's the
underlying question behind all of this, What has Tesla done
to anybody other than provide a vehicle that up until
about five minutes ago, everyone truly loved, including all the
people who believe in climate change. But back over, the
insurance premium the plant going up because of the vandalism,
(05:36):
spray paint, cars been set on fire, winders shattered, some
cars being shot. That damage to your personal automobile means
a comprehensive claiming against your own insurance. If you can't
find the person responsible for committing the violence and the
acts of vandalism on your car, they would have to
pay for it. Of course, that's a crime for which
(05:57):
they could be held accountable. Good luck with the local
police department tracking someone like that now. But of course,
insurers raise rates when they are faced with greater claims,
vandalism claims evolving. Tesla's starting to continuing to rise, they say.
Even responsible Tesla owners who have never even received the
(06:20):
speeding ticket might see their premiums rise merely because they're
driving a Tesla. And according to the reporting, I believe
it was Fox, Maybe it was uh, Epic times, Epoch times.
You can pronounce it either way. Every time I pronounce
it Epoch because I think it's better to pronounce it
(06:41):
that way, and it is an appropriate pronunciation because it's
easier to figure out how to spell It's a You
two can go to the Epoch Times and log in
and read some of the stories they have there. It's
a pretty good website. Epoch. You can pronounce it epic
or you can pronounce it Epoch. Look it up and
don't send me an email if you hear me say Epoch.
(07:01):
Tesla the most expensive premium car brand to insure a
cardinal carage. This is before the premium set to jump
because of the vandalism actions. Tesla just behind Rolls, Royce, Lamborghini, Bentley, McLaren, Maserati,
and Aston Martin. Average annual cost of full coverage insurance
(07:23):
for a Tesla Model three, according to the website Insurify
and the data that was supplied to Newsweek reporting on
this three and fifty three dollars and fifty cents per month.
It's pointed out you can get a loan and a
brand new twenty twenty five Nissan Center for lower than
(07:44):
your monthly insurance payment on a Tesla. They said, if
the rates continue to climb, Tesla ownership would be well
pretty out of the reach for most of the drivers
because they were already had three hundred and fifty three
dollars and fifty cents a month. The Tesla Model three,
(08:05):
Model Y, Model X are the most expensive evs to
ensure as of February twenty twenty five. According to the report,
the costs for full insurance for a Model three, according
to Insurify, increased thirty percent last year to four thousand,
three hundred and sixty two bucks a year, twenty five
(08:28):
percent higher than the comparable Mercedes Benz A class annual
average cost of full coverage auto industry for the Tesla
cybertruck three eight hundred and thirteen dollars in twenty twenty five,
according to the reporting, that's mind boggling. I had no
idea that they were that expensive to ensure. I got
(08:51):
three cars in my house insured for less than than that. Unbelievable.
So you're the target of doxing campaigns, you're the target
of vandalism. Your insurance premiums are all going to go
up beyond the already outrageous amount. Attorney General pambody A Bondi,
talking about this being domestic terrorism. Swarm of violent attacks
(09:13):
on Tesla property is nothing short of domestic terrorism, she
said the other day. In the past several weeks long,
federal prosecutors said, a Colorado woman through molotov cocktails and
vehicles at a Tesla dealership, scrolling the word Nazi on
one of the signs, definitionally inaccurate and revealing her epic
level of stupidity. One organ man fired bullets and explosives
(09:37):
into a dealership and its cars. South Carolina man spray
painted an anti Trump message on a Tesla charging station
parking spot before throwing five homemade bombs at the chargers,
exploding them. When they checked his bedroom, they found a
purple composition to a book with a three page handwritten
statement that asserted anti government beliefs and statements opposed to the
(09:59):
Department of Governmental Efficiency. As if he was impacted directly
by this. Apparently there's no catch all law that addresses
domestic terrorism, Prosecutors will have to pursue attackers for other
defenses like arson, property destruction, gun and explosive charges, some
of which can carry a twenty year prison sentence, accorded
(10:21):
to Pam Bonnie speaking of Fox News, if you're going
to touch a tesla, go to a dealership, or do anything,
you better watch out because we're coming for you. Designate
an investigation as domestic terrorism. Lets federal authorities use a
wider array of investigative techniques, and here's where the rubber
(10:43):
meets the road, which include launching what is called an
enterprise investigation into groups that are responsible. Bonnie said, the
Justice Department would investigate anyone quote operating behind the scenes
to coordinate and fund these crimes. Close quote. I'd say
that's a rec investigation. If you are coordinating criminal activity,
(11:05):
you're working with more than a couple of actors, that's
a conspiracy, and it's a conspiracy to commit crimes. They
could come at you. Crosshairs are levied against these groups.
So I got my popcorn out waiting to see how
that unfolds. Because behind the scenes, you know, damn well,
you know it, there's some entity out there, like a
(11:26):
Soros funded group or some you know, fill in the
blank organization, Leftists, Marxist whatever, see their funding source through
the federal government starting to dry up, and Doge is
the one responsible behind that. All these left wing advocacy
groups indirectly funded by your taxpayer dollars. And so what
(11:48):
do they do. They go after Doge and they call
them Nazis and swast the cars and all of that,
when the really the only thing that they're trying to
do is save us from ourselves. But in the final
an hour, els is all of this anger coordinated behind
the scenes, is because they know that they are in
the crosshairs, that they see that money drying up and
(12:09):
they're no longer going to be able to be able
to fund their insanity, their propaganda, their efforts to undermine
the United States of America in all ways shapes and
forms five seventeen right now five one, three, seven, four nine,
fifty eight two three Taco with Ton five fifty on
AT and T phones. I'll be right back after these
brief words.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station, our iHeartRadio
musical on.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
A Thursday and a happy one to you feel three
to call if you got something to say. And there's
an interesting op ed and illustrating my exact point about
Doge and the money drying up for left wing organizations,
Trump's epa versus Biden's dark climate money. Today's Journal actually
(12:55):
editorial Board of March nineteenth. Lawsuit may expose how Democratic
green New Deal really worked, and they right. Imagine if
Republicans gate the Trump administration tends of billions of dollars
to dole out to right wing groups, to sprinkle around
to favored businesses. That's what Democrats did in the Inflation
(13:18):
Reduction Act. This is how this all works. Trump's team's
effort to break this up this spending racket has led
to a court brawl, which might be educational. They write.
Environmental Protection Agency administer Lee Zelden recently canceled some twenty
billion dollars in grants that his Biden predecessors rushed out
to left wing groups from the EPA's Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
(13:42):
Democrats established this quasi private green bank in the IRA
to avoid government oversight of climate spending. Hmmm. Selden claims
the freeze is needed because of quote substantial concerns regarding
program integrity, the awards processramic programmatic fraud, waste and abuse,
(14:03):
and mismanagement with the agency's priority. It's close quote He's
right that the program is rife with political conflicts. One example,
the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund director Jahi Wise oversaw a
five billion dollar grant to his former employer, a group
called Coalition for Green Capital. Biden ordered another two billion
(14:25):
dollars to Power Forward Communities, which described as an umbrella
group of climate outfits formed in twenty twenty three supposedly
to finance home energy efficiency upgrades. But the Inflation Reduction
Act includes credits and other grant programs for this purpose,
so that organization and it's two billion dollar grant may
(14:46):
be unnecessary. They say, Power Forwards real purpose is to
spread taxpayer fund of taxpayer funds to progressives. One Power
Forward member Rewiring America, which is backed by the Windward Fund,
a nonprofit managed by the liberal dark money group Arabella Advisors. Ah,
there's that direct line connection to Arabella. Rewiring America hired
(15:11):
Stacey Abrams as a senior counsel in twenty twenty three
to two. In their words, guide the organization as it
builds the tools and capacity close quote to connect Americans.
In other words, liberal groups to Inflation Reduction Act incentives money.
Abrams the former candidate for Georgia governor who refused to
concede she lost for years. The program's biggest recipient, Climate
(15:34):
United also formed in twenty twenty three, has received seven
billion dollars, which is nearly as much as the EPA's
annual budget. Climate United claims on its website to have
made a handful of investments, including thirty two million dollars
for a solar project in Arkansas and two hundred and
fifty million dollars for California electric truck manufacturing. Climate United
(15:59):
for its parts as it's partnering with Forum Mobility, which
is a California electric truck and charging startup whose CEO,
Matt de Leduke, is a Biden Harris donor. Primary beneficiary
of the Arkansas so called investment is Science Hill Sohler,
whose CEO is Bob Hall or Bill Halter, the state's
(16:21):
former Democratic lieutenant governor who worked in the Clinton administration.
Journal Rights. We discovered these political connections via Google searches,
and no doubt there are and will be many more.
Mister Zelden says the Biden EPA intentionally structured the grant
agreements with liberal groups to prevent the agency or Congress
from overseeing how those funds are spent. Rhode Island Senator
(16:44):
Sheldon Whitehouse, who likes to denounce conservative dark money, is
now denouncing Zelden for trying to shine a light on
liberal dark money. This is not how the Constitution, the
appropriations process, or how contract law works, he claimed. Well,
he's right. Congress isn't supposed to subc contracted spending powers
to third parties. Seldon said the program violates the private
(17:05):
non delegation doctrine, which says Congress cannot hand off its
core responsibilities to private parties. The Supreme Court next week
is coincidentally hearing a challenge to the Federal Communication Commission's
Universal Service FUM that highlights this doctrine. Liberal groups suing
the EPA point to the High Court's refusal to stay
a lower court requiring US Agency for International Development to
(17:28):
pay some two billion dollars to various group but that
money was for services that the groups had already performed.
The vast majority of the twenty billion dollars Zelden wants
to freeze hasn't even been obligated. Different legal theory there, folks.
They would point out that Alito Clarence Thomas, Gorsicch and
(17:51):
Kavanaugh wrote it in a dissent that the proper venue
for planets that to seek redress in such disputes that
the Federal Claims court that strikes us is right journal rights.
But if liberal groups want to defend in court their
right to taxpayer dollars, Americans might find it instructive to
discover how the Biden Administration's Green New Deal really worked
(18:11):
just one little slice of the doled out dollars from
the federal government. And this is probably a direct connection
to why they're all freaking out. Go ahead and burn
a tesla. Day of reckoning may very well be coming,
and never it couldn't come soon enough. Five twenty six,
fifty five KRS detalk station local stories or alternatively, your
(18:32):
phone calls. You choose the direction you want to go, regardless,
I'll be right back.
Speaker 4 (18:36):
Fifty five krst you.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
Five krs dot com gets your podcast when you can't listen.
Love Judge Intapolitano tig picture with Jack Addan and of
course Americans for Prosperity, Donovan and Neil talking about better
energy policy for Ohio and that didn't take long. Sort
of local story, state story anyway, We'll start with this one. Yesterday,
Ohio senators unanimously voted for exactly what he was talking about,
(19:03):
changing energy policies to encourage more energy generation in the
state of Ohio. Bill responsored by Senator Bill Reinike would
eliminate fees for two coal plants, get rid of subsidies
for utility scale solar, and change the way utilities charge residents.
According to Rhinicky Center, Bill two is based on four premises,
consumer costs, reliability, reduction of barriers for easier entry into
(19:26):
the high market, and consideration of the free market center.
Bill two designed to encourage generation. And all of us
know that Ohio has exploded with growth and that growth
needs energy. Senator Shane Wilkin apparently introduced an amendment to
allow consumers to receive a forty dollars annual credit from
their utility. If and here would you do this for
(19:47):
forty bucks? So, in return for forty dollars credit, you
give the utility access to your smart thermostat so that
they can remote control adjust it from one to three
degree during peak energy hours. No, and not over I
had more than fifty percent of the time. That's creepy.
They're gonna be a firm. Hell no, you could offer
(20:09):
me a four hundred dollars incentive on my energy bill,
and I wouldn't do that tinker with my And isn't
it weird that a smart meter can remote control change
your thermostat.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
No.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
Thank you Kentucky State Police and a local prosecutor asking
help and finding a wanted suspect, Bailey Tully, who's twenty
two and dited in February last year on more than
sixty counts related to child sexual abuse material. I haven't
(20:43):
got an award to give out. Indictment accuses Tully of
possessing sexual photos of young girls. In a separate indictment,
he's accused of making CSAM child sexual abuse material and voyeurism.
Roberts And County Comwealth Attorney Miae Lewis speaking with Fox
(21:04):
nineteen reporting on this and thank you for reporting on this.
It was all during the course of the investigation, they
found the defendant had a peep hole in the bathroom
and through the peep pole, he was videoing young children.
According to court documents, when troopers got his mount all
of at home, Tully voluntarily gave them his phone and
a trooper allegedly found this child sexual abuse material in
(21:24):
a hidden file. Documents also alleged Tully showed the trooper
the peep hole in his bedroom he used to watch
and film the girls. He's accused of luring the girls
to his home for that purpose. Judge ordered totally not
to have contact with the victims. Laws explained he was
on house arrest and he did not appear for a
court appearance, and the judge issued a warrant for his
(21:44):
arrest for his failure to appear. Tully's ankle monitor has
not communicated with the servers since October of last year.
Prosecutor asking anyone with information on Tully's whereabouts to call
nine to one to one or Kentucky State Police Post
six eight five nine Fortunes eight twelve twelve. As we
are assisting in that effort. We have agreed to extradite
(22:05):
Toullly if and when he is found outside of Kentucky.
Speaker 6 (22:09):
Peri is the biggest douche of the universe, in all
the galaxies. There's no bigger douche than you. You've reached
the top, the pinnacle of douche dum good going due,
Your dreams.
Speaker 7 (22:27):
Have come true.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
Officials again, Fox Ninting Reporting nineteen reporting Thank you, Ken Brown.
Officials warning parents and students about the possible dangers that
can happen during NERF Wars. It's Nerve War season has returned.
That's a game that apparently has led to nine one
one calls, car crashes, and even a teenager being shot.
So high school students across the stri state are now
(22:56):
beginning to play NERF Wars. Westchester school resource officer Jeff Newman,
please please please be careful, be safe, use your head
apparently delivered that message in Lakota School District many times,
and he's echoing it as students start Nerve for is.
I'm worried, he said. I worry about them during the
overnight period when I'm not at school. I worry about
(23:17):
them on the weekends making good decisions. We've tried to
talk with them, and we've met with the NERF War admin.
Apparently the rules varied based upon the school district. It's
a giant game of NERF with safe times and zones
the kids can get to avoid elimination, but the district
they live in as their play zone, and at times
(23:38):
the pursuit of another player can be dangerous. Newman said,
refrain from trespassing on private property. That will be number one.
Number two, I would be very careful with automobiles. There's
a lot of automobile laws that come into effect in
the state of Ohio that could become a problem for drivers. Apparently,
some time ago, a sixteen year old playing the game
(23:58):
sustain an actual gun shot wound after playing outside in
the dark in Anderson Township. Lamon Brewer pleaded guilty to
home to charges stemming from the twenty twenty three shooting.
It happened outside the home of former Bengals running back
Joe Mixon. Police in Westchester want to remind everyone that
(24:24):
two is that two is illegal and we'll get you
in trouble. That would be groups participating in the game
in various districts that will allow someone to be safe
from elimination if they are naked.
Speaker 7 (24:38):
Did you know that was a rule?
Speaker 8 (24:40):
Joe?
Speaker 1 (24:40):
You just strip your clothes off and you in being
hit with a NERF A ball is is not deadly
strike or something. I'm glad I grew up when I
grew up five thirty five fifty five ker City Talk station.
I see you feel like I've already stuck her in
tone the water of the stack is stupid, But I
(25:02):
do have quite a few stack of stupid stories to
dive on into in the absence of phone calls, and
we'll do that right after these brief words.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
Fifty five KRC do you have a math.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
Chene nine, says me. On an overcast day, maybe a
few isolated showers are possible higher forty five down the
twenty eight overnight with clear sky, sunny sky's tomorrow fifty
four clouds overnight slight chance of rain in a little
forty two and then dry on Saturday with clouds in
a highest fifty three. Let's see looking for my disappearing
(25:35):
temperature forty eight.
Speaker 7 (25:37):
Time for traffic from the uc I Trampic Center.
Speaker 9 (25:40):
The University of Cincinnami Cancer Center offers innovative clinical crowns
and the region's only young on set calorectal cancer program
called five one three.
Speaker 7 (25:48):
Five EET five u se CEC.
Speaker 9 (25:51):
Highways doing just fine early on this Thursday morning. No
recks to deal with on wet roads left over from
the overnight rain that moved through hand. A little bit
of fog in some spots. No trouble because of either
mon chuck INGRAMO five carera see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
By forty if at five kr SE the talk station
stack and stupid. We go to Downers Grove, just outside
of Chicago, where Christina Formela, thirty year old special education
teacher and soccer coach at Donersgrove High School, is in
(26:32):
a bit of a problem for engaging in sexual activity,
or at least a legend have been engaging in sexual
activity with a fifteen year old, telling the victim I
love having sex with you, among other text messages from
back in twenty twenty three, when she was twenty eight
years old. The boy sent for Mela in one text,
I love you so much, mama, to which she responded,
(26:54):
I love you so lots of oh's much baby. Even
though this morning was short, it was perfect, I know,
boy replied back, I know, baby, it was perfect, baby,
so perfect, and then opined how much more she loved
having sexrism. I know, baby, I love it so much.
It feels so good. It's so passionate, it's so intimate.
(27:14):
It's so perfect, the boy said. Of course, police took
these messes into evidence that Formela was engaged in an
inappropriate relationship with the student and was molesting him over
a couple of years ago. Protracted assault allegedly began during
her classroom tutoring session in December of twenty three and
continued until the boy ended it. After police arrested her
(27:35):
in Chicago's in Donners Grow, They allegedly found writings in
her phone's notes app, further suggesting a sexual relationship with
her underage student. This all in the court documents now.
For her part, she claimed the material in that app
was just an outlet for her anxiety and that any
sexual material was only about her husband. Whatever, thank you, Liam.
(27:59):
The now former two flat out to night the allegations,
insisting that she's the victim of a frame job and
a blackmail from the boy that she tutored and coached,
and people are targeting her, targeting her because she's good looking.
Court documents read quote. She claimed that one day the
boy had grabbed her phone unattended, had entered her pass code,
had sent the message to his phone, and then deleted
(28:22):
the message from her phone and saved it to his
phone as blackmail I know. Document stated quote for Mela
said everybody comes after her because she's good looking, and
she's just a good person who cared too much about
the boy. Clow Squad No thanks Dad. Text messages found
Friday after the boy's mom bought him a new phone.
(28:43):
As they were segging it up, she logged into his
iCloud account and that's where they were discovered. Took her
son to the Downers Grow police station the same day
and they reported the alleged abuse. For Melo charged with
two counts of aggravated criminal assault abuse and one kind
of criminal sexual assault. Released on the condition that she
not entered the schools or have any contact with anyone
under the age of eighteen, apparently wedding photos on her
(29:07):
social media accounts so that she and her husband were married.
As recently as August of last year. She began teaching
at Donners Groven. Twenty twenty.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
All the time. A man residing in Florida arrested after
allegedly making disturbing threats against President Trump, challenging him to
quote fight me naked until the death close quote there's
no flag for US. Amen to that. Authorities, including the
Saint Lucia County Serriff's Office swat team with help from
(29:46):
the US Secret Service, arrested Kendall Aaron Todd, who's forty two,
in Saint Lucie County after he allegedly posted the threats
to President Trump on social media. One of his since
the lead eclips Asloraty say, he declared, quote Donald Trump
is the Christ close quote and because of Donald Trump,
every single person in the world is cursed. He reportedly
(30:11):
in one clip, donald Trump has personally made business decisions
which have hurt so many different reincarnated Jesus, Thank you,
Joe be bubbling bong of stupidity see at court of
the reports, he alleged threats including he fight me to
the death naked, escalated to the point the US Secret
Service had to become involved. Sheriff Richard at Del Toro,
(30:34):
Saint Luci County. He just kept escalating his behavior. He
got to the attention of obviously the United States Secret Service,
and that got our attention. We worked with them to
obtain the restaurant and the search warrant. Today got there
today again, the SWAT team was there. We were in
full force. He said, We're not messing around, obviously with
threats of suicide by cop and things like that, threats
(30:55):
to our president. We weren't let take letting. We weren't
letting any taking chances, and we're not going to put
our deputies lives at risk. So it's a high risk situation.
See and every nut job like that has access to
(31:15):
social media, and in the idiots doing idiots things because
their idiot category, they make out loud statements like that
which subject them to legal liability because they are threats.
Five forty five five kr CD talk station, Chase Louise,
don't go away. I got more stupid coming up, be
right back.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
Fifty five KRC Are you a bit.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
Dying?
Speaker 10 (31:39):
First?
Speaker 1 (31:40):
One of wether forecasts got an overcast, maybe some isolated showers,
high a forty five, clear skies over night twenty eight.
Tomorrow sunny and fifty four CLOUDI overnight down to forty
two and in a dry Saturday with mostly cloudy skies
in a high fifty three. It's forty eight right now,
in time for traffic from the UCF.
Speaker 9 (31:56):
Tramping Center, the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center of Innovative
Clinical Trials, and the region's only young onset called the
Record Cancer Program called five one three five feet five
U see CEC highways not fan at all so far
this morning. Wet road city in with a little bit
of fog in some spots. But so far I'm seeing
no troubles at all. That includes the lay's inbound seventy
(32:19):
fours wide open in Montana, Chuck ingram on fifty five Kerosene,
the talk station.
Speaker 1 (32:29):
Five forty nine fifty five Karosee detalk station. I can't
believe I'm getting ready to read this story. Remind me
of Joe. Remind me a cool hand. Look you ever
see that movie Never seen a man eat fifty eggs?
Brace yourself, folks, trigger warning or I don't know how
(32:51):
I should characterize this, but let's just walk through it together,
shall we? Report published last week in the Dutch Journal
of Medicine titled quote step by step approach to rectal
corpus alenum. In other words, how to remove foreign bodies
stuck in a patient's rectum. Yeah, nearly killed him. Uh.
(33:17):
Joe no longer gets the hard copy of the Dutch
Journal of Medicine. He only gets the E version. Paper begins.
Ladies and gentlemen, Patients who visit the emergency room because
of foreign bodies in the rectum are certainly not exceptional.
In recent years, the problem is even increased. On the
basis of three different cases. We present a step by
step approach for the removal of a rectal corpus alenum
(33:38):
lean them from the Latin meaning foreign, so foreign body.
I looked it up. No, I didn't take Latin. One
case in particular, described as making the headlines quote, Patien C.
Is a twenty nine year old man who came to
the emergency room around midnight because of a cute stomach pain.
Together with his partner, he had inserted fifteen boiled and
(33:59):
peeled eggs while under the influence of GHB earlier in
the evening. I know in this case, you're right. GHB
described as a drug that we use for treating narcolepsy,
but most famous for being the date rate drub drug.
By the time he got to the hospital, he was
suffering from abnormally rapid heartbeat tachycardia of one hundred and
(34:21):
twenty b's for a minute minute, rapid breathing rate tacnia
of twenty eight breasts per minute. Physical exam revealed abdominal
guarding across his entire abdomen. Suspecting abdominal sepsis, the doctors
performed a CT scan, which you could get at a
low price at affordable imaging services, which they say was
(34:44):
well in the words of the reporting and if science
not pretty quote visible in the CT scan was a
perforation of the sigmoid and considerable amount of air in
the fluid or air and fluid in the abdominal cavity. Therefore,
we deemed an emergency lap rotomy necessary. That's where a
large incision is made through the abdominal wall, giving them
(35:06):
access to the abdominal cavity. I love this. I'm just
going to quote from the article in a revelation that
will shock approximately nobody. Forcing fifteen eggs up your rectum
is not a good idea. Doctors confirmed the large intestinal
tear caused by the eggs, as well as extensive inflammation
(35:26):
caused by feces leaking into it. Quote the eggs are
removed as well as we could, and the abdominal cavity
was thoroughly rinsed. After operation, the patient was monitored for
a short time in the ICU, and after a few
days was able to leave the hospital in a clinically
good condition.
Speaker 8 (35:46):
Now, who can argue with that?
Speaker 1 (35:52):
I think that falls clearly under the heading of don't
do that, considering iHeart met the aviation expert Jay Ratlo's
coming up an eight three. We have an unruly passenger
had to be restrained on board after allegedly biting and
hitting other travels on a Delta flight from Atlanta to
Los Angeles. Incident involved an adult male passenger. Happened shortly
after Delta flight five oh one landed at Lax Monday.
(36:14):
The man allegedly biting one passenger and hitting several others.
Aggressive passenger taken by ambulance to the hospital for a
psychological evaluation. Ambulance later returned to the airport to examine
the traveler that he had injured. Spokesperson Samanta moorph Fectle
from Delta Delta has zero tolerance for unrually behavior and
will work with law enforcement and thirties not a immediately
(36:36):
clear what prompted the man's kicking and biting spree or
whether he will face charges. Apparently, they have been over
three hundred reports of unruly passengers so far this year,
according to the FAA. Along similar lines, a man recovering
after having his ear ripped off during an altercation that
turned violent on a Florida beach during spring break. Lee
(36:58):
County Sheriff's office speaking with News that eighteen year old
Jack Turner arrested now facing felony battery charges after a
fight that took place in Fort Myers on Saint Patrick's Day.
Deputies patrolling the area were flagged down a reference to
the fight about five in the evening. Victim not identified
told deputies he was involved in the physical altercation and
a portion of his left ear had been bitten off
(37:21):
by Center. Shared footage of the brawl, of course, there
was with deputies, claimed that she could hear Turner calling
the victim racial slurs and then jump on him from behind.
Deputies reviewed the video confirmed seeing the victim lying face
down on the sand while Turner mounting his back and
striking the victim in the back of the head with
the clenched fist. Footage then showed Turner grabbing the victim
by the hair in the back of his head, pressing
(37:42):
it in the sand. Turner then pulled the victim's head
around appeared to bite the victim's ear, causing what is
described as traumatic arecular amputation. Deputies also learned that the
victim and Turner knew each other. Rested on felony battery charges,
booked in the Lee County jail. Not immediately clear if
(38:03):
he had an attorney. Sheriff's office said the victim is
currently receiving medical treatment and being seen by a specialist
for his injuries. So you think alcohol is in vawde
Ellen Joe Saint Patrick's Day spring Break NAH fifty five
fifty five KRCD talk station got a half hour to talk.
(38:24):
You can feel free to call until Dan Hills joins
the program. Darning his frontline advisors had to talk about
the Fairfield Police Department to having retention issues. No, that's
not related to the egg story. Stick around, be right
back after the news.
Speaker 11 (38:39):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days. Every day promises made promises.
Speaker 12 (38:44):
KEP fifty five krc the toxticks.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
I have six six here fifty five KRSD talks Station,
Happy Friday Eve. Bottom of the hour. Dan Hill's former
FOP president, Dan Hills, he has his frontline advisors had
on that's his business right now, and that'll be talking
about the Fairfield Police Department having problems with in retention.
That's at the bottom of this hour. George Runningman returns
along with Keith Tennenfield will be in studio talking about
(39:13):
restoring wellness They've got a meeting coming up on the
twenty sixth, and we'll be talking about the lies that
we were told about the nutrition pyramid that were drilled
into our head. Basically, he will live longer by doing
the opposite of what you were told by the experts,
evaluating food from the perspective of vitality and keto apparently
no longer a diet fad, but an effective treatment from
(39:34):
everything from diabetes to cancer and Alzheimer's. So that in
the seven o'clock hour, fast forward to eight oh five
empower Use Seminar by Hunter Oswald, the Legacy of Herbert
Hoover and Drew Pappis in an altercation the other day
with a liberal online activist who assaulted and battered Drew Pappis. Yeah,
(39:55):
shoved him out of nowhere. It's all on video and
the police were called. We'll hear the details from Drew
Pappas at a twenty fall by iHeartMedia media aviation expert
Jay Ratlife at eight thirty You feel far to call
if you got something you want to talk about, give
me a ring five one, three, seven, four, nine to
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk
found five fifty on AT and T phones. Big story
(40:16):
of the morning, as you heard of the top of
the our news. Trump expected to sign an executive order
which he promised on the campaign trail to do, which
is a banning and abolishing the Department of Education because
it's full of, in his words, radicals, zealots, and Marxists.
True Harrison Fields, the White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary,
said the National Assessment of Educational Progress scores reveal a
(40:41):
national crisis. Our children are are falling behind. Over the
past four years, Democrats have allowed millions of illegal miners
into the country, straining school resources and diverting focus from
American students. Coupled with the rise of anti American critical
race theory and DEI in doctrination, this is harming our
most vulnerable Bresident Trump's executive roder to expand educational opportunities
(41:03):
will empower parents, states and communities to take control and
improve outcomes for all adults. Well, you may need Congressional
approval on this. I'm certain that'll be hammered out in
the courts. Maybe Congress would agree to it. I know
congressrom Massi's previously proposed a bill probably would never get
sixty votes in the Senate, which we understand. But in
(41:26):
spite of spending billions of dollars on education, the outcomes
in schools are terrible. White House specifically side of the
thirteen Baltimore High schools where no as in zero students
tested proficient and mathematics in twenty twenty three, as well
as all the money that was spent to teach radical ideologies.
(41:47):
According to the fact she released by the Trump administration.
The Trump administration recently canceled two hundred twenty six million
dollars in grants under the Comprehensive Centers program that forced
radical agendas into states and systems, and including race based
discrimination and gender identity ideology. Instead of the Biden administration,
(42:07):
school's been forced to redirect resources to comply with ideological initiatives,
social experiments, and obsolete programs. And Trump supports bringing education
choice back to the States. I want every parent in
America to be empowered to send their child to public, private, charter,
or faith based schools of their choice, he said. The
time for universal school choices come as we return education
(42:29):
to the States. I will use every power I have
to give parents rights, which is a great thing. And
for those out there screaming, oh my god, abolishing in
the Partment of Education, the funding is going to dry
up now. They had a budget of seventy nine point
one billion dollars. What Trump's going to do is talk
about block grants, grants that won't have any strings attached
to them. And of course, this is how you end
(42:52):
up with DEI and critical race theory and hatred of
America incorporated in your school curriculum, because the federal that
are allocated to the schools, which usually wake up about
ten percent of the school district's budget, come with the
obligation of having to teach this nonsense, allocating precious time
in the classroom to topics that are divisive and harmful
(43:16):
and do nothing to educate children. Critics of the department
point to the nation's Report Card twenty twenty four National
Assessment of Educational Progress that's released every two years. The
exam tests fourth and eighth grade students, finding that among
that almost stagnant math growth for eighth graders in comparison
(43:36):
to twenty twenty two and reading scores dropping two points.
Further to this and explaining a little bit more how
this works, the head of Oklahoma's public school district a system,
Oklahoma Superintendent Public Instruction, Ryan Walters. He says this eradication
(43:57):
the Department of Education is exactly what we need, calling
it a historic moment. I think President Trump, he said,
is going to go down in history as the president
that saved education in the future of the country. He
said that rather than helping to implement effective education systems,
the Department of Education has been co opted by radical
teachers unions like the American Federation of Teachers, which he
(44:19):
said has been pushing diversity, equity, inclusion, and other leftist
ideologies in the states corner waters. The disruption of education
was the federalization of education and the unionization of education.
That's what got us away from the concept of schools
that valued the community, value the family, and value the individual.
You have thousands of bureaucrats that are up there that
(44:39):
are pushing a left wing agenda, the most radical agenda
of the country's ever seen. They're teaching kids to hate
the country, They're teaching kids to hate their faith. He
went on to say, you can talk to teachers about
the types of trainings the FEDS were requiring them to
go to they were not helping them drive students achievement
in the classroom. It was a push to a left
(45:01):
wing agenda on kids, pointing to the Department of Education
using federal funding as a leverage to push concepts like
DEI and gender ideology in classrooms. He said, it was
a very sharp in my I was very sharp in
my responses of why we are talking about transgenderism in
(45:21):
an algebra one class like there's no connection between the two.
But it shows you how far they were willing to
go with their woke ideology, with the strategy to undermine
American society, undermine the family unit. And he pointed out
this has shown up in test scores. All the test
scores have shown that they've gotten worse since this disruption occurred.
(45:42):
Nearly every society factor has gotten worse. You look at
teenage suicide, you look at drug use, you look at
this disintegration of the family unit. All these things coincided
in part because of the creation of the federal Department
of Education and the rise of teachers' unions. On how
you can argue with that, the numbers bear it out.
(46:07):
And back to Ohio, where they took a similar initiative
Senate Bill one passed the House Representatives yesterday fifty eight
to thirty four, and it will eliminate diversity, equity and
inclusion programs and scholarships, prohibit faculty from striking, prevent universities
from taking positions on controversial beliefs, and allowing tenured professors
to be fired after review. And universities and colleges don't
(46:32):
comply with this, we'll misk losing state funding. Oh So
state dollars comes with strings attached as well, has to
be approved by the Senate House. Changes were made, and
then we'll go to Governor Dewaine's desk. According to Senate
Bill one here in Ohio, it'll prohibit a highse public
(46:54):
universities and colleges from offering training, having programs, or providing
scholarships based on diversity at an inclusion. These programs established
to help historically underserve students, have come under fire from Republicans,
including Donald Trump, as I just mentioned, and of course
the Oklahoma Department of Education leader that I just quoted
allow students to come to their own conclusions about what
(47:15):
are described as controversial beliefs like climate change, politics, foreign policy,
and immigration. Faculty quote according to the bills, shall not
seek to indoctrinate any social, political, or religious point of view.
It'll prohibit faculty from striking. It'll require annual evaluations for faculty,
including teachers with tenure. These evaluations would include input from
(47:40):
students and peers. Poor performance could lead to discipline or firing.
Unions could not bargain over these evaluations. Eliminate undergraduate degrees.
A fewer than five students obtained degrees over three years. Yeah,
that'll be one of those areas where you shouldn't be
(48:02):
spending your precious dollars on earning a degree that obviously
no one wants because there's no job market for it.
It'll require students to take Civics class to graduate. Students
could opt out if they completed a qualifying program in
high school, and I'd like to think more and more
high schools will be offering Civics class. Require faculty to
post their syllabi, including required and recommended reading online starting
(48:26):
with the twenty twenty six academic year. That keeps well
you apprised of the ideology. I suppose that it'll be
provided in the reading materials. Reduce university's trustee tenure from
nine to six years, prohibital house state university students trustees
from voting on board actions, and finally prohibiting gifts or
(48:47):
donations from the Chinese government. That passed again fifty eight
to thirty four, of course, largely along party lines. Get
to affordable imaging services where you can get your echo cardigram,
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Speaker 4 (50:16):
Fifty five KRC Did you know that?
Speaker 1 (50:19):
Four channel I and tells us the following. As far
as weather goes, cloudy today isolated showers are possible. Have
a higher forty five skys clear out of the NINETEWN
of twenty eight. It be sunny tomorrow with a high
of fifty four cloudi overy night down to forty two
cloudy on Saturday as well, dry and a high of
fifty three forty eight degrees. Now let's hear about traffic.
Speaker 7 (50:40):
From the uc ON Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (50:42):
Then the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center offer centervative plentem
trials and the regent's only young onset Calledorectal Cancer Program
called five one three five eighty five UCEC see Highway
traffic continues to look good this morning. No time delays
to deal with as of yet, including southbound two seventy five.
Ask the lawrenceburg Ram there's a rack on seven seven
(51:05):
and Malhauser in the clean up stages with Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KRE see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (51:12):
Six one fifty five ker CEE talk station Dan Hill's
up net from frontline advisors on the Fairfield Police Department
retention issues. Uh in terms of backcrap insanity, we have
gone way, way, way overboard here and we go to
New Jersey for an illustration of this. Get a load
(51:33):
of this. There's a health network called Inspira Health where
they issued a form to all parents of newborn children
asking them about their newborn's sexual orientation and gender identity.
(51:58):
Does that make sense to anyone? New Jersey Senator State
Senator Holly Shepsy introducing legislation to exempt miners from this
type of question You got to go down the legislative
road to stop this stupidity. She didn't even believe it
(52:18):
was true. She saw it circulated on social media, and
then well, her staff did confirm that the questionnaire was
indeed real and was being distributed to new parents. Now,
the reason they issued this and inspire for its own
parts was really kind of hesitant to even do it.
There's a New Jersey law that requires the collection of
data on a patient's race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and gender identity.
(52:41):
Why said the health Network and fairness of them was like,
we don't necessarily want to be providing these out, and
we have received some pushback and backlash from parents. But
under the new law that was implemented New Jersey in
late twenty twenty two, the health Network had a real
belief that in order to be complained with the law
that they had to be all encompassing and include this
(53:04):
including for newborn parents. A newborn go ahead and ask
him who do you want to sleep with? What's your
sexual preference? Newborn? And I put that down on the form.
You know, if I was presented with a form like that,
(53:27):
I tell them where they could put it. President Trump
fighted back against this nonsense, too, suspended one hundred and
seventy five million dollars in your taxpayer dollars, most notably
federal funding for the University of Pennsylvania after defy they
defied his order on transgenders in women's sports. Senior administrator
(53:49):
told Fox Business that the administration pulled this one hundred
and seventy five million dollars in funding did not account
for UPenn's total federal funding, which the university purported last
year year was ready for this one billion dollars bas
(54:12):
not a direct result of the investigation into U Penn,
with a Department of Education announced a day after the
President's side of keeping men out of women's sports Executive
Order of February fifth. U Penn made the headlines when
they put Leah Thomas biological mail identifying as a woman
on the women's swim team. And I'll go back to
my point. Look at the world records in almost every
(54:33):
single sport, and you will see that men outperform women
across the board because of their biological scientific advantage. I
had one more quick care about dodge funding cuts hitting
Ohio State University State Professor's federal research grant of about
(54:55):
seven hundred thousand dollars canceled by Dodge. Doctor Christina's da
research study on the link between are You Ready cannabis
Use this disorder and the LGBTQ plus women received six
hundred and niney nine thousand dollars federalgram in twenty twenty four.
This month, Doge canceled the grant from the National Institute
(55:15):
for Health. Cour to the CDC, cannabis use disorder occurs
when people are unable to stop it using it even
when it's causing problems to their health. Her project examined
how lesbian, bisexual, and queer women, and gender diverse people
assigned female at birth are at the higher risk of
cannabis use disorder when compared to heterosexual women. Oh psychological problems,
(55:37):
perhaps self diagnosing or self medicating. Perhaps. They also worked
on a study examining depression and suicidal ideations among bisexual
adolescents and young adults. According to the NIH, which gave
her eight hundred and fifteen thousand, eight and eighty one
dollars this year, there's a direct correlation with psychological problems
(55:59):
and people for callong in those categories just saying it
out loud Dan Hill's up next problems with the Fairfield
Police Department. First word for foreign exchange. Get your car
fixed for less money, and that's the point of foreign
exchange existence. Servicing your car with an outstanding mechanic, a
SE certified master technician will be working on it. You'll
leave with the full warranty and parts and service and
(56:19):
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taken it to the dealer. So whether you've got a European,
an Asian or one of those manufactured in the United
States under a traditional imported moniker, you're in the right
hands at Foreign Exchange. From the exotic to the run
of the mill, they do a great job. They'll treat
you like family, assuming you get along with your family
and love them. They are really nice. You want to
(56:40):
talk to the mechanic there, you can as well. I
know it's very very difficult to do at a dealership,
so Bosh certified business. They are Tylersville Eggsit Office seventy
five is how you get to the Westchester location, which
is the one I choose. Austin and his outstanding crew
are there to help you with your all your repair needs.
So take Tylersville go east on Tyler'sville off seventy five,
just couple of two streets. Tanker right, you're there. It's
(57:02):
virtually no distance at all. To find them, go online
to foreign x form the letter x dot com. When
you call them, please tell them. Brian said, Hi five
one three six four four six twenty six at six
four four twenty six, twenty six.
Speaker 4 (57:14):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 11 (57:17):
Turn up your radio. Here's a Sean Hannity Morning minutes.
Speaker 13 (57:23):
There are these protesters showing up at these town halls
for Republican congress people, and then the media picks up
a republic and Congress people get into earful because they
support Elon Musk.
Speaker 1 (57:35):
Know that this is not organic.
Speaker 13 (57:38):
We're now discovering that those protesters are part of organizations,
radical left wing organizations that are sabotaging these town halls
instead of giving questions to the real constituents. And they're
they're designed to create as much trouble and confrontation as
they possibly can. So if you see that on TV
(58:01):
and the fake news media and the state run legacy
media mob is lying to you, just know that the
odds are very high that is not real.
Speaker 11 (58:09):
Check out the Sean Hannity Radio Show later today.
Speaker 10 (58:13):
Right here.
Speaker 14 (58:17):
Artificial intelligence AI, it's all you hear about.
Speaker 1 (58:20):
But how far away is it?
Speaker 14 (58:22):
And what are the potential threats from AI that could
totally upend the way Americans live their lives? What will
it do to the job market, What will the unemployment
rate be? What does it mean for data privacy or cybersecurity?
How about the banking system or national security? The ECB
has already warned about a bubble in AI stocks. Could
(58:43):
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Speaker 11 (59:17):
I knew I heard that.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
Channel nine with a forecast. What you have is an
overcast day, maybe a shower or two uh forty five
would be the high overnight low twenty eight with sky's clearing.
We have a sunny day tomorrow with the high f
fifty four forty two overnight with clowns, and a cloudy
Saturday with a high fifty three forty eight degrees. Right now,
time for a traffic update.
Speaker 7 (59:39):
From the UCL Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (59:40):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center offers innovative clinical trials
and the region's only young onset COBO rectal cancer program
called five one three five eighty five UCCC Setband seventy five.
Speaker 7 (59:54):
There's a broken down on the bridge.
Speaker 9 (59:56):
Let lane is blocked off, backing traffic just a bit
towards as Charles he spent two seventy five or broken
down left shoulder just before you get to seventy five
coming down to Trey County schot Ingbramont fifty five krs
the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
PAY six thirty fifty five KRCD talk station. Very happy
Thursday to you, and a welcome back to Dan Hill's
former FOP president of the City of Cincinnati Police Department.
He is wearing today his frontline advisors had and speaking
on behalf of the problems the Fairfield Police Department has.
Having welcome back to the program, Dan, it's a pleasure
to have you on, Brian.
Speaker 10 (01:00:32):
You know, the pleasure is always mine, always enjoyed being
on with you and your audience.
Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
Well, I appreciate that, and it's good to hear from you.
And it's good to put Fairfield on the map. As
you point out in your statement from frontline advisors. Quite
often overlooked Fairfield is, you know, between the city of Cincinnati,
which gets some reporting in Dayton, lots going on there
in Fairfield. But before we dive into the situation they're
facing with the police department there, why don't you remind
my listeners what frontline advisors and you do.
Speaker 10 (01:01:00):
Well, Uh, we represent police and corrections units. Not really
picked up another one. Can't reveal that one yet, but
and also lots of individual officers who maybe don't feel
satisfied with something their current counsel or representation are doing
come to frontline and frontline attorneys. So we represent cops
(01:01:24):
and that's what Uh, that's what I was doing with
the FOP, and I wanted to keep on doing it,
and I hooked up with the right lawyers, folks who
really do care about the police officers they represent and
go the extra mile. And that's kind of what experience.
And we haven't even like ever got real proactive in
(01:01:46):
our sales. We just kind of picking up agencies as
they come to us. And then, like I said, lots
and lots of individual officers who find that they haven't
been represented properly find their find their way to our doors.
We got to an office in Montgomery and an office
down in Tendagent close to downtown.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
And you got a website because there's an officer out
there going, hey, I need them.
Speaker 8 (01:02:10):
We sure do.
Speaker 10 (01:02:11):
You'll find You'll find us at Frontline Advisors. I believe
it's LLC DOC. I'll send that to you.
Speaker 8 (01:02:19):
How about that.
Speaker 10 (01:02:20):
I can make sure that's that's right. But yes, there
is a there is a website and I'll forward it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:25):
To you in jail. All right, something you should put
the memory there, Dan.
Speaker 10 (01:02:29):
Hills, you're gonna get me in trouble with all.
Speaker 1 (01:02:33):
Right, not giving you any more crap. Let's move on
to Fairfield. You are speaking on behalf of Fairfield, which
I guess they're in the middle of negotiation. So let's
start about talk about briefly about what's going on in
Fairfield up to now when before we dive into the
what what the stall is with the negotiations with the
police department. I understand that demographics have changed a lot
and maybe there's more criminal activity, but let my listeners
(01:02:54):
know about it.
Speaker 10 (01:02:56):
Yeah, I mean, they have apartment complexes where you know,
not to do the immigration thing, but that's what's happened
up there. There's apartment complexes that are just full of immigrants.
I don't know what percentage of them are legal, which
percentages are illegal, but they got a lot happening, a
lot moving up there. I feel like they're doing big
(01:03:17):
city police work in a little town. And then back
to what I said in my statement, they're kind of
lost in between Dayton and Cincinnati when it comes to
folks paying them attention. And we've had the contract of
Fairfield for I think a little better than a year now,
and the whole thing just always came across to me
(01:03:38):
is just kind of weird how their morale was and
where they were and I'm thinking, you know, departments got nice,
nice complex that they work out of and stuff. They're
definitely do a pay raise there's no doubt about that.
But there could be worse out there. But this healthcare thing,
and this is one I thought I might want to
talk to you because it's so bizarre. I've never seen
(01:04:02):
officers or employees treated like this with health care before.
They don't know when they go to the doctor, or
their kid goes to a doctor, or their wife goes
a doctor, what portion of the bill they're going to get,
and they don't seem to have any goal and they
be in the City of Fairfield of making that any better.
There has been a constant over the last three to
(01:04:25):
five years struggle and it even has been in the
courts too, about this health insured fund that they had.
I think it is worth like four million dollars. And
because they had multiple unit unions all buying into this fund,
and then they wanted to move away from the self
insured model and have them all go to something called
b hip by our Health Initiative plan, and they told them, look,
(01:04:48):
it'll never raise more than two percent a year. But
still going into something not knowing what you're going to
pay when you go to the doctor is not something
I've ever experienced before. As a civil servant, I knew
what our You know, I always knew what our out
of pocket was, out of pocket max or individual, how
much I was going to have to pay for scripts,
(01:05:10):
how much maximum per individual I had, and how much
maximum I had for family. It's all a mystery for them.
Speaker 1 (01:05:18):
That's insane.
Speaker 10 (01:05:21):
It's like they need a Ouiji board to determine what
they're going to pay for healthcare. And so they told
them listen, listen, you guys, you'll never see more in
a two percent race. I okay, all right, you know.
And so that first the first year was like eight percent.
The year following it was seventeen percent. Now I'm not
real good with math, but that's a lot more than
two percent. It went up like twenty five percent. So
(01:05:45):
their healthcare is skyrocketing. And then are trying to negotiate
with these police officers saying, hey, you know, how much
of a pay raise is going to make you SATISFI
I didn't like every other municipality, they always start off
with a flight well real low percent, real real low
percent of what they're offering for. At the same time
they're telling that they're they're telling them that, well, your
(01:06:08):
your health insurance is still going to be this mystery,
and so it put them in a spot there. I
was thinking that this was this was my days.
Speaker 8 (01:06:16):
Back with the city.
Speaker 10 (01:06:17):
I would have been all over the media and social media,
you know, letting people know. I didn't know how this
is going to work with like I said, a smaller town,
it's in between media ken Ken, we put some pressure
on a smaller municipality, uh to kind of wake up
because I don't know if all their their council members
(01:06:39):
or whatever realized the morale. Issy isayah, which that's the
okay point. I did want to get to talk about healthcare.
Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
Let's pause from them. We'll bring you back to talk
a little bit more about that amount of time in
the segment. So we'll bring Dan Hills back to elaborate
a little bit more on that. Well. I get to
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Speaker 11 (01:08:00):
One fifty five car.
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The talk station Pickleball is on the Ride Channel nine.
Wether forecasts got overcast. Sky's day maybe a shower or
two forty five for the high that twenty eight overnight
with clearing sky, fifty four under sunny skies. Tomorrow overnight
little forty two with clouds and a cloud eat Saturday.
I have fifty three, forty eight degrees. Now it's time
for traffic.
Speaker 9 (01:08:24):
From the UCL Traffic Center of the University of Cincinnati
Cancer Center offers innovative clinical trials and the region's only
young on set callorectal cancer program called five one three
five eighty five UCCC southbound seventy five. There's a broken
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No delay to get passed and broken down. He spound
two to seventy five. That's the south seventy five ramp
coming out of Try County chuck Ingram on fifty five KR.
Speaker 7 (01:08:55):
See the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:08:58):
TAX forty one fifty five KCD station Brian Thomas with
Dan Hills off front Lines and for frontline advisors advocates
on behalf of police officers and police departments and his
subject matter today Fairfield Police Department struggling with healthcare. But
I guess when you're talking about negotiating salary, you can't
operate in a factual vacuum.
Speaker 2 (01:09:18):
Dan.
Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
If you don't know how much money is having to
go to your healthcare, how can you possibly negotiate a salary, right?
Isn't that like part of the problem with this if
you don't mean the price of medical insurance keeps going up.
Speaker 10 (01:09:31):
Yeah, Brian, And that's why I decided I wanted to
speak publicly about it, is because I've never seen anybody
being so restricted and being able to negotiate fairly because
they have no idea. And I'm going to talk about
the officers that have left, they experience that has left.
Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
Yeah, before I say.
Speaker 10 (01:09:51):
That, Brian, front line advisor LLC dot com all one
word and advisor with it. That would se I don't
want to get out of here with the uh not
not getting up.
Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
You might correct the record when we came back.
Speaker 8 (01:10:07):
Anyway.
Speaker 10 (01:10:09):
So no, like I said, this is unique. I've you know,
started negotiating contracts back with the city. We're talking, you know,
good piece over a decade ago. And look, negotiations are tough.
They're going to be tough. That's you got you got
two sides that will each want to get to a
different point. But you know these are these are a
quality bunch of officers up there in Fairfield, really neat
(01:10:30):
bunch of guys and gals. And and again when we
took over, like I did, what was going on with
them arale up there and why so many are leaving?
In two years twenty five percent of their folks have
gotten out normal retirements and they've been hiring them on
as clicks for now as as as pretty much as
(01:10:51):
they're leading, but they've lost so much experience. And yeah,
I actually have a chart where they've done some unofficial
why you leave, and like nine or ten have left
for other agencies, so they weren't done with their careers.
Are like I just I love being a policeman, but
I can't be a policeman here in Fairfield anymore. And
(01:11:11):
some of it's time to the health insurance insurance ers
of this unofficial survey that was taking one one person
or I need to know. I need to know what
type of health insurance and my half of my wife
and I just don't know as a Fairfield Police officer
what I'm going to have. They have, they have a
(01:11:32):
couple of officers who were tempted to go to Fairfield
because they were lived and grew up in the area,
and they came from other agencies, and they came there
and they worked here for six months or so and
said nne, no thanks, and they went back to the
you know, luckily for them there the originally the original
agency took them back. So there is there is a
(01:11:53):
dysfunction there. The thing that I noticed is you have
a chief and three assistants who are not in the bargain,
and then they have nothing else in between, all the
way down to sergeants. So it's kind of like an
US and them thing, and it comes out and things
like pursuit policies. Now everybody's rethinking pursuits, and they should be.
(01:12:15):
It's a changing way of policing. But you have other
communities that border them that are having pursuits that go
into Fairfield. You have Fairfield's a big area geographically, and
there's a lot going on, and another community will have
a pursuit going into Fairfield and they're just not even
allowed to help them. They're not allowed for oup, stop sticks,
they're not allowed to do anything. And you know, most
(01:12:39):
agencies pursue policies while they are changing, they're not wholesale.
Just you better stay out of them, especially when you
consider other communities and they're them looking from support for
your department. But when you're talking about that amount of
seniority drained from your agency, it's a time until something
(01:13:01):
will happen. And then the administrators in frail fair will
going to throw out their hands and say, well, we
have no we had no idea that this was going on.
And that's where I kind of come in here and say, well,
you've been put on notice officially now publicly that there's
some there's some issues there and that your employees, your
police officers, especially in this time where it's getting so competitive,
(01:13:25):
people are all trying to grab up the really qualified
police officers that are out there and people who want
to be in that work that are out there. It
was it was really kind of disappointing since we took
over Fairfield to see where where they're headed, where they are,
and and that's why.
Speaker 5 (01:13:41):
I decided to bring a little public attention to it.
Speaker 1 (01:13:44):
Well, I'm happy to serve and serve you in that regard.
It's just, you know, it's a fundamental principle of fairness here,
How can you negotiate any factual vacuum. I mean, if
you can say, well, we're going to get the officers
and x percent raise, and then you know, not tell
them that, oh, by the way, that's going to be
your adoicated because the cost of medical insurance is going
to go up by twenty five percent or something. That's
just unconscionable. And I don't understand has any motive or
(01:14:07):
reason been expressed to you or any of the officers
as to why they're hiding the ball on what their
benefits are. I mean, normally you get a policy, an
insurance policy, and it says you're responsible for out of
pocket acts, or you're responsible for the copay of this
amount twenty percent or five percent whatever. The terms of
condition are spelled out very clearly. You know what's covered
and you know what's not. I mean, that's just just
(01:14:28):
basic fundamental principles of fairness and knowledge and information so
you can make informed decisions.
Speaker 8 (01:14:35):
Well, some of it's historical, and.
Speaker 10 (01:14:38):
It leaves me if my eyes werell in the back
of my hand trying to understand it all. They had
what they called a Healthcare Committee, and this thing's going
on like twenty years ago now. So it was self
insured a fire union, to police union, Stanitation, all their
people all kind of came together and to put all
this money into a pool and from that they were
able to I guess at one time healthcare costs that
(01:15:01):
were reasonable. And the committee was actually members of these
different unions would sit down and go all right, here's
here's what we need to do to keep our self
assured account sustainable and healthy, right right right. But as
as they wanted to move away from this model, they
be in the city of Fairfield in the last it's
(01:15:23):
been three or five years, they said they would they
would have a committee meeting schedule that they cancelor. They
have committee meetings schedule, they cancelor, and then one by
one they're picking off the unions and saying, hey, let's
go over this Butler Health Initiative plan that has this
kind of rolling thing where they don't they don't know
for sure what it is they're going to pay. So
they've picked off the other unions and must have police
(01:15:45):
union kind of standing there alone. And there there has
been court actions, lawsuits about this this big sum of
money because who owns this money. Who does this money
belong to?
Speaker 2 (01:15:58):
Now?
Speaker 10 (01:15:58):
It always been siphoned off unions, union members and again
all the unions and their paychecks, and I think they
still have, like the City of Fairfield still has like
four million dollars sitting in this account.
Speaker 1 (01:16:13):
For health care. Even if self ensured plans got to
have terms and conditions, it can't just be arbitrarily decided
on a case by case basis what is covered and
what is not. That's the mystery that I'm I'm dealing
with here because.
Speaker 10 (01:16:26):
I don't and that's that's the part that's got these
people so so miffed.
Speaker 1 (01:16:31):
I guess to the.
Speaker 10 (01:16:32):
Fact they did have their hands involved through these committees,
but now they're pressuring them out of that and into
this Butler Health Initiative plan with Again, it doesn't it
doesn't always define where they're going to be from year
to year. That's so they're they're they're they're really at
a point of no return that if things don't get
(01:16:53):
better in this negotiation or whatever, the people of Fairfield
are going to be losing more and more of their
experienced officers.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Yep.
Speaker 10 (01:17:00):
And then therefore it's going to change the pool of
which of employees that they can attract it right and
again that's why that's why Frontline Advisors, which you can
find on the WEFT site at Frontline Advisers.
Speaker 1 (01:17:15):
Llclc dot com. Yeah, front Line Advisors LLC dot com
reached Dan and the crew to help you out with
these issues. Well, I appreciate you raising it's everybody's attention
and putting Fairfield on the map. Obviously there's a problem there.
They can't afford to lose any more officers of twenty
five percent of the police force left over the past
couple of years. Retaining good talent important for proper police
work to be done. And of course you've got a
(01:17:37):
challenging environment out there with all these different police departments
fighting over a shrinking number of people who want to
engage in law enforcement as a career. Dan Hill's best
of luck with you and the situation in Fairfield. Now
you can let us know if there's any developments or updates.
I'll be quite curious to see how it ends up.
Speaker 10 (01:17:54):
I appreciate chance to be able to talk about it. Brian,
Thank you very much.
Speaker 1 (01:17:57):
Always good having you on the show. Six fifty fifty
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Speaker 7 (01:18:58):
Ready to elevate your financial.
Speaker 1 (01:19:03):
John I first one weatherward cast is going to be
overcast today, maybe a shower high forty five down to
twenty eight overy night with clear skyes fifty four with
sunny skies tomorrow, cloudy overnight down to forty two, and
cloudy on Saturday as well. But it to be dry
and we'll have a higher fifty three forty eight degrees
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Up Tramffic Center.
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The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center offers innovative clinical trials
and the region's only young onset called orectal cancer program
called five on three five eighty five UCCC new accident
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Bridge blocks the left lane. That back's traffic passed, says
Charles chuck Ingram. Fifty five k are seeing the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:19:58):
Coming up on six fifty five fifty five CED talk
station after top of the air. New is a return
to George Renaman and Keith Tennenfeld. He's a nurse practitioner.
We're talking about restoring wellness. That's their new push and
their effort talk about the food pyramid is a lie,
among other things. They have a Restore Wellness meeting at
the Farm coming up in March twenty six, so they're
going to come into the studio. We'll talk about health
(01:20:18):
and wellness and what you and I can do to
improve our situations. Obviously, this is big push with RFK Junior,
and I think I embrace it completely. Just look at
the trajectory of the American health and it is in
a sorry, sorry state. And I don't know where the
problems are coming from. Sedentary lifestyles, the fact that we
(01:20:39):
don't get up and move around much anymore, we don't
let our kids go out and play like we used
to back in the day, could be a multitude of things.
Plus what's in our food obviously is having an impact
on our health. So that'll be in the next hour.
We'll have an empower use s in our discussion with
Hunter Oswald the legacy of Herbert Hoover at eight oh five.
Drew Pappus on his interaction with the Liberal the other day,
who assaulted him and Jay Ratliffe. I heard mediaviation expert
(01:21:02):
those topics in the eight o'clock hour. Don't go away,
be right back after the news.
Speaker 11 (01:21:06):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days.
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Every day we stand on the verge of the.
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Four greatest years in American history.
Speaker 14 (01:21:14):
Fifty five KRC, the Talk Station. This report is sponsored
by Murph.
Speaker 1 (01:21:34):
It's seven oh six here fifty five r C, the
Talk Station, Doctor Talk Nutrition. Back in studio George Bretterman
and Keith Tennefeld. We're doing a restore Wellness campaign. It's
you find them online at restore wellness dot org. It's
all about improving our lives, our nutrition, maybe improving on
our weight, and we're going to get some details on
(01:21:54):
how we can all do that. Sort of springing from
you guys, been welcome back. It's good you hear you both,
And of course Keith is a nurse practitioner, and George
is just interested in the subject matter generally speaking. George
and I've been really interested in improving your health for
a long time now, so this is kind of a
right fit for you.
Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
It is, and we started this campaign to my wife
and I to just start doing a ton of reading,
and you know, the engineering side of me just tears
into the equations and facts and stuff. So like when
we started talking about, you know, what we wanted to
talk about today with nutrition in my mind, I immediately
jumped to the chemical processes. So sure, the chemical processes
(01:22:30):
when your body is hit with sugar and carbs is
totally different than your chemical process when it's hit with
proteins and fats and fats, and so, you know, to
get into that subject of nutrition, And I like that
word better than diet because when you think of the
word diet, you think, Okay, I want to lose weight.
Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
This is something I did for a little bit. It's
going to be challenging, it's going to require sacrifice. And
you know, as I mentioned to my listeners, and hell,
here's going to repeat himself again. Since I learned about
sugar's connection with cancer, I really did a I've really
concentrated on elimiting all that extra processed sugar, the corn syrup,
any added sugar. I don't eat foods that have added
(01:23:09):
sugar in them, and trying to and my wife and
I cook at home a lot, so we don't have
a whole lot of processed foods. I mean, I'll admit
to occasionally having some sausage or something like that, but
primarily just focusing on keeping all that extra sugar out
and just as a consequence of doing that, couple with
a really low carb diet. Since October last year, I'm
(01:23:31):
down thirteen pounds basically. Wow. See, And that's that's the
side effect of doing things right. But I feel heat absolutely,
And that's why I bring it up because I know
my list like, oh, you losing weight, rubinen, I just
feel better. It's like it's it's only it's a it's
a secondary benefit. If you want to lose weight, there's
your benefit, but it comes with the plus side of
(01:23:53):
you feeling better. You're not as exhausted and lethargic, and
I have more energy than I did before. So it
and that really, to me, rather than the number on
the scale, has kind of kept me engaged in minding
what I'm putting in my body because I'm just getting
that positive benefit from it exactly.
Speaker 16 (01:24:09):
You know, I think another benefit of eating healthy is
that you're eating usually less than and at the same time, yeah,
so less blood supplied to your gut, more blood supply
to your brain, your energy is awaken in your brain.
You get rid of that brain fog, and when you
start getting rid of bad food, then next thing you know,
everything's working on all eight cylinders.
Speaker 1 (01:24:26):
And that's a great way to just start your day. Right. Well,
let's something that's really always kind of annoyed me. It's
like every five ten years they readjust what the dietary
recommendations are. And I know you guys are real proponents
of throwing that food pyramid, which is what they rely
on now out the window because of the reason and
how it was created and why it's not necessarily good
(01:24:46):
for you. But I go back far enough. I don't
know if George you remember this, or four four three
two they had jingles and songs for four servings of
bread and three servings of meat and two servings of
cheese or something like that, and only minimizing, even back then,
minimizing the amount of candy and sugar. But it was
(01:25:08):
four four three two, and I remember that being counted head. Yeah,
this is bad.
Speaker 3 (01:25:12):
I remember when they first introduced the pyramid back in
the sixties, So maybe that's it.
Speaker 1 (01:25:17):
It's an extension to that. It was just a different
way of talking about it. It was basically a pyramid
because four was the bottom three, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:25:23):
So, and my thing is now the Thunno tried to
eat five to seven servings of rice and carbs. I
can't imagine how horrible I feel. Now, Well, let's just
start with that.
Speaker 1 (01:25:34):
How is it that carbs became something that were so
strongly recommended and encouraged to eat because that turns into
sugar in your body, which is a problem.
Speaker 3 (01:25:45):
Well, and it's totally against There's a book called the
Primal Blueprint Mark sistson and what he does there is
he goes through how the human DNA was evolved. So
humans didn't have farming until just ten thousand years ago.
So if you think about it, without a farm, what
do you eat?
Speaker 8 (01:26:02):
Well?
Speaker 3 (01:26:03):
Whatever you can cast, you can hunt or gather well,
and gathering only works sometimes. So the human body in
the DNA evolved to digest proteins and fats, and the
way it worked with carbs was okay, Right at the
end of summer, there's gonna be a lot of berries,
and so they would stuff themselves with carbs and the
(01:26:24):
cave man would get this nice fat that then had
a last thing through the winter when he didn't eat
as much, so the human body in the DNA evolved
to digest protein and fat and carbs. Is like, this
is a new thing to the human race and it
just doesn't fit well.
Speaker 1 (01:26:40):
It's almost like it's dessert, kind of like it's the
little extra special thing, and so they load on them
when they could find them. Right the shut when you
ran into a sugar, you would consume it, but it
wasn't frequently found in nature, I suppose, right.
Speaker 3 (01:26:55):
And so what's happened, and we were talking about this
on the way over, is is we've all to the
point now where we're so concentrating on the taste. I
eat stuff that tastes fantastic, and almost always taste is
equated to sugar.
Speaker 16 (01:27:10):
Well, I think that it started when they started putting
chemists inside these food industries and they started tantalizing, how
can we stimulate these dopamine receptors to get people addicted
to this, this and that, And before you know, it's
sugar being a very very powerful addictive chemical because of
the dopamine response, how you get became a mainstream for.
Speaker 1 (01:27:28):
Marketing absolutely, and you know, come on, does anybody eat
just one door eto those things the sprinkles jingle. You
bet you can't eat just one?
Speaker 7 (01:27:37):
Can't? Man?
Speaker 1 (01:27:38):
I mean, and I don't. I haven't eaten chips and
I can't remember how long. We don't even go down
that aisle anymore when we go grocery shopping. It's like
lead me not into temptation. But I talked to a
doctor last week wrote the book Fat, Stressed and Sick
MSG Processed Food in America's Health Crisis. Doctor Katie Reid
(01:28:00):
is her name, and she was talking about again along
the same lines MSG. It's not only literally put in foods,
but it's indirectly in there, so you're labeling won't even
show that it's there. But it's a flavor enhancer and
it's incorporated into so many foods because it does, you know,
set it apart from something that otherwise wouldn't maybe taste
as palatable. But there it is, and it's really bad
(01:28:22):
for you. There's a syndrome that people can sometimes experience.
It's called the Chinese food syndrome. After they eat Chinese food,
they get neurow irritability from the MSG. Well, that's where
I first started, and that's the first thing at the
gate when I was talking to her, I go, I
remember when there was this big craze with Chinese restaurants
to get rid of the MSG. They would either advertise
no MSG added, or you could ask them to not
(01:28:43):
add MSG. And that's twenty thirty years ago. But I
didn't realize, and after I did, after having talked with her,
that it is a chemically created thing through other processes.
Again that won't be revealed in your food labeling. So
it's almost impossible to avoid.
Speaker 3 (01:29:00):
And if you step back to the ten thousand foot
level and you think about food, the idea is food
is to give your body energy. It wasn't really ever
meant as a pleasure thing. It was you need to
do this so that you're alive. And what happened when
Philip Morris and R. J. Reynolds took over all the
food companies because they couldn't sell as many cigarettes anymore,
(01:29:21):
they did what Keith was just saying, they learned how
to make the food more addictive. Well that's how they
they did a cigarettes. It's exactly it. It's the same chemist.
I mean, it's the exact same industry that has now
made food the same way. And so what you got
to think about is you need to stop thinking about
food as I need stuff to taste good, and the
only reason I would ever reduce it is to lose weight.
(01:29:44):
And what totally changed how we approach things was I
am not eating this way to lose weight. I'm eating
this way because it's a better way to get energy
into my body. And that's kind of the whole main difference.
You know, carbs are a quick fix. They like you said,
it's converted to sugar right away, goes into the bloodstream.
The problem is it goes into the bloodstream and then boom,
(01:30:07):
the insulin gets produced to try and knock it down
because your blood having too much sugar will kill you.
Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
And so why do they give you bread at the
beginning of a meal when you go to a restaurant.
Speaker 3 (01:30:18):
The reason is it causes this huge spike and insulin
and you're and because we're eating so much bread and
so many carbs, we always overshoot. So they give you bread,
you get this insulin spike, and suddenly you're even hungrier
than you were when you came in the door tor
Toia restaurant, and now you're ordering appetizers and drinks and
(01:30:40):
oh yeah, deep.
Speaker 1 (01:30:42):
And defried fill in the blank, depfried pickles. For anybody
who isn't aware of this yet, deep fried food is death. Well,
we can talk a little bit more about that, because
that's the other thing we moved away from, anything like
with seed oils in it, because there's problems with that
and that's the heat. And I know for example, and
(01:31:03):
you know, God love the French fries, but now they're
frying beef beef tallow as opposed to vegetable oil, and
there's reasons for that. Beef is very good. Let's pause.
We'll bring these guys back. Keith and George talking health
and again it's Restore Wellness dot org. Not trying to
be preachy, just trying to elevate the amount of information
out there so we can make informed choices, which I
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Speaker 4 (01:32:20):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station Power.
Speaker 1 (01:32:26):
Shannon nine Weather Today. We've got some clouds, maybe a
little bit of rain. Sounds like not forty five for
the high down to twenty eight overy night with clearing
sky Sunya tomorrow with a high fifty four, cloudy overnight
down to forty two and U cloudy Saturday with a
high fifty three forty eight degrees. Right now, let's hear
about traffic conditions from Chuck.
Speaker 7 (01:32:43):
Ingram from the UC Health Tramping Center.
Speaker 9 (01:32:45):
The University of sins in Any Cancer Center offers innovative
clinical trials and the region's only young on set called
a rectal Cancer Program. Call five one, three, five eight
five U se ce C Step Bend seventy five problems
on the Brands spreads left lanees bocked off with an
accident that traffic now backs up to the Western Neills
Viaduct and over a fifteen minute delay into Northern Kentucky.
(01:33:09):
SOAB two seventy five slows with the Lawrence Program. Chuck
ingramont fifty five KRS Lean talk Station.
Speaker 1 (01:33:18):
Seven twenty year pitty by Kercity talk station talking Restore
Wellness Go online, Restore Wellness dot organ George Brunneman, who
is also the restorer Liberty dot us guy. He's in
politically engaged but also a health focus and nurse practitioner.
Keith Tannenfeld who is very much into this and how
how long you've been focusing on health and nutrition.
Speaker 16 (01:33:38):
I started my medical career back in nineteen ninety six
and then been to a nurse practitioner since two thousand
and nineteen, right before the COVID storm hit, and we were.
Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
Doing some amazing things with COVID. Okay, do you have
a clinic or something like that. There's a there's a
Root Cause clinic that I work out of in Harrison, Ohio,
Root Clause Clinic, and so you help people with nutrition
and exercise and motive and wellness and motivation. We were
having a conversation off air about motivation. He said, Oh,
you got to spend an hour with me and my
clinic and I'll get you motivated. I'm like, yeah, yeah, right.
(01:34:09):
I was your friend of myself as like the dude
from Big LEBOWSI the laziest man in Los Angeles County. Anyhow,
moving back over, I mentioned Steak and Shake and the
beef hollow. That was a move that was embraced by
RFK Junior, who's pushing to get these seed oils out.
So let's start with that. Because vegetable oil became all
the phenomenon when people started worrying about their cholesterol, like,
(01:34:31):
oh my god, we got to get the fats out
of our diet and don't eat eggs, and that was
a misguided push from what I understand now, right, very much. So,
so what's the problem with these oils?
Speaker 3 (01:34:44):
So the main thing is they were originally developed as
the cheaper way to get oil because petroleum was cheaper
was getting too expensive, and so they squeeze these seeds
to get the sludge out of them, and it's literally sludge.
Then they use an organic chemic that is poisonous and
dangerous to get the sludge to be thinner. Then they
(01:35:05):
have to remove the chemical they put in there, and
so it's this really artificial, crazy process.
Speaker 1 (01:35:12):
And the bottom line is the seed oil has a much.
Speaker 3 (01:35:17):
More difficult problem with what's called oxidation, so it turns
rantid quicker, and your body doesn't know what to do
with it. It's not a natural thing, whereas you know bacon, grease, lard,
beef tallow and for some reason, avocado and olive oil
are a totally different process.
Speaker 1 (01:35:34):
So we switched over to avocado oil.
Speaker 3 (01:35:36):
And that's what everyone's been schooled to do now, is
to get away from the vegetables.
Speaker 1 (01:35:41):
So why make homemade mayonnaise using our avocado oil. I
keep wanting to try that, man, is the toughest thing
to find. It is, so it takes you a minute.
I mean it's a little it's a little white wine vinegar,
some lemon juice, just this little Scotia dijon, a cup
of olive oil and an egg and some salt. You
get one of those handheld blenders. You put it in
and it's done. It's like almost instantaneous. I'm going to
(01:36:03):
be doing this so much better. No chemicals, preservative as
it is. You know, I make one batch, it'll last
me more than a week. And then you know, because
it's got a raw egg and it ended up throwing
out whatever is a little bit left. But oh my god,
what an amazing.
Speaker 3 (01:36:15):
And now you're not eating the seed oil which is
causing all these issues like heart issues, inflammation. Keith, you
were talking about the damage it does to the liver,
right exactly.
Speaker 16 (01:36:26):
So you know if you think about liver as a filter,
but it's really number one job is so that you
live when you don't eat.
Speaker 1 (01:36:32):
AKA.
Speaker 16 (01:36:33):
People who are forced not to eat, like say concentration
camp people, right, they live because of their liver. And
if your liver is not functioning very well, you can't
process cholesterol, you can't process fat, you can't process sugars.
So that's why people end up developing high blood pressure,
they developed diabetes and high cholesterol because your liver is underfunctioning.
And the best way to get your liver functioning is
(01:36:53):
to do intermittent fasting. And you know, I got a
friend right now who's on working on a ninety six
hour fast and he's feeling amazing. And so there's a
lot behind trusting the liver's job to really convert you
into what we call ketosis aka the keto diet. As
long as that you're drinking plenty of water. That's very,
very important when you're doing ketosis.
Speaker 1 (01:37:11):
So when you talk about fasting, I mean ninety six
hours fine, But is there any different type of fasting,
because I've heard like just not even for twelve twelve
hours is good.
Speaker 16 (01:37:20):
There's intermittent fasting, also known as breaking your fast aka breakfast,
and that's a very common one where people only two
meals a day and making sure that those two meals
aren't in gorge with extra food, so you're still kind
of limiting your calorie reduction, which is a great way
to lose weight over a period of time. But then
when you get into more of a medicinal fasting where
you're doing extended periods twenty four thirty six ninety six hours,
(01:37:42):
where you start to get really what they call a potosis,
where you're breaking down bad cells and harmful chemicals in
your body. And I think that everyone at least should
be doing a ninety six hour fast sometime in probably
in every year, not if twice or three times a year.
Speaker 1 (01:37:57):
Oh wow, I've done two days. I've never gone three. Nah,
that would be a tough one. We have to consider
trying that. Sometimes I won't eat anything, say between five
point thirty with dinner and maybe nine o'clock in the
morning when I get back home, so that I'm doing
that like every single day. Yeah, So I don't know
if that extended break is Yeah, that puts you in ketosis.
(01:38:19):
And as long as you're drinking plenty of water, you're
you're breaking down fat and you're letting your liver really
do the work. You're giving your pancrease a break, but
more importantan you're also giving your gut a break, because
our guts in America are always working. We're always shoving
something in there.
Speaker 16 (01:38:31):
Yeah, and if we could stop that and give our
gut a break, people's digestive problems will get better. Their
call batter symptoms are good, get better. Maybe they're if
they're having problems with elimination and such, that would improve
as well. Just coffee count a minimal coffee is a
great thing. Okay, I'm going to have another cup of
coffee and a break here. Let's continue in a few
minutes here with the guys on Restore Wellness dot Org.
(01:38:54):
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fifty five KRC. The talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:40:01):
Nine first one Wether forecast is gonna be overcast today,
maybe a little bit of rain, forty five of you.
The high down to twenty eight overnight with clear skies,
sunny tomorrow high fifty four, cloudy overnight down at forty
two at a high fifty three on Saturday with cloudy
skies forty seven degrees right now. Traffic time.
Speaker 7 (01:40:19):
From the UCUT Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (01:40:20):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center offers innovative clinical trials
on the region's only young onset called a rectal cancer
program called five one three, five eight five u SECC
snap found seventy five continues slow through Lachland Heavy from
just Bobo Hoppel to the Brent Spence where crews continue
to work with a wreck on the bridge, left lane
(01:40:41):
blocked Chuck ing ramonth fifty five KRE see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:40:47):
Six thirty one if at five KRCD talk station Talking
Health Today Restore Wellness dot orgus where you're gonna get
a lot of information on at George Bundeman and Keith
Tennefield in the studio empower Youse Seminar at eight oh
five will be talking to Hunter Oz about the legacy
of Herbert Hoover and Andrew Pappus about his altercation with
a liberal nut job the other day. He'll be on
at eight twenty and I heard need the aviation expert
(01:41:09):
Jay Ratliffe at a thirty. In the meantime, we're talking
health and we've talked a little bit about some fats.
We talked about the food pyramid being wrong and the
importance of maybe fasting and incorporating that into our diets.
With what other fun healthy tips can you offer the
listeners to improve their situations.
Speaker 3 (01:41:28):
Well, the key is to go after it because it's
going to make you feel better. I think that's that's
a huge difference from saying, Hey, I'm going to go
on a diet because i want to lose ten pounds.
You're going to lose weight if you do the right
things to get onto the right energy. And we've hit
the big ones. So the big ones are definitely you
want to reduce carbs. You mentioned in the in the
(01:41:48):
grocery store. We never go to the middle aisles anymore.
It's all this stuff on the outside.
Speaker 1 (01:41:53):
Yeah, I'll tell you what if you just the funny
thing is for me when I did the key, I
went full on a month of Keto and it sucks,
I'll admit. And your first couple of weeks, the keto
flew is a real thing you go through withdraw I mean,
and there's a weird and weird sense about it. But
after a couple of weeks, you know kind of kicked in.
But then you talk about you end up eating less.
(01:42:13):
I ended up eating less just because anything that was
full on Keto approved just kind of made me want
a gag, the thought about eating it. I am so
sick of eating this just limited number of things that
I can have on a Keto diet. But it's like
the the the the amount of carbs when you're focusing
on what you're buying. When you stare at the grocery store,
(01:42:35):
generally speaking, it's a sea of carbs.
Speaker 3 (01:42:39):
I mean nineties like everythingle upon ale, you got the
bread eye, you got the doughnut aisle.
Speaker 1 (01:42:45):
Yeah, it's crazy hip style and it's just everywhere. Carbs, carbs,
carbs everywhere.
Speaker 3 (01:42:50):
Well, and the key is what we want to try
and get is it is easy to make small differences.
Like RFK Junior said, President Trump's lost thirty pounds because
he's not eating the buns on his big mac anymore.
I mean it's small steps, So start small. The main
thing that we wanted to get out early on was
in talking about the Pyramids. So much of what was
(01:43:11):
just drilled into our heads was wrong, and it was
driven by either political forces or corporate lobbying from the
big egg. So you got to step back and say,
you know, it's okay to eat bacon and eggs. In fact,
that's probably a great thing to do. It's not you know,
all of the stigma that's attacked.
Speaker 1 (01:43:29):
Process and has nitrits and things like that. Unless you
watch Fred you can get bacon that's not correct.
Speaker 3 (01:43:36):
And so then the second step is, Okay, all of
these seed oils, all these artificial oils, and if you
can go to pro to just getting avocado and natural
oils like butter, we say bacon grease butter.
Speaker 7 (01:43:48):
Same thing.
Speaker 3 (01:43:50):
The third thing then is one are the chemicals that
are being added. You're hearing a ton now about life
a state or roundup. It's like in everything in the
United States, very little of it in Europe. So there's
all these chemicals that are added to your system. So
the question is what's the biggest bang for your buck?
And the biggest bang for your buck is to rethink,
(01:44:10):
do some study and get some knowledge, get some motivation
to change some things.
Speaker 1 (01:44:15):
And Keith, I think you've got some, you know, quickie recommend.
Speaker 16 (01:44:17):
Well, let's talk about motivation because that seems to be
the one barrier when you're gonna go choose to eat something.
You know they say is they say it's not your
habits are the problem, or you're not addicted to a
habit you're actually addicted to a decision. It's the decision
that creates the habit. So number one, what type of
decision do you want to make when it comes to
your health? And number one, how do you feel about yourself?
(01:44:39):
Are you worthy to eat properly? Are you worthy to
eat right? They will say, well, it costs too much money. No,
it does not cost too much money to eat right.
You just stop buying junk and you're already saving money.
And if you're buying really good food, you don't need
to eat as much because it's nutritiously valued, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:44:53):
So there's a big, big component to that. And the
other thing is grocery stores.
Speaker 16 (01:44:56):
They love selling this boxed stuff because it's on the shelf,
it's around for a long time, it doesn't get thrown
in the garbage. Sure they can see keep it on
the shelf, and you buy it and they make their
fancy money. Meanwhile, it's the it's the fresh produce, the
produce that has energy in it, that gives you vitality,
and that can usually obviously is around the edges, you know,
like they say, But I just encourage you when you're
looking at your food, you look at it for its
(01:45:17):
energy source. It it's a vibrant health energy. You'll get
a good feel, you'll get a good vibration from it,
and that's a great way to start processing it.
Speaker 1 (01:45:25):
And you're right about the weight thing.
Speaker 16 (01:45:26):
We sometimes will look at food as a weight issue
and a weight and weight's very defeating. But you said,
like you said, you start caring for yourself, you start
loving yourself, you start feeling better. Next you know, you're
working out, next time, you're exercise and you're burning calories,
you're eating right, you're drinking good amounts of water. Water
is very very important for processing, and before you know it,
that weight will just automatically begin to disappear.
Speaker 1 (01:45:48):
And it's really on all of the above kind of
a thing.
Speaker 3 (01:45:52):
So once you start cutting out the seed oils, once
you start cutting out carbs and eating more protein and fat,
you're suddenly not hungry full. You can go a long
time and still not you know, lose your energy. And
I think you mentioned that with the keto. You feel
like he got more energy even though you're eating, like
my plate's only half.
Speaker 1 (01:46:09):
Of what it used to.
Speaker 16 (01:46:10):
And another benefit of eating protein is it increases your testosterone.
And testosterone has systemic global effects through muscle gains and
healthy honors.
Speaker 1 (01:46:19):
Strong leg bull Yes, don't go away. We'll continue talking
to Health George and Keith afterward. For my dear friends,
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Low's Camp at CCM dot com fifty five KRCU. Time
for Weather Channel nine, first one to weather forecast. We
(01:47:45):
got an overcast day to day, maybe a shower popping up,
but high a forty five in any event, twenty eight
overnight with clear skies, sunny skies tomorrow with the high
fifty four overnight low of forty two with clouds and
cloudy Saturday high fifty three, forty seven. Right now, Time
for a traffic update.
Speaker 7 (01:48:00):
From the ucl Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (01:48:01):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center offers the innovative clinical
trials and the region's only young on set colorectal cancer
program called five one three five eighty five U se
ce C southbound seventy five continued slow through Wachman, then
from Hoppel to an accident on the bridge where the
left lane is blocked. You'll need an extra twenty five
minutes out of Sharonville into northern Kentucky. North found four
(01:48:24):
seventy one now slows across the bridge. South seventy one
slows into Blue Ash. Chuck ingramon fifty five KRC, the
talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:48:35):
Seven fifty five Krcity talk station Restore Wellness dot org.
So we're gonna find George Bunaman Keith Tennantfield's information. And
we've been talking all morning about health, nutrition, a different
way of viewing diet, and of course then as that
exercise component, and you you had get off air. I've
been you know, I always can give myself a hard
time for just really literally lacking any motivation whatsoever to exercise.
(01:49:00):
I don't know what happened to it. I used to
be really in good health and aerobic, you know, and
had good cardiovascular health and all of that, and I
just it just went down the toilet, I think probably
when I started this job. But how I mean, how
can you get someone to tap into a motivation. If
someone's listened to us right now, going I can't do that,
I can't do that. Where where does that motivation come from? Keith, Well,
(01:49:21):
I don't want you to hit the dump button, but
it's f your feelings, it really is. You got to
stop letting your feelings guide your decision making because you
know deep down inside that exercise is the right thing
to do or dieting is the right thing to do.
And sometimes you got to put the cart before the
horse and drag both of them along the journey until
the horse gets the idea. Listen, I do got to
(01:49:42):
get moving, and before you know it, the horse will
get motivation because you will end up feeling better after
you do these right things, and that'll start to perpetuate
a nice, feel good emotion and better dopamine, healthy dopamine
as I call it, and before you know it.
Speaker 16 (01:49:54):
But you just think goal is just to get started.
One of the neat statements I'd say to my patients
is what's the heart belt to get in karate? The
black belt or the white belt. Often people will say
the black belt, but it's not. It's the white belt
because the black belts got to show up to do
it right, You got it. The white belt's just showing up.
The black belts just doing the white belt over and
over again. And so really just saying, you know what,
I'm gonna stop letting my emotions or my feelings tell
(01:50:18):
me what I need to do, because I know what
I need to do, and I'm going to start doing it,
and it's going to start making me feel better. And
once that motivation starts happened, you start caring for yourself
and loving on yourself, then light begins to happen, positivity
begins to happen in your life, and you feel stronger
and you feel better, and you feel like you can
just tackle the next twenty years. But we get in
slumps in life, you know, we get someone dies in
(01:50:39):
the family, or we have a financial crisis or a
job change, and our structure gets messed up. That's understandable,
but get back on it, get.
Speaker 1 (01:50:46):
Back on to it well. And that's often when that
it's like self medication. You know, it's easy to pour
a scotch or crack open a beer when you're feeling
depressed or unhappy, and that tends to put a mask
over the whole thing. And I get that, but food
as a reward and food as a dopamine inspire is
a really popular thing, you know, right, we reward children
(01:51:07):
with food. No, here's a brownie forgetting an a or
I mean, it's just built into, built into our day
to day existence.
Speaker 7 (01:51:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:51:14):
And the key is, like Keith was saying, is you've
got to at some point look back and say listen.
And I joke on one of our podcasts, I said,
you know, I look at wellness as I can get
on the floor, play with the grandkids and get back
up off the floor. And so that's kind of a
you know, ground zero for wellness is I can get
back up off the floor. But what about, you know,
(01:51:34):
being able to go outside and play with them? What
about being able to you know, live to be ninety
or one hundred instead of seventy two, which is like
the average age now. So you've got to get that
thing in your head that I'm doing this for all
of the right reasons, and not all of them are
for me alone. It's so that I can be around
to do the job as a parent, as a grandparent,
(01:51:56):
and to make a.
Speaker 1 (01:51:56):
Difference in just what's going on.
Speaker 16 (01:51:59):
I have a saying that says that if you want
to be a great grandparent, you got to start doing
great things today.
Speaker 1 (01:52:06):
It's a good way looking at it. Let me talk
about living the ninetyear one hundred. I'm not quite sure
I want to live that way well, but the world.
I know what you brought Restore Wellness dot or we're
gonna bring it back for one more. They've got an
event coming up we're going to learn about. It's at
March twenty six at the Farm and Restore Wellness, meaning
we'll find out what's going to take place at that event,
and maybe another couple of fun facts on our health
(01:52:28):
and our diet. It's seven forty five right now at
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Speaker 4 (01:53:23):
Fifty five krc.
Speaker 1 (01:53:28):
Uh Channa and I Onetherfourcas's going to be cloudy today,
maybe a little bit of rain, high forty five, down
to twenty eight overnight with clear skies, clear day of
sunny skies tomorrow fifty four fotay every night down to
forty two and high have fifty three on Saturday with
botty skyes forty seven. Right now, time for a traffic update.
Speaker 9 (01:53:44):
From the UCUP Traffics Center, the University of Cincinnati Cancer
Center offers innovative clinical trials and the region's only young
onset corectal cancer program. Call five one, three, five eight
five U see CEC seth bend seventy five running close
to an extra half hour out of Sharonville into northern Kentucky,
break lights through Lachland, then from Hoppele to the bridge
(01:54:06):
where crews continue to work with the wreck that blocks
the left lane southbound seventy one. Now I'm going to
cost you an extra five field zirtle to fight for
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:54:25):
It's seven fifty to fifty five KRC detalk station. One
more segment here with George and Keith talking Restore Wellness
and when you can go to the website Restore Wellness
dot Org. Rick just sent me an email, Rick, thanks
for tuning into the program. I appreciate you listening to
the show. And he's always chiming in on matters political,
but he was interested in this and he wanted to know,
are there any books that you recommend? And George's like, yeah,
(01:54:47):
I just got to Restore Wellness dot org and click
on resources. You see the little pulldown menu right there
and it's got reading. And there you have the entire
list of the recommended books.
Speaker 3 (01:54:57):
Yep, it's a there's a ton of great books out
there there. I will caution that some of them are
like reading textbooks.
Speaker 1 (01:55:03):
Yeah, but a lot of them.
Speaker 3 (01:55:05):
If you read like the first third, you're going to
get the main storyline. And it's really really important to
understand the science behind some of this because this isn't
just people giving an opinion. This is based on studies
and facts and stuff. To me, that's always the core.
I got to understand the science first.
Speaker 1 (01:55:25):
Well, okay, and I'm glad you brought that up because
earlier on in the program and I forgot to ask
you and follow up on it. I hear what you're saying.
I hear the Keto diet. I hear you know, encouraging
you to eat more proteins and you know, obviously the
fewer carbs. But for every quote unquote diet or path
to well, there's always some alternative theory floating around it.
Yeah no, no, no, the Atkins diet or no, no, no,
(01:55:47):
the Keto diet is not good because you should be
doing this. So, like some vegan out there screaming at
the radio going no eat needs terrible for you, and
I hear that all the time.
Speaker 3 (01:55:56):
So it's really tough to get the protein from plants.
But the key is there is always a yin and yang.
The vegetable oil companies are going bersert now because RFK
juniors all against seed oils. So they've been trying to
publish these studies that say or publish these articles. There
are no studies at back set oils. They publish their
(01:56:17):
opinion that hey, it's it's really better for you because
of this, this, this and this. But you know, the
bottom line is the chemistry says you shouldn't be doing this.
Speaker 16 (01:56:25):
Right, and if the research is, you know, the research
will probably be easily fed into a biased, financially you know,
promoted outcome. We saw a lot that with COVID and
vaccines and all the other stuff, and that's that's what's
happening all over. My recommendation for those people, especially even vegetarians,
who are looking for, you know, other options for a
protein based and such as this is gonna be ironic
when I say this, but use your gut instinct.
Speaker 3 (01:56:48):
It'll help you. It'll guide you to trust them. So
the key is there's a bunch of stuff out there
that we can do to help you out. So the
first is, if you go to restore Welles dot org,
under the resources page are all all of the books,
and I encourage you to look at those. The second
thing is if you follow us on as we do,
repost a lot of the stuff that reinforces these ideas.
Speaker 1 (01:57:10):
Casey and Kelly means.
Speaker 3 (01:57:11):
Around there all the time, Doctor Robert, Robert Lufkins there
all the time.
Speaker 1 (01:57:15):
So I'm we're really trying to.
Speaker 3 (01:57:17):
Use AX as our outlet to hey, you're here's five
or six things you should be looking at today. The
next thing is on the website, we just posted a
podcast where we go through keys ten facets of wellness.
It's really interesting. If you've got thirty minutes, you know,
put on your headphones, go for a thirty minute walk.
You can listen to that podcast and you'll get a
(01:57:38):
really good foundation on on here's the different things you
can be doing.
Speaker 1 (01:57:41):
I saw what you did there with the walk incorporated
walk into the podcast. That's what I listen to podcast
is I just go for a thirty minute walk and
I listen.
Speaker 8 (01:57:49):
To you know, Daily Wire or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:57:52):
And one other thing else I think they can do
is show up at the farm or some I guess
de Fried Chicken March twenty six for the Restore Weldness meeting.
What are you going to be talking about it that?
Speaker 3 (01:58:01):
So March twenty six is I know this is a
place we usually go to for restore Liberty, but this
month we're going to be concentrating entirely on the wellness.
Gabe Gardini from Turning Point Action is going to be
talking about their Healthy Americans initiative that they've not going.
So the best thing with Gabe is he brings the
younger perspective to these things. He drops our everage age
(01:58:23):
in half, I think when he walks into a room.
But Gabe will be there, Keith's going to be there.
I'll be there March twenty six. The doors open at
five point thirty, dinner will start at six, we'll play
a podcast at six thirty, and then the meeting starts
at seven. So it's a full schedule. But you'll walk
out of there smarter than you walked in. I'm certain
you will.
Speaker 1 (01:58:42):
And you've made me a smarter person nutritionally speaking, just
talking today, and maybe you'll find it deep inside to
find that little ounce of motivation'll get me off my
butt during the day. There you go, my wife, and
my wife, I'm sure has been listening to this. She
listened to the program every day, and you know, I'll
come home and I guess she's going to have that
look on her face because she's always hounded me to
get off. I know that I'm a lucky man. Do
(01:59:06):
what she tells you to do. Oh, I love her plenty,
all right, very good, plenty, good luck down that road right,
getting off your button, taking a walk. I will endeavor
to do that. I do have a dog. There you go.
If she's the one that walks him every day while
she gets up at like five o'clock. It takes a
dog for a walk. Oh god, now I'm feeling really guilty.
(01:59:27):
Thanks guys. That's appreciate it. If I'm in hot water,
it's self induced and self created. So well, I look
forward to talking to you guys again. Keep up the
great work and keep you know, getting the information out there.
I think it's just so important and I'm I'm pleased
to be able to spend the time with my listeners
of me today to help to help serve that process.
Speaker 16 (01:59:48):
Thanks my pleasure and Brian, if your listeners want to
maybe text your email you have topics they want to
talk about, and you give that back to us, We'll
bring them to the table.
Speaker 1 (01:59:56):
That would not be a problem. Man right, excellent, Keith,
great senior. George always great scene you and I'll look
forward to having you back on the program again soon.
Keep up the great works, folks. Stick around. Hunter Oswald
on the legacy of Herbert Hoover. Just a little bit
of information. He's going to be doing a deep dive
on that with the empower You Seminar Andrew Pappus on
his altercation with the left wing advocate activist he got
(02:00:18):
assaulted and Jay Ratliff, I heard me the aviation expert
coming up at eight thirty. I who you can stick around.
Speaker 11 (02:00:23):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days every day.
Speaker 2 (02:00:26):
I'm America's deadline is over.
Speaker 11 (02:00:29):
Fifty five KR see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:00:32):
This report is spun the voices of Rees's.
Speaker 8 (02:00:35):
So glad we have you heard daily you know, the
only voice of reason on the radio.
Speaker 11 (02:00:40):
Fifty five cars the talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:00:45):
At oh five fifty five KRCD talk station. Happy Friday, Eve,
Please to walk to the welcome in the fifty five
years Morning Show Hunter Oswald, who's doing a seminar tomorrow night.
Empower You America dot org. FREA can register to log
in from the comfort of your own home or show
up at the studio seven pm. Star time on Herbert
Hoover Now. Hunter Oswald is a five philm Beth Gasewitch
(02:01:08):
Development Fellow Research Fellow with The American Spectator, where he
is currently working on a project with that publications founder.
His articles and Spectator have examined a whole host of issues,
and he's gone around reporting for The Spectator and from
covering the twenty twenty two Dobbs protest, you guys remember
that in Washington, d C. To jd Vance's Middletown rally
back in twenty four iff student fellow and Conservative thought
(02:01:30):
for the Institute for Faith and Freedom, and he's contributed
a whole bunch of different news outlets. Welcome to the program,
Hunter Oswald, It's great having you on the show today.
Speaker 5 (02:01:40):
Hey, thank you for having me on, Brian.
Speaker 1 (02:01:42):
The subject matter Herbert Hoover, and you know, honestly, other
than Hooverville's which was of course the Great Depression and
the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act. I didn't don't really know
anything about Herbert Hoover. Apparently he's got a reputation as
being one of the most hated and controversial presidents out there.
Speaker 5 (02:02:01):
Yeah, I mean, Hoover is definitely one of those figures
that today, when we think about him, most people in
the general population will think of the president that failed
the Great Depression and the guy who eventually led for
FDR to rise to power and the New Deal. Yeah,
but when we think about Hoover today, especially as me,
we kind of take these things for granted. But at
(02:02:23):
the same time, there's this new development, this new narrative
that we've created by New Deal historians that say, you know,
this guy named Hoover, you know, it was the reason
he failed was because of his lasi faire economics. It
was his hands off approach. But when you actually learn
and study him, you can see a completely different story
(02:02:46):
with Hoover. So tonight, with the Empire Seminar, I am
looking at Hoover as he truly is, not how New
Deal historians portray him as.
Speaker 1 (02:02:58):
Today an accurate picture of Herbert Hoover the president, and
it's actually it's tomorrow night, correct tomorrow at seven pm.
Powerre Youeamerica dot org. You said tonight, Well today is
there tonight? Oh my god, See this is my week.
I'm sorry, hunter, this is my week. I'm just I'm
hitting fits and spasms here this week. So apologies to
(02:03:19):
my listeners. I am not a complete idiot, just forgot
what today it is. Anyhow, going back, thank you. I
think we all go through those moments occasionally, if it's
not a sign of a dementia onset.
Speaker 7 (02:03:32):
Eddie.
Speaker 1 (02:03:35):
I did mention the Smooth Holly Terriff Act on purpose
because I did know was signed in the Launder Hoover
and it apparently exacerbated the problems created by the Great
Depression in the aftermath of the stock market crash. Is
there something that we can learn from that about what
Trump's doing today? We be talking about it and that
at all in this context?
Speaker 8 (02:03:53):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (02:03:53):
Absolutely, because when people think of the Smooth Carley terrifact,
they think of, Okay, you know, why why does this
tariff play into causing or at least exacerbating the Great Depression? Well,
what people fail to understand is when the Great Depression
hit on, people are already struggling for trade. In other words,
who to buy from, because now you have the government
(02:04:16):
vi of protectionism saying, hey, we the state are determining
where you're going to buy your products. And in their case,
they're arguing from what you would say a public interest theory,
which is that all we are doing for the economy
is in the public interest. But the tariff hardly. Terriffact
failed immensely. I mean we are talking a few months
(02:04:37):
after it passed in nineteen thirty, seventeen point nine percent
of production drops immediately. And so when we think about
in today's environment, with the tariff war right now with
Mexico and Canada, we have to be very careful of
what tariffs are because these the tariffs are not a
good thing. It's kind of an unfortunate loss loss situation.
(02:04:59):
And so like people say, well, it's only for national
security reasons, and you can make an argument for that,
but when you're looking at it from a purely economic standpoint,
you're restricting trade, you're creating new barriers of entry for
new companies to invest in your country.
Speaker 7 (02:05:14):
You're effected.
Speaker 5 (02:05:15):
And another unfortunate fact is you're actually encouraging cronyism because
terrorists often benefit those in a situation that are like,
you know what if I don't, the less competitors I
have in the economy, the more likely I can benefit.
So they what we start seeing is a transition from
say an economic competition, where you would say, okay, companies
(02:05:36):
actually have to compete with each other, versus say political entrepreneurship,
where it's like, how can I use the government to
my advantage. So I think with the terriff question today
with Trump, we should be very leery about how we
are using terroriffs in the context of what is going on.
Speaker 1 (02:05:53):
Well, I mean, I think they dis neecessarily along the
lines of logical reason that you're using. You know, the
natural reaction from an economic standpoint is, well, you know,
we're going to get retaliatory tariffs on us, and people
are not going to buy as much or in when
we buy if for the goods that are imported based
on the retaliatory tariffs, we're going to have to pay
more for it. So through what lens was Herbert Hoover
(02:06:14):
looking when he put tariffs on twenty thousand or so products?
Did he ignore that sort of logic, that economic reaction
that wait a second, that's going to cause people to
demand less American products, and it's going to cause the
products that we import to go up in price. How
can that help the economy?
Speaker 5 (02:06:31):
Exactly? So, when Hoover implemented the tariff, people kind of
debate about this somewhat, but most generally agree. When the
terror factor was approved in nineteen thirty, Hoover said, well,
it was part of our Republican platform because he did
campaign and then this was again nearly one hundred years
ago where Republicans were very much the party of terrace.
(02:06:52):
That was a huge deal under McKinley, as we've heard
Trump today talk about McKinley. So Hoover kind of played
in that idea of somewhat, I'm fulfilling what the party
platform is. But at the same time, and this is
another unfortunate fact about Hoover's he did play into cronyism
a bit from his supporters in the industries that are like, hey,
(02:07:13):
we want to benefit right now, and we need to
really focus on how do we restrict trade from foreign
countries other or other words, foreign competitors, so we get
the advantage despite the fact that consumers are going to suffer.
So an immediate way, it's like, okay, we can artificially
raise our prices, And Hoover kind of plays this idea, well,
(02:07:36):
you know, Lasei fair, it kind of works, but I
also think it's not the most efficient form of government
of the economy. So that's kind of where the terrific
narrative comes from. Where again he said, well, it's part
of fulfilling the party platform. However, there's also the fact
that you have whover going along satan. You know, this
(02:07:57):
Lazai fair thing is maybe not the.
Speaker 8 (02:07:59):
Way to go.
Speaker 1 (02:08:01):
So ultimately, then did was he was he more like
a Wilsonian kind of president.
Speaker 5 (02:08:09):
Oh, very much so. In fact, when Hoover initially expressed
his progressivism, he actually supported Teddy Roosevelt in then eighteen
twelve election. In fact, if you go to the Herbert
Hoover Library, his presidential library, everybody agrees that he adhere
to the Teddy Roosevelt wing of the party. He was
very much a progressive Republican of his day. So he
(02:08:31):
was like, you know, I believed in He's like, you know,
I believe in rugged individualism. Because of his Quaker background,
so he supported freedom. However, he also saw like the
state could be used as a means to be constructive
in the economy. So that's kind of where the Wilsonian
the Roosevelt mentality comes from. In fact, Woodrow Wilson appointed
(02:08:53):
him as the director of the US Food Administration during
World War One. That's kind of where his first major
political job is under Woodrow Wilson.
Speaker 1 (02:09:03):
How about that certainly enlightened me on quite a few
things on Herbert Hoover. And again the seminar tonight at
seven o'clock, And it's what did I overlook in terms
of something else you'd be speaking of love about Herbert Hoover.
We did a lot on smooth Hawley because I know
that was rather impactful and not a good way since
tariffs are a big topic of conversation. But just real quick,
what other fun fact can you throw out about Herbert
(02:09:24):
Hoover that you'd be talking about tonight that my listeners
might be interested in.
Speaker 5 (02:09:29):
Yeah, so I think I don't want to give all
away though.
Speaker 1 (02:09:33):
No, no, no, but don't don't rule the last page
of the book, oh exactly.
Speaker 5 (02:09:37):
But I think a lot of people will find surprising
is that when we think about who Hoover is as
this log a fair guy. As I said, that's not him.
And I think the biggest secret, or the biggest surprise
will be that Hoover actually developed his own new deal
before FBR ever thought about it. In fact, a lot
(02:09:59):
of economists and historians have actually looked back on this
and said, you know, and interesting enough, I have the
quote right in front of me from FDR's advisor, Roxford Tugwell,
who said, quote when it was all over, I once
made a list of new deal ventures begun during Hoover's
years as Secretary of Commerce and then as president. The
(02:10:20):
new deal owed much to what he had begun, and effectively,
what he's saying there.
Speaker 1 (02:10:25):
Is the blue bread.
Speaker 5 (02:10:28):
Without Hoover, FDR really didn't have that much.
Speaker 1 (02:10:33):
Well, that's his own new deals. That's hilarious, Hunter Oswald,
do be talking about this at length this evening again.
Log in online empower Youoamerica dot organis a link on
my blog page forty five caresy dot com. Just make
sure you register. It's a wonderful speech tonight, I'm sure
will be, Hunter, and thanks for coming in the morning
show and giving us a little bit of information about
Herbert Hoover that I'm sure quite a few of us
didn't know.
Speaker 5 (02:10:52):
Well, thank you, Brian, and again everybody come out tonight
and hope to see you.
Speaker 1 (02:10:56):
All there very much. So take care of my friend
and don't go away. Former Anderson Township trusty Drew Pappas
had a bit of an altercation with some liberal protest
to resulting in well him assaulting Drew Pappas. We'll get
the details on that coming up next fall by Jay
ratt Lift at the bottom of the hour.
Speaker 4 (02:11:12):
Hope you can stick around fifty five KRC.
Speaker 7 (02:11:15):
You one.
Speaker 1 (02:11:22):
Eight nineteen at fifty five kr City Talk Station. Yeah,
thanks Jrecker. It will be stuck in my hat all
day long. You can blame Joe Strecker for the earworm.
Brian Thomas please to Welcome to the fifty five KRSSEE
Morning Show. I wish it was under better circumstances. But interesting,
amusing and rather unhinged some Democrats can be of late.
(02:11:48):
Welcome back to the fifty five KRRE Morning Show. Former
Anderson Township trustee Drew Pappis. I saw the video. Let
my listeners know how what happened the other day to
you with this left wing activist who got all chovy
with you.
Speaker 15 (02:12:02):
First of all, thanks Joe for the intro music conglue
fighting excellent. I gotta tell you, Brian, So picture this
for a moment. I'm sitting there having breakfast, okay and
just quite you know, literally with a friend of mine
at pancake house.
Speaker 7 (02:12:21):
I'm five mile at Beachmont and we're finishing. We finished
our breakfast.
Speaker 15 (02:12:29):
Having coffee, and a gentleman comes up to my table,
stands right there next to our table, above us, and
he looks at me.
Speaker 7 (02:12:36):
He goes, do you know who I am?
Speaker 15 (02:12:38):
And I look up because I hadn't paid him any attention.
Speaker 7 (02:12:41):
I didn't, you know, I don't.
Speaker 1 (02:12:42):
I was eating right, drinking my coffee right, and he goes,
do you know who I am?
Speaker 7 (02:12:47):
I look up.
Speaker 15 (02:12:47):
I go, yeah, I know who you are. I go,
what's your problem? He goes, well, you're my effing problem.
And I go, well, that's not good for you, but
you know whatever, And then it asked lated a bit
from there where crowded restaurant, the curse words began to
fly and it was beginning to cause quite a scene.
I said, and I said whatever, and he goes, let's
(02:13:09):
take this outside? And I said, do you want to
take this outside? And he goes, yeah, I said, fine,
So I got up, you know, out of respect for
the restaurant.
Speaker 7 (02:13:21):
I don't want to cause them any angst. Right and pere.
Speaker 15 (02:13:24):
It wasn't the appropriate, you know, place for this. So
we go outside and he tries to get me to go.
He goes, let's go behind the building. I said, anything
you have to say, you can say right here, I said,
because I got my buddy right here filming it. The
guy was having breakfast with because I told him, I said, hey,
film is I don't know what this guy is capable of,
because he has threatened me in the past. But at
(02:13:46):
a polling place, KI, yeah, he's a member. He is
a member of the East Side Democrats here in anders
Or on the east side of town.
Speaker 7 (02:13:56):
He is one of there.
Speaker 15 (02:13:57):
I don't know if he lives in Mount Washington. I
don't know if he's a pe there, but he is
a Democrat volunteer and hands out Democrat ballots at polling places.
Speaker 1 (02:14:08):
Okay, and you are obviously living rent free in his head.
Speaker 15 (02:14:12):
Oh, I mean, there's not a lot of room up there,
but yeah, I am so so at the end of
the day, the video starts from there. It's on my
Facebook page and.
Speaker 7 (02:14:25):
He he I have I go outside.
Speaker 15 (02:14:27):
Now, if you look at the video, I put my
hands on purpose. I put my hands in my pocket.
I did not want to see I didn't want it
to be said that I was because the left is
have this mantra your bully, blah blah blah blah. And
I didn't want to seem antagonistic.
Speaker 1 (02:14:42):
Or aggressive in any nature from the guy who invited
you outside to go behind the building, which suggests to
me he wanted to get into a fight with you.
But whatever, go ahead.
Speaker 15 (02:14:51):
Well, I wanted to make sure that it wasn't misconstrued
that something.
Speaker 1 (02:14:55):
Certainly, certainly I observed that very clearly your hand were
in your pockets, and you didn't act aggressively toward him.
I watched the video, right, so uh, at.
Speaker 15 (02:15:06):
The end of the day, the video shows what it shows.
He then not necessarily just shoves me, but he gives
me he like you know, like in football.
Speaker 7 (02:15:14):
He chucks me.
Speaker 15 (02:15:15):
He blocks me, right, He.
Speaker 1 (02:15:16):
Pushes me aggressively, very aggressively.
Speaker 15 (02:15:19):
So I, in my mind, I had two of the
flowchart began in my mind, what do you do? Okay?
Do you react and then meet aggression with further aggression?
Or overwhelming aggression and just begin to to to beat
him senseless or whatever. And then I become the news story, right,
(02:15:39):
I'm the I'm the you know, no matter what you say,
he started it, blah blah blah blah. So I said,
you know what, I can't believe this is happening. So
I just turned and walked away, as you see, and
I said, call nine one one. So we called the
Sheriff's office. They came out, and let me be clear,
our sheriff deputies are the best. O.
Speaker 7 (02:15:58):
Canvas is not a slight against.
Speaker 15 (02:16:00):
Our Sheriff's office, our deputies in any way, shape or form.
But I was at that point pretty pretty confident that
he was going to be charged with either assaults or.
Speaker 7 (02:16:13):
Disorderly conduct.
Speaker 15 (02:16:15):
And from what I'm hearing now, this is not twenty
four hours old yet, because it's happened about, I guess
about ten o'clock yesterday, so it's not quite twenty four
hours old. But from what I'm hearing, at least initially
back from the sheriff's offices, well there's no crime here.
And I've got to I've really got a problem with that,
because Brian, we wake up every day now First of all,
(02:16:37):
you know, there's still avenues. I can go down Civilly,
but you can't get blood from a stone. And apparently
this gentleman is struggling financially, so he's probably a lot
of stress. Of obviously he's a leftist, so he's probably
you know, suffering from Trump derangement syndrome or Elon derangements.
Speaker 1 (02:16:58):
Tapestry.
Speaker 7 (02:17:00):
So and and you know, here's the deal.
Speaker 15 (02:17:04):
We wake up every day we see example after example,
more and more examples of violence perpetrated by Democrats against
either Tesla or Conservatives or whomever, right, and it seems
to be accelerating, and it's actually being promoted by the
very leaders of the Democrat Party in d C. I
shared a video yesterday. They all they're all calling Elon
(02:17:25):
Musk like he's an evil person to justifying the violence
that's occurring against Tesla dealerships.
Speaker 1 (02:17:31):
So you saw the Maxine Waters telling people to take
it to the streets. Yeah, the list goes on and on.
Speaker 15 (02:17:38):
You saw the leak or the hacker that is now
published the locations and addresses of every Tesla owner in
the United States and dealerships. I mean, we're we've passed
the point of actionable behavior. I mean, this is stuff
that should be should have been taken care of long
ago and dissuaded long ago.
Speaker 7 (02:17:56):
But for example, let me ask you, when when does
this is?
Speaker 15 (02:18:00):
When this society do we try to hold people accountable
for the action. So they the police are saying, and
the sheriff is the sheriff's department at least currently is saying, well, there's.
Speaker 8 (02:18:11):
Nothing we can charge them.
Speaker 7 (02:18:12):
Look, I don't, I don't.
Speaker 15 (02:18:13):
I don't pretend that this guy deserves to go to jail.
Speaker 7 (02:18:16):
It wasn't any you know, it wasn't. It wasn't something
that's ajailable.
Speaker 15 (02:18:20):
But should he be charged with something and have to
go down and pay a fine so that he has
I mean, are we trying to provide a deterrent to
this type of behavior? Are we trying to reward this
type of behavior? I really I'm puzzled at that.
Speaker 1 (02:18:34):
Well. High Revise Code Section twenty nine oh three point
one to three. No person shall know, only, cause, or
attempt to cause physical harm to another or another's unborn.
No person shall recklessly cause serious physical harm to another
and another's unborn. You're guilty of assault. Whoever violates the
sections guilty of assault, So I'd say he attempted to
cause physical harm, or one could at least interpret it
(02:18:55):
that way. He can get a defense attorney and try
to argue out of it.
Speaker 15 (02:18:59):
So the fact that I'm a much larger person than him, somehow,
I'm just don't have the same rights as everybody else.
Maybe if you look at him, let's be fair, let's
be fair. He's not a particularly masculine individual. He posed
me no physical threat.
Speaker 7 (02:19:13):
You could tell me I'm on body language.
Speaker 12 (02:19:14):
I was.
Speaker 15 (02:19:15):
I was not in any way, shape or form that
I seem to be concerned about anything that was about
to happen. I was fairly relaxed if you look at
my body language.
Speaker 7 (02:19:24):
But be that as it may. I have the same
rights as everybody else. I have a right to quiet enjoyment.
Speaker 15 (02:19:29):
I don't you know you should not be allowed in
society to walk up and do that to somebody else.
Once you lay your hands on somebody else, I'm sorry.
Speaker 7 (02:19:39):
You're in the wrong.
Speaker 15 (02:19:40):
And if if I had been, would the would the
what would the storyline be if the roles were reversed
and I had remember I remember a local school board
member here being on the news because someone pushed her
phone out of their face when she shoved their phone
in their face. Yet the news traps out and makes
all they were for moving from phone. Yeah yet literally.
Speaker 7 (02:20:03):
Well, the good thing.
Speaker 10 (02:20:04):
About this is this number one.
Speaker 15 (02:20:06):
He's famous now as being known as an unhinged.
Speaker 7 (02:20:09):
Liberal, which is good. Yeah number two, number two.
Speaker 15 (02:20:14):
I was amazed the lives of TikTok picked up the
story and they're running with it, which is amazing. And
you know, when, when when do conservatives get the same
protection as everybody else?
Speaker 1 (02:20:25):
Don't hold you, Jesus, don't hold your breath, Drew, Drew,
I love to continue where I'm sadly out the time.
We've got Jay Rattloff coming up next. But I appreciate
your sharing your saga with the listening audience and raising
these very importance of morality, ethics, and civility, because clearly
we are going down the wrong path, as evidence by
what happened to you the other day. Take care of well,
(02:20:48):
we'll talk again real soon. Keep us all posted on Facebook, brother,
because I have a feeling that this is probably not
the last time you're get to hear from this guy.
Speaker 15 (02:20:56):
Well, he might he might be, he might be hearing
from the sheriff again here said, well.
Speaker 1 (02:21:00):
You let us know take care Man eight twenty nine
fifty five krs of detalk station jay.
Speaker 4 (02:21:04):
Rilef up next fifty five krc.
Speaker 11 (02:21:07):
This is this simply money Jenner and I first winning one.
Speaker 1 (02:21:11):
The forecast two day overcast skies the media range shower
showing up forty five for the high, clearing up overnight
down to twenty eight to Mars high fifty four with
sunny skies, cloudy again over night forty two, and mostly
cloudy Saturday with the high fifty three forty eight degrees
now type of traffic from the.
Speaker 7 (02:21:27):
Ucl Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (02:21:28):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center offers innovative clinical trials
and the region's only young onset called the Rectal Cancer Program,
called five on one three five to eighty five. UCCC
crews continue to work with the wrecks. E Spend two
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East Spends seventy four near Feakman left side. There's a
(02:21:49):
wreck on twenty two above the Old three Sea Highway
and an Ohio Pike at nine mile chuck Ingram Month
fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:21:58):
Hey, thirty three fifty five krcit Talks. Sorry for the
late start. I'm always happy to have I heard mediavias.
Next for Jay Rattleff on the program. Jay, Welcome back,
my friend. Great to hear from you today.
Speaker 8 (02:22:08):
Hey, pleasant, good morning.
Speaker 1 (02:22:10):
Real quick here, I'll just I got your list, but
I want to ask you a couple of different us.
Speaker 8 (02:22:15):
Sure, why worry about the list that I spent hours
working on this? Talk about this totally different. I uh.
Speaker 1 (02:22:22):
First off, I guess the air traffic control system is
going to be getting a new system. At least it
was announced the other day. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said
that looks like they're going to have a system, a
new system. We've talked about needing a new system now
for quite some time.
Speaker 8 (02:22:40):
Yeah, it is, in fact, the three things that kind
of like the tricycle, if you will, for air traffic control,
and the challenges for the FAA is one to get
that technology in place, up and running, and get it
as updated as we possibly can, especially with the shortage
of air traffic controllers, which is the second concern for
the FAA. If we've got better technology, it will allow
(02:23:03):
the people that are doing two and three jobs to
do that job more efficiently. And then third, we've just
got the facilities of the airports that are just deteriorating
at so many places around the country that need assistance
as well as far as repairs, if it's air traffic
control centers, if it's airports with runways, terminals, those types
of things. So the challenge is for aviation moving forward
(02:23:26):
at a time when we're looking at the demand for
travel doubling in the next ten to fifteen years, is
I mean, it's daunting. I mean, it's going to be
a challenge. And that's one of the reasons I'm so
thrilled that President Trump is just not talking about it
as so many other administrations have done. He's actually saying, look,
let's get it done, Let's bring in the people they
(02:23:46):
can get it done, and let's get moving in that
direction as quickly as possible. The industry, as I've said
so many times Brian is an integral part of the
nation's economy and it deserves every bit of resources that
we can devote in that direction. And I'm just thrilled
with what I'm seeing, and hopefully.
Speaker 1 (02:24:02):
It'll continue fair enough, let's pause, bring Jay back, talk
about quite a few other topics got on the list here,
Tay thirty five, I'll be.
Speaker 4 (02:24:08):
Right back fifty five KRC. Did you know that for
adults sport?
Speaker 1 (02:24:14):
Jay Ratliffe asins Ihart media aviation expert, I've got quite
a few topics. Who over with Jay Ratliffe this morning.
It was kind of funny. We don't need to do
a dive on in because you have mentioned the Southwest
bag check policy has changed and out charge for it.
There was a Wall Street Journal article the other day
about it about what people were checking in their bags turkeys,
tire rims, kitchen sinks, among others. And so the party's
(02:24:37):
over at Southwest, so leave your kitchen sink at home.
No more free baggage. But what we do have on
the list to talk about, Jay, we.
Speaker 8 (02:24:45):
Talk We could talk about that because I can tell
you employees of Southwest are pleased with those new changes
as far as paying for check bags. For just what
you mentioned, it's going to alleviate some of the massive
amount of of check luggage is people are going to
be carrying some more things on board and all and
going to assigned seating means that that open call, open seating,
(02:25:08):
you know Black Friday boarding event you have every time
at the gate area can be alleviated as well. So
you know, people that have enjoyed free bags for like
the last fifty seven years. Yeah, it's going to come
to an end, but Southwest needs.
Speaker 1 (02:25:21):
It to better compete well, and number one on your list,
Southwest Airlines had a bit of a problem with a
passenger the other day, or rather a laptop the other day.
This is scary stuff, man.
Speaker 8 (02:25:30):
Well we've talked about these lithium batteries. When they overheat,
it's an issue. And that's one of the reasons that
flight attendants, those emergency evacuation specialists that I have the
highest regard for, are trained when a fire breaks out
on board and aircraft. And we had a Southwest flight
that had to land in Reno because they had a
laptop that overheated started to catch on fire. And it
(02:25:53):
was Southwest just a few months ago that in the
Denver Airport at the gate they had a cell phone
catch on fire and it filled the cab with smoke.
They had several people that were injured. And it's one
of the reasons that you'll always hear them tell people
at the airports to not place any of your electronic
devices inside checked luggage, right because it's going to go
in the cargo facility. We can't access that from the
(02:26:15):
aircraft in flight, and the fire suppression systems that we
have on most modern aircraft are not adequate to put
out the heat that comes off of these lithium batteries
to put out the fire. So Brian, I hope one
day we don't look back and say, why did we
ever let any of these things ever on an airplane ever?
But in the back of your mind you think about
(02:26:37):
that because so many times at the gate area, and
you know how busy things are when you travel, and
they say, hey, we'll check that bag for you and
put it, you know, underneath, and then you don't have
to mess with it in the gate area. Okay, take it,
and they'll ask you do you have an electronic devices
in here? And a lot of times, oh, no, no,
I don't have anything in there. And it's not intentional,
(02:26:58):
but they forget that they got things in there.
Speaker 1 (02:27:00):
Yeah, they got their vape pens or you know, anything.
Speaker 8 (02:27:06):
And that's one of the reasons that it's just such
a scary event because you know, we've had tragically over
the over the years, airplanes have had fires that have
erupted in the cargo area. They've not been able to
be extinguished and it causes the flight to crash with
an incredible loss of life. So that's why this is
such a serious, serious thing. And you know every so
(02:27:27):
you know, Southwest has four thousand plight today, so you
know the fact that they had this one and then
one in November or whatever, it doesn't represent you know,
an out of controled trend here, but they are certainly
moments that we can highlight, not only here but around
the world where we've had a situation where, look, we
had an airplane that caught on fire big time and
(02:27:49):
I'm trying it was air Bussan or one of the carriers,
international carriers where they're banning certain battery chargers from even
being allowed to be brought on board the plane because
of the fact that you can bring them, but you
can't plug them in because they tend to overheat and
call it some problems. So this is going to be
an ongoing discussion as we move forward, because it's becoming
(02:28:09):
more and more of a safety hazard. As we have
more and more people traveling with these things. And remember,
as more people travel and that growing number continues to
expand over the next five, ten, fifteen years, all we're
doing is increasing the likelihood of some of these things
continuing to happen.
Speaker 1 (02:28:25):
On board and aircraft, no doubt about it. Well, in
terms of a laptop catching on fire within the passenger
area where it we're supposed to be, do they have
some kind of specialized bag or something they can put
it in? Do they? Okay?
Speaker 8 (02:28:38):
Yeah, flight attentts are trained using fire suppression bags and
other means to make sure of it. And that's one
of the reasons they say, if your cell phone gets
lodged into the seat, don't go reaching in for it,
because sometimes those things tend to overheat and it's the
flight attends you need to call for to have you
be to get the assistance that you need on those
(02:28:59):
Because again, it's just Brian, these things are such a scary,
scary thing. You can't ban every every cell phone and
every electronic device from an aircraft. Obviously we can't go
that route. But I tell you, it's just it just
it's such a concern when you see the number of
events that we have and look, we've got there's YouTube
videos out there you can look at. So somebody's walking
(02:29:20):
through the airport and the backpack just suddenly erupts into
fire because of a laptop battery that overheated, that caught
the bag on fire. And you see how fast these
things burn and then you think this is on an aircraft. Yeah,
you can find space, and it really underscores just how
serious of a situation this is.
Speaker 1 (02:29:38):
That's just every time you come on, you give me
one more reading. Well, I don't feel like it's an airplay.
Speaker 8 (02:29:44):
Jay I could I could bring the good you know,
the feel good stories. But you and I talk about
everything and yeah, this is a recent thing, and no.
Speaker 1 (02:29:51):
You're raising you're you're raising important awareness because you know
it's that you really need to think when you're talking
about check bags and the fact that you talk about
it and you think about the absolute tragedy that would
happen if you're you forgot. So it's a checkpoint. Look
in the back seat when you get out of the car,
if you've got toddlers strapped in there, you know, it's
like you look and make sure you don't have any
(02:30:11):
electronic devices in your check luggage. It's sound advice, it's
pause shape safety yet for on everybody's behalf okay, it's
eight forty five. We'll come back. We'll talk about some
good news for Boeing that's a rare thing occurring. And
another viral videos shown up about people's conduct at airports.
More with Jay after these brief words, fifty five car
the talk station.
Speaker 7 (02:30:33):
Have you ask yourself?
Speaker 1 (02:30:34):
Does my wealth deserve more? Hey, it's final weather report
for the morning. Channel nine says overcast skys, maybe a
shower in there and a high forty five, clear skies
every night twenty eighth to Mars sunny skies in fifty four,
clouds return overnight down to forty two, and Saturday looking
like a cloudy day with a high of fifty three
but ry closing out of forty seven. It is time
(02:30:54):
for final traffic chuck.
Speaker 7 (02:30:56):
From the UCF Trampling Center.
Speaker 9 (02:30:58):
The University of Cincinnami Cancer Center offers innovative clinical trials
and the region's only young onset caborectal cancer program called
five one three five to eighty five u SEU see
see cruise continue to work for the wreck E's found
on the Reigen Highway. It's near Galboy traffic backing past
Swinton and in Claremont County. Cruise are working with the
wreck east found on Ohio Pipe just before you got
(02:31:21):
the nine mile chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the
talk station, Hey.
Speaker 1 (02:31:27):
Forty nine if you about KRCD talk station. Happy Friday,
e Tech Friday with Dave Otter tomorrow the meantime one
more settment here with I heard mediaviation expert Jay Ratliff.
Look at this amazing good news for Boeing that doesn't
happen stock jump ten bucks to share yesterday.
Speaker 8 (02:31:42):
Yeah, and because Japan Airlines said, oh, well, by seventeen
or so of your aircraft and the Bowing seven thirty
seven max. And I mean the list price is one
hundred and twenty some million, they're not gonna be paying that.
But it was good news for Boeing. But you know,
the other fascinating read between the line, Boeing news comes
from Southwest. Southwest is undergoing so many changes right now
(02:32:05):
that you and I have talked about. They actually mentioned,
you know, smaller airplanes might actually come in handy for
us in some smaller markets. Ooh, now they only fly Boeing.
They've only ever flown Boeing seven thirty sevens. So what
does it mean when they say maybe we should go
with some smaller airplanes. Does that mean smaller Boeing planes
(02:32:26):
or does it mean somebody else. So it's going to
be interesting to see if this may just be Southwest
throwing out some negotiating employ hats off of them for that,
or they may say, look, we've got a lot of
markets that that seven thirty seven aircraft is simply too
big of an aircraft at one hundred and fifty seeds.
We need something the seventy seventy five seat range that
might work better. So it's going to be fascinating as
(02:32:48):
we move forward because if there's a time that we
could believe that Southwest is going to deviate from what
they've been doing for the last five plus decades, it
would certainly be Now.
Speaker 1 (02:32:57):
How about that? Yeah, so all small aircraft, and it's
quite a few manufacturers of those smaller aircraft out. There's
lots of options for Southwest.
Speaker 8 (02:33:04):
You get a two options. Either you pull out of
the market because the plane's too big, or you bring
in another type of equipment that can better serve and
make you more money in that smaller market.
Speaker 1 (02:33:14):
I think they would choose the ladder.
Speaker 8 (02:33:16):
It is, but then you need different equipment because the
nice thing about the seven thirty sevens is all the
ground equipment at every airport is the same, the same,
right training for the pilots is all of that consistency
saves you money. And it was one of the brilliant
things Southwest did early on. But it's like investing. You
put all your eggs in one basket and things go wrong.
I mean you're gonna be paying for it.
Speaker 1 (02:33:36):
Doors start flying off, you know, little things like that.
We have a got another viral video video out there.
What's this one all about?
Speaker 7 (02:33:44):
Jay?
Speaker 8 (02:33:45):
Fifty four year old man flying out of dollars gets
into an argument with the gate agent and of course
you do what you do when you get into an argument,
you hit the guy, knock him out. That's what happened.
Speaker 1 (02:33:54):
It was.
Speaker 8 (02:33:54):
It was a viral video that has just taken off.
And I mean this, this guy punched the the poor
employee one time and down he went, knocked him totally out.
Down goes Frasier, hits the floor. The guy has to
go to the hospital. Well, the man who struck him,
is obviously arrested. He's going to be charged for assault,
He's going to be fined by the FAA. He may
find a civil penalties of some kind of if the
(02:34:18):
employee attempts to sue. You have a United saying you
never flying this again, which is all good things, because
he has to face his consequences and for the next
five years they'll probably be in court. Brian, My point,
as it has been so often, is that other airlines
will not share that information. United won't share it with
other carriers, meaning this person who's clearly a threat to
(02:34:41):
not only employees but other passengers could be allowed to
fly in Delta Southwest American just go right down the list.
Because airlines do not share the list of passengers they
ban who've assaulted crew members or passengers, and they've been
asked in the past to do it. And as we've
talked so many times before, these airlines say, the cost
(02:35:02):
to initiate this list and to maintain this list is
just it's just, you know, it's a cost issue, and
you can't throw them on the tear watch list because
that's a completely different animal. But don't, as a CEO
of an airline go running to a podium screaming about
how employees are your number one thing and passengers are
your number because that's a bunch of crap, because if
(02:35:23):
they were, you wouldn't let somebody like this fifty four
year old ever board one of your airplanes after they
have physically assaulted, clearly on video, an airline employee. I
just it just bothers me, and it just continues to
bother me because we've got to do a better job
of protecting those airline employees. Now.
Speaker 1 (02:35:41):
There's such a loss of civility and society these days,
and the idea that anybody would think it, under any
circumstance appropriate to punch someone whose job is merely to
help get you on and off an airplane. Anyhow, Well,
all right, well, as we always do, we'll close on
hub delays. How's it looking out there for travel today? Jay?
Speaker 8 (02:35:59):
You know'll we get a little know when Chicago and
March's discussion can come up, we can talk about that.
That's going to slow things down. And then the Detroit
I think those are going to be the two problem
children of the day. Might have late Dagus who's in Charlotte,
but I think those are going to be minor so
other than Detroit and Chicago, which I think they'll handle
those delays. Okay. Should be a pretty good data to fly.
Speaker 1 (02:36:18):
Sounds great, Jay Radlff. Always enjoy having you on the program.
Appreciate our conversations, and I'll look forward to doing it
again next Thursday.
Speaker 8 (02:36:24):
Imagine how much fun's gonna happen between now and then.
Speaker 1 (02:36:26):
I'll be ready, Amen, brother, I take care man of
a great week. It's coming to a E fifty five
fifty five cares of the detalkstation from front Lies, Frontline Advisors,
LLC dot Com and Dan Hills representing the Fairfield Police
Department having some problems their healthcare. They have no idea
what their healthcare covers or how much it's going to
cost them. Bad thing when you're struggling to find officers
(02:36:49):
to fill the holes in the ranks. Twenty five percent down.
Excuse me in Fairfield George Running and Keith Tunnefeld in
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information about how and what we're eating and how to
transform our diet. It's really important stuff these days. Hunter Oswald.
The legacy of Herbert Hoover tonight. It is Thursday, seven o'clock.
(02:37:09):
Empower Youoamerica dot org. Learn something about Herbert Hoover. A
lot of interesting stuff about him. And we heard, of
course from Anderson Township Trusty Drew Pappus about his interaction
speaking of lacking incivility with some left wing guy who's
got Drew Livin rent free in his head. Anyway, sad
to that see that kind of stuff happening. It's all there.
(02:37:30):
I fifty five caresy dot com, get your iHeart mediapp
wire there seeking stream the audio wherever you happen to be.
Joe Strecker thanks, as always, my dear friend, for producing
the show and lining up guests. We'll have guests including
Dave hat Or Tech Friday tomorrow at six point thirty.
I hope you have a wonderful day, folks. Glennbeck's coming
right up.
Speaker 12 (02:37:48):
A full rundown and the biggest headlines there's minutes away
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This report is