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April 29, 2025 143 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five o five at FTY five k r C the
talk station. Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Some say.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
A vacation.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
And that's the way the news goes.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
Indeed, a doodle, it is Tuesday. Brian Thomas, right here,
glad of you. Good to see Joe's treker WHEREY belongs
right there in the executive producer booth. And a beautiful rundown.
Thanks again to Joe Strecker, executive producer for putting together
the guests for the morning show, which included doctor Stanley
Ridgley with his book Dee I exposed about that. That's

(00:53):
perfect timings considering the actions by the cincinn Public Schools
UH refusing to sign on to try administration demand to
dismantle DEI in the Cincinni Public Schools among other public
schools nationwide. Get to that shortly here, But DEI expose
putting the spotlight on the big con of diversity, equity
and inclusion, and it is a scam. What else is

(01:15):
coming up? In power Youse? Seminar Jude Kessler Birth of
the Beatles? How about that? How the Beatles became a band?
And when I saw that on the rundown, it was like,
isn't it strange twenty twenty five. We're still talking about
the Beatles. Obviously a profoundly influential band, no question about that.

(01:36):
I cannot deny it. In I like the Beatles well enough,
I suppose. Anyway, what else is coming up in the
Five Jersey Morning Show. It is Tuesday, so we do
the inside scoop today, Brightbart News immigration expert Neil Monroe.
We'll talk about the new executive order ensuring truck drivers
speak English, as well as border security and Donald Trump's
enjoying at least he's got some I know was his

(01:57):
numbers of drop, but he is enjoying some high favorability
rate for the crackdown on the border and his deportation policies.
Something else we can get to here. And Daniel Davis
deep Die with the latest on Russia and Ukraine, and
apparently Trump's hard working, working hard with trying to get

(02:18):
Zelensky to sit down or at least agree to some
kind of peace deal with Vladimir Putin. Putin putting a strike,
a pause in the in the war for three days
or something like that. It's kind of like the Easter pause.
We'll do a ceasefire for three days. And I'm not
sure if it's in order to get the ducks in
a row. Maybe to sit down and talk a little
bit more about negotiating resolution. Looks like Crimea is now

(02:40):
in the hands of Russia permanently, at least from all
things I've been able to read. It's obviously a constant
state of flux. Just be nice to have that war over. Yeah,
Russia declared a three day ceasefire in Ukraine for the
World War two victory Day. All right, you could probably
just declare it sees fire because it's the day ending,

(03:02):
and why if you need a justification for it, may
as well be the end of World War two. Let
us see that. Also, Irani shield coming on are ask
the expert. We'll talk about that. Figure out why that's
a great product. If you feel like Colin, feel free
to do so. Five and thirty seven four nine fifty
five hundred eight hundred eight two three talk pound five
fifty on AT and T Funds, speaking of doctor Stanley Riginally,

(03:24):
this book de I exposed since our public schools will
not sign a letter from the Trump administration asking school
districts to eliminate diversity, equity inclusion policy initiatives and k
through twelve schools, just so you know where your kids
are going and what they're up to. So apparently, the
recently Department of Education sent letters to education organizations local

(03:46):
districts to get them to certify that they will comply
with the Trump administration's interpretations of civil rights law, and
not complying could cost the district's federal funding. There's your threat. Remember,
for all those who advocate federal funding as a means
of altering state behavior, here you go, new times, new administration.

(04:07):
Federal dollars come with strings attached. I don't like it,
You don't like it. Just depends on whose ox is
getting gored. Well, how about not attaching strings to federal
dollars When it comes back to the states, who's center
to the federal government in the first place? Anyway, According
to the Department of Oppressed Release, federal financial assistance is

(04:28):
a privilege, not right. When state education commissioners accept federal funds,
they agree to abide by federal anti discrimination requirements. Right
and as far as since I public schools are concerned.
According to Policy Matters Ohio, it would represent a twenty
two percent funding loss from its budget. Can they deal

(04:50):
without that money?

Speaker 5 (04:57):
Now.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Late last week, apparently three cases federal judges paused the
administration's effort to cut off money from public schools with
DEI programs. Talking with WCPO reporting on this one, since
a Public School said in a statement, CPS has not
signed the Reminder of Legal Obligations letter, which is initial
cap and all that that's what the letter is called,

(05:18):
issued by the US Department of Education on April third.
Since a public Schools is well aware of its legal
obligations under Title six of the Civil Rights Act in
nineteen sixty four and the constitution and laws of the
United States and state of Ohio. So since our public
schools follows the law and will continue to follow the law.
That a statement from board President Kareem Moffatt, who went
on to say the district's policies, programs, and activities do

(05:41):
not discriminate against students on the basis of race or
any other protective characteristics. CPS did not sign the letter
because the district policies and programs are supportive and welcoming
to all students. Okay, you don't discriminate, and I guess

(06:02):
the trouble administration and its interpretation of the Title six
if you're in if you have DEI programs, then you
are discriminating. I think that's that whole merit versus equity
kind of argument. Have you demonstrated merit? Are you able
to pass the subject matter? Are you able to advance
to the next grade. Well, a lot of school districts
don't give a rip about that, and they will take

(06:24):
in factors such as race and you know, socioeconomic disparities
in order to advance students and be on the grounds
that well, it's unfair to hold them back. I guess
I don't know why else you would advance a child
who hasn't learned the subject matter or can't demonstrate competence
in any particular area of the subject matter, that you
would allow them to move forward to the next grade

(06:46):
or give them a passing grade when they can't pass
the test. Someone give me an argument as to why
that's appropriate. I mean, the further you move along under
that system, the further you fall behind. It's like, you
gotta go take algebra one before you can go take

(07:06):
algebra two. Why Because algebra two deals with the continuation
of the building blocks of the subject matter you learned
in algebra one. I mean, if I miss something on this,
we live in a crazy world, but any of that.

(07:29):
One CPS parent, Katie Elliott, was speaking with WCPO about this,
and I thought this was a rather unusual statement. She said,
I think the letter apparently is out of touch. I
think it's out of touch. She has two children who
attend Pleasant Risk Montissori. She said, she's aware of the
financial risk of district my face, but hope CPS stands

(07:50):
by its decision. So it makes me sad that the
leaders of our nation think that that's the solution. If
you're gonna be moan in the performance of public schools
and then threaten to take away their funding, a lot
of institutions that I thought wouldn't have caved have been caving. No,
it's not about the performance of the public schools. It's
what they're teaching in the public schools and DEI policies

(08:13):
and initiatives. I guess I definitely have a relationship to
the performance of public schools. But I think another fundamental
underlying layer on all this is that these schools are
spending too much time dealing with social justice and activism
versus you know, spending time teaching core subject matters my
perception anyway. Anyway, she said she hopes people with deep

(08:33):
enough pockets can step in to fill the gap from
federal funding. Joe, are you gonna make a donation and
contribution to funded since a public schools if they lose
federal funding? Never? I don't know how deep Joe's pockets are,
but I can see that being the reaction from the
vast majority of folks. Are you kidding me? Have you
seen my property tax bill? Hell? Already fund enough money

(08:58):
enough of the school districts of expenditures and needs. I'm
not going to write an additional check to cover the
gap from their refusal to sign on to this administration
strings attached obligation. Well, go ahead and make a stand.
May come with significant consequences anyway. Oh and by the way, Kentucky, sorry,

(09:26):
I know you asked for an extension on the real
ID deadline, but they're not going to give it to you.
The Trump administration said there will need be no real
ID exceptions. Now need a real ID. It's May seventh
is the deadline to get one. Are you not going
to be able to fly unless you have a passport
or a military ID? So beginning May seventh, passengers will
need real IDEA or another acceptable form of identification according

(09:49):
to the TSA again, passport military idea or real ID.
Transportation Secretary Administration TSA spoke this person said, non compliant
passengers may expect wait times or additional measures at airports.
If you're an illegal alien without a real IDEA. The
only way you'll be able to permit the flies if
you're self deporting. So they made an exception for illegal

(10:11):
immigrants in our country so they can get on a
plane and go back home. Kentucky lawmakers and Kentucky's Transportation
Committee Chair Jimmy Hignan and twenty seven other Senate leaders
sent I led at Homeland Security Secretary of Christy Nome
asking for an extension because they have concerns among Kentuckians
who are still unable to access drivers licensing services due

(10:36):
to limited appointment availability and long lines for walkins. Now,
real ID got implemented by the Bush administration, and it's
been kicked down the road quite a few times. But
isn't this I don't want to be critical with my
friends in the Commonwealth, but aren't they asking for an
extension Because Kentucky's Bureau motor vehicles. I guess which processes

(11:04):
these licenses aren't operating efficients efficiently. Kentuckians who are still
unable to access drivers licensing services due to limited appointment
availability and long lines for walkings. That would be at
the Bureau motor Vehicles, which are run by the state.

(11:24):
So maybe you need to oil up the machine at
the bureaum Motor Vehicles or DMV or whatever they call
it in Kentucky. Anyway, one of the Higden that's going
back to his day and the simple requests to protect
Kentuckians from bureaucratic burdens. Rural residents, seniors and families still
have hurdles in front of them, and a lot of

(11:45):
the cases may not be aware of their options. Said,
only about forty percent of our residents have a real ID,
But I would like more time to keep Kentuckians understand
that they may not need a real ID. Kentucky has
made a good faith effort, but we just aren't there yet. Well, no,
says the Trump administration. So I don't get the issue.

(12:07):
I know a lot of people don't like the real
ID generally and conceptually speaking, but it is long on
the books. They've already told you the deadline was coming.
You had like years to prepare for the deadline and
get the information out to your citizens and act responsibly
as an elected official and say, hey, like it or not.
If you plan on flying, you're gonna need one of

(12:27):
these things. So it's in play. Five seventeen fifty five
krs to the talk station five one, three, seven, four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to
three talk pound five fifty on eight and t funds.
But for to give me a coll you got something
on your mind, particular subject matter.

Speaker 6 (12:42):
You know.

Speaker 1 (12:42):
I love hearing from you. I'll be right back after
these brief words.

Speaker 7 (12:44):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 8 (12:49):
Are you.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Here?

Speaker 1 (12:52):
Is your ten and nine first warning weather forecasts. We've
got some showers and storms likely one pm to five pm.
I have a high eighty today, apparently overnight there'll be
a lull in precipitation. Had partly cloudy Skuy's and are
dropped at fifty nine. Mostly cloudy tomorrow, best chance to
showers of the storm after six pm. Seventy four overnight

(13:12):
scattered storms sixty two for the low, and then it'll
stay warm on Thursday, highest seventy nine quote, storms still
lurking and thunderstorms in them hours seventy one degrees right
now if you bought kearseity talk station. It's amazing how
the weather forecast changes by the minute, right, Joe, yesterday,
We're gonna have rain NonStop from six pm today through

(13:35):
the rest of the week. I know your opinion on weathers.
It's the safest mind. Yeah, not to this nine. I
don't think anybody ever has it down one hundred percent. Ever,
it's like reading tea leaves. Just don't put your you

(13:57):
know this. You know they say online gambling for the weather,
you like, lay odds on whether the forecasters will get
it right, you know, put it. Make it as a
component of sports betting, you know, like weather betting the
house will win five one, three, seven, eight two three.

Speaker 5 (14:16):
Talk.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
Let's see what Mississippi James is got going on today.
Welcome back to Mississippi James. It's always good to hear
from you.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
Hey, good morning, doctor Brian. Now I have a new prologue,
and I start off with I come in peace. I
love everybody, and there's nothing you can do about it.
I like that, and I took that from two other
local guys here. I just put it together but made
it mine, okay, and one of them approve of it.

(14:44):
The other one I hadn't talked to him, So I'm
sort of like, what do you call it when you
steal somebody else language?

Speaker 1 (14:50):
Yeah, appropriation? No, well you know, naturally, No, it's a
I think you're you're, you're, you're. It's sort of a
salute when you you're giving them. You're using their language,
but you're using it favorably, which is a compliment to them.
It reminds me that David will Rogers. I never met
a man I didn't like, and I always interpreted that.

(15:10):
It's not like he liked every single person he met.
But if you're meeting someone for the first time, you
should go in with exactly what you said. I never
met a man I didn't like. I didn't walk up
to someone and immediately say I don't like you before
you get a chance to meet him. Once you meet him,
then you can make an informed determination of whether you
like him or not.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
There you go, Yeah, you were speaking on the Yeah, okay,
and you said it was a scam. Now I tell
you what, if you take it back in compartment lize
and take a snap snapshot of it why it was created.
It was beneficial when it was created in a small

(15:52):
segment to repair a hip some of the damage that
was done. But when it becomes successful and more people
jump on that bandwagon and it's like, well okay, we
need some of this. Well yeah, you get large loses
his personal meanings and it just get out there as

(16:13):
an economic gain. So it's like sucking off and I'm using, Hey,
that's for his cab to come there. But if a
goat come there and all other kind of animals come
there and.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Suck off, well, just hold on Mississippi, James, because you
just got a dump button from Joe. I was getting
ready to hit it myself. You can't use that word
because of the FCC the T word that you use,
So you lost about a minute and a half of
your point in commentary that you're making. So just a
warning to my listeners and to you, James. I know

(16:50):
you don't know what the rules are, but you got
to really mind your p's and q's when you're using
a different you're using your choices of words. Okay, okay, okay,
I got you.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
Yeah, cannot say bris well, yes, yes, that's what you.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
Yeah, you made the I think people get the point
you were making, so we don't need to dwell out
at this point.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
James, Okay, well that's just analysis of animal king, all right.

Speaker 6 (17:20):
I guess you know a certain thing.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
Well, I suppose the reason I may be boiled it
down to scam is that I think most people are
offended by the whole idea of adversity equity inclusion because
quite often it boils down to hiring someone or putting
someone in a position who is not the best candidate
for it. They're a whole room full of people, and
there's someone that's got a resume a mile long. They're articulate,
they're well spoken, they're knowledgeable about whatever subject matter they're

(17:44):
being hired for. They're the best candidate. Black, white, Asian,
doesn't matter. That's the person you're supposed to hire because
they're the best qualified for the job. When DEI kicks in,
it's like, no, no, no, no, there's not enough of
this particular color person or this particular type of person.
I don't see any LGBTQ members in the mix of
people working for the company you need to hire that

(18:06):
person because they fill in a check box for a
certain category. The DEI thinks that we need mixed into
the situation, whether it's teachers or corporate positions or whatever.
That is getting rid of the concept of merit in
favor of well, something that many perceive to be unfair

(18:26):
and in some cases racist. You're hiring someone because of
the color of their skin rather than their merit, their ability,
their competence for the particular position. That's the point about DEI,
and I think that's why a lot of people rejected,
and a lot of people within the you know, the
black community, I mean, considering it's quite often we're talking
about minorities here. They too, people who have earned their

(18:46):
positions out of merit are worried that someone is going
to look at them and say, well, you're a diversity
higher and I've heard that you know you're a diversity
higher that what that is saying is you don't deserve
the job, You aren't the best candidate for it. You
got it because of the color of your skin, which
is bad for everybody.

Speaker 3 (19:04):
And that's just good on that side of the argument.
But on the other side, we talk about nepotism.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Oh, that's not good. Yeah, I agree with you. If
you're hiring someone because you know you're friends with the
owner or are you're the son or daughter or relation,
and you got the job merely because of that connection,
not because of competence, then I would agree that falls
into the exact same argument. Yes, that's wrong. Now if

(19:33):
the person is the best possible person for the job,
like if you grew up, if you're the son of
the owner of the company, and you've worked at that
company your entire life, your knowledgeable skill and you can
manage it, and you're in a good position to be
the person in charge, then it's not a nepotism Higer,
It's a competence hire. You've demonstrated merit and ability. So

(19:54):
not all cases where you have a relationship hire is
it nepotism. But in cases of true nepotism, are they're
only being hired because of the connection with the hiring person,
then you're right, same thing. That's why I am you
know why. That's where my position on DEI comes from,
but falls into the same category, James, I really believe that,

(20:14):
and watch your language, my friend, You're always welcome to
call the morning show. I like your position at the outset.
Take care. It's five twenty eight fifty five care see
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You'll find them at plumbtight dot com. Uh channel line
for forecasts. Let's see here storms develop late morning hours

(22:05):
for central Indiana, but that's gonna make its way over here.
Showers and storms are likely today in the area between
one and five pm GUS up to thirty miles prior
with the wind as well high of eighty overnight low
of fifty nine. There'll be a lull in the precipitation
mostly Totty's guys tomorrow at that best chance of showers
and storms after six pm seventy four for the high
overnight low of sixty two was scattered storms and staying

(22:26):
warm on Thursday, thunderstorms in the evening hours. High of
seventy nine right now seventy one degrees above. Krc DE
Talk Stations five thirty two coming up with a five
thirty three fifth about CARCD Talk Stations, Local Story five
and three, seven four nine, fifty eight two three Talk
and of course fifty five KARCA dot com Vieting get

(22:47):
a chance to listen live to Christopher smitheman described by
my friend Jeffrey as red hot.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
No.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
I said he was white hot yesterday. He was all
agitated accountability and responsibility. So I got the podcast at
you five caresee dot com Monday Monday and also Dustin
Dunbar's book You're Doing Great and other lies. Alcohol told
me so recovery expert he is, having seen it, been
there and done that. Kind of a nice guy too.

(23:13):
I enjoyed our conversation. Coring Township mom said she is
scared after somebody fired bullets that just hit under her
bedroom window while she was sleeping there with her nine
year old daughter. Police responded to shots fired in the
area of Stadium Drive and Deshler Drive around eleven thirty
pm on Sunday. According to the incident report, officers recovered
shellcasing from the area and one home was struck by gunfire.

(23:35):
Vehicle at a neighboring residence also struck. Spoke from for
the township Helen Tracy Nora and speaking with Fox nineteen,
said we did have a shooting around the time last night.
There were no injuries. It's an active investigation, so it's
too soon to tell if the house was targeted. Kashia
Phillips that she called nine one one when they woke
up to the gunshots in and around their home. A

(23:56):
bullet came through my front door and hit my living
room wall. She said. A bullet had just below my
bedroom window where my child and I were sleeping. Jeez,
louiez idiots with guns and maybe an indication that hemlon.
Kuty Prosecutor Countie Pillage is I was going to take
a hardball approach with crime. Fifteen year old boy charged

(24:18):
with murdering a twenty five year old man in Coryville
could face charges as an adult. Hemion County Prosecuter County Pillage.
Talking with WCPOS, she said, so it starts with my
office requesting the bind over and then the judge having
a brief hearing and then having an investigation to a
lot of different aspects of the child's record as well
as their behavior. Could take about forty five days to

(24:38):
go through the process. Teen facing charges in adult court,
something the family of Kylie Merrick called for back in
April thirteenth. Merk's sister Katie, even though this kid is
fifteen years old, he needs to be charged an adult.
You know why he was sitting outside a liquor store
as an adult. He had a gun as an adult,
So why isn't he charge as an adult? I agree, Lee,

(25:02):
Prosecutor Hamlin County, speaking tough WCPOS that the case meets
the criteria for potentially charging the suspect as an adult.
Billige explained the charges against the teenager where one of
the criteria for her office requests of the judge. Court
documents show the charges from April twelfth shooting against the
team include murder and aggravated murder, which Pillage described as
heinous crimes. Well, yeah, that's an easy statement. Get your

(25:27):
popcorn out, dear, just as well until they get in
the court room. Oh you think she's not gonna stick
with that this path, Joe, you think he's gonna go
light Ah, the judge, Yeah, there is the need for
the judge in the situation, and you may very well
be right for the front of judge Silberstein or Silverstein.
Probably let the kid ride out. Joe thinks. Jo's betting

(25:51):
on one hundred dollars fine and a slap on her wrist.
It is five point thirty six fifty five r SE
DE talk station. Colin Electric getting tuck to the end
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Speaker 7 (26:49):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
Jen and I says the following about the weather. Showers
and storms are likely between one and five pm today,
windy conditions, high of eighty apparently nothing going on overnight,
all lull and as precipitation drop it at fifty nine tomorrow,
mostly cloudy skies. Best chance of rain after six pm
seventy four for the high sixty two overnight with scattered
short storms and warm storms are still lurking about on Thursday.

(27:18):
High at seventy nine Right now seventy one. Time for
first traffic from.

Speaker 5 (27:22):
The U see Hout Tramphics Center.

Speaker 9 (27:24):
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Clean slate down the highways to start off your Tuesday morning.
No accidents to deal with, and I'm not seeing any
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(27:46):
downtown Chuck Ingraman fifty five KO SA the talk station.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
By forty one. I think about KARCD talk stations DAK stupid,
But do have a caller online, so we'll start there.
Five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred e two three talk Bobby, Welcome back to the program.
A happy Tuesday to you.

Speaker 10 (28:05):
Good morning to you, my friend, Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
It's on your mind today, Bobby, Well, I'll.

Speaker 10 (28:10):
Tell you what. Since night school systems, I guess they
just want to give up about fifty two million dollars
because they want to stick with their DEI programs.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
Yeah, they claim they comply with the law, but they
won't sign on to the acknowledgment that they are not
incorporating DEI into their curriculum. So I think that speaks
volumes right there.

Speaker 10 (28:32):
Well, maybe they think their opinion is worth about fifty
two million dollars. I don't know myself, but.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Well, the one thing about it, I say, if Trump
ultimately succeeds in trying to do or accomplishing this in
other words, you'd have your funding denied if you refuse
to remove the EI and he prevails in courts in
spite of the legal obstacles that are put in his way,
then I thinking that this since a published will probably

(29:00):
change their mind.

Speaker 10 (29:03):
I think they should, you know, like on the DEI.
All they got to do to correct that problem is
one thing, just two words and women we selected service,
Selected service. All they do is gather information and just
add women to it. Well on their information and everything

(29:25):
for people.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
I'm not sure how selective service comes into what since
a public schools has in its curriculum by way of DEI.

Speaker 10 (29:33):
Well, it's a nice jab with them. Let them mose
fifty two million dollars in add and add women to
the selected service. You know they need to be included too,
don't you think I would agree completely?

Speaker 1 (29:45):
Women are perfectly capable of serving a military capacity, not
all military capacity law enforcement. Yeah, I know, I'm not
going to argue against that. I agree with you completely. Yeah,
matter of fact, I think it's it's insulting that women
are not included in this lector service sign up requirement.
So there you go. Didn't call looking for an argument today,
did you Bobby, No, sure, take care of yourself, my

(30:08):
friend appreciated over to the stack of stupid if unless
you want to call a sham. Doctor charged with killing
a mother of two described to cops how his patients
started slurring your words and lost consciousness following a botched
butt implant removal procedure at his queen's apartment. A's this

(30:29):
tradition prompting into panic. How many stories like this have
we had over the years, Joe Dozens. Yeah, if you
haven't plastic surgery've done in an apartment or a motel
six is the case, maybe you're going to potentially die.
Philip Oyo's for Runda thirty seven, moments from boarding a
flight to Florida a JFKA Airport when police grabbed him

(30:50):
March twenty, eight hours after Maria Pana Loza was left
brain dead by the illegal nineteen hundred dollars at his
Astoria living room, allegedly told cops when he was hauled
back to the precinct for questioning, I injected her in
the bottom, not his word, I substituted. After I injected her,

(31:13):
I knew you were going there, Joe. She started to
speak funny, then she stopped speaking, and then she tensed up.
He allegedly insisted well, noting Slorge's speech is normal during
this type of anesthesia, even though after she tightened up,
she didn't respond close quote. She was rusted to the
hospital by paramedics and Forn then hastily cleaned up the

(31:37):
room and made a bee line for the airport, booking
a flight to Florida, all the way to Columbia so
he could evade arrest in prosecution because he claimed he
was scared that a statement from Queen's assistant attorney Gregory
Lassak Junior in court. Outside the courtroom, mother of the
deceased blasted her the accused quack as an assassin, calling

(32:00):
him a danger to society. Yeah, I'm no no problem
with that conclusion either. Court to prosecutors, Feranda admitted to
having done the type of procedure that led to this
woman's death hundreds of times, telling cops word of mouth
has given me my business. I've been practicing in that
apartment for a few months, he said, I'm not a

(32:20):
licensed doctor here. I understand that I'm not allowed to
practice medicine, Prosecutors say. Penalosa went to Foreranda to have
implants removed as well, and was led into his living
room of the apartment, described as a makeshift operating room,
where she was hooked up to an ivy of light
a Kane. That is when she began to slur her

(32:41):
speech and her body began to tense up and eventually
went into cardiac arrest. Don't do that by forty sixty
five CARCD talk station and do call Zimmer Heating and
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the website easy to schedule appointment. Add to go Zimmer
dot com. Fifty five car the talk station not general

(33:48):
I says today we get some showers and storms likely
between one and five pm. Windy conditions with gusty winds
eighty for the high overnight little fifty nine with a
lull in the rain. Got mostly body day tomorrow with
a chance of storms after six pm seventy four of
the high overnight low of sixty two, with more scattered
storms and a warm day on Thursday going up to
seventy nine degree thunderstorms in the PM hours seventy one

(34:11):
Right now traffic.

Speaker 9 (34:12):
Time from the UCL Tramfic Center U see health wait
Ball Center offers comprehensible b cdcar in advanced search of
coal expertise called five P one three nine three nine
two two sixty three.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three.

Speaker 9 (34:27):
Highways are doing just fine this morning, no wrecks to
deal with and right now, nothing close to a delay.

Speaker 5 (34:34):
Westbound two seventy five.

Speaker 9 (34:35):
Undred ten minutes between Milford and Montgomery East found wide
open pants Cole rain over the seven forty seven chuck
Ingram on fifty five KRC.

Speaker 5 (34:45):
He talks station.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
By thirty Happy Tuesday, right, I I was returning to
the stack of stupid. Let's go to Magnolia, Texas for
this one and maintenance man accused of showing an elderly
woman elude video before propositioning her. Eighty one year old
Dorothy Carlton described it as taken aback when her apartment

(35:10):
maintenance man, a man described as a twenty five year
old guy named Phinis Medford, handed her his cell phone.
Carlin speaking with local Carlton speaking with local news. I'm dense,
I guess, but I never expected anything. So he hands
me his phone and I froze, she told the station.
Then he slides back and said, don't you want to

(35:31):
touch it? And I said no, And this time I'm frozen.
Shocked by the encounter, she expelled the man from her
apartment in contact with the police. Magnolia Police detectives charged him
with obscene display or distribution, described as a Class C misdemeanor.
Medford returned to the apartment complex the following day despite
the charge. Another elder resident report of the similar experience

(35:53):
with Medford months earlier. Residents and speaking with the news said,
he said, I don't want to be awkward, but I
just want you to know that I'm into older women
and you're very sexy, and if you're interested, let me
know what. Wow. Boone County, Kentucky man facing charges after

(36:18):
the father of a thirteen year old girl found the
man naked on the floor of her bedroom. Corn of
Boone County Sheriff' spokesperson twenty year old Parker Kramer Louisville
charged with burglary Ravensdomy. According to Major Philip Bridgo. He said,
Kramer told detectives that he drove from Louiville to meet
the victim at her home. Girl's father told deputies he
woke up when he heard noises coming from the daughter's bedroom,

(36:40):
walked into the room and found the man lying naked
on the floor. Girl's father told the suspect he was
calling police and then went downstairs and got a handgun.
That sounds like something I do. Ridgards Major Ridgells said
The suspect ran out the front door, and the girl's
father followed him, firing three shots into the ground. Deputy
found a vehicle park on the sidewalk nearbyy with nobody inside.

(37:02):
Victims father positively identified the suspect after he was shown
a picture from a driver's license which was attached to
the vehicle's registration. After searching the grounds from the air,
suspect was located by a drone near Mount Zion Road
in I seventy five came. He's being held in Boone
County Jail where he's being held probably held down by
his fellow inmates, but also on a two hundred and

(37:23):
fifty thousand dollars cash bond.

Speaker 4 (37:25):
Heeri is the biggest douche of the univer Yeah, in
all the galaxies, there's no bigger douche than you. You've
reached the top, the pinnacle of douche dom. Good going, douce,
your dreams have come true.

Speaker 1 (37:47):
An award that can be shared by this Canton, Ohio
woman who was arrested for allegedly slamming an eleven year
old's head into a slide and then telling the girl's
mother that she hoped the girl died. What happened? Can't
Police Department said officers responded to the assault call. Friday
Dessante Scott, twenty years old, detained on the scene while

(38:07):
she was in an argument with the mother. Paige DeShong Seng,
said Scott got into a fight with her eleven year
old childhood a park and repeatedly slammed her head off
the metal portion of a slide. At least say they
have video of the assault. While Scott was being arrested,
she told Deshung that she hoped the eleven year old

(38:27):
would die. The Sung then ran at Scott. Accord to
the rest report, DeShawn arrested in charge of disorderly conduct
and obstructing official business. Scott charged with assault and disorderly conduct.
The Evolution all right, this probably one of those stories

(38:47):
where my wife will probably want to turn the radio off,
although I just can't believe what I'm reading, so why
not go ahead and read it. We have a man
accused of sexually violating a dead body on a Lower
Manhattan subway train. Forty four year old Felix Rojas charged

(39:09):
with rate nearly three weeks after he allegedly assaulted the
body of the dead man on an R train near
the Whitehall Street station. According to the York Police Department,
victim identified as thirty seven year old George or Jorge Gonzalez,
who mysteriously died on the train and was then allegedly
targeted by this Rojas pervert. Rojas turned himself into police. Apparently,

(39:32):
Gonzalez had borded the subway train about eight pm April eighth,
before the suspect got on three hours later. The accused
necrophiliac identitally allegedly performed the sickening act on the dead
man shortly before midnight. New York Police put out an
image of the suspect on the train before and the
rest was made. Not immediately clear what led to Gonzalez's death,

(39:52):
although his estranged wife said he dealt with alcoholism and cirrhosis. Yeah,
sick people out there in the world, folks, no question
about it. Five fifty six to fifty five KRCD talk station.
Plenty to talk about in the seven o'clock hour, including
peak peak heads, f Pete heads, av interesting crackdown on obesity.

(40:15):
When you hear the statistics on the condition of America's military,
I think you'll probably be a bit concern, as was I.
But there's a whole lot more going on the six
o'clock hour, plus I'd love to hear from you, so
feel free to call. Be right back, covering Trump's first
one hundred days.

Speaker 6 (40:32):
Every day America's deadline is over.

Speaker 1 (40:36):
Fifty five krc the talk station. Hey, it's six oh five,
Come onbout six or six or fifty about KRCD Talk
Station Fine Times. Wishing everyone a happy Tuesday and an
invitation to stick around all morning here on the morning show.
Doctor Stanley originally joins a program in one hour to
talk about his book DEI Exposed. Then that'll be followed

(40:56):
by Jude Kessler with how are You? Seminar on the
Birth of Theles seven point thirty with Jude Kessler, and
Inside Scoop with Bright Bar News. It is Tuesday. Would
do that every Tuesday eighty five. Today, immigration expert Neil
Monroe will talk about the new executive order ensuring truck
drivers speak English, as well as border security, and it's
just looking at the statistics. I don't care where you

(41:18):
are in border security, but it's like Donald Trump just
flipped a switch and things magically changed. It was some
border official that worked under six different presidential administrations and
said this was this was so intentional, considering that even
you know, Barack Obama took a lot of steps and
efforts to eat deport folks as well as keep the

(41:40):
border somewhat measurably secure. Joe Biden, I guess in a
moment of sleepiness, someone using the executive Panda in his
absence making a decision to open the borders, not enforced
border security. So definitely an intentional act when you had,
you know, a couple of quarter of a million people
coming in over a month, and then it's trickled down

(42:01):
to I think maybe you're looking at like ten thousand
a month now. So obviously Trump's efforts on the border
have just been absolutely amazing, and you didn't need a
congressional action on that. Of course, you can't wait around
for Congress to pretty much do anything. Inside Scoop of
Bright Barton is at eight oh five Daniel Davis Deep Dive.
We'll get the latest from retired Lieutenant Colonel Davis on
Russia Ukraine situation, Will there ever be peace? And Rhino

(42:25):
Shield's going to join the program at the end for
ask the expert. So there's your run down today, and
you feel free to call five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
talker pound five fifty on AT and T phones and
a reminder fifty five cars dot com to get your
iHeart media app so you can listen to the podcast,
the content, the show wherever you happen to be, and
also get a copy of books. Dustin Dunbar joined the

(42:47):
program yesterday his book You're Doing Great and Otherwise Alcohol
Told Me, which allows me to pivot. It was obviously
about the problems in the toxicity of alcoholics, connection with
cancer and real nice and the book actually is light,
it's not heavy reading. So maybe offering alternative solution to

(43:07):
something like AA I think is his idea. But it's
his done personal story and what he did overcome challenges
of alcohol addiction. Pivoting over to the health of Americans
generally and specifically in our military. This is so disturbing,
and you know, I'm glad that RK juniors out there
raising awareness about public health because maybe more people will

(43:31):
start paying attention. We are a nation of obese people,
and I don't know that it's necessarily just because we're
all eating too much. There's got to be some something
else nefarious going on here. But as far as military
service is concerned, you would think to be lean, mean
fighting machines now, But it turns out more than two
thirds of look like John Candy from stripes. It's reported

(43:55):
more than two thirds of reserve and Guard troops are overweight,
which is just as a potential threat to the readiness
and their ability to deploy at a moment's notice. This
a report by American Security Project. Sixty eight percent of
the nation's reserve forces are overweight, according to the researcher's estimate.
In the report, they say, with the diminished size of

(44:18):
active duty force and increased demands on National Guard and reserves,
service members separate separated due to obesity and its comorbidities,
are vital personnel the armed forces cannot afford to lose.
Study calls for a new policy to ensure troops health
and better access to obesity related healthcare. Defense Secretary Pete

(44:40):
Hegzeth in an ex post, completely unacceptable. This is what
happens when standards are ignored. All caps on that word,
and this is what we are changing. Real fitness and
wage standards are here, we will be fit and not fat.
Close quote. Now, this isn't the first time this American

(45:04):
Security Project has done an analysis. This apparently report from
October twenty twenty three found the two thirds of active
duty service members fell into the overweight to obese category.
If you're just looking at BMI, and some people challenge
BMI because it doesn't take into account muscle mass, but
it certainly is an indicator of a problem. The report

(45:26):
warned that these service members experience heightened risk for a
wide variety of serious health conditions such as type two diabetes,
cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease, osteoarthritis, which may lead to
life threatening health events such as stroke and heart failure. Wow. Now,
for his part, Pete Hegsett launched a review of grooming

(45:48):
and physical fitness standards last month after expressing a lot
of concerns that fitness standards have eroded, also questioning whether
mismatched standards for men and women are affecting readiness. Acting
under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to look
at existing standards set by the military departments pertaining to
physical fitness, body composition, and grooming, which includes, but is

(46:10):
not limited to beards. He's an old school guy, I guess.
He wrote in his book War on Warriors when we
were when I was in the army, we kicked out
good soldiers for having naked women tattooed on their arms.
And today we're relaxing the standards on shaving, dreadlocks, man buns,
and straight up obesity. Well, I guess, and you could
say you saw this one coming. Service branches began making

(46:35):
accommodation for recruits who did not meet physical fitness standards
in recent years as a way to address the recruiting crisis.
So we can't get people to sign up for the
American military. There are very few people out there in
the world, young people who otherwise might have joined the
military because they don't meet our recruiting standards in so
far as their weight is concerned and their ability to
the ability to their physical fitness ability. So we're just

(46:58):
gonna get rid of the you know, standards and allow
people who otherwise wouldn't qualify for military service to join
the service. Fortunately, though under the trub administration, the recruiting crisis,
I don't know. I can't say it's over but from
by all accounts and from everything I've read, a lot
more young people are signing up for American military service.

(47:19):
So I don't know. It just really troubling to me.
You known, know this all happened over my lifetime and
you last, I mean the thirty forty years. You know,
I was the fat kid in the neighborhood. You know,
I was ten Ton Thomas, but I was skinny by

(47:40):
today's standards of what is fat and what's not. Yeah,
you talk about bullying. I got bullied all the time
by the neighborhood kids. But you know, I will say
something along those lines that bullying was a motivational tool
for me to ultimately lose the weight. And it's amazing
what puberty coupled with being on the Cincinnati Marlins can
do to turn one around from a physical fitness standpoint.

(48:03):
So if you're looking for a solution to perhaps an
overweight child, abam joined the Marlins or some comparable swimming
outfit like that. During my Marlins days, I could literally
eat anything. I've burned through five thousand collaries a day
as much as I used to swim back then, and

(48:25):
managed to lose all the weight ID normal size and
along lines of Health Pepsi COO, they've agreed to remove
all of artificial agreements from their food items by twenty
twenty five, AH heating to call it a band artificial
agreements by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy,
Junior Ramon La Guarta, Pepsi COO Chair and chief executive

(48:48):
officers said in a recent conference called that the company
will reduce artificial ingredients and has already begun doing so well.
We've been leading the transformation of the industry now for
a long time on sodium reduction, sugar ducts, and better fats.
Sixty percent plus of our portfolio today doesn't have any
artificial colors. He also said the company is undergoing that transition.

(49:11):
He cited specifically Lays and Tostitos, which quote will be
out of artificial colors by the end of this year.
Why do you think it takes them so long? Can't
you just slip a switch and stop adding artificial colors. No,
we're going to use up the stock of artificial colors
who've already bought before we turn them off. So healthing

(49:31):
Human Service Secretary in the news release recently establishing a
national standard and timeline for the food industry to transition
from petrochemical based dyes to natural alternatives the way I
guess they do it in Europe, initiating the process to
revoke authorization for two synthetic food coloring citrus red number

(49:52):
two and orange be within the coming months, and working
with industries to eliminate six remaining synthetic dyes and who
knew they were a petrochemical based fdn C Green number three,
fd and C Red number forty, FDNC Yellow number five
and six, and fdn C Blue number one and two.

(50:14):
By the end of the year, they'll be in it
from the food supply, which I suppose is a good thing.
And there's a certified nutrition that's incited in the article
that by Fox News. Some author named Liana Werner Gray.
She wrote a book called Earth Diet, and she just

(50:35):
documented her experience. She because I personally eliminated ar official
dies like a red, forty, yellow five, yellow six, blue
one and others from my diet over sixteen years ago
when I started the Earth Diet, living a natural lifestyle,
and she's once I removed these dies and switched to natural,
whole food based alternatives. The symptoms she had went away
symptoms including major moon swings, anxieties, skin breakouts, energy crashes,

(50:58):
and strong impulsive urges to eat processed foods. And I'll
tell you from my own experience getting rid of sugar,
I don't have really any desire for it anymore. You
got to go through that withdraw period, and I'm honest
with you. You know, like if you go on that
keto diet, they called it keto flu. And I've mentioned
this before and it's well documented. Hell yeah, it's a thing.

(51:21):
It's like going through a heroin withdraw is the only
analogy I can draw, even though I've never been on
hooked on heroin or whatever tried it. But you know
what people go through, you know, they shake and they sweat,
and you've seen movies about it and everything like that.
It wasn't nearly that bad, but you, oh, you felt miserable,
and yeah, you head straight for the carb cabinet. You
have one of those in your kitchen, the carb cabinet.

(51:42):
That's where your chips are, your p tet, pretzels and
the bread and all that. Man, when I cut those
out of my diet, I found myself just unconsciously walking
over there as a matter of routine. It was like
part of my you know, every hour on the hour
kind of thing. Walk over there, I'll just have a
couple of chips. Open the back, get a couple of chips,
you put the bag back in. An hour later, you're

(52:02):
back at the Carbre cabinet. So, you know, just been
my experience. But getting it out of my diet has
just been an outstanding thing for me. And I wreck
I say this out loud now because I'm patting myself
on the back, because I'm encouraging you to maybe get
on the health bandwagon and feel better in your day
to day life by getting this crap out of your life.

(52:24):
Six seventeen fifty five KCD talk station. It's already going
to tear. I don't mean to be preachy, really don't.
Just love my listening audience, and I'm wishing the best
to help for everybody. Foreign exchange. I also like to
save you money and steer you in the direction where
you can get your imported traditionally imported automobile Asia Europe
or your teslass service for less money than the dealer.
And that, of course is the reason for foreign exchange existence.

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Outstanding customer service. You get as certified Master technicians who
be doing the work on your car. They have access
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car service there and you get a full warm Um
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I know that I'm not treated any differently than anybody
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a loaner for you. So it's the Tylersville Eggs at
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right on Kinglin and you are there five one three
six four four twenty six twenty six. That's six four
four twenty six twenty six. Tell them, Brian said, Hi,

(53:29):
head over to the website. It's foreign xfor in the
letter X dot com fifty five KRC dot com.

Speaker 2 (53:35):
Customers often ask what's the.

Speaker 1 (53:37):
Bare Jann and I weather forecast. We've got showers and
storms likely between one and five pm today. It'll be
windy with gusty gus up for thirty miles per hour.
I have eighty over nine down to fifty nine with
a pause in the rain. A cloudy day tomorrow with
the best chance of showers and storms after six pm.
Tomorrow's high seventy four down to sixty two overnight with
a few scattered storms, and it will be warm on Thursday.

(53:58):
High seventy nine, thunderstorms in the evening hours. UH seventy one.
Right now, it's time for traffic.

Speaker 5 (54:06):
From the uc UP Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (54:08):
You see health waypot center offers comprehensive obesity Karen advanced
surgic co expertise called five one three nine three nine
two two sixty three. That's nine three nine twenty two
sixty three. Highways continue to look good. Just beginning to
see some break lights. Stop Pound two seventy five approaching
the Carroll Cropper Bridge from the Lawrence Park ramp ingram

(54:29):
Ont fifty five.

Speaker 1 (54:29):
KIERO see the talk station, Hey six twenty two if
you've got kocde talk station or do nothing. Congress actually
did something yesterday. House representatives last night overwhelmingly passed legislation,
the Take It Down Act, four hundred and nine to
two vote. We'll get to the two here in a moment.

(54:54):
UH makes it a federal crime to knowingly post or
threaten to publish realistic computer generated pornograph images and videos
that attempt to show identifiable people on social media and
elsewhere online. Heading over to Donald Trump's desk for his signature,
a bill co sponsored by Ted Cruz and Amy Klobashar,
So you got both sides of the ledger already passed
the Senate unanimously back in February. Trump already indicated previously

(55:18):
that he would sign the bill into law. So there
you have it. Milania Trump was behind this as well,
one of the things that she championed. Going back to
the two voted against it. Anybody want a guess who
one of them was. Two OUs Republicans, Representative Thomas Massey

(55:42):
of Kentucky and Eric Burlson the Missouri voted against the bill.
It requires US websites to remove the content within forty
eight hours of being notified to the issue. According to
Thomas Massey and his post on Acts. Tonight, we're voting
on the Take It Down Act, a bill that would
impose federal criminal and civil penalties for publishing unauthorized intimate

(56:03):
pictures generated with AI. I'm voting no because I feel
this is a slippery slope ripe for abuse with unintended consequences. Now,
I don't have to get Master on the program to
further elaborate on his perception of that. I'd have to
just guess what the ripe for abuse and unattended consequences
component may be. Now, someone hacks into your computer and

(56:27):
makes it look like you're the one that posts something
like this. That's one thing I always worry about that
kind of thing happening, you know, because we have some
people out in the world who are very nefarious, as
we learn about every single Friday here in the fifty
five krecy Morning Show with Tech Friday. And if someone
can hack into your computer, can't that person hack into
your computer like pretty for example, put child porn on it,

(56:50):
and then a lot authorities that you're a pedophile and
you got child porn and the cert your surfing child porn,
and then they come over to your house with the
search warrant they find it on and then you get
prosecuted for something you had no idea even on your computer.
I certainly can envision a scenario where that might happen.
So maybe it's something along those lines, but it's not
elaborated on in the article about his specific reasons for

(57:11):
voting against it. So maybe when next time Congress masses
on the program, because you know, it sounds like a
good idea generally speaking. Obviously it was passed, I mean
unanimous in the Senate and four h nine to two
in the House. Rarely do you see bipartis immunity like
that these days, Like it's almost pretty much nonexistent six

(57:34):
twenty five. If you five ksity talk station, local stories
or your phone calls aren't always welcome. First though, I
want to save you money. I love when people save money,
especially when you can get the exact same service for
a mere fraction. And I'm going to be talking about,
of course scans echo Cardigram's mrict scans ultra sounds. If
you go to affordable imaging services and not the hospital
imaging department, you're going to save heap loads of money,

(57:56):
thousands of dollars in savings. And you have a choice.
Doctor's gonna want you to go to the hospital imaging
department because that hospital system probably owns your doctor's practice.
Love to keep the money in house. And what a
profit center these places are thirty five hundred dollars for
an echo cardiogram. Uh uh no, how about no affordable
imaging services If you don't need an enhancement, it's five

(58:17):
hundred bucks eight hundred dollars with an enhancement. Echo cardiograms
at hospitals and other facilities are being scheduled weeks and
sometimes months out, so it's your heart at issue here.
Don't wait to take care of your heart. Affordable Imaging
can take you right away. MRIs thirty five hundred bucks
at a hospital doesn't include the radiologist report it does
at Affordable Imaging Services, and an MRI is only four

(58:38):
hundred and ninety five bucks. I could go on, but
I don't need to. The website Affordable Medimaging dot Com.
Every scan comes with that imaging report, and all the
equipment's the same kind of thing the hospitals are using
with medical professionals who've been operating them for decades. Five
one three seven, five three eight thousand, seven five three
eight thousand again online Affordable Medimaging dot Com fifty five

(59:00):
KRC the talk station waking up on the right side.
This is the Sean Hannity Morning Minute. The Institution of
the media. Legacy.

Speaker 11 (59:12):
Media is one of peddling lies, conspiracy theories, and a
political agenda. They've been trying to shove down the throat
of the American people, just like they're trying to do
it today by creating a false narrative that Donald Trump
is oh hated by the American people after one hundred
days record, No, it's not.

Speaker 1 (59:30):
Meanwhile, ignoring the.

Speaker 11 (59:31):
Democrats that have the lowest approval ratings they've ever had
in history, you know, ignoring the petulant side of the
Democratic Party, ignoring their you know, the party of anger,
the party that has now been taken over by the radicals,
the parties whose leadership is afraid of the radicals. Where
there's stupid sit ins and singings and chanting and f
bombs and bingo paddles.

Speaker 9 (59:53):
From coast to coast, from sea to shining seas.

Speaker 1 (59:57):
It's a Sean Hannity.

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Speaker 6 (01:01:04):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
Channa Nina has this to say about the weather. Windy
and warm, gusty wins up thirty miles per hour, showers
of storms between one and five pm, likely eighty eighty degrees.
The high overnight little fifty nine with a lull in
the ring. We have a mostly blotty Wednesday for the
best chance of showers and storms after six pm highest
seventy four, scattered storms over night sixty two and warm

(01:01:27):
Thursdays seventy nine for the high thunderstorms in the evening
hours seventy one degrees. Right now, let's get a traffic update.

Speaker 5 (01:01:35):
Probably U see how traffic center.

Speaker 9 (01:01:37):
You see how weave Bass Center offers comprehensive obesity Karen
advanced surgical expertise called five on three nine three, nine
two two sixty three. That's nine three nine twenty two
sixty three. Highway traffic looking pretty good this morning. No
major time delays to deal with as of yet. Inbound
seventy four problem free past Montana. I mean for southbound

(01:01:59):
seven tventy one at the latter room. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:02:08):
TIX thirty eight fifty five kr CD talk station welcoming
phone calls. We got something to say or topic you
want to talk about? Five one, three, seven, four, nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two to three talk
or pound five fifty on AT and T phones. Otherwise
straight to the local stories. Ah, look right it again.
Cleveland brown SINCINNTI Bengals, and FC Cincinnati all want hundreds
of millions of dollars for their stadium projects. Credit w

(01:02:31):
CPOs Paul Christian for reporting Ohio House passed the six
hundred million dollar bond deal to help the Cleveland Browns out.
I wonder what kind of goods the Cleveland Browns have
on members of the House. They're building a one point
two billion dollar dome, stadium, and entertainment district a place
called Brook Park, so we get to pay for it

(01:02:52):
six hundred million dollars worth financed by bonds which are
going to end up costing like a billion dollars over
however many years we pay the bonds out. I just
am so disturbed by this. Of course, the Bengals not
a part of that agreement, I guess. Speaking with WCPO,
State Senator George Lang Butler, kind of Republican serves on
the Senate Finance Committee, said, I think if we do
for one, we have to do it for all. It's

(01:03:14):
either do all or do none. I personally will choose
the latter option. Lawmakers receive separate requests for additional funding
from the Bengals and FC Cincinnati. Bengals and Hamilton County
asking for three hundred and fifty million dollars for pay
Corpse Stadium renovations. FC Cincinnati wants it's hand in the
cookie jar to be reimbursed for thirty percent of the

(01:03:35):
construction costs on its planned three hundred and thirty two
million dollar mixed use development near TQL Stadium. Lang, for
his part, says, well, you can't blame them for asking.
If you don't ask, you don't get it. Yes, that
may be true, but you don't have to get it.
Lang features creating new community. This is kind of comical

(01:03:58):
community authority districts drawn in geographic areas around the stadiums
where business and property owners can vote to increase sales
taxes to raise money to make payments on the project's debt. Now,
my IMDIA reaction to that is how big of a
geographically defined space around the stadium is that going to be?

(01:04:19):
Because I'd be willing to walk an extra block or
two to save the additional tax that they're going to
charge within that particular zone, right, I mean, it's not
going to get go into the zone and buy an
automobile anyway, he said, I would like to explore that scenario.
Taxpayers are not on the hook. Yeah, well, unless you're
buying something, he said, for the banks that could literally

(01:04:43):
make the banks the project, it makes sense for it
to expand a little bit further. And for FC Cincinnati,
that whole development around there, I mean it's exploding, well,
I mean it is exploding naturally, and because of the
supply and demand, FC Stadium is there, It's become a
very popular thing soccer here in this city of Cincinnati,
and so much like Wrigley Field in Chicago, people kind
of want to live by it. It's an expanding, evolving

(01:05:06):
community that apparently doesn't need a capital infusion of three
hundred and thirty two million dollars I don't know, or
at least thirty percent of the construction cost of that
from the state taxpayers. Here's another interesting statement from Lang,
except we should not participate in this. If these teams
are going to hold us hostage in twenty five or

(01:05:29):
thirty years and say give me more or I'm leaving
for the Browns, I'd like a fifty year commitment. For
the Bengals, I'd like a thirty year commitment. I kind
of put lol next to that, because that's within his well.
If they're going to pack up their bags and threaten
us thirty years down the road, I don't want that
part of the deal. So you get a thirty year
commitment from the Bengals thirty years down the road. They

(01:05:50):
could threaten to pack up their bags. And I don't
know why the Browns would get a longer commitment. Why
not make both of them commit to fifty years or
maybe even agree to never leave. I don't know, but
you know what fundamentally unfair and in time when we're
dealing with economic problems. You know, our property tax bills
going through the roof, some people's financially struggling out in

(01:06:11):
the world. You know, electricity bills going up. Everything seems
to be going up. Inflation is taking a real toll.
Go ahead and try to buy a stake at the
store and see what it sets you back. These days,
everything seems to be going up. We all got to eat.
But these are well healed, very very wealthy people who
own these sports teams. And it just irks me that

(01:06:32):
public dollars are being used to pay for these grand
and glorious temples, especially noting that most of the improvements
we have to deal with here with pay Course stadium
are the private boxes that the vast majority of the
population will never ever see. Six point thirty five ifty
five care see detalk station. Feel free to chime in.

(01:06:53):
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it's usually overnight delivery, not in all cases. I just
they want me to qualify that. But it used to
be guaranteed overnight, so probably like with at least within
two days, so ordered online, it'd be delivered to your
front door in very short order. Or if you need
it right away, they sell it everywhere around town. There's
a search engine on the website odor exit dot com.
It'say exactly where those locations are.

Speaker 7 (01:07:56):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
Men is good enough. There's your Shanna nine Onetherfoecast. Showers
and stores are likely today between one and five pm.
It'll be a windy day two with gus up to
thirty miles per hour, eighty degrees. The high fifty nine
the overnight low with a lull in precipitation. Tomorrow mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers and storm showing up
after six pm. Tomorrow's hie seventy four sixty two overnight

(01:08:22):
with scattered storms and at seventy nine high for Thursday,
thunderstorms in the evening hours seventy one degrees. Right now,
it's time for a traffic update from the You.

Speaker 5 (01:08:31):
See How Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (01:08:32):
You See How waybat Center offers comprehensive obesity Karen advanced
sarchical expertise called five one three nine three nine two
two sixty three. That's nine three nine twenty two sixty
three SAP pound two seventy five continues to build. Slowed
between the Lawrenceburg Rampa and the work on the Carroll
Cropper stapbound seventy five though, that's doing just fine through

(01:08:53):
Sharonville and even Dale before you get into Lochland northbound
seventy five and northbound fourth seventy one both. I'm free
on the bridge, just Chuck Ingram Month fifty five KRCV
Talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:09:07):
Six forty eight, fifty five KRCD talk station. Happy Tuesday
to you. Saw this California article about the editorial board
of the il Wall Street Journal about the gasoline awakening
in California. Newsom has gasoline awakening worth noting the insanity

(01:09:31):
as I as you know, I'll give this a predicant
on this. The EPA announced yesterday that is going to
allow E fifteen to be used all year round. That's
the ethanol fifteen percent ethanol gasoline, which I believe was
created as a consequence of the lack of available real gasoline.
I know it's not necessarily good for I mean, it's

(01:09:52):
bad for engines that were built before twenty two thousand
and one. You're not supposed to use it in motorcycles
and small engines or at water craft. It doesn't give
you as good as gas mileagy. You lose like two
percent of miles per gallon. And I know that doesn't
sound like a whole lot, but another downside of it,
and it's just built to support the agricultural industry. It's

(01:10:13):
just a gift to the corn growers. Not to diss
the corn growers, but you know, why are we putting
food in our gas tanks when we have an abundance
of oil and we can refine and actually provide real gasoline.
Just get out of the way, you evil environmentalists. And
that's what the Trump administration is doing. And yet here
we are having the EPA now allow this moved And

(01:10:36):
according to the Agricultural Secretary Brook Rollins in a written
statement yesterday thanking the EPA for this decision, this move
will allow the summer sale of E fifteen, which apparently
makes it smaggier, so you're gonna have more small out there.
Will provide immediately relief to consumers. What relief, provide more
choices at the pump, and drive demand for corn grown

(01:11:00):
process and use right here in America. And I think
that's the only reason we're burning food gas in our
gas tanks. By administration also allowed E fifteen to be
sold in the summertime in twenty two to twenty three
and twenty four, as it faced high gasoline prices, particularly
in the wake of Russian invasion Ukraine. Plus pivoting over
to this, Newsom has gasoline awakening, plus what we've done

(01:11:21):
to ourselves, cutting our own throats in the name of
climate change, and that right, well, we'll California Governor Gavin
Newsom do when he doesn't have oil companies to kick
around anymore. The possibility is suddenly occurring to him. After
Valero announced last week that it will close a major
Bay Area refinery and signaling another in Los Angeles was

(01:11:42):
at risk arguing even higher auguring even higher gasoline prices.
Valaro said it will idle, restructure, or cease refining operations
at its Venicea refinery by April next year, citing uncertainly
related to current or contemplated legal, political, or regulatory developments
that are adverse to or restrict refining and marketing operations.

(01:12:07):
In other words, we're under attack by Sacramento, California. Chevron
more or less said the same thing when it announced
last summer that it's moving its headquarters to Texas from
San Ramon, California. Same thing with Phillips sixty six planned
to close a major southern California refinally, after Newsom signed
a bill to let the state Energy Commission micro manage refineries,

(01:12:28):
oil companies warned the law would make operating refineries uneconomic.
Newsom didn't listen. Instead, he shot the messengers quote, they
buy all these ads saying somehow it's California's fault. They've
been manipulating you, They've been lying to you. Not so.
Closure of the Valerra and Phillip sixty six refineries will
eliminate twenty percent of California's already constrained refining capacity over

(01:12:52):
the next twelve months, increasing the risk of supply shortages
and price bikes. I think the gas prices are high now.
In the Golden State, average gasoline gallon costs four dollars
and eighty cents. Just wait, national average right now apparently
is three dollars and thirty cents. And if you collect
your your Kroger points, my wife just paid two dollars
and twenty cents the other day filling up the tank

(01:13:13):
and our five gallon gas cans two twenty who'd ever
thought that that might happen again? Anyway. Not so in California.
Several refineries have shut down over the last decade because
of the burdensome regulations as California's low carbon fuel standard
and cap and trade program kicked in. Few refineries outside

(01:13:33):
the state can produce California's mandated clean fuel, so whenever
a California refinery has a problem, gas prices go through
the roof. After a fire to Bay Area refinery in February,
price is shot up thirty five cents a gallon. Democrats,
as usual, accused oil companies of price manipulation and their
infinite ill wisdom. They passed along twenty twenty three, Letting

(01:13:55):
Energy Commission set a maximum gross gasoline refining margin and
imposed a penalty on refiners that exceeded it. Then there's
the California Air Resources board recent tightening of its low
carbon fuel standard, which the board predicted would raise gasoline
prices by forty seven cents a gallon this year alone.
All this plus taxes, explained why California's gas prices on

(01:14:17):
average a dollar sixty four gallon higher than what we
the rest of us out in the nation pay. The
Valero and Phillip sixty six closure could lift prices by
another one dollar a gallon, according to some estimates. Enter
mister Newsom, who on Monday urged his Energy Commission to
mend fences with oil companies. Its essential quote, refiners continue

(01:14:40):
to see the value in serving the California market and
to reinforce the state's openness to a collaborative relationship and
our firm belief that Californians can be protected from price
spikes and refiners can profitably operate in California, a market
where demand for gasoline will still exist for years to come,
he wrote. He tells us as he tries to clean

(01:15:01):
up his record ahead of a potential presidential bid in
twenty twenty eight. But if it's sincere, he'll drop his
war on the industry. You see, it's just proof, putting
proofs in the pudding. They make it very difficult to
refine gasoline and burn gasoline. The State of California regulations
create a massive increase in the cost for the citizenry

(01:15:22):
of the California. Take away the regulations, the price would
go down. The self inflicted wound California trying to lead
the globe and reducing carbon emissions or whatever. As if
it's going to have an impact craziness. E wait till
you hear what's going on in Germany. If we'll get
to that in a minute. Six forty five or forty
six to fifty five care City Talk station. Get USA

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Fifty five krc Hey if you're listed. Jana nine says
we've got some showers of storms today between one and
five pm. They say they're likely gusts up to thirty
miles per hour and high eighty lull and precipitation over
nine fifty nine for the low. Got a cloudy day tomorrow.

(01:17:12):
Our best chance of showers of storm shows up after
six pm highest seventy four. Overnights and scattered storms sixty
two for the low and warm Thursday with the highest
seventy nine and thunderstorms in the evening hours seventy one.
Right now traffic time.

Speaker 9 (01:17:27):
From the UCU Traffic Center, you see health weight balls
center offers comprehensive OBCD care in advanced Sergeico expertise. Call
five one three nine three nine twenty two sixty three.
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three sath pound
two seventy five. The loan slow spot on the highways.
That's thanks to construction on the Carrol Cropper Bridge. You're

(01:17:47):
backing up to the Lawrence pArg ramp inbound seventy four
little doing fine. Same for northbound four seventy one on
the bridge. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KO see the
talk station six fifty one fifty five KERCD talk station.
A happy Tuesday to you. Yeah, A cautionary tale from
our friends in Germany. Continuing to theme along the lines

(01:18:09):
of these year we cut our own throats in the
name of so called climate change. Everybody knows I'm a
non believer when it comes to that religion. But again
Wall Street Journal, Germany's invested so many hundreds of billions
in euros of its green and its green energy transition
over the years that no one can tally the precise amount.
Yet the share of the wind and solar power in

(01:18:29):
the country's energy mix in the first quarter of this
year managed to fall by a lot. Pointing out here
there's a lesson for the United States. Again, A cautionary tale.
Renewable sources made up about some forty seven percent of
electricity consumption in Germany, Europe's largest economy, at least formerly,
I would argue, in the first three months of twenty

(01:18:49):
twenty four, down from fifty six percent in the first
three months of twenty twenty four. The drop comes despite
Germany's continuing build out of renewable generation. The country's added
eight hundred and seventy two windmill.

Speaker 1 (01:19:02):
Turnbines three point or four point three gigawatts of additional
capacity since April of last year. Yet the wind power
output fell sixteen percent. Wa wah, wah, wah. You can
guess what went wrong. Ah February and March wind free
offshore and onshore lack of rain let hydro power under perform.

(01:19:24):
March sunnier than usual, which helped boost solar electricity output
compared to a year ago. But as the journal notes,
we're talking about Germany in March, relatively short daylight hours
in the northern latitude met its boost with solar wasn't
enough to offset the decline and wind generation. These climactic
conditions happened regularly enough in Germany and the German language

(01:19:46):
has a word for it, don'kl flauta. Also, I mean
in English dark stillness. It means renewables alone can't power
and advanced industrial economy. As even Berlin is starting to
notice new coalition agreement that will form on the basis
of the incoming Chancellor of Friedrich Merz's agenda envisions building

(01:20:08):
twenty gigawatts of natural gas fired power generation by twenty
thirty to provide stable base of power, but Merzy's left
wing coalition commits to continuing a renewable buildout as well.
Good luck with that. Since an over reliance on intermittent
renewables tends to make it uneconomical to run natural gas

(01:20:29):
plants as a backup, expect more subsidies in the future. Notably,
nuclear power is absent from their energy production plan. Germany
is further down the road of renewable power than many
other large economies like here. Its energy mess is enough

(01:20:51):
to make everyone realize it's not an example to follow. Well,
aimen to that. What wrong with German people? Well, they're idiots.
They listen to Greta Thunberg. I mean you can't run
factories on a windmill. I mean there's nothing more than
you can take away from this reality. We're watching it happen.

(01:21:13):
It's like ignoring all the other efforts by people to
become socialist governments, only to see them collapse before their
very eyes. Oh, we need to do it here. They
just haven't done it right there. All those other times
when they tried it, they just didn't do it right. Well,
we'll get it right this time. No, you're not. We
need to stop cutting our throats. And thank god we

(01:21:34):
got the Trump administration who's turning its back on this
all green nonsense, all the above approach, which here in
the United States also includes nuclear. Let's start fast tracking it.
I'd like some reliable power and this is one of
those areas. And when I talked to VV. Ramaswami about this,
you know, we could lead the nation in nuclear power.

(01:21:57):
We could be a magnet for business and industry because
we have constant, never ending, clean, efficient, small nuclear plant,
modular type plant footprint, nuclear plant production. Why wouldn't we
go down that road? Coming up? In six fifty six,
fifty five krc DE talk station doctor Stanley Ridgeley with

(01:22:19):
a book DEI exposed after the top of the R
News be right back a.

Speaker 9 (01:22:24):
Full Rundown and the biggest ten lines there's minutes away
at the top of the hour.

Speaker 1 (01:22:28):
I'm giving you a fact.

Speaker 5 (01:22:29):
Now the Americans should know.

Speaker 1 (01:22:30):
Fifty five R the talk station, so please have this conversation.
Welcome to the fifty five KRC Morning Show, Doctor Stanley K. Ridgeley.
He's a clinical full Professor of Strategic Management at Drection University,
holds a doctor and master's in International International Relations and
Security from Duke University and an International MBA from Temple

(01:22:51):
U Russian language linguist and former military intelligence officer and
author of a book we're talking about today, DI exposed
how the biggest con of the century almost toppled higher education.
Doctor Ridgley, Welcome to the fifty five CASE Morning. So
it's a real pleasure to have you on this morning.

Speaker 8 (01:23:07):
Well, hey, the pleasure is all mine, Brian, I appreciate it.
Got a cup of job on my hand. I'm ready
to talk to d I.

Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
All right, we're both java equipped. Good thing to have
at this time of morning. Now, you know, part of
me wants to think that this DEI. And just by
way of context, you know how old I am. I'm
fifty nine years old. So this didn't exist up until
almost you know, historically recently, and then all of a sudden,
everybody's created a DEI department. College, universities, corporations have had

(01:23:35):
this shoved down their throats. And part of me wants
to conclude, and maybe you can answer the question for me.
This is made of This is just like a whole
cloth creation designed to provide jobs for people who went
to college and got worthless degrees in social justice. I mean,
is that about?

Speaker 10 (01:23:54):
You know?

Speaker 8 (01:23:54):
I tell you what. That pretty much strips away the
facade of DEDI. These are really gillless individuals who managed
to get onto the university campus. And lord knows how
they managed to do that, but they did it through
the big con that I talk about in DEI Exposed.
These are folks with indeed workless degrees and their work
that they like to say they're doing the work of

(01:24:15):
justice and that kind of thing. It's really basically just
coercing people to believe a kind of a make believe
world of the United States as a racist institute, a
racist country, and the colleges and universities are somehow riven
with white supremacy culture. It's a fraud, it's and it's
a real injustice to our students to have admitted these

(01:24:37):
people onto the campuses to perpetuate this nonsense.

Speaker 1 (01:24:40):
Well, and one of the beautiful things about the Trump administration.
Say what you might or will about Donald Trump's administration,
but the Department of Government Efficiency has revealed and shown
to the American people how many billions of dollars are
being shoved into college universities largely in support of DEI initiatives.
As an American tax payer money used to indoctor and
a college student.

Speaker 8 (01:25:01):
Well, that's why the left is so uh is screaming
because they're being pulled off the teat of government support
for these naxis. They have now have to deal with
accountability and transparency, the kinds of thing that you and
I have to deal with all the time with.

Speaker 3 (01:25:15):
Respect to the work.

Speaker 8 (01:25:16):
These folks want no strings attached money to perpetuate their ideology.
They're being called out, and they're being called out in
a way that that universities understand. You know, funding and
bad publicity. These are the only two things that can
get a university to reform itself. In university and higher education,
they've been lacking oversight for far too long. For instance, Harvard.

(01:25:37):
You know, you've got Harvard, which is you know they've
been calling for, uh, this noble opposition to the Trump administration.
But who runs Harvard? Well, it's the billionaire Penny Pritsker
at the head of the Harvard Corporation with her fellow
billionaire Bitty Madison and Bitty Martin. I'm sorry. And and
these are the these are the oligarchs, the billionaire oligarchs

(01:25:58):
that the left is always talking about, and they're in
control of Harvard. And we don't we don't ever hear that.
All we see is the President Garber standing up for
racketemic freedom and freedom of speech. This is absurd, It's
just a fraud.

Speaker 1 (01:26:11):
Okay, So let's dive into motive. Now I can see.
I mean, the useful idiots in the world, they don't
do any thoughtful, logical, reasonable analysis of this. They don't
understand how damaging to the American economy the removal of
meritocracy is going to be. But if you're a billionaire
billionaire like Pritzker, what what's your what interest in this
do you have? Why would you be pushing this and

(01:26:31):
pressing this into say Harvard University?

Speaker 8 (01:26:35):
Well, I think is this the fact that that it's
a money machine. When you look at it, it is basically
drafting taking taxpayer money. You've got a fifty three billion
dollar untaxed endowment. Aside from the one point one point
seven percent one point four percent of a tax, which
is the pittance. You've got this nine billion dollars of
investment slash grant money from the United States government that

(01:26:58):
is no strings attached, no overside. And you've got this uh,
this hubrist that attaches to the Harvard name. And so
you've got these billionaires that are there's there's thirteen members
of the Harvard Corporation. Pritzker is the head of this
corporation and they're they're basically is by the way, her
brother is JB. Boss Pritzker, the governor of Illinois. There's

(01:27:18):
nothing that comes to they said they got their money
through inheritance. They're the Hyatt hotel uh errors of that fortune.
And so so I can't really speak to her motivation
except to the idea of power and the ability through
their money to uh actuate their ideology. And I'm going

(01:27:38):
back to the whole idea of DEI. It's not what
people think it is. And this has been the major
strength of DEI. It's not creating a level playing field
for everyone. It's not catering to marginalized populations, giving everyone
a hand, a helping hand. It's not just teaching about
race and teaching about slavery. No, it's none of those things.
That those things happen, it's merely as a byproduct. It

(01:27:59):
is the acceptance and propounding of a noxious, toxic doctrine
of racialism, where everyone is slotted into one of two categories,
either villain or victim, either you know, white, non white,
oppressor or oppressed, and nothing else in one's history matters.
Not your education, not your attitude, not your parents, you know,

(01:28:21):
not your way. Often nothing matters except race. And that
is the dirty secret of DEI that is now being exposed.

Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
But to accomplish what because that is divisive and ruinous
for society. It ruins the cohesiveness of the nation. I mean,
I'm a little ill libertarian kind of guy. Live and
let live. I trust you with your zipper and your wallet.
I don't want anything from you. I'll let you do
what you want to live your life as long as
it doesn't intrude into my decision making. To my choices.
We live under the banner of freedom, at least we

(01:28:49):
used to, you know, the flag would stand for this,
this freedom concept where yes, in the United States you
can be yourself and choose your own pursuits. But this
is ruining to that national cohesion. The flag is then
viewed as a symbol of racism because of you know,
historic racism and this whole concept the were just evil
white supremacists. I mean, this is leading to the end

(01:29:11):
of our country. And maybe is that the nefarious element
that's going on behind all this. They don't want the
United States to continue its amazing success.

Speaker 8 (01:29:21):
I think you're right, You've hit the nail on the
head of the idea. It's a collectivist doctrum, the idea
that your membership in a particular identity group supersedes and
is far more important than your identity as an individual
with individual preferences, dreams, et cetera, et cetera. And I
think this is the latest social justice canard that has
basically achieved kind of a regnancy on the college campuses.

(01:29:45):
And it's it's just the old wine, old collectivist wine
in a new bottle. It's Marxism if you really wack it.
Down to it. The idea of Marxist class consciousness has
been replaced with race consciousness, and the framework is virtually unchanged.
And so this is the idea that it's somehow, some
sort of racial equity type of things is really cool.

(01:30:08):
It's the old social justice crowd, collectivist crowd trying to
supersede and trying to argue and coerce people into believing
this notion of collectivism that you're identity in a group
is far more important than your identity as an individual.

Speaker 1 (01:30:24):
Well, and you're certainly not entitled to your own opinion.
One of the reasons I loved college in law school
so much, doctor is, you know, the Socratic method, the
idea you could have an exchange of ideas. There was this,
you know, exchange of thoughts and concepts, and you weren't
told that there was one particular point of view that
you must follow or be ostracized or get an F

(01:30:45):
on your paper. The world's obviously different place since then,
and I think this is reflected in the in the
media's shift to a far left sort of uniform lockstep
left wing reporting perception because they're victims of this one
sided view in college ed education we've lost the media
to this. I mean, is this something that can be undone?

(01:31:05):
Can this bell be unwrong? Or is it too late?
Because colleges are filled with professors who have a uniform
ideology anymore, you can't be a conservative and teach college
of courses anymore.

Speaker 8 (01:31:17):
Well, you certainly can't be a conservative and be you know,
have unlimited success. But the fact is that to reform
and higher educations will be very tough because they have
had almost they succumb to ideological capture a long time ago.
But I do think the Trump administration Department of Education
is doing the right thing. The only the only thing
that universities understand is money and bad publicity. That's that's

(01:31:42):
a lot. That's one thing that we can count on
being true. So the Department of Education is utilizing funding
is leverage against the universities, and yes, it is against
the universities to become serious institutions again, become places where
that marketplace of ideas is a reality, where those ideas
can you contend in an open debate, rather than having

(01:32:05):
certain views suppressed as we find right now. And that
is indeed the case. And I detail this and I
chronicled this and DEI exposed. Do I exposed DEI is
simply this this latest did for in perimature over the universities,
and they found it very useful because it sounds good,
doesn't it. Diversity, equity, and inclusion, just like cults like

(01:32:26):
the Moonies utilize the terms peace and unity, that's their motto,
and the inclusion and belonging. It sounds very cult like. Well,
and that's because it is.

Speaker 1 (01:32:36):
Well. Anytime I see the word equity anymore, I get,
I get very very concerned and worried. And the idea
that I feel concerned because I have, you know, lots
of black friends and a lot of Jewish friends, and
you point out, and DEI exposed that this is this
concept of DEI is actually fueled anti Semitism. And I

(01:32:59):
want to get I get your explanation for that. But
also the removal of meritocracy. There are many, many people
of color that have reached lofty positions through their merit,
through their experience and their knowledge of any given industry
or position, they earned it. And this idea that you're
going to just fill in a check mark that oh
black check, We're going to hire that person merely because

(01:33:21):
they're the right color, even though there are more qualified
Asians or pick a color, skin, or nationality. We're not
going to hire those people. We're going to put this
person in because they meet this equity checkbox or diversity
checkbox that waters down and negates those people who've actually
earned those positions because people have this perception like, wow,
you're a diversity higher. I know you've heard that term before.

Speaker 8 (01:33:45):
Oh well yeah. And I think it's unfortunate because I
deal with in when students, I deal with a lot
of intelligent, incredibly talented black students, you know, Indian students,
Russian students, students of all racist creets and colors, as
they say, And there's no stick attached to that. I mean,
and who wants the stigma of the question mark behind
your name? Did this person really earn something or did

(01:34:07):
they just were they just checking someone else's matrix box?

Speaker 6 (01:34:11):
Right?

Speaker 8 (01:34:11):
And the idea that you're going to subvert someone's individual
achievement by labeling them something like this, because it's not
the conservative side or libertarian side, or the republicanside labeling
people DEI hires. It is the folks on the left.
I think Joe Biden himself basically appointed a dei hire
as his running mate. And I think that this is stigma,

(01:34:34):
is unfortunate, and it's completely unnecessary, and I think we're
going to finally move beyond this. I should point out
that the latest executive order from last week striking down
disparate impact, the idea that if you can show that
there's some sort of statistical result that shows that somehow
one group is having a different outcome than other groups,

(01:34:55):
you can utilize this to prove individual discrimination against you.
And this has been an absurd notion that is in
our judicial system that is now being struck down. Those
of us and social sciences know this is a fraud,
it's a fallacy. You can't do this because it makes
it's not valid, and yet we find it. We've been
following this disparate impact for quite some time. That's no

(01:35:18):
longer to be the case.

Speaker 1 (01:35:19):
Doctor Stanley Ridge, originally author of Dee I Expose and Doctor,
we put your book on my web page A fifty
five caresee dot com so my listeners can easily obtain
a copy of it. And I'm going to go back
real quickly here because I do have quite a few
Jewish friends, you know, and not necessarily practicing Jews. They
just had to be Jewish in terms of their ancestry.
Some are in favor of Israel, some are in favor

(01:35:40):
of Palestinian two state solutions. They're just a mixed bag
of Jewish people. How has DEI fueled anti Semitism? And
I don't understand how it is that there's some what
their motivation is, and anger over that the Jewish people
is on college campuses as if the Nazis took over.

Speaker 8 (01:35:59):
Well, very similar in the sense that this it's an ideology.
DEI is in ideology, and the ideology tells them to
behave in certain ways. That ideology says that that Jews
basically are white people and therefore undeserving of protections affords
other minitized people. That's what they say. And the fact
is that the Jews, especially those from Israel, are considered

(01:36:21):
settler colonialists. As a result, they are by definition oppressors.
So it doesn't matter how many assaults or bullying or
trespassing or vandalism that kind of thing is perpetrated against
Jewish students, it doesn't matter. And I have an entire
chapter on this of how DEI has perpetrated this anti
Semitic ethos on campus, that it's okay to discriminate against

(01:36:45):
Jewish students, it's okay to bully them and to assault
them because they deserve it, because they are oppressors. In
this framework that I've described to you, that's the that's
the core of DEI, that you and I are in
a particular racial category and are deserving of our faith,
the fate being determined by the Dei ideology. It's the
thing that motivated Luigimangioni to kill Brian Thompson in New York.

(01:37:09):
His ideology for him to do this.

Speaker 1 (01:37:12):
Well, it's I wish they were familiar with the concept
of two wrongs, don't make it right. That we once
had slavery in the United States, and it was wrong,
and we did right that wrong, and many laws were
put into place, and many laws were struck from the
books to remove that from our society. And we've made
huge strides toward that. You know, everybody's equal kind of perception.

(01:37:33):
They're destroying it, They're just they're turning it on its head.
It's just it's okay to discriminate against someone on the color,
based on the color of their skin. It's just got
to be the right color in their eyes.

Speaker 6 (01:37:44):
Yeah, I think it is.

Speaker 8 (01:37:45):
I'm really disturbed by a lot of students who buy
into the whole social justice mantra and this social justice
collectivist mantra. It has a whole host of ideologies under
its umbrella, and DEI is just one of them. But
I was very good for someone to say, well, I'm
supporting I'm working for social justice, and if you probe
beyond that cliche, you find there's not much there except

(01:38:09):
the fact of the idea of coercion. I'm going to
compel you to do something that I want you to
do that my ideology tells you do, because I have
access to this hidden knowledge that the left has always
been claiming on the college campuses.

Speaker 1 (01:38:22):
Doctor. Originally, it's been a fantastic conversation this morning. I
really appreciate you spending time with my listeners and me
to talk about your book, Deegi. I exposed how the
biggest con of the century almost toppled higher education. I'll
encourage my copy my listeners head over to my web
page and get a copy of the book. Doctor. Thanks
again for your time today and keep up the great work.
Seven thirty, which you have ive Care CD talk station.

(01:38:44):
A Happy Tuesday to you. I love the empower You seminars.
They are amazing thing. And thanks always the Dan regular
to fram Usa originally a fram Usa for creating the
concept of empower. You've been doing this for decade, about
a decade, and it's just filled with all types of
different topics, not always political. We learned about Woodrow Wilson,
or you're going to learn about Woodrow Wilson tonight, but
Thursday being at seven pm, you're going to hear about

(01:39:06):
the Here from the foremost authority on John Lennon and
the Beatles, Jude Sutherland Kessler, leading authority on John leven
having spent the last thirty eight years researching and writing
the first six books and an anticipated nine volume John
Lennon series. Welcome to the program, Jude. It's a pleasure
to have you on this morning.

Speaker 12 (01:39:26):
Bryan, thank you so much. I cannot wait to be
in Cincinnati. The only thing that I like as much
as the Beatles the Bengals.

Speaker 13 (01:39:36):
Oh how about that, Well, Mabell.

Speaker 12 (01:39:38):
We didn't have a guy here, actually two guys here
that went to LSU and we love them still.

Speaker 1 (01:39:45):
That's great. Well, you know, maybe you can come to
Cincinnati and help us resolve the Bengals pay course stadium
upgrade solution, because they're dealing with some financial realities that
have seemed to be impossible to overcome. And one of
the veiled threats from the owners is they're going to
take their ball and run with didn't go someplace else.
So we're hoping the Bengals stay in town and we
get all that resolve. But pivoting over, how did you

(01:40:05):
become such a massive Beatles and more of John Lennon
per first and foremost? But fan, what started all this
for you?

Speaker 12 (01:40:13):
Well, it started actually before the Beatles even came to America.
In December of nineteen sixty three. I was approached in
elementary school right when I got off the bus by
a group of girls who said to studious me, look,
these are the Beatles. We know you don't clue in,
but you need to look at this forty five picture
and at recess. You have to tell us which one

(01:40:35):
you're falling in love with. What recess that's two hours away?
And unfortunately I chose George Harrison the first day and
they were so disappointed they wouldn't tell me why but
they were very disappointed in me. So I went home
and I did what I always do. I did research,
and I called their big sisters and said, tell me

(01:40:55):
about these Beatles. And I found out that John Lennon
was considered the leader, the smart Beatle. And so I
went back the next day and said, listen, I changed
to my mind, it's John Lennon. And I think I
was like nine years old and it's been John Lennon
ever since.

Speaker 1 (01:41:09):
How about that, Well, your first pick was is my favorite,
while my guitar gently Weeps is my absolute all time
favorite Beatles song. So George Harrison fan, I am. But
I mean start on in John Lennon's early days. I
mean his youth was rather troubled from what I understand.

Speaker 12 (01:41:29):
Yeah, and that's what we're going to be talking about
Thursday night. We are going to be looking at the
birth of the Beatles and how this all got started,
and how John's mother, in spite of many many tragedies
that happened to him as a as a young boy
and as a young teenager, told him that he had
music in his bones and he was destined to become

(01:41:49):
a great singer. And she did it because he was
being swallowed up by tragedy, and of course just a
few laters, she herself was hitting killed by drug driver
and she was taking away from him, and then his
best friends to Sutcliffe was taken away from him. How
John Lennon persevered and gave us the soundtrack of Our
Lives is the greatest success story of all time?

Speaker 1 (01:42:11):
Really, how about that? You know, it's interesting. I kind
of observed sort of a parallel the Beatles before and
after the breakup, kind of like Pink Floyd before and after.
Some of their parts is wholly different than the individual
artists themselves. You know, Lennon wrote and did solo work
that was just completely different, and you see where that
creative element in, you know, like Sergeant Pepper's and other

(01:42:33):
of the they're sort of the front runners in musical experimentation,
at least within rock music. Roger Waters obviously the sort
of John Lennon, like David Gilmore, more like Paul McCartney,
more poppy, more traditional, non experimentation kind of music. Do
you kind of feel that way the same way as
I do in my observations?

Speaker 12 (01:42:54):
Yeah, I think it took really all four of them
to do what they did, because you need Paul's happy, positive,
poppy sound, and he can get serious. I mean, you
take Yesterday, I mean some of his songs are very
very serious. And then you take John who is mainly

(01:43:14):
known for being the rock and roller, but he can
write songs like good Night and Julia beautiful ballads as well.
And then George Harrison. I mean, the Beatles have a
huge void without George Harrison.

Speaker 1 (01:43:28):
And they knew they needed Ringo or they.

Speaker 12 (01:43:31):
Would not have let their friend Pete Esco and brought
Ringo in. It takes all four of them.

Speaker 1 (01:43:36):
Okay, well you're gonna have to explain that, because I
don't know enough about the Beatles to know why they
got rid of Pete Best and favor of Ringo. Start
Ringo my least favorite Beatle. I think kind of a guy,
and I don't have really much respect for his drumming skills.
You know, I'm a big fan of drummers, you know,
like I like tools. Danny Carey and Neil Parrot from
Rush was amazing, and they just maybe that sort of

(01:43:58):
more modern drums obviously developed over time in the area
of rock and roll music. But what was with them
getting rid of Pete Best? And favorite Ringo star.

Speaker 12 (01:44:08):
Well, Pete was a very good drummer and a heck
of a nice guy.

Speaker 6 (01:44:12):
But Ringo was cool.

Speaker 12 (01:44:14):
He was John's age, he was older, he had a
silver streak in his hair, he had his own car,
he had shiny suits, and he was the guy they
all wanted to be the cool guy, and not only that,
be a great sense of humor. And he ends up
being the star of both of their films. So you
need that personality to bring another element in not just

(01:44:36):
the music, but a little bit of shining charisma as well.

Speaker 8 (01:44:39):
And Ringo supplied that.

Speaker 1 (01:44:42):
Now do you talk about I mean, in your seminar
on the Magical Tale of How the Beatles became a band,
do you discuss the breakup and what led to that?
Because I know everyone loves to blame Yoko Ona. I'm
just wondering if there's any truth and credibility to that.

Speaker 12 (01:44:57):
Now Thursday Night, we're going to stop after Brian Epstein
becomes their manager. Propelled towards success, We're going to be
in those early early years. We're going to listen to
some very primitive recordings that they did the first time
that they recorded in nineteen fifty seven, wow, and we're
going to go, you know, through that rudimentary phase that

(01:45:18):
led them to step off the cavern club boards and
step onto the stage of the world. But I will
say the real mystery is not why they broke up,
but how in the world two alpha male, brilliant, talented
big dogs like John and Paul stayed together as long
as they did. That's the real miracle.

Speaker 1 (01:45:40):
What caused them to become just so amazingly I guess
it wasn't overnight, since you mentioned they first recorded in
the late fifties, but you know, by the early sixties
they were a international phenomenon. On Ed Sullivan of course,
I know their first appearance here was at Cincinnati Gardens.
I don't know was that nineteen sixty four or five? Yeah,

(01:46:00):
But how did they blow up? What was I mean?
The music obviously was very appealing, and they were good
looking kind of guys, and that there was an appeal there.
But you know, back then, you know, music was often
just word of mouth. You shared sort of records that
you ran into. Some local DJ would pick up on
an album and they would play it and then people
would start asking them to play it again, and that

(01:46:22):
would create a phenomenon. How did it happen with the Beatles?

Speaker 8 (01:46:25):
You know?

Speaker 12 (01:46:26):
John Lennon said, if we knew the answer to that,
we would be managers and have other bands. I don't
think they even knew, but I will tell you this.
When they play for other auditions, they don't succeed until
Brian Epstein steps into the picture. And when he begins
to polish and hone them, put them in the suits,

(01:46:47):
teach them not to throw food at the audience, or
to swear on stage, and to bow from the wasted.
He gives them that polish that they need and the
other ingredient. And this is so crucial to their sel
is that every time I interview someone who attended a concert,
whether it's in Cincinnati or in Chicago or wherever, they

(01:47:08):
tell me the same thing. They looked right at me,
they sang a song to me, They stared straight at me.
Both men and women say the same thing. Somehow they
had the ability to connect with an audience in ways
that no one else could.

Speaker 9 (01:47:26):
It was almost.

Speaker 1 (01:47:27):
Magical that charisma came through. It's beyond more than the music.
There's a connection with the audience and the artists themselves.

Speaker 12 (01:47:36):
Yeah, it really is and a connection with each other.
You watch them doing I'm Down this the last song
in Chase Stadium in nineteen sixty five. They are having
the time of their lives together. Yeah, and that joy
is something we all need.

Speaker 1 (01:47:51):
That's a really interesting observation and such a true point.
I mean, I've been very disappointed by artists I've seen,
and I've been just totally amazed and wowed by many,
And you know, I think you're right. It's what you
perceive on the stage and connecting with that that really
can make or break any given show. One thing you
mentioned them playing in New York as well as when
they played here at Cincinnata Gardens, the rudimentary equipment. I mean,

(01:48:15):
I don't know that anybody in the audience actually could
hear the words they were singing or the music that
they were playing. There were so many screams and shouts,
which in and of itself was a wild phenomenon back then,
this unrestrained exuberance that the fans, most notably the women
in the audience had right you.

Speaker 12 (01:48:33):
Know, at Say Stadium. I've talked to a lot of
people who said they could hear the music, and my
husband and I were discussing this tonight, and he said,
do you think they really could hear the music?

Speaker 8 (01:48:42):
I said, what they could hear was.

Speaker 12 (01:48:45):
Yeah, that's all you could hear the hundred watts and
there is no way but fifty five thousand, six hundred
attendees screaming that anyone heard anything.

Speaker 1 (01:48:58):
Okay, well you confirm my suspicion on that one. Jude
Castler should be doing the seminar Thursday at seven pm.
Log in from the comforts in convenience of your own home
or show up at the Empower You Seminar Studios that
will be three hundred Great Oaks Drive, Cincinnati. Hear her live.
You're gonna do any Q and A at all?

Speaker 12 (01:49:16):
Definitely, We're gonna do about an hour great great PowerPoint,
great music, rare photos, and then we're gonna do Q
and A after that. So I love for everyone to
be there. Let us make this a whole Beatles party
Thursday night.

Speaker 1 (01:49:33):
And put a smile on your face. Moving away from
politics and thinking about something it's a lot more fun
than the troubles and cares of a year have to deal
with day to day. Here, it's been a real pleasure
talking with you today. I enjoyed the seminar and have
a good time doing it. It sounds to me like
I'm certain that you will. There you go, seven fifty
fifty five KRCD talk station. We love that song. Eight

(01:49:57):
two three talk found five fifty on AT and T phone. Yeah,
I just would love I'd just like to listen to
the song. Joe, you do this to me every once
in a while, and I just don't want to say anything,
but I do appreciate that. Got to move on, so
I've got something to say. Feel free to call. After
the top of the our news, it's the Inside Scoop
with Bright Barton News. Immigration expert Neil Munroe joins the

(01:50:20):
program to talk about the new executive order ensuring truck
drivers speak English, and we'll talk border security and as
far as border security is concerned CBS, so you know
this implicit bias and anything CBS does right. They did
a poll of twenty three hundred and sixty five adults
and it showed that fifty six percent of those polled

(01:50:41):
approve of Donald Trump's program to fined and deport immigrants
who are in the country illegally. It's broken down. Ninety
percent of Republicans are happy with it. Fifty four percent
of independence approved, but only twenty two percent of Democrats approve.
Paul asked about illegal immigrants, not about illegal migrants who
committed crimes, so it was a general question, not for

(01:51:04):
the specific criminal illegal aliens. Women split fifty to fifty
sixty three percent of men backing Trump's program, eighty percent
of liberals disapproved, eighty nine percent of conservatives approve, which
is consistent with I think most of the people's tea
leafreading on this. The left wants these in, and you
think sanctuary cities magnets for the illegal immigrant communities or

(01:51:30):
for illegal immigrants generally creating a larger population base for
the purposes of maintaining or getting more congressional seats, because
it's judge based on population, so that may be the
nefarious component behind it, not that they're going to be
voting necessarily, but when it comes to overall population. That
may be what's going on behind the scenes on that.

(01:51:53):
But most people are happy with it. President Trump's not
an executive voter yesterday, escalating his battle against the sanctuary
cities and states don't fully cooperate with federal immigration authorities.
The order directs the Attorney General and the Secretary of
Homeland Security to identify within a month cities and states
that are not complying with federal immigration laws designate them,

(01:52:14):
designating them as sanctuary jurisdictions, which then could face a
cutoff of federal funding as well as possible criminal and
civil suits if they refuse to change their laws and
their practices. Could there be repercussions, White House Press Secretary
of Carolyn Levitt said yesterday at a briefing along with

(01:52:35):
Tom Holme, and Trump's borders are It's quite simple. Obey
the law, respect the law. Don'tumstruct federal immigration officials and
law enforcement officials when they were simply trying to remove
public safety threats from our nation's communities and the order.
Trump also directs the Justice Department to pursue civil rights
cases against city or states and in its view, if

(01:52:56):
a favor immigrants over country over in this country, ill
legally over US citizen, citing policies that treat immigrants more
leniently in criminal cases or in sentencings, and state laws
that provide immigrants in state tuition rates at public universities
yet deny the lower rates to US citizens who live
out of the state. Apparently at least twenty five states

(01:53:18):
have adopted such laws in some fashion or other. And
you know, get a load of that. You get illegal
immigrants in your state, and you'll provide the lower tuition
rate to them. But if there's some person, like you're

(01:53:38):
talking about a California university and there's somebody out in
Ohio who foolishly wants to go to California to go
to college, you're not going to give them the lower rate.
That doesn't really make any sense to me. Of course,
the administration is facing legal challenges on the actions that's
already take taken against sanctuary cities. Last week, federal judge

(01:53:59):
in California block Trump suffers to strip federal funding from
sixteen counties and cities in the state, like San Francisco,
under executive orders he had previously signed. Judge ruled the
orders likely overstepped the president's authority and constitutional requirement of
due process and protections against coercion. That ruin took issue

(01:54:19):
with prior order or lack of specificity in Despine defining
which jurisdictions were deemed sanctuaries, an issue. Yesterday's executive order
attempts to scourt by requiring the Justice Department of Homeland
Security to formulate a list. Okay, problem presented to the judge,
flagged it out, and problem solved with this executive order.
Maybe now going over to Boston Michelle Mayor Michelle wou

(01:54:43):
she said the executive order wouldn't change policies in the
sanctuary city quote. The courts have backed us up on
this as well. That In a statement yesterday over in Chicago,
spokesman for Mayor Brandon Johnson said that making lists of
cities to withhold federal funds based on their political leadership
as fundamentally unconstitutional and undemocratic. No, it's not based on
political leadership. It's based on your decision to not enforce

(01:55:06):
US immigration laws and obstruct proper lawful law enforcement from
enforcing federal laws. So don't try to hide behind this
as a party issue that the Democrat Party and their
mayors and their governors have chosen to do sanctuary cities
and states and defy federal law and deny ice from
its ability to do its job and throw up roadblocks

(01:55:27):
in front of that. That's the conduct that is the
predicate for this. It's not because you're Democrats. Well, because
you're Democrats, you carry these philosophies. But still inside scoop a
bright Bard news coming up off top of the our
news fall by the Daniel Davis Deep Dive with to
get the latest on Russia and Ukraine at eight thirty.
I hope you can stick around us. Happens fast, stay

(01:55:49):
up to date at the top of the hour. Not
going to be complicated, It's going to go very fast.
Fifty five KRC the talk station this reported.

Speaker 7 (01:55:58):
Who participated with Jeffrey.

Speaker 1 (01:56:00):
Staying check in often for the latest.

Speaker 5 (01:56:02):
I support all the related.

Speaker 1 (01:56:05):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 6 (01:56:09):
A no.

Speaker 1 (01:56:09):
Five, but fifty five KRC de talk station. It being
Tuesday at eight oh five, that is that time of
the week where we get the benefit of talking with
one of the reporters from Breitbart Book Market. You'd be
glad you did b R E I T B A
art dot com. Great reporting, including great reporting from Welcome
to the fifty five KRC morning. So it's a pleasure
to have you on. Immigration Expert Neil Monroe. Welcome to
the show, sir. Glad to be on, Glad to have

(01:56:33):
you on, and glad to have you reporting about the
border and border security. I was just talking about it
before the top of the hour break. The CBS poll
that came out just the other day. Apparently Donald Trump
is enjoying widespread, overwhelming approval about his program to find
and deport immigrants, not just illegal immigrants, but immigrants generally
are our brother not just criminal illegal immigrants, but who

(01:56:55):
are in the country illegally. Fifty four percent of the
six percent rather of those poll to prove it, ninety
percent of Republicans, fifty four percent of Independence and only
twenty two percent of Democrats. But overall, it's enjoying widespread support.
It's really truly amazing, isn't it, Neil, what one change
of administration was able to accomplish in such a short
period of time in towards in terms of shutting down

(01:57:17):
the influx of illegal immigrants as well as deporting the
most nefarious of the group.

Speaker 6 (01:57:24):
Well yeah, but you know, it comes like the US
superpower can't stop people sneaking over the border. They under Biden,
they didn't want to, They were encouraging people to come over.
And so along comes Trump and says, well, I got
to turn off all the function. Suction pumps just goes
down and that's sad. It's really easy. I mean, migrants

(01:57:45):
are off stupid. They're very rational. Like if you're living
in Central America and you say, shall I go up
to America? First, You've got to do mortgage your farm.
You got to take out a loan from the local bank,
and they only go north to America if they can
pay off the loan, right. And but Biden and the
New York As his evil sidekick were doing. They were

(01:58:07):
telling the migracy, you know, you come up here and
will let you go, and then you can get a
job and you'll work eighteen hours a day for you know,
five dollars an hour or whatever, so also in better wages,
and you could pay off your death and you can
get money for your kids and your wife and your house.
Maybe you don't want to go home, but you can
learn a lot of money if you come up here
for a while. That's what your federal government was saying.

(01:58:30):
And they were doing that because they wanted to pump up.
They wanted to move a lot more money into the
pockets of big corporations and big investments. And it was
very successful. Your housing prices rose, your interest rates went up,
the price of eggs went up, the prices all those
went down, rents went up. That was great, that's what

(01:58:50):
they wanted. It sounds insane, but driving up housing prices
is great for people who own large blocks of land,
who own a part building to well ow an office building.
So that's what they were doing, they said it, Oh yeah,
I do to ask them well.

Speaker 1 (01:59:06):
And it also supports an element of the climate change agenda,
which thinks that you know, building houses and living in
freestanding houses two thousand and three thousand square feet or whatever,
which is the typical American way. That's all evil and
it needs to stop. So by putting housing out of
the out of the realm of affordability, for a vast
majority of young Americans too normally be looking to buy

(01:59:26):
their first house, they just can't do it anymore. So
a goal accomplished with that as well.

Speaker 6 (01:59:32):
Yeah, and migrants aren't hostile or stupid or anything like this,
but they they come here to earn money. And if
if it's going to cause Americans inconvenience, that's not their problem.
They have a family at home, they have co ethics
to help. And so what Democrats do is saying by
margarets including me, I came here the fiance age during

(01:59:54):
the Cobo. Well, they just invite them in in order
to create more diversity, to impose and inflict more diversities.
So Americans are divided, so Americans are fighting with each other.
That's great for big government because then big government can say, well,
you Americans are fighting over there in that corner. This
is what we're going to do. And one of the
things they did they imported roughly speaking, ten million people

(02:00:17):
during Biden's years fourteen to fifteen million if you count
all the legalized workers, the white collar workers, and among
them were about say ten million illegals across the southern border,
and they were putting them to jobs, and it looks
like they put half a million, eight hundred thousand of them.
That's half a million. It's very hard to track into

(02:00:40):
the trucking business. So when you drive out on the highway,
you're passing trucks, and trucks are passing you that have
been driven by illegal migrants or longer migrants aquasi illegal migrants.
There's numerous ways they did it, so about five hundre
let's say, five hundred thousand people on the road are

(02:01:02):
basically not Americans and what often what they're doing is like,
so this is the way it works. A couple of
Indians in India say, I want to make some money
for my family from my village in America. I go
to the American embassy and I'll get a visitor's visa,
you know, like I'm a tourist, okay, but under the
visitors visa, they're allowed to become truck drivers. So the family,

(02:01:26):
So a couple of young men will get together, say
ten thousand dollars it's fortunate in India, and then they'll
fly off them they get the visa because Trump of
Biden's people will just hand them out like candy. They
fly into America and then they got ten thousand dollars
for comment. So they have more or less buy commercial
driver's licenses in California and various other loosely, you know,

(02:01:50):
very generous states, let's say, and take its driving course,
a little bit of this, a little bit of that,
and pretty much a couple of a month or so later,
they're on the road. They're on the road, barrewing passed
you at eighty five miles an hour, singing happily themselves
in Hindi by the way, there's two. There's two or
three guys in that truck. So when they get in

(02:02:12):
the truck in La, they can drive to Florida or
Texas or New York in one go. They barely have
to stop. There's a sort of government regardation that says
you can't drive more than they are. And and then
there's of course the basic rules. You need to stop
to go to the bathroom shower. Not these guys. These
guys are making money, a tiny amount of dollars that's

(02:02:36):
worth a fortune in India. So they're happy putting the
hammer down for eighty miles an hour across the United States.
So if you don't like those big trucks barreling by you,
that's them. Now, Biden and New Yorkers did that to you.
They did that. They made that possible. And so the

(02:02:57):
Obama's people. There's a rule that says, an old rule
that says you can't drive on American roads unless you
pass a reading test. Okay, it doesn't sound unreasonable. This
was designed for say, Canadian truckers drill delivered beer into
Detroit or something like that. Our Mexican delivery agriculture product

(02:03:17):
in Texas they were supposed to be able to read. Well,
the Indian language or Eritrean language, or Kazakh language or
Somali language or Cameroonian language is completely different. These guys
can't even read our letters. And in twenty sixteen, Obama's

(02:03:38):
people said, you know what, we love these immigrants. We
want more immigration. Let's stop, and we want cheap labor.
Because the companies always want cheap labor. Let's stop enforcing
that rule. So in twenty sixteen, they stopped and forcing
the rule that said if you can't read the signs,
you can't drive. That's how Biden and New York I've

(02:04:00):
got five hundred thousands migrants onto the roads behind the
driving eighteen wheelers. That just ended the language rule. And
you never heard about it because most media doesn't care.
It's a tiny little rule, very very deep in the
federal government. And I never knew and I covered this
stuff full time, and I didn't even know that people

(02:04:20):
could fly in here on B one visitor visas and
get truck driving license. Because there's so much going on.
It's also chaotic, it's also confusing. It's also incredibly complex
that I didn't know. Well, I found out a couple
of months ago what was going on, and I wrote
it up. And then Trump and its people they're like sharks.

(02:04:42):
They're politicians. They're after votes and poll ratings. That's what
keeps them going is what we want. We don't need
him to love us. We don't need him to rhapsodize
about American society. We need him to help by following
the polls. So they saw that and they've quickly changed
the rules. And yesterday Trump announced in an executive order

(02:05:05):
telling is sexuality of transportation to start and forcing the
language rule. So soon enough, a month or two, they
will start and forcing the rule that if drivers can't
read English, they can't.

Speaker 1 (02:05:19):
Drive on our road.

Speaker 6 (02:05:20):
So our roads are going to get safer. There's good
to be slightly fewer trucks because of If you like
overnight delivery on democracy, there's good news for you.

Speaker 1 (02:05:30):
Well, and I suppose Neil and Roe, there are statistics
out there which bear out the dangers that you're explaining.
I mean, have our roads become demonstrably more dangerous? Have
there been more accidents because of this inability? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (02:05:44):
Yeah, So like the number of air crashes has gone
down enormously. It's like a standing you find. You climb
into this metal tube and it jumps in the air,
and it flies across the United States a tremendous speed,
and everyone's bored when it ends. That's an astounding achievement.
But truck mild debts are going up in part because

(02:06:06):
the federal government wanted cheap labor. And what does all
this cheap labor mean? First of all, it which is
a huge number of American trucking companies out of business,
so names disappear, jobs disappear. It also drives down wages, right,
and so what that means is truckers get poorer and
poorer and less than less experiences, and so American drivers

(02:06:28):
will get worse. And here's another thing it does. When
there's truck drivers willing to drive across the country can't
without getting out of the cab in their little teams,
what do the warehousing companies and retailers do. They don't
care what happens to truckers. So a lot of truckers
spend a lot of time waiting to park, waiting at

(02:06:50):
warehouses be loaded or unloaded, which is really unfair. If
I drive eight r the one we paid for eight hours, well,
under federal rules, you don't get paid waiting in a
park loss. So many of these truckers have to waste
many hours doing nothing and one reason. And that's bad
for all of us because it means we have more
trucks and more costs in order to deliver the same

(02:07:12):
amount of stuff. But when there are plenty of cheap drivers,
the warehousers, the warehouse companies are under no pressure to
improve efficiency. They don't care if the truckers are stuck
four or five hours in the parking lots. It's not
their problem. They're not paying for it. And if there's
loads of truckers, the trucker counts right back. So if

(02:07:35):
there was a shortage of labor, the whole system would
get more efficient. If there was a shortage of labor,
the warehouses would say, you know, let's speed this up.
Let's stop wasting time. Let's make everything more efficient and
more productive. And that's what makes Americans, which when the
country gets more productive, more efficient when there's less wasted time.
But cheap labor from overseas just turns everything to mush.

Speaker 13 (02:07:58):
You know, we all get poor well, and being a
truck driver could be very lucrative here in the United States,
I guess, up until this phenomenon has occurred, because you know,
you can make a very comfortable living doing being a
long haul trucker and support a family and maybe even
afford one of those houses a few people can't afford.

Speaker 6 (02:08:18):
Right, But even then nucleus say, yeah, you can make money,
but you've got to be in a truck for you know,
twenty hour runs.

Speaker 1 (02:08:24):
That's not for everybody.

Speaker 6 (02:08:26):
Yeah, and now there's two or three Indians in a
truck barreling down the highway and you don't have a load. Well,
it's what like what immigration does. Chiefly it makes things.
It makes rents a property and ground more expensive. And
that means people who own apartment buildings, who own downtown spaces,

(02:08:51):
who are investors in real estate, they make more money.
When you stuff more people in the country, right, the
economy doesn't get more efficient, so everyone knows spending more
of their greater share of their money on rent and
property and on various other things too. It's like it's
migration makes the country as a whole bigger, fat, or richer,

(02:09:14):
but it doesn't make the average American.

Speaker 1 (02:09:16):
Better all, no question about that.

Speaker 10 (02:09:18):
Better.

Speaker 6 (02:09:19):
All Americans are better off.

Speaker 1 (02:09:22):
Yeah, Immigration expert Neil Monroe from Brightbard, I just have
to observe. You make a great argument about truckers needing
to speak English because of course they got the biggest, heaviest,
potentially most dangerous vehicles on the road. They should know
how to read road signs and all of that. I
get that, But this executive order ensuring truckers speak English

(02:09:42):
does not carry over to the average driver of an automobile.
And you mentioned roads being unsafe, and lord knows, everybody
can see how crazy people drive these days. Maybe it's
part of the problem because illegal immigrants can get drivers' licenses.

Speaker 6 (02:09:56):
No, this is so we're not going to be a
little delicate. Okay, So imagine a nice Norwegian on the
Cincinnati roads. Okay, there are not in any particular rush.
They're going to obey the science because that's the way
it's been in a thousand years. In Norway, there are
people from wilder cultures where they don't have road signs
or they don't particularly obey the road laws because they

(02:10:18):
come because the grandparents didn't have no car with all
very recent and so there are people drive at different rates.
And everybody you know of has had the road insurance
rates rise up, and that's partly because immigration has brought
an immense amount of inexperience and reckless drivers, and it
has also brought in a huge amount of theft. So

(02:10:42):
we will regularly see articles about illegal migrants stealing catalytic
conversions in Canada and here there's a huge illegal If
you're from often illegal migrants will say, Wow, that's a
really great car, be worth a fortune in my home country,
How do I get it? There A lot a lot

(02:11:02):
of migrant steel cars, very professionally, very sophisticated, very electronic,
high tech, and they stick them in a container and
or their ownership in Baltimore a day later heading off
to South Africa or Bornosires or whatever.

Speaker 1 (02:11:16):
Well, I tell you what, I had more time, We shu,
we had more time. You've shown you've showed a light
on something that a lot of people obviously did not
know about you. Even yourself would not know about this
until very recently. Immigration expert Neil Monroe. I'll encourage my
listeners to check out your writing over at Breitbart dot com,
and I look forward to having you back on the program. Neil.
It's been a great conversation delighted to turn up. Thank

(02:11:39):
you very much, Thank you sir. It's a twenty fifty
five KC the talk station. Get in touch with Zimmer
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(02:12:41):
more information about contests on this channel nine first one
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hear from traffic update Chuck Ingram from.

Speaker 9 (02:13:15):
The UCL Traffic Center, U S Health Weight Ball Center
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down in Florence between Safeway and Empire for police activity.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs seat the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:13:47):
A thirty on a Tuesday. It's that time of the
week if we get to talk to retired Lieutenant Colonel
Daniel Davis, you get the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Welcome
back to the program, Daniel, my friend. It's a pleasure
to have you on as always. Good to see Brian.
How were you. I'm doing well, you know, hanging in there.
As they say, among the problems in the world, I'm
surrounded by all it's just a bunch of crap. Every

(02:14:07):
story you got a gloom and doom. Four corners of
the universe seem to be troubled, and that's usually what
we end up talking about. So it can be depressing.
But I'm doing fine, and I hope you can say
the same. We've been talking week after week after week
about the latest on Russia and Ukraine, and I saw
some hint of suggestion because Trump apparently had a meeting
with Zelensky when they were overseas that CRIMEA might be

(02:14:34):
under consideration, that Zelensky might not have that red line
in the sand. I'm not going to give an inch
of my territory up. But crime has been taking over
by Russia now for twelve years. Barack Obama let it happen,
and it's been that way, and that seems to be
part of sort of a foregone conclusion and all of
our prior conversations you talk about zelensky lack of willingness
to concede any territory. Does he think that he can

(02:14:57):
somehow get back CRIMEA. I mean recognizing the relative negotiating
powers that we've talked about, and that he doesn't have
a whole lot of power on his side at the
negotiation table. I gotta tell you, Brian.

Speaker 14 (02:15:11):
I think that the issue, and this may sound like
a trite statement, but I mean it genuinely. I think
he has become delusional in his thinking and is not
looking at things reality. That's one of the reasons why
I think that President Trump just has to make whatever
decision he thinks is best for the United States because
he doesn't have a genuine partner on the Ukraine side

(02:15:32):
to come up with some kind of rational plan that
they can present as a as a unified side along
with Europe in their negotiations with Russia.

Speaker 1 (02:15:41):
Because you have Ukraine, you have the Europe.

Speaker 14 (02:15:44):
I mean, they're literally all over the map over here,
and they're not connected with the reality map that Trump
apparently is.

Speaker 1 (02:15:50):
So you see, it's nearly impossible.

Speaker 14 (02:15:52):
So the only thing that is going to make some
sense for President Trump is going to be I'm just
gonna have to make the best deal that I can
with Putin or I'm just gonna have to walk And
Rubio mentioned that on Sunday again, and I think that
that he said this week will be crucial, and I
believe that Trump is now nearing the point to where

(02:16:13):
he's gonna say, I've tried everything I can with you guys,
but you won't deal with the reality that exists on
the ground, and I'm gonna have to just walk away
and let you guys figure it out for yourself, because
if you're not gonna listen to sam any kind of
common sense, then I can't do anything for you anyway.
And that'll be a He'll come under a lot of
pressure from that for President Trump, but only those who

(02:16:35):
are also not willing to look at reality.

Speaker 1 (02:16:37):
And I think that's where he's headed. So Zelonsky's basically
operating from a position of delusion. I mean, as anybody
sort of slapped him in the face and say, what
do you god, I mean, what is your argument? I mean,
your people are being slaughtered on the battlefield, and I'll
admit that some of the Russians, and I guess North
Koreans as well at this juncture, are being slaughtered as well,

(02:16:58):
but not the degree the Ukrainians saw are they're running
out of people to fill the ranks in the military.
This has been going on for quite some time. Meanwhile,
the slaughter goes on, Zelensky's in an untenable position and
yet won't acknowledge it. I guess I just don't understand
why didn't somebody just sort of throttle him.

Speaker 14 (02:17:17):
Right right right that well, I think diplomatically, that's what
Trump is about ready to do. And I think that he's,
like you would ordinarily think the head of a state
is somebody that can be dealt with rationally, and even
if you come to a situation you don't like the
circumstances aren't to your locking, and therefore you can't get
the outcome that you want. You grudgingly acknowledge what is
and then get the best out of it you can.

(02:17:37):
That's kind of normal how that people would work. But
Zelenski is not in a normal position. And I think
that his situation is exacerbated further and alarmingly so by
leaders in Europe because instead of throttling him, as you
just put it, they instead encourage him.

Speaker 1 (02:17:54):
And I mean, you've had it all the way through.

Speaker 14 (02:17:56):
You've had Boris Johnson advise against having the Istanbul agreement
in twenty twenty two, and you've gotten them now. Germany
was published published sized said they suggested Zelensky reject Trump's
plan to quote giveaway crimea and as though there's a

(02:18:16):
choice to be made. So that's not just Zelenski, but
it's also the new incoming government from Germany. And then
you have of course back Ron and secure Starmer of
the UK. They keep talking about this coalition of the willing.
I mean they're feeding into it. So there's a much
bigger problem, quite frankly, going on in the Western world
right now, which complicates this greatly.

Speaker 1 (02:18:37):
But this pressure on Zelensky to reject the idea of
negotiating some sort of you know, land for peace deal
with Putin. They haven't stepped up and said we will
send our people in to help and fill the ranks
of your depleted military. There's been no out loud statement
from the European Union leaders to that effect. They're just

(02:18:57):
egging them on and having as people continue to go
through the meat grinder. Am I or am I wrong
on that? Oh you're not.

Speaker 14 (02:19:04):
As a matter of fact, the UK in particular has
gone backwards and said, you may recall I want to
say this is late as December. They were talking about
a total European force of two hundred thousand's what they
were looking for. And then they said, well, okay, maybe
one hundred thousand. And then they start looking at the
actual numbers of.

Speaker 1 (02:19:22):
Who could do what. They said, okay, all right, sixty thousand.

Speaker 14 (02:19:24):
And then the UK said all right, and we'll pony
up maybe thirty thousand, and then they said okay, well
actually maybe ten thousand. And now in this past seven
or so days, it's like, okay, we'll send some trainers
into Ukraine, not even peacekeepers, because they realize they don't
have enough, they can't actually do it. But they're still
talking about this and encouraging Zelenski forward, which has the

(02:19:47):
perverse effect that you just laid out there, getting more
Ukrainian slaughtered in and pointing this battle they can't win
and they just won't come to graps with reality.

Speaker 1 (02:19:55):
It's really puzzling. What is the state of the I mean,
we do know what the Ukrainian population wants at this juncture.
I mean I don't know if they do surveys and polls.
And it's one thing to be patriotic and say, no,
damn it, we're not going to give the Russians an
inch of land and we're gonna get crimea back. But
practically speaking, the people on the ground are the ones
that have lost their sons and their husbands and their

(02:20:17):
grandfathers to this terrible conflict. Yeah, I do.

Speaker 14 (02:20:21):
I actually I have talked recently to a former member
of Zelensky's government.

Speaker 1 (02:20:26):
I won't say who. I don't want to throw that
person under the.

Speaker 14 (02:20:28):
Bus, but they told me that the polling that is
actually out there shows that the further away you are
from the line of contact, the less willing you are
to recognize reality, and the more willing you are to
say and yeah, let's keep on going.

Speaker 1 (02:20:43):
But even that numbers is coming down.

Speaker 14 (02:20:45):
But they said that when you're up on the front lines,
I mean I'm talking within like one hundred kilometers or so,
those people are saying, this is dumb.

Speaker 1 (02:20:53):
Let's don't do this anymore.

Speaker 14 (02:20:55):
We we'll just keep losing more territory now than there
was four more villages this morning around the area Pakrosk
on the Ukraine side, which has received orders to evacuate.
Because this the Russians are continuing to go forward. Russia
gained twenty seven square kilometers of territory in the last
twenty four hours, so their advances are accelerating, and now
more Ukrainian people are put at risk, and there's more

(02:21:17):
flight going on inside the country, and you keep seeing
that over and over, and you just got to ask yourself,
how much worse does it have to get before you
finally come to a recognition that the war can't even
be stopped much less one. But unfortunately, it looks like
that there is no end inside and so that means
this by definition, Russia will eventually conquer what it wants

(02:21:39):
on the ground, aside from the negotiation because they don't
have a partner that they feel they can discuss it with.

Speaker 1 (02:21:44):
Yeah, every day that goes by, they lose even more
negotiating power, not that they have a whole lot to
start with. H Daniel Davis. So I wish we had
some really positive news that come from that front, but
it's well, you get the leader.

Speaker 14 (02:21:58):
At least President Trump is grounded in reality and he's
trying to do something that nobody else had done. It's
definitely the previous administration. So there is some positive on that.

Speaker 1 (02:22:07):
Yeah, hey, real quick, just your your your thumbnail skeedch
boiled down take on military strikes against the against the Hoothies.
We've been dropping all kinds of bombs on them lately.

Speaker 14 (02:22:19):
Yeah, we've been dropping bombs and we've been losing drone
of these multimillion dollar drones, I think like seven of
them in the last week or so. And then I
don't know if you noticed, but yesterday in the Red Sea,
one of the Hoothy missiles came so close.

Speaker 1 (02:22:33):
To the aircraft carrier UH, one of the air correct carriers.

Speaker 14 (02:22:35):
We have in there, that we had to maneuver out
in this emergency situation and lost an F eighteen.

Speaker 1 (02:22:40):
Over the side. How does that happen?

Speaker 6 (02:22:42):
Man?

Speaker 1 (02:22:43):
How does that happen? Because they were just doing a
normal move on their on.

Speaker 14 (02:22:48):
Their hangar by moving a plane around, when all of
a sudden they had an emergency requirement to uh maneuver
away from a ship I mean away from an anti
missile ship, any ship missile And because of that, the
list yes, very heavily to the side and it literally
rolled into the sea.

Speaker 1 (02:23:03):
Yeah, what an embarrassment for the United States military on
that score. This is a mission.

Speaker 14 (02:23:08):
We can't fight. We can't win this militarily. All we're
gonna do is lose millions of dollars. Now it's into
the billions in the curtain in terms of the mission too.
And you're not gonna knock them out. We need to
do something different.

Speaker 1 (02:23:19):
Daniel Davis Deep Dive every week at Tuesday at eight thirty.
Check them out online. Find the podcast just by searching
Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Uh again. Sometimes depressing Daniel, but
always interesting, stand up on top of things, speaking truth
in the face of insanity. Girl said, thanks talking next week.
We'll talk next Tuesday. Brother eight forty I fifty five

(02:23:39):
car see the talk station. Don't go away. We're gonna
hear from ours the experts. Take go learn all about
rhinews shield that's coming up. I hope you can stick around.

Speaker 7 (02:23:47):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (02:23:50):
Thinking about buying your first home

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