Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Five O five five k r C the talk station
Election day, Cory Bowman voto a blast from the past,
(00:35):
did not go back to the Obama first election. Joe Yeah,
jeez wow, taking me back Happy Tuesday folks at his
election day and strongly encourage everyone to get out and
vote no on issue too. If you don't know why
Jennifer Gross is on a high Representator Jennifer Gross yesterday
(00:56):
in the fifty five Carsey Morning Show explaining very crystal
clear why she is at No. One issue to and
YU should be as well. It's a reason to vote.
Hardly anybody's going to show up today. And I hate
to say that definitively as if I can know the numbers,
but come on off cycle election with only one issue
on the Ohive and it's a constitutional amendment, folks. It's
(01:17):
going to permanently establish in Ohio's constitution a slush fund.
What are they using the thirty nine whatever sent gas
tax for? Why isn't that covering the roads, bridges and infrastructure.
Why can't the representatives in the state well do the
job they're supposed to do and allocate tax dollars that
they take in. And there's no there's no financial problems
(01:39):
in Columbus right now, do their job and take the
revenue that they receive from us every year and allocate
it towards existing infrastructure before they start buying and funding
new stuff and things. Question mark question mark question mark. No,
they got to instablish a constitutional amendment to take even
(02:00):
more money from you, and you're gonna have to pay
the debt service on this. This is just going to
create another line item in the budget. We borrowed money
because we passed the constitutional amendment that the voters approved
that said go ahead and borrow money for roads, bridges,
and infrastructure. And parenthetically, what roads, bridges and infrastructure are
(02:21):
going to get this money? Do you have any say
over that? Is your community going to get out of
the funds that are going to be created or taken
in by this measure? Probably not, But you got to
pay debt service on money you borrow. I don't under
just really it burns me, absolutely burns me. So listen
(02:44):
to Representative Jennifer Gross before you go and to vote today,
and please go and vote and vote no on issue too.
Please podcast at you have caresy dot com if you
are interested in hearing what Jennifer grow says to say
private citizen b Winstrip will be in studio love when
Brad comes into the studio talk issues. We'll talk about
(03:04):
the empower use seminar he's doing on May seventh. We'll
talk about lessons he learned from the pandemic and lessons
we all learned from the pandemic. Trump apparently has now
ordered a curb on halting a funding ungain of function research,
which is a good thing. Anyway, After commres from Winstrip
departs the studio, we'll get the insighte scoop of bright
(03:25):
Bart News Today editor in chief Alex Marlowe will talk
about the empower use seminar that's going on tonight, plus
media credibility. Do they have any I note that CBS
sixty minutes interview with Kamala Harris that they edited for Primetime,
the one where they took out her words salad, the
(03:47):
editing job on that was nominated for an Emmy. It's
like Barack Obama one of the Nobel Peace Prize for
doing absolutely nothing, just nominated. They didn't get an Emmy anyway.
Alex marlow eight O five, follow by the Daniel Davis
Deep Dive the latest in rush plus Israel's plan to
seize Gaza, and it is a bold and ambitious plan.
(04:09):
Regardless of how you feel about that plan, They're basically
going to flatten it and take it over and well
established law there at least that's from their standpoint. Plus
Secretary of State Frank Lrose on voting today. He'll join the
program at the tail end of the eight o'clock hour
seven four nine fifty, five hundred, eight hundred and eighty
two three talk hit pound five fifty if you have
an AT and T phone, just like Cribbage Mike did. Mike,
(04:32):
Welcome to the Morning show, my submariner friend. As always,
thank you for your service to our country, and will
you be at listener lunch tomorrow at Saunder Brewery in Westchester.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
I already have a wake up call in because after
we put our fourteen hours in today, I'll be raring
to go to break your one game winning streak, sir.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
Yes, sir, and I know you probably will.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Odds are in your favor, and let me start again,
not only for your thank you for your service to
our country. Thank you for being a poll worker. Appreciate
that community serves you're doing right there.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
Yes, sir, waiting here from my eleven other patriots here
out in Claremont County. And as you aptly stated about
it's how important it is today to show up. I've
been voting since my right after I graduated from my
beloved Elder High School in nineteen seventy four. So this
is my fifty first year casting a ballot. A lot
(05:22):
of absentee ballots while I was active duty military. But
as important as it is to vote for our congressmen
and our senators and of course our president, these elections
today affect our pocketbooks no more than any other election.
So it's always very disheartening when you hear these predictions
(05:42):
of ten to fifteen percent turnout. But you know, people
wake up. That's why they put these issues on an
off year May sixth, early morning, to try and slide
it under the table. So let's get out vote, vote
your conscience. We actually have three issues here in Claremont County. UH,
the school district Levy, which in my humble opinion, needs
(06:04):
to go down hard because of this management of what
they've done already. UH, since the disillusionment of the village
of Amelia Pierce Township has taken up the load as
far as police and fire. So I am in whole
support of that because as we continue to grow as
well as what they took over after Amelia went away,
we need to support our police and fire and definitely
(06:24):
vote no un issue too, sir.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
Well, and I know you're near and dear to your
heart because your property tax is increased by what sixty three.
Speaker 2 (06:32):
Actually three percent, yes, sir, in the last five.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
Years now, wells Claremont's school, Levey has really burned your hide.
You want to you want to put some flesh on
the bones of that brief statement, Mike while you're on
the phone.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
Well, they eight years ago, and it was it was
a great plan, you know. They as we continue to grow,
uh they So they they sold the glenns to former Glennst.
High School to a commercial development, and there's beautiful you know,
retail condos, uh green space going on over there.
Speaker 4 (06:59):
But the promise was.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Made that all the money that we got from the developers,
the new West Claremont High School taxpayers will not have
to pay a dime. So after three years, their hera
is on fire. We're out of money. So it's either
you lied to us or you're incompetent or both. Either
one is not good. So they got that levee through
five years ago, and between that and then the triannual
(07:22):
property assessment, our me and my neighbor's property taxes went
up sixty three percent. And now they said the building
fund that was garnered from that GLENNISDA High School sale,
all that money has gone. So our two aging elementary
schools need to be totally rebuilt because they're sixty five
years old. We'll do the math. Ten years ago when
you got that money from the developers, they were fifty
(07:44):
five years old, so more than likely they were going
to have to be replaced. So the fact that you
overlooked at you built this beautiful campus that any community
college would love to have, and we don't have to
recruit like colleges. If you live here, you're going to
go to the high school. So if that would have
been a more modest high school, we could have already
rebuilt these two elementary schools and you wouldn't come coming
(08:05):
back dipping into my wall at this morning.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
Well, stated Mike, I knew you're passionate about this, which
is why I suggest you elaborate on the specifics of
that that's cool. Look, no, I'm glad you called in,
and I appreciate your passion on that. I just the
idea that your property taxes went up that much is
just mind blowing to me. And I know you're not
alone on that. A lot of people's property taxes went
through the roof with that reassessment. So, but more fundamentally,
(08:27):
do they really need the money? Should you reward what
you suggest is mismanagement? And of course sounds like a
hard noe for me. If I was able to vote
in Clairemont County, I can't, and I can't vote in
the city either. There's lots of things I'd love to
change if I was as a voter in various jurisdictions. Mike, Mike,
good luck today, Thanks again for working the polls, and
I'll look forward to seeing you tomorrow. Listener launch again
(08:50):
Saunder Brewery's Westchester location. Feel free to be an observer
of the cribbage game when I probably will go down
in flames. I really enjoy playing courbage with my good
man he is. I love listening to lunch too. If
you haven't ever been to one Nay show up. Actually,
I believe my wife is going to show up to
Listener in lunch tomorrow. She said she's going to make
plans to do that, So that's an unusual thing for
(09:14):
her because she of course works during the day. But
Paul Ett, if you're awake and listening, I'm happy you're
going to be attending Listener at lunch. Yesterday on the
Morning Show, we heard from FOP President Ken Kober about
the murder of Deputy Henderson, and I think we can
accurately describe it as a murder. He was specifically targeted
because he had a uniform on a sheriff's uniform, which
(09:37):
had nothing to do with the CINCINNTI Police Department shooting
of his son. I'm sure to take great comfort in
knowing the Cincinnati citizens complain authority is investigating that shooting.
But ken Kober had some pointed words on the whole topic,
and I understand that the passionate law enforcement officer would
(09:57):
have about well one of their brother officers in uniform
getting run over, intentionally struck and killed. A couple of
statewide law enforcement agencies are calling on go fundme to
take down fundraisers for the guy who killed the Hammond
(10:17):
County Sheriff's deputy Rodney Hinton Junior, the man who struck
deputy with his car May first, while that deputy was
doing nothing more than directing traffic at the University of Cincinnati.
Buckeye State Sheriff's Association in the Ohio Fraternal Order Police
objected onto the online fundraiser for Rodney Hinton Junior, and
(10:39):
I can understand that now, a GoFundMe spokesperson and Kaylin Lee,
and I props to The Inquire's Aaron Glenn for reporting
on this, said, the organization's terms of service prohibit fundraisers
for the legal defense of violent crimes. Quote. She said,
consistent with this long standing policy, any fundraisers for the
legal defense of someone charged with the violent climb are
(11:01):
removed from the platform and fully refunded. H mcry reached
out to the organizers of the fundraisers, unable to contact them.
Executive director of the riff Association, Robert Cornwell, mister Hinton
and his family and friends should not benefit at the
expense of a law enforcement officer that was doing the
(11:22):
job he was hired to perform. This is absolutely outrageous
to fundraise off the assassination of a law enforcement officer.
He said, I'm sorry. That was a quote from Jay McDonald,
president of the twenty three hundred member of Fraternal Order
Police MCRY. Did a search for Rodney Hinton on the
GoFundMe site last evening found two fundraisers, neither of which
(11:42):
had received any donations, which it wouldn't shot me if
there were donations. Before the calls from the FOP and
Sheriff Association, there had been active fundraisers for both Rodney
and Ryan Hinton, not available as a four thirty PM.
(12:03):
So maybe the gofunding sites actually followed through with their
own policies and well pulled the FUNDRAI pulled the go
funding sites from the site, both organizations that put them up,
claiming the Hinton taunted deputies that his Arraignment's unclear whom
Hinton spoke to or what he said in the video
of the arrangement, And it just reminded me of that
(12:25):
Luigi Mangione guy who's become a bit of a celebrity.
He murdered the United Health CEO Brian Thompson, and I
went to the there's a Gift send ghost site up
for that guy. For the murderer of Brian Thompson, CEO
of United Health, who was murdered, apparently because MANGIONI just
(12:46):
felt that well healthcare insurance companies were bad in evil.
They deny claims. You know, it is a policy of insurance.
It is subject to limitations and exclusions. I mean, sorry,
sucks to be us as of general population. But you know,
the insurance companies can't pay for everything. It upends the
(13:06):
actuarial analysis that provides them with the basis to at
least make some measure of profit and manage claims. Anyway,
the give send go site which apparently does not have
the same type of rules for that that the GoFundMe site.
(13:26):
As in other words, violent crimes fundraisers for those charged
with violent crimes are removed from the platform Give send
Go I guess allows them, and thus far they have
raised one thirty two forty seven dollars at least as
of this morning. So there's enough people out in the
United States that are willing to defend the outright assassination.
(13:48):
I think merely because people have a chip on their
shoulder about medical insurance companies. Now you may have a
chip on your shoulder, you may have legitimate arguments about them.
You may think the system is broken or wrong or whatever.
Does it justify murder? Is this what we have devolved into? Assassination?
Just because you're angry? It seems like we're moving in
(14:11):
that direction anymore. Anyway, million plus dollars, I don't get it.
Five nineteen fifty five KRC City Talks. They's you wifer
to chime in five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty
five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talk found five
fifty on AT and T phones right back after these brieforts.
Speaker 5 (14:27):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
Is your retirement plan missing.
Speaker 6 (14:37):
Here?
Speaker 4 (14:37):
It is?
Speaker 3 (14:39):
You're channel nine first one.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
A weather forecast today, mostly cloudy skies, rain remains. It's
going to be north of the Ohio River. They say.
My friends in the Commonwealth, I guess have nothing to
concern themselves with today's high sixty six, overnight little fifty
with mostly cloudy skies started to dry out Tomorrow, mostly
cloudy skies, slight afternoon chance rain. As they originally said
it was going to be a dry all day, seventy
(15:04):
two for the high tomorrow overnight low of fifty three
with partly Claudia's guy partly Claudius Well on Thursday and
high of seventy five. It's fifty degrees right now, fifty
five care seeing the talk station, Jasiah five twenty three
f fifty five kre see talk station. Then Happy Tuesday
(15:25):
to you. Election Day, Get out and vote vote no
on an issue too. I'm gonna be saying that a lot
this morning, so I'm sorry for being repetitive, but I
think it's important. Five three seven four nine fifty five
hundred and eight hundred two three talk. Thank you, Corey,
he said, remember go fund me remove Kyle Rittenhouse's account.
I did not recall that, Corey, but you're right. You
(15:45):
jogged my you refresh my recollection. As they say in
the law, Uh okay. I love the Democrats and efforts
to perpetuate this myth, and you'll the oligarchs. It's it's
the Republicans and the oligarchs. This is the holdover from
the days when the Republicans represented the evil business enters
(16:07):
to the exclusion of the middle class and the working man.
Republicans have really taken over and gotten made great roads.
It's much like the Reagan administration inroads into the working class,
the exclusive realm of the Democrats up until people woke
(16:28):
up and realized that the Democrats were the globalists and
the ones that were, you know, joined at the hip
with the multi multi billionaire so called oligarchs, that they're
seeking to tie the Republican Party too. But I just
thought this was a great illustration of the hypocrisy. And
I understand she was the vice president. I understand that
she is entitled a secret Service protection. But get a
(16:50):
load of this. The climate change folks on the left,
and I know Kamala Harris is among that group, and
they never walk walk, do they. Oh, they want to
tell you what appliances you can have and what cars
you can drive, and all those edicts and mandates from
on high controlling your life and the name of this
(17:11):
religion that we call climate change. New York Post reported
Kamala Harris took more than two dozen bodyguards, including taxpayer
funded Secret Service agents, to go out on a date
with her husband, Doug M. Hoff over at Cincinnati. One
of New York City's most exclusive bars is a place
(17:32):
called the Polo Bar. And of course I've never been there.
Probably couldn't get a reservation because Apparently people had to
get reservations weeks and weeks in advance of the event.
In advance of the met gala, if you go online,
there's a lot of sites posting what women were wearing
at the met Gala. I didn't get an invitation to
that either. Anyway, she was spotted leaving the Polo Bar
(17:54):
on East fifty fifth Street Sunday night ahead of her
rumored appearance at that Met gala. According to the Post reporting,
they mingle with elite guests, many of whom had booked
their tables weeks in advance, post for pictures and chatted
with patrons. The pictures show at least twenty five bodyguards,
secret Service agents and New York Police Department officers stand
(18:16):
around the couple who are waiting outside where four one, two, three,
four bulletproof cars and three count them additional SUVs or station.
That's your dollars federally funded protection. And apparently she gets
that and her family gets that federally funded protections for
about six months after leaving office. I mean, I always
(18:38):
talk about optics, and I've been critical of the optics
from the Trump administration from time to time. You know,
the things you can do that you shouldn't do. But
she wants to run for president again, which may make
you chuckle and laugh, which it always does me when
I think about it. His words, Salad put to show
(19:00):
up at an elite hotspot in advance of an elite
gala that no one out there in the real world
would ever have an opportunity to go to and have,
Like that's seven cars so she can go out with
her husband. You know, if I'm in a conversation with
my wife and I'm entitled to this type of protection,
(19:22):
and I'm thinking about it, and I'm thinking about higher office,
you know, we're like, do you want to go to
the polar bar tonite?
Speaker 3 (19:26):
Honey? No, absolutely not.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
You know why because we'd have all kinds of opportunities
for the opposition, or take photographs of us with seven cars,
notably three additional SUVs. We got to tote these people around.
It's gonna have a bad opt it's gonna have bad optics.
You know, where are the party of global warming? Climate change?
And that would look bad. Now, they never have that discussion.
(19:50):
They never look out. They never look like from a
position of neutrality, the forest for the trees kind of thing.
So I'm calling them out on it. Somebody wrote WTF
at the top of that article. Five twenty seven fifty
five KRCD Talk Station got local stories coming up. Your
phone calls will be preferred, so feel free to give
you a call.
Speaker 7 (20:07):
Be right back, fifty five krc ten and nine.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
First one you want a forecast today, mostly cloudy sky's
rain north of the Ohio River. If we get any
sixty six of the high today, overnight loll of fifty
with mostly cloudie sky Tomorrow mostly clouds slight afternoon chance
of rain and a highest seventy two with an overnight
lote of fifty three with clouds Thursday at party cloudie day,
and seventy five for the high fifty degrees. Right now
(20:32):
for the five KRCD Talk station, it is five thirty.
It is Tuesday. It is election day. Bowls open six
thirty am to seven thirty pm. So make sure you
get in a vote no on issue tune if you're
a resident of the City of Cincinnati, protest vote. If
you're a Democrat, plan on voting for FTEB Provoll November,
(20:52):
because I presume he's going to be one of the
top two candidates in today's primary member. It's the largest
vote getter. There's three choices. I recommend Corey Bowman. Good
Man cares about the city, cares about the residents of
the city, regardless of the political stripe lease. That's why
he comes across. Put to my friends in bond Hill
and Hyde Park who felt like they got well ignored
(21:17):
by their elective of elected officials in a representative form
of government that we have here city council stabbing him
in the back in terms of zoning. And as to
every neighborhood in the City of Cincinnati, connected communities that
ruined your opportunity to direct your navigate your own zoning
in your own local neighborhood. Get out and vote and
vote for Corey Bowman. Let's see if we can't send
(21:38):
a message to have to have Purvall to balance the
city council. Your jobs are in jeopardy. Just the thought.
Over the phones we go, Let's se what Tom's got
this morning. Tom, good to hear from me, my friend,
Welcome back to the fifty five Carsey Morning Show.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
Yeah, good, good morning. I'm surprised to hear that you
and Paultte didn't get all gussied up and go to
the met.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Gall Oh yeah, well we were, you know, we were
planning on it, but.
Speaker 4 (22:02):
I'm sure your invitation got lost in the mail. Is
that what happened.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
I think it was the problem with the airport, the
air traffic controllers, and the system went out. We were
afraid we couldn't land.
Speaker 4 (22:16):
And that, of course is all Trump's fault, right.
Speaker 3 (22:19):
Yeah, of course, Oh yeah, absolutely, see.
Speaker 4 (22:21):
How you can just see how you can just randomly
make that connection. It's all Trump's fault.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Yeah, So the legacy system that runs the air traffic
which has been around for the last forty years. Yes,
Trump is responsible for a failure to maintain it, up
keep the air traffic control system software.
Speaker 4 (22:39):
So it's just so easy when when you have no
conscience and you have no common sense, you don't even
care if you get either one of them. It's so
easy just to say random crap out there, because really,
what it comes down to, your job as a politician
is to say something that will emotionally affect somebody and
calls them to vote a certain way. That's really all
(23:02):
your job is as a politician. You're not obviously, you're
not there to do anything that's beneficial for anybody. You're
just there to stir people up and get them to
vote a certain way, which gives you more money, makes
you more powerful, all that stuff. I mean, it's absolutely ridiculous,
the lack of common sense that we have in government
(23:25):
and really with the voters. I mean, you know, well
I keep saying, you know, my final statement, every phone
call is directed at the voters, because it's up to
the voters to make this stuff happen a certain way.
Nothing's going to change if you don't change the way
you vote. It's that simple. Because these people see a little,
(23:45):
they a little, a big sometimes big pot of gold
that they can just dip their hands and do anytime
they want. And to constitutionally enshrine a big bucket of
money for these people to do whatever they want with,
I mean, really, where is the common sense in that?
I mean, that's ridiculous. I don't know how anybody could
(24:06):
possibly say yes to something like that. Here you go,
all you people who have made it very clear that
you don't know how to properly spend our money. Here
you go. Here's a whole bunch of money, and we
won't even ask what you're going to do with it.
How does that make any sense whatsoever?
Speaker 1 (24:22):
Brian, I have no idea. And it comes out of Columbus,
where Republicans control both the House, the Senate, and the
executive branch, and the form of the governor is mind
blowing to me. It is the antithesis of what the
Republican Party is supposed to stand for. Slush fun, it's
all about it's all about the money.
Speaker 4 (24:40):
Yeah, and obviously I am severely anti Democrat Party in
case anybody didn't notice, But there are plenty of issues
with the Republican Party, the fact that these people are politicians,
and something happens to your brain when you get elected
and you say, oh, I got all this money disposal,
look at what I can do and look at I
(25:03):
it's I don't know what happens, but people. We need
to get people in there who are fiscally responsible because
the first place if their decisions affects us is our pocketbook.
And it stays that way. But start a conversation with
my wife about the school district and how much we
pay them in our property taxes, and man, just like
light and a fews. Yeah, I mean it's yeah, it's crazy.
(25:27):
So yeah, obviously we got to keep an eye on
all of our politicians. We got to watch every one
of them. Just because you're in a in a locality
or a state that is controlled by Republicans doesn't mean
that everything's okay. It is not treat There's still politicians,
there's still thieves with their hand in your pocket. But
of course, as always, don't vote Democrat. Have a great day, Brian.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Thanks Tom, I just appreciate your passion. Five and three
eighty two to three. Talkeet to the stack of stupid
abs and phone calls coming up next, But first ord
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Speaker 5 (27:38):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (27:45):
Here's your Chann nine first one to let vocask got
mostly Clodiys Skuy's to day. If there's rainy remains north
of the Ohio River, you're safe in the Commonwealth. Sixty
six for the high down to fifty overnight with mostly
cloudy skies. Cloudy dat tomorrow as well slight chance of
afternoon rains. Seventy two for the high over night, lie
of fifty three with clowns cloudy on Thursday as well.
Seventy five be the high the ends fifty degrees. Right now,
(28:06):
time for our first traffic update. I'm you see up
traffic center. When it comes to stroke, every second counts.
Speaker 8 (28:11):
That's why you see health.
Speaker 9 (28:12):
That's a clear choice from rapid life saving treatment earn
more right you see how dot com sap found seventy
five A bit of.
Speaker 8 (28:19):
A slow go early this morning.
Speaker 9 (28:21):
It's some pretty heavy rain falling through west Chester and
into Sharonville.
Speaker 8 (28:24):
Right now, North found seventy five.
Speaker 9 (28:27):
That's doing fine through the cut and I'm not seeing
any problems at the moment. I'm inbound seventy four Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KR.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
See the talk station. It is five forty one afty
five Karo City talk Station. Very happy Tuesday to election day,
Get out in vote.
Speaker 3 (28:47):
Did imension VOTEO on issue too?
Speaker 1 (28:49):
If you're in the state of Ohio anyway, let us
see here over the stack is stupid, Hey Joe, When
you vacation in the Philippines Southern Zamboanga sibu Gay Province,
remember when you there? Of course, did he visit the
Kaboog Island, Mangrove and Wetlands Park when you were there
(29:11):
that was first day, because that was why you went
to the Zamboanga Zibugay province. Anyway, That's where we are
for this one. A man visiting the Cabog Island, Mangrove
and Wetlands Park and the aforementioned Philippine Southern Zamboanga Zibugay province. Well,
I'm gonna just sort of call him an idiot. Idiots
(29:33):
doing idiot things because they're idiots. He was attacked by
a crocodile after he climbed into the animal's enclosure to
pose for photos. In the video, of course, went viral
onlookers can be heard screaming at the man in the
crocodile after it bit him on the arm and held
on tight. Man could be seen sitting still as he
awaited help. The crocodile, a female named Lala, dragged him
(29:57):
through the shallow water and rolled over, twisting his arm
even further as he screamed out in pain HMM. Police
officers speaking with local media said to the man had
climbed into the enclosure because he thought the crocodile was fake.
Police staff sergeant Joel Sedgio LOGA close enough, sorry, Joel.
(30:21):
The tourist was walking around the area then he saw
the crocodile, which he thought was just a plastic fixture.
He climbed the fence and entered the enclosure, and the
crocodile attacked him. Video footiage show Lalley rolling the man
multiple times in what scientists called the death roll, which
is described as a tactic used by many types of
crocodilian species to kill prey and tear it apart for consumption.
(30:49):
Quarter reported by the Daily Mail of the Zoo caper in
charge of Lala had attempted to stop the man from
climbing the fence before it happened. Eventually, he entered the
enclosure himself to rescue the twenty nine year old, hitting
the crocodile over the head with a piece of concrete
to force her to open her mouth. Amen. Of course,
(31:10):
paramedics showed up, taken to the hospital, got more than
fifty stitches, of course, described as lucky to be alive.
At least you said, this kind of behavior is very dangerous.
Nobody should ever enter in animal's enclosure at the zoo.
He put other people's lives at risk, and he's very
lucky to have survived. Well, statingly obvious. We've got a
(31:35):
Delaware County, Pennsylvania woman now in custody after she allegedly
defecated on another person's car during a road rage incident,
all of which no idea, all of which was captured
on video. Of course, it was do you reach for
your phone immediately when anything strange is going on around you? Thankfully,
(31:56):
I don't have that default reaction. I just it's just
kind of the normal default reaction with everybody anyway. That's
why there's video of everything, literally everywhere fourth Street and
Madison Avenue Tuesday, April twenty ninth in Prospect Park, Pennsylvania,
Police said the woman identified as forty four year old
Christina Solometto of Ridley Park, defecated on another driver's car
in a road rage incident that started when one driver
(32:18):
cut off another one. The other driver did not report
the incident police. A witness recorded it and posted the
video on Instagram. Police later identified Solimento as the suspect,
taken into custody and charged with indecent exposure, disorderly conduct,
cronal mischief, harassment, and depositing waste on a highway. A
(32:42):
little what other charges can we come up with? Prospect
Park Police Chief David Madonna, speaking with local news, said
no laughing matter in spite of the massive quantity of
jokes online. After reviewing the video, said, I know it's
being joked on a lot. There's all kinds of puns
and any windows online, but the bottom line is, as
we are treating it seriously. It can't happen in this community.
(33:03):
No town wants us to happen in their town. The
recognition that town gets over this kind of thing. It's
really unwelcome. We don't want this. Whoa, that's a lot
of feces. You don't go to Prospect Park, Pennsylvania because
people there dump.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
On cars as a tradition.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Local News reached out to Settlementa's family members, who did
not agree to an interview, shocking no one. Oh you
care to comment? Five forty six O see thank you dad,
(33:48):
shout out from heaven for my father, God love him. Oh,
feel free to call. I'd love to hear from you. Gone.
That will continue in the stack. Is stupid this morning
at first. But Herbert Motors they're gonna treat you great,
a butter Herbert Motors. You need lawn equipment, you need
but Herbert Motors. Do not go to the box store.
You're gonna get inferior equipment sold to you by people
(34:08):
who don't know anything about what they're selling you. They
don't carry the finest in the business like but Herbert Motors.
They aren't five generations of family in an operated business,
which means you're gonna get well. If your name is
on the building, would you, I mean, would you have
would you think customer service is first and foremost in
your mind? That's what the Herbert Family's all about you're
(34:28):
gonna work with one of the Herbert family members. When
you call Butter Herbert Motors, they're just wonderful people. They
only sell the best in the business. John Deere, you
got x Mark Moors, steel, hond of power equipment. I
went with the Honda, happy I did. They told me
it would be the last push powered push More walk
behind mom that I'd ever have to buy. That's how
well it's built. And man, I'm telling you it is
a workhorse. It does wonderful job. They're gonna come out
(34:50):
and service my Honda Pushmore because I called them and
asked them to. They do service what they sell, and
they do deliver to your door. You don't have to
worry about the box store and finding somebody's truck to
load it up. So just don't go down that road.
I had a bad experience doing that, and that's how
I ended up learning about Bud Herbert Motors. And I'm
pleased that they asked me to let you know about them.
But Herbertmotors dot Com. The number five one three, five
(35:12):
four one thirty two ninety one. Tell whichever Herbert family
member you're working with that Brian Thomas said, Hi, please
five one three five four one thirty two ninety one
fifty five KRC. Not everyone who handles your personal Here's
Channel nine weather forecast. Cloudy day to day rain north
(35:33):
of the Ohio River anyway with the highest sixty six
some clouds over night fifty for the loadsmor mostly cloudy
sky's slight chance of afternoon rain with the highest seventy
two nine to fifty three over night with partly cloudy
sky is partly cloudiye on Thursday as well with the
highest seventy five fifty Right now time for traffic.
Speaker 9 (35:50):
From the UCF Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you See Health is the
clear choice for wrapping by saving treatment.
Speaker 8 (35:57):
Learn more at you see health dot com. I wait, Trampick.
Speaker 9 (36:00):
It's doing okay at the moment, but there's some pretty
heavy rain moving down seventy five past Hamilton and in
to Westchester. It's going to slow things down a bit
early this morning. Northbound seventy five. No trouble at all.
Northbound four seventy one looks good too. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five care seed the talk station.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
By fifty one fifty five care City Talk Station, Happy Tuesday.
I'm going to go straight to the phone before we
get back to the stack. Is stupid because Dave's on
the line. Hey Dave, thanks for calling this morning. Welcome
to the morning Show.
Speaker 10 (36:31):
Hi Brian, thanks for having me on.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Happy to.
Speaker 10 (36:36):
Uh yeah, I'd like to if I could talk about
the Princeton School District levy. Yeah, coming up of vote today.
It's a pretty big increase, six point six mil. And
so basically it translates into your property value. For every
one hundred thousand dollars of your praise property value, it's
a term thirty dollars increase. So for like a three
hundred thousand dollars home, it'd be close to a seven
(36:58):
hundred dollars a year tax increase.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
Louise.
Speaker 10 (37:01):
Yeah, and they are in Prinston already spends over thirteen
thousand dollars per student, and that's more than comparable districts,
even more than Mason, Fairfield, Oak Kills and Hamilton. Yet
they're coming back for more money. So it just doesn't
make any sense. I mean, I think a lot of
people might be in favor of a little bit of
(37:23):
an increase, but an increase of this size is just,
you know, way too much.
Speaker 1 (37:27):
Well, an off cycle election, you know, if you're going
to do it, you may as well go for as
much as you can get. But maybe the voters will
say no. Two hundred and thirty per one hundred thousand,
that is a lot of money, my friend, A lot.
Speaker 10 (37:39):
Yeah, it's supposed to generate approximately, according to their the
mailings that we received from the district, twelve point eight
million dollars per year for the next ten years. And
what they're going to do with this money, we're not
totally sure. I mean, it's it's almost like it's a
personal slush fund for the school administration.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
Taking me and making me think about issue too, some
slush funds. Yeah, well, I appreciate the call. This is
the reason to get out and vote. You may feel
differently than Dave about the school levy, that's fine, But
if you go out, don't go out and vote, then
you're not gonna have a say in the matter. That's
the point. So, and it's off cycle election, the numbers
are going to be low. You can count on that.
(38:21):
You can put money on that, which means your vote
matters so much more than a major cycle election. So
thanks for the call, Dave, appreciate it. Let us go
to Union County, North Carolina. We have a referee arrested
after firing a concealed weapon at a youth sports athletic facility.
(38:42):
According to the Union County Sheriff's offeies, I don't even
think we're going to find out. Deputies who are already
on the scene to act as security, arrested forty nine
year old Ernest Davis. He was working as a referee
for a youth sporting event when he fired a weapon
that had been concealed in his gym bag. The crowd
was filled with parents and children. Thankfully, nobody was hit
(39:04):
one of spectator. I was about fifty feet away when
shot this shot. My son here was playing in a
baseball game at the time. He was even closer to
where it happened. Is referring to the sun. He was
within twenty feet of the situations. My first thought when
I heard the sound, I thought it was a metal
chair fall on the ground, but a little louder. But
at the time it got everybody's attention. Everything stopped. We
(39:26):
went over toward the kids to make sure they were safe.
Davis charged with carrying a concealed weapon and discharging a
firearm into occupied property. Triff Eddie Cathy issued a statement
reminding gun owners to practice state firearm ownership. Quote. Safegun
ownership can be can help avoid situations like this and
prevent unnecessary injuries or a tragic loss of life.
Speaker 3 (39:49):
Now who can argue with that?
Speaker 1 (39:51):
Yeah, stating the obvious there. You know, it really bothers
me about the reporting on this. There's no why are
you doing that? Answered the question? Nothing, Just idiots doing
idiot things because they're idiots, I suppose. Anyhow, planning to
talk about in the six o'clock hour, looking for the
seven o'clock hour with an in studio return of a
private citizen, brad Winstrip, former congressman. Anyhow, we'll find out
(40:17):
what's going on in the world of politics, and we'll
find out about the lessons learned from the pandemic with
brad Winstrip again seven o'clock hour for that. So stick
around and be right back after the news at the
top of the hour.
Speaker 5 (40:29):
Every day we discover something new and important the.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
Day's top stories on fifty five KRC the Talk station
six six fifty five kr CE the Talk Station. Brian
Thomas here was she everyone a very happy Tuesday election
day here in the state of Ohio. Get out and
vote vote no on issue too. If I can give
you a strong suggestion, if you don't know why you
should vote yes or no, listen to High Representator Jennifer Gross,
(40:53):
who joined the program yesterday, on why she is a
firm no on issue too. It's a slush fund. I
summed it up that way, and I said, is that
safe to say it that way? And she agreed with me.
Allows the state of Ohio to issue bonds. They get
to borrow money to cover roads, bridges and infrastructure. What
the hell is the gas tax? For all the taxes
(41:14):
that they take in in Columbus, they should be responsible
and properly allocate the taxpayer dollars that they take in
already to go to roads, bridges and infrastructure in a while,
always thinking of the City of Cincinnati when it comes
to allocation taxpayer dollars. Oh yeah, that's right, because they
don't take care of the roads, bridges and infrastructure. They
go out and build new things anyhow, and speak of
(41:38):
the city of Cincinnati. Another strong recommendation, and my Democrat
friends out there go ahead and do a protest vote
vote for Corey Bowman. It's a primary top two vote
getters going to advance to November's election for mayor. I'm
going to assume for the well for the obvious reason
mostly Democrats in the City of Cincinnati, but have to
have par bow will be one of the two. Corey
(41:59):
Bowman I think were since the best option for the
second vote. But considering Corey would have allowed you neighborhood
whichever one I'm speaking to, for example, bond Hill and
Hyde Park, to chart your own course when it comes
to zoning, unlike AVT have pervoll in the current makeup
of city council, who denied you the right to chart
(42:19):
your own destiny. A protest vote would be a wonderful thing.
Doesn't mean you have to vote for Corey baum in
this November. And now I'm repeating myself from a prior
conversation along these lines. But this is my last chance
to get it out of my system because I can't
vote in the City of Cincinnati that don't live there.
That's exactly what I would do. Anyhow, You've been under
a democratic grule now for about four decades. How has
(42:40):
it served you well, I mean just ask yourself that question.
You'll be asking yourself that question in November as well.
Five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty eight, two to three,
talk pound five fifty if you have an AT and
T phone, love to hear from if you've got something
on your mind. Private Citizen Brad wins Or coming up
in one hour he'll be in studio. We're talking about
a variety of issues with the former congressman. Inside scoop
(43:01):
with bright Board News bright Part News eight oh five
with editor in chief Alex Marlow. We'll talk about media credibility,
do they have any credibility anymore? Plus an empower use
seminar that's taking place tonight, the Daniel Davis deep dive
on the latest in Russia as well as Israel's planned
to seize Gaza. Sounds like they're gonna steamroll it, knock
it all down, kick all the Hamas folks out, and
(43:23):
start from scratch. It's going to displace a couple of
million people, though there's a big question mark floating around
about where those people are going to end up. Anyhow,
I thought this was a brilliant idea. And do you
remember you got to go back a couple of decades.
If I recall correctly, I mean we're going back a
(43:45):
long time. There were cities out west that were having
homeless problems, and the idea was, well, let's just buy
them one way tickets on a bus. And of course
the left got outraged over that. That doesn't solve the
problem sports your problems, and it gives them to other cities.
And yeah, okay, that may be true. But if you
give a homeless person an option, would you like a
(44:08):
bus ticket to go to pick a city? If they
choose to do that, you've eliminated one of a broader
problem within the homeless population. You can't force them to
get on a bus and kick them out that way,
but you can give them an option. When the unchecked
illegal immigrants started flowing across the border during the Biden administration,
obviously the governor of the state of Texas had the
(44:30):
idea of well getting them out of of the his
state and offering them an opportunity to go to perhaps
a sanctuary city. Would you illegal immigrant like to leave
the state of Texas and go to, say, Chicago. I
don't recall them being forced onto a bus or an airplane,
but many opted for that, and of course Chicago's sanctuary
city has got a lot of illegal immigrants as a
(44:50):
consequence of that. In New York as well and other
sanctuary states and cities. Listen, they hang out the flag
saying we are a welcoming community, we enjoy illegal immigrants,
so please feel free to come here. I don't think
they expected the way it worked out, but it worked
out to a certain extent, much to the chagrin of
(45:10):
the sanctuary city residents. Twenty twenty four election confirmed that
people were a little unhappy about that. But to that end,
the Department of Homeland Security has offered to front the
cost of a commercial flight along with a one thousand
dollars check, to any illegal immigrants who opt to self
(45:33):
deport from the United States. This apparently is going to
reap massive money savings for the American taxpayer. Now, some
people will say, well, wait a second, why would you
give them a reward they came here illegally. Well, the
reason you might want to give them a thousand dollars
as an incentive to take them up on this free
commercial flight plus a little cash in their pocket, is
because it's really really expensive when they stay here and
(45:55):
they're entitled to an administrative hearing, which will probably result
in them being deported. But when you've got millions and
millions of people that are by law entitled to an
administrative hearing, it takes forever to do it and it
comes at a significant cost. The Apartment healland Security said,
this will be a seventy This is seventy percent cheaper
(46:17):
giving them a thousand dollars and a commercial airline ticket,
seventy percent cheaper for the taxpayers. Because it currently costs
the Apartment of Homeland Security alone an average of over
seventeen thousand dollars to arrest, detain, and deport someone. Do
the math on that. We're talking about millions of people here.
(46:41):
So when you add in all the costs compared to
seventeen thousand dollars to arrest, detain, and deport somebody, the
Apartment of Homeland Security said that this will ultimately be
about forty five hundred dollars on average for those who
opt to self deport, and apparently the money would not
be paid until it was verified that the individual actually
(47:03):
did self deport illegal aliens who used the CBP Home
Self Deportation app to access this assistance and a partner
of Homeland Security expects self removals, already into thousands, to
ramp up significantly with this announcement. So they turned the
CBP Home app. Well, they call it now CBP Home.
(47:26):
That was the Biden administration's app that allowed people from
out of the country to apply to come here. You know,
increasing the volume, I mean is one of the nefarious
things the Biden administration did. They didn't stop it. They
didn't just open the borders and telegraph to the rest
of the world that the borders were open. They actually
gave people an opportunity to come into the country without
even having a step foot in the country by using
(47:47):
this app. So they flipped the app on top of
the TED Now it's a CBP home app, the self
deportation app side up. DHS Secretary of Christi Noomes with
Fox News. If you were here illegally, self deportation is
the best, safest and most cost effective way to leave
the United States to avoid arrest, she continued. DHS now
(48:13):
offering illegal aliens financial travel assistance and a stipend to
return to their home country should this through the CBP
Home app. This is the safest option for our law
enforcement aliens and is a seventy percent savings US taxpayers
download the CBPO app today and self deport. But isn't
that a great idea? I mean, when you boil it down,
(48:35):
financially speaking, we're on the hook for a lot of money.
And you know, the money that it costs the Department
of Homeland Security to process these at seventeen thousand dollars
a pop, is just one component of the cost that
the illegal immigrant community has placed upon the United States.
And I know some of them are working and they
contribute to society, but a lot of them a lot.
(48:58):
And this is the problem. And ask the city of
Chicago and the problems it's face because of the budget
problems it's placed upon the city of Chicago, because of
the overwhelming numbers of illegal immigrants who've landed in their
community that do not participate and do not contribute, but
still have to be closed, housed, sheltered, and well educated.
Those all come at tremendous cost. We're talking billions of
(49:21):
dollars for one city alone. So if you add up
all the amounts of all the amount of money, if
you could really fully calculate that, I think it will
be an overwhelming figure by comparison the plane ticket and
the cash incentive forty five hundred bucks. Like I said,
I think it's a brilliant suggestion and opportunity. And well,
(49:44):
I'm just hoping a lot of them take them up
on it. Your thoughts are welcome. Maybe you disagree, maybe
you agree. Five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three talk found five
to fifty on AT and T phones. Oh look, Donald
Trump teaming up with the global warming climate change alarmists
to bring around well reduction in carbon emissions. Sounds like
(50:08):
a strange connection, doesn't it. I'm going to give you
that connection here in a minute. It's pretty wild. Cover
since he get in touch with John Roman, the team
at Covers. Sincey that I'm talking, It says Cover Sincy
and that's what they That's the website coversinci dot com
where you can sign up to find out if they
can find a better path for your medical insurance. But
it's not just Cincinnati, the greater Cincinnati area nationwide wherever
(50:29):
you're hearing me, like New Hampshire, Gary, Mississippi, James, I
know you're back in town, James. But if you were
in Mississippi, you can still call and get in touch
with cover Sincey to find out if they can find
a better way to get your medical insurance. They work
for you. It's like a fiduciary obligation. But they have
access to hundreds of medical insurance companies, thousands of different policies,
(50:50):
which allows them to put together a package of insurance
policies that will provide you better coverage, including dollar one coverage,
and allow you to save money at the same time.
Sounds like it's impossible, it is not. They do it
all the time. And I've had so many listeners get
back and be like, oh my god, I saved so
much money. Got a neighbor that called them up. They
save five hundred dollars a month every month and got
(51:13):
better medical coverage. So get in touch with them. It
doesn't cost you a dime. Your information will be kept confidential.
They're not going to sell it to anybody. If you
go out on the world on the Internet and try
to search for this kind of thing, your information will
be sold and you'll find yourself getting inundated with the emails.
So John and the team will look into what you've
got determined if there's a better path, and if not,
you know, they'll tell you. Listen, you're in the best
(51:34):
possible place when it comes to medical insurance. And that's
kind of good. Make you feel comfortable about it anyway.
But couples hundred sixty five save in five hundred one
thousand dollars a month with better coverage. This just happens
all the time. To reach them five one three eight
hundred call five one three eight hundred two two five five,
fill out the form online, you get the process started
to get right back to you.
Speaker 3 (51:55):
Coversincy dot com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 11 (52:00):
So you had a.
Speaker 3 (52:00):
Solid retirement dreamboat.
Speaker 1 (52:06):
Jene n First onening with a forecast, we got a
cloudy dayner hands day rain north of the Ohio River
if it shows up sixty six for the high down
to fifty overnight with clotdy skies. Cloudy tomorrow as well,
maybe a slight chance of afternoon rain with the highest
seventy two clouds overnight down to fifty three and a
cloudy Thursday as well. I have seventy five fifty right
now in time for a traffic update.
Speaker 9 (52:25):
From the UCUP Trampic Center when it comes to stroke,
every second count. So that's why you see health is
the clear choice for a wrap up by saving treatment.
Speaker 8 (52:32):
Learn more at ucehealth dot com.
Speaker 9 (52:35):
I continue to see some heavy traffic westbound two seventy
five year the airport thanks to a work crew left inside.
Speaker 8 (52:41):
Elsewhere.
Speaker 9 (52:42):
You're doing okay, even some spots starting to dry out
a little bit from the earlier rain.
Speaker 8 (52:48):
Chuck ing Raman fifty five kr. See the talk station.
Speaker 1 (52:53):
It's six twenty here fifty five kr. Se de talk station.
Brian Thomas welcoming phone calls, Get care to comment on
something on your mind? Seven two three talk meantime. Amy Chan?
Who is Amy Chan? No right winger? She she is
the chief sustainability Officer of the University of California, Berkeley
(53:15):
Hast School of Business, Chief Sustainability Officer. So she's a
believer in man made climate change kind of thing. And
she writes in the opinion section of the Wall Street
General headline Trump tariffs are a victory against climate change.
So he left us out there, and people against the
(53:35):
tariffs consider her points, and I think she makes some
really valid points. It's kind of comical, which is why
I wanted to bring it to your attention, she writes,
I recently attended a closed door session with seniors supply
chain and sustainability executives. The mood was visibly tense. Conversations
quickly turned to rising tariffs de globalization because remember, these
folks love globalization, one world government, Sorry energy. My comment
(54:00):
there amy to your op ad, but I had to
and mounting geopolitical risk. But something surprising emerged from the anxiety,
the possibility that President Trump's trade war might accelerate environmental progress.
This may sound counterintuitive with the Troup administration is no
champion of green policies, but if you care about emissions
(54:20):
over consumption and waste, is a case for optimism, said.
I spent more than a decade leading environmental initiatives and
investments at the World Bank and Apple. I now serve
as Chief Sustainability Officer at the University of California, Berkeley's
Hospital of Business. While many of my peers are anxious
about the future of sustainability, I see a different story
unfolding for three reasons. First, the reordering of global trade
(54:44):
is forcing companies to rethink supply chains. Many supply chain
leaders are outlining an emerging strategy called manufacturing in region
for region, this means producing goods in North America for
North American consumers, in Europe for Europeans and so on.
That's good for sustainability and even better for the planet.
(55:06):
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, transportation accounts were roughly
fifteen percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. Fewer trans oceanic
journeys means less emissions. And when I pausn't thought about that?
Remember the local war move you know, buy your local
fruit from your local farm and your local beef from
your local beef producer, and that kind of thing. That's
(55:26):
a big movement, isn't it support your local community, your
local community farmers. This is just in line with that
sort of concept. Second, Trump's recent move to end the
diminimous tax exemptions. I really appreciate this one. By the way,
for low value imports from China could curb America's addiction
to fast fashion and disposable goods supplied by retailers like
(55:50):
Shane and Tinu. This would result in fewer impulse buies
and less landfill waste. And look, I wrote happy meal toys.
My wife has always had a chip on his should
about half meal toys. These little toys are made out
of plastic. You know, they have a half life of plutonium.
When they end up in a landfill, and they always do.
They're pointless, they're stupid. Why are they even there? It's chum,
(56:13):
And yet we're oh, we're drawn to them. We're going
to collect them. And the collection ends up in a box.
And when your kids move out for college, you're left
with the box of these things you end up throwing
away anyway. Sorry, This would result in fewer impulse buys
and less landfill waste, she writes. Manufacturers may also respond
by producing I like this too, higher quality, longer lasting products.
(56:36):
The effect won't be limited cheap goods. Higher prices on electronics, appliances,
and vehicles will encourage consumers to extend the life of
what they already own. The greenest car isn't a new
electric vehicle. It's the one you don't replace. This is
a fundamental point of mine. I have lived my life
trying to buy quality. It's like a Butt Herbert commercial.
(56:56):
You know that the most expensive lonequent you buy is
the cheapest because it's going to fall apart and you
gotta replace it. How much stuff do we replace that
we really shouldn't have to replace. Third, the US remains
deeply dependent on China for critical minerals such as rare
earth elements. Rare earth are vital inputs for everything from
smartphones and eve East wind turbines and military systems. China
(57:18):
accounts more than two thirds of the global rare earth production.
The US can mitigate this vulnerability by investing in domestic
rare earth recycling infrastructure. And you know, I would interject,
although she's a global warming believer, we could do domestic
rare earth production here in our own country. And she
points out how we have an opportunity here to recover
(57:41):
the rare earth from discarded electronics. Apple's doing it, they said.
They announced that it's more than ninety nine percent of
the way towards its twenty twenty five targets of one
hundred percent recycled rare earth elements and magnets and one
hundre percent recycled cobalt in Apple design batteries. It's there,
it already exists. Why not reuse it? I embrace that,
(58:01):
she says. When rare earth's are cheap, there is little
incentive to recycle we're a throwaway society. None of this
should be mistaken for a coordinated climate strategy rights. Under
President Biden, climate was a top tier priority and a
Trump it isn't. But there's a difference between removing sustainability
as a priority and actively opposing it. Energy Secretary of
(58:22):
Chris Wright has a consistent message on this subject. The
Trump administration isn't against clean energy or evs. It is
for energy dominance and economic competition. As long as sustainability
efforts don't conflict with mister Trump's key priorities, there's a
room for progress. And she concludes environmentalists shouldn't waste time
hoping for a different political landscape. This is a moment
(58:42):
for pragmatism. Mister Trump's trade policies might do more for
the planet than a thousand environmental, social and governance reports.
It's rare for environmental objectives to align with the Trump
administration's strategic interests. We shouldn't waste the opportunity to capitalize
on it. And ultimately her points are well made, I think,
and it means more opportunities here in America, more jobs
(59:06):
for Americans, buy local, produce local, and I think that's ultimately,
Trump's subjective so head aligns with the global climate change
people out there. If you're one, you're so inclined to
abide by that religion. Six six fifty five KRC Detalk
Station QC kinetics. I'm surprised by the numbers. Maybe not surprised.
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(01:00:30):
zero zero one nine one more time five on three
eight four seven zero zero one nine fifty five car
the talk station.
Speaker 8 (01:00:39):
Waking up on the right side.
Speaker 3 (01:00:42):
This is the Sean Hannity Morning Minute.
Speaker 12 (01:00:46):
Any illegal alien who allegedly tried to rape a four
year old girl in Virginia was cleared for release by
a prosecutor in a Democratic run Fairfax County is has
swooped in and take custody of this illegal accused of
trying to kidnap and rape four year old after Fairfax
County prosecutors dropped the case against this individual. A Honduran
immigrant being held by ICE at Caroline Detention Center, Caroline County.
(01:01:12):
Quoting in court documents, a man broke into the home
of where this four year old and her mother were
asleep in separate beds in a room. The mother woke
to see the window blinds rustling and heard the girl
yelling and from the living room. The girl said a
big man grabbed her from her bed and tried to
carry her out, but apparently abandoned the plans when she
started screaming.
Speaker 9 (01:01:31):
From coast to coast, from sea to shining seas it's
a Sean Hannity show.
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Speaker 1 (01:02:41):
Your retirement plan Corner Channel nine. Here's your weather forecast
fotty day to day rain, possible literty north of the
Ohio River. Today's high sixty six don to fifty overnight
with clouds body again tomorrow, but just a slight chance
of afternoon rain seventy two for the high overnight partly
claudium fifty three and Thursday partly cloudy day with the
(01:03:01):
highest seventy five fifty degrees. Right now, let's see what
Chuck has to say about traffic.
Speaker 9 (01:03:06):
From the UCL Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you see Health is the
clear choice for a rapid life saving treatment. Learn more
at UCHealth dot com. Highways not bad at all, with
the exception of what's been two seventy five. Then it's
moving slow near the airport thanks to a work crew
left side wet roads to deal with. But I'm not
(01:03:27):
seeing any accidents at the moment because I'm a chuck
Ingram on fifty five kra Seed Deep Talk Station.
Speaker 1 (01:03:37):
Fifty five KO City Talk Station. Apparently it is raining.
Jess Chrecker looking at the radar Hamilton, so that's north
of the Ohio River. Uh, forget the local stories. Got
some callers online, which I always fully appreciate. Five one, three, seven,
four nine, fifty eight two three talk. Let's start with Hank. Hank,
Welcome to the Morning show.
Speaker 4 (01:03:55):
More and Brian.
Speaker 13 (01:03:56):
I just wanted to chip in. I was listening earlier
on the that interrupted your stack. As stupid to talk
about property taxes. Yeah, and I live in a house
that's paid for, and I'd like to know how long
it's going to take me to pay off my property
taxes so I.
Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Don't owe them anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:04:16):
It's a great question, I know, but yeah, it makes sense.
Speaker 13 (01:04:21):
Yeah, that's why I don't vote for any levies or
property taxes or any of that stuff, because honestly, I'm
tired of being a serf.
Speaker 1 (01:04:30):
I get it, so I get it. I hear that
argument all the time. You really don't own as long
as you have to pay a tax bill, you do
not own your property exactly. That's the point. At some
point you should be free of the burden of paying
property taxes, you know. I mean, listen, you're preaching to
the choir on this one, Hank. I don't know what
(01:04:51):
the solution is, but maybe after you retire, if you
paid off your house and you're in retirements after sixty
five or it's picked some arbitrary random point time, no
longer obligated to pay property taxes. I just I agree
with you, Hank. I don't like the idea. One other
go ahead, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:05:07):
One other thing too.
Speaker 13 (01:05:09):
You were talking about the lady that from California that
was talking about climate change and all that stuff. Yes,
And one other thing she probably didn't bring up was
the fact that the Chinese are putting up like one
hundred and sixty some odd coal fired power plants over
the course of the next year. Now, if this is
a global problem, that should be a problem for everybody.
Speaker 1 (01:05:32):
That I agree. I've made that point a billion times.
Speaker 13 (01:05:35):
Yeah, Yeah, we don't need more cheap Chinese crap that
falls apart. I mean, it's getting worse every day.
Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
It is. It is. Yeah, preach to the choir and
now one hank. I mean that we all breathe the
same air. We're all in the same bubble. How come
China's allowed to produce coal plants and belch out carbon
emissions and all that, and we're not allowed we cut
our own throat for the best interests of China. Well,
it continues to belch out crap into the environment. I mean,
if you're a believer in this kind of stuff, the
biggest I mean, the most pressure should be placed on
(01:06:02):
the worst offenders. That includes China and India and other
countries that do not care and do not believe that
are the carbon is well causing climate change or whatever.
Appreciate it. Hang Mississippi, James heard me mention your name earlier.
I guess. Welcome back to the program, sir, Hey, doctor Brian.
Speaker 4 (01:06:23):
I come in peace, love everybody.
Speaker 11 (01:06:25):
There's nothing you can do about it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
Good for you, James. What's on your mind today?
Speaker 14 (01:06:30):
I haven't heard about the listening lunch.
Speaker 15 (01:06:33):
Are you having it tomorrow?
Speaker 3 (01:06:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
Yeah, yeah, tomorrow. It's Sounder Brewery. They have multiple locations.
We're going to the Westchester location, Sonder Brewery. S O
N D E R. Yeah, it's just type in Sonder
Brewery in your search engine and it's again the Westchester location.
I'm looking forward to that one. They got a pretty
nice menu too. It makes my mouth water.
Speaker 11 (01:06:54):
Okay, now I'll tell you to the thear Eye bought
into Fullia's profit attach.
Speaker 14 (01:07:00):
Now.
Speaker 11 (01:07:01):
I don't know what's the true numbers, but you know,
after you pay off your property, you know, you still
got roads, fire departments, schools, police department and all that
stuff that come out of it. So I'm bought into
that theory. Okay, I'm an old taxes to who we
die on that part. But what's the true number that
(01:07:21):
we should be paying? You know, That's where it gets cloudy.
We got to pay something, but it you know, yeah,
but some kind of way we need accountability. Is there
way to find out what's the true number we should
be paying?
Speaker 1 (01:07:37):
Well, honestly, if we had responsible elected officials who were
responsible like families have to be with managing budgets, we
might know that number and they might properly allocate the
tax dollars they take in to take care of the
roads and infrastructure that we absolutely need and regularly rely on.
As opposed to chasing after bright, shining new objects which
(01:07:58):
require also maintenance and upkeep. I mean you're I mean,
you're talking my language, James. We just don't elect responsible people.
They're just they think that, you know, we need to
get new gifts in the and bestowed upon them by
their benevolence because they were elected and we've got to
do something for us. All that comes at with a cost.
You know, you don't get re elected. Apparently, if you're
(01:08:20):
responsible fiscally, you got to give us a new skate park.
You got to give us a new fill in the blank.
You got to give us a street car.
Speaker 3 (01:08:27):
No you don't.
Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
How about taking care of the roads that we already
have that you're letting fall apart well, taking yourself a
bigger and bigger hole every year, like pension programs, for example,
that are left unattended, leaving people out in the cold,
perhaps in their retirement, even though they've counted on you
to responsibly manage them. I could go on for hours, James,
(01:08:49):
hope to see you lunch Tomork again. Sounder Brewery, Westchester location.
Good hearing from your brother six thirty seven fifty five
KC detalk station. I got several callers online. We're gonna
go right back to calls as soon as I mentioned
and strongly encourage you. Everybody needs a general dentist, and
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If you're someone that doesn't like dentist, you're gonna love
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Speaker 5 (01:10:02):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:10:09):
Jenni Weather four ks. We got clouds, a day rain
north of the Ohio River apparently going on right now,
a little bit sixty six for the high today or
nine down to fifty with mostly cloudy sky's Claudia again
tomorrow with a slight chance of afternoon rain seventy two
for the high six fifty three rather overnight partly cloudy
and a partly cloudy Thursday, seventy five for the high
fifty degrees right now. Typer traffic from the.
Speaker 9 (01:10:30):
Uc LP Traffic Center when it comes to stroke, every
second count. So that's why you see help is the
clear choice for a wrap up by saving treatment. I
learn more you see help dot com. West Pound two
seventy five continues to be a slowgo at the airport.
Speaker 8 (01:10:42):
Traffic elsewhere doing fine.
Speaker 9 (01:10:44):
I'm not seeing any mettime delays on South Pnd seventy
five between Davosville and Union Center. South Pound seventy one
much better into blue Ash Chuck ing ramon fifty five
krc the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Six forty one and fifty five KRCD talk Station Happy Tuesday.
Go go straight to the phone. It's got several callers online.
Everybody hold on from then we're gonna start in the
order which they received, which means Mike is first. Mike,
Thanks for calling the program.
Speaker 4 (01:11:13):
Hi, Brian, real.
Speaker 16 (01:11:14):
Quick about the Trump's trade policy is about helping the environment,
possibly because if if they make the things here, be
less polition, because you know, China and India and Taiwan
and all that they don't have as all these strict
policies exactly doubt and we don't do that exactly help
(01:11:35):
the environment that way.
Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
I mean, but what I mean, you're yes, that is
exactly right.
Speaker 1 (01:11:39):
The price you pay, though, is that it's more expensive
to produce here, which is why everything got outsourced, tough
polluting China where they have slave labor. So you know,
you want to do a cost benefor knowledge, Yeah, better
quality and supporting the American worker comes at a higher price.
Isn't that price worth it? I mean that's kind of
the point that Trump's trying to make.
Speaker 3 (01:11:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:12:00):
So yeah, oh, I've got.
Speaker 15 (01:12:01):
A refrigerator that was made the eighties that still worked alight.
Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Ah, they you remind me of college. I had got
a refrigerator from the nineteen fifties and my fraternity caught
my room in the fraternity things still running strong. I
mean the thing was built like well, it was standing
in a nuclear holocaust. Yeah. It's one of those old sayings.
They don't make them like they used to. And isn't
that the truth appreciated? Mike, Let's get to Mark. Mark,
thanks for calling this morning. Welcome to the Morning Show.
Speaker 4 (01:12:27):
Hey, Brian, how's.
Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Going doing well? How you doing today? Good?
Speaker 17 (01:12:31):
I was. I'm not exactly as well educated on a
rare minerals that come from China, but I do know
that China tries to hold rare minerals over our heads
for cell phones. Maybe here's a bright idea, Maybe we
don't need as many cell phones as we have.
Speaker 3 (01:12:46):
Ah.
Speaker 17 (01:12:48):
Yes, you know what about us, you know, putting homes
back in our houses.
Speaker 3 (01:12:54):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
I like that. Yeah, you know what, my Mark, I
only recently had to replace my cell phone. I don't
care what the latest technology is because I don't use
ninety nine percent of the crap that's on cell phones.
I don't download apps to rely on them. I'm old
school in that regard. I got along fire without the app.
I know the apps sucking up my data, but I
don't need a new phone. I only had to replaced
my phone recently because it wouldn't charge anymore. I had
(01:13:16):
replaced the battery. You could replace the battery, and I
had to replace the damn phone after Man, I had
that thing for like seven years and it still worked.
Why do I need the newest technology? I don't. We
all don't. That's kind of why I was taken by
that article by that you know, climate change advocate out
of UC Berkeley, because she made some good points. We
(01:13:37):
are a wasteful society. We throw stuff away all the
time that still has a useful life, or things are
manufactured so poorly that we have to replace them. Why
do you have to replace your refrigerator after like ten years,
or your washer and dryer after like ten years. You know,
we had a Maytag that was built like a workhorse.
American made Maytag it Man, it lasted forever. I can't
(01:14:00):
remember why we had to replace it. Didn't want to,
but you know, it worked like a charm. And now
they don't make them like that anymore. Why because well,
the new climate regulations and new obligations and mandates they
place on appliance manufacturers, you know, less water consumptive or whatever.
You know what. No, how many times you have to
(01:14:21):
flush the toilet to get at work with these low
volume toilets? Okay, there's three flushes or two flushes, the
old one only needs to take one. Is it really
an environmental benefit?
Speaker 13 (01:14:32):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:14:34):
So yeah, that's again I'm glad I read that article.
I just liked. You know, that's you can reconcile these
two positions and shed a little bit of light on
the problems that we face as a society or the
problems that we are responsible for by quality. If if
someone made quality and you will to spend a few
extra dollars for it and not have to replace it,
(01:14:56):
that is the right thing to do one and it's done.
It's good for you, it's good for the environment, and
we all end up benefiting in the long run. Kevin,
hang on, I get your call right out of the gate,
if you don't mind holding for a moment here at
six forty five, right now, if you if I have
KCD talk station seven zero eight three thousand dot com
seven zero eight three thousand dot com. That is the
(01:15:18):
site for Peter Shabria Keller, Williams seven Hills and his
awesome real estate team, Cincinnati's number one real estate group.
And a salute to the first responders. I appreciate the
They have many programs, you know, like the the instant
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You got a cash offer, don't have to show it,
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(01:15:40):
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(01:16:03):
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(01:16:25):
Five one three seven zero eight three thousand, fifty five
KRC dot com Channel nine. Weather forecast mostly clouds today,
some rain north of the Ohio. Today's high sixty six,
clouds over night fifty for the low. Tomorrow clouds slight
chance of afternoon rain seventy two for the high with
clouds overnight fifty three, and he partly cloudy Thursday with
(01:16:48):
the highest seventy five fifty degrees. Right now, let's get
an update on traffic from Chuck Ingram.
Speaker 9 (01:16:52):
From the UCUP tramp Thing Center. When it comes to
stroke to every second counts. That's why uce health is
the clear choice for rapid life saving treatment.
Speaker 8 (01:17:00):
Learn more.
Speaker 9 (01:17:00):
Had you see how dot com westbound two seventy five
runs a bit slowed past the airport. Other than that,
traffic doing okay even with some rainfalling, especially the further
north you go. Both on seventy five and seventy one.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs the talk station sixty nine.
If it's five KRC decalk station.
Speaker 1 (01:17:22):
Citizen Brad Winster, a former congressman still doctor of Brad
Winster at the top of the our news for full
hour in studio the meantime over the phones, Kevin, thank
you for holding over the break and welcome to the
morning show.
Speaker 14 (01:17:33):
Hey, good morning, bron loved Hanks your color. Hanks comment
earlier in property texts, Yeah, I got a got a question.
They're gonna pay off my third mortgage for pothole damage
in Cincinnati to three of our vehicles.
Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
There apparently is a reimbursement fund the city of Cincinnati
has if you if they do not.
Speaker 3 (01:17:59):
Yeah, yeah, you're lucky enough, right Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
After said they don't have advanced notice of the pothole,
they can deny your claim, but if someone has been
put them on notice, apparently they keep records, then you
can get reimbursed.
Speaker 14 (01:18:09):
They paid out, They paid out zero claims.
Speaker 1 (01:18:12):
Yeah, that's the word on the street, and that doesn't
shock me, although I'm sure there's someone in the city
government to say no, no, no, no, we've paid all claims.
But you know, how about sunset, Kevin, you gave me
a great opportunity to mention sunset again, which looks like
a war zone and it has for years and years
and years. Everybody and his brothers should unleash a world
of hurt if they got their car thrown out. A
(01:18:34):
line on driving on sunset, Kevin, thank you man. Anyway,
one of the things to be talking about with a
private citizen. Former Congressman Brad Winster. The next hour of
what we've learned from the pandemic and interesting timing because
yesterday Donald Trump ordered new limitations on biologic research that
(01:18:57):
he and others like me claim caused COVID nineteen pandemic
through the lab leak in China. We are now halting
funding in certain countries were so called gain of function
experiments tinkering with pathogens to make them more infectious, and
the whole idea and concept behind that is just frightening
in and of itself. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's junior
(01:19:19):
on Act. There's no laboratory that's immune from leaks, and
this is going to prevent inadvertent leaks from happening in
the future and endangering humanity. Amen Jay about a Chara,
director of the National Health Institute had this to say,
any nation that engages in this research endangers their own
population as well as the world, as we saw during
the COVID nineteen pandemic. Now there are some that still
(01:19:44):
cling to the idea that this occurred naturally, and I
laugh at them. Come on, give me a break. Of course,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Department of Energy, and
recently the CIA have now shipped did and admit or
at least lean toward the idea that it was. The
origin was the lab, the Wuhan Institute of Virology. That's
(01:20:06):
where it came from. That's where they were doing gain
of function research. That's where they were tinkering with the
coronavirus to make it more contagious. You know, they never
answered the question why, Well, we were trying to figure
out just in case some gene mutator to some coronavirus mutated,
(01:20:27):
that we would be ahead of the curve so we
could solve the problem and create a vaccine on how
about no, And of course we all know well documented
in the twenty tens National Institute of Health taxpayer funded
(01:20:48):
entity funded BAT coronavirus research at the Wuhan Institute via
the US based nonprofit EcoHealth Alliance. Now Trump acts that
during his first term, but by reinstated that, so we
were paying for this at least in part. And of course,
you remember doctor Anthony Fauci. He continues to maintain and
(01:21:11):
always maintained that the work at Wuhan did not meet
the federal definition of gain of function. Now this is
something Congressman Winstup and others took him to task over seriously.
Federal definition of gain of function. If you take a
virus and you tinker with it to make it more
susceptible to human beings and more contagious for human beings,
(01:21:33):
that's gain of function research. Go ahead, change the definition
or well much Fauci's you know, playing word games with
the definition of gain of function research because he claimed
that we weren't doing any we were in China. I mean,
(01:21:53):
the concept is just mind boggling. Is this really happen
to us? Yes, it did. We did go through the pandemic,
the pandemic that you can trace to the front door,
the Wuhan instud of Virology where someone apparently didn't clean
their shoes off when they walked out the front door.
At least it put a lid on the money now
(01:22:14):
newsmax reporting. The order also seeks to end funding for
other types of life science research in countries deemed to
lack sufficient oversight, significantly broadening the types of foreign research
that can be targeted. Again, we're talking about our money
being sent abroad to fund this research. I mean, we
can't stop that research from happening of some crazy country
(01:22:36):
that doesn't have safety standard wants to engage in this
type of thing. How can we stop that? We can't.
How do you stop Iran from building a nuclear weapon?
Apparently you can't. They're gonna go ahead and do it
on their own. But at least we're not paying for it.
The order also calls to the development a strategy to
quote govern, limit and track dangerous gain of function research
(01:22:57):
across the United States that occurs without funding. Okay, digest that. So,
even absent US taxpayer dollars going to it, there's some
drug company or whatever out there tinkering with this type
(01:23:18):
of research, which creates, i mean, the potential for a
COVID nineteen release or something perhaps even more deadly to
be unleashed on the globe. So why do we do
this type of research. I'm sure there's a million reasons
(01:23:39):
why it's worthwhile. I don't know. Didn't work out so
well with the tinkering with COVID nineteen, now did it?
Six fifty six Congress Former Congress Wan wins froment not private
citizen in studio. We'll talk about that and so much
more after the news. I've you can stick around.
Speaker 9 (01:23:56):
A full rundown and the biggest ten lines there's minutes
away at the top of the hour.
Speaker 8 (01:24:00):
I'm giving you a fact now Americans should know.
Speaker 3 (01:24:03):
Fifty five KRS the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:24:19):
Fifty five air CD talk station. Boy, big smile on
my face when I came in and check the rundown
of guests here on the fifty five KRC Morning Show.
Welcome back, and it's always great to have you in studio.
Former Congressman now private citizen, Brad Webstrip.
Speaker 3 (01:24:33):
Good to be with you, Brian. As always, I look
forward to these little chats we have.
Speaker 1 (01:24:38):
I do too. It's great to have the exchange of
thoughts and ideas, and so nice to know you're doing
an empower you seminar. This one's tomorrow night, Wednesday night.
Not a normal night for empower you. They' usually Tuesdays
and Thursdays. But empower you America dot org. Just by
way of upcoming guests, the Insight scoop of Bright Barton
News editor in chief Alex Marlow. He's doing an empower
(01:24:58):
You Medias presentation tonight. We'll talk to them a little
bit about that. It's the establishment media has destroyed itself
and we can't stop smiling. So log in for that
one and tomorrow night Congress or former Congressman Winstrip, doctor
still doctor Winstrip. We'll be discussing on providing what lessons,
what are the lessons learned from the pandemic. He's the
(01:25:20):
former chairman of the SLUX Subcommittee on Coronavirus Pandemics, so
he's going to be going all through all that Tomorrow night,
seven pm. Show up. I think in person at Scarlett
Oaks three hundred Great Oaks. Drive for the in person
presentation or log in from the comfort of your own
home right there. Just register online. Empower Youoamerica dot org.
Congressroon Winstrom, I just got done. Tell me my listeners
(01:25:40):
about the executive order Donald Trump signed yesterday ordering new
limitations on the well gain of function research that was
done at the Wuhan Institute Virology, and we all know
what tragedy came from that. I don't understand why that
type of research is done in the first instance, and
he can't stop it from happening. I mean that we
no longer funded well, first off, that we ever funded it,
(01:26:03):
to me is just batcrap and saying no pun intended. Yes,
that we funded it, notably in China. That's what's insult
to injury on that one. That's well put. It's really
amazing that it happened that way, but you have a
group of people that aren't really concerned as much about
the positive possible negative effects as much as it is.
(01:26:27):
This is science, and we're scientists and we like doing
this because we can. You know, it's almost kind of godlike,
but in a perverse way. Mengo alike, Yeah, it really is.
And you know, look, gain of function. Let's be clear
on one thing. If you can do gain of function
research to make an antibiotic more effective against a bacteria
(01:26:48):
or something like that, that's great. But when you're doing
gain of function research to create something that's more harmful
to a human being potentially because it might happen in nature,
that was the premise twenty ten, twenty eleven, Fauci Collins.
You know, they're running the government wing of our research,
and they just think this is the greatest idea. But
(01:27:09):
even in twenty twelve, Fauci was asked, well, aren't you
concerned about getting out of the lab and creating a pandemic,
and he said, I think the benefits outweigh the risk. Kennedy,
you know, Secretary Kennedy did a good job in the
press conference yesterday of summing that up, where he said,
you know, the premise of this gain of function research,
which I've been talking about since I found out about
(01:27:31):
it when COVID started, is to be able to predict
a virus that may come about that could affect humans.
But guess what, will have a vaccine ready because we've
created it in the lab, not out there in nature,
not out there infecting people. But as Kennedy said yesterday,
(01:27:51):
no lab BSL four, which is the most restrictive, it
doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
No lab is immune from leaks. And he said that yesterday,
and I think that's an important point to make. So
why would we do this at all at this point
in time? By the way, understanding nature and understanding the
anatomy of viruses, AI can predict it.
Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
Well, fine on all that, and I don't disagree with
you and IOTA on your point, but I'm sorry, in
a world with scarce resources, in a world with diseases
that run them up killing people cancer, for example, we've
been paying money into funds and organizations and trying to
get funding research to fight cancer for decades and decades
(01:28:33):
and decades still with no home run solution, which is
one of the reasons I work for the cures or
do the charitable work for the cure starts. Now they're
trying to do that. This is putting money into a
man created virus that hasn't happened yet naturally, so that
you can create a vaccine to prevent it or unring
(01:28:57):
the bell if it does actually get created in nature
somewhere sometime down the road. So you're trying to find
a cure for something that doesn't exist, when we've got
diseases that exist right now that we have no cure for.
I mean, that's just absolutely stupid. And this is another thing.
They did research to come up with nerve gas, mustard gas,
(01:29:21):
things of that. They did chemical research, they created weaponized
viruses and agents, and they tested them on I know
the Nazis test them on human beings, but of course
tested them on animals in the lab. Why for use
for military purposes, so you can kill your enemy. See
(01:29:42):
that to me is the sort of domino following the
logical reason why you would be doing this so you
can unleash it on your foe. I mean, you're doing
on this level, this biological level. You can create a
virus that can attack certain DNA type structures. Like so
if you want to kill all the black people, you
want to kill all the white people, you want to
(01:30:03):
kill this certain ethnicity, you got DNA and they could
target it to a particular type of DNA.
Speaker 3 (01:30:08):
And that was our problem with you know, the things
that were like, oh find out your ancestry, Well, China's
getting all your DNA information exactly, you know. But yesterday's
press conference was very good. I mean, we're really cleaning
house and having good logical people in place right now
that can make a difference. As Jay Bodachario now the
(01:30:29):
head of NIH that took Francis Collins place, that gain
of function does not protect us, it only endangers us, exactly,
And that is exactly right now, I will tell you.
In February of twenty twenty is when I was doing
research on COVID itself, when everybody was in lockdown, you know,
we came across this article that showed Ralph Berrick in
(01:30:51):
North Carolina's English and China creating new viruses that showed
that they can work like legos and take this part
of one virus, this part of another back backbone, put
it on there. And then the most dangerous thing that
they were doing, and we were paying for it, is
putting fur and cleavage sites on there. The fur and
cleavage site is one of the things that makes the
(01:31:13):
virus way more infectious to the human respiratory system. And
we were doing it. And we're in a place now
where any of this stuff, the public, the government, we
can say no. The regulatory reform that was put in
place yesterday was music to my ears and a fight
that we were having that was being ignored by the
previous administration, and all of these details in facts. I
(01:31:37):
was thrilled to see that the Trump administration, the White
House put out basically our report that we spent two
years working on, backed up by previous investigations in the
previous two and three years. They put it out said
we believe it came from the lab. The CIA, even
under the Biden appointee. Burns came out at the end
(01:31:59):
and said, looks like a lab leak. It's basically for
those of us who have been investigating it and have
the intelligence too. Remember our report is unclassified. If you
look at the intelligence component two, how can you not
say it likely came from the lab. There's been no
evidence of nature. We got to move on, protect ourselves,
do better in the future, and certainly do whatever we
(01:32:20):
can to make sure that we aren't funding our adversaries.
I work in this arena, and we go back to
the point you we aren't funding it now, as reprehensible
as it is that we actually funded in the first instance.
Acknowledging all the points you just made and the realities
we experienced with their gain a function research with the leak,
we can't stop this research from being done in other countries.
(01:32:42):
That we are no longer funding, it doesn't mean it's
not still going on. Much like the Mustard gas point
I made earlier, militarization weaponization, that that might be that
work might be ongoing elsewhere. I mean, Iran could have
a lab doing this type of research right now. We
don't know that, and if we didn't know about it,
we couldn't stop it from happening. Well, interesting that in
(01:33:03):
their regulations or the Executive Order, I should say, they
put out President Trump specifically named China and Iran. You know,
COVID was preventable. And I was glad to hear my
friend Marty Mcarey, who I worked with closely through the
whole COVID investigation, even before the committee was formed. You know,
(01:33:25):
he summed it up yesterday said COVID was preventable, and
it was created by technology exported from the United States
to Wuhan. Unbelievable. Our technology given to China for the
purposes of altering this to make it more infectious for
(01:33:47):
human beings with no oversight. And that's the other thing
that's in the Executive Order is if we're doing anything
in a foreign lab, especially that of an adversary, we're
going to have tremendous oversight. You know, if we're going
to do research on a new type of bone graft
for severe fractures or something with an adversary hell nation,
(01:34:09):
that's fine, but let's have oversight over that too.
Speaker 1 (01:34:12):
Well exactly, we'll stick around. We got a whole hour
this seven o'clock hour with former Congressman brad Winstrip. Word
to pause right now. Let me opportunity, give me an
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Speaker 5 (01:35:08):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 14 (01:35:12):
We have this receiving herain.
Speaker 1 (01:35:14):
Here's a channel nine first one too. The horc Ask
got a cloudy day to day rain north of the
Ohio River possible and I think was ongoing current earlier
sixty six for the high overnight clouds in the low
of fifty tomorrow mostly cloudy with just a slight chance
of afternoon raining. Seventy two for the high down to
fifty three overnight with clouds and a cloudy Thursday highest
seventy five fifty right now, traffic high from.
Speaker 8 (01:35:34):
The UC Health Transit Center. When it comes to stroke company,
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Speaker 9 (01:35:37):
That's why U see health is the clear choice for
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talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:36:01):
Dashy seven twenty fifty five KRC detalk station. By the
time it's with a former Congressman, brad Winstrip, doctor brad Winstrip,
who again is going to empower you some of our
Tomorrow night, you're going at seven pm on what are
the lessons learned from the pandemic? And Brad yesterday you
were very happy to see one other component. Not only
will we not be funding gain a function research out
(01:36:23):
there in the world, but we learned something from the pandemic.
I think we learned a lot of lessons from the pandemic,
you know, a whole lot. I mean, there was some
good that came out of it, like telehealth, for example.
I love the idea of being able to get your
doctor on the horn and you know, do just a
talk to him or a zoom conference type of thing.
(01:36:45):
You don't have to drive in getting your appointment and
drive in to see him. You know, they made life
a little bit easier. But something that we learn and
it's a hard lesson to have to deal with that
we don't make anything anymore. And I know that's a
broad brush stroke. We still make some stuff, but we'll
make the vast majority of our pharmaceuticals come from China.
Speaker 3 (01:37:05):
We've referred all that out over the years, and we
got rid of our generic manufacturing plants. I know that
Mark Cuban's going to try and reinstitute one in Texas.
And there is another one that came forth during the
first Trump administration recognizing this problem. And even in the
executive order yesterday, President Trump talked about how they recognize
(01:37:27):
the problem we have, the national security risk, the.
Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
Health wish to a security aerica.
Speaker 3 (01:37:32):
There was a book written called China RX, and if
you really want to get scared about it, go ahead
and read that. You know, about twenty years ago, fifteen
twenty years ago, there was a situation where we had
tainted hepron that came from China. Oh yeah, and about
two hundred and fifty people died, and so the people
was sitting out in the sun, and yeah, the opportunity
(01:37:52):
for sabotage, et cetera is huge anytime China decides to
do it. I mean, the FDA, especially during COD is
not over in China inspecting their labs to make sure
that they're doing everything right. That's one of the things
that Marty McCarey brought up yesterday that the FDA, you
know they do surprise visits in the United States, right,
(01:38:13):
they just show up and say, we're going to make
sure you're doing everything right inside of your lab. But
what they're going to start doing is surprise visits in China.
Those those have been scheduled. You know, it could be
a dog and pony show. You know, it's the same
thing for hospitals. We always knew when when the hospitals
were being inspected where the Joint Commission was coming in. Well,
now it's surprise visits, so you better be ready all
(01:38:34):
the time. And that's how it should be ending, like.
Speaker 1 (01:38:36):
Drug testing for employment any reasons. You know, they never
tell you in advance when they're going to do it.
So you got to sit on the edge of your seat. Well,
and for good reason, right right right, Well, we're going
to test your blog. You're you're you're in the fifteenth
of next month. Thanks appreciate your heads up.
Speaker 3 (01:38:52):
So anyway, we got to get onto the path of
US production, and we got to be smart about it.
If you'd have told me when I was in Iraq,
then my protective equipment as a surgeon and my pharmaceuticals
relied on China, I'd say, how did we get here?
And I had a bill during the last term that
unfortunately never really moved, but said let's at least make
our battlefield medicines one hundred percent domestic. Maybe maybe the
(01:39:16):
other side of the aisle would pay attention to that,
because otherwise it was just being ignored the fact that
we have this problem. I would tell you the military
who I'm surprised to ever let this happen. I was
working when I was still in uniform with the Defense
Logistics Medical Supply Chain Council recognizing the drugs we need,
where we get them, all the way down to the
(01:39:36):
active pharmaceutical ingredients, and that was being controlled by China.
And so that's a problem that we have. But even
the things that we make I'm Puerto Rico, for example,
large on medical supplies, et cetera. Sailing they had, yeah,
two hurricanes got no, we couldn't get saline. And so
those are the things we have to recognize, not only
(01:39:58):
make them domestically, but haven't made in more than one
place within our own confines, or at the very least
work with our trusted allies on these types of things.
Minerals that we may need. You know, we have the
same situation with batteries. Oh you know, you know I
could never promote, for example, putting getting using federal grants
(01:40:20):
to put power charging stations.
Speaker 11 (01:40:23):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:40:23):
I had one community said, we need charging stations so
tourists coming through here can charge their cars. I said,
these are people whose ability to transport themselves relies on China,
whether they like it or not, because that battery is
made by Chinese or the components. Now we're going to
assemble batteries here. That's that's different. A'm move in the
(01:40:46):
right direction, but it's not the same, same with the
same with the generic medications. So this order puts us
on the line to domestic production of critical medicines, something
I've been promoting for some time. And it's great to
have some common sense people in the administration that are
pushing towards making these things happen.
Speaker 1 (01:41:06):
In a lot of.
Speaker 3 (01:41:07):
These cases, Congress has to cooperate, and Congress has to
make these things possible too. If nothing else, you know,
if something was just an executive order or regulation, it
seems that the same entity or agency that's now under
the guidance of the Trump administration can make these changes
(01:41:28):
in the other direction.
Speaker 1 (01:41:29):
Well, I guess boiled down. The reason all of this
ended up in China is simply a question of production cost. Yes,
that's the only reason. Yes, we don't lack the specific
components that go into any given pharmaceutical. We just don't
want to manufacture here because it's more expensive. There's so
many dangers out there. I mean, I can remember when
(01:41:50):
I was a resident in Chicago, there was a Walgreens
up the street from me that was selling tile and
all okay, they came for the manufacturer, but was laced
cyanide and people were dying.
Speaker 3 (01:42:01):
Oh I remember that. Yeah, do you remember that. You
might have still been in Chicago at the time.
Speaker 1 (01:42:05):
That's what brought about all of the changes to packaging
and lid's.
Speaker 3 (01:42:09):
You know, everything's got to cover on it.
Speaker 1 (01:42:10):
Is sealed with the plastics, so you know if it's
been opened or not exactly. We'll continue with Citizen brad
Winstrip pause for a moment, and me recommend right now
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spelled out twenty two to three dot.
Speaker 3 (01:43:15):
Com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:43:18):
The talk station John nine says this about the weather.
Got cloudy skies today, rain north of the Ohio River,
certainly a possibility sixty six for a hot and they stood.
Maybe rain right now in your neighborhood. Overnight clouds in
the lower fifty, tomorrow clouds, a.
Speaker 3 (01:43:35):
Slight chance of rain in the afternoon seventy two for.
Speaker 1 (01:43:37):
The high overnight clouds fifty three and partly fty Thursday,
and the highest seventy five fifty right now. Traffic time.
Speaker 9 (01:43:44):
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Ingramont fifty five K.
Speaker 8 (01:44:11):
See the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:44:14):
Seven thirty here for the five kr CD talk station.
Happy Tuesday. Former congress In brad Winster. It's still doctor
bradwinsterp in studio going through the issues with the Congressman.
He's gonna be doing an empower you seminar tomorrow night
about the what we learned from the pandemic. So hearing
what he has to say. He was chairman of the
Select Subcommittee on Coronavirus Pandemic, so he has been up
(01:44:36):
and down the road with all the documents and information.
So since we dealt with that topic, let's move on
to well holpout student loans. Taking a move away from
things medical. Donald Trump's put his foot down and says, no,
You're gonna have to pay your loan off. And I
have no fault, no problem with that. I mean, I'm
sorry that you got a degree in college that didn't
(01:44:57):
provide you a vehicle for employment. You know, you're making
formed to choices when you're going to college and you're
taking you're getting you know, one hundred thousand dollars maybe
or more in debt for a I don't know, community
service degree or something like that. There's just a if
the degree in providety value. I think this just stream
of thought here, stream of consciousness here. You know, I
(01:45:17):
think colleges should have a fiduciary obligation when someone gets
admitted to school for any given degree, to sit them
down and talk about the employment opportunities that may or
may not be available to them when they get their
art degree. Yep, you know, yep. I mean, I'm sorry.
There are only like two job openings at South of
(01:45:38):
Bees every year and that's about all you're going to
be able to get with an art degree.
Speaker 3 (01:45:42):
Well, you know, for the last fifty or sixty years.
I'd say not so much in the in the Trump
era for sure, but before that, we really as a nation,
we're saying in essence subtly that if you don't get
a college degree, that's somehow you've failed. Well, that's it's
not the American dream. The American dream is being able
(01:46:02):
to put a roof over your head and being able
to pay for that roof and to feed your family.
But here's the interesting thing. The Bureau Labor statistics. I
recently found that the unemployment rate for recent associate degree
community college, hilarious and vocational in their twenties was two
point one percent, So they were being employed compared to
(01:46:25):
fifteen point three for four year college grads and eight
point four percent for advanced degree recipients.
Speaker 1 (01:46:32):
That's me, that's the unemployment rate.
Speaker 3 (01:46:35):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (01:46:35):
So, but you know, I find it interesting because you
and I had the same statistics. I saw the Wall
Street journals into the Free college launch op ed piece
was brought those statistics up, and I thought to myself, Oh,
you got it as well. Unemployment. Now, that doesn't speak
to what area of employment these degreed folks are working in.
(01:46:56):
You could have a master's degree in naval con templation
and you're working as a barista at Starbucks. You are
employed or uber or uber yeah, I mean, I mean again,
I would love to see the boil down, like, Okay,
does employment mean in the field of study you engaged
in while at college. I would love to see that figure.
Speaker 3 (01:47:18):
And I have nothing against those jobs you mentioned. No, no, no, no,
you don't need that expensive degree to And I always
said this too. When I'm talking to college presidents. They
wanted to tell me how many people graduated each year.
They have a really high graduation rate. I said, tell
me what they're doing five years from now, and I
will say at some of the colleges, they're starting to
do that. It's easier to track people when they leave college.
(01:47:39):
Now you know they still have the same phone number.
All of these so many things say the same. You
have this contact with them, so keep in touch, find
out what they're doing five years later.
Speaker 1 (01:47:49):
While you're asking them for a financial contribution. Also ask
if they're employed, and then you can really determine what
success looks like, Brian, because success means this degree add
to you being successful and independent right in life, not
dependent on the government for your existence. Well, and the
(01:48:09):
graduation rate seems to me to be a nonsensical measure
of anything, because we all know that they engage in
grade inflation. I mean, one of the reasons that the
Trump administration is telling Harvard to go you know, pound
sand in terms of grants. They actually have a remedial
math program at Harvard. They let someone in, yes, who
(01:48:34):
needs remedial math. So you've lowered standards. We know grade
inflation happens in K through twelve. You go ahead and
pass someone on into the next grade when they can't
even meet the standards for that particular grade during the
student no service whatsoever. But they'll also admit people who
are incapable of working at college levels. What do they
do They lower college level standards down to something less
(01:48:55):
than they're teaching basically at high school.
Speaker 3 (01:48:58):
Well, it's been it's in med school and everything else
that's scared. And speaking of in med school with loans,
I can remember when when I was in school, having
to sit down with people that went over the loans
that were available and the risk that you're taking. There
was a Health Education Assistance loan that following Jimmy Carter
(01:49:18):
was at seventeen percent. Yet they're going to throw you
twenty thousand dollars or so. And I saw students going
out by a new cars where I'm drying and my
grandpa's old Pinto. You know, they were crazy. I didn't
take a heel loan until my senior year, and I
paid that one off first right because of the high
interest that was on it. But we were educated in
(01:49:40):
that and.
Speaker 1 (01:49:41):
This school what you were getting in.
Speaker 3 (01:49:43):
Yeah, the school took some responsibility of saying, we don't
want you to go out there and be bankrupt, you know,
in two years, because when you go out and you
first get in practice, you know you're building a practice
and so you're not going to have this huge revenue
day one. So to be able to pay these things off.
It was a responsibility that seemed to be there, but
(01:50:04):
it's not there across the board. That should be taking
place everywhere with the school. And here's the thing. If
a particular school has a large number of students not
able to pay off their student loans.
Speaker 1 (01:50:18):
That's indicative of all.
Speaker 3 (01:50:20):
Let's put some responsibility on the college, and that's what
the Trump administration is trying to do.
Speaker 1 (01:50:25):
Right, and that illustrates perfectly what you're talking about earlier,
which is does that degree provide you with a source
of revenue.
Speaker 3 (01:50:33):
I've always said, you know what, I have nothing against
a four year degree. I have three of them. I
believe you might have two, two or three college and
law school, yeah, combined. I have nothing against those higher degrees.
But at the same time, for example, as a surgeon,
there's a lot I can do in the operating room.
I can't build that operating room.
Speaker 1 (01:50:53):
No, you can't.
Speaker 3 (01:50:54):
Can't fix that equipment.
Speaker 1 (01:50:55):
Amen. I make that point about elected officials. We elect
them to make decisions over matters that they have no comprehension, right.
You know they think Guam's going to capsize me, that
representative that said Guam is gonna tip over. I mean
we elected that guy. You think he has any idea
how to I mean science industry, I mean any of that.
(01:51:16):
He's got no clue, so and yet making decisions on
our behalf. Let's pause, We'll bring brad Back I mentioned,
you know, Gate to Heaven, Gate to Heaven and Montgomery.
It is a beautiful, beautiful place. You want to a
place for quiet contemplation, reflection, maybe exhalation, living in the moment.
Enjoy the grounds at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Montgomery.
(01:51:36):
Now that sounds like a strange like I'm going to
enjoy a cemetery. Yes, you absolutely can. They rolling hills,
mature trees, the winding roads and pathways. Take a pleasant
stroll and just enjoy the seasonal flowers, the trim lawn,
the reflective water features in a very tranquil atmosphere. A
perfect location for prayer and reflection. And it's open to
(01:51:57):
everyone to enjoy. To learn more, just check come out
online at Gate Offheaven dot org. Administering to the tricity
for more than seventy seven years in honoring life on
sacred ground. Gate of Heaven dot org.
Speaker 5 (01:52:08):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (01:52:14):
As you're Chandeline with a forecast. Today we got mostly
cloudy skies, a little bit of rain north of the
Ohio River, sixty six for the high overnight clouds and
fifty tomorrow mostly Clyde with a slight chance of afternoon
range seventy two for the high fifty three overnight with
clouds and a partly cloudye Thursday, and a high seventy
five right now fifty time for traffic.
Speaker 8 (01:52:31):
From the U see how traffic center. When it comes
to stroke, every second count.
Speaker 9 (01:52:35):
So that's why you see Health is the clear choice
for rapid life saving treatment. LEARNMOREGG you see health dot
com problems. Northbound two seventy five an accident before you
got to twenty eight in Milford hands the right lane
blocked off. There's also some involved on the left hand side.
Traffic is still moving down the middle, but backing up
pants the parkway, then heaving around the circle to love
(01:52:55):
on wet roads, not helping any southbound seventy one break
rights from above fields through blue Ash chuck.
Speaker 8 (01:53:02):
Ingram on fifty five. Care and see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:53:07):
Think about krcdtalk station Brian Thomas with Brad Winster, doctor
Brad Winster, former congressman, you know that, talk him through
the issues, and let's move over to Medicaid reform. Everybody's
out there whaling in nash teeth. Donald Trump's gonna take
away Medicaid. Donald Trump's gonna take away Medicaid, No, he's not.
We're gonna try to reform it. If you're able bodied
and capable of working, you should at least be forced
to try to work or get some job skills which
(01:53:28):
will be happy to pay for, but you can't take medicaid. Brad.
Speaker 3 (01:53:33):
Yeah, well it's been interesting too and seeing the results
of expanding medicaid. Look, I am all favor in favor
of a country that has safety nets for those in need.
But as it's been said before, it shouldn't be a hammock.
It should be a safety net, right, and we want
to provide for people on their path to independence, financial independence.
(01:53:59):
Everything else should be designed to be a temporary bridge. Yes,
if at all possible. Now there's some I know, with disabilities, etc.
That it's not going to be and I get that,
and we want to be able to provide. But there's
strong evidence that has been shown that there's a shift
(01:54:19):
of financial resources with the expansion away from taking care
of the most vulnerable, and that's the narrative that we
need to be talking about. We want to reform it
so that we can do things like preventive medicine and medicaid,
and do things that really help the most vulnerable, help
(01:54:40):
pregnant women, especially if you're in poverty and you're pregnant,
you may be undernourished. All of these types of things
are you're getting your perinatal care, all these things to
then produce another healthy American exactly, those areas rather than
covering down for people that could be working that aren't working.
(01:55:00):
The expansion has has been disastrous for many, and it's
time to take a common sense approach to helping people
all in all, consistent with what we have just said
in the Doctor's Caucus, we want to be the healthiest
nation on the planet. I credit Director Kennedy Secretary Kennedy
(01:55:21):
for saying make America healthy again. You know, let's be
the healthiest nation on the planet. And yesterday he addressed
reforming snap as well.
Speaker 1 (01:55:31):
We don't pay for SODA's, soft drinks, sugary beverages like that,
among other things. We we actually pay for people to
just pollute their bodies and and and move them closer
to diabetes and obesity.
Speaker 3 (01:55:45):
And fraud is a problem too. You you mentioned off air,
you can't buy cigarettes, and but what you can do
is I sell your snap card for cash so that
you can then go out and pay for those.
Speaker 1 (01:56:01):
I used to watch that when I worked in Findlay
Market back in the eighties Harry's Meats and Seafood. Shout
out to the Geiger brothers if they're out there, and
the guys that used to work there. But that was
the first time I encountered food stamps. I grew up
in a nice neighborhood and people were not relying upon
public's assistance. And I'm not dissing the concept, but they
(01:56:23):
would swap them outside the store. People would hand over
food stamps, your five dollars increments or ten dollars stamps
or one dollar stamps in return for cash. Exactly cash.
You get discounts, So five dollars in food stamps maybe
net you two or three dollars, but you could take
the two or three dollars and go down to buy smokes.
Speaker 3 (01:56:42):
So the person using the cards should have to identify themselves.
It seems to me just the same as amming to
identify yourself when you're buying alcohol, the same as you
have to identify yourself for so many things. It's only fair. Look,
it's we are a giving nation. I get that, but
we shouldn't be doing more harm. Well, the idea is
(01:57:03):
a doctor, do no.
Speaker 1 (01:57:04):
Harm, do no harm. And for people who say no, no, no,
people have a choice with you, you're just being you know,
you can't to deny them the opportunity of choice with
what we give them by way of public assistance. Like
wait a second, that would be encouraging harm. You know,
if you allow a snap card to be used to
purchase literally pollutants, unhealthy products to put in your body,
(01:57:25):
then that's a government who enables, you know, poisoning. Well,
I mean, I hate to be so harsh with my
conclusions on that, but that, to me, that's what sodas
are nothing. But you know, sugar injected in your system,
which has no nutritional benefit whatsoever. Why make that an option?
Speaker 3 (01:57:40):
And you know what the argument has been that I've
heard it. I heard it in Washington. Well, Brad, rich
people get to buy at bad foods, why shouldn't everyone.
The point is, you know what, there's there's a lot
of people with money that end up doing more to
protect themselves, to keep themselves healthy. They can buy those things,
(01:58:01):
and yes many of them do, but they also pay
for they shouldn't, but they also pay for their own healthcare.
Speaker 1 (01:58:07):
Yeah, yeah, that valid point, But that's not an argument
that these because rich people can buy them, that they
even should buy them in the first place. We discourage
it across across the board that they want to make
stupid choices. They're in titled to make stupid choices too,
They shouldn't be able to do it on the back
of the taxpayer. Will continue one more segment with Brad
Winnstrip it's coming up in seven forty seven. If if you
(01:58:28):
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Com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 8 (01:59:30):
What if you had an extra thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:59:34):
There's your Channel nine weather cloudy day to day rain
to the north of the Ohio and high. Have sixty
six files over night fifty for the low Tomorrow flatty
with a slight chance of afternoon rain seventy two for
the high. Partly cloudy every night fifty three and on
Thursday a partly cloudy day as well. I have seventy
five fifty right now.
Speaker 9 (01:59:49):
Traffic County from the UCEL tramphic Center. When it comes
to stroke, eming second counts. That's why you See Health
is the clear choice for a WRAPID life saving treatment.
Learn more at you seehealth dot com found two seventy
five crews continue to work with an accident before you
got twenty eight in Milford traffic back in a close
to Eastgate northbound seventy one. There's an accident in above
(02:00:09):
the Reagan Highway, adding two delays out of Kenwood. There's
a serious accident outside of Oxford. That's on one twenty
seven and frazy Chuck Ingram fifty five KRC. The talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:00:24):
Coming up on seven fifty one to fifty five KR.
See the talk station. Brian Thomas Swift, doctor Brad Went Sr.
Former Congressman, going through the issues and Catholic he is.
I mentioned Gata Heaven Cemetery. He's got a couple of
plots there for him and his wife. Congress Or former
Congressman winsterrip a comment or two about the pope. We're
gonna get a more conservative pope this time because I
have many I grew up in an all Catholic neighborhood
(02:00:45):
except for me, basically got lots and lots and lots
of Catholic friends. Many of my listening audience are Catholics,
and I have not run into a single one that
had well appreciated or liked the direction that the deceased pope.
Recently deceased pope took the messaging very left wing, very liberal.
He's sounded like a socialist, which rubbed a lot of
(02:01:07):
people the wrong way. Do you think there'll be a
more conservative pope this time?
Speaker 3 (02:01:11):
I have a feeling that that's going to be the
trend because there was a lot of controversy around this
pope who had good intentions, but he's human like any
other pope, and so it should be an interesting go
round this time. You know, those of us our age Brian,
we have vivid memories of John Paul the Second, Oh sure,
(02:01:33):
and that was an entirely different time and a different pope,
pope and different approach from this pope. You know he
was he was dealing with issues of evil in the world, communism,
you know, from his home country of Poland. It was
it was inflicted upon them, and he would work with
Ronald Reagan. I mean, two of my heroes in my lifetime,
(02:01:55):
two of my inspirations for my Catholicism and for my
patriotism as an American right. And so it was a
different time. But I think it's time we take a
closer look at what really matters. And so it's one
thing has always bothered me when I would hear things
from the pulpit, well, let's pray for our leadership and
(02:02:17):
for our members of Congress, and this not to be
more compassionate. It's really up to us, Brian, It's up
to us as individuals. I have high respect for Cardinal
Dolan out of New York. I don't know that he
would get it politically. I don't think the world's ready
maybe for an American pope, and maybe they should be
(02:02:38):
at this place in time. But I think that Dolan
said he's searching for the energy of John Paul the Second,
the intellect of Benedict, and the heart of Francis, And
I don't disagree with all that. I think Francis po
Francis had a big heart, but he was more you know,
he was brought up in more of a socialist, yeah regime.
Speaker 1 (02:03:01):
And that he was known to walk away from the
fundamental doctrinal, dogmatic principles of the Catholic Church. In order
to accommodate modern times. I mean, that's not the role
of the pope. I thought the role of the pope
was to uphold the church ideals in doctrinal dogmatic principles exactly.
Speaker 3 (02:03:17):
You know, for me, as a Catholic, I don't want
a church that accommodates my sins, right. I want a
church that forgives my sins right, but don't accommodate them.
You know, you can love the sinner but hate the sin.
All of those things are how I was brought up.
And so some of the things that may be controversial
(02:03:38):
to many, that doesn't mean you can't still love the
person that may be part of that controversy. And just
just looking at marriage and the Catholic Church, we call
it matrimony, which the origin of that word is the
making of a mother.
Speaker 1 (02:03:55):
Which limits it to men and women getting married. I
understand your point on that. I'm not a Catholic, so
I don't struggle with doctrinal dogmatic issues.
Speaker 3 (02:04:05):
You sure do know a lot of them, and I
know that well.
Speaker 1 (02:04:07):
I told you, man, and I know you want to
a word or two about the what I believe prosecutors
are referring to as the murder of Deputy Larry Henderson's
such as shuts of tragedy that he was intentionally hit
and run by a car following the shooting of the
younger Hint and Rodney Hinton Junior has been charged with
his murder. I know you wanted to comment on that.
Speaker 3 (02:04:29):
Yeah, I mean, I'm really taken by this in many ways,
as you might imagine. You know, I've been a strong
protector of law enforcements as you have, and you know,
we endured the loud cries of the defund the police,
and although I do think it's still out there, it
(02:04:50):
has died down quite a bit and some people politically
have changed their mind on that. From the other side,
I think one of the things that really has me
upset in a lot of ways is the reaction that
has taken place. There's a go Fundme page.
Speaker 1 (02:05:09):
Yeah, I saw the Sheriff's Department was seeking to get
that removed because that violates Go Fundmese rules. You can't
create a funding page for people who've been charged with
heinous crimes. So I hope that's the case. Well, no
one had given any money to it, least as of
the last time.
Speaker 3 (02:05:23):
There wasn't much. I saw like five thousand dollars or
something that's dollars. But the reaction to defend thieves and
murders as victims to me as appalling. But that's very
deep rooted and misdirected, and I think it has a
lot to do with what was put in people's minds,
whether through social media or whatever, to turn everyone into
(02:05:46):
too a victim. I'm very saddened by this, but you know,
we were just talking about the pope. I think for
the family, I'm extremely sorry, and I hope to reach
out to them and hope that they can understand that, uh,
there's a lot of support for them in their grief
without question. And you know, I guess like a lot
(02:06:07):
of times, I'm only comforted by the promise of heaven
and that gets me through a lot of.
Speaker 1 (02:06:12):
Things, you know, and that really does work for so
many people, you know, you get the looking forward to
the peace of God. Brad Weinster, I love you, brother,
It's great to see you. Thanks for coming in and
making the trip. It's been great to walk through the
issues with you, which we had more time, but got
to take a break right now. Do top of our
news and then we'll get the the inside scoop with
Breitbart News editor in chief Alex Marlowe. Remember Brad's doing
(02:06:36):
a seminar tomorrow night, seven pm. Empower Youamerica dot org
for all the details. What are the lessons learned from
the pandemic? Thanks for your time, Brad, it's been great.
Speaker 3 (02:06:43):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (02:06:44):
Stick around me right back. Confused happens fast, stay up
to date at the top of the hour.
Speaker 8 (02:06:50):
Not gonna be complicated.
Speaker 17 (02:06:51):
It's going to go very fast.
Speaker 8 (02:06:53):
Fifty five KRZ the talk station.
Speaker 3 (02:06:56):
This report is sponsored by Ox.
Speaker 13 (02:06:57):
Talk Radio, So I listen to the talk forever for weather,
we're local news for every one.
Speaker 3 (02:07:03):
I listen on the way home from traffic.
Speaker 8 (02:07:04):
Fifty five KRCD.
Speaker 1 (02:07:07):
Talkstation ATO six. If you're about krc the talkstation, Brian
Thomas reminding you that every Tuesday at this time, regular
listeners know it's time for the insight scoop with bright
Bart News. Today we get to talk to editor in
chief alexmarlow Good to have Alex back on the program.
And a concert reminder every time we start brightbart dot
(02:07:28):
com book market and check it out regularly. B our
E I T B A R T dot com honest
reporting and reporting. This really well done, Alex. Welcome back
to the Morning Show. It's a real pleasure having you
on today here.
Speaker 15 (02:07:39):
Brian TMD, it is great to be back with you.
Speaker 1 (02:07:41):
And I love the topic of conversation. You're gonna be
doing to empower you seminar tonight seven pm. Log in
from the comforty your own home, empower Youamerica dot org.
H establishment media has destroyed itself and we can't stop smiling.
With a great headline for the topic. And it's true.
The polly reflects that no one trusts the mainstream media
(02:08:02):
and it's like, finally it's sunk in that we're all
being lied to and this big left wing uniform reporting
mechanism that is the mainstream media these days, ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN,
et cetera. They all spend the same tune in quite
often it's a collective group of lies to the American people.
Speaker 15 (02:08:23):
Yeah, it's true. It is a great title for the talk.
I'm only the headline guy, but our friend Elizabeth Woren
actually wrote that one, so she gets the shout out
on that, which is which is pretty fun. No, but
it's one of these things where sometimes if you've ever
achieved a goal, Igine. I've never ran a marathon, but
I imagine a lot of marathon runners feel this way.
(02:08:43):
I kind of feel this way sometimes if I finish
a book. It's the what would you do with yourself
with your time? That's a little bit what we're going
through right now with bright Bart when it comes to
the establishing media, because we have been spending of the
many foes we've tried to take on in the sixteen
seventeen years or so that we the CINTI Andrew Braiperd
launched his family of group blogs, which was what it
(02:09:07):
was at the start. Yeah, our number one supervillain was
always the establishing media, and now they're so disgraced, they're
so discredited. Everyone just makes fun of them all the time.
They're such an embarrassment that it really is time for
a reset and where we are because they've never been
so weak in my entire career in journalism, and it
is a absolute delight. I'm so happy it is that way.
Speaker 1 (02:09:28):
Well, and as am I and I guess you have
to wonder how it is we got from response to
what we call responsible journalism sort of you know, reporting
the facts, but not offering an editorial commentary. Now it's
become constant twenty four to seven commentary, but it's all
from the left side of the Ledger or the vast
majority it. I don't want to paint with the too
broad of a brush. I do recognize there is some
(02:09:48):
conservative commentary out there, but for the most part, it's
what we're talking about.
Speaker 8 (02:09:51):
Now.
Speaker 1 (02:09:51):
This is a consequence, I would argue, of the product
of college education and the left in doctrination camp K
through twelve has become as well, they're going to churn
out left wing journalism degrees. And with that in mind,
and you can feel free to disagree with me when
I finally let you talk. But what is it to
(02:10:12):
have a journalism degree? Now that we have the Internet,
I can go online and I can post observations, factual observations.
I could go to a council meeting and report what
the council members have said. Am I not a journalist
in some regard? What does it mean of a journalism agree?
Why are they sort of special you know, gets special treatment.
(02:10:33):
We're all journalists in the same language.
Speaker 15 (02:10:35):
And then this is the language that Andrew Breitbart would
have been very happy to hear about may rest in peace,
because he had spoken about this quite a bit. He
was not a trained journalist, nor was his original boss,
Matt Drudge, and they became two of the most famous
and effective journalists in the history of the country, not
(02:10:56):
just in modern history, but in the history of the country.
And without having study. I mean, we all have a reverence
for good journalism. And I'm not saying there aren't classically
trained people who are good journalists. Of Matt Boyle, one
of my met reporters, did go to study journalism, so
it's not like they around people at Breitbart's staff who
don't take the craft of journalism seriously. But overall, when
you've got the combination of a smartphone in your pocket
(02:11:19):
and now with AI, which probably poses more risks than
the guaranteed benefits, but it is like a junior or
senior researcher in your pocket that it's able to help
you sort out what actually is true and what actually
is going on in a record of speed. You do
(02:11:40):
not need any journalism degree, and in fact, if you're
spending money on it, you're probably wasting the money and
you're spending a lot of time getting indoctrinated by left
wing activists who are trying to mold.
Speaker 1 (02:11:51):
You exactly, but honestly, that someone could go in let's say,
politically neutral into college and come out the other side
a left wing activist that suggests that that person is
not capable of critical thinking, logic and reason, that they're
a mold of clay, that they allowed themselves to be
molded into some college professor or collective group of college
(02:12:11):
professor's image.
Speaker 4 (02:12:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (02:12:14):
Well, this is what the schools and this isn't just
JA schools, it's law schools. I mean, it's really even
schools and heart sciences. It attracts the type of people
to the profession of teaching that want to indoctrinate people.
It's what it is, and it's when these people want
to indoctrinate other people. It is a risk for families
(02:12:36):
that are thinking of sending their children there, and it's
a risk for you as young people who are impressionable.
Just know that they're there specifically to change your mind
on stuff, and so you need to be very cautious.
And a lot of people when they enter these schools
when they're eighteen or nineteen years old, they just don't
have that maturity to discern that there's probably a lot
of good information in this class. But the person who
is talking to me might be a good person, it
(02:12:58):
might be an interesting person. They will presumably be at
least a somewhat knowledgeable person, But they're trying to mold
you into something. So what are they trying to mold
you into? And all the evidence suggests from decades of
history that left wing activists is what they're trying to
mold and it's time to reject it. But the good
news is it feels like we finally.
Speaker 1 (02:13:15):
Are Yeah, people are waking up to it. And of
course many people are now saying that listen, I'm not
going to bother going into debt to go to college.
It's a pointless exercise to get a worthless degree when look,
the trades are welcoming people every single day and provide
you with a lifetime career in sufficient earnings to raise
a family. You know, you describe those that are motivated
to go to and become college professors, it sounded to
(02:13:38):
be much like politicians. Those who want to be powerful
and lord over and make decisions on behalf of the
unwashed masses quite often gravitate to politics. There's a nefarious
component to it.
Speaker 15 (02:13:49):
Yeah, certainly they are almost all political actors. In most
of the schools that are not hard sciences, that don't
require some sort of data, that don't even know the
peer review process is sort of But at least in
medical schools and stuff you do, at least you're at
least supposed to pay homage to the scientific process and
to the concepts of trying to have your theories be testable.
(02:14:12):
It's just not the case in law schools and jay schools.
I mean, you can just go through stuff and just
basically talk crap for lack of a better expression, and
you could be elevated for it if you're skilled at
a talking crap. I mean, that is what it is,
and it's but I think people understand it. And you
made an interesting point about going into traits. If you
(02:14:32):
want to do journalism and you're in in high school,
you're probably better off immediately starting to do journalism, trying
to track down a big story in your community, trying
to find an internship with a figure that you like,
trying to develop skills that maybe older talented journalists need
that maybe they're not going to be as savvy with
(02:14:54):
someone with technology something like that. You're really better off
doing that on your own than paying a bunch of
money to go to journalism school. Because I'll tell you,
if I'm looking at to hire a reporter who's twenty
three and when's jaschool or is in j school, or
is eighteen and is super hungry and will do anything
with a smile on his face, I mean, it's a
really tough call, and I'm probably airing towards the eighteen
(02:15:15):
year old who's got the energy versus a twenty three
year old with a degree. I don't really care about.
Speaker 1 (02:15:21):
My guest Today editor in Chief Alex Marlow, giving us
the inside scoop again the Empower You seminar, which is
it's tonight on journalism generally speaking, empower Youamerica dot org.
You can log in from home and enjoy the conversation.
I guess I have to ask you, what's Alex journalism
as a field of study in college. I'm wondering what
(02:15:45):
value it even provides. What argument can be made that
you should go and pursue a journalism degree because it
all seems to me to be logic and reason. Are
you capable of putting together sentences? Do you understand how
to structure and ar a breakdown the who, what, where?
When can you report the facts? Are you going? I mean,
anybody can be an editorialist, but in order to just
(02:16:05):
be providing information to the public in a journal with
journalistic integrity, isn't that just simply a question of telling
the truth and putting things together in a readable fashion?
What more can you learn in journalism school? What's so
special about?
Speaker 15 (02:16:19):
There's nothing? The only thing is someone And we again,
we have people at right part who have been in
journalism school, so it's not We have others who watch
know college at all, so we have everything in between, right,
it's the we don't.
Speaker 4 (02:16:33):
I don't.
Speaker 15 (02:16:34):
I don't know what they learn in journalism school to
be honest. Okay, presumably you get some sense of journalistic ethics,
but the field that of theset ethical people in all
of American media are one who study journalism. So I
don't think that's a good reason.
Speaker 1 (02:16:46):
To go amen.
Speaker 15 (02:16:48):
I think it's more of an indication your potential employer
that you're serious. That's all it amounts to, just to
be not to be snarky about it, but to be literal.
I think it's that's all it said to say, well,
is that you really are committed to doing to doing reporting,
and that's it. But otherwise you're better off as being
a smart, savvy person who is willing to work hard
(02:17:09):
and is unafraid. That is the number one quality that
I'm looking for is people who are willing to call
out the bad guys, whoever they may be, in a
fearless way.
Speaker 1 (02:17:19):
Amen.
Speaker 15 (02:17:20):
Yeah, that's my number one, two and three criteria.
Speaker 1 (02:17:25):
That's a wonderful way to summarize that. Being able to
call it the bad guys in spite of social pressure
and what you perhaps open the door to, which is
in this Internet age and doxing and anger and vitro
which seems to come out of nowhere the minute someone
bucks the system. I think that's a profound way of
putting it. And you know, I CBS, this is so funny.
(02:17:48):
I'm serious. The sixty Minutes which in speaking of ethics,
forty six News and Documentary Emmy Award nomination got it
for that interview of Kamala Harris, the one that they
edited to make it look like she was actually more
intelligent than she actually is. That they had to come
(02:18:09):
out and apologize the interview basis for the twenty billion
dollar lawsuit whether it's Got married or not, that Trump
filed against CBS in his parent company, Paramount Global, that
was nominated for an Emmy. Talk about the circular pleasure
fest that goes on among journalists. I mean the Emmys.
It's just the idea that it was awarded the CBS.
The CBS.
Speaker 15 (02:18:29):
Yeah, I actually agree with that because to make her
look Sami intelligent does deserve some sort of a special
award because she just comes off of so idiotic all
the time. That's great. So that's actually one place where
I'm at the contrarian to the conservative movement. I think
I think that absolutely the reason enough for an award.
They do this all the time. There's a tweak going
(02:18:52):
around from a guy named John Hassen this morning that
points out that Pro Publica had won a which is
a a find funded group that they actually do some
pretty good reporting, but it's all activist reporting. But they
had won a Pulitzer Prize for falsely blaming a woman's
death on abortion laws instead of the extreme abortion medication
(02:19:15):
that she was on. And and that's so they've gotten
the story wrong, and they went an award for it.
I think about how the Pulzer got your Times in
Washington Post won them for a false reporting about the
Russian collusion hoax, and no never retracts them. They're never
given back. No one ever says a has any humility
and Post online I shouldn't have won this and I'm gonna,
(02:19:39):
you know, do something to make up for it, and
no one ever does anything like that. So they're all
dishonest people.
Speaker 4 (02:19:44):
I mean, it's one of the one of the things
that's going.
Speaker 1 (02:19:46):
On well, which supports the reason why the established the
media has destroyed itself when they lie to us, and
they they obviously reveal their political biases and what they
report and how they report on it. I mean, Alex Marlote,
you have seen the statistics on the the number of
negative news stories about Donald Trump versus the positive ones.
It's like ninety plus percent negative versus positive across the
(02:20:10):
mainstream media. Ledger listen. More than the majority of folks
voted for Donald Trump. Clearly they don't have that much
bias against them. With the majority of the American people,
he won the popular vote, and yet here they are
perpetuating all of the negativity in many cases lies about him.
Speaker 15 (02:20:26):
Yeah, they do that. I'm wondering where you found the
ten percent positive stories, because I want to make sure
I breathe.
Speaker 3 (02:20:31):
That out com Although.
Speaker 15 (02:20:34):
You're not weak down then I guess that's where they are.
Speaker 1 (02:20:37):
You're not part of the mainstream media.
Speaker 15 (02:20:38):
It's yeah, but I always like it. I sometimes get
confused if they do something good, because then because then
maybe I feel like they'll take them seriously, which is
a lot more effort than what we have to do now,
which is we just have to point laugh at them
and to watch them light themselves on fire. It was
such a spectacle. A couple of weeks ago, they had
(02:20:59):
the White House Respondents Association dinner where all these journalists
who are national disgraces, they get together in DC to
fancy hotel. They drink champagne, they wear black ties, and
they congratulate each other for all I guess the stories
they didn't report on. Yeah, the year or something, and
they lost the election because you know, they wanted Harris
to win, and before that, Biden they didn't cover very well.
(02:21:22):
So it's fine. I mean, they're all here for our
amusement at this point. But ultimately, though it would be
nice if we had fearless reporters who did want to
report the news to people. It is, in its essence,
is essential to a functioning democracy or republic if you prefer,
and we don't have that right now, so it'd be
nice to get it one day.
Speaker 1 (02:21:42):
Learn all about it here, Alex Marlow tonight, empower you
America dot org. The establishment media has destroyed itself and
we can't stop smiling. Log in only, but register before
you log in. Empower you America dot org. Alex has
been a real pleasure having you on the program this morning.
I hope your seminar tonight's widely attended. I'll look forward
to having you back on the show real soon.
Speaker 15 (02:22:00):
Thanks, it's kind of you. So it's nice talk to Brent.
Speaker 1 (02:22:02):
My pleasure, my friend coming up an eight twenty one
fifty five kr se DE talk station. Going after work
this morning, where Foreign Exchange's gonna drop my car off,
gonna get my oil, change's gonna get my spark plug exchange. Yeah,
it's time for one of those X thousand mile major
maintenance things break. Fluid's gotta be changed. Yeah, you know,
and I'm you know, I was running the numbers in
(02:22:23):
my head my German car. If I take this to
the dealer to get all that done, oh my god,
I just can't imagine how expensive it's gonna be. It's
still gonna set me back, but I know it's gonna
set me back a lot less going to Foreign Exchange
for all that work. They're gonna treat me great, though
everybody gets treated great at Foreign Exchange.
Speaker 8 (02:22:39):
Of course.
Speaker 1 (02:22:40):
I'm going to Westchester location. Head up seventy five, get
off of the Tylersville Eggs and go east just two
streets and hang it right on Kingland Drive, and I'm
gonna be there, and I'm looking forward to having that
service done by Foreign Exchange, knowing full well that I'm
gonna get a full warranty on parts and service. My
car will be fixed, my satisfaction as it always is,
and I'm gonna save lots of money. That's the point
(02:23:00):
of Foreign Exchange. Don't go to the dealership to have
this work done. Go to Foreign Exchange Westchester location. Find
them online, go to foreign X one the letter X
dot com five one three six four four twenty six
twenty six five one three sixty four four twenty six twenty.
Speaker 7 (02:23:14):
Six fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (02:23:18):
Channel nine says this about the weather. We've got a
cloudy day to day rain north of the Ohio. If
there's going to be rain, sixty six for the high,
mostly cloudy every.
Speaker 3 (02:23:24):
Night, fifty excuse me, fifty.
Speaker 1 (02:23:27):
For the low. Cloudy for the most part, with a
slight chance of afternoon rain. Tomorrow seventy two will be
the high overnight little fifty three with clouds and a
cloudy Thursday. I have seventy five fifty two degrees right now.
Speaker 9 (02:23:37):
Let's get a traffic update Chuck from the UC Health
Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke, every second counts.
That's why U see health is the clear choice for
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Learn more at uc health dot com.
Speaker 9 (02:23:49):
Northbound seventy one crews continue to work with an accident
at Ridge that traffic heavy from before the lateral then
tho slow traffic continues into Kenwood southbound seventy one break
flights fields an old passed red Bank north two seventy
five heavy out of east Gate to an accident at
twenty eight in Milford where the right lanes remain blocked.
Chut thing ra month fifty five KRASD talk station AY
(02:24:13):
thirty if afy five KRECD Talk station. I always look
forward to this time of the week because we get
to talk to Daniel Davis doing the Daniel Davis Deep
Dive with retired Lieutenant colonel of course, Daniel Davis, Welcome back,
my friend. It's always a pleasure having you on the program.
Always good to see you, Brian, good morning.
Speaker 1 (02:24:28):
Always had a conversation. Though global conflict is the subject
matter we go over with Daniel Davis every week, and
as we have been for quite a few months. Now,
let's start with We're going to move over to talk
about Israel and Gaza, but let's start with Russia.
Speaker 3 (02:24:42):
And I don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:24:44):
My perception of the news of late is that Vladi
Putin's really just not interested in settling this thing and
he's just going to continue to wage war and take
over more and more of Ukraine. If I got that
just sort of summed up well enough.
Speaker 3 (02:24:59):
Yeah, that's out of change.
Speaker 18 (02:25:00):
Though the Russians have been saying, especially since Trump was inaugurated,
that they're willing to make a deal, but the terms
are very draconian, very hard, and they have said unambiguously
in the open, not in back diplomatic channels that either
they'll get this on, they'll they'll achieve their security objectives
on the negotiating table or on the battlefield. I actually
(02:25:23):
had the deputy Russian UN ambassador on my show last
week and I point blank ask him that, I said,
if you don't get it, will you keep fighting? And
he almost dismissed and said, well, we've never said anything
besides that, So yes, that's the case. And now then
we see it playing out on the battlefield and Russia,
from what I can observe along the entire front line,
Russia is making preparations now as though there won't be
(02:25:45):
any negotiated settlement and they'll continue on forward. And the
moves are not good from the Ukraine side, and don't
pretend well, which should signal that they need to finally
just suck down their pride and make a negotiated deal
on bad terms, because right now it's either bad terms
or no terms at all, and except for terms of surrender.
Speaker 1 (02:26:04):
Yeah, that's that's my perception of the events going on.
And didn't I read the other day that Ukraine launched
into Russian territory a strike, and it is my recollection
on that wrong that they're still firing off drones or
whatever into Russian territory.
Speaker 18 (02:26:22):
Brian that was last not again, Okay, I did rease
consecutive notes they have fired into into Moscow in attempt
to disrupt putents may not celebration. Zelensky has openly said,
I can't guarantee anybody's safety who's attending that parade, So
it's continuing to go.
Speaker 1 (02:26:39):
Yeah, zero military benefit, none, that's I don't even think
that can have a psychological benefit other than to rile
the Russians up even further, to want to run the
Ukrainians out of the existence. That just and it has
no military benefit to the Ukrainians. If they've got any
missiles left, shouldn't they be lobbing them at the Russian front?
Speaker 18 (02:26:58):
Listen, I just got to tell you there is an
opening in the White House for National Security advisor and
you should apply.
Speaker 3 (02:27:03):
So you've got it spot on.
Speaker 1 (02:27:05):
That is exactly right.
Speaker 18 (02:27:06):
There's no military value, not even especially not tactical.
Speaker 3 (02:27:09):
But only thing that can.
Speaker 18 (02:27:11):
If they succeed at this, especially if they do anything
to disrupt the actual ceremony itself on the not is
to enrage the Quasians and make them drive even harder. So, yes,
you're spot on.
Speaker 1 (02:27:22):
I you know, terrorist attacks is one of the reasons
we end up in the Middle East for a decade plus, right,
you know, you enrage a society of people, they are
going to stand up and rise up and go after you.
So again, I don't understand what the hell's going on
in Zelensky's mind, but then again, I don't know that
anybody does. So if it's gonna settle, it's gonna resolve,
it's gonna have to be Ukraine putting its you know,
(02:27:44):
have to suck it up, give up some territory in
order to get some peace and end the slaughter of
their civilians, because there's no way they can win this war.
I think we've ended up at this place previously, Daniel, Right,
I hate to laugh about it.
Speaker 18 (02:27:57):
There's no rational way to end in different place. But
as you said, Zelensky resumed today. He was in the
Czech Republic today signing some documents and still saying I
was watching the press conference just before we came on
the air here, and he's talking likely that it's still
a decision that could go either way, and we just
need a few more artillery shells And thanks for this
(02:28:18):
support here and all this no possibility, no hint that
he's gonna do anything differently.
Speaker 1 (02:28:23):
Okay, and real quick before we pivot over to Israel
and Kaza. This minerals deal that we signed with Ukraine,
that sounds me like it's going to establish an American
footprint by way of putting American business interest in there
in order to do extraction work, which provides a mechanism
for us to have to stand up and defend American
(02:28:44):
interest in a foreign country. I don't know if that's
a positive development, Daniel Davis, your thoughts, Well.
Speaker 18 (02:28:51):
That first of all, implies that some company is going
to be willing to put their people in harm's way.
It's also assumes that there's gonna be a Ukraine can
trolled area to do these minerals distraction, and it implies
that there's gonna be billions of dollars and that's a
bee or at least hundreds of millions in infrastructure development,
and that will take multiple years. So this is something
(02:29:12):
that's kind of a head scratcher to me because it
has no near term impact one way or the other.
Speaker 1 (02:29:17):
All right, fair enough, pivoting over to Gazza a couple
of headlines in front of the Israel prepares Operation Gideon's
Chariots to take over Gaza, clear Jamas over to ms
or MSN. Israel plans to occupy and flatten all of
Gaza if no deal by Trump trip they got, I
guess they claim they have enough resolve and enough resources
(02:29:37):
to just, I don't know, wipe out whatever exists in
Gaza and start from scratch. Daniel Davis, listen, I've been
saying this, and I know some of your viewers don't
like it. Since this we started talking about this many
many months ago, Israel has choosing to use military means
to try and achieve the unattainable. You're not gonna kill
(02:29:58):
your weight to victory here and to I mean, what
have they not done over nineteen months that suddenly they're
going to start doing now and get a different outcome
you have?
Speaker 18 (02:30:07):
I mean, the entire population is completely stoke. They have
no other alternatives. They can't even quote surrender this idea
that they should voluntarily go somewhere else. Only there's nowhere
else that we're going to take them. Yeah, so they
can't go anywhere else, So then what are you going
to do? And every time you kill somebody that's not
a Hamas person in all these attacks, you raise up
(02:30:28):
more every time you do kill somebody. There's no shortage
of men that's going to continue on with the resistance.
How could it be any other way? So I truly
don't understand what their objective is here.
Speaker 1 (02:30:39):
Well, and I've read in a couple of different places
this would require the moving I guess essentially evacuating more
like two million people and to.
Speaker 18 (02:30:49):
Where that's exactly right? Where can they go in the
God's drip? Because is you just read there they're looking
to demolish everything. There's nowhere left to go. I mean,
they're basically on an existence right now. And by the way,
all the food ad has been cut off for weeks now,
and the many people are at risk of genuine starvation
and some have already succumbed.
Speaker 1 (02:31:09):
Well, I don't think it's a terrible situation. It is,
but it's been a terrible situation Gaza for a long time.
But all the photographs that I see, and I recognize
they're only going to show the worst of the worst.
But I just kind of scratch my head wondering what's
left by way of infrastructure in Gaza that can be destroyed.
Speaker 18 (02:31:25):
Well, I mean, yeah, and you see, it's not just
that they're showing the worst of the worst. That's all
there is to see. There is only the worst of
the worst. And yeah, there's like shells of buildings some places,
and skeletons of buildings. Then those are also being demolished
until there is literally it's being raised to the ground.
And I don't see any military utility in this. I
don't see any political utility in this. It just looks
(02:31:48):
like they're just destroying the ability of these people to live.
Speaker 1 (02:31:51):
And then they'll have to keep an occupying force in
Gaza in order to maintain whatever definitely order that they
hope to achieve.
Speaker 18 (02:31:57):
Now, even if they succeed tactically, and I don't know,
they just say, yes, we've done this, so we've conquered it.
Now what because you've got two million people there with
no place to live, you have to occupy it. And
what are you gonna what's your army gonna do perpetually
stay there? I mean, what's the in state here? What
is the end objective? I just don't see anything that's good. No,
(02:32:18):
And you know, if you if you continue to occupy it.
Speaker 8 (02:32:20):
I don't know how.
Speaker 1 (02:32:21):
I mean, if you have two million folks living in
Gaza that they call it their home. Among them, obviously
people with a tremendous amount of hatred for Israel and
the occupying forces that would have to remain there, you're
setting yourself up for a whole lot of pot shots
and sniper fire and IEDs. I mean, a perpetual battle
(02:32:43):
from behind the scenes with an unorganized military against the
occupying forces. I mean, that's that's what you're you're asking for.
I mean, that's and we've seen this in history.
Speaker 18 (02:32:53):
We certainly saw a lot with the Partisans against the
Germans in France, with the Partisans against the Germans in
Yugoslavia for example, just a horrible, horrible year's long blood
of time Ukraine actually during y'uring the occupation portion of
World War Two. It was always that way, was always bad,
and the population has no other alternative, right, It's not
like you can pacify them.
Speaker 3 (02:33:14):
That's all they have.
Speaker 18 (02:33:15):
So you're signing yourself up for that kind of an
existence again with no discernible in state. That's positive for
the Israel side. I don't understand it.
Speaker 1 (02:33:24):
Daniel Davis deep dive. You can find a podcast online,
just search for it. We'll look forward to having him
back on the program next Tuesday for another exciting conversation.
Take care of my dear friend. See you then look
forward to it. It's a forty fifty five KRCD talk station.
Stick around Secretary of State Franklrose. It's voting day. It's
election day, Get out and vote. I got my thoughts
and ideas about issue too. We'll hear from Secretary of
(02:33:45):
State Frank LeRose coming up next. When something mats.
Speaker 11 (02:33:51):
Here.
Speaker 1 (02:33:51):
It is one more time for the Channel nine first
one and weather forecasts. Got cloudy day to day, rained
north of the Ohio River, high sixty six over night,
little fifty with clouds, cloudy tomorrow with a possibility of
afternoon rain. Seventy two for the high tomorrow overnight, lot
fifty three with clouds and a cloudy Thursday partly and
a high seventy five fifty three degrees. Right now, it's
time for traffic update Chuck Ingram from.
Speaker 8 (02:34:11):
The uc UP Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (02:34:13):
When it comes to stroke, every second counts. That's why
you see how this is the clear choice for WRAPPID
by saving treatment.
Speaker 8 (02:34:18):
Learn more right.
Speaker 9 (02:34:19):
You see how dot com cruise continue to work. By
the wreck northbound seventy one at Ridge, traffic slows Smith
edwards into Kenwood westbound two seventy five. An accident near
five mile backs traffic to Ohio Pike. Right lane is
open again northbound two seventy five with the wreck near
twenty eight in Milford. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC
(02:34:39):
the talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:34:42):
Josh Ivy forty three, fifty five KRCD Talk Station. Very
happy Tuesday to you and a welcome back to fifty
five CARC Morning show. High State Secretary of State Frank
LeRose is good you have you on this morning.
Speaker 6 (02:34:54):
It's good to be back, Brian. And notice that traffic
report did not say anything about traffic jams at the
voting location. Nothing to worry about today, Get out and vote.
We'll even give you a free sticker.
Speaker 1 (02:35:04):
I problem free sticker as an incentive to get more
people to vote in a day when very few people
end up voting because it's an off cycle election. The
numbers that are always sort of sad to see when
we wake up the next day and find out that
only fifteen percent, you know, exercise the right to vote
and maybe steer the direction of the state of Ohio.
I mean, this is a constitutional amendment. I think it's
(02:35:25):
a very important issue for people to consider.
Speaker 6 (02:35:29):
Yeah, and listen, Ohioan's are civic minded, engaged people. Look
at the numbers that we've been posting in the even
number years, twenty twenty all time record breaking. Twenty twenty
two broke the record for goubernatorial elections. Twenty twenty four,
we broke the record for early voting. You can trast
that with these odd numbered years like twenty twenty five,
you do seem much lower turnout. And maybe one of
(02:35:51):
the reasons why I run into people every now and
then say, you know, I just don't know enough. I
don't want to guess, And I get that. But you
can just check our website vote dot gov. You'll see
what's going to be on your ballot. You'll see the
argument and support of issue too, the argument against issue.
To take five or ten minutes, be informed, and go
out and cast your ballot. It'll be easy to do
and you'll be doing your civic duty.
Speaker 1 (02:36:12):
Amen to that. And of course a lot of people
have school lovies to vote on. City of Cincinnati has council,
the primary for mayor, and other things. So lots of
other issues to drive some of the voters out, but
the vast majority of us only have this single issue.
But it is important. I had a high representative, Jennifer
Gross on the program yesterday, so I encourage my listeners
to listen to that podcast if you have carecy dot com. Now,
(02:36:32):
polls are already open, Secretary of State Franklerose, and they
close at seven point thirty. What if folks need to
bring with them in order to cast a vote?
Speaker 6 (02:36:40):
Yeah, you're right. The poles have been open for over
two hours now and things are going smoothly. You need
to bring a government issued photo ID. That's for most
of us, that's our state ID or our driver's license,
or it's like me, you can bring your military ID,
or you can bring a passport. But also bring a smile.
I say that because bring a smile to thank those
poll workers. When you get to your voting location, you're
(02:37:01):
going to be greeted by a bipartisan team Democrats and
Republicans on this Tuesday morning working together to help you
have the smooth and secure and convenient election experience that
you deserve.
Speaker 3 (02:37:13):
Thank them.
Speaker 6 (02:37:14):
For their work. They're putting in a long day and.
Speaker 3 (02:37:15):
They're doing for us.
Speaker 1 (02:37:16):
Amen to that. And of course already heard from Sherry
Pulling from the Hemon County Board of Elections on the
need for poll workers. So please consider doing that as
we approach November. They always need poll workers and it's
a way to fulfill your civic obligation. Plus you'll have
a pretty good time doing it. My wife did it
a lot of time, and everybody gets along well, regardless
of political stripe. You'll get along well with your fellow
(02:37:38):
poll workers.
Speaker 6 (02:37:39):
And Brian, here's the other cool thing in Ohio. Seventeen
year olds can be poll workers. So you've got a
high school student in your life. What a great thing
to put on a college application or a job application.
It shows a level of responsibility and civic engagement. And again,
seventeen year olds can be poll workers before they're even
eligible to be voters. You sign up at vote Ohio,
(02:38:00):
they'll train you, they'll even pay you, not a lot,
but they'll pay you a little bit for your trouble.
And it'll feel good when you go home at seven
forty five and kick your feet up and watch those
results come scrolling in you'll know that you were part
of making that happen. So mootohowd do gove is where
you sign up to be a poll worker. We're already
starting to recruit for this November.
Speaker 1 (02:38:18):
That's great. I'm glad you. I had forgotten that, so
I'm glad you brought that up. Secretary of State, Frank Lorose,
real quick, since we're talking about election. Before I gravitate over,
I wanted to ask you about real ID because that
deadline So I guess is it today the deadline for
real idea to travel tomorrow?
Speaker 4 (02:38:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (02:38:34):
So yeah, it's a good idea to have one. Yes, Listen,
I got mine over ten years ago. You need it
to board an airplane, you need it to go into
federal facilities and buildings. It is not, however, a requirement
to vote. Your regular old state idea as long as
it's unexpired will be fine. It's a good idea to
get the real ID, but you don't need that to vote,
(02:38:56):
as long as you have a valid state ID or
driver's license or military idea or passport. Full list again
is at our website vote Ohio dot go, and of.
Speaker 1 (02:39:03):
Course you get that Department of Voter vehicles. Are they
a well oiled machine. I've never had any problem with
my DMV and I actually lost head to replace my
license because it cracked, and they turned it around quickly
mailed my new I had a real ID. They mailed
me my new one within five days. So I'm just
wondering for people who, oh my god, I've got to
go out and get that.
Speaker 3 (02:39:23):
Is it a quick process? Painless?
Speaker 6 (02:39:26):
Brian, you should stop using your ID card to Jimmy
open the door, Stop losing your stop losing your keys.
Now listen, they've gotten a lot better.
Speaker 1 (02:39:35):
You can.
Speaker 6 (02:39:35):
You can make a reservation online to get there, and
that kind of thing. Yeah, so there's a lot of
good options. And here's the thing. Some people make this
silly argument that somehow it's discriminatory to require IDs to
vote them notori estates do it Ohio and support it.
But here's the thing.
Speaker 14 (02:39:52):
It's free.
Speaker 6 (02:39:53):
We'll give you a free ID for the purpose of
voting if you can't afford one, and so there's no
reason not to have one. Keep your driver's license or
your ID up to date and use it when you
go to vote.
Speaker 1 (02:40:04):
Yeah. I find that argument to be rather racist, to
be quite candid with you and insulting some people of color. Yes,
you're not capable of getting what are you kidding me?
Any How, before we Park Company Secretary of State Frank LeRose,
I was told that you went door knocking with mayoral
candidate Corey Bowman, who we hope is going to win
the primary this morning or today.
Speaker 4 (02:40:25):
I'm excited.
Speaker 6 (02:40:26):
Corey is one of these transformational candidates. Cincinnati is a
great city.
Speaker 1 (02:40:30):
I think you know.
Speaker 6 (02:40:31):
My dad went to uc my mom went to Miami.
I've grown up visiting Cincinnati my whole life. It's a
great city that's been mismanaged by one party Democrat rule.
I think Corey is the guy that can flip the natty.
He's gonna make He's gonna make the other side work
for it. If nothing else, I think he can win
this in November. And that's why I was out supporting him.
Speaker 1 (02:40:50):
Amen to that, and I'm with you all day long.
I've had him on my program quite a few times
leading up to today, and I just find him to
be absolutely sincere in his passion and love for the city.
It just comes through and everything he says, Hey.
Speaker 6 (02:41:03):
Man, No, the guy's the real deal. He's an entrepreneur,
he's a minister, he's somebody that loves this city. And
you know what, we've had enough of the career politicians
running the city. Give give this guy a shot. And
again that's why I was outdoor knock and form and
by the way, we were in Hyde Park and we
got a really positive reaction from people that met him
and and gave him the job interview there on their
(02:41:26):
front porch.
Speaker 1 (02:41:27):
Well, I would hope after the mayor and the city
council currently has made up stabbed him all on the
back by denying them the right to chart their own
destiny when it comes to zoning. Obviously a little passionate
about that. Secretary's Dave frank LeRose, thanks for joining my
listeners to me this morning talk about the election. I appreciate.
I'll look forward to having you back on the program.
Speaker 6 (02:41:45):
Old open until seven point thirty vote Ohio dot go
for all the info.
Speaker 1 (02:41:48):
Thanks brand, thank you, Votohio dot gov. Okay, let us
see here. Yeah, you're going back to Jennifer Gross and again,
if you're going out to vote and you're planning on
not voting, let's talk to the folks like I'm not
going to get up off my couch and drive to
the polling place just to vote on an issue. And
(02:42:11):
beyond that, I'm not even con sure because I've I've
seen most of the advocacy for voting for Issue Too
in favor of it is actually a campaign with yard
signs to vote yes on Issue Too. Ask yourself who
paid for that. Jennifer Gross pointed it out yesterday, which
(02:42:33):
is why I was going to gravitate to listen to
the podcast of what Jennifer Gross had to say Representative Gross,
because this is basically as I boiled it down, and
she agreed with my, you know, perception of it and
summarizing and summing up as it's a creation of a
slush fund. Oh and it's going to help your roads,
(02:42:54):
Your brids is your infrastructure. We can only use the money,
the additional money, and this is going to be a
huge bot of money, and they're going to go into
debt for funding this additional money into this fund that
they already have in place. Every ten years at least
you had a chance to vote on whether you wanted
a refund it or not a special fund for roads,
(02:43:17):
bridges and infrastructure and water projects and things of that nature.
But they want more. Of course they do additional I
think two hundred and fifty million dollars more, but issuing bonds,
which is basically putting it on a credit card. Right,
they don't have the money in their pockets if they
want to add to the fund, so they're going to
go into debt to continue to fund this even further,
which means every year rather than allocating the money that
(02:43:40):
they've got in the form of taxpayer dollars, they meaning
are elected officials and doing the job that they were
hired to do, and allocating the limited tax dollars to
fund the roads, bridges and infrastructures and take care of
what we've got already. It's a tough job. I'm there
(02:44:02):
they are. And there's that pile of money you get
from all the gasoline is sold in the state of Ohio.
I think thirty nine cents a gallon state tax. That's
not enough to fund these projects. I guess not. You
can't work with the amount of money you take from
us in our terms of our tax in terms of
our income tax here in Ohio, plus the gas tax
that you generate. Then you got the lottery tax, which
(02:44:22):
is supposed to fund schools, and yet our property tax
bills are up through the blank and roof to fund schools. Hey,
you go on forever on. This can't get But they're
going to have to then put a line item in
the budget to allocate funding for debt service. They're gonna
have to make principle and interest payments on these bonds.
(02:44:43):
So I guess that's an easier task. So think gets
this massive pile of borrowed money to increase this slush fund.
And I call it a slush fund because when you're
out there voting, you're thinking about voting yes on this,
what projects are going to get done? And who decides
it local governments? Do you want to entrust the city
of Cincinnati with another pile of money to get something done?
(02:45:05):
And going back to who funded the vote yes on issue? Too?
How about the labor unions who are going to of
course get the work that this money will fund. This
is a giant additional pile of money for union contracts.
Because you know, you can't sit at the table like
for example, in the City of Cincinnati or even Hamilton
(02:45:26):
County for that matter, if you're not a union house
or union shop, you can't even put a request for
an RFPN there. So that's my I felt that way
about it since I first read the issue, but that
it is a constitutional amendment. You're not going to get
an opportunity to unring this bell. You are just a
(02:45:47):
little Constitutions are not supposed to include budgetary items like this.
At least that's from my perspective. You may share a
different viewpoint, but come on, we're mending the highest law
of the land in the state of Ohio to incorporate
this slush fund into it. It just doesn't sit well
with me. So anyhow, a great program today, at least
(02:46:11):
I thought so, because we were head Congressman and former
Congressman now citizen brad Winstrop and Citio doing an empower
you seminar to tomorrow night, what are the lessons learned
from the pandemic And we went through the whole idea
of gain of function research and among other topics, we
talked about medicaid, and we talked about student debt and
all that. But he was very very much involved when
(02:46:31):
he was an elected official representing the state of Ohio,
chairman of the SELEXT Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, so
he knows all about it, and he's been there from
day one, and so that's going to be an interesting seminar. Again.
You can log in from the comfort of your own
hown empower you America dot org, which can also do
tonight Breitbart editor in chief Alex Marlow. Establishment media has
(02:46:53):
destroyed itself and we can't stop smiling. Subtitle years of
unethical journalistic practices among the majority of US news outlets
has resulted in a massive corrosion in credibility. That's tonight's
empower You seven ar seven pm. Log in only again
empower you America dot org where you can register for
that seminar and enjoy it. I'm sure it'll be a
(02:47:14):
great one. So also heard from Daniel Davis with a
deep dive. You can visit my blog page fifty five
KRC dot com to maybe forward that link to a
friend if they didn't get a chance to listen, or
you want to listen to it again, or if you're
just tuning in folks, tuning in tomorrow will get the
election results. Sitting on the edge of my seat by
some of these school levies as well as issue too,
and Judge Annapolitano of course, Jos Trekker, thank you for
(02:47:35):
producing the program. You do a great job, my friend.
I'll hopefully hear you from me tomorrow, maybe phone call in,
but don't go away. Glenn Beck is coming up. News
happens fast, stay up to date.
Speaker 8 (02:47:48):
At the top of the hour, you're moving very quickly.
Fifty five KRC the talk station. This re