Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five. If it's five k r C the
talk station.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Well we're summon it up there. Yeah, I guess so
it depends on your perspective. But it is the day
after the election, of course we're gonna be talking about
election results and UH great job with the voter turnout, folks.
(00:51):
What was it like, ten percent turnout, Joe or five
percent something along those lines.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Ten.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
I got a text from UH truck commander Westside, Jim Kiefer,
who goes around and collects the ballots. He works the
polls and does his civic duty. Five percent turnout, that's
what he said. Okay, every vote counts too. I knowe
(01:16):
that Madison Local School District was a tie. Yeah, each
side got six hundred and twenty votes, So your vote
does count. It does matter anyhow, Maybe you want to
comment about what happened yesterday five three, seven, four, nine
fifty eight hundred and eighty two to three talk go
at town five fifty on at and T finals will
go over the There's not a whole lot to report,
(01:37):
of course, because there wasn't much on the ballot of
an issue too, which passed overwhelmingly. Great slush fund. Now
that's in place in the Constitution. A Big Picture with
Jack Addan Today every Wednesday at seven o five. Jack
Adenen joins a program and uh well, blesses us with
his just intellect and wisdom. Today, a century of Hollywood politics.
(01:59):
I guess maybe that's can with the Donald Trump's tariffs
on foreign films, that one is just It puzzles the
hell out of me anyhow, Jack Addin on whatever a
century of Hollywood politics, wherever that takes him, he will
lead us and Donovan and Neil Americans for Prosperity Today
every Wednesday at seven thirty, the need to renew the
(02:19):
Trump tax cuts first and foremost on Donovan's short list
today to talk about. Steve Belso from the Clemont County
Veterans Services To joined the program at seven forty doing
great things for the Clemont County Veterans and I sure
appreciate the work that they're doing. And Steve's a hell
of a good guy. Shane Jenkins, former January sixth defendant,
joins a program at eight to five, executive director of
(02:41):
Stand the Gap and the Real Jay six. That should
be very interesting. Judge Edita Poultono on holes in the Constitution. Yeah,
our elected officials and the powers that be behind the
scenes just do not care about the Fourth Amendment, our
right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures. Man,
it's just basically evaporated for those who swear to uphold
(03:02):
the Constitution and take an oath to do so. Say
what you want about Donald Trump, my left wing friends
and him destroying the Constitution. Man, It is across the board, Republicans,
Democrats and all the lettered agencies behind the scenes just
ignoring it and spying on us regularly and sharing the information.
It's just scary stuff. So Judge Napolotonous and I see
(03:24):
eye to eye on that abuse. And we'll talk about
that at eight thirty and at eight forty five Corey Bowman,
who did come in second, although sadly, you know, my
friends in High Park just don't care that they had
their they're well, the rights to choose their own direction
when it comes to zoning, just ignored by Cincinna City
Council and the mayor. And going again, ninety percent of
(03:49):
the Cincinnati voters opted to stay home. Every vote counts.
So we've got avteb per Ball leading by a very
large margin after have par Ball eighty three percent of
the vote. Of the ten percent has showed up, Corey
Bowman thirteen percent, and Brian Frank ended up in third
(04:13):
with five percent of the vote. So Corey, I figured
it would be him in per Ball, but I just
really was hoping it will be less lopsided in terms
of how the outcome is. Let's see here, nothing really
much else in the city to vote on. Of course,
issue too, which I mentioned did pass pretty much overwhelmingly. Bowman,
of course, came in a distance second. We're talking to
(04:34):
him again at the end of the show. He won
only two of Cincinnati's one hundred and ninety precincts, and
in only one of them he got more than fifty
percent of the vote fifty two percent in one of
the two Sale or Park precincts. Of course, you go
to the far west side and you're going to get
more conservative votes, at least that's been the history of
(04:56):
the neighborhoods. He lost the He lost the other Sale
of Park neighborhood fifty one forty three. The other precinct,
Bowman one was over the Eastern Neighborhood of California. Vote
split among the three candidates, with Bowman getting forty six
percent of the vote. So there's your two neighborhoods where
Corey Bowman came out on top. And as the Inquirer presumes,
(05:18):
his association with the vice president could be a liability
rather than an asset. Beggar parton Joe, Well, yeah, the
choir could stop mentioning it. Although you know, Corey Bowman
has made national news and in fact the outcome of
this election was on I believe Fox News reported or
I know is Epic Times and they interviewed Corey Bowman
(05:42):
as well. Epic Times did. Anyway, as the inquire points out,
the controversial one hundred and fifty million dollar hotel and
apartment complex plan for Hyde Park Square appeared to drive
slightly higher turnout. Kyde Park showed up fifteen percent of
the voters compared with ten percent for the city wide.
So congratulations for stepping up to the plate a fraction
(06:05):
of the voting population. Even though even though per Ball
and council supported the project that the Highe Park residents
didn't want. He won Hyde Park with seventy four percent
of the vote. Bowman got twenty percent. Reading from the
Inquirer's reporting Scott Wartman. Several Hyde Park voters supported Parvoll
(06:29):
told the Inquirer they disagreed with the mayor on the project,
but they weren't going to vote for Bowman. One of them,
Elizabeth West, the seventy four year old Hyde Park resident,
voted for parvol though she opposed the Hyde Park Square redevelopment.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
Quote.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
I'm furious with him because he voted against the square,
but I wouldn't consider the other two Republican candidates. Wes
said she plans on only voting for the two council
members who voted against the project, and none of the
seven who approved it. You're going to vote against your
(07:09):
own best interest just because the Republicans see this is
the derangement. I mean, you can't see the force for
the trees. Okay, I'm not going to vote for that
evil Republican, even though he would have allowed me to
chart my own destiny, even though he would have represented
my interest in government. He's got it R after his name.
Hell no, he's related to JD. Vans. Hell No, like
(07:34):
that makes any sense at all. School levies I mentioned
the Madison Local School District came out as a tie. Again,
each side six hundred and twenty votes. Princeton's school District
Levy passed fifty three to forty seven. It passed in
the Hamilton County portion of the district fifty four to
(07:56):
forty six. It failed in Warren in the Warren portion
fifty eight to forty two, and it failed in the
Butler County A portion of the district fifty three forty seven.
So you can see the lopsided effect there. Edgewood City
School District passed fifty one forty nine. Clinton Massie School
(08:19):
District passed fifty two forty eight. Kind of surprised about
that one, actually, but Mount Healthy School District failed sixty
two to thirty eight. Currently, facing budget shortfalls have led
to cuts and programs, increased class sizes, and reduced services.
(08:39):
The money would have funded, they say, teachers and staff salaries,
classroom supplies, students, support services like counseling and special ed
facility maintenance, technology upgrades, transportation and other operational needs. You're
not going to get that. In Mount Healthy West Claremont
Local School District failed epic failure. Cribbage MIC's out there.
He's happy about that because since his property taxes went
(09:00):
up sixty three percent. West Claremont Local Schools combined. Levy
failed eighty three to seventeen. Wow. According to the press
release from the district, the levee would have funded, but
it's not going to fund the master Facilities plan to
(09:23):
deal with overcrowding, aging facilities in equity between school school buildings.
Diverse needs that's in quotes of the district's growing student body.
Plan included building two new buildings, one for fifth and
sixth graders and one for seventh and eighth graders, and
the plan also included a new elementary school. I guess
(09:43):
none of which will be happening now. Diverse needs of
the district's growing student body. You know what that means, Joe,
I don't know what means. Franklin City School District levee
failed sixty six thirty four epic failure. Because the Lovey fail,
(10:03):
the district will eliminate one point two million in spending
for the twenty five twenty six school year. They'll cut
all day kindergarten, They'll raise that raise pay to participate fees,
make cuts the transportation, which will include no high school
bussing charge actual costs for school fees rather than reduce fees,
keep larger class sizes, the district will not be able
(10:25):
to reinstate previously cut teaching positions, and make only minimal
improvements to the intermediate campus. So there's your rundown on that.
And again Issue two passed I think overwhelmingly, but again statewide,
the turnout was just absolutely epic failure. If people just
don't care, I did cast my vote, feel pretty positive
(10:50):
about casting the vote, at least making the effort to
do so. Five one three seven, four hundred eight two
to three taco with tound five fifty on eight and
t phones. Feel free to chime in, love to hear
from you. I'll be back with more news and information
plus local stories at the bottom of the hour. And
a stack is stupid. All on the five o'clock hour.
I'll be right back.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
It's five nineteen. If it's the five kerr CE DE
talk station, Happy Wednesday to you. Try to make it
so anyway. Joe Strecker was just pointing out that in
every article about Mendi mayoral race and the primary, you
know Corey Bowman has identified as jd Vance's half brother.
It's the lead in It's like when you talk about
Elon Musk, every single reporter will mention billionaire, multi billionaire
(11:35):
Elon Musk. It's the lead. I mean, it has nothing
to do with it. But although I don't think the
outcome would change a bit if they didn't mention JD.
Vance's connection with Corey Bowman by way of a blood relationship,
no other connection, to the best of my knowledge, other
than their friends. They get along and play well together
like brothers usually do. Cincinnati did not vote for Donald Trump.
(11:56):
I mean, you know, it's overwhelmingly overwhelmingly Democrat. So the
idea that Corey Bowman even got a slice of the pie,
you know, it's kind of an interesting concept. But you know,
Congress from brad wins or a former Congress from brad
Winsor gave a go at it. And I think he
came in in a high forty percent in the popular vote.
And so that's as close as I think we're ever
(12:17):
going to get. But we'll see what happens as fall.
I'm not writing off Corey, and there's a lot of
time between now and then for people to wake up
and do something right. Why do you keep it? Isn't
the definition of stupidity, doing the same thing over and
over and over again, expecting a different outcome. Do you
feel well served by the Democrats in the city of Cincinnati.
(12:38):
I mean, it seems to me you've been collectively brainwashed.
I don't get it you're able to step away from
your party affiliation for a moment and perceive the reality
of what they've done for you or what they haven't
done for you. I mean, please give it a shot. Anyhow,
A couple of articles that had caught my attention. First off,
(13:01):
and in the world of defunding the police and the
world of border security and the fact that gang members
are infiltrating our country. This is sad Eleven teenage members
of the Ultra violand Venezuelan gang tradey Aragua involved in
an attack on two New York City police officers. Happened Friday
night in Times Square. Five of the suspects, illegal aliens
(13:24):
from Venezuela, have been arrested, youngest suspect twelve years old.
Police sources said that two of the children were picked
up by their migrant parents. One charged as an adult
with riot and assault. Mayor Eric Adams in a press
(13:45):
briefing yesterday It's horrific enough to be a victim of
a crime, but when somebody openly assaults a police officer,
you're attacking our symbol of safety and it cannot be tolerated.
Rather bold statement from the left wing governor. A mayor
Adam said he's heard from people in the city who
have said the suspects are too young for serious punishment.
He said, uh no, people who pray on innocent people
(14:08):
must be held accountable. They must be brought to justice. Well,
how about the Well, I'll get to that in a minute.
New York Police Commissioner Jessha Tish said, last week we
saw a troubling incident the heart of Times Square, New Yor.
Police officers came under attack seven thirty BM Cops assigned
a foot post in the area forty second and eighth
just to block away from the boxing match. Was apparently
(14:30):
was a big event. Noticed about ten to twelve individuals
beginning to surround three others. Officers engaged the group, attempted
to break up. Would appear to be a wolf pack
style robbery. Can you imagine being the surrounded by people?
You go downtown, a bunch of teenagers show up around you.
You know, and teenagers come pretty large these days, if
you haven't noticed anyway. Instead, the police were ambushed, he said,
(14:54):
and pelted with scooters, basketballs and other makeshift weapons. This
was a targeted attack, planned, deliberate, and carried out with
intent and will not be tolerated. Luckily, our officers are okay,
and the investigation that follow it was fast, effective in focus.
According to her, police identified subset of the trade, the
Aragua gang members, as the suspected perpetrators. She said, our
(15:18):
detectives got right to work with ours. Identified members of
the violent group known as Luls Diablos D forty two,
a subset of trendy Daragua splitters, several of them listening
in our gang database. I emphasized that for a reason.
It's one of the reasons we call many of them
so quick quickly as gang database. Tish pointed out this
city council was legislating against cops. They're trying to defund
(15:42):
the police, and scolded them for trying to do away
with the gang database, the database that gave allowed them
to find these individuals very quickly. She said, More wrests
are coming. This is not low level crime, it's organized violence.
Carried out by gang members that we've already taken off
the street for praying on New York and now they're
back ambushing cops in the middle of Times Square. It's
(16:02):
not a fluke. It's a system failure. It's what happens
when repeat offenders are allowed to cycle through arrest after
arrest without meaningful accountability. It's what happens when there are
no real consequences. Amen, she's pointing out the point of
the criminal justice system. There must be accountability, there must
be punishment if you commit crimes. It's a warning shot
to everybody out there who would otherwise do this. Somebody's gonna,
(16:29):
I mean, we're gonna have to figure this out at
some point, elected officials, judges. This is one of the
things that George Soros funds left wing prosecutors and left
wing judicial campaigns to get easy on crime, soft on
crime people put into positions where they're supposed to uphold
the law in order that we have a criminal justice
(16:49):
system to prevent rather deter others from engaging in violent behavior.
Just so damn frustrating letting our country go down a
toilet because well, they're just they shouldn't be treated harshly.
They shouldn't be punished. Well, that just eggs them on
and encourages more. Duh five twenty five. If you five
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So some pumps, no problem, they fix those all the time.
(17:34):
Maybe been dealing with the problem because of all the
heavy rain we've got, I understand that. But that's where
plumb type comes in. Slower clog drains, obviously they can
take care of those.
Speaker 5 (17:43):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
And slower clog drains, you have multiple of them, that
could be a sewer line problem. In indicator of sewer
line problems is multiple clog drains. But you know what,
they don't have to dig up your yard. Plump type
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tight dot com, fifty five car the talk station twenty
nine on a Wednesday listener. Lunch Wednesday going to be
at Sunder Brewery in Westchester, easily accessible off seventy five.
So I hope to see you there. It's gonna be
a fun time and I'm going to enjoy the company
and my wife today she's going to make it to lunch.
Looking forward to having her there. It's been a long
(18:48):
time since Paul it's been able to make her listen
to lunch. So any how, over to the phones we go.
Let's see what Tom's got to say this morning. Tom,
thanks for calling in. Always good to hear from my friend.
Speaker 6 (18:58):
Yeah, good morning, and it's always it's nice when the
wife is willing to be seen in public with you,
isn't it.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
Yeah, it makes me feel better. You know, she's got
a lot of reasons to want to avoid me, and
I get that. I just I kind of scratch my head.
I think it's to be married thirty three years in June.
So I out kicked my agree, I'll kick my coverage.
I know that I'm blessed and I'm glad I stuck
with it because, as I mentioned before, when I first
asked her out, she shot me down a couple of
(19:24):
times before she finally agreed to go out with me
when we were in law school. So you know, I
like a mountain to climb. You know, I don't want
an easy mark. As someone agrees. Actually, I'm afraid of women.
Back when I was single, women that would hit on
me out of the gate. That scared the hell out
of me. I'm like, because I'm so self deprecating, like
I why are you? But something's wrong with you? That's
like computer computer as a red flag. So you know,
(19:46):
I get turned down. I'm like, Okay, that's a challenge.
I'm going to work on that.
Speaker 6 (19:50):
Yeah right, yeah, yeah, yeah. The ones, the ones that
are too easy. Obviously their judgment must be impaired somehow.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Exactly, That's always the way I looked at it, Eddiehow.
Speaker 6 (20:01):
I'm still I'm still wondering how I how I uh
held on to my wife so long. It must be
the grace of God.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
You know, I give credit to the higher power.
Speaker 6 (20:11):
Yeah, I've definitely been my uh changing subjects here. My
parallel parking skills have definitely been uh used quite frequently
over the last year parking here at u SEE. This
probably the worst thing about working at u SEE is parking,
trying to find a parking spot and then trying to
get into that parking spot. And it's so nice once
(20:33):
once all these kids are gone, uh you know here
in the spring, last day of classes is coming up soon,
and it'll be nice. You won't have to fight for
for parking spots.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
So you're you're basically telling me that nothing has changed
since I was attending the university, since they back in
the eighties.
Speaker 6 (20:51):
Well, I would say, if only it's gotten worse because
because they they they pack in so many more people now.
You know, I'm sure there's a lot more kids in
school now than they were when you were how long ago,
did you say you went to school.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
I was there between the fall of eighty three and
all the way through law school, and I graduated from
law school in nineteen ninety, so I spent quite a
few years.
Speaker 7 (21:12):
They call that. They call that back in the day,
Brian in the day.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
Yes, back in the day.
Speaker 3 (21:17):
That's how the kids say it, right, So I did.
Speaker 6 (21:21):
I did want to comment on this, you know, again,
the whole voting thing. These people who insist on on
voting for Democrats and definitely all were not voting for Republicans.
How's that working out for you? I know, yeah, it's
just I don't I don't get it either. And you know,
I kind of understand those people who are living off
(21:43):
the system, you know, people who are getting welfare and
you know, getting to check in the mail every month
or whatever however they're getting it. And yeah, especially when
they pretty much a lot of they just direct the positive.
They don't have to do anything. Money just shows up
in their bank. And I kind of get that. But
there's people out there who are allegedly educated and they
(22:06):
think they're so smart, and what what are you paying
attention to? What what is it that's driving this ridiculous
notion that if you vote for a Republican your life
is going to end or something like that. I don't
get it. I don't understand it is. It's got to
be something mentally wrong with people in order for them
(22:26):
to believe that if we keep voting for Democrats, eventually
everything will get better.
Speaker 3 (22:31):
No, it won't.
Speaker 6 (22:31):
It's only gotten worse. That's all that ever happens when
Democrats are in control of things. Now, how many times
do we how many different things do we got to
remind you people of so that you stop this insanity
and please people don't vote Democrats.
Speaker 3 (22:45):
Have a great day, Brian, to hear from you.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
Yeah, I again going back to the definition of stupidity.
But you know people who are living off the system.
As you point out, city government has nothing to do
with that. Yeah, city government does hand out a lot
of money to a lot of non governmental organizations who
are well organized and do actually go out and vote
because it's in their best interest. But that's typically not
(23:10):
the average Cincinnatian who regularly votes Democrat. So maybe there
are more non government organizations living off the government dole
city government dole than I'm aware of. Maybe that's who
comprised the ten percent of the voter turnout, or at
least organized campaigns and pushed for the election of Democrats. Anyway,
(23:32):
you have another bite at the apple in November. It
ain't over. The fat lady has not signed. Tuesday, cordeering
in Hamilon County abruptly interrupted when a brawl broke out
in the viewing gallery. Of course, it's all on video.
Man in a black hoodie started walking to the other
side of the viewing area, making a gun gesture with
his hand. Thereafter, a confrontation ensued, people from the other
(23:54):
side of the viewing area rushing over, punches back and forth.
Hamilon County Sheriff's Office WUTS tried to get the situation
under the control. No one arrested in connection with a fight.
Evan County Sheriff's Office said the fight scene in the
video is not part of the Rodney Hinton Junior Court
appearance that happened earlier yesterday. Hearing taking place when the
fight started was for thirty eight year old Dominique Allahi,
(24:18):
who was arrested for the murder of an eighteen year
old Jaden Smith and Forest Park on Monday. According to
Lieutenant Adam pape. People just have absolutely no sense anymore.
A five point thirty five a fifty five KRCD talk station.
You know what makes sense? Saving about literally thousands of dollars.
I'm talking about imaging. Hospital imaging department's car charging arm
and a leg maybe to get an MRI that arm
(24:40):
or leg, Echo cardiogram, CT scans, Ultra sounds, MRIs, they're
all thousands of dollars at the hospital imaging department. There's
not a single service that Affordable Imaging Services charges. That's
four figures and more. Echo cardiogram. First, you might have
to wait around to get your echo cardiogram at a hospital.
I understand that there's a backload, but why they'll take
care of your away to aforable imaging services where you
(25:01):
won't pay thirty five hundred dollars you'll pay five hundred
without an enhancement. Eight hundred with MRIs could be thirty
five hundred dollars at a hospital. How about four hundred
and ninety five at Affordable Imaging CT scans minds lined
up for June my third or fourth from Affordable Imaging.
It can cost up to five thousand dollars for that
scan at a hospital four point fifty without a contrast,
(25:22):
only six hundred with every image comes with the board
certified radiologist reports. There's no up charge for that. And
of course my doctor had never bat an eye. These
things have always worked out five because they use the
same equipment, medical professionals taking care of the scans, so
save a heapload of money. Exercise. You're right, you do
have a choice, so call them up and schedule the
appointment of five one three seven, five three eight thousand,
five one three seven five three eight thousand online Affordable
(25:46):
Medimaging dot com.
Speaker 8 (25:48):
Fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
What if you had it's five forty on a post
election Wednesday. Feel free to call them with a comment.
I'd love to hear from you. Five one three seven
four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three talk,
or you can go with pound five fifty if you
I have an AT and T phone. Remember fifty five
car Se dot com. You get your iHeartMedia app so
you can get the content on all the iHeartMedia, including
the podcast on the fifty five Carsee Morning show. We
(26:12):
had Daniel Davis Deep Dive yesterday, we had the Breitbart
editor in chief Alex Marlow did an empower use seminar
last evening. I hope that was interesting and you were
able to tune into it. And Citizen bradwinstrip on a
variety of topics, including the origins of COVID nineteen because
he was integrally involved with that on the subcommittee when
he was elected official. Now enjoying being private, Citizen bradwinsrip
(26:36):
so check it out. Fifty five kr sea dot com.
Over to the stack of stupid, please say that a
woman was caught driving at an excessive speed. Rather interesting
excuse for her excessive speed. New York woman was pulled
(26:58):
over one of the busiest highways in the red and
speeding with a small child in the vehicle. She's now
facing multiple charges, including second degree reckless endangerment, according to
the Hertford Current reporting on this which reports that a
thirty seven year old woman allegedly recorded by state police
going one hundred and two miles per hour on I
ninety five Sunday morning. She accused me, I'll get to
(27:21):
that excuse of driving an excessive rate of speed with
a toddler in the back. As I mentioned. Connecticut State
police report that they pulled the vehicle over in the
median and then saw the two year old in the backseat.
Fish'll say the woman told them she was speeding because
she was late for a Thomas the Train event in Essex,
(27:45):
Well you should plan ahead. Arrested a charge with reckless driving,
second degree, reckless endangerment, risk of injury to a minor,
and fire to stop on the right side of the road.
Website for the event Out with Thomas the Party Tour
describes a gathering at the Essex Steam Train in Riverboat
(28:07):
Station as a fun filled family event, promise of a
train ride with a life sized Thomas the Tank engine
as well as access to a full day of activities
for all to enjoy. And of course, her excessive speed
prevented her from attending the event. I saw this story.
(28:28):
This goes back to a late April thirteen year old
Missouri middle school student was suspended for sharing a photo
of his weekend art project on his private Snapchat account
okay suspended from school. The student just described as WG
because he's a minor, and his mom, Riley Grunden, are
(28:48):
now suing the school, district, principal and superintendent for violating
his constitutionally protected First Amendment right to creative expression and
labeling him a cyber bully on his permanent record.
Speaker 9 (29:00):
At home.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
After school, he took a photo on his personal electronic
advice of doctor pepper cans assembled in the shape of
a rifle can art social media trend. Apparently that's according
to the lawsuit filed by Goldwater Institute's American Freedom Network.
Thank god for people like that who are representing the
(29:22):
pro bono. The n post of the photo on his
personal Snapchat stories there for his friends. The post a
company by a trending audio file titled AK forty seven,
which includes a voiceover saying quote, this is the famous
AK forty seven, with over fifty million manufactured in ten countries.
The AK forty seven the most popular assault rifle in
the world. I think that's an actually inaccurate statement. But
these are doctor pepper cans, folks. Following day, mom received
(29:46):
a phone call from the school principle informing her that
another parent had reported the snapchat post Karen, and that
the child would be subject to a search before entering
the school premises. The day after the search, Grundin met
with principal, superintendent the school resource officer, where she and
the child were told that even though the superintendent had
found no credible evidence of any danger, the snapchat post
(30:10):
had brought fear to other students and could be interpreted
as a terrorist threat. They're blank and doctor Pepper cans.
As a consequence, WG would receive three days of out
of school suspension for cyber bullying. Prior to that, no
(30:30):
history of bullying or cyber bullying. Now, Mom suon on
behalf of her son's free expression rights. The Supreme Court
has already made clear that schools do not have the
right to punish students for constitutionally protected speech that has
no connection with school safety. Twenty twenty one decision Mahoney
(30:51):
Area School versus b L opinion reiterates school's limited ability
to regulate off campus speech only when speech materially disrupts
the educational environment, and hedged against the temptation to censor
all off campus speech. The Court warned the courts must
be more skeptical at school's efforts to regulate off campus speech,
for doing so may mean the student cannot engage in
(31:11):
that kind of speech at all. Also twenty twenty three
decision Counterman versus Colorado, the Court established that speech could
only be punished as a true threat if the speaker
anticipated that the expression would be perceived as threatening. Clearly,
the doctor pepper Cans cannot be anticipated to be perceived
(31:34):
as threatening. They're banking doctor pepper cans. Idiots doing idiot
things because they're idiots. This reminds me of the kid
that got punished for biting a pop tart into an
l shape, which was perceived to be a gun. People
are loons out in the world. Now they're going to
have all these litigation expenses, you know what, And the
(31:54):
local school board are the local school taxpayers are going
to be paying for the defense the school district. We're
doing something that never should have done the first instance,
because well it's just backcrap, stupid. Jeez, Louise. We have
become unhinged as a society. I let us see here,
let me mention Chimneycare, Fireplace and Stove because they're doing
(32:16):
a free inspection and it's it's all about you. You know,
you get a free inspection from the Chimneycare Fireplace and
Stove and exterior evaluation of your chimney, which will allow
them to determine whether or not you have any water
potential water issues going on, and you know that could
be very expensive water damage coming into your home you
may not even know about. So take them up. It's
a free exterior inspection. They'll evaluate it thoroughly. And if
(32:38):
you have a woodburning fireplace or stove, get take advantage
of the spring special Woodburning Sweep and Evaluation for just
one sixty nine ninety nine. You get a full sweep,
full inspection along with that exterior evaluation for water damage
that comes included, of course, and they do great work
at Chimneycare Fireplaces stove. They've been around a plus with
a better business Brier, nineteen eighty eight. Locally owned and operated.
(33:00):
They've certainly helped me out over the years. Showroom four
thirteen Wards Corner Road. You can learn all about what
they offer in the showroom and you can make an
appointment online go to Chimneycareco dot com, Chimneycareco dot com,
or just call him up. And if you do tell
him Brian said, Hi, it's five one three two four
eight ninety six hundred five one three two four eight
ninety six hundred fifty five KRC the talk station City Talkstation.
(33:24):
Let us return to the saxt stupid. Springfield Township here
in Ohio, police arrested a man wearing a shirt that
says retired drug dealer what happened on Monday? Had twenty
four grams of methanfetamine in his car, court to social
media ports from the Springfield Township Police uber passenger texted
nine to one one after the driver, a guy named
(33:46):
Robert Rose, mentioned he had a false bottom aerosol can
in the car with methan fetamine inside. Drugs are mad
and you shouldn't bother telling random people that that's what
you've got, posted an officer spot of the same vehicle.
The next day, conducted a traffics and found inside the
car the false bottom aerosol can with twenty four grams
of methan fhetamine, four times of ball come out, four pills,
(34:07):
meth pipe, digital scale, packaging, baggies, cash, and three cell phones.
He denied owning the aerosol can before police found it
inside the vehicle. He's facing charge of drug trafficking, possession
of felony drugs, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Keep it
to yourself, buddy. Rutland, Vermont, where a teacher there is
(34:30):
accused of coming to school intoxicated. Vermont State Police troopers
called by officials West Rutland School. Happened Wednesday last about
a teacher identified as fifty five year old Lori and Tall,
who had arrived intoxicated. Police showed up. They determined that
she was showing signs of impairment, charged with driving under
(34:53):
the influence, and issued a citation of appear in court.
The second reported incident of a teacher showing up drunk
at this particular school distric and school in February, Dennis McLoughlin,
fifty three, arrested after police said he drove to work
and drunk. He pleaded not guilty to drunk driving. I
suppose it depends on which grade you're teaching. I probably
would have to be intoxicated to go into a classroom
(35:15):
full of unruly students myself. Hartford, Connecticut, where two residents
placed in custody after a prostitution transaction at State Police
Barrack early Tuesday morning, twelve thirty one of the afternoon,
troopers try to pull it into the parking lot of
the Troop H Hartford parking lot when they saw a
(35:35):
sport car blocking the gated entry. Since the entrance was blocked,
The trooper went up to the parked vehicle and saw
both occupants were undressed and engaging in what are described
as lewd activities. Both asked to compose themselves and step
out the out of the car. Troopers spoke with the operator.
They noticed signs of impairment and asking to perform a
standardized to field sobriety test. He failed. Police spoke to
(35:59):
the passage. She did not admit to a transaction made
of any kind at first, but troopers saw three ten
dollar bills at the top of her purse. She then
admitted a police that she does, in fact engage in
sex work thirty bucks. That's like a discount rate. Well,
I do have her mugshot that may account for why
(36:21):
the price is so well anyway, also revealed the passenger
of the vehicle was in possession of suspected narcotics as
well as narcotics paraphernalia later found to be fentanyl and
crack cocaine. Officers identify the driver of the vehicle, thirty
four year old Willie Farrell, passenger of forty eight year
old DeAndre Lysick Farreh placed in custody facing illegal operation
(36:44):
under the influence in proper parking, criminal trespass and soliciting
sexual act slash exchange for sexual conduct. Released on a
ten thousand dollars bond. Late Lysick arrested for use of
drug paraphernalia, possession of controlled substance, criminal trespass, and soliciting
sexual acts. Held on initially a one thousand dollars bond.
(37:07):
The thirty bucks. Well, you got a drug problem. I
guess there's certain thing standards that you would lower in
order to receive cash so you can go out and
buy drugs. Don't do drugs. Drugs are bad. Coming up
(37:27):
A five fifty six ify five KR city talk station.
Plenty to talk about in the six o'clock hour. Enjoy
hearing from you too, if you got something specific you
want to go over more. You know, just the election
results a rundown, and a lot of other topics going on, like,
for example, World War three breaking out between Indian Pakistan.
I'll be right back.
Speaker 8 (37:41):
Another update coming up.
Speaker 2 (37:43):
The day's top story's at the top of the hour.
Speaker 4 (37:46):
Imports are facing this country on.
Speaker 2 (37:48):
Fifty five krs the talk station.
Speaker 10 (37:52):
Leo Schofield spend coming up in six o six fifty
five krs.
Speaker 2 (37:56):
The talk station. Brian Thomas right here. Wish you never
want a very happy Wednesday. There lunch Wednesday. Sounder Breweries
Westchester locations where we're going to be start times around
eleven thirty. People always ask that and just show up
when you want. Usually a window of time that I'm
going to be there. I know my cribbage game with
Mike usually doesn't start until after one, so you can
guarantee that I'll be there for a while. And I'm
(38:17):
looking forward to having my wife join us at lunch today,
So you want to meet my better half, show up
at lunch again. Sounder Brewery, Westchester location today coming up
fast forward an hour Big Picture with Jack Addan. I
love hearing Jack Man. He's a brilliant, brilliant man. Wonderful commentary.
Today's topic a century of Hollywood politics. Now it's contemplating
which direction you would go if he's going to talk
(38:37):
about Trump's tariffs on foreign movies, or maybe the fact
that Hollywood's churning out crap these days versus what he
used to churn out that the American public actually wanted.
And I know that Hollywood has alienated a lot of
movie producers who've moved operations elsewhere because I suppose just
a terrible environment to operate with business expenses and overhead
and state regulations and like anyway, multiple directions Jack can go.
(39:01):
We'll find out together in an hour. Donald O'Neil follows
Jack Aden in seven thirty with Americans for Prosperities. Donovan
O'Neil on the need to renew the Trump tax cuts.
Steve Belso from the Climate County Veteran Services. He's gonna
be joining the program at seven forty. Topic unknown, but
Climate County Veteran Service a wonderful operation. I appreciate what
Steve and the folks they are doing for our veteran
friends in Climont County. Shane Jenkins, former January sixth defendant.
(39:25):
He's the executive director of Stand the Gap as well
as the real Jay six. Should be a very interesting
conversation with Shane at eight oh five. Judge Annonapolitano on
holes in the Constitution. No one in government, at least
behind the scenes anyway, gives a whit about our Fourth
Amendment right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures.
So we'll talk about him with that with him at
(39:45):
eight thirty, follow by Corey Ballman. Yes, election results are
in and Tory Corey did come in number two, but
way behind. Have to have Parwall who got eighty three
percent of the vote. Voters in the city of Cincinnati
turned out and amazing numbers, not ten percent ten percent
voter voter turnout anyway, eighty three percent for par ball
(40:09):
Cory Bowmen comes in with second with thirteen percent. Also
ran Brian Frank got five percent. Now, my friends in
Hyde Park came out in whopping numbers. Fifteen percent of
Hyde Park voters showed up and yet they still voted overwhelmingly.
Seventy four percent voted to for Aftab purvol in spite
of him stabbing everyone in Hyde Park in the back.
(40:29):
Bowman got twenty percent of the vote there. Anyway, Inquire
quoted one woman. She said she could not support a
Republican even though she really thoroughly detests what aftab per
boll And Council did. So I can't reconcile that. I
really it just doesn't make any sense to me anyway.
(40:50):
In terms of the rest of the election. Hamilton kunt
Okay overall the issue too, which I was thoroughly against
passed overwhelmingly sixty seven point seven five to thirty two
point twenty five. Here in Hamilton County, I'll do the
regional ones.
Speaker 11 (41:08):
Do you.
Speaker 2 (41:10):
Issue three shivvy At tax levee passed for seventy one
to twenty nine. Issue four chivy At tax Levey renewal
passed sixty seven thirty three. Issue five shiitvy At Tax
Levee renewal passed seventy two to twenty eight. Wow Green
Hills tax levey passed seventy one twenty nine. Bond A
North Bend tax levee passed seventy five twenty five. Silverton
(41:32):
tax levee seventy one to twenty nine passed. Miami Township
tax levee passed sixty seven thirty three. Mount Healthy City
School District tax levee passed sixty two thirty eight. Princeton
City School District tax levee passed fifty three forty seven.
You guys love your taxes out there over to Warren County.
(41:53):
My friends in Warren County sk smoking beverage Sunday liquor
s tells fifty three for it forty seven again Franklin
fire tax levee failed fifty four forty six. Harveysburg Police
tax levey passed fifty one forty nine. Kroger's Sunday Liquor
Stals You Love your Liquor Sales in Warren County passed
(42:15):
eighty nine to eleven. Harland Township Fire tax levee passed
fifty one forty nine. Massy Township Fire tax levee passed
sixty two thirty seven. Clinton Massy Local School District tax
levey passed fifty two forty eight. Franklin City School District
tax levee passed sixty six to thirty four. Princeton City
(42:37):
School tax levee passed fifty three forty seven. Midpoint Library
tax levee passed fifty one forty nine. Yeah, you can
say no to these tax levies. Folks get small percentage
of the population dictated this. You gonna find how much
your vote counts here in a moment. Pierce Township tax
levey over in Clemont County fifty nine forty one. Wes
(43:02):
Claremont Local School District tax and bond issue shot down
in Flames Cribbage MinC. If you're out there you were
hoping for this outcome eighty three to seventeen percent. Liquor
sales from Miami Township Wolfpenn Drive through yes, of course,
seventy one to twenty nine. In the Union Township Whila,
(43:23):
Sunday liquor sales passed eighty one to nineteen. Along the
lines of the school district levey over to my friends
in Butler County, Edward Skiddy's City School District passed fifty
one forty nine. Madison Local School District tax levee. And
here's where your vote counts. This is what I was
alluding to there in my comment earlier, six point twenty
(43:45):
in favor, six hundred and twenty against.
Speaker 9 (43:49):
One.
Speaker 2 (43:50):
More person could have shown up to vote and it
would have been determining on the Madison Local School District
tax levee. Your vote does count. Princeton City School District
tax levy passed fifty three forty seven, Midpoint Library tax
levy passed sixty five thirty five and another liquor sale,
while a Sunday liquor sales of course passed sixty two
(44:11):
to thirty eight. Give you learned something about that? Five three, seven,
four nine, fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three talk go with pound five fifty on AT
and T phones. Moving away from the elections. I thought
this was a rather interesting outcome as we as the
my Catholic friends out there contemplate who the next pope
might be. I guess they're doing their conclave thing right now,
(44:32):
and the black smoke or white smoke is going to
issue at some point and we'll find out who the
note pope is. Pivot over to Washington State or state No.
The Democratic governor that Bob ferguson this past Friday signed
into law legislation requiring Catholic priests to divulge information dealing
with neglect or abuse of a child that was shared
(44:53):
during confession. It's about the controversial peace of legislation. Now,
put yourself in a position of a priest. You know
you're supposed to keep that stuff confidential, but you're talking
about child abuse. Here. Doesn't a priest o an obligation
just under general Christian principles to see that that child
is no longer abused? And here's a person explaining to
(45:14):
the priest in confession, please forgive me. I'll do eight
Hail Mary's or whatever, and you'll forgive me, and God
will forgive me from molesting a child. Go ahead, reconcile
that with your own faith. That's sighed. I just I
don't know. Archbishop Paul Etienne close Enough wrote in a
(45:34):
statement posted by the Washington State Catholic Conference, the position
of the church is to stand in defiance of the law,
saying we must obey God rather than men. That's a
quote from Acts five, verse twenty nine. I guess there's
a parenthetical reference to it in the statement from the archbishop.
(45:56):
This is our stance now in the face of this
new law. I suppose enforcement may be district difficult because
they don't say anything. How do you know that the
person in the confessional actually confessed to molesting a child.
Archbishop said confessions remained sacred, secure, confidential, and protected by
the law of the Church. He said the issue is
(46:19):
not disclosing the information, but strictly on how it's obtained.
Our policies already require priests to be mandatory reporters, but
not if the information is obtained during confession. US Department
of Justice apparently investigating law which singles out the clergy
quote with no exceptions for the absolute seal of confidentiality
that applies to Catholic priests close quote. DJ also points
(46:42):
out the overall theme of the law potentially violates the
First Amendment Free exercise clause. Of course, on that one,
Civil Rights Department from the DJA handling the investigation to
what the department describes as an apparent conflict between the
law and the free exercise of religion of the First Amendment.
The sponsored the bill of Seattle Democrats. Senator Noel Frame
(47:04):
noted that three years ago the bill it took three
years to get the bill of the governor's death. She
said imposing the disclosure requirement on priests was paramount quote.
You never put somebody's conscience above the protection of a child.
Interesting constitutional setup on that one. I suspect the First
Amendment Free exercise clause will trump the obligation to disclose.
(47:25):
But there's a more fundamental component going on here, and
that is that you know, I've talked about law enforcement before,
like in the Special Crimes Division of the cincinnat Police Department,
where my sister did work for a while, and man,
it took a psychological toll on her because they deal
with child molestation cases. And can you imagine an officer
(47:48):
who has to gather enough information to establish probable cause
of the crimes been committed so they can refer to
the prosecutor's office so they can secure conviction beyond a
reasonable doubt. You've got to evidence gather, but you know
that this particular guy is molesting a child. You got
to live with the weight on your shoulders. You got
to go home at night with that information in the
(48:09):
back of your head knowing you've got to continue to
investigate when you know that there's just not quite enough information,
but you've got enough to prove in your mind that
this person is harming a child real time while you're
laying in bed at night. It could be going on
right then and there. I just cannot imagine the stress
(48:33):
and the weight of having to deal with that day
in and day out, same thing. Being in a presposition,
you're in confession. You're not allowed to disclose this information
because it's when the confines are a confessional and it's
part of the church doctrine and dogma. But you're hearing
someone talking about this activity and you don't say anything,
(48:56):
and you can't say anything. I don't get it. I
just academy imagine being placed in that position. It seems
to be such a conflict, a conflict between church teachings
and this rule within the Catholic Church that that information
can't be disclosed. Six seventeen fifty five kerr ce De
talk station courbaged bikes on the phone. Look forward to
(49:18):
playing That came a cribbage with him, my submariner a
friend after I mentioned the Shebri Groupkeller Williams seven Hills,
the outstanding real estate group that they are Cincinnati's number
one real estate group, a group that provides you value
in a real estate agent, whether it's a buyer's or
sellers agent. Thank them for supporting the American veteran with
their Veterans Program as well as folks that work for
the VA. They call it the Patriot Program, Veterans, VA workers,
(49:44):
police Department members, fire Department members, members of the Emergency
and medical services, those first responders out there. You work
with Shebri Group, ten percent of their commission is given
to you as a rebate at closing. I love that
they're doing that and a program that was developed by
veterans to help patriots buy and sell their homes. They
also have other amazing programs like the Instant off Her program,
(50:06):
Love It or Leave at Cash. The Keys work with
Shabrigor at the only real estate team I'd ever consider hiring,
whether I needed a buyer or seller's agent. It's online
at seven zero eight three thousand dot com seven zero
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one three seven zero eight three thousand.
Speaker 4 (50:22):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station. Did you
ask about pick three six.
Speaker 2 (50:28):
Twenty one on a Wednesday? And a happy one to you.
Ryan Thomas inviting everyone to Listener Lunch Saunder Brewery's Westchester location,
where I will play a game of cribbage with my
submariner friend Curbbage. Mike two. Mike's on the line. Other Mike,
hang on for a moment. Mike, welcome back to the program.
Always great to hear from you.
Speaker 12 (50:43):
My friend Lovely Bride this afternoon, sir.
Speaker 2 (50:48):
I'm looking forward to it. She hasn't been the Listener
Lunch in such a long time because she worked for
a living, you know, And I always tell people who
say I would really love to come to listener Lunch,
but I work. I was like, well, you made the
right choice.
Speaker 12 (51:00):
And then the timing couldn't be better because as of
last just like in last November, to have a listener
lunch right after fantastic election results, it's a great time
to celebrate with friends. And I want to give it
once again a shout out to our listener lunch run Kevin,
who put his own money out there and help with
the signs. He gave me ten and I would like
to think they had a lot to do with our
(51:21):
school levy going down. Epically, I don't think anything across
half Warren or clairemone.
Speaker 3 (51:26):
And that kid Joe.
Speaker 12 (51:29):
Yeah, three percent to seventeen percent.
Speaker 2 (51:32):
And of course I immediately thought of you and Kevin when
I read the electure results because you know, sadly the
issue too passed and that really brung me up. But
I mean that was shot down in flames, to say
the least.
Speaker 12 (51:43):
On that, yes, sir, and even out here Issue two
went down all three. I feel bad for the police
and fire, but Issue too lost in Claremont County. But
I was like sixty forty, but nothing like the school levy.
And before I go to further, I want to thank
my team and every poll worker that was out there,
and it was such a pleasant surprise because we were
(52:06):
looking we told to estimate about ten eleven percent turnout
as well, so in that case that would have been
like two fifty to three hundred voters. For us, we
had close to twenty six percent turnout. We had a
lot of one hundred voters. I'll be lucky to see
that many next year next November for the governor and
Senate races. That was just once again showed that you know,
(52:27):
Pierce Township and the portions of the Tavia Township where
this school ley was going to hit hard. They came out,
they supported it was it was a steady day all day.
And also want to give a kudos to Frank Lero's
Secretary State Frank LeRose and his staff because even with
that increase in turnout, we came up with new He
provided new tablets to his last November which greatly increased
(52:49):
that we can just scan the QR code now on
the back of the license. But now we've done away
with those poll books altogether that my team actually just
scans the bar code. My team went from sixteen down
to twelve and we process people. We just got nothing
but positive, you know comments from the voters. So just
just what a phenomenal day. But bottom line, to see
those results, you know, people are finally waking.
Speaker 2 (53:12):
Up, well waking up at least in Claraid County. I
can't see that for Butler and Warne. In other counties
where the all the tax levies passed by, you know,
at least you know, several points, if not substantial margins. Yeah,
it is, it is.
Speaker 12 (53:24):
And you know, when I took my lunch break, there
was a story on the news that had eleven o'clock.
There were two precincts in Hamilton County eleven o'clock. So
now the polls have been opened for three and a
half hours, had zero.
Speaker 3 (53:36):
People show up.
Speaker 2 (53:38):
Holy cow. Well I was kind of checked. It is
on a boring day. It can be, although you know,
bring a book if you're a poll worker on an
all cycle section, or bring your tablet.
Speaker 3 (53:49):
Probably was played on their phones.
Speaker 2 (53:50):
Yeah, yeah, there's always that too. Here, I am old
school mentioning actual a book. Does anybody read actually a
book anymore?
Speaker 9 (53:58):
Anyway?
Speaker 2 (53:58):
It was a sorry commentary on society. Elections. When you're
proud of a twenty five percent phot turned out, Mike,
I gotta point that out. Thanks to the call brother
and thank you for working the polls. In a salute
to all the poll workers out there, and again thank
you to Kevin the barbecue pitmaster of the world for
putting his own money behind those vote no signs. Well done, Kevin.
I'll look forward to seeing you at lunch day, I
(54:20):
hope as well. Mike and Robert. If you don't mind
hanging on, I'll grab your calls right out of the
gate and we get back. First word for Emory Federal
Credit Union. Love the folks at Emory. It is a
better way to bank. I've been banking there for a
long long time and I do have one of those
big bank accounts as well. But services and customer service
and everything is just better at Emory. And they do
things like the annual shred event, which is coming up
(54:42):
June seventh, market on your calendar. All three Emory Federal
Credit ANNUILAK locations will be gathering up your personal information
and shredding them so confidential documents. Absolutely. Bring them to
any one of the three locations, whether it's Blue Ash,
Liberty Township, or Western Hills, they will shred them for free. Now,
the shredding that takes place between nine am and one
pm against Saturday, June seven, So again mark it down
(55:05):
in your calendar to learn more information. Learn about the
benefits of banking with Emory. Go to EMORYFCU dot org
for all the details. Federally insured by NCUA.
Speaker 4 (55:14):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (55:17):
Genera the Wolka ass We have a cloudy day today,
maybe a slight chance of rain at the highest seventy five,
clouds every night, down at fifty four. Mostly cloudy tomorrow,
possible scattered showers and storms, seventy for the high just
clouds every night, and forty four and a zero percent
chance of rain on Friday with mostly clear skies sixty
nine to high. Then it's fifty three right now in
time for traffic.
Speaker 13 (55:37):
Probably you see Health Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you see Health as the
clear choice for wrapp up fife saving treatment. Learn more
at you sehealth dot com. Traffic continues to look good
on the highways this morning, sapbound two seventy five. Just
beginning to get a little bit heavy or approaching the
care on Cropper Bridge. It's not going to cost you
a whole lot of extra time in Bend seventy fourth
(56:00):
and find it covering Chuck Ingram on fifty.
Speaker 9 (56:02):
Five krs the talk station.
Speaker 2 (56:11):
Just shy a six point thirty at fifty five krc
eat talk station Happy Wednesday. Yeah, Kevin responsible maybe for
the West Caromont Lovey getting shot down because of his
personal money going into the yard. Signs just texted me,
he said, you haven't mentioned listener lunch. Did you used
up all your listener lunch mentions last week? Dude? I
(56:33):
mentioned it like four times this morning as I pointed
out my wife's showing up. So yeah, listener lunch Sunder
Brewery's West is the location. I'll look forward to seeing you,
Kevin over the phones. Mike, you're out of the gate first.
Thanks for holding brother. It's good to hear from you.
This morning.
Speaker 14 (56:48):
I sawd to a priest launch about the serious crimes
and people.
Speaker 7 (56:53):
Matt, Yeah, and he said, he said, confession, that's not
much concension. That's as't weren't for confessions.
Speaker 15 (57:02):
So just because you know the confession.
Speaker 14 (57:04):
And you the chount of us, that's why doesn't forgive
it format from sins.
Speaker 2 (57:14):
Okay, Yeah, I don't profess to be an expert in
any theology. Or any particular set of doctrinal dogmatic principles.
I just know that they passed along in Washington State
obligating priests to disclose that type of child abuse, and
that the archdiocese there issued a leather saying no, they
would defy the law. So I can't reconcile what they
(57:35):
say versus what you're saying. I don't know which side
of the equation is right. I just step outside of
the doctrinal dogmatic realities and just pose the ethical question
and the reality if you are told something along those lines,
whether or not you can forgive them of the sin
under the Church's teachings or not, but the idea that
you can't disclose it to authorities, which allows that activity
(57:56):
to go on and continue. So sorry, I can't give
you a pass. In God's eyes, you're a criminal or
you committed to mortal sin. We can't forgive that for
doing rosaries or whatever. Fine, but just ethically, speaking outside
of the Church's rules, how do you live with yourself
if you know something like that and can't disclose it
(58:17):
to authorities. Let's see what Robert's got. Robert, thanks for
calling this morning. I hope you're having a happy Wednesday.
Speaker 16 (58:22):
Welcome, Good morning, bron How you doing, buddy?
Speaker 2 (58:25):
Doing well?
Speaker 3 (58:26):
Man?
Speaker 2 (58:26):
What's on your mind today?
Speaker 16 (58:28):
So I'm fairly new to the elections and voting and
stuff like that, and I've voted in the federal election obviously,
and so I've been finding out more and more that
like the local elections being a lot being that we
live in, you know, the city of Cincinnati. So my
(58:50):
question to you is, so, I live in Green Township
and I went to vote last night and I wasn't
the candidates weren't on there. And I asked the lady
why I live in Cincinnati. She said, I don't live
in the city. What is the difference? Can you explain
that or no?
Speaker 2 (59:04):
Yeah, there's a geographic boundary for the city, and I
guess certain areas of Green Township may be part of
the city. And I actually think that's the case in
dal High although I could be wrong. But if you're
not within the geographical boundary of the City of Cincinnati,
you're not a City of Cincinnati resident. So maybe there
are parts in fact in Green Township that are part
(59:24):
of the city, but you're not. You don't happen to
be in them. So if you live in the city limits,
you should have gotten a ballot which had the mayor
oal choice on it. But that's the best answer I
can give you on that geographical boundaries.
Speaker 16 (59:36):
It seems so unfair because I mean, my address has Cincinnati,
Ohio on the bottom of it.
Speaker 2 (59:42):
Well, that's because it's the county seat. I lived in
Dalla High, grew up my whole life outside of the
city limits, you know, when I when I was a kid,
and we still the mailing address was Cincinnati, Ohio because
it's the county seat. It's like I live in Simms Township,
but my mailing address is not Sims Township. It's Loveland
because we're considered part of the town of Love and
(01:00:03):
the Love town So that's just for mailing purposes. That
does not define actually whether you are physically within the jurisdiction.
So county seat is where you get that Cincinnati mailing address.
Appreciate trying to.
Speaker 7 (01:00:18):
Do my part.
Speaker 16 (01:00:19):
I was tying my party.
Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
I always staying there, I know, and he could have
used the extra vote, but he did come in second,
which is kind of what everybody anticipated anyway, given how
left leaning and blue the city is. In the city
proper thanks to the call Robert appreciated. Let's see here
local stories good quick one here. Man and woman have
(01:00:42):
been identified in that Boone County Sheriff's office investigating a
possible murder suicide. Sixty year old Robert Sexton and sixty
year old Sharing Secton identified by the Boone County Corner's
Office yesterday. Bodies found inside home on castleo Oak Drive.
According to the Boone County Sheriff's Office. There, the investigators
said they want the home for a welfare check after
one of the sections did not show up for work.
(01:01:06):
Excuse me, you know the answer why. Investigation is described
as ongoing. Feel free to call five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight to two
three talk or hit pound five fifty if you have
one of those AT and T phones, get you right in.
Joe'll put you in the queue. Love to hear what
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one three, eight four seven zero zero one nine fifty
five KRC on a Wednesday, Happy Wednesday, post election Wednesday,
going straight to the phone. It's got quite a few
callers lined up order in which they receive, which means
Jim's first. Jim, thanks for calling this morning, Welcome to
the show.
Speaker 15 (01:02:51):
Good morning, Brian. The guy was asking about the why
you got as Cincinnati address. It's got nothing to do
with the geographic now leaves. It's what the post office
or the postmaster way back wanted to do. And I
live in Claremont County, Union Township and we've got three
different addresses here in our township that Cincinnati is one,
(01:03:16):
and the Tage is won and Amelia's one. It's just
whatever the postmaster was way back. That's that's when they want.
Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
It's fair enough. Yeah, I don't purport to be an
expert on such things. I just know it typically County
seat can dictate, and I suppose if you have the
right zip code, that's all that matters these days. You know,
if you put city at Cincinnati, Ohio on my mailing address,
I guarantee you I will get the mail. You don't
have to put Loveland on it. When you're mailing something
even though that's what is identified I guess by the
(01:03:44):
post office. Pretty I appreciate that clarification. My friend. Let's
see what New Hampshire Gary's got. Gary, welcome back. It's
always good to hear from you.
Speaker 7 (01:03:52):
I could clarify that because I used to live in
Montgomery and we had a Cincinnati address. Go figure, anyhow.
Speaker 3 (01:04:02):
I want to. I want to things.
Speaker 7 (01:04:04):
You have such a high turnout next time we have
them allf election, I'm going to introduce I'm going to
register as a Democrat. I'm going to introduce Issue three,
and you can raise another six hundred million dollars pond
to help me live up here in New amp We'll
call it recapitalization. I mean, what the heck? I was like,
(01:04:25):
are you kidding me? I can't believe people are that stupid,
But go figure, I might as well join them, you know,
registered as a Democrat help me up here.
Speaker 2 (01:04:36):
I think so. You know, in the state of Ohio,
I mean, sixty seven percent in favor of issue too,
sixty seven percent capital infrastructure. Shouldn't they be already taking
getting that out of our own taxes, our gasoline tax,
which is like is huge I'd love to know the
total number of money that a state of Ohio takes
in in gasoline tax and why isn't that specifically allocated
(01:04:58):
for the roads? How come that isn't sufficient to deal
with the road all? No, this was infrastructure, all kinds
of other projects. And I still go back to the
fact that we have no idea which project is going
to be funded by that and with as much inflationary
pressure as we're all facing with a real estate tax
bills gone through the roof, and everybody's struggling. At least,
that's the lowest me scenario the media paints every day.
Maybe they're wrong, maybe they're lying. Maybe everybody's fine out
(01:05:18):
there and people are really satisfied. But if you look
at consumer sentiment and all these types of indicators that
they take, everyone seems to be blue and misery and
oh my god, we're all going to die and markets
are going to collapse, the world's going to add Maybe
that's just Trump's arrangement syndrome. But most of these taxes,
and of course that bond issue all passed, or the
(01:05:40):
vast majority of them did. What side Jim truck Commander Jim,
thank you for working the polls yesterday and driving around
picking up ballots pretty light day.
Speaker 11 (01:05:49):
Huh oh yeah, I mean it's amazing.
Speaker 3 (01:05:53):
I just shake my head.
Speaker 11 (01:05:54):
Sometimes at elections, you just never know how the prediction
comes out. But when I was talking about that, those
two precincts in Cincinnati, they were both well actually one
was in Mind with zero voters and the other one
had four voters and four workers. So you sat there
all day and four people showed up the vote.
Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
Isn't that insane?
Speaker 3 (01:06:18):
That that is this unbelievable.
Speaker 11 (01:06:21):
I've got words that I can't say on the radio
because the don't buttons sitting too close to you.
Speaker 3 (01:06:25):
Yeah, but yeah, I mean we were the first ones back.
I mean that's how.
Speaker 11 (01:06:30):
And we're all run Knee Road and you go from Neee.
Speaker 3 (01:06:33):
Broad to al to Smith Edwards.
Speaker 17 (01:06:35):
That's a long haul.
Speaker 11 (01:06:38):
And like I said, we were the first ones back.
Speaker 3 (01:06:40):
I was.
Speaker 11 (01:06:41):
I was home by a quarter to ten, and that's unusual.
Speaker 3 (01:06:45):
That's really unusual.
Speaker 11 (01:06:46):
So everything, the bags were white, everybody, you know that
one good thing. Everybody was kind of in a good mood.
You know, the workers, I should say, yeah, so because
because they didn't hit to bust their butts and.
Speaker 2 (01:07:00):
I understand that. You know, it's kind of funny you
bring that up, because well, my wife and I showed
up on at the polling place was on Montgomery Road.
It actually got moved because they didn't need as many
polling places for the off cycle election because they knew
it was going to be low voted turnout. We got
there that we actually had to wait about a minute
and a half because the four workers that were checking
people's driver's licenses were engaged in checking driver's licenses and
(01:07:23):
one of them looked up. She goes, oh my gosh,
we've got a line. That's a first for today. It's
not a line if I was first in quote unquote
the line waiting for someone to back off. So it
was a low turnout in my area as well. It's
sad ten percent turned out.
Speaker 3 (01:07:37):
But I'm glad.
Speaker 11 (01:07:38):
I'm glad Corey come in second. That was kind of predictable.
He came up to Pricell Chili for lunch yesterday and
we had a light turnout there also. I mean, it's
just there wasn't nothing on the ballot. Now November, yeah,
city council races and then you'll have some more smore
some more school levies and so forth. So yeah, things
will be a little bit different, and I know Corey's
(01:07:59):
going to step up his game and attack pur ball
a little bit different than what he did yesterday. I mean,
he's new to the game, so yeah, he learned, he
learned a lot, and he's going to be learning a
lot going all the way through.
Speaker 3 (01:08:11):
But I know he's up for up for the challenge.
Speaker 2 (01:08:13):
As they say, well, he did better in Hyde Park
than it did overall. Although I just was just chuckling
over the Cincinnion Choirer's reporting on the resident that they
interviewed in Hyde Park who really was angry at AFTAB
Provall and the council for changing their voting or their
their zoning laws and nonetheless still voted for AFTAB par
ball and also stated that she would only be voting
for the two council members that voted no on the
(01:08:36):
voting variants. So I just like, Okay, you know, if
you're banging your head against the wall and it hurts,
but you won't stop banging your head against the wall,
does that make any sense whatsoever? The answer, of course
obviously no.
Speaker 3 (01:08:48):
But no, that's amazing.
Speaker 2 (01:08:50):
It is it is. It's like a cult. Man, it's
tough to get out of it. Like scientology, dnn R,
d nt R stuff. You know you picked the best
person for the job. You don't pick a letter. Yeah,
well I understand, man. I'm with you all day long.
Hope to see it lunch today, Jim. I know you're
up in the arn whether you can make it, but
it'll be really great to have you there. Listen.
Speaker 11 (01:09:10):
Well, we'll see how the legs hold up, and you'll
probably outsee me out there in Westchester.
Speaker 2 (01:09:14):
I hope so man Son of Brewer Westchester location, You
too can meet west Saie Jim and say hi to
my wife. Sixty six fifty five cares of the talk station. Todd,
You're next, you don't mind hold on also Mike today
for Mike's on the Morning show. Be right with you.
I'd have to mention twenty two three because I really
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(01:09:38):
Wendy and Jeff run a husband and wife, and they
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It's Mom's Day weekend this weekend. If you bring your
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(01:10:00):
maybe signing mom up for a class. Wire out there.
They have a variety of classes that they offer, from
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(01:10:21):
Twenty two to three the number twenty two follow by
the word three spelled out twenty two to three.
Speaker 4 (01:10:26):
Dot com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
That's the callers this morning. I love that. Love hearing
from the listeners and figuring out what you want to
talk about. So to the phones, I go, Mike, hang on, Todd,
you're out, you're up. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 18 (01:10:37):
My friend, Brian, what's happening brother?
Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
I just going living my life, looking forward to lunch
today and uh, you know, just still reeling from the
low voter turnout. I just don't understand people. I just
don't you know.
Speaker 12 (01:10:49):
It's so funny.
Speaker 18 (01:10:50):
I went in yesterday and even though it was thirty
in New Programmers, number one in your heart, I was
number one. And the guys they were all laughing. They're like,
we don't know if anybody.
Speaker 2 (01:10:58):
Else isn't it crazy?
Speaker 18 (01:11:01):
And you know what, you braid in my family and
my cousins, I'm like, get your you know what out there.
But here's the deal on issue too. All these unions,
I'm sure they've got it in your contest. You've got
to vote for this stuff. Absolutely, no way you're going
to beat that stuff. You know, it's unfortunate. But yeah,
well the way the money.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Well, you hit the nail on the head on that tide.
Because in an off cycle election, everyone already presumes accurately
so because history is demonstrated every time they do an
off cycle election, the heart of anybody's going to show up.
And if you know the voting for an issue is
going to land money in your pocket, you've got incentive
to get off your butt and go vote.
Speaker 7 (01:11:36):
That's unbelievable.
Speaker 18 (01:11:37):
Hey, the other thing too, This has always burned my backside,
the whole Cincinnati thing, you know. I mean, come on, people,
everything they do in downtown Cincinnati affects Hamilton County. Yeah,
and we don't get a chance to vote for it.
I don't understand this. This is ridiculous, right, I mean,
come on people.
Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
I know there's nothing we can do to change that,
but everything downtown since he does, impacts northern Kentucky is wrong.
I'm sure they're like.
Speaker 18 (01:12:01):
I know, it's ridiculous. I mean, it's never going to change.
It's going to be big bs all the way through.
Speaker 14 (01:12:06):
But life goes on.
Speaker 12 (01:12:08):
Brother.
Speaker 18 (01:12:08):
I hope you stay healthy and h let's make it
a great day.
Speaker 2 (01:12:11):
Thanks Todd, and you do the same. I appreciate your calling,
and thank you for tuning in. Mike, welcome to the show.
Thanks for holding there.
Speaker 9 (01:12:18):
Hey, Brian and.
Speaker 19 (01:12:20):
Wife, we're talking about issue too. Yesterday He's asked me
exactly what it was about. That's our list for infrastructure
and such, and she's like getting there with her gas
taxes far. I'm like, yeah, but they've reallocated that money
so much.
Speaker 2 (01:12:35):
Yeah, I don't know, you know, we never are told
what the total cost of whatever it is, they need
to do an account of year is and we never
told the total intake of revenue stream from the gas tax.
So it's like a big mystery out there.
Speaker 3 (01:12:48):
It's like.
Speaker 2 (01:12:50):
We do you know, I thought the lottery was supposed
to pay help fund schools. And I don't know to
what degree how much money the lottery takes in, but
I imagine it's a pretty sizable chunk.
Speaker 8 (01:13:00):
Though.
Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
Everybody's out there asking for school levies and you know,
interestingly enough, about half of them passed yesterday. I don't know,
maybe the information has posted out there. I can't say
definitively whether it is or not, but it seems to
be a big mystery. You'd think every time something like
this would come up that media outlets would report it.
You know, they're asking for more money for infrastructure, okay,
(01:13:23):
and they're going to issue bonds, which of course will
have to be paid back. It's like the Cincinna street
cars built on borrowing money and you got debt service
on that. So they're borrowing money. Now they don't have
a sufficient money coming into Columbus, so they've got to
borrow an additional sizeable chunk of money on an annual
basis and pay interest on it, putting it on a
credit card, and of course they've got to pay it.
(01:13:44):
It's a line on them in the budget in the
future paying off the bonds that were issued pursuing to
the passage of issue too, which is and again incorporated
into the Constitution of the State of Ohio, now placed
in an off cycle election, which of course ensures it's
pass is demonstrated by the prior callers point, those of
the vested interests of lining their pockets are going to
(01:14:06):
show out in force, especially when hardly anyone goes out
and votes. It's a wonderful strategy. I got to give
him prop for the strategy. It's just that, you know,
you see it with your eyes wide open, you know
what the strategy is, and yet you don't go out
and vote. I mean, it's a lock for him, although
(01:14:27):
it didn't work us so well for the West Cleremont
School Levey six fifty five eighty five cares detalk station.
I love Wednesdays because I love talking to Jack added
in the big picture with Jack added and coming up
after the top of the our news. A century of
Hollywood politics the subject matter, follow by Donald and Neil
for Americans for Prosperity on the need to renew Trump
(01:14:48):
tax cuts plus Climont County Veterans Services. Steve Belzo returns
talk about what they're doing for the American veterans and
Claremont County and they do wonderful things for them. So
looking forward to talking to Steve again. That's in the
seven o'clock hours around me right back. Stay on top
of the day's biggest stories at the top of.
Speaker 8 (01:15:04):
The alum and that's so important.
Speaker 10 (01:15:06):
Another update coming up on fifty five KRS The talk Station.
This report is the events of the day.
Speaker 8 (01:15:14):
The audit care Hollis laid out a lot of information
at the top and bottom of the album.
Speaker 3 (01:15:20):
You'll understand.
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Fifty five KRS The Talk Station seven six fifty five
(01:15:42):
KRC DE Talk Station. Great time a week be tuned
into the fifty five KRC Morning Show because we all
get to enjoy the brilliance. My friend Jack Adad and
welcome back. Jacket's time for the Big Picture. Good to
have you on the program as always. Oh thanks so
much for having me.
Speaker 20 (01:15:55):
Me back pal, it's a little early in the morning
for popcorn but happy blockbuster movie season, Brian. Maybe, like me,
you are not flying to see the newest Marvel Anti
heroes or the other tired franchises and live action remakes,
but millions of people are at least willing to pay
(01:16:15):
for a ticket. To contrast that with this new rule
imposed by Hollywood's Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Before they can hand out an oscar for Best Picture,
Academy voters first have to folks, maybe you'd better cover
up the kids' ears, because this is vicious. Before they
can choose a Best Picture, Academy voters first have to
(01:16:39):
actually sit and watch those movies. Oh no, woke turkeys
that nobody pays to see. You and I are lawyers, brother,
and I'm not sure that that rule is constitutional. It
seems to constitute cruel and unusual punishment.
Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
Exactly, they have to consume their own content. Maybe that's
the point of the rule, jackets, to force them to
watch the crap they turn out, so maybe they'll turn
out something better.
Speaker 20 (01:17:10):
Well, we can always hope they used to. We can
always talk history and folks, that used to be that
the most popular films. It happened one night gone with
the Wind Casablanca, even as recently as The Godfather in Titanic.
Those movies were not only popular, they also won all
(01:17:31):
the awards. So when and why did the so called
best pictures become unpopular? And more broadly, how of Hollywood
politics over the last century reflected and shaped our national character?
Speaker 3 (01:17:45):
Uh?
Speaker 21 (01:17:46):
Huh.
Speaker 20 (01:17:47):
One hundred years ago, during the Roaring twenties, the biggest star,
maybe the most idolized star ever was Rudolph Valentino.
Speaker 2 (01:17:57):
Oh, yeah, you remember Rudolph.
Speaker 21 (01:18:00):
You know, maybe your grandmother did.
Speaker 2 (01:18:02):
Yeah, I mean, I'm a fan of old movies, so
I have seen some Silence and some very old pictures,
and yeah, I knew how I mean, I'm aware of
how popular he was back then.
Speaker 20 (01:18:11):
Valancino represented the new sexual freedom that revolutionized America. World
War One had killed off a generation in the trenches.
Then the Spanish flu infected. Still hard to wrap your
mind around this. Even after COVID, the Spanish flu infected
half a billion people, one third of the world's population. Tease,
(01:18:35):
so the survivors, especially young people, went on a ten
year binge prohibition meant you had to pay for illegal
rotgut at a speakeasy, but driving to a speakeasy, Brian,
who's actually half the fun Because the new Jalappies people
had let girls escape from their parents' parlors and dream
(01:18:56):
back in the rumble Seat that they were getting ravaged
by Rudolph Valentino playing an arrow sheet. Those fantasies came
crashing down when Wall Street's House of Cards collapsed in
nineteen twenty nine. Instead of wondering where you were going
to find your next drink, you're worried about finding your
next meal, which was often on a breadline. A future
(01:19:19):
movie star, Bernie Schwartz, before he became Tony Curtis, slept
with his family night after night on rooftops in the Bronx. Now,
there were different movies for different people. If you were
looking for revenge during the depression, maybe you fantasized about
being a gangster like Jimmy Cagney, you dirty rat. If
(01:19:40):
you wanted to escape, you dreamed of Debonair, Fred Astaire
waltzing with Ginger Rogers. You might even have seen yourself
as a misunderstood monster like Boris Karloff. But in the
depths of the depression, Brian, do you know who became
Hollywood's biggest box office star, even bigger than the King
Gable Mickey ruined it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:03):
I got that right.
Speaker 21 (01:20:04):
How about that is small budget movies.
Speaker 20 (01:20:07):
The Andy Hardy series let America remember what it used
to be like to lead a normal life before the
Depression in small town America. The hero of those movies
was not Andy Hardy, the kid who was always getting
into scrapes. The hero was Andy's father, Judge Hardy. Yeah,
and the climax of each of those films, that old
(01:20:29):
fashioned role model gave his son good advice, the kind
of common sense advice that all of America longed for.
It wasn't until more than ten years later World War
Two that everybody finally got back to work, and victory
gave us the chance to reindustrialize America and rebuild the world,
(01:20:51):
starting with our enemies Germany and Japan. American families gave
their kids what they had never had during the depression,
nice homes in the new suburbs, economic stability. And the
opshot was we talk about this so often, Brian, but
you got to keep remembering they spoiled those kids who
no longer had any use for Andy Hardy movies taught
(01:21:13):
baby boomers to despise their parents and their values.
Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
The wild Ones look that movie.
Speaker 20 (01:21:20):
Brando a bier and a leather jacket asked what he
was rebelling against. Answers, what do you got? Yeah, but Brian,
it wasn't just scruffy gang members who were rebelling. A
decade later, clean cut Ivy League. Robert Redford in The Candidate,
played the son of a conservative California governor. Redford rebels
(01:21:42):
by becoming a left wing lawyer, a champion of migrants
and the environment, until sleazy Democrat operatives tell Redford that
he can be more effective by winning a US Senate seat.
And what does it take to do that? Selling out
your principles? We're taking another Robert Redford movie, The Way
We Were. Bob's the golden boy in college, so privileged that,
(01:22:07):
as he writes in a school assignment, everything came too easily.
He dazzles a gawky outsider, Barbara streisand for whom nothing
comes easily, it's the eve of World War II. Barbara,
of course, a communist, adores Joseph Stalin, despite the political
prosecutions in the Soviet Union that genocide, even despite Uncle
(01:22:31):
Joe teaming up with Hitler Redford believes, and Barbara because
she may be wrong and dangerous, but at least she
believes in something so called best and brightest. Baby boomers
never learned to be grateful, only self righteous. Like Robert Redford.
They gloriated causes, but did not hesitate to sell them
(01:22:53):
out and turn their causes into power grabs. Think of
somebody who also has kind of clan cut out of Delaware.
The residue of sixties far left hypocrisy still rules the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Oscar people.
But here's the good news, folks. More and more people today,
(01:23:15):
especially young people, are getting back to basics, getting back
to common sense. Because these young people are not spoiled.
They've inherited the catastrophe created by phonies like Joe Biden
and Kamala Harris and Chuck Schumer and all the rest.
Tens of millions of illegal migrants, the Green new Scam,
the shipping of America's manufacturing based at China are corrupt
(01:23:39):
big government bankrupting the private sector. So instead of embracing wokeness,
gen Z helped top gun Maverick earn one and a
half billion dollars in counting. Two years ago, Top Gun
lost the best picture Oscar.
Speaker 2 (01:23:56):
Do you remember what the film was?
Speaker 3 (01:23:57):
Debated?
Speaker 20 (01:23:59):
Everything, ever, where, all at once. But our country is
no longer searching aimlessly for itself in some incomprehensible multiverse.
More and more audience members of all ages are realizing
what it will take to make this universe greave again. Faith, family, freedom.
(01:24:19):
Movies the champion that message, Brian, will be real blockbusters.
Speaker 2 (01:24:24):
What do you say, my friend, I agree. You know,
I was right down notes as you were talking, and
I was thinking about, you know, the World War two
era and the thirties movies and even all the way
through up to the fifties and until the McCarthy era.
You know, sort of the bottom dropped out of that
whole McCarthy hearing. And I think that's where some of
the rebellion out of Hollywood came out, was the blacklisting.
The response to that anybody who was left wing was
(01:24:46):
blackwist and kept out of the out of the industry. So,
you know, obviously, with the Baby Boom generation having this
this rebellious attitude generally and them taking over Hollywood industry,
the movies had a noted as you pointed out left
wing shift. But the movies and you mentioned Faith, Flag
and Freedom back in the thirties, forties or fifties, they
were all so very patriotic and Judeo Christian base. There
(01:25:09):
was a message in them that was, you know, pro
America and pro morality for the most part, and that
just sort of disappeared, and it's been substituted with this, well,
the crap generally speaking that they churn out. But all
this leftist mentality and now it's a woke mentality that's
put in all these movies and transgender characters, and it's
(01:25:29):
just the messaging. It's just so obvious of trying to
shove a message down the throats of America that, as
you point it out, with the younger generation, we just
don't agree with. So it doesn't surprise me that the
revenues are drying up. And I don't know the other
thing I noted in over time, when you look at
who the bad guys are in movies, you know, it
used to be you know, of course you had the
(01:25:49):
Communists and the Nazis and the forties, but then it
was always you know, evil people, you know, they and
there was a period of time where it was all
terrorists were the bad guys. You didn't have a country necessarily,
you're pointing too, but either these organized groups of terrorists,
Oh my god, that's racist. So now all the enemies
in movies seem to be like board members of corporations
or corporations themselves. They're pullouting the water, they're poisoning the people,
(01:26:13):
you know, they're ripping people off. A noticeable shift in
who the eyre is focused on. I don't know, it's
just so obvious when you look at it from ten
thousand feet as opposed to just an individual movie.
Speaker 20 (01:26:26):
Of course, the movie studios themselves are now all run
by huge corporations. Back in the day silent movies, the
nineteen thirties, you had relatively small corporations. Yeah, family businesses,
you know, movie studios. They went into theaters until that
was broken up by anti monopoly legislation, but they never
really got that big. The funny thing is that you
(01:26:49):
think of Barbara streisand again in that movie The Way
we Were, America had to turn on a dime when
having teamed up with Hitler, the Soviet Union then became
an America an ally. When Hitler made the biggest mistake
of the war and invaded Russia. So suddenly Hollywood was
turning out pro Russian Soviet movies until very quickly, you know,
(01:27:11):
after Roosevelt died, Harry Truman took over, and Harry Truman
saw what the Soviet Union was doing to half of Europe.
It was enslaving it, and you know, then we went
back to patriotism. The McCarthy time is very problematic. Certainly
McCarthy himself was a sleazy guy and they went way overboard.
But there really was a threat from Russia. We forget
(01:27:34):
you know, you used to have to get under your
desk in school because he thought that there was going
to be a bomb exploding. They even made comedies about it.
There was one that was called the Russians are Coming,
the Russians. Yeah, but the Russians really weren't coming, you know,
so it was difficult for people. I think we have
to be a little bit careful about painting with a
broad brush the anti Soviet sentiment of the nineteen fifties
(01:27:56):
and sixties. But thank goodness, you know, culminating in Ronald
Reagan and George H. W. Bush and the Pope. We've
been talking about Pope slightly quote John Paul the Second
and Margaret Thatcher. You know, I mean, we brought an
ends to that era which nobody would have believed possible
just a few years before.
Speaker 2 (01:28:14):
Well, and it just cracks me up, Jack did. Every
once in a while, a really you know, quote unquote
conservative movie or patriot movie will come out. It'll do
gangbusters at the box office, and you think, you know, well,
finally maybe Hollywood'll wake up and realize there's this massive
demand for that type of content and they'd start producing
more of it. Was it Mel Gibson, the movie about Christ,
(01:28:36):
and it did really, really well in the box office.
Clearly there is a pent up demand for that type
of material, and Hollywood never seems to wake up and deliver.
I mean, aren't they in the business of making money?
He asked rhetorically.
Speaker 20 (01:28:48):
You know if they know, because you know, as I
was saying before, one of their businesses for all of
these big corporations comcasts and the rest is to make
movies and TV content and cable. But that's just part
of the puzzle. They're just as interested in engaging with China,
which by the way, has a huge movie market. Oh yeah,
it's a funny thing about China, Brian. They were originally.
(01:29:11):
When I say originally, I mean it was recently ten
years ago. Two reasons for America and multi national corporations
to try to go into China. First of all, cheap labor,
slave labor, and all of the parts and finished products
that we got from them. Also, because they have one
four point four billion people. We wanted that consumer market.
But China in recent years, i mean just the last
(01:29:33):
five years, has been pivoting. Xijingping is no longer as
interested in trying to build up his middle class because
he's found that it's feudal. They were putting out all
kinds of phony figures, eight, nine, ten percent growth every year.
They were never doing that well domestically and their middle
class for various reasons, not least because for years they
(01:29:54):
wouldn't allow girl children to survive, you know, and the
young men there don't don't have nates. It's a crazy economy.
We don't look at it enough. And now the corporations
realize they don't have a big consumer market in China.
Maybe in India and some of these other places, but
not in China, and they have to rethink their priorities.
(01:30:15):
Those movies we were talking about where they depicted villains
very often they would be Muslim villains, where they would
be Eastern Europeans. Yeah, you didn't see that many movies
with Chinese villains, no, for a long time. And that's
the reason we're trying to make money off of China
and from.
Speaker 2 (01:30:29):
China, appeasing them and actually modifying the content of movies
in order to appease them. That's another nefarious thing that
was going on for a long time. Jack added in,
always an enjoyable conversation. I really appreciate you coming to
the program every week. My listeners love hearing from you.
And of course if you like what Jack had to say,
the podcast would be on my page fifty five care
Sea dot com. God bless you. Jack added in, and
(01:30:50):
love to your better half, and I hope to see
you real soon, my friend. We'll talk next Wenesday.
Speaker 3 (01:30:53):
So much.
Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
All right, thank you, seven twenty one.
Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
Right now.
Speaker 2 (01:30:55):
If you have krc DE talk station Gata Heaven Cemetery, Montgomery,
you know it's a great place for you know, quiet meditation,
maybe prayer, just a you want to enjoy a beautiful
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(01:31:19):
and of course at any time of year, and it's
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that's really what they're trying to encourage you to do.
They've been ministering to the tri State for over seventy
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Speaker 4 (01:31:40):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (01:31:43):
Jashi A seven to twenty nine. If you've got KERRC
detalk station. Happy Wednesday listener line. Saunder Breweries Westchester location
and welcome back from Americans for Prosperity, Donald, And it's
always a pleasure for having you on the program, my
friend Brian, always great to be with you. So Americans
for pros aready pushing to renew the Trump tax cuts.
That's certainly something that's good for all of us and
(01:32:05):
I hate the way the left tries to spend this
like this is just cut tax cuts for evil corporations.
You know, the middle class doesn't get anything. Well, that's
just not true.
Speaker 3 (01:32:14):
No, it's not.
Speaker 22 (01:32:15):
We've even seen some some folks on the right sort
of begin to embrace those ideas and say, maybe we
should raise taxes just a little bit on the wealthiest
in our country, and.
Speaker 21 (01:32:25):
Maybe that'd be okay.
Speaker 9 (01:32:26):
But we've seen that song.
Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
And dance play out before, haven't we, Brian in the
early nineties. God, yes, George W. Bush.
Speaker 22 (01:32:33):
So voters were really clear last November right four years
of Bidenomics in spation, green Energy, New Deal subsidies that
provided hidden taxes on Americans. They rejected the tax and
spend policies that the progressive Democrats like Kamala Harris and
Joe Biden put on this country. And they want to
(01:32:54):
make permit the Trump tax cuts that were originally enacted
in twenty seventeen.
Speaker 2 (01:32:58):
And so that's what we're holding folks too, and drive
in towards and the operative words in that sentence you
just made. You just said permanent, make permanent. It just
really just Franklin, And I'll use the words pisses me
off when they know they impact tax policy, but they
only do it for ten years or five years or whatever.
It forces you to have to go back and do
(01:33:18):
something over again or unring a bell or like now
to try to enshrine them and make them permanent. That'll
force some future Congress, thankfully making them permanent. The lower
tax because that'll force some future Congress to actually have
to vote to raise our income tax. Not a very
popular thing to do, no, And I think that's the
theory on it, right.
Speaker 22 (01:33:37):
It's like, hey, we can get a really good fiscal
note right the Congressional Budget Office. Your listeners probably hear this, right,
it'll say this legislation is going to cost x amount
of dollars or impact revenue by x amount of dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:33:48):
But here's the deal.
Speaker 22 (01:33:49):
It's consistently wrong. We just had Representative Lisa McClain join
our team in DC for a discussion around this. She's
a conference chair, and what she was talking about as
well is, you know, they get these numbers wrong because
it doesn't account for some of the dynamic aspects of
what happens in the economy, right when you lower taxes. Yeah,
(01:34:09):
on one hand, you can say over the next ten years,
lowering taxes is going to impact the national federal revenue
by you know, several billions of dollars. But what you're
not accounting for is where those billions of dollars are
going right back into the economy, reinvested, and we see
the growth that occurs when more people get to keep
more of their hard earned money. So I think lawmakers
(01:34:31):
begin to get dialed into hey, CBO is helpful, but
the fact that the Congressional Budget Office oftentimes gets this wrong.
We're going to forge ahead because we know good policy
equals good politics, and that's what folks on us here
to do.
Speaker 3 (01:34:44):
Well.
Speaker 2 (01:34:44):
It's an excellent point you make that that money is
in fact reinvested, that employees actually get the benefit of it.
Quite often, that businesses expand when you don't take their
money away from them. So that's the one side the
economic activity that's created by allowing us to spend the
way we want to spend our money. You know, it
goes for buying goods and services and purchases, which further
(01:35:05):
expands the economy. All that is good, and yet look
at the other side of the coin. On that, Donovan,
what do they do with the money they take from us?
How efficient is Washington d C. With the spending of
our earned dollars that they steal from us? Look at
what Doge is uncovered. Granted it's only just a tiny
slice of the entire revenue dream that comes out of Washington,
But you know, paying for transgender mice research or whatever,
(01:35:28):
I don't care, pick up your favorite ridiculous thing that
Doge pointed out. That's what they're doing with it. Funding
green energy subsidies. Subsidies are needed when the demand is
not there for the products and the energy generation that
we normally would pursue. The market forces are ignored when
you get incentives, and it gets people to do stuff
(01:35:49):
they won't do that's on our backs, and it's never
enough money. Look how I mean, we're in the whole
thirty seven trillion dollars almost and they just continue to
spend way beyond what they take in. I mean, it's
just insulting and I wish more people. I mean, we
quit playing that class warfare game on the left and
Eviel Corporation elo Oli, evil billionaires blah blah blah blah blah.
(01:36:10):
Oh shut up, you know, just look what they're doing
with your tax dollars. You hate the size of the
American military budget, so do why trillion dollars annually? I
guarantee you that's filled with fraud, wasted abuse that could
be ferreted out. They can't even pass an audit. And
they can't even pass an audit.
Speaker 3 (01:36:25):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:36:26):
I love the American military, and I salute the American
veterans every single day and active duty service folks. But
tell me they need a trillion dollars. Come on, find
a waste. You guys waste money all the time. We
shouldn't reward them with taking more of our money. Donovan,
thank you for letting me vent my spleen.
Speaker 22 (01:36:43):
I love it, and I think we need more of
that righteous indignation, right, and we hear it out there
on the doors and in the communities and at the
events we do talking about this because people are frustrated,
right they they they're taxed a lot. And I think
a lot of folks are fairly reasonable, right. They under stand,
we need roads, we want police, we want fire, we
want good schools, we want you know, we want national defense.
(01:37:07):
But then you begin to look at the you know,
the spotlight that the Biden or the Trump administration is
putting on through the Department of Government efficiency does the fraud,
waste and abuse happening in our federal government, and folks
get mad and then to hear to have folks even saying, hey,
maybe we should raise taxes just a little bit on
some you know, just sends people into a tailspin. We
(01:37:28):
don't need to be doing that, Brian, right, we need to.
We need to see our federal government operate more efficiently
so that it can deliver the services as people who
need it better, while also making sure that people Americans
like you and I get to keep more of our
harder and paychecks rather than sending you know, twenty two
percent of our paycheck on the marginal tax brackets out
to Washington, d C. To be burned, you know, in
(01:37:50):
some unknown program that's not getting any results or really
serving any public good.
Speaker 2 (01:37:55):
I tell you what, I'll hold you over Donald, because
I know you're going to what, Oh, that's right, I
got the Clamork kind of vettern services coming up, So
I won't hold you over right, just take you for
an extra minute or two here, Donovan. I guess I'm
just kind of wildly curious to know what your guess
is as to where this opposition to what Dose is
doing is coming from. Is it this small, really really
squeaky wheel gets the grease loud leftist class that's doing that,
(01:38:17):
Because how could any even middle or even I would
say even left to the spectrum democrat disagree with that
the of the realities. How could they argue that getting
rid of dead people off the social security active roles
is a bad thing. It's just demonized, demonized, demonized, and
it doesn't make any sense when you look at it
from a logical and reasonable perspective, which I guess they're.
Speaker 22 (01:38:38):
Not now, and I think what they're looking for they're
grastipating the straws in a lot of ways, I feel like,
trying to find areas of controversy, and then some of
that gets fueled by select traditional media outlets who also
want to fuel that controversy. But the reality is like
when you talk to an average person, yeah, get a
bar or restaurant wherever, and you talk about that social
security example, they get it, people at it, and so
(01:39:01):
it's it's consistently a messaging war, right where you have
to get out there and kind of combat that. So Yeah,
squeaky wheel gets the grease, but then I think some
of that squeaky wheel gets amplified by folks.
Speaker 21 (01:39:11):
Who have an agenda to push.
Speaker 2 (01:39:13):
At the end of the day, this is what we
should be seeing.
Speaker 22 (01:39:16):
Both Democrats and Republicans should be doing this kind of
stuff right, shining a light on inefficiencies in our government
so that it can deliver better services with the dollars
we give it all?
Speaker 2 (01:39:25):
Right, what's the website we need to turn to to
get involved. Donald and'neil get.
Speaker 22 (01:39:30):
Into crunch time on the tax cuts and jobs that
go to protect prosperity dot com. Protect Prosperity dot com.
We're gonna have a number of events coming up here
in the coming weeks. I'll be back on the show
to give your listeners an update on how they can
get active in Southwest Ohio.
Speaker 2 (01:39:42):
Protect Prosperity dot com dot ne'neo Americans for Prosperity. I
appreciate you coming on the program. I'll get my listeners
a head on over the website and I'll look forward
to having you back on the program. Have a great day,
my friend seven thirty six, would you have k see
talkstation or we're gonna throw the Klemer County Veterans Services
in studio here in a moment. First, I'm taking my car.
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The talk station facing a cafole cast said, not bad today,
just mostly cloudy skies going up to seventy five degrees.
Just just like chanceer Ring clouds every night down at
(01:41:06):
fifty four. Uh, mostly cloudy all day tomorrow, but with
scattered showers and storms. That possibility seventy for the high
down to forty four of a night with clouds and
clear skies on Friday with zero percent chanceer Ring sixty
nine for a high. It's fifty three right now. Let's
hear about traffic.
Speaker 13 (01:41:21):
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Speaker 13 (01:41:30):
Highway traffic really building fast and northbound seventy five and
accident adds to that. Just before you get the buttermilk
on the right lane, then the exit lane to buttermilk
is currently blocked off. Traffic Facts Pass Surfway Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KR see the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:41:51):
Seven forty fifty five KR SZ talk station. Welcome back
to the fifty five KRC Morning Show from the Claremont
County Veteran Services Steve Belltop.
Speaker 21 (01:42:00):
It is great, good morning. The sun is up in
cloud in the sky. Jennifer Keatchmark had nothing negative to
say about this day. It's a good day.
Speaker 2 (01:42:08):
She never has anything negative to say.
Speaker 21 (01:42:10):
She said it was raining yesterday. Oh well, I don't
know if I agree with that.
Speaker 2 (01:42:13):
Jensen the sales department, and of course Steve is her
account so she takes wonderful care of Steve and the
Clemont County Veterans Service Office. And you guys do great work.
So let me start out by thanking you for the
work that you do for the Clemont County Veterans. It's
such important work. And let us talk about Memorial Day.
And because people often get Memorial Day and Veterans Day confused,
(01:42:33):
and there's a substantial difference between the two days.
Speaker 21 (01:42:38):
Day, let's let yeah, let's put the foot stomp on
substantial right, Yeah, absolutely there is, but you know, with
less than two percent of the American public having served
in the military. It's easy how the two could be
merged together in their minds, especially when we tend to
treat them the same.
Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
Yeah, I mean, I think most people wish the American military,
have good will for the American military, absolutely right, So
anything having to do with military service or loss of
life in connection there with I think that's why it's
kind of merged together.
Speaker 21 (01:43:09):
Right, it is, But there's also an education piece behind it.
You don't want me going, Brian, it was great listening
to you on some radio station you don't even belong to.
You'd kind of go, you didn't, that would made me right,
and so I had that happened.
Speaker 2 (01:43:24):
Actually, I heard your endorsement to so and so, and
I'm like, no, never spoke for them on their behalf.
Ever in my life.
Speaker 9 (01:43:33):
That happens all.
Speaker 2 (01:43:34):
That's what happens all the time. It's like, what the
hell were you listening to?
Speaker 3 (01:43:37):
You know who I am?
Speaker 2 (01:43:38):
My voice is, you can't discern me from somebody else.
Speaker 21 (01:43:41):
It's a compliment. However, it's in disguise because I did
not understand your compliment.
Speaker 2 (01:43:46):
Yeah, I get it.
Speaker 21 (01:43:46):
So with the memorial on Veterra's Day. Memorial Day created
after the Civil War. Did you know, we really don't
know the absolute truth of the creation of Memorial Day. Really,
there are three different locations who believe they started Memorial Day.
Speaker 2 (01:44:03):
Okay, so this is like, who's got the who invented
the Phillies Chief Day California credit for it?
Speaker 21 (01:44:09):
Where's Waldo? And did he really exast?
Speaker 3 (01:44:11):
Right?
Speaker 21 (01:44:11):
So there was a an African American battalion down in
South Carolina who after the war were decorating the graves
of the soldiers. There's another place I believe in Massachusetts
and one and even I think Minnesota. So all of them,
ten declaim were the origin of Memorial Day. And we
really don't know the truth of where it started. It
(01:44:31):
just happened to blossom organically and grow from there.
Speaker 2 (01:44:35):
So different cities or communities or organizations started honoring the
fallen and then ultimately became a national holiday at the
right point. Correct, So the phenomenon caught on so much
so that they decided to make it just one day.
I suppose these were different events throughout the year. It
(01:44:55):
never it wasn't a coordinated effort on behalf of a
whole bunch of different groups that al said, we're all
going to do it on this day.
Speaker 21 (01:45:01):
Right, So when it comes to the federal level, like okay,
let's let's recognize a day, right, But it was just
happened to be communities doing what communities do for their
veterans that especially have expired in the time of war,
which is really when you think about the definition it's
memorial Day. You went to Uncle Bob's memorial service before
(01:45:22):
we committed him to the ground, so therefore memorial days,
but honoring those who have sacrificed their lives for the
freedom of this country.
Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
Yeah, well, and there's all kinds of you know, centuries
old monuments that local communities established to honor their fallen dead.
These are the war heroes from our county or from
our community. So that's it's a nice thing that people
are inclined to do that because they recognize the importance
of military service and the ultimate sacrifice being paid.
Speaker 21 (01:45:50):
It is, but you can also you can also go
wrong with Memorial Day. It's not just the bot with
the barbecue girls. We can go to commercials all day long,
but when how many church services have you been into
and the pastor says, all veterans rise, so we can
thank you. Yeah, wrong, audience, audience. But it's because the
(01:46:11):
populace doesn't understand the difference, and we tend to treat
the two holidays or remembrance days the same.
Speaker 3 (01:46:19):
Well.
Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
I think you've definitively pointed out the very very distinct
difference between the two days. And we've got all kinds
of events coming up, So will pause or bring Steve
Belzer from the Claimant County Veteran Service Office back and
we'll talk about those events that are coming up. After
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Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
Chairman nine tells us the following about the weather today,
You've got mostly cloudy skies, although I think it was
sunning out there just a moment ago. Regardless, we'll say
a high at seventy five and just a slight chance
to rain, dry and cloudy over nine fifty four. Scattered
showers are possible tomorrow, otherwise cloudy and seventy for the high.
Partly cloudy over Thursday night with a drop of forty
four and a mostly clear Friday and also zero percent
(01:48:01):
chancer rain on Friday sixty nine. For the high it's
fifty four right now traffic.
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King Ram Month fifty five. KRC Deep Talk Station.
Speaker 2 (01:48:36):
Seven nine. If you have KRC de Talk station, hope
you have it. A wonderful Wednesday. Let us see judgment
a file time at eight thirtyfl We're preceded by Shane Jenkins,
former January sixth defendant, the director Executive director stand the
gap as well as the real j six and we'll
hear from Corey Bowman, who came in second second yesterday
the primary. In the meantime in studio, Steve Buzzo from
(01:48:57):
the Clemont County Veteran Service Office already defining the difference
profound it is between Memorial Day and Veterans Day, and
so honoring the fallen soldiers is what we do on
Memorial Day. I know there's all kinds of events going
on in Steve's got a list of some of the
things that's going on that are going on, So Steve,
let's talk about it.
Speaker 21 (01:49:14):
Absolutely. Yeah, thanks Brian. There is a lot of our
Veteran Service organizations, we know them as a VFW, the
American Legion, the dav and it just goes on and on. Right,
many of them are hosting events at our cemeteries to
recognize our fallen warriors by decorating the graves. So every
(01:49:36):
county we support our Claremont County Veteran Service organizations with
flags and markers to duly notate those graves and counter
those individuals. So it's a great way for the community
to get involved for Uncle Bob, aunt Joe, whoever it was,
to just go out and help them decorate these graves
(01:49:58):
of these warriors.
Speaker 2 (01:50:00):
One of the things that I've observed about visiting grave sites,
and I am not the kind of guy that's inclined
to go do that. I'll be quite honest with you.
I have instructions for when I die, cremate me, put
me in a plastic bag and take a tablespoon with
you when you go someplace fun, and then sprinkle it
where people are having fun, because I figure a generation
(01:50:20):
from now a nobody going to be showing up where
I'm laid to rest because they'll forget about me. And
that's of course memories faded. I mean I can't remember that.
Speaker 3 (01:50:29):
Might you know?
Speaker 2 (01:50:30):
Certainly great great parents who I never knew. I knew
some of my grand great grandparents, but I don't know
where they're buried. I wouldn't be inclined to go. So
are are Do you keep a list of veterans that
sort of can be remembered by the community when they've
their families have long since moved by and won't show
up to remember them themselves.
Speaker 21 (01:50:47):
You know, we actually have volumes in my office from
the Civil War of Clermont County veterans. That's great and
it's just to read some of their actions. There was
a gentleman I wish I could remember his name, actually
did a book on World War One Claremont County veterans.
(01:51:08):
There's some great reads in your county about individual families
serving in the Great Wars. It's just I knew this family.
I didn't know they had a relative that did X,
Y or Z overseas for our nation. It's just so
being able to go and locate these headstones and give
them a moment of honor just keeps their their their
(01:51:30):
name and that which they performed alive.
Speaker 2 (01:51:33):
Yeah, exactly, it's.
Speaker 21 (01:51:35):
Honoring our history as a nation. We are so I
think it's it's fantastic. These organizations will gatter together, they
have they'll have speeches, not long, but to talk about
some of the veterans. Even the VVA, the Vietnam Veterans
of America, is going to meet at the I call
it the Helicopter Park, Union Township Park, and they're gonna
honor the Vietnam veterans from Claremont County there underneath the
(01:51:58):
Huey Helicopter. So it's just again on May twenty six,
another great event of honoring those who have served our country.
Speaker 2 (01:52:06):
Well, I know the Governor's got the annual reef laying
ceremony on the twenty first in Veterans Plaza Ihio State House.
Speaker 21 (01:52:12):
I will tell you that is a very unique event
in the If you've never been to the Veterans Plaza,
it's on the backside of the State House and there
is inlaid in the grass a stone of every county
of Ohio, says eighty eight stones labeled with the county's name.
(01:52:32):
That almost is a enclave to the very park itself,
and it backs up to the backside of the State
House where the speeches will go. And we will have
service officers from every county. Oh wow, that will line
their blocks. Oh that's cool. It is a neat event.
Speaker 2 (01:52:51):
That's rue.
Speaker 3 (01:52:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 21 (01:52:52):
So and the government brings the government. The governor brings
a great speaker every year to talk about events were
day what it is. A gold Star family. Let's not
forget them who have sacrificed their loved one for your freedom.
So don't look down on it and don't forget them,
(01:53:12):
because they're the ones who need the greater support. We
thank God for Johnny Susie who gave their lives for
our freedom. We think also the families who lent them
to us that we could fight these wars.
Speaker 2 (01:53:25):
That's a really important point you made there, Steve, and
I know. Of course the Union Township Veterans Memorial Park
exists as well. There's going to be an event there
May twenty six, two pm.
Speaker 21 (01:53:34):
That's right, that's right, is five hundred crosses, right. They
will have the grassy the grassy park. I won't use grassy, no,
because that always takes over running. We're waiting for this setup.
But the grass that we filled with these crosses, it
(01:53:56):
looks absolutely gorgeous. The Huey helicopter is decorated as a
metaback flight, so it's it.
Speaker 2 (01:54:04):
Fits reminiscent of like MASH.
Speaker 3 (01:54:07):
Right.
Speaker 21 (01:54:07):
So okay, you know MASH actually was an acronym.
Speaker 2 (01:54:11):
Yeah, Mobile.
Speaker 21 (01:54:13):
Army Surgical Surgical Hospital.
Speaker 2 (01:54:15):
Yeah. If you gave me about an hour and a half,
I would have been able to remember it.
Speaker 21 (01:54:19):
But your listeners don't have the time. Brian, This is important,
it really is.
Speaker 2 (01:54:23):
They belt out Clem County Veteran Services. Yeah, veterans out there,
consult your Veteran Service Office. Whether you're in Cymont County,
you can do that. Hamilton County has them. They're all
over the place. Butler County, Warren County, they do great
work on behalf of the American veteran. But in this
particular case, I'm sure that each of these veteran service
organizations and each of the counties will have events going
(01:54:43):
on Memorial Day. Events aren't of the fallen soldiers, the
ones who gave the ultimate sacrifice and service to their country.
So God bless each and every one of them, and
make sure you pause for a moment at least give
them some thought on Memorial Day as it fast approaches. Steve,
thank you for the work that you're doing each and
every day for your service to our country.
Speaker 21 (01:54:59):
Ran, thank you for partnering and helping us.
Speaker 2 (01:55:01):
Hey you kidding me? Love love love being able to
help the veteran On this program, folks don't go away.
After the top of the our news former January sixth
defender Shane Jenkins, executive Directors, Stand the Gap and the
Real Jay six joins the program, follow by Jude Jennenal Paulitano,
and Corey Bowman. Next hour stick around at the top
of the hour.
Speaker 8 (01:55:20):
Every day we discover something new and important.
Speaker 10 (01:55:23):
The day's top stories on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 21 (01:55:29):
Oh Canada, Donald Trump crashing the economy, We're session looming,
What happens next watch what happens will happen right here.
Speaker 8 (01:55:37):
On fifty five KRC the Talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:55:43):
It is eight oh five right now. If you have
KRCD Talk station, A very happy Wednesday to you. I've
been looking forward to this all morning. I am please
welcome to the fifty five KRC Morning Show. One of
the January sixth defend and spent quite some time, quite
a bit of time in jail, and he's now the
executive director of two different groups we're going to be
learning about today, Stand the Gap and the Real Jay sixth.
Shane Jenkins, Welcome to the fifty five KRSE Morning Show.
(01:56:05):
It's a real pleasure to have you on. Thank you
so much. It's honor to be here with you this morning. Well,
and I'm bringing your biography. Man, You've got a hell
of a story to tell. You have lived a rather
transformative life and one of redemption as well. Just give
my listeners a little bit of background about your early
childhood and into the teenage years before you well woke
up and discovered a higher power.
Speaker 17 (01:56:29):
Yes, sir, when I was twelve or thirteen years old,
I found out I was adopted and I had a
really adverse reaction to that. I had what I would
call an identity crisis at a very young age, and
I set out to create what I thought the persona
of this man that I thought Saint Jenkins was a lie, honestly,
and so I said, as an immature young boy, started
(01:56:50):
to create what I thought a man was, which was
an angry violence people, somebody that people feared or respected
in the wrong ways, which led me down a very
arc path. I turned away from school and sports and
my family, and you know, I began to look at
my biological family is like I wondered what was so
wrong with me that they didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:57:10):
Want me right my own mom could throw me away, and.
Speaker 17 (01:57:13):
So I was a very wounded young man turned to
the streets, you know, and ended up in jail by
the age of sixteen till age of nineteen. Watched my
friends shoot and kill a guy shoot two other people
when I was in the car with them, and so
I went down in Texas as a laws of accessory
(01:57:34):
if I had full the trigger, and so I did
three years for that. Got out when I was nineteen.
My mom married this violent and alcoholic, drug addic, abusive
man and he went to jail twice to beat my mom.
At the age of twenty, I shot shot and killed
him in self defense. And so here I was sixteen,
lost my friends, kill a guy, I shoot to other people,
(01:57:55):
and at the age of twenty killed my stepfather and
self defense was acquitted by a grand jury, no charge,
but still.
Speaker 2 (01:58:00):
Ahead in my mind the weight the blood of my
blood and blood of.
Speaker 17 (01:58:04):
My stepfather's uh wife on my hands, right and so
and uh well, and so that let me down a
very dark path. I had this guilt and shame from
killing my stepdad, even though it was in self defense,
even though it was in defense of my mom and
and myself, and it just really led me down a
dark path. Three trips to prisons adults and uh after
(01:58:25):
my adopted mom passed away my third trip to adult prison,
Jesus Christ met me there in a prison cell, thank God,
and then salvaged me from busting the gates. The hill
wide open.
Speaker 2 (01:58:38):
So since you, you know, achieved this enlightenment and this
awakening through Christianity obviously changed your life for the better,
and you've been running a straight and narrow path ever since,
I presume, well.
Speaker 17 (01:58:51):
Yeah, other than the buffer the road that we called anywhere.
Speaker 2 (01:58:55):
We're going to get to that, and that, of course
is a nice segue to talk about that. So you're
in the Capitol. Now what led you to be at
the Capitol on January sixth, ultimately leading to your arrest
and imprisonment?
Speaker 8 (01:59:06):
All right?
Speaker 17 (01:59:07):
Well, like I had, Like I said, I had been
in out of trouble a lot of my life, criminally,
and they twenty nineteen, I got off for roll. Had
given my life to Christ in twenty sixteen, and so
my politics sprang from my faith.
Speaker 3 (01:59:20):
Right.
Speaker 17 (01:59:20):
I started the value life and all these things and
gave my life to Christ again in twenty sixteen, and
then started watching the persecution and President Trump, and so
I finally wanted to vote in the twenty twenty election.
Voted early in Texas, then watched the election election night,
which I had a lot of questions about the twenty
and twenty elections.
Speaker 3 (01:59:39):
Still do.
Speaker 17 (01:59:41):
Manipulated an election at best, stolen at worse is what
I would say, you know. President Trump sent out the
tweet said come to d C, joined the Stop of
Steel Rally will be wild in all caps. And I
had never been to d C, never been to a
Trump rally, wanted to go protests and request that they
in the electors back to the states so they could
(02:00:02):
do an investigation in these states that were won by
very small martins. And so I went and got and
got drugged up into the crowd, and so the melee
was watching people be assaulted, was assaulted myself found out
Ashley about it was murdered inside the Capitol while I
was there on the Lower West Ares.
Speaker 2 (02:00:20):
And you know, it was a lot, and ultimately you
were charged. What led to the charges I see was
eight phlonies and one misdemeanor in this in connection with
your activities in the capitol on January sixth. What did
they say you did?
Speaker 17 (02:00:38):
They said they said that I assaulted police officers, which
after watching people be assaulted for no reason, being assaulted
myself for taking no action against police officers, finding out
they had shot and killed somebody inside the capital, on
top of feeling like they were stealing an election, covering
up the steel of an election, I finally lost my
(02:00:58):
tool and I did. I did throw sticks what you
would say like flag sticks, a broken piece of a crutch,
a death strawer. I did so those items at fully
riot eeared armored helmeted field police officers. And I'm accountable.
Speaker 2 (02:01:14):
For that, understand, And I appreciate you willingness to odmit
your accountability, but you know you have to observe, and
I observe, and I can't forgive violence against police officers.
And this is why they end up taking it to trial.
But you know, this is really an illustration of selective
prosecution because a lot of those BLM and anti file
(02:01:34):
folks are out in the streets throwing bombs, fireworks that
exploded at police officers, throwing frozen water bottles and other
articles similar to what you threw at police officers. I
don't recall a mass roundup and prosecution of any of
those folks. Do you recall them anyach chain.
Speaker 3 (02:01:50):
No, not at all.
Speaker 17 (02:01:51):
And I will say this Rose, another woman died fifteen
feet from me on the Lower West Sis Roseanne Boiling.
And then not only that, but when they came and
raided in my house here in Houston, they sent the
head of the Joint Terrorism Task Force from the FBI
to raid my house along with Houston SWAT. They also
labeled me a Tier one anti government extremist. Whenever at
(02:02:14):
worst I threw Dick got caught up in the heat
of the moment and threw sticks at police, but that
they determined that I wanted to overtow the government by
those actions and was a terrorist. Well eighty is absolutely ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (02:02:26):
Welly, and basically your your your prior criminal background, which
you obviously admitted and admit regularly in your in the
context of your your transformation and your enlightenment. That was
not related to political activity, was it?
Speaker 8 (02:02:38):
No, not at all, not at all.
Speaker 2 (02:02:40):
So okay. So you go through the trial and of
course I'm sure there was a biased jury there given
the location of the venue. You're You're found guilty at trial,
so they sentence you to what was your sentence.
Speaker 17 (02:02:54):
Eighty six months, which is seven years?
Speaker 2 (02:02:58):
Seven years. It seems excessive in light of the modern
criminal process we have today where everyone gets off for
almost murder. That's more more time than people that commit
murder get And you were in not you were in
nine prisons as well as what they call the DC gulog.
How much time did you end up spending in prison?
Speaker 17 (02:03:17):
I've spent forty six and a half months or fourteen
hundred and eighteen long days.
Speaker 2 (02:03:22):
Yeah, not like you were counting Shane, Well in twenty
four of which were pre trial. So did they deny
you a bond hearing? Did they say no bond?
Speaker 3 (02:03:34):
Oh? Absolutely, they said no bonds.
Speaker 2 (02:03:37):
Now did they refer.
Speaker 17 (02:03:38):
They were afraid that we were going to have another
rally and something else was going to happen, and that
like I had never been in trouble for going to
political rally and getting out of control? Why I was
Antifa or something? They said, no, You're a threat to society.
Speaker 2 (02:03:52):
Okay, And I'm sure they brought into evidence to your
criminal background. Absolutely, of course unrelated to the protest against
the government. All right, So what was it like in
what we call the DC gulag Shane?
Speaker 17 (02:04:07):
That was absolutely horrific. I had I had, Like I said,
I've been to many different jails of Texas and prisons
and stuff. Never have I been denied visits with my
family for two years. Never have I been denied religious
services for two years. Never have I been denied aircuts
for a year. Never have I been denied figuernail clippers
toenail clippers for a year, which is all things that
(02:04:29):
they did at the DC jail. Not to mention since
officers in to assault people, pepper spray people, throw us
in solitary confinement for no reason, and so it was
a you know, you throw us in this ninety seven
percent Biden district with well I call the Rainbow Brigade.
You had the black lesbian anybody above a regular officer
(02:04:50):
grade was a black lesbian woman, and they hated Donald
Trump and Trump supporters that they would spit on the
floor at his hair and his name.
Speaker 2 (02:04:58):
And so, okay, it was that's where that treatment comes from.
I can understand that. Yeah, bias within the prison system. Anyhow,
Shane Jenkins, you decided you were going to do something
about it, and you were going to help out folks
in the future while you were in jail. Tell my
listeners about your sort of eared idea behind the Real
J six and ultimately stand the gap.
Speaker 17 (02:05:21):
Yes, sir, we started a nonprofit. Well, we started the
LLC the Real J six first just to kind of
put out newsletters, to sell merchandise T shirts people that
want to support us, and to get guys' stories off.
Speaker 6 (02:05:32):
Then as that kind of evolved, we realized that we were.
Speaker 17 (02:05:35):
Paying taxes on that money, so we started the nonprofit
because we also wanted to do justice reform in the future.
In the meantime, we wanted to help January sixth or so.
Speaker 7 (02:05:43):
We still sell merchandise on the real Day six.
Speaker 17 (02:05:46):
But we are a nonprofit at standindegap dot Foundation and
we are currently helping January six guys right now. We're
working on credit repair and for healthcare because you know,
we were kidnapped by the fbiybody's credit was shot all
to nothing, bad, all bad, and then health care in
(02:06:07):
the prison's distem is terrific, So we want to be
able to fund guys going to the doctors, going to
the dentists. And then we're also working on a thing
called Mission Memory Maker, where we're fully funding a three
to five day vacation with the January sixth defendant and
their family and children so they can get away for
three to five days, no expense to them. Ubers paid
for airfare, resort, paid for meals, everything. Because you know,
(02:06:31):
the pressure is on the men right now for the
most at I say man, and there's women too, but
for the most part, the men to get back to
work because the wife has been out there typically raising
the children on a single income where it was typically
two incomes for the last four years, So the pressure
is on the man to get back to work typically,
so we want to ease that burden and that stress
(02:06:53):
and just pay for their vacation so they can get
away and just have no worries and love on each
other and just get back to some type of normalcy
in their lives.
Speaker 2 (02:07:03):
Oh, it's a nice thing for you to do. You've
been through the ring of yourself and you know what
it's all about. So it's nice that you'ld step up
to the plate for the other Jay six post.
Speaker 3 (02:07:10):
You know.
Speaker 2 (02:07:10):
I see other component of this is and I think
about Ashley Babbitt, that that was not a justifiable use
of deadly force under any circumstances. And I'm a lawyer.
I know the law when it comes to use of
deadly force. She did not represent an eminent threat to anyone.
She was snaked through a window that had been broken
out and they gunned her down. And I think about that,
(02:07:32):
and it's like, how that that person has never been
held accountable, That person has never been hauled into the
view of social media, the person that shot her and
criticized and condemned for killing really what amounted to a
totally innocent, unarmed woman.
Speaker 17 (02:07:47):
No, absolutely and somebody and shooting my stepdad and self defense.
I'm very familiar with self dist self defense of the
third third party, and so she had no weapons in
her hand. There was nobody vulnerable and in danger right there.
It was an ambush she and bushed her coming through
that window. Of a veteran of our air force wounded
a combat. It's just a horrible it is.
Speaker 11 (02:08:13):
It is.
Speaker 2 (02:08:14):
And that's kind of why I emphasized the Ashley Babbitt
story because I think it's one of the most egregious
examples of you know, the treatment of people there, but
also because you've been through down that road based on
your history and your life. As you just reminded folks
that you had to kill your stepfather because of the
threat that he opposed to you. So you know the
law too in that realm, and of course the law
allowed you to escape having to go to prison for that.
(02:08:34):
And I hate to live with the reality of I
fully appreciate where you're coming from in terms of the
stress that that has left you with. Emotionally, no one
would ever want to take the life of another human
being and could ever forget it after it's done. But
that's that's that's the agreedous side of the law enforcement.
But the treatment of people that just engaged in innocuous
behavior like just strolling through the capital, that the idea
(02:08:55):
that they were rounded up and subject to the judicial system.
It's really mind boggling to me, particularly given the comparison
to how the left wing protesters were treated and not
bothered at all in terms of law enforcement.
Speaker 17 (02:09:07):
Well, yeah, sir, well, and to see Tom Tillis yesterday,
Senator Tom tilly Is saying that people that trespass on
Capitol grounds deserved between thirty days and three years in
prison is absolutely frustrating and ridiculous, especially when you had
groups of massed individuals taking down ski fencing, removing bike
racks next to the DC police, Capitol police watching them,
(02:09:30):
giving them the thumbs up and allowing.
Speaker 2 (02:09:32):
Them to remove those barriers in.
Speaker 17 (02:09:34):
Those trespassing signs, which any other day other than January
sixth would not be considered trespassing to be on Capitol grounds.
But he's calling for people to be in jail, and
it's just so frustrated. Then he doesn't want to confirm
Ed Martin as the DC Attorney and.
Speaker 3 (02:09:51):
It's just super super frustrating.
Speaker 2 (02:09:53):
I imagine it's like it's like pointing assault or vinegar
in your current lasting Shane Jenkins, the real JA six
dot com is where you find Shane in his organization there.
And what's the website for the Stand in the Gap.
Speaker 17 (02:10:11):
Stand in the Gap dot Foundation?
Speaker 2 (02:10:13):
Oh okay, I saw that. I'm used to seeing a
dot com or a dot org or a dot gub
or something. I've never seen a dot foundation, but there
you have it Stand in the Gap dot Foundation and
my listeners, I really appreciate where you're coming from, Shane,
and as do I Sorry you got run through the ringer,
but you know, it's good that you're out there explaining
the injustice that was involved in what they call the
(02:10:36):
justice that was served there, and your voice is fully appreciated.
And I know the other JA sixers who were similarly
treated certainly appreciate what you're doing in your efforts on
their behalf. Shane Jenkins, thank you for spending time with
my listeners of me today. It's been very enlightening. And
I'll have my executive producer put your organization's links on
my blog page at fifty five KRC dot com. Thank
(02:10:57):
you so much for I hope you'll have a wonderful
day and God bless you, Oh bless you, sir. It's
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Speaker 4 (02:12:42):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station.
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For months.
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Time for the nine first went to one of orcass.
We have a cloudy day to day. I think it is,
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every night it'll be dry and fifty four for the
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(02:13:10):
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fifty seven. Right now, time for chuck Ingram with a
traffic update Fromaly.
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You see how traffic center when it comes to stroke,
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U seehealth dot com. Southbound seventy five better through west Chester.
Still heavy in and out of Lackland with two accidents,
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Speaker 9 (02:13:57):
The Judge's next Chuck Ingram on fifty five k R
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Speaker 2 (02:14:04):
A thirty. That was a good one, the Knapshack.
Speaker 8 (02:14:10):
Yeah, he is a piece of work.
Speaker 9 (02:14:13):
He is a piece of work.
Speaker 23 (02:14:15):
Good morning, Brian, what a pleasure to beyond with you.
Thank you for that introduction.
Speaker 2 (02:14:19):
Yeah, we gotta give Chuck Ingram props. Every once in
a while he just goes sort of off on ralph rails,
But that was kind of cute anyway. Judge Endena Paula
Tano on the f five Kesey Morrey Show every Wednesday
at this time, and I thoroughly enjoy our conversations on
any subject matter. But I am a lucky man for
the privilege of getting an advanced copy of his column,
which always comes out at midnight tonight. Holes in the
(02:14:41):
Constitution is the caption or headline on it. And one
of my favorite topics with you is always the Fourth Amendment,
your honor, And we're talking about the Fourth Amendment today,
And you know I didn't realize the history of the
where Faiza came from. That was on the heels of
the Nixon and the Watergate scandal. I don't know why
I never cared.
Speaker 21 (02:14:58):
Right, I mean right.
Speaker 23 (02:15:01):
Nixon resigned.
Speaker 5 (02:15:03):
The Congress appointed the Church Committee, which was one of
those rare committees of both members of the House and
members of the Senate, to examine the extent of domestic
surveillance under the Nixon years.
Speaker 23 (02:15:16):
It uncovered all kinds.
Speaker 5 (02:15:19):
Of things that none of us knew about, but for
our purposes, it revealed the President Nixon had ordered the
CIA and the FBI to engage in surveillance without any
kind of warrants whatsoever. The result of that was the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which purported to codify the circumstances
(02:15:45):
under which the US could spy in American citizens by
going to the Pisa Court. Of course, they lowered the
constitutional standard. Can't tamper with the Constitution. But they did
it anyway, from probable cause of crime to get a
search warrant to probably cause of being a foreign agent
to get a search onet that, by the way, it's
(02:16:07):
not in the article, but that, by the way, was
also watered down to probable cause of communicating with a
foreign agent, and that was watered down to communicating with
a foreign person. That's if I call my cousins in
Florence or a bookshop in London, and well, I'm.
Speaker 23 (02:16:28):
Already probably under surveillance.
Speaker 5 (02:16:29):
But if I did that, that would be enough for
NSSAY to go to the visor cord and get a
want to surveil me because I communicated with a foreign person.
That's how far afield we have come from the constitutional norm.
What the article reports to reveal and complain about is
(02:16:50):
that when this system was begun, there was a wall
of separation between the intelligence community.
Speaker 23 (02:16:56):
And law enforcement.
Speaker 5 (02:16:57):
So if this rampant, unconstant spying unearthed evidence of crimes,
it could not be passed from Intel to law enforcement.
The Patriot Act destroyed the wall, and so now the
rampant spying is used by law enforcement to gather evidence,
(02:17:18):
rather than law enforcement using the traditional tools of going
to a traditional judge like I was, and presenting evidence
of probable cause and getting the judge the sin of
search warm way go through all that trouble. When your
cousins in the NSA and the CIA will spy for
you anyway, that's where we are today, and Trump, who
(02:17:40):
was personally victimized by this in twenty fifteen. In twenty sixteen,
we all remember that has not has not put a
stop to it.
Speaker 2 (02:17:50):
And I understand all of that, and I guess I
have to go back in this slippery slope that you
explained very very succinctly on how we went from probable
cause of a crime to just communicating with a foreign person,
but a foreign agent. I guess that in and of
(02:18:10):
itself could be loosely defined. I mean, how do you
define a foreign agent for the purposes of the original
Phiza course? But also was this watering down that you
just explained. Was that done by virtue of an amendment
to the original Pisa Act or is it just done
as a matter of course behind the scenes.
Speaker 23 (02:18:28):
Ye, but that is a fabulous question, Brian.
Speaker 5 (02:18:32):
It was done by DOJ lawyers persuading the Pisa Court,
which meets in secret and whose records are secret, whose
judges are searched when they leave the courthouse to make
sure they're not taking any records or files with them,
whose mobile devices are scanned by the litigant before them,
(02:18:56):
the NSA. All of that was done by the Phis
Court itself, not by the Congress. So today it is
a dastardly secret hole blown into the Fourth Amendment by
federal bureaucrats and gutless federal judges. How do you get
(02:19:16):
on the fights at court? The FISI court is made
up of thirteen Federal District Court judges. They don't sit
in a panel, they sit individually, They rotate, they rotate
through and they're appointed by the Chief Justice for the
most part.
Speaker 23 (02:19:31):
Gutless.
Speaker 5 (02:19:31):
They've become gutless tools of the intelligence community.
Speaker 2 (02:19:36):
Well, I guess on some level we've sort of reverted
back to ignoring the Fourth Amendment, playing and simple. But
then again, Jay Edgar Hoover engaged in this kind of
activity the entire time he was at the FBI, right
and he gathered files and spied on politicians and presidents
and everybody he could get his hands on.
Speaker 5 (02:19:54):
Yes, he used it for blackmail purposes, but he was
smart enough to know at least after Matt versus Ohio
in the early sixties, and he wasn't going to get
this into evidence in a courtroom. Today, of course, federal
agents have come of age. A whole generation of federal
(02:20:16):
agents has come of age. Since nine to eleven, twenty
four years ago, and that generation has been taught spy first,
worry about the Constitution and the statutes later.
Speaker 23 (02:20:31):
And every year it gets worse and worse because the Feds.
Speaker 5 (02:20:35):
Rely more that the federal law enforcement relies more on
federal intel. If you think I'm exaggerating, this report is public.
It's a nine hundred and six page report written by
the Trump FBI first term Trump, revealed by the Biden
FBI given to Congress at the tail end of.
Speaker 3 (02:21:00):
Term.
Speaker 23 (02:21:01):
And nothing has changed.
Speaker 5 (02:21:04):
And in this report, the Trump FBI reveals how it
relied on CIA and NSA to do domestic spying for
law enforcement purposes.
Speaker 2 (02:21:14):
Did anybody complain?
Speaker 5 (02:21:15):
You have the usuals complain, Ron Paul complained, Ron Widen complained,
Paul being the libertarian, widened being the progressive that monitor
civil liberties abuses.
Speaker 23 (02:21:27):
Where did their complaints go?
Speaker 5 (02:21:28):
Some buried somewhere in the congressional record that said everybody looked.
Speaker 3 (02:21:32):
The other way.
Speaker 2 (02:21:33):
Well, to the extent of prosecution for criminal activity arises
as a consequence of their unconstitutional listening into our conversations.
That's evidence that was obtained a violation of our civil rights.
Notably the Fourth Amendment that could be suppressed. But what
you're telling me is once it's referred to law enforcement,
law enforcement then knows about this alleged criminal activity and
then begins to build a case seemingly independent of that
(02:21:56):
original Fourth Amendment violation. So what they appear to do
is valid evidence.
Speaker 5 (02:22:01):
Well, there's two ways they do that. One is called
what you've just described, parallel construction.
Speaker 2 (02:22:06):
Where they will.
Speaker 5 (02:22:09):
Re engineer a route back to the evidence by seemingly
lawful means. The other is outright deception, by just passing
the evidence from person to person to person the person
so that the prosecutors in the courtroom do not know
the true origin of the evidence. And when that DOJ
(02:22:31):
lawyer in the courtroom says to a federal judge the
means that the government says they legally acquired it, he
really believes that he has been duped by his own people.
So there's two ways that they try and get that
evidence in court. This is positively stalinistic.
Speaker 21 (02:22:47):
Yeah, and it hasn't changed.
Speaker 5 (02:22:49):
Under the Trump DOJ or the Trump FBI, which is
what provoked me to write this piece.
Speaker 2 (02:22:55):
Well, and also didn't change into the Biden administration. I'm
sure this was going under the Obama administration. It sounds
like it's been going on for decades and decades even
prior to FIZA was as the Jaggar Hoover point, Well, the.
Speaker 5 (02:23:08):
Spying has been going on since the original patriarcht Now
you're always was spying, but it became rampant to the
point and technological technologically feasible after nine to eleven. Holding
up my iPhone, I don't know if you can see it,
whereby the fence can monitor every keystroke on every mobile
(02:23:31):
device and every desktop and.
Speaker 23 (02:23:34):
Do so without even the charade of a warrant.
Speaker 5 (02:23:38):
Now, this produces so much information overload that they can't
possibly monitor.
Speaker 23 (02:23:43):
It in real time.
Speaker 5 (02:23:45):
But it does exist if they want to go back
and look at it is a utah where the largest
office building on the planet, the largest structure on the planet,
bigger than the Pentagon, and where in public doesn't even
know this. The government built this monstrosity, and you ta
to hold all the computer chip information that the intelligence
(02:24:07):
community gathers on Americans every year.
Speaker 2 (02:24:10):
Well, and now you're on it. We have artificial intelligence
and supercomputers. So you know the fact that they can't
they deal with information overload? Maybe it was just up
until now an AI can be put to the task
of rifling through all those unconstitutionally seized texts and information
and get the root of whatever they think they're looking for.
It's frightening stuff, and again it's all in violation of
the Constitution.
Speaker 5 (02:24:31):
Well, if they could type in Brian Thomas, Judge Napolitano
and just pick a date in any Wednesday five years ago,
and they'll get immediately the transcript of what we set.
Speaker 23 (02:24:40):
Now, that's not a good example because what we set
us already public.
Speaker 9 (02:24:44):
But if you and I were on the.
Speaker 5 (02:24:46):
Phone on a given day in a non public environment
and they want the transcript of that, they can get it.
Speaker 2 (02:24:55):
Scary stuff, but stuff we all have to know and
enlighten us. And hopefully there'll be up rising and a
demand from the populace to change things. But I'm not
waiting around for that because apparently nobody knows the Fourth
Amendment or the Constitution. Generally, since they've taken civics classes
out of schools, people are no longer insulted by this
type of trampling on our right to be free of
unreasonable searches and caizars. Judge Andrew Napolitano obviously enlightening went
(02:25:19):
good schooling today on the Fourth Amendment, and I love
talking about it, and I love talking.
Speaker 3 (02:25:23):
To you man.
Speaker 2 (02:25:23):
I look forward to next Wednesday as I always do,
and rank back at.
Speaker 3 (02:25:27):
You, Brian.
Speaker 5 (02:25:27):
Thank you for these wonderful conversations and this opportunity to
discuss these very important issues.
Speaker 23 (02:25:34):
I trust that your audience appreciates them.
Speaker 3 (02:25:38):
I know they.
Speaker 23 (02:25:38):
Appreciate you, all of us.
Speaker 2 (02:25:40):
Thank you, brother. We'll talk next week. Have a great
week between now and then eight forty two to fifty
five KREC detalk Station. Corey Bowman's going to join the program.
Came in second yesterday. He's on his way to a
runoff with Mayor aftab Pervall. In the meantime, Chimycare Fireplaces.
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Speaker 4 (02:26:47):
Are you drowning an IRS?
Speaker 3 (02:26:49):
Tax Day?
Speaker 2 (02:26:51):
It is eight forty seven if you've bot KRCD talks station.
Of course, election day was yesterday, even though nobody showed up.
City of Cincinni's got a population of a little north
The three hundred thousand people and only about twenty one
thousand people even got up to vote. That's kind of disturbing.
Welcome back to the fifty five Kessey Morning Show. Came
in number two. He's in a runoff with aftab par Ball.
(02:27:12):
Corey Bowman, good to have you back on the show.
Speaker 14 (02:27:15):
Good more and Brian, how you doing.
Speaker 2 (02:27:16):
I'm doing fine. I'm just a little I obviously was
hoping for better numbers for you, and it's an odd thing.
I'm sure you saw the article in the Since any
Inquire or Hyde Park. They actually had more than ten
percent show up. They had fifteen percent, and they interviewed
one lady who said, even though she's pissed off at
aftab par of Ball in council, she still voted for
him against her best interest. She just will not vote
(02:27:38):
for a Republican period into story. I don't understand that.
It's you know, the city's been running to the ground
last forty years. What are the Democrats actually done for
the people of the city of Cincinnati generally speaking, and
they keep going back to the well. It's the definition
is stupid, doing the same thing over and over again
expecting a different outcome. Corey, your reaction to the outcome,
and I suppose you can hit the ground running with
(02:28:01):
the with the campaign between now and November.
Speaker 14 (02:28:05):
Yeah, well, first I want to know thank every single
person I actually did get out and vote. You know,
I know a lot of times we're going to focus
on who didn't show up, but let's focus on the
people that did show up and got out and voted
for the first Republican nominees that's hit the city in
the last fifteen sixteen years. And so I see that
as accomplishment in itself. And yeah, it might have been
(02:28:28):
a low turnout about ten percent, but ever since we
first started this, you know, we had about two and
a half weeks to get over five hundred signatures to
get on the ballot. I look as we had about
two and a half months to get the votes that
we got, and so that's giving us an opportunity the
next seven months to hit the ground running to advance
in this stent.
Speaker 2 (02:28:47):
Well, and I wish you all the best as you
do that. I guess you have a You're going to
have a lot of outreach to do. Do you plan
on going to all the neighborhoods in the city of
Cincinnati between now November well, yeah, you have to.
Speaker 3 (02:28:59):
Yeah, we are.
Speaker 14 (02:29:00):
Our job the next seven months is we've been put
in a position to be able to convince people that
we're the right candidate for mayor of Cincinnati, and so
over the course of the last two and a half months,
we've been able to reach certain amounts of people, and
we've been able to do the best with what we have,
and I'm very happy with what we've been able to accomplish.
But like many people text me this morning, like I've
(02:29:22):
texted many other people, the work has just started. And
so we hit the ground running starting today all the
way to November, and we're excited.
Speaker 2 (02:29:30):
I'm sure you are. Given the lopsided nature of the vote,
I guess pur of all got eighty three percent. You
came in at thirteen. A lot of people might have
said they had the wind taken out of their sales.
But I still have to go back to the number
of voters that showed up. I mean, twenty one thousand
people determined the destiny of the city the Cincinnati, at
least in terms of who the candidates are. You worry
(02:29:52):
about that in the fall, like getting people off the
couch and getting them out to vote. There's nothing doesn't
there's a lot of criticism. Loving it's a Hamilton County
Republican party generally speaking, I'd like to think that they
would really engage in an effort to get people out
to the polls in the city. I know they view
that the you know, like bring the flag out. We're
all done in the city. But there's a lot of
(02:30:14):
work and a lot of effort that they could step
up with the plate and provide you before we get
to November. In the election day.
Speaker 14 (02:30:20):
Yeah, I believe that we're going to see that. You know,
like I said, we haven't had a nominee in over
fifteen years, and I believe that not only is this important,
but over the course of the summer and fall, we
have to put strong people forward to run for council
as well. And so this is a very big ship
that we're going to turn on a very small rudder.
And so every step of the way matters. Every vote counts,
(02:30:42):
every single poll worker that I saw yesterday, those are
vital to the election process.
Speaker 3 (02:30:48):
And we're very thankful for everything that has happened so far.
Speaker 14 (02:30:51):
Yeah, what if I would talk to any Republican in
the city, if I would talk to anybody, not even Republican,
but anybody that's just fed up with the city. Next seven,
we're not going to be running on a candidate. We're
going to be running on city issues. And I think
that's what's going to turn people out the vote is
if we can convince people and get people to know
where we stand on these vital issues for our city
(02:31:13):
and know that we're going to have policies, we're going
to have actions from day one in place that are
going to benefit the citizens of our city. Well, then
we're going to turn out more votes in November.
Speaker 2 (02:31:23):
And I know Corey where you are on the issues,
and they're all just very grounded in common sense, logic
and reason, you know, efforts that will benefit all of
the residents in all of the communities. There's really nothing
divisive about your message. This isn't like you know, something
like abortion, like oh my god, that you know the
the polar opposite sides of the equation. You got your
(02:31:44):
pro livers and you got your pro abortion folks. You're
never going to reconcile those and it's a divisive issue. Nothing.
What you have run on talked about what you want
to accomplish for the city is like even I would
argue political, no, Well, I.
Speaker 14 (02:32:00):
Think that what we got to do because you can't
see this at like, let's say, if we're speaking on
who got the most votes yesterday, Well you, if you
actually have a heart for the city and local government,
you can't see that as a definite win when only
ten percent of voters showed up. And so what we
have to see it as is we have to give
(02:32:20):
the ninety percent of voters that didn't show up today yesterday.
We've got to give them a reason to get out
in November. And that's what we're going to be working
our rear ends off the next seven months to show
people on these issues that it's going to be worth
getting out the vote, to letting them know what the
dates are, letting them know where the polling locations are.
But then honestly too is having those interactions with people
(02:32:42):
to let them know that we're the right candidate for
the job. And so I haven't lost any hope. I
know that there's a lot of people that might have
the wind out of their sales, but if anybody's listened
to me, I'm telling you we are more motivated than
ever before.
Speaker 3 (02:32:55):
And this was just a next step.
Speaker 14 (02:32:57):
Like I said, we had two and a half weeks
to get five hundreds signatures.
Speaker 3 (02:33:00):
We got them.
Speaker 14 (02:33:01):
We had two and a half months to go in
second place to be able to get on the bout
in November.
Speaker 3 (02:33:06):
We got it.
Speaker 14 (02:33:07):
And so every step of the way, we're gonna see
milestone after milestone every month, and we're gonna fight this
thing to be able to see a great turnout in November.
Speaker 2 (02:33:16):
I appreciate your optimism and enthusiasm, getting people ginned up
and not throwing the towel. That's what it's all about.
Corey Bowman, you can find him online at Corey Bowman
dot com. And Corey, you know, I'm going to have
you on the fifty five Carrisey Morning Show quite a
bit between now and the h and November. And you
think I have to have parvoll Is going to ask
for equal time, Well, I don't know.
Speaker 14 (02:33:37):
I think I mean, you're a likable guy who wouldn't
want to be on your show.
Speaker 2 (02:33:40):
Well, someone who's armed with information from citizen watchdog Todd Zenzer. Yeah,
having to be accountable for some of these the problems
that have been uncovered by the stones that Todd Zenser's
overturned along the over overtime, Corey Bowman has been great
having you on. Congratulations. I'm happy as I can be
that you came in at least second and that you'll
(02:34:02):
be fighting. I have to have pur ball in November,
and I appreciate what you're trying to accomplish on behalf
of the city of Cincinnati. So best of luck between
now and then, and I'll look forward to having you
back on the show real soon.
Speaker 14 (02:34:13):
Brian, sincerely, thank you so much for having me on
the show. Thank you to all your listeners, and stay
in touch on Coreybowman dot com. This is going to
be an awesome summer and fall. To see the voters
come out.
Speaker 2 (02:34:23):
Yep, gett a yard time, get a T shirt, support
the campaign, maybe do some door knocking for Corey. Corey,
takeare brother, have a wonderful, wonderful week and eight our
week as well. Fifty five to five K Steve Talk
Station Big Picture with Jack Allen and the brilliance of
Jack Adenen cannot be understanding overstated. Rather a century of
Hollywood politics, man, I just I'd love that. And if
you didn't get a chance to listen to him, You've
(02:34:44):
got to check out the podcast A Big Picture with
Jack add and Donald New Americans for Prosperity just the
tip of the iceberg on the need to renew the
tax Trump tax cuts is going to be doing events
with Americans for Prosperity promoting that and you can help out.
We'll learn in the future on how to do that.
Steve Belzo It's number County Veterans Services on the difference
between the Veterans Day and Memorial Day. Substantial difference with
(02:35:05):
Memorial Lay coming up. He talked about some of the
events are coming up and the profound difference between those two.
Shane Jenkins, former January sixth defendant, on his website Stand
the Gap and the Real j six What a story
he has to tell Judge Ennitapolitano in the Fourth Amendment
Holes in the Constitution. All fifty five krs dot com
tune into mar for iheartmediaviation extper Jay Ratliffe, hope to
see you at lunch today Saunder Breweries, Westchester location. It's
(02:35:29):
going to be a good time and chance for you
to meet my better half. She's going to show up
a lunch today, first time and I can't remember how
long so hoping to see you there as well. Joe Stracker,
executive is sir, thank you for doing everything you do
for the program. Without you, we wouldn't have a program.
Have a great day, folks. Don't go away. Glenn Beck
is next, Kip. Thanks to everything your mother has done
for you, because we each have the best mom in
(02:35:49):
the world.
Speaker 21 (02:35:50):
Mom, I love you, I missing you.
Speaker 8 (02:35:51):
Have your Mother's Day fifty five krs the talk station.
Speaker 4 (02:35:55):
This report is