Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five at fifty five k r C. He
talks day time, Happy Friday, e s Will.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
And that's the way the news goes.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Yeah, I wish you could see the stack of stuff
around my uh my space here the way the news goes.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
I have so many.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Stories and articles that I would love to be able
to get to, and I never can quite get to them.
Oh my god, the world is a fast and furious
place anyhow, Brian Thomas, thank you for tuning the fifty
five Casey More Show. Jug Trecker Whory belongs in the
executive producer booth and got a line up here, looking
forward to talking to John's zencer. He's coming up at
(01:01):
seven thirty. Save Hyde Park Square Organizer? What's next for
Hyde Park? If anything comes on the heels after the
Cincinnatio Connected Community's zoning law may be facing some changes.
Dabble into that a little bit here shortly, but you know,
one size fits all connected communities. You must do it
this way until somebody steps up and says, no, I
(01:22):
want a variance from the Connected Communities proposal that the
City of Cincinnati shoved down every neighborhood's throat. And wait
till you hear what's in it idea The details of
the Connected Communities Plan I've never quite seen, but since
some are arguing that needs to be changes to it,
members of the Making Connected Communities Better Working Group apparently
(01:43):
presented some ideas to a recent since a city council
meeting to well strengthen the new zoning code and make
it more palatable for the fifty two neighborhoods in the
City of Cincinnati. More palatable. One size apparently does not
fit all.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
We'll hear from John's end of the Save Hyde Park
Square organization on what he thinks is coming up next.
Doctor James Thorp's been on before, but his book Sacrifice,
How the deadliest vaccine in history Targeted the most vulnerable,
returns at eight h five and Jay rat leff I
heard me the aviation expert today thirty. Jay was a
listener lunch yesterday along with his beautiful wife, his better half.
Speaker 1 (02:20):
He admits it. We all know it.
Speaker 3 (02:24):
My better half was at listener lunch yesterday too, and
thanks to everybody who made it was a lot of fun.
Saunder Brewery's Westchester location treated us right, hit myself a
nice smash burger and a beer and I won. Yes, Mike,
that's two in a row. Brother cribbage, Mike, I beat cribbage, Mike.
I don't think that's ever happened. I've never had a
(02:46):
winning streak, so I have a streak of two and
playing cribbage with Mike at the tail end of the lunch.
Really enjoyed the time there with the listeners, and of
course it was great seeing Jay Ratliffe there and.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
He will join the program at eight thirties.
Speaker 3 (02:57):
He does every Thursday, Nice light conversation, real id act
now required. Newark a Charlie foxtrot, not Jay's words mine.
Newark airports facing all kinds of problems. I got one
of the runways that's out of commission because it's under
construction or upgraded. The air traffic control system went out.
Isn't it kind of a scary situation. You're on a
plane and the planes can't communicate with the air traffic controllers. Man,
(03:22):
it's bad enough the problems you face with air traffic control.
Two commercial flights forced to go around at DCA Airport
to avoid another army helicopter. And we'll also get an
update on hub delays. All that with Jay Ratliff at
eight thirty. You can feel free to call five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty, five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three
talk pound five fifty on AT and T phones. Since
(03:45):
Zinder's coming up to talk about that Hyde Park Square thing.
If Inquire reported on this, Sidney Franklin doing the write
up on it, I'll give them credit for it. But
what are the things that was revealed? Here are five
ways controversial connected munity zoning may change. And if you're
not in this city and you think you don't care
(04:05):
about this, this is just an illustration of government control,
edicts and mandates from our elected officials telling us how
to live our lives and how developments will be done. Now,
consider the size of the city of Cincinnati, three hundred
plus thousand people, all these different neighborhoods, all these different
architectural styles. You know, your neighborhood might want to keep
(04:28):
be consistent. You know, if you're going to build something,
let's keep it consistent with what kind of buildings are
in this neighborhood. You might object to that. The libertarian
to me says, well, no city government or any government
should be able to tell you how to build or
what to build. I listen, I know there are exceptions
of that. You got safety and other issues. But this
is where the the insanity from this one size fits
(04:52):
all approach comes in the point it's point number two.
Point number one is about changing that. So a super
majority of council and the committees must approve these development
changes or variances or whatever. So but number two update
the design standards so new buildings fit the context of
each neighborhood and the Sydney Flaker reports in the enquire
(05:16):
In the current Connected Communities legislation, the design standards outline
the city's preferred minimums for size, shape, height, and style
of new buildings. Notice I emphasized the word style applies
to two to four family unit structures. Anything larger that
should also follow design standards. Anything larger than that should
(05:38):
also follow a design standards. That's what's the request in
the working group. But listen to this. The standards call
for an Italianate style design on all new buildings, which
says they must therefore have a distinct base, middle, and top,
like mixed use structures found in Over the Rhine. But
(06:02):
it's not the predominant architectural style found in all of
Cincinnati's neighborhood noted by CINCINNTI Preservation Association Executive director Beth Johnson,
one of these members of this working group that's trying
to appeal to the City of Cincinnati to provide some
variants or some changes to this Connected Communities program on
(06:22):
purely residential streets, that type of building is uncommon since
many houses don't have a have separate basis, she said
in the meeting Tuesday. This degrades our neighborhoods and takes
away from that character because these buildings will stand out
like sore thumbs. This working group suggested updating the design
centers for each zoning designation, even plan developments, so developers
(06:44):
are encouraged to design buildings that conform to what's already there. Now,
think about that city Council with this Connected Communities has ordered, oh,
you Neate style design on everything for the whole city.
(07:10):
Isn't that a bit of micromanagement? And where did they
come up with the preference for Italianate style and why
it ignores the realities of what neighborhoods and communities might
want the will of the people ignore no Italianate that's
what's going there. Really, No, I don't want that. It
is going to look stupid. None of the other buildings
around here italian ate style. This dictatorial control from on
(07:35):
high just irks me to no end. And I wish
more people would step up to the plate and complain
about this. And I'm not quite sure that that's what
this Making Connected Communities Better working Group is all about.
Speaker 4 (07:48):
Now.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
They're obviously drawing attention to some of the problems with
this one size fits all legislation or zoning rule that
city council foisted upon everybody. But I don't know, Corey Barlman,
you know, there's an answer out there, and maybe changing
the makeup of city government. I've talked to Corey enough
(08:10):
to know that he wouldn't, you know, embrace this dictatorial
control over neighborhoods. He has witnessed himself the roadblocks that
stand in the way of small developers taking over otherwise
abandoned buildings and trying to better communities, and he questions
why they are doing that.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
I don't know. Well, I do kind of know.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
It's this whole member Agenda fifty one, you know, the
fifteen minute city crap that well that's fundamentally, I believe
behind in the background of what all this is. It's
widely reported I have to have Purvoll views everything through
the lens of equity and climate change and green so
zero flexibility. But I just thought that was a wild
point that there's so much specificity in what type. I mean,
(08:55):
it boils down to the exact architectural style of buildings anyhow.
Five on three, seven, four, nine, fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eighty two to three talk pound five fifty
on AT and T funds and don't forget fifty five
careseea dot com and you can't listen to lie to
the judge Ennita Polaton on how the federal government is
ignoring the Fourth Amendment right to be free of unreasonable
(09:17):
searches and seizures, pointing back to the Patriot Act is
one of the genesis for that and the fies of
courts which have gradually eroded the well the Fourth Amendment
to the point where it doesn't even exist anymore.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
Listen to podcast on that.
Speaker 3 (09:35):
Representative Annapolina from Paulina Luna from Florida Republican yesterday proposed
legislation to eliminate the intelligence community surveillance tools that, she said,
erode American civil liberties. This is right along the lines
what Napoloton was talking about. She said, for over two decades,
rogue actors with actors within our US intelligence agencies have
used the Patriot Act to create the most sophisticated, unaccountable
(09:59):
s valance apparatus in the Western world. She introduced the
American Privacy Restoration Act, a bill that would repeal the
us A Patriot Act, which was enacted after the nine
to eleven terrorist attack. HMM Elizabeth Goytine, Senior director for
(10:23):
the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center
for Justice, talked about how the post nine to eleven
law dramatically increased warrantless survey a surveillance on you, the
American people, pointing out in a variety of contacts, it
became lawful for the government to collect America's an American
sensitive information based merely on a claim that the information
(10:44):
was quote unquote relevant to a legitimate purpose, regardless of
whether the person was reasonably suspicious suspected of wrongdoing. Even
for the most sensitive of information communications content, Congress gave
the nsa free reign to collect phone calls, texts, and
emails between foreign targets that will be your friends in Europe.
For example, I've got one there, I've talked with them before.
(11:07):
Ergo NSA can spy on me. That's a kind of
the cord of their standards. I haven't been suspicions, you know,
there's no suspicion of that I've committed a crime, there's
no probable cause for a warrant in court. But they
can nonetheless spy on me and listening to my communications.
Why because I talk with a guy in France. That's
what this spoils down to. We should mostly be offended
(11:28):
by this, and at least representative Anapoulina Luna gets it.
Judge Antedapolatana gets it. I get it. It's also pointed out,
according to this expert from the Liberty and National Security Program,
there is no evidence that suspicionless surveillance has made us
any safer. It all said, consider the NSA's program a
bulk Collection, the poster job for suspicionless surveillance, in which
(11:52):
the agency obtained America's phone records and MOSS. Two independent
reviews found that this program yielded little to no counter
terrorism aout affinity. There's no evidence that an over collection
is Indeed, there's evidence that overcollection is counterproductive, a point
and a Polatono made yesterday. They collect so much evidence
they can't even filter through it. You think about the
(12:14):
number of cell phone communications in this country and that
they're collecting all of them. Do you think they could
possibly stay up on top of it? I suggested AI
yesterday into Poltona that maybe artificial intelligence will help them
weed through all of the billions and trillions of bits
of information they've got.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Maybe maybe that's one of the reasons it's being developed.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
The point is, though we have a Fourth Amendment, they
need a warrant issued from a judge based on probable
cause to listen to your phone conversation to collect that data.
They don't have it, and they're doing it anyway. Unbelievable.
(12:55):
If we talked to civics in the United States and
people had a firm grasp but what that amendment means
in the limitations of places on government, which was the point.
Our founding fathers were all about these general warrants that
the Brits would use. You'd just kick your door in
rifle through everything that they were sick of it. They
were tired of it. It was an abuse of power.
(13:17):
That's why we have a fourth Amendment. Were returning to
the old days. Interesting tie in. Attorney General Body hasn't
released the Epstein documents yet because there are so many
of them that they're pouring through. A relatable topic to
the point on the Fourth Amendment. Coming up next five eighteen,
(13:38):
fifty five KR City Talk Station.
Speaker 5 (13:41):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station, the Free
I Heard Radio.
Speaker 3 (13:46):
It's five twenty two. It's a five krcity talk station.
Sort of a tie in with the government spying on
literally everybody they want to spy on without a warrant.
Pivoting over Attorney General Body FBI apparently reviewing what she said.
We're tens of thousands of videos related to Jeffrey Epstein
and his sexual crimes against girls, young girls, and they
(14:10):
have to review them before week. We're gonna be able
to see them if we get to see anything. Of course,
if it involves young girls, you can't release sensitive information.
Of course, if it's pornography, they're not going to release
to the general public. But regardless the existence of tens
of thousands of videos quite disturbing. She denied claims from
lawmakers that the files have been destroyed or have gone missing.
(14:31):
And there's the point I want to make on that,
relating to that Fourth Amendment thing. She said, there are
tens of thousands of videos of Epstein with children or
child porn, and there are hundreds of victims, and no
one victim will ever get released. Of course that is true.
Justice Department released hundreds of files previously didn't have any
new information, and I knew people were disappointed upon that
(14:54):
or about that.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Now here's the point.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
Washington Times reported on this House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee chairman James Comber, speaking with a podcaster named Bennie Johnson,
said he's concerned the remaining Epstein files and sex tapes
were destroyed perhaps before President Joe Biden left office to
cover up the government's culpability in the case. Now that's
(15:19):
a theory, but he Comber pointed out the Justice Department
was aware of mister Epstein's crimes as they were taking place,
but didn't intervene in order to acquire evidence. Here it
is to blackmail powerful people from around the world.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
Quote.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
My concern is the government may have known a lot
more and may have been an active participant, maybe with
the intention of intelligence gathering.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
Now.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
Bondi, for her part, denied that any evidence is missing,
claiming the delay is merely because of the sheer volume
of the information the FBI has to review in order
to protect the victims. She claims she hadn't heard about
Comber's claim, but she said she'd call him later to
fire it out. Now that's an important point, and you
might scratch your head from time to time, And I
think this is something else I've talked about with jud
(16:07):
Jennen of Poultano. Why do our politicians do what they
do and say what they say, sometimes completely one hundred
and eighty degrees from what they campaigned on and promised
to do. Is it possible, perhaps that they have the
behind the scenes lettered agencies have the goods on some
of our elected officials. It's certainly a possibility, isn't it.
(16:33):
So you end up impacting policy in a direction that
the powers that be wanted to go in spite of
the fact that it's inconsistent with what a politician might
truly want. Why because we've got a dossier on you
would you like to see it. Oh, look, would you
like this information to be made provided to the general public?
(16:58):
And if you step back one step, if they have information,
and they've gathered information, perhaps illegally according I mean again,
violation of your Fourth Amendment rights to be free of
unreasonable searches and seizures. They couldn't use that in court
if because it violated the Fourth Amendment. But there may
be evidence of a crime there. And you don't necessarily
(17:22):
necessarily have to be dragged through the legal system, do
you in order to have your life completely changed, altered
or otherwise ruined merely by the release of that information. Oh,
there'll be no prosecution, ma'am or sir, but it will
be made public. Frightening thought, isn't it. Five twenty six
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I thoroughly enjoy my dental experience because I go see
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(18:09):
General dentists they are, but also cosmetic dentistry. That is
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rigorous standards doctor Fred Peck had in mind when he
decided to have doctor Meghan Freu joined him, but he
made a great call in that selection. She is outstanding,
most notably for folks who don't like going to the dentist.
She's just got a great I will say chair sidne man,
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Speaker 5 (19:27):
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Speaker 3 (19:30):
Five thirty coming up with five thirty one and fifty
five k RCD Talk station.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Five on three.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
Two three Talk with Pound five fifty If you have
an AT and T phone, Love to hear from you
and welcome back Tom.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
Good to hear from you, brother.
Speaker 7 (19:46):
Morning. How are you?
Speaker 1 (19:47):
I'm doing fine? Look you good?
Speaker 7 (19:49):
Seod good to hear your your comment. Uh, real quick
on the Uh there's a whole zoning thing and uh
the comment that I heard it makes the most sens
is UH change the makeup of government. And people need
to understand that that we have we have the ability
collectively to change the makeup of our government, of our
(20:11):
councils and and the Congress and president whatever. We we
have that ability. Uh, but we just we gotta pay
attention enough. We gotta we gotta take enough time to
to look at things and and talk about things and
actually spend some time on it. And a lot of
people just don't want to bother with it. And and
(20:33):
then that's why you see a ten percent turnout for
these you know, off year elections. You know, in quotes,
I mean they're not off year. I mean every election
is is vitally important somehow some way. You know, issue
too is going to give these people a bunch of
bunch of money, give access to a bunch of money
to do what they want with, you know, and all
(20:54):
these school levies and stuff like that. You know, these
are these are very important issues, and and for ten
percent of the people show up basically tells you that
people just don't give a damn. And that's the shame,
because I'm sure a very large majority of that ninety
percent have no problem bitching and complaining when something's not
(21:14):
going the way they think it should go. Well, it's
up to you to change that. That's your that's your responsibility.
So the main reason I call is this old whole
transgender thing going on and transgender rights as basically, I
don't want to say it's become the new racism because
(21:35):
the Democrats will never let racism go. Racism is one
of those terms where all you have to do is
label somebody racist and you've put a black mark on
them and that will never go away. Oh, Trump's are
racist or Republicans are racist or whatever. But coming alongside
racism now is the whole transgender thing. And He's representatives
(21:58):
are very clear that they're they're loving the two together.
Especially the hearing yesterday on the on the women's rights
and sports and all that stuff. One of the Democrats
actually said, it sounds like we're going back to the
nineteen fifties when segregation was was legal. See that that's
they're they're trying to put transgender and race in the
(22:21):
same category.
Speaker 8 (22:22):
And it's not.
Speaker 7 (22:23):
One thing is something you have absolutely zero control over.
You're born a certain way, as in your color of
your skin, what family you're from, culture, all that stuff.
The other one is is behavior. It's decisions that you make,
simple with boils down to that you were not accidentally
(22:44):
born a woman and you need to become a man.
Speaker 9 (22:48):
To fix it.
Speaker 7 (22:48):
That's not the truth, that's not reality. And there needs
to be adults in these people's lives to to help
these people understand that. I understand there are some mental
issues people have, and I'm not a doctor. I'm not
sending there giving a diagnosis, but it's pretty obvious some
people have some serious issues. I mean, some people think
(23:09):
that they're cats, some people think they're astronauts, some people
think they're all kinds of different things, and it takes
adults in their life to go, well, hold on a second,
let's let's just talk about this, permit it, because this
isn't real, you know, same thing you got to do
with your toddler, your kids, you know, and even your teenagers. Look,
this is not okay. But what the left wants to
(23:29):
do is use this subject to to give them the
ability to control things. And it's and it's wrong. It's
flat out wrong to let people to continue to believe that,
you know what, you were born this way, but really
you should be this way, and we're with you, We're
here to support you. And if, oh, anybody that doesn't
want to let them do whatever they want to do. Oh,
(23:51):
you're against their rights, and you still have the same
amount of rights that everybody else has. All the rights
in the Constitution are yours. You don't get any different
rights just because you think you're a man but you're
actually a woman. It's ridiculous. So it's up to us
back to the original point, to change the makeup of
our government so we don't have these idiots in there
(24:12):
her are using these things to control the rest of us.
So don't vote Democrat.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Have a great day, Brian.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
Thanks Tom, He's got to let him go. Get it
out of his system. Make some good points, though, some
really good points. What more can I say? You elaborate
on that? It's a five point thirty five fifty five
k C detalk station. Feel free to call I gotta
stack this stupid to dive on into. But you know,
if you want to get it out of your system.
(24:39):
Five on three seven four nine, fifty eight two three
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locations and have them shredded. Yes, they will be completely destroyed, obliterated.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
You know how it works. And they'll take care of
all that for you.
Speaker 3 (25:15):
So you got a big volume of documents, Emory's happy
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Speaker 5 (25:37):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 6 (25:39):
What if you had an extra thousand dollars ed.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
It is five forty one. I took five kers you
talk station.
Speaker 3 (25:47):
Are very happy Friday Eve to you feel free to
coffee life five on three seven nine fifty five hundred
eight hundred eight two three TALKO with found five fifty.
If you have an AT and T phone, your choice
on that and otherwise stack is stupid, and you know
I have.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
In the more serious.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
Realm, there was an article that I saw, maybe I'll
get to later about this online neo Nazi cult targeting
children as young as nine years old. And the FBI
has issued a warning to you to keep your eye
and keep an eye on your children about their online activity,
what they're doing, and some of the warning signs and
(26:27):
signals that they may be a victim of one of
these these grooming efforts that's going online. They basically get
your kids to do stupid things like take nudy pictures,
or abuse themselves, or abuse animals. So it's twisted as
it can various actors gets in touch with them and
pivoting over to the stack of stupid. We've got a Lexington,
Kentucky mother named Holly La Favors set her eight year
(26:50):
old son Liam, ordered seventy thousand lollipops and had them
sent to their home. Used his moms Amazon account to
send twenty two cases of dumb, dumb lollipops to their home.
She said he told me that he wanted to have
a carnival and he was ordering dumb dumbs as prizes
for his carnival, blaming her son was being friendly and
(27:13):
being kind to his friends. Four thousand dollars charge showed
up on her bank account because the activities of an
eight year old online. So when I saw what the
number was, I just about fainted. Unaccounted for eight of
the cases twenty two got delivered, eight cases unaccounted for.
She went to the post office and found that they
had been returned. To send her jash for a refund
(27:34):
took her a while, spend a long day of working
with the bank and talking to a few news stations.
Amazon then called and said they'd be refunding her money
in order to prevent another order like this. Mom said
she has changed some settings on her phone, so there's
an eight year old able to you know, close a
(27:54):
transaction four thousand dollars and that's a little bit disturbing.
Again giving the FBI warning that came out about your
children's online activities. Here's one of the made rounds on
social media. Pet raccoon found with a meth amphetamine pipe
in the driver's seat during a police stop.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Woman's been arrested.
Speaker 3 (28:12):
A woman arrested after the raccoon named Chewy found holding
this meth pipe on the driver's seat of her car
what police are calling a strange encounter on patrol in
the state of Ohio. Half a Monday, seven to fifteen pm,
Springfield Township police officer Austin Branham conducted a traffic stop
(28:33):
on South Arlington Road, identifying the vehicle whose registration a
registered owner, had an active warrant and a suspended driver's license.
When the officer approached the car found fifty five year
old Victoria vil Vidal of Akron, able to detain her
without incident quote. However, things took an unusual turn this
according to the police statement, his officer Brandon returned to
(28:54):
the vehicle, he observed the raccoon named Chewy sitting in
the driver's seat with a meth pipe in his mouth.
Chew had somehow gotten a hold of the glass methan
fetamine pipe, leading officers to further inspect the vehicle. Police
did confirm Chew he was a pat raccoon and then
he was not a wild animal, after Vidal had the
appropriate paperwork and documentation to own him, but subsequent search
(29:16):
of the vehicle revealed that her car contained a bulk
amount of methan fetamine, crack cocaine and three.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Used meth pipes as a tradition.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
Charged with f three possession of drug, three counts of
possession of a drug paraphernalia cited for driving under suspension.
Also subsequently turned over to the Caihoga Falls Police on
her active warrant, where additional charges related to crack cocaine
possession will be presented with grand jury pending lab results.
Please said, thankfully, Chewy the raccoon unharmed. A notifications made
(29:45):
of the proper authorities to determine that she has the
proper paperwork and documentation to own the raccoon. While our
officers are trained to expect the unexpected, finding a raccoon
holding a meth.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
Pipe is a first.
Speaker 5 (29:58):
The Aristocrat.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
Authorities confirmed no raccoons were hurt or injured in the incident.
Five fifty five K see the talk station. Plumb type plumbing.
It's always plumbing done right, outstanding plumbing work from Plum
Type Plumbing. It's one of the reasons they enjoy a
plus the better business for their customer. Service is fantastic,
no service, fees, free estimates, and you deserve better.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
They know that.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
That's why they try to step it up to the
next level and providing service and superior plumbing. Some pump problem,
no problem called plumb tight. Got clogged drain, no problem
called plumb tight. And you know, I didn't realize this,
but plump tight advised me that multiple clog drains, if
you're dealing with that, that could be an indication you
have a sewer line problem. And if you do have
(30:47):
a sewer line problem, they'll figure that out. They can do.
They do trenchless sewer line repair so they don't have
to dig up your yard. It's a really cool thing
that they offer from plumb Tight. Also the Tri State's
number one installer of tankless water heaters. Save huge amounts
of base, get rid of that massive tank, save some money,
and have endless hot water with a unit that lasts
longer than a traditional tank. Great reasons to get a
(31:08):
tankless system from plumb Tight Plumbing online. You'll find them
at plumb tight dot commember tight is te plum tight
dot com five one three seven two seven tight. That's
five one three seven two seven eighty four eighty three.
Speaker 5 (31:20):
Fifty five KRC Leo Schofield.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
H Channel I weather forecast around noontime. This has got
a chowers and the storms might pop up and even maybe
some hail. Seventy for the high today, down to forty
five overnight with decreasing clouds, a sunny Friday with the
highest sixty seven, sparse clouds every night forty four, and
a partly cloudy Saturday with a dry weekend.
Speaker 1 (31:44):
Seventy one for the high Saturday right now fifty nine.
Speaker 10 (31:46):
Time for traffic from the UCL Traffic Center. When it
comes to stroke, every second count. Sin's why you see
how this is the clear choice for rapid life saving treatment.
Speaker 6 (31:54):
Learn more at you can see health dot com problems.
Speaker 10 (31:57):
Early this morning, an accident east found two seventy five
before you got the five.
Speaker 6 (32:02):
Mile currently has Aul Wlaan's blocked off.
Speaker 10 (32:04):
Traffic starting to back up towards Kellogg Cruiser also working
with the wreck above Ross that's on one twenty eight
near ross Milldale.
Speaker 6 (32:12):
Chuck Ingraman fifty five KRC deep talk station.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
Yeah five fifty fifty five kr CD talk station.
Speaker 3 (32:23):
Looking forward to hearing from John Zencer seven thirty Save
Hyde Park Square organizer about what's coming up for Hyde Park.
Given these city councils, edicts and mandates UH seven fifty
eight hundred and eighty two to three, talk all right
over back over the stack is stupid. Let's see in
the smoking gun a regular source of stupid, A nurse
(32:46):
has been accused of shoving cheesy nachos down the leggings
of her wife during a three am domestic battery. What,
of course, which state you think we're in, right, Florida?
As a t be'st going to say, forty year old
victim was making nachos with nacho cheese in the kitchen
when her spouse, Alison Swan, thirty nine, told her she
(33:08):
shouldn't be eating this late and made a comment about
her weight.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
Oh what.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
During the argument that ensued, Swan, who'd been playing video
games in the living room, walked over to her spouse
and grabbed it a handful of cheesy nachos, shoving them
down the back of her leggings. When the victim, who
also happened to be a registered nurse, which is unimportant
to the content of the article and the reason it's
in the stack of stupid, I might observe subsequently sought
to change her clothes. Swan allegedly dragged her to the
(33:34):
floor and shoved her fingers into either side of her
mouth and hooked them like a fish, and continued to
batter her by grabbing her head and slamming it to
the floor multiple times. What During the confrontation the court
of the victim, Swan made several comments that she was
the one in charge and that her wife was not
(33:56):
behaving just A friend of the victim called nine to
one one to report hearing via an open phone line
Swan striking the spouse. Police responded the couple's Port Saint
Lucci residents. This was Saturday morning. Swan denied, and at
a physical altercation occurred. She claimed her wife had been
in a drunken rage and had thrown the plate of
(34:18):
nachos and rolled around and covered hersel and covered herself
in nachio cheese. However, whatever examination of the victims legging
revealed what appeared to be nacho cheese on the interior backside,
consistent with the story, the other woman gave a substance
resembling nacho cheese found smeared on a wall. The victim
also had a nod on her forehead and a scratch
on her right arm. And while Swan claimed her spouse
(34:43):
had thrown the nachos, cops found a ceramic plate that
they were prepared on was in fact completely intact. Swan
arrested for domestic battery misdemeanor. She was free from the
county jail after posting a two hundred and fifty dollars bond.
Ordered to have no contact with the victim, must stay
away from the woman's car, place of employment, and home.
(35:08):
Since she resides with the victims, she may have to
return to the residents accompanied by police to get her
belongings away. Amen Joseph may have an award to give out.
Registered sex offender. That's enough to give the award out
right there. Registered sex offender urinated into a holy water
(35:29):
font in a Pennsylvania church, courting investigators who have charged
a fifty one year old suspect with desecrating the sanctuary.
Jesse so Call, arrested last month, entered the Saint Patrick
Catholic Church in York. Wandered around the building, which was
unlocked and opened to the public. After browsing through the
Lost and Found box of the church, vestibule, he approached
(35:51):
the pedestal containing the holy water. Police officers who prepared
the probable cause affidat to note that the pedestal is
considered an object of generation and that so called desecrated
it by polluting it with urine, all recorded on security camera.
Of course, even churches have them. Church work are confirmed
(36:13):
that the holy water was indeed contaminated with urine. SoCal
identified as the suspect after a review of his prior
booking photos, arrested for intentional desecration of a venerated object,
second degree misdemeanor, carrying a maximum penalty of two years
in prison five thousand dollars unsecured bail. He was free
on scheduled for preliminary hearing in some time in May.
(36:35):
Rap sheet includes convictions for theft, criminal trespass, reckless driving,
disorderly conduct, driving without a license. Also convicted of indecent
assault without consent, which is why is required to register
as a sex offender after getting out of custody.
Speaker 1 (36:51):
Custody all right.
Speaker 11 (36:54):
Period is the biggest two sho of the universe.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
Oh the galaxies.
Speaker 3 (37:01):
There's no bigger douche than you.
Speaker 12 (37:04):
You've reached the top the pinnacle of Douche do good goingdue.
Speaker 1 (37:11):
Your dreams have come true.
Speaker 3 (37:16):
According to my executiveducer, Joe Strecker, who is an internet
research guru, I was given credit for that. If you
are Catholic or you care about the pope, they don't
have one yet. They just released some black smoke, So
that's two days of black smoke, no pope yet. As
a tradition, yeah, I think that is tradition. It'll happen
soon enough. I saw an interesting thing the late pope
(37:41):
appointed like the vast majority. It's cardinals who selected Pope, right, Joe.
The ones in red, I mean an overwhelming majority were
selected by Francis. So it's going to be interesting if
the left leaning folks were among those that were selected
by him to become cardinals.
Speaker 1 (37:57):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
I don't pay attention to Catholic politics. Stick around, I
got more to talk about the six o'clock Hour'd love
to hear from you. If you feel like Colin, feel
free to do so, but I'll.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
Be right back after the news. Huge happens fast, stay
up to date at the top of the hour. Not
going to be complicated. It's going to go very fast.
Fifty five krs the talk station. Aaron, I've got an idea.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
It is six six here fifty five per CD talk station.
I'm Thomas swishing everyone a very happy with I like
to call Friday Eve run down coming up. John zinz
Or joins the program at seven thirty. He's with the
Save hyde Park Square. He is a Saved hyde Park
Square organizer. We're going to find out from him his
perspective on what's going on next in Hyde Park.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Seven thirty.
Speaker 3 (38:42):
Of course, that the Connected community foisted upon all the
residents of the City of Cincinnati in all neighborhoods, and
then a variant from connected communities to let the well
connected developer develop the hotel that exceeds the maximum height
that the Hyde Park residents won. So lots of layers
(39:02):
on that one make a change in city council.
Speaker 1 (39:06):
November.
Speaker 3 (39:08):
Corey Bowman, doctor James Thorpe, he's been on the program before.
His book Sacrifice, How the deadliest vaccine in history targeted
the most vulnerable. That'll take place at eight oh five,
and then I heard media aviation expert Jay Ratliffe. Always
enjoy talking to Jay. I enjoyed talking to Jay yesterday
at Listener to lunch. It was wonderful seeing him there
and his beautiful wife. Real id act now required. He'll
talk about that. Also, Newark Airport a colossal Charlie Foxtrott
(39:31):
my words, not his two commercial flights were forced to
go around at the DCA Airport again because of an
army helicopter. Those are the topics of Jay Ratliffe and
maybe I'll come up with another one. Thanks again everybody
made to the Listener lunch. Wonderful seeing the smiling faces and haha,
two in a row. I won my cribbage game Withage
my submarine or friend. Always great seeing the folks at
(39:53):
Listener lunch. I certainly enjoyed the fellowship and props. And
thanks to my wife for showing up as well. She
had a real nice time. Uh five three seven, four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to
three talk pound five fifty on at and T funds.
You know, Tom made a comment about this transgender thing
going on, and there was apparently a hearing yesterday and
(40:13):
just children basically are elected officials representatives just getting into
an argument over this hearing on trans athletes in women's
sports described as descending into chaos. At least that's the
Fox News boiled down version of according to the headlines,
And I did see that, and this parallel was in
(40:34):
fact drawn by one of the Democrat elected officials representative
who equated it to racism, that if you don't believe
that a guy who claims to be a woman is
in fact a woman, that somehow that is analogous to racism,
which is a preposterous concept when you it really doesn't
take much thought and break down to realize how ridiculous
that is, you know, disliking someone or excuting someone like
(41:01):
for example, men in women's sports, excluding them is because
they have a biological advantage because they have testosterone, and
they develop differently, and their bone structure is superior to
women's in certain ways. And I don't mean superior in
the sense of degrade women and their value or anything,
but you all get the idea. Demonstrably, men are better
(41:23):
at least to have faster times. Look at the world records,
as I always like to boil it down to go ahead,
look at all the world records and all the sports.
You will find out that men's times and scoring is
typically in most cases I believe in all cases higher
than women's. So that's it. And you have two sets
(41:44):
of sports activity. You have women's sports and men's sports.
Men's plaining, I am, I understand that, but because of
the differences between the sexes in terms of strength and speed,
that's why you have two different divisions, And to allow
men into the women's division, why don't you just erratic
eight genders in sports? And that way women won't be
able to participate at all. They'll never be able to
(42:06):
win or at least in almost all the sports, except
for things like maybe darts or ping pong or something.
I don't know if there's a male advantage in sports
that don't require physical activity, but let's not you know,
consider that kind of thing. So do you want women
to have their own sporting events where they can compete
(42:26):
among their own sex or not? And I think most
people like it the way it is. And we do
live in a democracy, don't we, right? Isn't it the
left always running around talking about ending democracy? What happens
in democracies? I know we live in a constitutional republic.
I'm not talking about that, but just in terms of
(42:47):
the democrats running around screaming about the end of democracy,
isn't it majority rules in a democracy?
Speaker 1 (42:54):
And since the.
Speaker 3 (42:55):
Vast majority of Americans of all political stripes are against
men participating in women's even if that man believes in
his heart that he is in fact a woman, you
applied democratic principles in this and Americans would say no.
So you want to put it to a vote. Put
it to a vote. Otherwise, don't run around and force
this issue on other people. But that's exactly what's going on,
(43:16):
and with a lot of harm coming with it. And
I pivot over to this. Virginia father said yesterday that
Aloudun County public school official launched an investigation into his son,
as well as two others, for questioning why a biological
female student was in the boys locker room. It's the
(43:39):
flip side of the sports argument, court to May fifth
report from Northern Virginia news outlet WJLA, reporting the biological
female student who identified as a male, recorded the three
male students in the locker room talking about being uncomfortable
about the transgender student being in there. The student this
(44:02):
transgender student allegedly filed a complaint which turned into a
formal Title nine investigation for sexual harassment by this school district.
A guy named Seth wooks Wolf, speaking with Fox and
Friends So yesterday, said that his son, sophomore at stone
Bridge High School, won three boys in the locker room
(44:22):
that day. He said this was a conversation that he
was having among his peers. He wasn't even questioning this
student or anything like that, and then not being able
to have those rights to even question that, and on
top of that being investigated. He described it as very confusing.
I would have different words for it than that. Founding
Freedom Law Center attorney Josh Hetzler. Of course, had they
(44:45):
lawyer a lawyer up. This is the lawyer representing the boy,
He said. I want to make it very clear, these
boys did absolutely nothing wrong. All they did was ask
why is there a girl in our locker room? And
the express concern. None of the boys ever both with
this girl once. So there's no basis for the investigation.
And are they not entitled to their own opinions Along
(45:07):
these lines, he said, the school's gender policy violates state
law and federal policy, according to him. Referring over to
President Trump's order, he said, that's a big problem for them,
and we're going to have to address that, the attorney said,
it's truly an insane situation where the ones who are
the real victims of the ones being punished, and isn't
(45:29):
that the truth. Virginia Governor Glenn youan Can announced on
Tuesday he and Attorney General Jason Maias we're looking into
this locker room incident at the school district, calling it
deeply concerning to read reports of yet another incident in
Loudun County schools where members of the opposite sex are
violating the privacy of students in locker rooms. Well, thank you,
(45:51):
Governor for stepping up to the plate. School district released
the statement saying that they have their policies and blah
blah blah blah blah. But this is that, you know,
leftist mentality shoving down something that is contrary to the
vast majority of Americans belief systems that they're going to
(46:13):
get their way.
Speaker 1 (46:14):
Now.
Speaker 3 (46:14):
Who's whatever happened to democratic norms and principles? And there
is no parallel with this issue and racism unless they're
going to engage in some sort of mind control effort
where we can ignore chromosomal and biological reality. I mean,
we got the winning argument on our side. If you're
(46:36):
of my mindset, a person cannot become a different sex.
Speaker 1 (46:40):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (46:41):
You can't on a biological level anyway, the person is
in need of some counseling. They call it gender dysphoria
and pivoting over. A journal wrote on this and I
had a Department of Health and Human Services therapy for
minors of dyspoyer rather than mutilation, and just change the
(47:03):
policy with the Health and Human Services.
Speaker 1 (47:06):
Jonah wrote.
Speaker 3 (47:07):
The latest good news is report released last week that
assesses the scientific evidence of pediatric gender medicine receive less
attention than it deserves. Four hundred and nine page study
from the Department of Health and Human Services reviews the
evidence about gender dysphoria among children, and I suppose kids
in high school are children too, and the various treatment
(47:28):
options amounting to a rebuke of the political and medical
conformity that has developed around gender identity, including radical treatments
that are opposed by parents. Evidence reveals deep uncertainty about
the purported benefits of medical interventions like pubity blockers, cross
stress horms, across sex hormone treatments and surgeries. Course to
(47:49):
the HHS report, treatments carry risks that include infertility, sexual dysfunction,
adverse cognitive impacts, and psychiatric disorders. This is giving you
these surgeries and these gender are these hormone treatments giving
in to that twisted notion that somehow you can alter
your biological reality. Sewing something on or candle or cutting
(48:10):
something off doesn't change one's gender. It creates complicating and
disturbing realities in that person's life on a going forward basis.
And especially when you're talking about young people who often
change their mind. You ever change your mind when you're
a kid? Yeah, treatment for gender dis for you? They
(48:31):
right among miners today is quote characterized by a child
led process in which comprehensive mental health assessments are often
minimized and beauty blockers and surgeries are promoted. That in
the report, medical associations have created, in their words, a
perception that there is a professional consensus. That consensus driven
(48:54):
by groups like World Professional Association for Transgender Health. They've
got an agenda. Biden Justice Department cited that organization World
Professional Association of Transgender Health guidance and it's challenged the
Tennessee law banning gender transition treatment for minors. So you're
listening to the transgender advocacy group in establishing HHS policy
(49:20):
which will allow this to move forward? Is that not
backcrop insanity. HHS study now consists with the UK's twenty
twenty four cast review that found little evidence of purbity
blockers and the like improved the mental well being of children.
Other European countries, including Sweden and Finland, have also backed
(49:42):
away from such medical treatment. That's the direction everybody's going.
This is a fad. We're allowing the alteration and mutilation
of children in pursuit of a fad that everybody's waking
up to realize that, oh my god, this is actually bad.
Five eighteen fifty five kr CD talk station Tommy, hang on, brother,
(50:04):
you don't mind holding on for a moment. I'll take
your call when we return. After these brief words, first,
starting with Gate of Heaven Cemetery. You know, especially when
you engage in a conversation that heady, you might want
to pause and exhale and quietly contemplate maybe the meaning
of life, engage in some prayer, meditate a little bit.
Gaya Heaven Cemetery is open to everyone for that enjoyment.
(50:26):
Just the park like setting alone give you an exhalation
opportunity live in the moment. Rinding roads, pathways, monument statues,
shrine seasonal flowers, the beautiful trim lawns, reflective water features.
It is, indeed a tranquil atmosphere, the perfect location for
that prayer and reflection. So you can find comfort and
peace and the cemetery's quiet reverend surrounding. So take them
(50:49):
up on the offer to walk on in ministering to
the tri State for over seventy seven years, an honoring
life on sacred ground. Learn more online check it out
at Gateofheaven dot org. Fifty five car the talk station.
Speaker 6 (51:03):
Men is good enough, really what you want?
Speaker 3 (51:06):
Jenna and I Weather Forecast share around noontime as some
storms may show up along with possible hail and even
up to an inch your range. Otherwise, just the cloudy
day and I of seventy overnight little forty five clouds
will decrease, leaving us a sunny Friday and a pleasant
sixty seven high overnight down to forty four and on
Saturday at partly cloudy day, dry weekend.
Speaker 1 (51:28):
They're saying seventy.
Speaker 3 (51:29):
One will be the eye on Saturday fifty nine degrees.
Right now, let's get a traffic update, Chuck, did you.
Speaker 10 (51:34):
See how tramphic center when it comes to stroke to
every second counts. That's why you see Health is the
clear choice for rapid life saving treatment. Learn more at
uc health dot com. Highway Trafford, do we fine once again?
Earlier issues eastbound two seventy five near five mind been
taken care of northbound seventy five. There's no delay into
the cut and so of yet Cruise are cleaning up
(51:56):
a rec on one twenty eight near ross Millville. Chuck
Ingramont depied KRNCY the talk.
Speaker 3 (52:01):
Station MIS six twenty two the Happy Friday Eve to
you five one three eight hundred eight two three talk
both time five fifty on AT and T phones. Remember
fifty five KRC dot com for the iHeartMedia app.
Speaker 1 (52:15):
Tommy, thanks for holding over the break. Welcome to the
morning show.
Speaker 13 (52:18):
Good morning, sir, we'll talk today. Well, I thought I
would call to you. Had questioned whether UH women and
men can compete against each other in UH non UH
physical sports. Yeah, Well, the World Chess Organization, in their
sanctioned UH competitions, they do not allow men to compete
(52:42):
against uh uh women because men have an unfair advantage.
Speaker 6 (52:49):
Oh kay, And what Yeah, I know, I.
Speaker 13 (52:52):
Know that there's a lot of people out there that
there's no way, but I'm telling you that the World
Chess Organization, at the highest levels of competition, they do
not allow men to compete against uh women.
Speaker 3 (53:08):
Well, that flies in the face of those who argue
that women have an at least an equal intellectual ability
as men. I mean, I think we all sort of
spring from that proposition, I know.
Speaker 13 (53:20):
I do you know, Yeah, you know, sir, I think
that that maybe it just comes down to that uh
that that that men for whatever reason or more a
depth at that. You know, there are other things too
that like you know, generally speaking, men are better at,
like like uh maybe fichine or stuff like that when
it comes.
Speaker 1 (53:40):
To a competitive environment. Yeah, you know.
Speaker 7 (53:43):
So, I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 8 (53:45):
I don't either.
Speaker 3 (53:46):
I don't know by what authority they came up with that,
you know, division between men and women in chess. I'd
like to see the research of the science behind how
they reach that conclusion. But if you look at all
the world champions in chess, I think they have typically
been it has been dominated by men. I've never seen
when you see the World champion chess match, I've never
(54:07):
seen a woman involved in that, so I guess there
could be something behind it. But you Brian Thomas is
not on record saying women don't have at least an
equal when it comes to intellect. No, Brian never said
that the World Chess Organization apparently, Tommy, thanks for calling.
I was not aware of that, but I said that
out loud. I was thinking about like darts. You know,
(54:28):
if there's a championship in darts, then I don't see
how there could be an advantage for men over women
on that because it doesn't take physical strength to throw
a dart at a dart bird. It takes the ability
to actually land the dart, of course where you want
it to go on a dartboard. I mentioned ping pong.
I don't know if there's you know, an agility advantage
(54:49):
men have over women, But it doesn't take physical strength
to play ping pong. But those are the outliers and
the vast majority of sports. I mean know what I'm
talking about here, running and lifting and boxing too. Six
twenty five. Dave, you're on the line. Hold on if
you don't mind. I have to take a break right
now and get to mention to you where I was
(55:11):
yesterday Foreign Exchange. I got my car service. I had
a heaplow to work done on it. It's the big
maintenance that you have to do every so often, and
that was my day.
Speaker 1 (55:24):
Spark plugs, break fluid filters.
Speaker 3 (55:28):
Oh my god, the filters were awfully, awful, awful, So
I got to see that. They showed me pictures of it.
Had a couple other things I needed to know about.
They checked the tread on my tires, and I was
glad that they did that. I mean up and down
the line. A lot of service, including the oil change,
and I bet, I bet, I saved one thousand dollars
over the dealership. I taken it to Foreign Exchange. It
(55:48):
was a big bill, but nowhere near what it would
have cost at the German dealership where I would have
had to take it had it gone to the dealership.
So this is the point of Foreign Exchange. I did
get a full warrantam parts and service to the car
runs out. It runs like aces now, not that it
didn't really much before, but it seems noticeably improved in
terms of acceleration, I checked that out this morning, since
I was in traffic coming home from Foreign Exchange yesterday.
Speaker 1 (56:10):
But yep, running like a top.
Speaker 3 (56:13):
So it's the foreign exchange advantage because you save a
heapload of money. A SEU certified master technicians working on
your car, and they have access to the manufacturer's technical information,
whether you're imported cars from traditionally manufacturing in Asia or Europe.
Told me a story about the Honda that was in
there somebody else's and the dealer actually lied to the
hondowners said there were no codes thrown, none at all.
Speaker 1 (56:36):
Austin said, he hooked it up.
Speaker 3 (56:37):
He's got the same software Honda has and found all
kinds of codes. He got in touch with the dealer,
who ultimately fessed up to that. How about that foreign
X dot com foreign letter X dot com Westchester location
off Tylersville Road five one three six four four twenty
six twenty six five on three six four four twenty six,
twenty six.
Speaker 5 (56:55):
Fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 6 (56:58):
Turn out you old Rady. Oh, here's a Sean Hannity
Morning Minute. The amount of lawsuits.
Speaker 2 (57:06):
This is where the Democratic resistance is getting worse and
worse daily. Got all these activist, legal groups, elected officials,
local jurisdictions. Now we now have the full numbers on
Fox News Digital. More than one hundred and fifty lawsuits
against the Trump administration since January twentieth in response to
(57:28):
more than ninety executive orders as well as executive proclamations
and memos. And the president has long been a legal target,
which hit a fever pitch during the twenty twenty four
election cycle when Trump faced four criminal indictments. All of
this is designed to stop and who surf the constitutional
authority of a president. Check out the Sean Hannity radio
(57:52):
show later today right here. Now, don't get suckered into
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Speaker 3 (59:00):
Here is Channa nine weather forecast. Scattered showers and storms
show up around in Tune. May get some this morning,
but apparently there might be some hail and some areas
they say may get one inch of rain. Cloudy, David,
the most part seventy for the high overnight little forty
five with decreasing clouds, leaving us a sunny Friday high
at sixty seven. Sparse clouds every night, with a little
(59:21):
forty four Saturday. It's gonna be a dry weekend, they're saying,
and Saturday is going to be partly cloudy, fifty nine degrees.
Right now, Time for a traffic update, from the u
SELF Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke, every second count.
Speaker 10 (59:33):
So that's why you see health is the clear choice
for wrapping life saving treatment. Learn more at u sehealth
dot com. Stop found two seventy five Loading up now
between the Lawrence Perd ramp and the work on the
Carrol Cropper. Everything else on the highways doing just fine
and I'm not seeing any weather.
Speaker 6 (59:49):
It's used to deal with. Chuck Ingram on fifty five
care see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (59:55):
Six thirty one fifty five fair Seed Talk Station.
Speaker 3 (59:58):
Feel free to call five one three seven Fournine fifty
hundred eight two three talk and day. Thank you for
holding over the break. They're welcome into the morning show.
Good to hear from me this morning.
Speaker 14 (01:00:08):
Good morning, how are you.
Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
I'll doing well? Man, hope you can say the same.
Speaker 14 (01:00:12):
Beautiful suns. I coming up head and east on T
senty five.
Speaker 8 (01:00:15):
Traffic's nice.
Speaker 14 (01:00:16):
So one question I had is, could I know the
Supreme Court makes statements about stuff. Could they just put
a statement out there of the duties of the President
and all things brought against him that he's doing to
his job will be struck down the Supreme Court? Could
they put that statement.
Speaker 3 (01:00:32):
Out in an opinion or just issue a blank state,
a blanket statement. I don't think they just issue statements.
You need to have an a justiciable controversy in order
to be in front of them.
Speaker 14 (01:00:43):
So I mean, well, with all these one hundred lawsuits
against the president, could they say these are his duties
and we will support the president's role on these duties.
Speaker 3 (01:00:50):
Never in a broad brush no, because you can have
executive power abuse and they might put their foot down
and say no, you can't do that from the executive branch.
Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
You don't.
Speaker 3 (01:00:58):
You don't have that authority in the concert. That's the
role to determine whether what is being done is within
the confines of the Constitution and the law.
Speaker 4 (01:01:07):
So the other thing I was wondering, I never entertain,
uh the ideas of didn't needs to be transgendered or
called transvestites?
Speaker 1 (01:01:18):
Yeah, I guess, uh huh.
Speaker 14 (01:01:21):
And then why are we going to as why do
we go to a softer name to make it sound
better around the table?
Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
I don't know there's a softer name. It doesn't sound
too much different to me. I mean it's not like
I don't know it's and actually I think it's pretty
more definite more definitionally accurate transgender, because you're speak speaking
specifically about gender, I don't know. Transvestite doesn't accurately define
(01:01:47):
what we're talking about. Although definitionally speaking, I believe there's
no difference between the two. I don't find either of
the words shocking or insulting. So maybe within the transit
they do the programs.
Speaker 14 (01:01:58):
I always call it die.
Speaker 1 (01:02:00):
Because they I know.
Speaker 14 (01:02:03):
And then also with yesterday with the Catholic Church saying
they won't report crimes against children if theist in confessional booth,
what does the Bible say to going against them? If
you harm a child, it's better to take a stone
and put around your neck.
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
Well, they're being hypocritical.
Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
See Now that's the difference between what is written in
the Bible and Catholic doctrine and dogma. I mean, we
could make arguments all day long about different different theologies
and whether or not what they practice is consistent with
the Bible's teachings.
Speaker 1 (01:02:32):
But you have confession.
Speaker 3 (01:02:33):
Within the confines of the Catholic Church, there is that
concept of confession, and it is subject to their own rules, regulations, edicts, mandates, whatever,
and they say. Within the Catholic church, that that is
purely private. It's between you and the priests, and therefore
it's between you, the priest, and then God, and the
priests can't reveal anything that's revealed in in in the
during that process. There's nothing about that in the Bible.
(01:02:56):
To the best of my recollection, I don't profess to
be a theologian or an expert in any particular theology
or any particular religion. But therein lies the challenge. If
you're confessing to a crime against a child to your priest. Now,
whether or not that he can relieve you of the
sin by having to do hail marriage or not, that's
a different thing. Again, that's part of the Catholic doctorate
(01:03:17):
and dogma. But I'm with you in that it seems
inconsistent with Christianity to not turn that person in or
reveal that information to the authorities. Because there's a child involved,
and that child is being harmed or was harmed. That
person has confessed to criminal activity of the most heinous form,
(01:03:38):
And I mentioned that yesterday. How could that priest live
with himself knowing that perhaps that abuse is ongoing. I
find that to be the heaviest of weights. I mentioned
the folks who do special crimes in the police department,
they see that type of material online, they see the
type of material that's been made. They know that the
child has been and maybe can may still be being
(01:04:00):
molested by this pervert. Yet they've got to gather enough
sufficient evidence to prosecute a crime, and it takes some
time to do that. So they go home at night
every night knowing that somewhere out there there's a child
that may be subject to some horrific abuse. And the
weight that that brings about to me, I don't know.
(01:04:20):
I couldn't manage it. And when my sister went through it,
when she was doing special crimes for the Sinsint Police Department,
it took a terrible, terrible psychological toll on her. It's
a horrific weight. Looking at that material alone would bring
just things. Thinking about it brings bill up in the
back of my throat. And people have to do that
for a job, protecting the community and the children within it.
Speaker 15 (01:04:42):
No.
Speaker 3 (01:04:43):
Sorry, went off in a bit of a tangent. Hank
and Donnie, you don't mind holding for a moment. I'll
get to you. It's already six thirty six and I
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Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
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Learn more about all those seven zero eight three thousand
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Speaker 16 (01:05:51):
Com fifty five KRC, the talk station made for this
mountain exists.
Speaker 1 (01:05:56):
To him.
Speaker 3 (01:05:59):
General get yes, and it sound like it was a
nice day out there. I can't have no windows, so
I don't know. Anyway. Around noontime they just see scattered
showers and stores may show up. Could get to an
inch of rain in some places that maybe even hail.
Otherwise it just do mostly cloudy day seventy for the high,
down to forty five overnight Tomorrow, sunny skies and a
pleasant sixty seven high forty four overnight and partly cloudy
(01:06:20):
day on Saturday, the weekend.
Speaker 1 (01:06:21):
They say we'll be dry. It'll be dry on Saturday anyway,
seventy one to the high. Then it's fifty nine. Right now,
it's time for traffic updates.
Speaker 10 (01:06:28):
Probably you see up traffic center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you See Health does the
clear choice for rapid life saving treatment. Learn more at
you seehealth dot com. North found seventy five continues to
run under seven minutes out of irline go into downtown
South found two seventy five. It is the heaviest of
a highway. Traffic between the Lawrence Burn ramp and the
bridge had a couple of extra minutes. Chuck Ingram on
(01:06:50):
fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:06:54):
Hey's six forty here fifty five kercde talks days, Very
Happy Friday, Eve to you.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Go to the pones.
Speaker 3 (01:07:00):
Hank and Donnie will both kind of up the holder
of the brake order in which they received, which means,
Hank first, hang on, Donnie, we'll get you in a minute. Hank,
welcome to the show. Thanks for calling up this morning.
Speaker 9 (01:07:09):
Good morning again, Brian.
Speaker 12 (01:07:11):
I was reading something a while back. It was an
interesting comparison of ideas of what would happen with the
transgender and heterosexual and all that stuff. And basically the
idea was, if you took one hundred heterosexual men and
women and put them on an island that had adequate
(01:07:35):
national natural resources, you came back in one hundred years,
you'd find a small thriving community of senior citizens, men, women, children.
The usual if you take one hundred men and one
hundred transgender women and put them on that same island.
You're going to come back in one hundred years and
find the skeletons of two hundred men.
Speaker 8 (01:07:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:07:56):
Yeah, there's logic and reason of that. That's why there
is a distinct scientific difference between the two sexes. I'm
just illustrating the factual reality of that, Hank, And that's
why I am happy to stand here and firmly committed
to my understanding that you cannot change your sex period.
Speaker 1 (01:08:14):
End of story.
Speaker 3 (01:08:15):
It's that mighty python routine from a life of Brian.
You know, I want to be a woman. Well, why
do you want to be a woman because I want
to have babies? Well, you can't have babies. You don't
have a womb. Where's the fetus going to gest date?
That's the point in a box? Under your baby in
a box? Right, What are you going to put it
in a box? Yeah, exactly, good point, Hank. It's an
undeniable truth. It is a fact, an undeniable fact. And
(01:08:40):
yet this is a group of people who want you
to just ignore that factual reality and give into this
notion that that particular small segment of the population is
that they are indeed someone else in terms of their
sexuality or sex not sexuality gender. And I've always said
(01:09:00):
I can live side by side in a free society
with a person who believes they are a different sex,
but you can never force me to buy into that proposition.
That is my right as a human being to acknowledge
scientific reality and just say, well, okay, you're struggling with something,
but that's okay, you don't want to get counseling and
(01:09:21):
therapy for it. Some say that you know in counseling
and therapy is inappropriate, and of those that they different opinions.
Opinions are like sphincters. We all have them, even within
the medical community. But you can't impose your will or
your thought process on me. You can't tell me I
must deny the scientific factual component that exists in this discussion.
(01:09:45):
I'm entitled to that right, and the majority of people do.
Going back to my different democracy point earlier, who's arguing
about democracy? If you're talking about facts, logic, and reason,
you having an argument like this, I think the scientific
reality will win out over the day, and the majority
of people, as they do, poll after poll after poll
after poll across the political spectrum, are on my side
of the equation on this that men should not compete
(01:10:07):
against women when it comes to sports. Donnie, thanks for
bearing with me there, Welcome to the program. Thanks for
calling up this morning.
Speaker 17 (01:10:14):
How's it going, mister Thomason. I was just gonna piggyback
off the chest.
Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Guy.
Speaker 17 (01:10:17):
I think we're downplaying how good man is considering we've
won Woman of the Year twice.
Speaker 3 (01:10:27):
There you go, you have a good day holding a
nick that point. Okay, so man and the Woman of
the Year, and along those lines, who are you dealing
with in connection with that, You're dealing with a left
wing mainstream media phenomenon and probably magazine. I guess Time
magazine Man of the Year if it's in fact a
(01:10:48):
woman or vice versa Woman of the Year as a
man a man competing in a beauty contest. Now I again,
I go back to defending women along these lines. Yeah,
I suppose that's a lot more level playing field, because
if you're really going to evaluate beauty along traditional beauty
lines and you know, find and say what you want
about beauty contest, I'm no necessarily fan. We all have
(01:11:11):
our different views of what is and is not beautiful.
You know, at least these are subjective judges subjectively determining
in their mind what is in fact beautiful, and they
may have a political bias along those lines in order
to advance the transgender agenda. They might find that a
man dressed as a woman is more beautiful. That's up
(01:11:32):
to them. You and I may draw different conclusions. No,
I like the girl on the end there, she's better looking.
Six forty five fifty five Karasiti talk station. It's absurd, really,
isn't it it. I just think this is really uniquely desired,
not uniquely just designed to be one more layer of
(01:11:54):
fostering and encouraging division within our culture, and that ultimately
have truly believe is the goal. Here is no one
that really truly buys into that idea that you are
in fact a different sex when you declare it so.
Speaker 1 (01:12:08):
But that if it's it's just such a thorn.
Speaker 3 (01:12:10):
In the side of so many people because it flies
in the face of everyone's consciously. I did logic and
reason like my point on the whole biological reality of it,
that they do it just to cause us well, angst
and anger and stir the pot of the visuals in society,
especially when it comes to school districts. Adopting that bat
crap insane philosophy six forty six, the draph careacy, doogs Zation,
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Speaker 1 (01:13:57):
Foam fifty five KRC.
Speaker 3 (01:14:02):
Here's around nontime is see some scatter showers and stores
may show up and maybe even an inch you reign
in some areas impossible. Hail I have seventy to day
with lit the last floudy skies clouds a decrease over night,
dropped at forty five. Get a sunny Friday with the
highest sixty seven forty four again over night and on
Saturday at partly flotty day.
Speaker 1 (01:14:20):
They say it'll be a dry weekend and the.
Speaker 3 (01:14:22):
Highest seventy one on Saturday fifty nine. Right now, sign
for traffic update.
Speaker 10 (01:14:26):
From the u SEE Health Traffic Center. When it comes
to stroke, every second counts. That's why u See Health
is the clear choice for rapid life saving treatment.
Speaker 6 (01:14:33):
Mern Moore at UCHealth dot com.
Speaker 10 (01:14:36):
Highway Triumph for the most part, in decent shape, like
southbound seventy one less than twenty minutes from above field
zurdle into downtown inbound seventy four, so okay, past col Ring.
It's south two seventy five. That's those between the Lawrence
Perg Ramp and the bridge. Chuck Ingram on fifty five
KR a scene the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:14:56):
Six fifty on a Thursday, and a happy Thursday two.
I'm enjoying the conversation with the callers this morning. You're
going to have more right now, starting with Linda Moreen
hang on Linda's first. Linda, thanks for calling the show
this morning. Good to hear from you.
Speaker 15 (01:15:09):
Hey, good morning, Brian. I'm calling about the transgender stuff,
and I don't know what's wrong with parents. Don't they
remember when they grew up, they'd see someone on TV
and they think.
Speaker 18 (01:15:23):
I want to be them, yeah.
Speaker 17 (01:15:25):
Or you had a.
Speaker 15 (01:15:26):
Group of kids, I want to be them. I always
want to be someone else. And growing up we find
out who we are. Nobody told us, oh, gosh, you
must be trans because you don't know who you are.
They actually let us grow up and go to work
and find our own way. Indeed, if I just don't
understand parents not relating to the fact that their kid
(01:15:51):
doesn't know who they are, it is appalling to me.
And why is all this stuff done in secret? Well, yeah,
yone knows it's wrong.
Speaker 3 (01:16:01):
Yeah, to to your point, school districts and teachers who
are instructed never to disclose to the parents what's going
on with the children. Most notably that the child wants
to identify as a different sex. That to me is
extremely harmful and it denies parents the opportunity to maybe
have a conversation with their own children about exactly what
you're saying, Linda. And that's part of the Health and
(01:16:21):
Human Services shift in direction on this from the Biden
administration of the Trump administration. They release that report. They
make a point of noting that that quite often children
will go through different experiences and change their mind and
so that's why they're against allowing these puberty blockers and
surgeries on children, because children change their mind, and quite
often these things are it can't you can't unring the bell.
(01:16:43):
They are permanent. A mass sectomy can't be undone. And
sometimes these puberty blockers do long term damage to the
child's growth and development, and that rebel can't be unwrung.
So don't do it. Allow them to develop at least
to the age of eighteen, where considered under the law
to be legally adults and capable of making their own
decisions under the law, get married or into contracts, buy
(01:17:06):
a car, that kind of stuff. It's yeah, so Maureen's
got Moriene, welcome to the program. Thanks for calling.
Speaker 19 (01:17:15):
Hi, Good morning, Brian. I don't know if you remember
when I first met you was at Sebastians at the
listener lunch.
Speaker 1 (01:17:22):
Do you go back that far?
Speaker 19 (01:17:25):
Oh, my twenty years ago?
Speaker 3 (01:17:27):
Yeah, I was with like twenty people would show up, Max,
so you could actually go to Sebastians.
Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
I love that place. That brings back memories.
Speaker 19 (01:17:35):
It's good, but I know we weren't allowed to talk
about politics back then, so instead of being able to
talk to you about anything. I brought you a packet
of information and it was about twenty pages and it
was the Globalist Agenda dot org. Yeah, and you can't
find it. You can't find it anywhere on the internet
right now. It's scrub but there are books. But anyway,
(01:17:57):
the end game of all this globalist agenda, it incorporates
different things media, culture, education, philanthropy, NGOs, science and technology,
but medisine is one of them, and the endgame is depopulation.
So kind of it seems like everybody have on covers
that in some way, like Jack Atherton's discussion of Hollywood
(01:18:17):
yesterday touches on media and just the whole ruining of
the culture is what I think. And then also you
have James Thorpe on today and you're discussion, you know,
about what's happening with pregnancies and the injection and that
sort of thing. It's they're non viable. And then also
now you're talking about transgender All of this relates to
(01:18:37):
their endgame, which is depopulation in one form or another.
You have these transhumanism and these blended sexes. You can't procreate,
and what's the endgame depopulation? Well, I don't know if
you saw. If you're familiar with Katherine Austin fits, she
is a former United States Assistant Secretary of Housing and
Irving Development under the Bush administration. She was on Top
(01:19:00):
Carlson last week and she did with this people need
to tune into this if if you can find it
on YouTube, says Catherine Austin sits and Tucker Carlson discussed
the United States has twenty one million dollars of taxpayer
money used to make underground cities for the rich to
hide in a near survival.
Speaker 14 (01:19:18):
Tunes Day event.
Speaker 1 (01:19:19):
Yeah, I did see that.
Speaker 19 (01:19:21):
Yeah, so what's the goal here? Get rid of all
of us and they go hide in this underground city.
I know it sounds crazy, and I sound OK.
Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
Yeah, I no, no, no, I know I was.
Speaker 3 (01:19:33):
I was going to chime in on that craziness element
of that story, because you know, people say crazy crap
all the time. There are people out there in my
listening audience maybe that even believe in lizard people and bigfoot.
Speaker 19 (01:19:42):
You know, well, I don't know that far.
Speaker 1 (01:19:45):
I'm glad to.
Speaker 3 (01:19:45):
Hear that morning because I like you and I think
you're a reasonable, common sense type of person.
Speaker 19 (01:19:52):
I just want to get that out there's some people
can check out that video of themselves or that yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:19:56):
Yeah, And you know, there's there's also another element that's
going on in this this and whether it's the Malthusians
out in the world that want to you know, limit
the population or not, and there's certainly are a lot
of them out there. This whole feeling of despair and hopelessness,
which is you know, a product of I believe a
lot of the division that is sowed online. It makes
it really convenient to sew the division when you have
(01:20:17):
this internet thing that we have now. But the willingness
of young people to have children these days has been
diminished dramatically. Look at the population replacement figures. I mean,
we're look at Japan for example, look at our own
We're not having enough children to even meet our current
and maintain our current population, so that it's reflected in
the statistics. But if you are growing up in a
(01:20:39):
world where nothing but you know, woe is me, that
oh my god, we're all going to die at Fiat
currency's going to collapse, there's no jobs out there, you
can't afford a house anymore. YadA, YadA, YadA, YadA, YadA,
despair and hopelessness is sown, and it's like, why would
I want to bring a child into this world? And
I know you've probably read articles along those lines where
people actually say that out loud. I've seen some left
articles about some left that get sterilized, women who had
(01:21:02):
their ovaries removed because they don't want to have a child.
Young women. Going back to the idea that you might
want to change your mind. You know, you might meet
somebody down the road and you might realize that, you
know what, having a child is a beautiful and wonderful
natural thing, but you can't do it because you pulled
the trigger and made that decision when you were a
(01:21:22):
young person, influenced by all of these well outside elements.
I think there's a lot of truth in that six
fifty six fifty five k see talk station coming up
seven thirty Johnson's or Save Hyde Park Square organizer. That'll
be at seven thirty. We have time to talk between
now and then I'll be right back us.
Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
Happens fast, stay up to date. At the top of
the hour.
Speaker 14 (01:21:42):
We're moving very quickly at.
Speaker 6 (01:21:44):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
The talk station.
Speaker 20 (01:21:47):
This report is sponsored by a Tree.
Speaker 1 (01:22:02):
It's seven six Happy five kr CD talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:22:06):
But everybody's having a decent Thursday. Bryan Thomas welcoming phone call.
Has been enjoying the conversation this morning five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty, five hundred, eight hundred and eight to two
three Talk POUN five fifty on AT and T phones.
Coming up bottom of this hour. John Zinser, he's an
organizer with Save Hyde Park Square. We're talking about what's
next for Hyde Park after the City of Cincinnati decided
(01:22:27):
they were not entitled to determine their own destiny by
way of Hyde Park Square development. And this strange, strange
thing that's going on, this Making Connected Communities Better working
group that's been meeting with CINCINNTI Council proposing ideas how
to so called strengthen Connected communities by changing it just
summing it all up. Since anti Council imposed this Connected
(01:22:49):
Communities on all the neighborhoods in the City of Cincinnati,
even though some of them didn't want it, some of
them did zoning mandates and edicts, including which blew my mind.
The standards of the Connected Communities require an Italianate style
design on all new buildings, even though that Italianate style
is not in all the neighborhoods in the city of Cincinnati.
(01:23:12):
But no, we're gonna have one size fits all. This
will be the building style, a distinct base, middle, and top,
like the mixed use structures that are founded over the Rhine.
And it's reporting from the Cincinni Inquirers Sidney Franklin. Anyway,
I just found that to be just unimaginable. I mean,
the dictatorial control that they have over everybody. You will
(01:23:35):
conform to this particular model that we live in a
free society. Anyhow, bit of a tarror on that one.
And going back to you know, some of the points
Marine made. You know, maybe it is population control, these
edicts and mandates from government, and the craziness that was
springing from our conversation about the transgender issues. You know,
(01:23:58):
we got a kid in one of these school districts,
County School District, just talking to his friends in the
boy's locker room about the fact that a girl is
in there, a girl who claims to be a guy,
and that they're supposed to abide by that and they're
not entitled to their own opinions, opinions which you know,
I don't share with those advocates on the trans community
that we're supposed to believe that they are in fact
a guy or sometimes in a case of men being
(01:24:20):
in the women's locker room, a girl.
Speaker 1 (01:24:22):
They're not.
Speaker 3 (01:24:24):
It's an obvious biological difference when they take their clothes off. Oh, look,
that bit shouldn't be in here. So the child gets
in trouble with the school district because he talks amongst
his friends sort of questioning why is there a girl
in here? And so of course it led us to
a broader conversation on that topic. But here's another component
(01:24:47):
of this division, and obviously the globalists of the world,
and it's undeniable that they find borders to be a problem.
This is why the Biden administration opened our borders to
a horrific horde of people flowing into our country, unregulated,
with no connection to American ideology, no connection to the
constitutional framework that we enjoy, the idea of this republic
(01:25:09):
that we enjoy, and the idea that the Constitution limits
government and its ability to control us, and limits government
in the sense that is not allowed to rifle through
our effects and papers. We have a fourth Amendment, we
have a first Amendment right to free speech, free exercise
of religion. The freedoms we enjoy are unknown to the
vast quantities of people that flow across our border. They
(01:25:30):
have no connection with our culture, and that may be
one of the nefarious reasons behind why they open the
borders and let these tens of millions of people come
into the United States to water down our culture, and
with that I pivot over and the United Kingdom. For example,
according to an IPSOS poll that was released that happened
(01:25:53):
to coincide with victory in Europe day the formal surrender
of the Nazis to the Allied Nations in nineteen forty five,
forty eight percent of Brits would not fight for their
country under any circumstances. Thirty five percent said they would
be willing to put their lives on the line of
protect the United Kingdom. This is a sense of patriotism
(01:26:14):
that is evaporating in the UK, and I'm certain it's
happening here too. Seventeen percent said they were unsure. This
is a post of a poll published in The Daily
Mail over the weekend. Stark difference among the sexes, forty
nine percent of mens saying they would take up arms.
Twenty one percent of women said the same thing. Also
(01:26:35):
a difference among political affiliations, supporters of the anti Brexit
Liberal Democrats being the least likely to be willing to
defend the nation. Niseel Fazer former UK Party were found
to be the largest cohort willing to sacrifice their lives
to protect their country from f for example, foreign invasion,
but again it's under any circumstances. Big difference in a
(01:27:00):
as well. People aged eighteen to thirty four most likely
to actually sign up to fight forty two percent. Although low,
it's still compared to twenty eight percent of those thirty
five to fifty four year olds. Commenting on the decline
of patriotism among Brits, there's a retired British Army officer
(01:27:20):
and veteran of the Afghan and Iraq wars, Richard gill
I Guess, speaking with The Daily Mail. The fact that
so many would refuse to fight for Britain is a
symptom of a deeper national malaise. We've stopped teaching pride
in our country, its history and its value. A nation
unsure of itself cannot expect its people to defend it.
(01:27:42):
That must change. And if you hear those words and
you sort of reflect on where we are here in
the United States, don't you think that that is something
that is in fact being taught and foisted upon us
the whole sixteen nineteen project hate your country, the idea
that they don't teach civics in class anymore in public education,
they'll learn about the reason the founding fathers established the constitution,
why the revolution happened in the first place. They aren't
(01:28:06):
doing the pledge of allegiance in the school anymore. They
aren't supportive of our nation and its values and what
it means to be an American and live in a
free society versus a tatalitarian regime like China. That doesn't
happen anymore. And one could easily conclude that, of course
(01:28:27):
that's by design. Globalists don't like nationalism, and I think
one of the things where the hatred for Donald Trump
springs from this flies in the face of their globalist agenda.
And of course you can easily tie in this climate
change alarmism into the whole equation as well. Reducing economic
(01:28:50):
might by virtue of statute and laws and reduced ability
to produce energy, energy is the key component to financial
wealth and development. And if you take away a constant
energy supply that allows for factories to produce and if
for industry to work well, then factories will produce, an
industry will work. Taking it away reduces the ability of
(01:29:11):
production of thus profit and strength. It's just, you know,
issue by issue by issue seems to all be connected
on some way. Now you may think I'm some sort
of crazy conspiracy theorist, but you know, the truth is
in what you see in front of your very eyes
and the realities of it. There's no sense of national pride. Oh,
you're a xenophob if you'll love your nation really? No,
(01:29:35):
not really. I mean I have pride to my nation.
I'm happy they live in a free society. I'm allowed
to be proud of the United States of America. I
mean we did help stop the fascists, the National Socialist
Party in the form of the Nazis, Mussolini, right, I
thought those were good things.
Speaker 1 (01:29:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:29:56):
If you rewind the clock, and if you take today's
modern fulhilosophers and modern politicians and you spin back the
wheels of time, I think maybe they would have been
on the side of Hitler and the Nazis dictatorial control,
an all powerful pull the trigger, say what I say,
what I want and it happens. That kind of thing.
That's the type of thing that they want to bring about.
(01:30:17):
They scream about the evil oligarchs. Bernie Sanders on his
Oligarchy tour, yelling about we need to take the power
away from the oligarchs. You know what he's lying to you,
That's exactly what he wants. He just gets He wants
to pick and choose which oligarchs tells us, to tell
us the terms of conditions of our lives. That's it's
nefarious as well. Let's see what Harry's got. Harry, welcome
(01:30:39):
to the show. Thanks for calling this morning. Oh Terry,
I'm sorry I saw Harry on the screen up there.
Speaker 1 (01:30:46):
I apologize. Oh yeah, good morning, good morning. Yeah, that's funny.
Speaker 21 (01:30:50):
You mentioned xenophobia, Anda Duram Chernobyl. When the Liquidators would
complain about getting sick because the radiation levels, they came
out and said, well they suffer from radiophobia.
Speaker 1 (01:31:06):
Just you know, just just add a note there.
Speaker 7 (01:31:09):
You know, they come up with these phobias.
Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
Yeah, radiophobia.
Speaker 21 (01:31:12):
Yeah, I'm a fear of dying of radioactivity. You know,
because I'm on top of radioactivity. You know it's it
must be me.
Speaker 3 (01:31:20):
They made up the word to suit the time you
got it.
Speaker 21 (01:31:24):
But you know, on the other thing, you're talking about
kind of dumb degrees, and you said these dumb art
degrees earlier in the week. Well, if we don't have
dumb art degrees, how are we gonna tell between a
real hunter Biden a fake hunter Bidy.
Speaker 3 (01:31:38):
You know what, I didn't take that in to consideration, Terry.
I should have thought.
Speaker 1 (01:31:42):
Of that right away.
Speaker 3 (01:31:43):
I appreciate the call man seven sixteen, Kevin, You're next.
Hang on, brother, I'll be happy to take your calling
and get back. First, I would recommend strongly Chimney Care
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Speaker 1 (01:33:03):
Dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:33:04):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 11 (01:33:08):
Made for this mountain. Exists to empower listeners to rise
above off Chedea I and first one to weather forecast.
It's around noontimes, some showers, the storms.
Speaker 3 (01:33:18):
Should show or could show up, possible hail, and some
areas maybe getting an insuring. I don't write it, I
just read it. Mostly clouding overcasts. Otherwise with the highest
seventy overnight little forty five. We have a sunny day
tomorrow with the highest sixty seven h sparse clouds overnight,
dropping to forty four Friday night, and then Saturdays it's
gonna be a dry weekend they're saying, and partly cloudy
(01:33:38):
skies on Saturdays. Seventy one will be the high end.
Right now, it's fifty nine and time for a traffic
update Chuck from.
Speaker 10 (01:33:44):
The UC Help Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke co,
every second counts. That's why you see health as the
clear choice for rapid life saving treatment. Learn more at
u sehealth dot com. Loading up growth found seventy five
and getting close to a five minute delay out of
Arrowmonger now into downtown southbound two seven tventy five continued
slow between the Lawrenceburg ramp and the bridge and now
southbound seventy five. I had a couple of extra minutes
(01:34:07):
through Lachland. Chuck ingramon fifty five KR and see the
talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:34:12):
It's seven twenty one. It's Thursday Friday, Jay Ratlip at
eight thirty. Looking forward to that. We'll hear from doctor
James Thorp. He's going to return to eighty oh five.
We had him all before sacrifice. How the deadliest vaccine
in history target are the most vulnerable. We talk in
COVID with the good doctor and John zins are of
course in the next segment about the Hyde Park and
Hyde Park Square. In the meantime, over the phones we
(01:34:32):
go Kevin, thanks for calling this morning. Good to hear
from you.
Speaker 22 (01:34:36):
I just want to say this transgender stuff is there's
a problem, all right, it's a psychatric problem. If you
are not sure what you are, go find a full
length mirror, employer pants an any orn aality.
Speaker 3 (01:34:57):
That's where I hang my hat on. No pun intended. Yeah,
there's no denying. And traditionally you know the diagnostics and statistics, man,
you'll always identified it as you engendered. This for you
and that's what the Department of Health Human Services is
now saying. Counseling, not hormone replacements, not surgery, not enabling counseling.
(01:35:29):
And that's where I stand on it. And unrelated news.
This is an amazing thing and totally unrelated news. But
I saw an article on Epic Times, Epoch Times, Epic Times.
I'd like to say Epoch because it's easier to figure
out Epoch Times, dot Com, Epoch although that's like a
tomato tomato kind of thing. But they had an article
China ramped up fentanyl precursor production to target the United States.
(01:35:52):
They called it Project Zero in the Epoch Times or
Epic Times, speaking with a dissident named Yuang Hung being
living in an exile in Australia. He was a teacher
in China Jiju Normal University in Southwest China, taught there
ten years and Pee King University, taught there for eight years,
and apparently is exiled because he's a dissident and maintained
(01:36:15):
connection with some of those who hold key positions in
Chinese political legal system. And he said the Chinese regime
has dubbed this thing Project zero, secret Project Unleashed during
President Donald Trump's first term in office, for the purpose
of weakening the United States by scaling up production of
fentanyl precursors and shipping to Mexico in Canada, where they're
(01:36:35):
manufactured into fentanyl and then distributed across the border. This
was a purposeful exercise in the part of the Chinese
Communist Party. Add this to an element of war without
waging war. It's like the attacks on our internet. It's
frightening stuff. Turn thegittal, Pam Bondi said earlier in the week.
(01:36:56):
On Tuesday, authorities made one of the biggest fentanyl busts
in US eleven and a half kilos of the drug,
including three million pills. Also said thirty five kilos of
meth amphetamine, three kilos of mess, seven and a half
kilos of cocaine, four and a half kilos of heroin
also seized, along with five million dollars in cash, and
(01:37:18):
just parenthetically, forty nine rifles and pistols. Sixteen people, including
three women, arrested in the operation. Six of the males
in the United States illegally. Oh yeah, there's that. The
leader of the group happened to be a high ranking
member of the Sinaloa cartel living in Salem, Oregon. Drugs
were distributed in the Albuquerque, New Mexico area, Phoenix, Arizona,
(01:37:39):
as well as in Utah. And here's where the alarming
thing comes in. Ag Bondi pointed out that all of
the fentanyl pills were stamped as oxy conone and came
in various strengths, and that nefarious element is because fentanyl
is now found in all of the street drugs that
you buy anything illegal, for cocaine to weed and everything
(01:38:01):
in between, if you're buying it from a dealer, or
the possibility of it having fentanyl, and it is a
genuine possibility. So you think you're getting an oxycodon tablet,
you don't want fentanyl, but you may end up dying
of an overdose or addicted to fentanyl, which apparently is
extremely addictive, not that oxycodone is not, but a concerted
effort on the part of the Chinese Communist Party to
(01:38:25):
undermine the United States of America, create a bunch of
a nation of addicted people, whether you intend to be
addicted or not. Seven twenty five ifty five KRST the
talk station Let's Talk Hyde Park with Todd zend Or
Johnson's or rather he's joining the program next after Cover
since he a strong recommendation to do yourself a huge
service and make an outreach effort to get in touch
(01:38:46):
with John Rowlman and the team at Cover Sinsey for
medical insurance. I don't care what time of year it is,
it's always a good time to get in touch with
a team. What they'll do with no cost to you
is look at your current insurance situation. If you're uninsured,
definitely give them a call, because you know, taking care
of your of yourself, you're gonna end up at the
hospital at some point. Maybe you're definitely gonna have some
(01:39:07):
sort of medical experience. You need to talk to a
doctor from time to time, but you don't want to
go into that out of pocket responsibility. They can get
you dollar one coverage and they can get you the
catastrophic coverage and everything for a lot less money than
you probably currently paying. Couples with the under sixty five
save in thirty to sixty percent on their medical insurance
with better coverage. That's because they are your medical insurance broker.
(01:39:28):
They're working with hundreds of insurance companies with access to
thousands of policies, and they will create a package of
insurance just for you and your situation. You're working in
an employment office, you got maybe twenty thirty people there.
Small businesses get in touch with John and the team.
If you can't afford medical insurance for your employees, or
your employees won't take you and take you up on
what you're providing because they can't afford ninety five hundred
(01:39:50):
dollars out of pocket. John can solve that problem. He'll
look at every single employee in your group because everyone's
different and everybody's at a different point in life. Save money.
And again, they're with you throughout the entire process, and
they're with you after you getting sure through them because
if you have a problem with the insurance claim, they
will solve.
Speaker 1 (01:40:07):
It for you.
Speaker 3 (01:40:07):
You don't have to even pick up the phone other
than to reach out to cover Sincy to do that.
Five one three eight hundred two two five five that's
five one three eight hundred call online. It's Coversincy dot com.
Speaker 5 (01:40:19):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:40:22):
Time Fordy Channel nine first forty one forecast.
Speaker 3 (01:40:25):
They're saying, around noontime we'll get some storms showing up,
possible thunderstorms and maybe some hail.
Speaker 1 (01:40:32):
They say it's going to be scattered. I don't know.
I just read it slotty.
Speaker 3 (01:40:36):
Otherwise, HI have seventy forty five overnight with just a
few clowns leaving us a sunny day on Friday with
the highest sixty seven, sparse clouds overnight drop into forty four,
and a dry weekend with a high at seventy one
on Saturday and partly cloudy skies fifty nine.
Speaker 1 (01:40:51):
Now time for traffic.
Speaker 10 (01:40:53):
From the U Scout Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why you see health is the
clear for a wrap up by saving treatment.
Speaker 6 (01:41:02):
Learn more.
Speaker 10 (01:41:02):
Had you see help dot com northbound seventy five and
an extra five out of Burrow Linger into downtown southbound
seventy five, you'll need a couple of extra minutes in
and out of Blackland. Still no accidents on the highways
to where we're about. Southbound two seventy five continued slow
between the Lawrence Burg ramp and the bridge Kingramont fifty
five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:41:25):
It's seven point thirty here pea five kr CE talk
station pushing everyone a very happy Thursday and welcoming to
the fifty five KRC Morning Show. A man who's interested
in what's going with hide Park Square. Hyde Park Square
organizer Todds ins or Todd's or John Rather, John, it's
good have you on the program this morning.
Speaker 1 (01:41:41):
Thanks for joining the show. Glad to join it to
thank you, Brian.
Speaker 3 (01:41:45):
And I think my listening audience is quite familiar with it,
because I've talked about it a lot. I found it
rather insulting that since a city council refused to give
into what the residents of Hyde Park one in terms
of zoning. First they foisted connected communities on all of
the Cincinnati neighborhoods without input from the neighborhoods. And then
they offered an opportunity for a waiver two connected communities
(01:42:06):
requirements to these well connected developers to put in a hotel,
which obviously is going to dominate the landscape of Hyde
Park Square because of its height, as well as the
fact that maybe it's a hotel that people don't want
because of congestion and traffic and everything else that goes
along with that development. Now do you get to sense
I saw all the signs and I knew it was
well organized campaign in favor of Hyde Park residents determining
(01:42:28):
their own destiny. Do you get the sense in the
community that everyone's a little bit angry about what the
council did.
Speaker 18 (01:42:36):
I think anger might be a little bit strong of
a turn. There are definitely a lot of upset people,
and I don't want to be clear, this isn't a
Hyde Park issue.
Speaker 1 (01:42:43):
This is a city wide issue.
Speaker 18 (01:42:45):
You mentioned connected communities, fifty two neighborhoods across the city.
Of those fourteen other communities took votes to support Hyde
Park and asked council not to do this. For other
civic organizations also joined in with us and said, don't
do this. This isn't what should be happening. The numbers
(01:43:06):
that the city council saw were off the charts like
nothing else previously. This starts all the way back in
January with the Planning Commission staff event, which was a
zoom call. They had sixty some speakers, sixty three sixty
four speakers. Four of them were four, the others were opposed.
They had over seven hundred pieces of email for that
(01:43:29):
event back in January. Then we you know, fast forward,
go through all the steps the Planning Commission meeting. Then
you have the committee, the Equitable Growth and Housing Committee.
Then you have finally the council vote. At every one
of those steps, they saw overwhelming public turnout, email, phone calling,
(01:43:51):
et cetera, and effectively a deaf ear And to me,
that's what's important right now. Save Hyde Park Square is
a referendum. We are working to get the petitions that
we need in order to put this on the ballot
in November. We need about fifteen thousand signatures in a
little under a month, So we are working hard at that,
(01:44:14):
and we are doing it citywide because this isn't an
issue just for Hyde Park. City Council isn't listening to
you regardless of where you are. And I think most important,
I think this ties in very much with what I
understand you focus on a lot that city council has
literally said we're uninterested in neighborhood councils, community councils in particular.
Speaker 3 (01:44:38):
Well, and that's maybe why I characterize it as anger,
because candidly I feel anger on behalf of each of
those neighborhoods because I find it insulting you. This turns
the concept of representative government on its head.
Speaker 18 (01:44:52):
I completely agree with you on that, and I think
Certainly there are people and there are neighborhoods where the hanger,
I would say, is higher and lower. I think everybody
in part case frustrated and perturbed about the lack of listening.
I know there's some other neighborhoods who have had huge issues.
And sure, if you want to say anger, I just
want to be careful with the word like that.
Speaker 1 (01:45:12):
I get it.
Speaker 3 (01:45:12):
I mean again, I don't want to put words in
your mouth or anybody else's mouth. That's my personal feeling
because again, the concept of representative government, we elect people
to speak and and and provide and exercise the will
of the people as opposed to what they have on
their mind or whatever direction they want to go.
Speaker 1 (01:45:31):
This is like after example.
Speaker 18 (01:45:33):
Of this of this council, this administration saying we know
better than you do and we're going to do what
we think is right. You've been touching on connected communities.
I'm no expert on that, but I have some familiarity
with it. The council from theyre has consistently said we
know what the city needs more than you the people
(01:45:56):
know what the city needs. That's a challenge.
Speaker 1 (01:45:59):
I want.
Speaker 18 (01:46:00):
Aren't people lending ideas, bringing thought forward. But I know
there's a famous Japanese proverb, none of us are as
smart as all of us. And if we do not
involve the neighborhood councils, if we do not involve citizen voice,
we are not going to do the best things that
(01:46:20):
we can do.
Speaker 3 (01:46:22):
John Zenzer, let's pause, we'll bring you back. We'll talk
about the website, we'll talk about how people can get involved.
And I want you to contemplate this. You know this city,
you know rit large, It's made up of all those
different neighborhoods, of fifty two neighborhoods, each of which is
its own sort of environment within the broader scope of
the city, all with different needs, wants, in different architectural structures.
(01:46:44):
We're going to talk about that concept as well as
what's the next phase in this with John Zenzer again,
Save Hyde Park Square dot org seven thirty five right now.
If you have kiousy TOALX stations, stick around John to
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or do it the way I prefer. Call them up
to schedule the appointment five one three five two one
ninety eight ninety three five one three five two one
ninety eight ninety three.
Speaker 5 (01:47:53):
Fifty five KRC The Ford Oval of.
Speaker 3 (01:47:56):
Honors Channel nine First Warning Weather forecast, not to say
scattered showers and storms may return. It should happen around noontime.
They mentioned hail being a possibility, as well as some
areas maybe getting.
Speaker 1 (01:48:07):
An inch of rain.
Speaker 3 (01:48:09):
Cloudy otherwise, I have seventy forty five overnight with some
clouds decreasing, sunny skies tomorrow with high sixty seven but
a few clouds every night that own of forty four,
and the weekend's going to be dry, Saturday partly cloudy
and seventy one fifty nine Right now, traffic time.
Speaker 10 (01:48:25):
From you see up Trampics Center when it comes to
stroke to every second comps. That's why you see health
as the clear choice for wrapping life saving treatment.
Speaker 6 (01:48:32):
Learn more.
Speaker 10 (01:48:33):
You see help dot com really beginning to slow down
down south Fens seventy one between Field Zurtle and Fifer
southbound seventy five break lights just below Tylersville towards Union Center,
then through Wachmann and bound seventy fours, an extra five
minutes coming down the hill from North Bend chun Ingramont
fifty five krs deep talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:48:54):
To shy seven forty fifty five KRCIT talk station. Brian
Thomas talking with John Zinzer, concerned citizen behind at least
one of them, behind Save Hyde Park Square, which you
can find online at Save hyde Parksquare dot org. They're
circulated petition for a referendum. It has to be filed
to Nullifi City Council's April twenty third decision to approve
(01:49:15):
this planned development zone change for Hyde Park Square in
spite of the fact the Hyde Park residents didn't want it.
And you know, John, the website is quite revealing. I
don't know that I had seen. I'm certain I hadn't
seen what it is going to look like after this
development is put in.
Speaker 1 (01:49:29):
It is really something, isn't it. Oh my god.
Speaker 18 (01:49:32):
It's like dropping a container ship into a historical neighborhood.
Speaker 1 (01:49:36):
Great way, great way to put it.
Speaker 3 (01:49:40):
So, you know, in case you were thinking, oh, what's
the big deal, you should see how huge this is.
Speaker 1 (01:49:45):
It's just inside and I got nutray.
Speaker 18 (01:49:46):
I mean, that's a piece of paper and that's a drawing.
You know, when you stand in front of a building
of any mass, of any size, you go, my gosh,
that's a building.
Speaker 1 (01:49:55):
It's huge. It's big.
Speaker 18 (01:49:57):
It's not a piece of paper. If they build that thing,
the feeling in the square will be lost forever. And
it just that's what the citizens on one level are
most concerned about. This is a neighborhood. Cincinnati is made
up of fifty two neighborhoods. You were saying this before
you headed out to the break. Every neighborhood has its
(01:50:19):
characteristics and its specialness, and that deserves That's one of
the things that makes Cincinnati if I may Cincinnati, and
that's why the citizens here are taking action right now.
This is not the way we should go about development.
I'll say one more thing about Hyde Park and then
when I kick it back to the city for a moment.
(01:50:39):
We are not opposed to change, to growth, to advancement.
We are opposed to this project. I heard you talk
in the earlier segment you returned about connected communities. I
know you have an issue around being told what to do. Again,
I'm no expert on connected communities. This neighborhood and no
neighborhoods to have something dropped on it that it doesn't
(01:51:03):
have a say, And what's it going to look like?
What's it going to do to the traffic, What's it
going to do to our day to day rhythm. That's
something every neighborhood deserves to have a voice and a
comment on rather than having a developer alongside some city
council people who are worked together over and over again,
(01:51:24):
the ease with which development can happen in Cincinnati. There's
a miss out there that we're a hard place to
build something. We're actually of the forty seven communities that
were rated, we were the forty fourth, meaning we were
the third easiest place to build something. What needs to
change now we need to get this on the referendum.
We need volunteers. I would love people listening to us
(01:51:46):
right now. Went to Save park safehid parksquare dot org
and signed up to become someone who would move a
petition around, get some signatures different events. Really need to
talk with people in the different parts of the city.
Said earlier, we have multiple neighborhood councils who are supporting us,
other civic organizations who are supporting us. But we need
(01:52:07):
we just need a lot of people to help us
put this to a referendum, get a vote in November,
and I believe that vote could begin the process of
reversing the tide. There's been this long, steady tide of
city council not thinking that the neighborhood council's community councils
got example after example of how they are trying to
(01:52:28):
depower or actually do away with that.
Speaker 1 (01:52:32):
And this is a.
Speaker 18 (01:52:32):
Place where the people have the chance to stand up
and say, now we get to say in this what
we say also matters. You may be smart, but you're
not the only smart person. We know some things too
about where we live and how we'd like to live.
And we're going to put this on the ballot to
get that started.
Speaker 3 (01:52:52):
Yeah, and I suppose you'll get a lot of people
in bond Hill wanting to sign on to something like
this as well, because.
Speaker 18 (01:52:58):
I did the actual presentation to the ONTIL group to
say will you join us? And I was overwhelmed with
how they feel what happened to them. Perfect example, even Oakley,
who's a relatively friendly to the developer community, just had
a really nice housing project scrapped for car condos. I'm
(01:53:20):
not opposed to cars having nice places to stay, but
if city council is all about housing, how dare you
make an adjustment from something that was going to be
reasonably priced housing to something to park my ferrari in.
Speaker 3 (01:53:33):
That's a good point, and it seems like that's kind
of I'm a misunderstanding. It seems inconsistent with their desire
to get rid of cars in the City of Cincinnati,
you know, turning it into a fifteen minute walking or
public transportation community, which is the green agenda folks idea
about it.
Speaker 18 (01:53:50):
So, and I want to be careful that one of
the advantages of hyde Perk is its walkability. Yeah, and
that's something we'd like to preserve. That's a feel that
we want. Other communities may want to be different in
how that feels, but they need to have their voice
in order to achieve that. And that's why we're asking
people to help us to move the petition around. Please
(01:54:12):
go to save had parksquare dot org, sign up to volunteer,
find us. We're got lots of events. Then we had
the primary on Tuesday. We were at lots of the
polling places. A lot of people signed up. Thank you
for everybody who has signed. If you did sign the
change dot org petition, that's not the same thing. Over
five thousand people signed that for us. It was a
(01:54:33):
very helpful tool. It was another thing that city council
just chose to ignore. But we need different signatures to
get this on the refer to get this on the.
Speaker 3 (01:54:43):
Ballot, Save Hyde Parksquare dot org. And this is something
that's going to resonate with all the communities, I think
more than just the ones that have been insulted by
the decision making of since a city council like you
and bond Hill, but everybody who felt like I mean
I talked about think going back to connected communities real quick.
That was foisted on all of the neighborhoods as well
without any of their input, in spite of the fact
(01:55:04):
that a lot of them chimed in and said, wait, wait,
where did this come from? And we don't want that,
and you didn't consult us before you foisted it upon us.
So this is going to resonate among I would think
the vast majority of Cincinnati residents. So if you are
a resident of the city of Cincinnati, that's the signature
that you need to put down on paper and go
to save High Parksquare dot com to do that or
dot orger to do that.
Speaker 1 (01:55:26):
Completely agree, thank you.
Speaker 18 (01:55:27):
I can go the connected community piece. Absolutely, you don't
have to go anywhere near that far back to find
a place where neighborhoods are not being heard, not even
being responded to by the city.
Speaker 1 (01:55:43):
On ours just frown.
Speaker 18 (01:55:44):
Fourteen different neighborhoods sent an official letter to the city
saying we took a vote and we agree we're standing
with hyper Square. Not one of them received a letter
back saying thank you for your letter, nothing more, not
even acknowledgment. And I can go down a list of
different neighborhoods, different instances where they are writ into the
(01:56:06):
city and thing we need help with this. This has
happened to us, the things ranging from the recent flooding,
some police issues or some staffing issues, things that happened
to an adverse outcome because of development project, all of
these things where the neighborhood councils have written to the
city crickets coming back nothing. And that's what has to change,
(01:56:31):
and that's why we need all the help we can
get with this referendum.
Speaker 3 (01:56:34):
It sounds like we need a change of council members
and perhaps the mayor. My idea, John, you don't have
to buy into that or not. I don't care what
your political affiliation is. But no one seems to be
being served by the elected officials who are supposed to
serve the will of the people. And I love the idea.
This is a grassroots, community based effort. I was thinking
(01:56:54):
along the lines that maybe you guys might propose litigation,
but that has to be fund unless there's a lawyer
out there will be doing on a pro bow no basis.
But you know, you get everbody an opportunity to help out,
chime in, put a lawn sign in the yard. And
another element of this I wasn't even aware of, which
is posted on your website, say hyde Parksquare dot org,
is that it forces out over ten independent small businesses
out of the square.
Speaker 18 (01:57:15):
I mean the Business Association of Hyde Park Square voted
against it. They wrote a letter said we don't want it.
If they thought it was good for business, they would
be at the.
Speaker 1 (01:57:26):
Front of the let's do this. They don't.
Speaker 18 (01:57:29):
And I can tell you can walk around Hyde Park
Square right now and it feels a little depressed because
there are all these empty storefronts. That's primarily not due
to business conditions or anything.
Speaker 9 (01:57:41):
That's due to.
Speaker 18 (01:57:42):
The developer carefully phasing people out, primarily in legal means.
Primarily there is at least one lawsuit running about that
that I know of, But that is why Hyde Park
Square right now feels a little dingy, a little empty,
and that's really unfortunate. You can thank the developer for
(01:58:04):
those empty storefronts because they're now having to wait. They're
now having to wonder can we move ahead with this.
That's one of the reasons that we need to keep
the momentum up and get to the referendum. You mentioned
a lawsuit. That's always an option, but we do want
to be the grassroots group who does this the right way.
And city Council I think about one of the few
(01:58:27):
things they said that was positive was there has to
be more communication between the development and developer and the community,
and that just didn't happen. It was as quiet from
the developer as it has been from city council. They
listened to us a lot. I don't think they hurt us,
and I know that's a subtle distinction, but it's an
(01:58:48):
important one. Right now, we as a citizens group would
like to be heard as we were not heard. We're
going to put it on the ballot. We're going to
put in a referendum, but only with help from people
who listen to your show and others who see citizen
voice matters. I want to be heard. I want my
neighborhood council to be heard, and the neighborhoods that's signed
(01:59:09):
on for this stretch all the way east to west.
You've got Mount Washington out east all the way to
Sailor Park in the west. I would love to have
other of the neighborhood councils also to join on with us.
More letters from that because of this right now has
become for me. Yes, I do not want that development.
I also want city council to have to listen, to
(01:59:30):
pay attention to community councils, to neighborhood councils, and again
we have example after example of them saying we're not
going to listen anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:59:39):
I love the message, John, It transcends just this issue
for me personally, and I appreciate what you're doing. You
can sign up to be a circulator or a captain.
You can help out circulate position, show up at farmers'
markets and citywide events, and have these petitions ready for
folks to sign. It's easy to do, John, and the
team has made it so easy. Save hide par Square
(02:00:01):
dot org. I wish you all the luck and the
best in the world, John and your efforts fifteen thousand.
Speaker 18 (02:00:06):
I really appreciate this time.
Speaker 1 (02:00:07):
Pleasure man.
Speaker 3 (02:00:08):
If you got an update or something down the road,
you want to announce the day that you get the
sufficient signatures. You got a welcome opportunity here in the
fifty five KOs Morning Show. Good job John, keep it
up seven to fifty one, fifty five car see the
talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:00:21):
I love that effort. Love it.
Speaker 3 (02:00:23):
Affordable imaging. Imaging can be affordable if you go to
affordable imaging services rather than the hospital imaging department, because
it's crazy expensive there, crazy expensive. I don't know why,
well I do know why. It's profit center. They got
tons of overheaded hospital. They got to pay for it
some way, so that's why they charge you five thousand
dollars for a CT scan when you can go to
affordable imaging services like I'm going to do again in
(02:00:45):
June keeping an eye on my cancer. Got to get
CT scans with a contrast six hundred bucks. Four hundred
and fifty bucks. If you don't need a contrast. That's
for a CT scan that might set you back five grand.
At a hospital echo cardigram, they'll get your right into
affordable imaging services, unlike that hospital which may have a
wait time. It's your heart. I know you want to know,
so without an enhancement five hundred bucks. With an enhancement
(02:01:06):
eight hundred, not the three grand four grand they might
charge you at the hospital. Every image, whether it's an
ultrasound CT scan, MRI, eco cardiogram, comes with the board
certified radiologists report in the price. You may pay extra
for that at the hospital. I've been there multiple times.
It's low overhead, but they have the same kind of
equipment hospitals they are using in medical professionals that have
(02:01:27):
been at this for decades. Never a problem with my
cancer doctor about my CT scan five one three, seven,
five three eight thousand, five one three seven, five three
eight thousand online Affordable Meddeimaging dot com.
Speaker 5 (02:01:39):
Fifty five KRC What if you had an extra thousand dollars?
Speaker 1 (02:01:44):
Donald crashing the economy, recession looming?
Speaker 6 (02:01:47):
What happens next? Watch what happens will happen right here.
Speaker 3 (02:01:50):
On fifty five KRC Bean talkstation, Shive ETO five and
fifty five KRCD Talk Station. Bryan Thomas wishing everyone a
very happy Thursday, slash Friday, even so please to welcome
back to the fifty five PERC Morning Show, doctor James Thorpe.
We've talked to doctor Thorpe before, eye opening conversations they
(02:02:10):
always are. He was the author of Sacrifice, How the
deadliest vaccine in history You targeted the most vulnerable. Also
participated in the book COVID nineteen Vaccines and Beyond What
the Medical Industrial Complex Is Not telling Us, author by
Sally Saxon, fellow doctor doctor Viglioni and my guest today
James Thorpe. Doctor Thorpe, thanks for joining the program. It's
(02:02:30):
great to hear back from you.
Speaker 9 (02:02:33):
Thank you so much for having me back.
Speaker 3 (02:02:34):
Bryan, it's a pleasure now. I last time we talked
and you gave us this just you know, fire hose
of information about what happened to you when you first
started speaking truth to power about the vaccine and what
you observed as a board certified obstetrician gynetologist met maternal
fetal medicine physician with over forty four years of obstetrical
(02:02:55):
experience seeing thousands and thousands of high risk pregnancies. You
were responsible for medical journal reviews. You testified before Congress
on things medical in the past. I mean, you've got
just credentials out the wazoo, and you stand up and
figure out that, well, whoa, there is something really wrong
with this COVID nineteen vaccine because you saw what was
(02:03:17):
happening to your patients, right deadly to unborn babies.
Speaker 9 (02:03:22):
That's right, that's absolutely one hundred percent correct. And I
also published extensive studies using the government's own data, the
CDC and the FDA's own data, in pfiser's own data.
Speaker 3 (02:03:43):
Now, you ultimately got terminated without cause of the consequence
of this when you started speaking out about your findings
and your review of the data and letting the public
know and try to get in touch with elected officials
to let them know how dangerous this vaccine is. Did
you know what was going to happen to you?
Speaker 1 (02:03:58):
Yes, I had.
Speaker 9 (02:03:59):
Death and I made a conscious decision. I was given
I was given orders from high command, you know, the Lord.
It was made very clear to me that you need
to speak the truth, and it's more important than your
job or your life. And so that's what I've been doing.
(02:04:21):
And you know, my charge specifically is to really point
out the extreme corruption and how my societies and my
medical organizations that govern pregnant women and all women obgym,
(02:04:41):
maternal feetal medicine, how they engage in not civil but
criminal behavior. They colluded and conspired committed racketeering, rico violation, fraud,
mass assault and battery.
Speaker 1 (02:05:03):
And mass murder.
Speaker 9 (02:05:04):
And they colluded with our United States government CDC, Rochelle Walyinsky,
and the New England Journal of Medicine and the pharmaceutical
complex to do this. And I will testify to this
in the Senate, and I expect a special counsel to
(02:05:26):
be assigned for criminal charges because this was illegal, this
was government, This was all secretive. Patients, pregnant women going
to see their obstetricians thought they were getting counsel and
directions and therapy from the most sacred relationship in medicine
(02:05:51):
that between a patient and her obstetrician.
Speaker 1 (02:05:55):
When that was a lie.
Speaker 9 (02:05:56):
Her obstetrician was a puppet for the pharmacy sceutical complex,
the CDC, and they told her they pushed vaccines. I'm
involved with many cases where mothers babies were killed with
the vaccines, including twins currently in litigation, and I am
(02:06:18):
using these to show the American people that these babies
were murdered. This mass murder, assault and battery. This involves
not a few hundred or a few thousand, But when
you include miscarriages, fetal deaths, and newborn deaths and pregnant
(02:06:42):
women deaths globally, you're talking about the injuring and killing
of millions of pregnant women, preborn in newborns globally. Because
as America goes in terms of medicine, especially obgyn so
goes the rest of the world. So the American College
(02:07:06):
of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
the Society for Maternal Fetal Medicine, the American Board of
Medical Specialties, and the Federation of State Medical Boards committed
criminal behavior responsible for killing and injuring millions of the
(02:07:30):
most vulnerable patients globally.
Speaker 3 (02:07:34):
Well, don't pull any punches, sir. It's frightening and I
hate to chuckle about that, but you rarely see this
sort of pointed, definitive statement along those lines. We were
so used to. No, no, no, there's no problem, nothing
to see here, Go ahead and get the vaccine. It's
not a threat to anybody. Question, though, is this from
(02:07:54):
the pharmaceutical company's failure to properly test and do trials
or I mean, for example, life take a Flimina solidomide.
Unintended consequence was well Polidimie babies were harmed in the
womb when mothers took the drugs. Whoops, sorry, we didn't
know about that. They pulled the drug from the market. Others,
and I know some of my listening audience believed that
this was intentionally designed to do exactly the harm that
(02:08:15):
you're talking about, directly harm unborn babies. And I don't
know if it causes long term sterility in women or what,
but that for the purposes of population control.
Speaker 1 (02:08:25):
Any thoughts on that.
Speaker 3 (02:08:26):
Is this nefarious or just whoops, sorry, we didn't realize
it was going to happen.
Speaker 9 (02:08:32):
No, this is a nefarious and this was premeditated. This
was purposeful. All you have to do is read the
Pfizer papers by Naomi Woolf.
Speaker 1 (02:08:41):
I've got to copy that. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:08:42):
By the way, the papers clearly show that they knew
and by the way, they tried to quiet and subvert
and take down data from our research groups that had
a mass, massive databases that were actually on social media
(02:09:07):
documenting thousands of women that have problems, especially with their
menstrual difficulties, and these were deep platform the government illegally
that this is not civil this is criminal behavior. What
they did was they colluded, they subverted this and at
(02:09:29):
the same time these severe menstrual dis services and I'm
talking about very severe. The White House knew about it.
The Biden administration knew about it. There were emails exchanged.
The pharmaceutical companies.
Speaker 1 (02:09:44):
Knew about it.
Speaker 9 (02:09:45):
Not only did they know about it, Brian, but they
entered into a they bought entered into a agreement with
another pharmaceutical company to market a drug called my Fembree
m y f E m b r EE. And I
(02:10:06):
posted on this last week and doctor only Wolf picked
up on it. This was in twenty twenty one when
they were denying it.
Speaker 1 (02:10:17):
It is almost very very uh.
Speaker 9 (02:10:21):
It's this is really really disgusting. They knew they were
causing these serious problems and then they acquire a company
and push and market the drug my Fembree to treat
these medical severe disasters.
Speaker 7 (02:10:39):
That they cause.
Speaker 4 (02:10:41):
This is the this is they their moo.
Speaker 9 (02:10:44):
This is what they've been doing for decades, Brian, and
it's absolutely horrible. You know, you're looking at massive You
may be looking at sixty billion dollars a year that
the pharmaceutical industry makes on vaccines. But guess what the companies,
(02:11:06):
the vaccine pharmaceutical companies that make money off drugs to
cure or to alleviate or treat the problems that the
vaccines caused is five hundred billion dollars per year. This
is a racket. This is purposeful, premeditated destruction of an
(02:11:30):
injury of life to make money. This is satanic.
Speaker 3 (02:11:34):
Yeah, I will agree with that completely, that conclusion. And
what I guess I'm curious to know the pharmaceuticals, the
companies knew that the so called COVID nineteen vaccines caused
these problems. The research points it out. They knew about
it ahead of time, Yet they rolled these out. And
I can understand other pharmaceutical companies stepping up to the
plate to try to resolve these problems with their own development. Hey,
(02:11:55):
there's a money making opportunity, as you explained it. But
in the first element with this idea that they knew
that this was going to cause harmed unborn babies and
women's menstrual strikles and Is that part of a nefarious
sort of globalist Malthusian depopulation agenda or is there something
else going on there?
Speaker 9 (02:12:14):
No, I believe and I believe that that the this
is ultimately from Satan. So I think that there are
key figures in the world economic form. You're looking at
Bill Gates, You're looking at Fauci, You're looking at several
other players, maybe Borla the Butcher and others. I think
(02:12:39):
you're looking at several people, Peter Dadzik, Tony Sauci, Francis Collins.
I believe these are Satanic individuals. I think that that
that they are literally endowed and controlled by Satan himself
(02:13:00):
right now. The vast majority of the other people they're not.
They're just prostitutes and whoores who take the money to
do the government's dirty work.
Speaker 3 (02:13:09):
Okay, and that's a common phenomenon the ladder. But looking
at it from a non denominational, you know, point of view,
the Satanic element, I guess is this if it's serving
Satan or not. I don't know how it benefits Satan
to kill lace babies. But ignoring that part, but is it, like,
is it depopulation for the purposes of you? They believe
saving the planet from itself. That's what the Malthusians think.
(02:13:32):
There's going to be so many people that we're all
going to starve to death or the world's resources are
going to evaporate. That's consistent with that sort of climate
change argument that leads us all to self harm and
cutting off our electricity. Ply why because we're too consumptive.
It has nothing to do really with pollution and has
anything to do with preserving the planet. Did that kind
of dovetail in there, Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:13:53):
You're one hundred percent right. And you know, you look
at the you look at the Club of Rome, and
these ideologies and these secret societies they've been taught, and
look at our own presidents and administrations and political leaders.
They've been talking about depopulation for a century. And you know,
(02:14:16):
then it doesn't take a rocket scientist to look at
the Gates Foundation and states statements that Gates has made
about reducing population in a gentle kind of way, in
in a non violent way through vaccines. These are statements
that have been made by high officials uh and and
(02:14:39):
alluded to multiple times by Melinda Gates and Bill Gates
and and and hierarchy of the world economic form and
the Club of Rome. These are these are and and
you know, look at the Georgia guidestones. I mean, people
don't talk about the Georgia guidestones. Evil people broadcast what
(02:15:00):
they want to do. And the Georgia Guideestones. For the
viewers who listeners, the audience who don't know what those are,
look them up. They were constructed in nineteen eighty. Satan
mimics God. They created a massive edifice, a stone marble edifice,
(02:15:22):
massive and wrote their ten commandments on it in Northeast
Georgia called the Georgia Guideestones, probably hundreds of millions of dollars,
and they wrote the ten Commandments on there. Their first
commandment was keep the global population less than five hundred million.
Think about that. Think about that. For forty years it
(02:15:44):
was right in our face, they told us. And this
is what Satan does. If you read the Holy Scripture,
Dayton always tries to mimic and outdo God. You know,
God gave Moses ten commandments on Mount Sina, right, and
it was on a tablet of stone. Well, Satan and
the globalists write this mass of Georgia guidestones with their
(02:16:09):
ten commandments in seven languages and it stands for forty
years until it mysteriously blows up a couple of years
ago and is immediately removed. Isn't that interesting? And then
look at the Digal Report. Look at the Digal Report,
and I think you're very familiar with that, right, Actually,
I'm not, okay. The Digal Report is a governmental report.
(02:16:35):
It's been in existence I think for thirty or forty years.
It's charged with with predicting the population of every country
in the world for the last I think thirty or
forty years. And this is a governmental this is not
(02:16:56):
a private organization.
Speaker 1 (02:16:57):
This is real.
Speaker 9 (02:17:00):
Those listeners, do your research. D as in dog Gigle
de eagl E Report in twenty fifteen, they predicted that
they predicted and this is clearly documented in government organizations,
that the population of the United States of America by
(02:17:21):
the end of twenty twenty five was going to be
reduced to ninety millions, and any other Western countries the same.
Speaker 14 (02:17:30):
This is fact.
Speaker 9 (02:17:31):
This is not fictions.
Speaker 1 (02:17:33):
Now, I'm not doctor Turp.
Speaker 3 (02:17:36):
I hate to get you off. We're out of time,
but I obviously very enlightening. You could go this all
reading assignment and maybe what they can't accomplish through the
COVID nineteen vaccine in terms of population reduction. Maybe they'll
bring it about with oh, I don't know, world War three,
break it out between Indian and Pakistan, or in Europe
to reduce the population via war. We've seen that happen
before as well, Doctor Thorpe. Keep up the great work,
(02:17:57):
sacrifice how the deadliest vaccine in history target of the
most honorable.
Speaker 1 (02:18:00):
Will put a link to.
Speaker 3 (02:18:01):
That book back up on my blog page fifty five
R see keep speaking Truth of power, Doctor Thorpe. It's
been a pleasure having you on the program again. Thank you,
Ben my pleasure. Seven twenty one or eight twenty one,
fifty five cars to Detox station. Colin Electric family owned
and operated since nineteen ninety nine, eight plus of the
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Speaker 5 (02:18:49):
Com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 9 (02:18:52):
You don't think.
Speaker 1 (02:18:54):
Here is your Channel nine first morning weather forecast.
Speaker 3 (02:18:57):
Sometime around noon they say scattered showers in a store
might show up at the weird part about it, possible
hail and maybe some areas getting an inch rain. Seventy
degrees for the high anyway, with cloudy sky's forty five
overnight decreasing clouds leaving us a sunny Friday with a
pleasant sixty seven high overnight low of forty four, and
Saturday is going to be just partly clouded.
Speaker 1 (02:19:17):
The whole week's going to be dry.
Speaker 3 (02:19:18):
They say, seventy one for the high on Saturday, sixty two.
Right now, time for a traffic update.
Speaker 10 (02:19:23):
From the duc Up Traffic Center. When it comes to
stroke to every second count. So that's why you see
health as the clear choice for wrapping by saving treatment.
Learn more and you see health dot Com. Cruse continue
to work with the accident sap pound seventy five above
union center, left shoulder that traffic is heavy from above
Tyler's zilt stop pound seventy five, then slows again through
Blachmann northbound seventy five, having us out of erliner into downtown.
(02:19:48):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (02:19:53):
It's a thirty on a Thursday, which means the time
for iHeart MEATIA Aviation expert Jay Ratliffe. Always enjoyed this
segment talking with Jay, just like I enjoyed talking with
him in his beautiful bride Yesterday Listener Lunch, Jay Ratliffe,
so great senior at Listener Lunch yesterday.
Speaker 23 (02:20:07):
It was a nice relaxed environment and rarely, as you know,
given my schedule with my training in the stock market.
Speaker 8 (02:20:14):
Uh can I take some time off?
Speaker 23 (02:20:16):
But I told you that it was it was needed,
and uh yeah, that way you can meet Cherry and
when I brag on her, you'll know exactly what I'm talking. Oh,
I knew you got to meet your beautiful your beautiful wife.
So yeah, we're in We're in the same same boat.
Speaker 3 (02:20:30):
There, Pal, Yeah, we both outkicked our coverage, and yeah,
we both offered each other proof of that. Although I
always took you at your word. There's no man out
there who's not happily married, who regularly goes online and
talks and praises his wife all the time. And uh
so wedded bliss you got and that's a great thing.
Speaker 23 (02:20:45):
Jay Ratt still trying to figure out the out kicked
the coverage comment, But.
Speaker 8 (02:20:51):
Like, what does that mean? I said, I explained it later.
Speaker 1 (02:20:54):
That's great, Eddie.
Speaker 3 (02:20:55):
How turning over to something that's been rumbling around has
been rumbling around out there for I don't know more
than like it seems like twenty years. Real ID it's
now a thing, although apparently you don't necessarily need a
real ID to fly.
Speaker 1 (02:21:08):
Where are we on this, Jay Ratliffe.
Speaker 23 (02:21:11):
Well, the TSA told us early on, even though we've
known about this for twenty years and we've talked about
it constantly, where you had to have the TSA approved
driver's license to fly get into federal courthouses, et cetera,
et cetera. They said there's going to be twenty to
twenty five percent of the people still that are going
to show up this week after the deadline is here
(02:21:32):
and not have what they need. Now, the TSA is
not going to turn us away, but what they are
going to do is they have a kind of an
enhanced security protocol they're going to follow. It's going to
take a lot more time, and you are going to
be subjected to some indep screening and it's a hassle.
But if you don't have what you need, it's the
best way to get you on the plane. So if
(02:21:53):
you're not sure what the Ohio real ID driver's license
new and improved looks like, just a quick Google image
search will give you what you need. But if you
don't have it, get to the airport extra early and
I mean like three hours before departure, and then work
your way through. Now, eventually the TSA will reach that
point of no return where okay, the great period is over.
Speaker 8 (02:22:14):
Now you have to have what you need to fly.
Speaker 23 (02:22:16):
And I certainly wouldn't push that too far because I
don't know how long it's going to be, because it's
a lot like if you lose your billfold and the
West Coast and you got to fly by a calm,
you're thinking, oh, I don't have my ID. Well, the
TSA is going to work with you. They're going to
get you on board the flight. They do have protocol
for that, and they're doing everything they can here. And
as I've said so many times before, hats off to
(02:22:36):
the US government. I rarely say that for rolling this
out in the slowest travel month of the year in May.
They did it at a time when they knew things
were going to be slow. There's going to be an
implementation period, and it's going to take passengers and the
TSA agents, you know, a little extra time to get
through things.
Speaker 8 (02:22:53):
And so far, so good.
Speaker 23 (02:22:55):
No, you know, screaming long lines at the security checkpoint
or a lot of stories that have gone viral as
a result of this, which tells me that everybody's handling
it pretty well well.
Speaker 3 (02:23:06):
I would imagine. Does it take really that long to
do a body cavity search?
Speaker 1 (02:23:11):
There? Jay, I have this vision rubber gloves.
Speaker 8 (02:23:18):
Yeah, right this way, sir. Yeah, we'll teach you not
to have the right right. I'll have it next time,
I promise, I swear to God, I'll go to the
d m V. I'm not even gonna fly now, I'm
gonna go get it exactly.
Speaker 1 (02:23:29):
Oh, my son, you be fun.
Speaker 8 (02:23:31):
It would be fun to do that.
Speaker 23 (02:23:32):
Just just the just the premise of seeing people's reaction,
having a little a little fun at the airport. Not
planning to do it, of course, right, you know he's
having fun at work. You know, you and I get
to do it, but so many other people can't.
Speaker 3 (02:23:46):
And that's the truth. I don't meagine there's a whole
lot of levity among the TSA folks. Yeah, we have
one of the guys who stand there and when the
new people come up, put a pair of rubber gloves on,
say follow me. I think that would be hilarious.
Speaker 8 (02:23:59):
I saw as for other things.
Speaker 3 (02:24:01):
But yes, real quick here we'll part company for a
brief commercial break.
Speaker 1 (02:24:05):
But just a quick topic.
Speaker 3 (02:24:09):
I saw a couple of United Airlines planes, clipped wings,
trying to depart in San Francisco. The one was backing,
being pushed back from its journey and ran into a
Hong Kong bound United Airlines flight on the ground there.
And I know air traffic controllers don't control the ground
space least that's what I read, But I mean, you
think that they'd be looking around their environment before they
(02:24:29):
start pushing back and because you know, you clip the wing,
that means the plane's not gonna be able to fly well, neither.
Speaker 8 (02:24:34):
One of them.
Speaker 23 (02:24:35):
More than five hundred people were on both flights, So
when you have that, we call it swapping paint. And
the pilots, of course, are not in control. It's being
pushed back by the ground crew and you have teams
that surround the airplane, so it's a very slow process. Yeah,
everybody's looking, everybody's communicating. So from airline management, when this happened,
it would drive us absolutely out of our mind because
(02:24:58):
now you have two airplanes with five hundred peop you
have to take both those planes out of commission. You
have to now bring resources from other parts of the
airport that we're supposed to be doing other jobs to
get the bags off both planes so that we can
try to reaccommodate the passengers. And it creates a lot
of last minute chaos that you have to deal with
simply because people weren't doing their job, and you know
(02:25:22):
they're taught. If there's a problem, a question, you stop,
you make sure everything's okay. But when people get in
a hurry you have this happen. It's not dangerous but
when it happens and you feel that thud, you're thinking, well,
you know, this plane's not going anywhere because the maintenance
crew has to come out, and it is a huge
inconvenience for those people. But look, people were waiting on
(02:25:42):
that plane at the destination and they don't have a
lot of extra planes sitting around where they'll go, well,
we'll just substitute this one for that one. Sometimes that's
not the case.
Speaker 8 (02:25:50):
Sometimes we can. Most of the time we can.
Speaker 3 (02:25:52):
Yeah, it's just it's such an obvious I mean, planes
are big. You've got two hundred fifty people out of
giant object. How you could even have this happen ignizing
exactly what you.
Speaker 8 (02:26:01):
Are, Brian.
Speaker 23 (02:26:03):
You've seen at the airport. We all those great big
windows and you look out and a lot of times
these aircraft are stacked, you know. Yeah, Premium. Premium is
the real estate word at the airports because there's just
not a whole lot of room on that ground. And
when you throw in a lot of ground equipment that's
also out there kind of in the way, and different
types of things that we use for auxiliary power and
(02:26:24):
other things. Even though it's kind of building the jetwit bridge.
Speaker 8 (02:26:27):
It can be it can be tight.
Speaker 23 (02:26:29):
And that's why every other week there's a story out
there somewhere in the in the country where airplanes have
clipped wings normally as they're pushing out or coming into
the gate.
Speaker 1 (02:26:39):
We'll bring it back. Newark is a mess understatement of
the week.
Speaker 3 (02:26:43):
We'll talk about that and more with I Heard Media
Aviation Next for Jay Raytle If it's a thirty seven.
Speaker 1 (02:26:47):
Be right back KRC dot com.
Speaker 3 (02:26:49):
Hey forty if you about the CAIRCD talk station in
Jay Raydler certainly has I heard Media Aviation expert. We
are bussed to have him with us every Thursday beginning
get a thirty talking some AVA news and man, the
Newark airport is a mess. They got what one runway's
shut down because it's being what refinished or rebuilt and
it's already crowded.
Speaker 1 (02:27:11):
It's crowded right oh, big time.
Speaker 23 (02:27:14):
And you know you're talking about a situation where we
have an airport that is technology challenged because I'm just
trying to find that the right wording to use. Because
you and I've talked about before how just the entire
industry is really suspect when it comes to the technology
(02:27:35):
and they had a situation where last this week where
we had aircraft that were flying around and air traffic
controllers lost the radar. Yeah, they were able to talk,
but they couldn't see. And and for men and women
that are you know, responsible for keeping everybody safe, you
talk about some stress. That was it, And then you
(02:27:57):
have a situation where you have a shortage of air
traff for controllers. It's just a mess on top of
a mess, on top of a mess. Now we're being
told that the United Airlines is looking at canceling or
about ten percent of their schedule because they're saying, we
simply can't be operating where we have flights that are
going to be routinely late two three, four hours a day,
(02:28:20):
so they're cutting the flights back, and they're saying that
to fix all of this is not a situation that's
going to be a matter of days, weeks, it's going
to be years.
Speaker 8 (02:28:29):
So what are you going to do?
Speaker 23 (02:28:31):
And of course, with us having a shortage of air
traffic controllers back, four or five of them went on
a medical leave because they were so emotionally distraught over
losing control of the airspace type of thing where they
couldn't see what was going on.
Speaker 8 (02:28:45):
It scared them to death.
Speaker 23 (02:28:46):
Remember, a lot of these individuals, these men and women,
are working overtime because we've got the shortage of three
thousand air traffic controllers across the country.
Speaker 8 (02:28:54):
So there's no easy fix to any of this. It's
going to take time.
Speaker 23 (02:28:57):
And unfortunately we got here because of decades of non
decisions that could have been made to address this.
Speaker 8 (02:29:04):
And now we're all paying for it.
Speaker 23 (02:29:06):
And the beauty is the idiots in DC on both
sides that could have addressed this and fixed it are
too busy pointing at each other, as they always tend
to do, versus saying, you know, yeah, okay, we dropped
the ball. Let's get it fixed. No, we can't ever
take responsibility. But wor you're going to blame it I
think President Trump.
Speaker 9 (02:29:25):
Yeah, let's blame it on him.
Speaker 8 (02:29:26):
Yeah, even though it's been in the making for forty years.
Speaker 3 (02:29:29):
Well, and that's the point I was going to emphasize.
You obviously made it. No, it's not Trump's fault. This
is a problem that's been in the making for decades
because they're still using basically, you know, two eighty six
process or five and a quarter floppy drive kind of computers,
I mean boiled down. I mean it's kind of the
way it is, isn't it. It's old, old, legacy technology.
Speaker 23 (02:29:48):
Do you hear people in the background typing in Google search,
what's a floppy disc? Yeah, there's people have no clue
about that. But when you're dealing with technology that's this
out of date. When airline CEOs were asked about and
Trump's pledge to upgrade the air traffic control system, I mean,
it's music to their ears. They're thinking, thank you, because
for decades we've heard politicians talk about the need to
(02:30:10):
do so, but when it came time to deliver the money,
crickets never seemed to happen, or they might get a
trickle of what they needed. It was never, ever, ever,
ever a priority. And I've said so many times with
you when we talked that the economy of the nation,
an integral part of that is the aviation network that
has the distribution of passengers, luggage, cargo, all that kind
(02:30:33):
of stuff and bags and freight and all the mail
and everything else. And when that is hampered, it impacts
adversely our economy. And why it's never been a priority
is maddening to me, and because I recognize it's a
very thin thread. Now some people are using the term
jay it's unsafe to fly now. It's not as safe
as we would like. But I will not cross that
(02:30:56):
threshold of saying it's not safe to fly, because if
I did think that, I would make it very clear
to you and everybody else how I felt.
Speaker 8 (02:31:04):
I'm not at that point yet.
Speaker 23 (02:31:06):
Yeah, but it is because we're making the adjustments. Because
the FAA, if there's too much traffic going into the Northeast,
they do this every day. If it's needed, they do
a ground stop. If for a flight from Atlanta or
from cincinnati's about to head to New York. Uhuh, groundstop,
time out until we get the airspace thinned, and then
we will let you take off and then you can
enter the network. As far as heading in that direction.
Speaker 8 (02:31:29):
They control it. Now.
Speaker 23 (02:31:30):
It's aggravating, and it's certainly something that the technology would
allow us to be more efficient at what we do.
So there's just a lot of things there that need
to happen, but they all take considerable time. And some
of the stuff President Trump is beginning now, to me,
is a lot like his Supreme Court appointments that he
gave us first time around, when he gave us three
Supreme Court justices. It's something that for the next twenty
(02:31:53):
years is going to impact this country. So as long
as he's allowed to finish what he's doing on the
getting this stuff in implemented for aviation, it's going to
change things for us for the next fifteen to twenty years.
Speaker 8 (02:32:05):
And it's going to be great. Not that he'll ever
get any credit for it.
Speaker 23 (02:32:09):
Yeah, it's needed, and I'm just glad we've got a
president who's saying, hey, this has got to get fixed,
and I'm gonna make sure it gets gets done well.
Speaker 3 (02:32:16):
Army helicopters causing problems again, We'll hear one more from
Jay Rattleft if we take after these brief words.
Speaker 16 (02:32:21):
Stick around fifty five KRC the talk station one more
time for the Channel nine Weether forecast. Scattered showers and
storms showing up around noontime. Hail possible some inch, some
areas may get an inch of rain seventy for the highdaydays.
Overnight clouds decrease drop into forty five a sunny Friday
with a pleasant sixty seven high forty four overnight again
(02:32:43):
with sparse clouds and Saturday partly Friday skies a dry weekend.
Saturday's high seventy one closing out at sixty two.
Speaker 10 (02:32:50):
Time for final traffic. Chuck Ingram from the you Scope
Tramping Center. When it comes to stroke, every second count.
So that's why U see Health is the clear choice
for wrapping by saving treatment. Learn more at you see
how dot Com. Highway traffic continues to improve sathbound seventy
five clearing out between Tylersville and Union Center after an
earlier accident. We're still running slow in and out of Macklin.
(02:33:12):
The heaviest traffic on northbound seventy five is out of
Erromanger into the Cut and soathbound seventy one off and
on the breaks between Peiffer and Redbank.
Speaker 6 (02:33:21):
Shot king Ram Month fifty five krs. The talk station.
Speaker 3 (02:33:25):
Hey forty nine fifty about KRC detalk station one more
segment with Jay Ratliffe. I heard medaviation expert Jay, what
is with the army helicopters feeling the need to fly
close to the DCA airport.
Speaker 8 (02:33:41):
It should be happening.
Speaker 3 (02:33:42):
I know, it's just so simple. After me, That's why
I'm so frustrated. By this I read about the first time,
I'm like, wait a second, they're flying into planes that
are either landing or taking off. Why do they need
to be anywhere near that obviously dangerous situation area?
Speaker 23 (02:34:00):
And Sean Duffy echoes your sentiment completely because he's furious
because it's been clear stated where these helicopters are to be.
And apparently, from what we're being told, someone headed to
Dependagon wanted the scenic tour, the scenic route. So some
of the previous you know, guidelines and mandates were totally
(02:34:23):
disregarded by somebody. As it happened, not once or twice,
we had a Delta Airlines and Republic Airlines flight both
had to go around when again, we had an army
helicopter that was in the proximity of their approach. And
when you lose sixty seven lives and you say we're
going to learn from that by making things better, this
is what we're going to do, it makes no sense
(02:34:45):
to me why that would be totally disregarded, Because then
my question is, if.
Speaker 8 (02:34:50):
Sixty seven lives isn't enough, what on God's green.
Speaker 23 (02:34:54):
Earth does it cake for us to make those necessary changes,
Because please, it just it's maddening, but it continues to happen.
Speaker 8 (02:35:03):
So I don't know, we know who the commander in
chief is.
Speaker 23 (02:35:06):
Somebody's going to answer for it because you just cannot
allow that kind of stuff to happen.
Speaker 8 (02:35:11):
And we'll see where it goes.
Speaker 1 (02:35:12):
Yeah, I guess.
Speaker 3 (02:35:13):
But you know, sort of bizarre in all of this
is the idea that you know damn well that the
pilot of that helicopter had heard about the collision with
the airplane and the prior helicopter knew about it, and
yet nonetheless took basically the same path.
Speaker 8 (02:35:30):
That if he's ordered to if he's ordered to do.
Speaker 3 (02:35:32):
So, well, someone's head needs to roll right there. I mean,
you talk about commander in.
Speaker 23 (02:35:37):
Chief because you're you're placing lives at risks. I'm in
total agreement. I think a firing squad's a little extreme,
but I think something's got to be done because it
just how you've got to honor the lives of those
that were lost, but making changes and adhering to those changes,
and Brian, when they don't, it's it's beyond idiotic and asenine, yes,
(02:35:57):
it's it's irresponsible, and you're placing lives at risk willingly,
and that's why something's got to be done. And I
suspect something will be done, and I suspect we will
know when something's been done.
Speaker 3 (02:36:08):
I'd like to think we will. And the other component
of this, it's not like you're high you can sneak
by and get away with it. You're on your I mean,
it's well documented where you are. It's on radar. They
can see you. So look, what the hell's the helicopter
doing there?
Speaker 23 (02:36:20):
Anyway, the silts are ticked and they're going to make
sure somebody. They may not, but it's going to hit
social media somewhere. I can promise you that, yes.
Speaker 1 (02:36:27):
It will.
Speaker 3 (02:36:28):
All right, we always part with hub delays. Jay Ratliffe,
what's going on out there in the world of air
travel other than the fact that we want to stay
the Helloway to Newarks for Newark?
Speaker 23 (02:36:36):
Yeah, yeah, that one for a while. We've got a
lot of rain that's in the area across the country.
It's yet to impact any major hubs now. Obviously, as
the day progresses, the afternoon storms that we've been talking
about might start to impact some flight activity towards Atlanta
and Charlotte. But other than that, I think that it's
going to be probably the best day of the week weatherwise.
(02:36:59):
We've had to fly, and that's saying something because it's
been a it's been a rough week.
Speaker 3 (02:37:03):
It sure has Jay again, great scene yesterday, great better
see your better half.
Speaker 1 (02:37:08):
It's always great to have you on the fifty five. Came,
that's all right.
Speaker 3 (02:37:12):
Please do When she wakes up, you can tell her
and I'll look forward to another great segment with you
next Thursday.
Speaker 1 (02:37:17):
Have a wonderful week on my Friend,