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November 4, 2025 • 140 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Five o five at thirty five k R the talk station,
Happy Election Day, will a vacation vot voter, taking us

(00:31):
back to the Obama election. Happy Election Day, folks up,
you get up and get up and vote, Get out
and vote. Voter die, Joe says Joe Trackers. I could
produce a fifty five care morning show, mister podcast too,
if you want to do a podcast. Joe's a man
to hire. There's a little side plug for Joe. No,
I do not get paid to mention Joe's tracker and
support his efforts outside of his current employment. But I
do support what he's doing. Of course. A man's got

(00:51):
to make a buck, right Joe. How many podcasts do
you produce now, Joe? Couple dozen't Well done? Man, well done?
That's great. Edie how Moving away from Joe Strekker, producer
of podcast Week, fast forward to fifty five Casey Morn Show.
Today on the rundown, we have Franklerose. Frank Loose. It

(01:15):
is election day in Ohio. Frank Loroo is going to
join the program at seventh there to talk about that.
He comes on every election cycle. I appreciate him doing that.
Inside scoop of breitbarton News. We're going to get that
eighth five for that one every week. Politics editor Bradley
Jay returns talking about the shutdown and the national election races.
Daniel Davis deep dive, get the latest on Russia, Ukraine,

(01:35):
maybe a little dabble onto into Israel, Hamas and I
saw an article a little disturbing about the number of
young Ukrainians leaving Ukraine. One thousand a day, I think
they said, headed into Germany. I didn't realize there were
that many young people left. Not worth fighting for headline.
I saw here one thousand Ukrainian men arriving in Germany
every week, sorry, not day, every week. Apparently the Telegraph

(01:59):
report to the nearly one hundred thousand Ukrainian men between
ages eighteen and twenty two have already left the country
in the past couple of months, notedly a force well
larger than the seventy thousand soldiers in then the entire
United Kingdom Army. Little comparison. There frightening stuff going on there.

(02:20):
It's just a terrible, terrible, terrible situation. Stating the obvious. Anyway,
Daniel Davis said eight thirty on that plus, we're here
from OHC my favorite cancer folks, my cancer doctors. OHC.
We'll get learned some information at the end on the
Asty Experts segment. I appreciate them coming on because it's
always good news. Plenty of developments and advancements in cancer therapy.
So I love to express optimism, thinking that cancer may

(02:43):
be cured within my lifetime. I always love hearing from folks.
Maybe you got a common or to about election day.
Polls open here to Higowa at six thirty. They're open
in the Commonwealth at six am, just as ar in Indiana.
Six am. Give until six pm in Kentucky six pm
in Indiana, you have until seven thirty here in Ohio,
so six thirty to seven thirty. I want to encourage
everybody in the city Cincinnati get out and vote. Voter

(03:05):
Die josephs and a note from Christopher smitham in this morning.
I wished him well. I also shot a text to
Corey Bowman wished him well, and Christopher and I engaged
in a short exchange. He said, left it all out
on the field. Now it's up to the people, and
I said, I'm hoping they've been paying attention and care
enough to vote. Christopher noted Lord it's so true. This

(03:28):
is about action. Corey has a real shot because voter
turnout is low. This is me trying to encourage you
if you care capable of voting. I know I'm focusing
on the city and we have been lately at such
an important and vital race to the entire region. Those
of dear Lord. Please, if you're in the city and
you have registered, get out turnout it's going to be low.

(03:49):
I think that's pretty much demonstrated by history over and
over and over again. You know, past results are not
indicative of future returns, but you know we've seen this
play out before. They the neighborhoods like Hyde Park and
Mount Lookout, if they show up, it's over for well Pervolt.

(04:11):
If the West Side comes out because well, lack of investment,
the police chief issues, whatever the case may be, you
come out in favor of Corey Boum And then we
get a new mayor, a different direction, and someone who's
prioritized things like public safety number one. And he means it.
He lives in one of the worst neighborhoods in town.
He's invested in it, and his business is there, his

(04:32):
church is there. He said, I think of over sixteen
thousand registered voters in Hyde Park alone. However, only four
thousand or so vote. Imagine Christopher points out if ten
thousand showed up, how much of an impact it would

(04:53):
have on the city of Cincinnati. A massive impact. And
I've been blessed enough to meet and I wish the
circumstances surrounding my meeting her had been different. But I've
met her, I've had her on my program a couple
of times, She's been interviewed by local media, and thankfully

(05:14):
she's outspoken in spite of the tragedy. It fell in
her lap, literally fell in her lap, and the since
that her husband died in her lap. Of course, Sarah
Herringer Patrick murdered in their apartment over the Rhine. The
horror of that alone. Anybody your home has been invaded
by a murderer, and not just any murderer, murder who's

(05:36):
out in parole is supposed to be having an ankle
monitor attached, and that ankle monitor was cut off and
he was free four months. Lord, do we learn a
lot about how what a failure of that program here
is in Ahisle, thank well, sadly, as a consequence of
Patrick Herringer getting murdered in their home, and I appreciate

(05:56):
Sarah being outspoken and keeping this out in front of
everyone's attention. Going back to will the residents of the
city of Cincinnaty pay attention? Do they want to go
in a different direction on crime? Do they think that
well crime has been addressed adequately by this current administration?
Sarah Herringer wrote the following why I am voting for

(06:23):
Corey Bowman. Let me be very clear, Corey Bowman has
not asked me to write this. I'm not endorsing anyone.
I'm speaking as someone who has lived through what happens
when leadership failed. Despite what people might assume, I'm not
a Democrat, I'm also not a Republican. I've been an
independent since I was old enough to vote, and I've

(06:43):
voted in every election since. I vote based on the
person's record, their actions, and whether they stood by their
word when it mattered most. Corey Bowman has been consistent.
If you'd listen to his debates, his interviews, or his speeches,
he tells you who he is and who he doesn't,
and he doesn't waiver. Rather, he's not reading office script

(07:05):
or chasing headlines. He's direct, clear, and accountable. I know
some people hesitate to even consider him because of what's
happening nationally with the Republican Party, or because of who
he's related to. I understand that concern, but this isn't
about Washington. This is about Cincinnati, our streets, our safety,
our leadership. Corey's priorities have been local and consistent. Spend

(07:31):
money responsively, rebuild infrastructure, support small businesses, and restore accountability
in public safety. You don't have to share his party
label to recognize integrity when you see it, Amen, Sarah.
He owns a small business and one of the most
dangerous parts of our city, and instead of leaving, he's investing.

(07:52):
That matters because leadership isn't about sitting safely on the
sidelines while neighborhoods fall apart. It's about standing inside the
mess in helping rebuild it. You may not share his religion,
and that's fine, but let's be honest. If you were
Muslim or Hindu, his openness about faith would be praised
as authenticity. Corey doesn't use this Christianity as a weapon

(08:13):
or a slogan. He's simply honest about who he is. Meanwhile,
this current administration has mastered the art of appearances, endless promises,
press conferences, and photo ops, Yet the city is less
safe than it's ever been. My husband Patrick was murdered

(08:33):
in our home because of the environment this administration has
allowed to fester. A city that looks the other way
on violent crime, a city that values pr over protection.
And if you think that that's the leadership we need
to keep, then by all means, vote for it. But
don't pretend it's working. Don't pretend we're safe. Don't pretend

(08:56):
this city hasn't failed the very people it claims to serve.
I'm voting for Corey Bowman because when the unthinkable happened,
he showed up. He reached out when the current mayor didn't.
He didn't need cameras or headlines to do it. He
did it because well, that's who he is. I'm writing

(09:16):
this because I've been open about everything else, and because
I want to see real change in this city. What
happened to my husband was not an isolated tragedy. It
was the result of leadership that stopped caring for its people.
Every one of us has a voice and a vote.
Use it. Demand better don't hand your power away to

(09:38):
anyone who treats safety and accountability like slogans. My husband's
death should have been the line in the sand. If
it isn't, then what will be? Sarah Harringer, She's fantastic

(10:01):
and such an amazingly strong woman. I've talked to her
fairly recently, and you can still and this comes as
no shock to anybody who has had to deal with
this pain, this type of loss. You could see it
in her face. You could see the emotion and the
pain inside. Are just looking at her and hearing her

(10:22):
talk about it, but being so willing to talk about this.
Why is she willing to do this? Because you heard
what she wrote? She wants something better. She too loves
this city. She knows there's a better path. She knows
that crime can be dealt with effectively. She understands priorities.

(10:49):
Corey Bowman priority number one, public safety has been since
he decided to launch the campaign. He lives amid the
gunfire and the violence. He sees it. He understands it
started businesses. He's done and he well, he understands the
red tape and the and the the well, the regulatory nightmare.
If I might put it that way, that the City

(11:10):
of Cincinnati, you know, puts up against people who are
otherwise looking to better their individual neighborhoods, perhaps in conflict
with what may have to have purvol envisions for any
given neighborhood, Hyde Park, Bond Hill, We could go on.
But someone who really appreciates the city, wants to invest
in it is pushed aside or otherwise prevented from moving

(11:32):
forward with their business building efforts or perhaps even housing
building efforts. Does that make sense to anybody but crime?
Sarah Heringer experienced it, Cory Bowman's experienced it, So many
residents in the city of Cincinnati have experienced it. Do
you think things are better now than they were four
years ago? As this administration delivered on safety and infrastructure

(11:59):
and irotization. When it comes to the finite number of
tax dollars they take in from you, have they delivered
to your satisfaction? Can you put aside this JD. Vance's
brother crap for a moment, because none of that matters,
and vote for someone who truly cares about the city.

(12:22):
Give it a shot. It can't really get any worse, now,
can it. Oh? And I say that out loud, and
I maybe regret saying it, because I guess it could.
Five on three seven four, nine, fifty five eight hundred
two three Talk Contact fifty on AT and T Films
has got a great illustration of the failure going on
the city of Cincinnati right now. We can talk about
that in a minute, or go any direction you want.

(12:43):
Just give me a call, be right back.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
Happy Election Day tomorrow, first Wednesday the month listener lunch.
We're gonna be a High Green Brewery Brentwood location. And
sadly cribbage Mike aka my submariner friend Mike and I
make it. Got a message from him yesterday, So Mike,
I really wouldn't have seen you tomorrow, but I enjoyed
the fellowship a listener to lunch whether or not we

(13:13):
get to play cribbage, and I have a great time,
and I know we're gonna have a great time tomorrow,
hopefully in a celebratory mood. What was that show? You
think he's scared cribbage? Mike is not afraid of anything.
He lived in a submarine six months out of the
year or however long go ahead, put yourself in that position.

(13:39):
I'm not claustrophobic, but I get claustrophobic just thinking about that. Anyway,
Tomorrow listener, lunch Brentwood or our High Green Brewery Brentwood
Pub location. Hope to see you there. All right, Well
we're talking about crime, of course, not to Sarah Herringer
and that beautifully written reason why she's voting for Corey Bowman,
and of course you should too. I'm scratching my head

(14:00):
over this local story. Thank you to WCPO. Brett Burganski
gets credit for it. But over the Rye neighborhoods went
the city of Cincinnati to close down a nightclub. This
was the nightclub that was involved in these Well maybe
it wasn't personally involved there early Sunday morning shootings. It's
this Privy on elmhich Is, which sits in the corner

(14:23):
of Elman Finley Streets and corner of the reporting. People
have been unruly outside of the club for months. Listen
to this. Some of the complaints I just read the sentence.
Some of the complaints include playing loud music, speeding down
the street, drinking outside on the sidewalk, smoking weed outside,

(14:44):
and leaving garbage on the street and fighting. Now, with
the exception of playing loud music, which the reporter didn't
say was occurring outside of the club or inside the club,
does any of the other activities that are obviously objectionable
mostly criminal, I had anything to do with the nightclub itself. Yes,
the nightclub is the magnet apparently for some real jerks.

(15:06):
I would be more graphic with my description of them,
but the FCC prevents me from doing so. However, it's
the people.

Speaker 3 (15:19):
Now.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
If you change the name Privy to Oh, I don't know.
I just pick a different name, and maybe you change
the interior of it. I don't know if it would
draw a different class of people. But is the bar
really to blame for who shows up at it and
then who goes outside and commits bad activity? So ponder
that on your own talk amongst yourselves. But if this

(15:40):
is always happening, and the impression from the neighbors that
they interview, it's much of Lil Ways Sarah Herringer, Oh,
the gunshots happen so often we don't even notice. It's
like that line from the Blues Brothers. How often does
the train go by? So often you won't even notice?
But if this activity is indeed as bad as these
neighbors are saying. In hell, it was demonstrated over the

(16:02):
weekend the gunfire going out on the streets. Question, don't
you think that's an ideal place to have maybe a
rather looming and present, a constant, circulating even presidence of
police department officers. Isn't that an area, a hot spot
area that should be deserving of a greater police presence.

(16:26):
And I'm not criticizing the police department at all, I
might even criticizing the administration, maybe the leadership in the
since a police department would love to have regular roving
police officers in that neighborhood, given to how terrible the
situation is outside this club, maybe they don't have enough officers.
Maybe the lack of the two or three hundred officers

(16:48):
that we've been struggling with all for the last several
years under the par Ball administration, maybe that could solve
the problem, that they would have adequate resources. I can't
answer that question definitively, but I'm looking at it's not
so much the club itself and the activities and drug
dealing and anything else that might be going on inside
the club. Hell, if people were fighting inside the club,

(17:08):
if people were dealing drugs and smoking weed inside the club,
and the club would be responsibility. But how can the club
be held accountable for what these so and sos do
after they leave the doors of the club. The problem
is the people in this particular case. Every neighborhood's got

(17:30):
a club, every neighborhood's got a bar, Every neighborhood has
a little a late night spot where people can go
and you know, maybe in bibe, but not every neighborhood
has this particular problem. So where I ask out loud,
does the solution lie? Five twenty six fifty five care
see shut the club down. That's what the neighbors are
asking for. I don't know if that's the answer. Be

(17:53):
right back with some of the local stories or alternatively
phone calls, which I would prefer, get out and vote today.
I'll be right back.

Speaker 4 (18:02):
I'm both five.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
Eight hundred and eighty two to three taco pound five
fifty on AT and T phones. You want to hear
the final version of the Smith event from yesterday before
the election, the final version. I hope it's not the
last one ever. Check it out fifty five Caresey dot
com y'all also get information from Brian James from Monday Monday.
Every Monday we get at least those two people, and
it seems to me every day and thankfully so we
get a call from Tom about this time. Tom, thanks
for calling as always, welcome.

Speaker 5 (18:25):
Back, good morning, hope you guys are doing.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
Okay, fair enough, fair to Midland praying but I said,
I'm praying praying.

Speaker 5 (18:36):
Yeah, yeah, today's a big day, it sure well, it's
all the build up is also today and then it'll
be over and then there'll be another one to.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
Look forward to next I know, yep.

Speaker 5 (18:45):
So it's just continuing cycle. Your gas price update real
quick up here seventy five north of town. Since Natty
Dayton Road. Uh, you may have noticed a lot of
gas stations jumped their gas price up. I thank you
pretty much. Two has been the common common gas price
that everyone jumped to, except the one gas station on

(19:08):
the south or west side.

Speaker 3 (19:10):
Of the street.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
Depends on how you look at Sint Date Road right
there off the highway. It's two point fifty two forty
seven cent difference across the street. Oh wow, so yeah
across it's still it. I just passed it and now
yesterday and the way home, I knew I needed to
get gas, so I stopped there and I gave them
my business because they're deeping their price down even though

(19:31):
the the major gas chain across the street is jumped
their price up. So about two those to them, and
they got my business because of it.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
So, yeah, running about two to eighty in my neighborhood.
I just did four five two two the Cincinnati zip code.
It's two ninety nine for regular according to the Ohio
Gas Price Stats. The cheapest price in the state of Ohio,
according to gas Buddy two dollars and thirty five cents,
the average three to oh three. So you're still getting
a great deal at that spot you found there, tom.

Speaker 5 (20:00):
So promise of that, right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
And then in that gas station over on Camargo, I
think is running out about six dollars and five.

Speaker 5 (20:08):
Cents at the very least. At the very least. Why
not the line in Sarah Harner's letter that everyone, I mean,
the whole thing is great, but the one particular line
that stood out to me, and especially in a daylight today,
when she said, you have a voice, you have a vote,

(20:30):
use it because you're gonna you're gonna bitch a complain
about everything that you don't like about what the government's doing,
doing to you, doing to others. They should be doing this,
they should be doing that. Today is your day unless
you've already voted leading up to today, But today is
the day where you get to use your voice and
your vote. And if you don't use it, then shut up.

(20:54):
There's only nothing for you to complain about. I mean,
you want to get involved and get on board or
some council, then that's even better. But at the very least,
when you're you know whatever, on your way to work,
on your way home from work, after you go what
I do, what our tradition is I go home, the

(21:14):
wife and I get together and we could, you know,
make sure we're ready to go. We go out, we vote,
and then we go get a bike. That's our usual
tradition on election day, en exactly, and today will be
the same. And even though it is an off year election,
there is no really no such thing. I say that
with air quotes, no such thing as an off your election.

(21:34):
Every election matters, Every election affects you. So get out there,
don't vote Rhino, and definitely don't vote Democrat.

Speaker 6 (21:43):
I have a great day, Brian.

Speaker 1 (21:45):
Take care of Tom. Hey, Joe, you think Tom's election
day date? I think that includes a happy ending. He
didn't mention that phrasing anyway. Speaking of bars being closed,
how about this one, or well, people demand the bars
be closed for activity that curs outside of bars. Was
still scratching ahead over that one. We got a Hamlin
County judges ordered a Clifton hookah bar to close permanently.

(22:09):
This after a lawsuit with the City of Cincinnati. Bally
shram Is reporting wcp's mining sham, I gotta give you a
credit Bohemian hookah cafe in order to shut down by
the Hamilton County Common please, Judge Patrick denk Locker bar
got sued by the city and the Cincinnati Board of
Health back in September. Ruling came out. City council member
Mark Jefferies, who's guests currently running for re election, said, quote,

(22:33):
Clifton gaslight just got safer close quote. He also wrote,
this was never about shutting a business down, but rather
ensuring that any business plays by the rules and is
respectful to neighbors in a neighborhood business district. Okay, apparently
this hookah bar has been been dealing with problems repeatedly,

(22:54):
neighbors complaining of late night parties, illegal alcohol sales, and
potential violence centered around the business. Now, if they're engaging
in illegal alcohol sales, there you go, that's something connected
with the business. But what happens outside the business I
keep struggling with how do you hold a business owner
accountable for that? What if you had a grocery store
in one of these areas and people went to the
grocery store and bought like a soda and then came

(23:15):
out and started beating the crap out of each other
on a regular basis, would you shut the grocery store
down anyway? In July, late night street takeover took place
near the bar, where several people were seen in surveillance
footage blocking traffic, partying in the street and fighting on
Lovelow Avenue. That street took a take over led to

(23:36):
several Clifton business owners demanding action again against the Hookah Lounge.
UH owner of Ludlovel Wines and president of the Clifton
Business Association, Mike Anagnosto, was quoted as saying Clifton's always
been a very welcoming, very safe neighborhood. It really does
harm the businesses here, referring, I guess to the hookah bar.
Lawsuit didn't SPEs specifically address those complaints from neighbors, but

(23:58):
claimed that the Bohemian Hooka Cafe repeatedly sold tobacco to
someone under the age of twenty one, repeatedly violated how
Smoke Free Workplace Act by allowing smoking indoors without obtaining
an exemption from the High Department of Health. Huh reasons
to go after the bar and that stands in contrast
and independent of the other one cries to close that

(24:18):
that that that nightclub there because people beat the crap
out of each other and engage in criminal activity outside
of the club. Struggle with that one from a legal perspective.
It is five thirty six right now. But you have
k City Talk station stack of stupid or phone calls
five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eighty two to three talk and to give
you the number for plump Chuck by forty one vacationed

(24:41):
the answer from executive producer Joe Strecker five on three seven,
eight h eight two three talk Idiots and Politics, making
the stack of stupid right on top. But first let's
talk to Luke. Luke, thanks for calling this morning. Happy
election day.

Speaker 3 (24:55):
Here, Good morning, Brian.

Speaker 7 (24:56):
I saw a video circulating, uh kids on Halloween where.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
You know, kids dump the whole bowl of candy.

Speaker 8 (25:02):
In their bag.

Speaker 5 (25:03):
Was entertained these you know, uh just unwritten.

Speaker 7 (25:07):
They you just take one piece of taking a couple
maybe you know, and move on. And you know, it
just so happened that some of the Jews I saw
the children were black, which adds another tangible element.

Speaker 9 (25:19):
To the situation of the riff we have in this country.
It just does the the way you look does matter.
We are human bands and it does add another element too.
And then this one little white kid, he came up
and here's there's only two pieces left. He took back
from his candy candies from his bag.

Speaker 7 (25:38):
And helped fill that bowl back up.

Speaker 5 (25:44):
It really was and.

Speaker 8 (25:45):
It was something that my boys would do.

Speaker 7 (25:47):
And it just and a my two I have to
mix sons.

Speaker 9 (25:52):
I'm really country.

Speaker 7 (25:53):
I'm from middle of nowhere, but I'm living since nighty now.

Speaker 8 (25:55):
My wife is black, and it's something my sons would do.

Speaker 5 (25:59):
But it just it really is about to call your
skin so far as how.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
You are raised, thank you, period. That is everything. How
you are raised, That you had someone who cares enough
and concern enough about you being raised in an environment
that's positive, uplifting. That you would teach your child to
do something exactly like what you described. That is independent

(26:22):
of color of skin, It's independent of income level. You know,
teaching your child responsible ethics and morals and values does
not require money. It just requires effort. It doesn't matter
about what your skin color is. It matters that you
personally care as a human being to care about the
person you brought into this world.

Speaker 8 (26:41):
Luke, so well, are we ever going to be able
to solve the problem of the of the just the
major difference in values of the people in this country
is how do we solve the problem?

Speaker 10 (26:52):
How do we show the.

Speaker 7 (26:53):
Other side there's value in being a valuable and a good,
honest person.

Speaker 3 (26:56):
That's all.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
That's a good question spoken out loudly. I appreciate your
observations and thoughts, and you know, part of me wants
to be really harsh and crash and say, you know what,
maybe we ought to let a little bit of Darwin
element to come into this. I mean, survival of the
fittest in the form you know, the survival of the strongest,
and you know could be even meanest and toughest person
out there. That person is no morals or ethics, survalues

(27:19):
may come out on top in a fight, but you know,
in as far as rewarding people who are guilty of
stupidity wrongful conduct mean that I'm thinking back to the
guy the idea that you're gonna reward someone on parole
for showing up at a parole hearing, when that is
a fundamental basic tenet of being on parole. If you
don't show up, you're going back to jail. Isn't that

(27:43):
enough of a threat out there to get someone to
show up with the parole hearing. No, we've got to
reward them by giving him a candy bar or something.
We've turned everything up on top of its head. There
should be a penalty to be paid for people who
do bad things. That's how the whole criminal justice system
has worked for so long, and for whatever reason, the
Left wants to tear all that down because well, why,

(28:09):
our society is inherently broken and therefore we can't enforce
the laws that apply equally to everyone, regardless of color
of skin, religion, anything else, income level. I don't know.
I just think I go back to the whole idea.
I've said it a million times, and I think so
many people agree with me. Officers agree with me, sociologists
I've talked to, you know, politicians, everyone who's out there,

(28:29):
even social workers. The destruction of the nuclear family, the
removal of people that actually care about those they brought
into this world, bringing up children a thoughtful, proper manner,
one that you know, we can all live together. Why
can't we all just get along? There's a I think

(28:51):
right there. All problems in society, I think largely point
to that. By forty six fifty five CARE City Talks
Stationsissippi James on the line looking for Deed Talk Station
five fifty one. Here fifty five KR City Talk Station.
Happy Election Day, Get out and vote. Your vote certainly
matters in an off year, so much more than normal.

(29:13):
But in the city of Cincinnati, Hell, you can vote
in a presidential election here and half the people would
bother showing up set as it is, Mississippi James, Welcome
back to the fifty five KRS Morning Show. It's always
pleasure hearing from you.

Speaker 10 (29:24):
Sir, Hey, good morning, Brian, Come in peace, love everybody,
and there's nothing you can do about it.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Good attitude.

Speaker 10 (29:32):
Man, you're on a road this morning. I must tell
you I agree with seventy to eighty percent of what
you're saying, but you're only saying fifty percent of what
need to be seen.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
There's only so many minutes in a day. Go for it, James, right.

Speaker 10 (29:50):
I repeat that. Now, everything you saying to me is
in a Eurocentric mindset. Now, when you get into an
afrocentric mindset, and I'm not talking about the ego centric,
I'm saying afro center, I hear you. You know this
system has been set up for the European. You know
that Afrocentric has been minimized, demonized, marginalized, deep press, old press,

(30:16):
soul press. Now you say, hey, why can't you people
just assimilate.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
I didn't talk. I'm not speaking to anybody of a
particular race. I'm saying this across the board. Color does
not matter in as far as my comments. It does, Yes,
it does. Go ahead and explain how that works.

Speaker 10 (30:32):
Because you speaking from a person that's white supremacy, that's
been told the best. They are good, they are smart,
and then when another person to hear that of a
different that's been told, they discme, they curse, they bad.
They're gonna see it from different ways. So it matters.

(30:56):
It does matters, you know, even color, Like people say,
what color doesn't matter that Jesus was, It don't matter.
It did to somebody that painted that portrait. So when
you go all over the world pushing that portrait and
telling you this is the image of something good, and
you're taking it away from the original. Now, I don't

(31:17):
know about God and Jesus and all that stuff in
the beginning, but I'm saying the way it was shaped
and pushed, I know by spiritual that I think, oh yeah,
but the but the way religion was pushed in shape,
that was the division there.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Well, no kidding, I mean you think about the Roman Empire.
They always used to worship all these various gods. They
adopted Christianity and then shoved it down people's throats. Nobody
had a choice like the Church of England. Our forefathers
that founded this country were aware of the oppression of
the Church of England. They were forced to pay taxes
to the Church, that is, the state imposing its will
upon people, and in an effort to impose Christianity on people,

(31:55):
you had to, of course, among a solidly white, historically
Northern European, European focused group of people. You're dealing with
a bunch of white people. You gotta sell Christianity. You
got to put a white face on it. I agree
with you on that, but it doesn't matter if the
message is what is really important. That they had to
do marketing to an illiterate society that could not even

(32:17):
read the Bible that they were worshiping. You had to
put a happy face on it. Yeah, that was marketing.
I agree with you that Jesus probably was a brown
person or maybe even a black person. I didn't live
back then, but I know the region of the world
in which he was born, and I know it wasn't
filled with white people.

Speaker 10 (32:33):
James, right, And that was just migration where people migrated
out of that part of the world to other parts
where evolution took place. They got lighter, they hair textra
changed because of what nature did to them. Yeah, when
they came back and saw the people that didn't look
like them, whatever, the friction was right them instead of

(32:56):
them getting a loan, you know, it's almost day death
test to each other.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
You fear what you do not know, and there's a
problem with people generally speaking. Maybe it's part of our
evolutionary process, you know, the hunter gatherers of the world.
When encountering people in different cultures, different lands, maybe different regions,
even close to where they live, that person or those
group of people maybe represented a threat. Maybe that's ingrained
in are just our biological being. It doesn't mean it's right.

(33:23):
Just because you're a different colored skin, that doesn't mean
I should well not like you. I shouldn't be suspicious
of you. I should take the time to get to
know you first. I never met a man I didn't like.
I love that phrase, why because it suggests that you
shouldn't judge people before you even get to know them,
start from the proposition that you like them. And I

(33:44):
don't know if morality has anything with ethnicity, James, because
you say, I'm coming at it from a Eurocentric point
of view, and you didn't get a chance to explain
because you hung up what an afrocentric point of view is.
And maybe perhaps it's this idea that the racism that
we experience in our but racism that exists elsewhere. I
mean think, and let me go back to my point
on like that tribalism concept, you fear what is not

(34:07):
you among your people? Where did all the slaves come from?

Speaker 11 (34:10):
It?

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Quite often was black folks in Africa, tribes within Africa
that fought against each other, much in the same way
Native American tribes fought against each other. One tribe over here,
one tribe over here. Here's these idiots over in white
Land who want slaves. Let me steal those slaves from
that tribe over there, even though they look a lot

(34:32):
like me, they're from a different tribe. Let me gather
them up on behalf of these evil white people and
sell them to them for my profitable advantage. That's evil,
that's wrong. But that was black people doing it to themselves.
I'm not defending it. I'm just saying it's a reality
because people lived in different tribes and had different viewpoints,
maybe different land claims, I don't know. And thus it

(34:54):
has ever been, whether it's color of skin dividing us,
religion dividing us, country of ore in dividing us, it's
that us versus them mentality, which transcends race but quite
often involves race. Quite often involves religion too. We got
a problem between the Palestinians and the Jews. Yeah, there
you go, different religious belief systems. And again, thus it

(35:16):
has ever been. I think the challenge is to rise
above that and just view crime as crime doesn't come
from a Eurocentric point of view or an afrocentric point
of view. If you harm someone else, you steal someone
else's stuff, it is demonstrably and objectively a crime. Fifty
seven fifty five Carsity Talk stage, Oh west Side, Gym's

(35:38):
on the phone. Can't wait to hear what you have
to say, Jim, if you don't mind holding me right
back today.

Speaker 12 (35:43):
It's tough headlines coming up on election head quarters.

Speaker 13 (35:47):
We're about to lose the country.

Speaker 1 (35:48):
Fifty five the talk station. It's six or sixty fifty
five kr SE Detox station. It's election day. Yes, I
know it's at it before and I'll continue to say
it throughout the morning, encouraging people who otherwise might not
be inclined to vote, to get out and vote, Get
out and vote. Why wouldn't you scratch my head every

(36:11):
single election cycle that so many people just say, well,
let it go, what the hell don't care? Doesn't impact me, Yes,
it does, it does it does? Somebody knows that more
than almost anybody else, was Sai Jim. Good to hear
from the West Side. How things looking around the West
side of Cincinnati?

Speaker 3 (36:26):
Well, Bara, Brian, good morning, sir. And I was with
Corey all week. If Pryce Lil Chili, he worked the
West Side like it was the last the Alumo. Let's
put it that way, and.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
Don't use that parallel. The Alumo didn't work out real well, well,
the good.

Speaker 3 (36:45):
Guys, that's true, But the movie was good. Truck Commander time,
my civic duty good. So I worked Saturday and I
worked today. But I'm going to get out here in
a couple of minutes and put the last of my
signs up at a couple of the polling locations, and
let's just hope that Corey pulls this thing through because

(37:07):
he's he's worked his tail off, Brian, I'm watching him
on TV right now. There's the other guy. I forget
his name, but no Dodtter predicted twenty five to twenty
eight percent.

Speaker 4 (37:21):
Oh wow, we're gonna have a rush.

Speaker 3 (37:24):
But I think I think he's got a decent chance.
I mean, everybody's saying he doesn't have a chance. He
didn't got a shot. People are listening, and the people
I talk to, a lot of them say they haven't
put signs up because they're afraid of what the neighbors say,
or they just you know, they just wanted to keep
it to theirself. But I really think that he does

(37:46):
have a shot, more than what he had in the
primary course, because nobody knew who he was. Now they
know who he is and his just like Sarah's message,
I mean, I read that yesterday and I'll tell you
what she is. She's something else she is. I mean,
there's just no other way to explain it. She's so
vocal and the way she puts things out there, and

(38:09):
I'm glad she's on basically our side, but mostly Corey side,
because she speaks the truth.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
She does, and you know, and with such passion, and
who among us can you know you speak with such
authority too. She lived that terror, she lived that reality,
and she revealed and she revealed to the rest of
the world to the death of her husband. How just
stupid the whole idea of ankle monitors are and obviously

(38:36):
illustrating the problem with crime generally speaking. I mean, She's
a hero to anybody who cares about crime in the
city of Cincinnati by well, pointing fingers at the right
people and trying to suggest, you know what, there's a
better way. We have a better path. What we're doing
is not working. My dead husband is a great illustration
of that.

Speaker 3 (38:55):
How many times have we done something like an ankle
monitor just to throw it against the wall see if
it works, and it doesn't end up working, and we
waste a lot of money, time and effort, and then
something like this. It takes a really drastic event to
show that, and it's terrible.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Yeah, you can sell the concept of ankle monitor because
it's built on the perception that we all had past
tense that there was some sort of real time monitoring
going on. What sense does it make to put a
gadget on somebody's ankle that doesn't go off, that doesn't
issue an alarm to law enforcement when it's cut off

(39:32):
or when they leave their geographical boundaries. And we do
have geo fencing. It's a modern concept that been around
a long time. You set up a geofence, it's electronically
monitor when your dog hits the geo fence, it gets
a zap on the collar. When your criminal leaves the
geo fence, it sets up an alarm that says, hey,
this criminal has violated the terms of his or her parole.
Let's go get them or at least alert law enforcement

(39:54):
that the terms of the parole been violated and to
pick them up. That's what we were sold on, and
we turns out Patrick Haringer's death reveals No, they're not
paying attention to it. They're not looking. They don't issue
an alarm or warning to anybody. What you were told
and what you believed was a lie. If you knew
that going in, would you have embraced the concept of
ankle monitors. I think the real answer to that is no,

(40:16):
what's the point if you're not going to monitor him,
what's the damn reason even by them?

Speaker 3 (40:20):
And then we lost a great citizen and her husband.

Speaker 1 (40:24):
What an amazing guy he is.

Speaker 10 (40:25):
He was I'll not even go bring politics into this,
but he was a business owner, so you know the
tax is involved and everything else. Then and now you know,
she has a move, basically moved out, and I guess
we'll see what her future holds.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
I know she probably doesn't want to talk about political office.
I wish she would and I don't care which one
of the aisle she runs on. I like to see
people like this in it no matter what.

Speaker 1 (40:50):
Yeah, someone who has a reason to run, someone who
has a lived experience and has some connection with it.
You know, well that isn't that Corey Bowman. You've never
been a politician for he's an experience, but you know
he's lived the experience of a resident of the city
of since any one of the worst neighborhoods that we have.

Speaker 3 (41:07):
And Brian, we listen to his message and the only
thing that comes out from the other side is Jady
Vance's brother.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
I know, and you know, and Jim, I'm glad you
brought that up again, because you know, I'm constantly pointing
this out. If you're engaged in a debate with someone
and that other person starts calling you names, you have won.
Name calling is not debate. It's the lowest form of debate,
if it even could be so. By By have to

(41:36):
have provol and his crony saying JD Vance's half brother
every time Corey Bowman's name is mentioned. Because of course,
everybody hates evil Orange Man, most notably in an all
Blue City. Somehow that's supposed to be like Corey Bowman's platform,
that Jadvance is Corey Bowman. They are one of the same. No,
that's name calling, it's not debate. It just illustrates they

(41:58):
don't have anything to show for themselves. I would respond
by saying, no, no, look what I've accomplished. What the
hell are you capable of doing? This is what I've
done on behalf of the city, engaging a back and
forth over you know, the direction of the city. This
is my goal. I've set this up for the future.
Here's all the accomplishments that have led up to this moment.
In time. Give me one more term in office, I'll
deliver on X, Y and Z. I've heard none of

(42:21):
that from the current administration. None. Just JD. Mans's half brother.
In response, they lose the argument.

Speaker 3 (42:27):
And you know, Brian he brought up to well, he's
a mega. We're not going to have a mega in
this town. That was his quote. And that's it's ridiculous
because Corey Bowman has not brought one thing up about
a national platform into his campaign. He's talked everything about
this city and what he's going to do and everything else,
and purpol is just a photo op. I mean basically,

(42:50):
that's all he's done in four years. He's been a
photo op.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
Yeah. Well, and if some listeners out there screaming going no, no, no,
he's done this, call me up and tell me what
he's done.

Speaker 3 (42:59):
Right, Yeah, exactly. And there's been some things done but
already done. Right are they correct and if they aren't,
were they corrected? Again?

Speaker 10 (43:07):
Speed humps speed?

Speaker 3 (43:10):
And is sunset? Is that thing been paved over? After
Brian Thomas has been excuse me pitching about it for
all these years.

Speaker 1 (43:19):
My favorite road.

Speaker 3 (43:20):
I guarantee Corey Bowman becomes mayor, that thing's going to
be paved Yeah, I guarantee it.

Speaker 1 (43:27):
EV promised that. You know, I'll hold him accountable for that.
Like I said, Corey Bowman, you're gonna continue to come
on the fifty five karosey morning after being elected mayor
if it happens, Yes, I will be willing to take
criticism from me and addressed criticism. If I love you
at your direction, yes I will so. Yeah, well, that's
I think that's good for all of us.

Speaker 12 (43:46):
That photo op.

Speaker 3 (43:49):
That's one photo op that I will be glad to see.
Standard there him there out there with a blacktop.

Speaker 1 (43:55):
I would have be there for the first shovel of
asphalt thrown on Sunset craned open of the Sunset repaving project.
And I'm gonna thanks.

Speaker 3 (44:05):
I'm going to try to hold it start do my
civic duty.

Speaker 1 (44:09):
Truck commander, be careful out there, and thank you for
your serves to the community. As truck commander. Yes, Jim
Keefer goes around and collects all the ballots and takes
them over to the Board of Elections. Good man for
doing that. And I'm want to thank all the poll
workers out there today, as always usually were short on them.
I haven't heard any cries of distress about poll workers
for this election, but regardless of you folks are valuable.
I want to thank Sherry Poland over the Board of

(44:30):
Elections for running a very well oiled machine. Thoroughly thoroughly
impressed by that operation over the years. So props to
all involved with that, regardless of political stripe. They do
make it work. And everybody out there who's working the polls,
you're doing the best you can to make sure we
have an election that is you know, has integrity. Republicans

(44:51):
Democrats watching the process to make sure that no Shenanigans happened.
That's the way it's supposed to be, if only people
WI get up and vote six fifteen right now fifty
five ker City Talk Station five one, three, seven, four nine,
fifty five hundred Talks Station, Happy Election Day, Get out
and vote. Of course, we do have the big deal
going on here a city of Cincinnati, which was a

(45:12):
bigger deal for most residents of the city. We also
have these national elections, and of course I keep focusing
on New York, which is just batcrap insaying from my perspective.
I'm going to combine two little of the op ed
piece that I saw in the Journal today. One Gerard Baker,
Mandami is a gift which Trump should unwrap carefully. In
the other William mcgern's Why Socialism Wins in New York,
which is I think an excellent analysis, but I appreciate

(45:35):
Baker's summary of who Mondami is. He writes, He's the
kind of democrat that might have been invented by in
a laboratye a laboratory by a perverted social science, by
a maga doctor Frankenstein, a socialist and an immigrant, a Muslim,
a son of a movie director and a professional post
a professor of post colonialism, holder of a degree in

(45:55):
African studies, a thirty four year old whose experience runs
the gamut from co founder of the The bow Doing
College Chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine to membership
of the New York State Assembly for the last five years,
with stints as a rap producer and tenant organizer. Have
I missed anything? Those employment experience does include a gig
as third assistant director in a twenty sixteen Disney Moonvie

(46:19):
Queen of Katwi, whose director, Mira Naire, is Orhan's mom.
In case those credentials weren't enough, He's enhanced his status
of Tribune of Lost Causes, saying at various times that
he wanted to defund the police, globalize into FADA, open
city run grocery stores, and reinvent America in which there
was no billionaires. He's a self described child of privilege

(46:41):
and socialist who would arrest the Israeli Prime Minister if
he visited the city with the world's largest Jewish population.
But if he wins on Tuesday. Fast forward a little bit,
it's because he did a better job of speaking to
voters concerns about their living standards in a city in
which what were once basic aspirations like a well paying
job and a decent home to live in, have become

(47:02):
unrealizable and fantasies for many economics, he says, is a
more pressing priority for young voters. But they don't understand economics.
They see expensive, expensive, expensive, and they think the ultimate
solution is to say, well, let's make it free or
freeze the rent, which never works out. It doesn't, it can't,

(47:23):
and it makes things worse, which pivots me over to
the William mcgirn column, and he again going to going
to these proposals of the Zorhan Mandami. Economically, the proposals
he lists on Zoron from NYC dot com read as
though they came from a Saturday night live skit freeze
the rent, city on grocery stores, fast fair, free buses,
no cost childcare, and so on. Though I would like

(47:46):
to see free cheeseburgers for the elderly, jokes mcgirn. Unfortunately
it's working, he writes. Mister Mundami wins today. His victory
will be a rebuke to Democrats who argue that the
party's problem is that it's moving too far left. Then
he brings up a really important point. One response to
the prospect of Mondomie is to point out the economic

(48:07):
flaws with socialism and why it's doomed to fail. The
critiques are all thoughtful and correct, but they don't seem
to be denting his popularity. Why the answer, he says,
Sidney Hook knew the answer. Hook, who died in nineteen
eighty nine, was a philosopher at New York Universe. He

(48:28):
started out as a Marxist, later became a leading critic
of communism. He alluded to the past. He alluded to
that past in his nineteen eighty seven autobiography Out of Step,
a Unquiet Left. I'm sorry, I apologize. Out of step
an unquiet life in the twentieth century anyway, that's the
name of the book. He noted the protagyum that today
may deliver a socialist mayor to America's richest city. He writes,

(48:51):
I was guilty of judging capitalism by its operations and
socialism by its hopes and aspirations, capitalism by its works,
and socialism by its literature. To this day, this error
and its disastrous consequences are observable in the judgment and

(49:13):
behavior of some impassioned individuals, mostly young. You see the
difference the operation which has been in full flex here
in the United States successfully so since our country's founding.
That will be capitalism. And then you have Marxist literature
from each according's ability to each according to his need,
that sort of philosophy. Can't we all get along and
live together and share the land. It's appealing, and he says,

(49:39):
almost forty years later, those words help explain why Mondami's
campaign holds such appeal, especially among young people who have
no experience with how socialism actually works. It starts with
happy talk about free things, but that means taking wealth
from those who have earned it and giving it to
those who haven't. We're seeing people to spend their money

(50:01):
in ways that they don't want. Nationwide, Pole finds that
an increasing number of registered voters have a negative view
of capitalism, and the parties differ sharply. Two thirds of
Republicans view capitalism positively, compared to forty four percent of
Independence and only twenty five percent of Democrats. That's the
cord of the NBC poll just released. Just twelve percent
of Republicans view capitalism negatively compared to twenty eight percent

(50:22):
of independence and forty five percent of Democrats, it will
be more telling. This is a great point if NBC
conducted a longitudinal study of New Yorkers, measuring their attitudes
right now, and then coming back four years later with
this question. Mayor Mondami promised to freeze for your rent
and make life affordable. How's that worked out for you?

(50:45):
The author this hook guy. The hook prodigem means that
no matter how much socialism fails in practice, socialists will
brain blame greedy businessmen, never socialism itself. In the same
way socialists than people who don't understand economics, attribute the
unaffordability of housing, medical care, and education to market failure.

(51:07):
Never does it occur to them that the culprit might
be the perverse effects of government regulation. Many problems in
New York will be solved with a stiff dose of
market capitalism, he said. Apple face the same kind of
government intervention in the Big Apple has imposed on a
housing market. Those Mamdami voters be carrying flip phones, he writes.
It's also telling that the political realm, the champions of

(51:31):
socialism always are looking for new and mostly unknown candidates.
That's because the people who have put socialism into practice
don't have successful records to which they can point, making
me think of to have purval to a certain degree. Anyway,
he says, isn't good news for Republicans whose nominee from

(51:51):
Arion Curtis Sliwa trails not only Mandami but Andrew Cuomo.
Trump came out and endorsed Cuomo yesterday. As a matter
of fact, I don't know if that's going to help,
but it's interesting insight to how desperate folks have become
to keep this Mandami Kami out of office. And he concludes,
on the one hand that tightening race, in a tightening race,
rather if enough Slaval voters decided that they had to

(52:14):
vote for the independent Cuomo to prevent mam Dami from winning,
the Democrat party would have a repute be repudiated at
the polls. And that's cool. That's why Trump came out
and said, you gotta vote Cuomo, repudiate Mandami at the polls.
Get the Democrats to wake up that socialism is not right,

(52:36):
it's the wrong direction, it's bad. But with two weaker
candidates Cuomo and Slava in New York City. This is
almost guaranteed Mamdami's emergence as the winner of the race
and will likely convince a lot of Democrats that maybe
we do need to move to Mandami socialism. Sorry for
interjecting my comments anyway, he said. Likely that would mean

(52:58):
a new civil war with Democrat Socialists of America. That
will be between the Democrats and the Democratic Socialists of
America if Mondami is squeezed out by Cuomo. On the
other hand, if mister Mondami does win, it will signal
his successful hijacking of New York's Democratic Party by the
Democratic Socialists of America. Sounds about the way socialism work,

(53:18):
he concludes, with just about everyone except those at the
top emerging worse off, especially the voters. So props to
William mcgern and Jerrek Baker covered up in six twenty
nine long when did I have been in that segment?

(53:39):
Apologize We have a little time for local stories. More
phone calls are always welcome. Love to hear from you,
and love for you to get in touch with QC.

Speaker 14 (53:45):
Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
Sixty three fifty five care City Talk Station. Election Day
falls are open in Ohio. Just got open a few
minutes ago, Kentucky, Indiana been up for the last half hour. Kentucky,
Indiana open until six pm. And in Ohio seven thirty.
Plenty of time. Get out and vote, please, it's very important.
It's good for you, good for the city. Perhaps uh

(54:08):
five on three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred eight two three talk if you're out of Paul
right now, you want to give us everybody an update
on If anybody is bothering to show up, feel free
to give me a call. Beyond that, let's get to
a local story. You got local state and health departments
testing the water at Christ Hospital's main campus because two
people were diagnosed with Legionnaire's disease. Christ's Hospital Health Network,
speaking with Local Fox nineteen, said the two cases appeared

(54:30):
separately over the past six weeks, which would be some
time between mid September and the end of October. Both
since been diagnosed with Legionella pneumonia potentially came from Christ
Hospital's main campus, though that has not been confirmed court
of the release from Christ Hospital. While the exact source
of the exposure for these individuals are currently unknown, the

(54:51):
Christ's Hospital immediately initiated additional environmental testing protocols to identify
any potential hospital related sources and ensure maximum levels of safety.
That is good because Legionnaire's disease a severe form of
pneumonia caused by this Legionella bacteria often found in natural
and man made water systems. When the contaminated water is inhaled,
for example the shower or from air conditioning, the bacteria

(55:15):
can ender the lungs and cause the infection. They say
the disease is not contagious and cannot be spread from
person to person, which is very fortunate since a health
department in mung with the Hamilton County Public Health and
ONHIWO Department of Health conducting the additional water test at
christ Hospital's main campus in response to those two cases,
so they are on top of it and I hope
those folks recover speedily. Six point thirty five fifty five

(55:36):
krsit detox station. Feel free to give me call anybody
out there voting fifty five krc detox station. Happy Election Day.
I'm gonna go to the phones and can reach me
at five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eight two to three talk or pound five fifty.
On eighteen t phones like Harry did. Harry, thanks for
calling this morning. Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 15 (55:53):
Thank you, Brian, Good morning, I get to your listener
to lunches. I've never called before, but calling about some
issues in the election today that are not that nobody
seems to be considering. There are a number of contests
that are extremely important to the safety and security of
the citizens in the county. Those are municipal court races.

(56:15):
Now there are seven judicial districts. All seven of the
seven judges are up for election or re election today.
Only two are contested. The other five are running unopposed.
The two candidates who are running in contested races are

(56:35):
Josh Berkowitz in the district that covers Hyde Park, Norwood,
and Anderson Township, and Betsy Sunderman, who you talked to
a few times, runs in the district covering generally Sharonville,
Blue Ash in Montgomery. Both of these people are highly
qualified for the positions. Josh Berkowitz is a friend and
has been on the municipal court bench for more than

(56:56):
two years, highly competent and extremely fair. And I don't
have as much experience with Betsy Sunderman, but she's been
a domestic relations judge is now interested in serving as
a municipal court judge. I've met her and talked to
her a couple of times, and I ard your listeners
if they're not going to vote for any other any
other issues today, particularly outside of the outside of the

(57:17):
Cincinnati which is where these are, uh well, some of
some of the Josh is in some of the areas
that are they're covered by the City of Cincinnati. I
urge them to vote for both of those people today
because I think that the safety and security of the
citizens of Hamilton County is at stake.

Speaker 1 (57:35):
Excellent, excellent points, Harry, and I cannot thank enough for
bringing them up, because obviously we're typically focusing clearly on
the mayoral race and council race, but there are so
few issues on the balance for most people. I think
I'm really concerned that they're going to be they're not
going to go out to the polls. But you are right,
Betsy Sunnyman and Josh Berkwitz are outstanding jurists, and I
do know both of them, and I respect and applaud

(57:56):
and agree with your perception of both of them. They
are great and they're exactly what we need Harry's making
a good point. I mean, you can have the best
police force on the planet, and you can have a
great prosecutor's office, you don't have judges who are willing
to uphold the law. Most notably, given the criminal circumstances
we're dealing with in the City of Cincinnati, that detern
effect goes out the window. I mean, what is the

(58:20):
criminal justice system designed to do but deter crime? If
everybody gets treated with a slap on the wrist, there
is no deterrence. I know I'm saying the obvious, and
I know I've said this before, but you know, it
doesn't take a rocket science to look or scientists to
look out in the world and see exactly how these
leftist political philosophies when it comes to criminal justice have failed.

(58:43):
And this failure is not felt by just one political
party or the other. How do you think the residents
of Portland really truly feel about the hell hole that
these woke policies have brought about to their city and
their community, and just one of a multitude of cities
that have gone down this road. We learn from other

(59:04):
people's mistakes. I mean, the old joke about City of
Cincinnati it's like ten years behind everybody, the world will
end and we will continue to live, thrive, and survive
in the city of Cincinnati for ten more years. Then
we finally wake up to that reality. Don't go down
the road that others have chosen. It's like the article
about socialism. Yet it sounds so damn appealing on the paper,
but the minute you start trying it, you realize, well, apparently,

(59:26):
inherently we're all either lazy we don't want to participate
in that system, and it collapses under the weight of
its own. People who actually do produce, live, earn come
up with ideas and concepts that we all want in
a capitalist world. They would survive on their own because
of the merit of what they discovered and brought to
the people. They don't want to bring it anymore. It's
like Atlas shrug. You know, why bother? If you're gonna

(59:49):
take whatever I earned from me, I quit. That's what
Einran wrote about. I mean, in a long winded fashion,
I will acknowledge, but the book makes a profound point.
Why bother? This exercise has been tried and tried and
tried and tried and tried. It doesn't work. And I'm
moving back to the area of criminal justice. Yeah, okay,
we live in this terribly racist, inherently unjust society. If

(01:00:13):
the law in the book says you can't take from
somebody else, and I think there was a commandment about that,
but we don't want to get religion involved in this.
Just look at the fundamental basic pres or concepts of
people living next to each other and what they have
to do in order to live next to each other,
and that's you got to respect that person's stuff and
things and leave them alone. Enter the criminal justice system, well,
if you don't respect their stuff and leave them alone,

(01:00:35):
we are going to hold you accountable because the society
would collapse under the weight of you stealing from someone else.
It's all logical and reasonable. We've moved over to this
whole thing. Well, they just misunderstood. They had a poor childhood, really,

(01:00:57):
and we're supposed to forgive the crimes that have been
committed because they had difficult circumstances. I had to note
some of the most successful people in the world were
driven by their difficult circumstances. Some of the most successful
people in the world decided that you know what, I'm
going to be as hard working and as successful as

(01:01:20):
I am capable of being, because I don't want to
live the way I grew up in difficult circumstances. That's
a real motivator. So I'm use it as a crutch
to excuse terrible behavior on a going forward basis, And
then we get elected officials who want to excuse the

(01:01:42):
terrible behavior because of just the realities of life. Life
can be unfair on its face. M But that doesn't
mean you have to turn out to be a bad person,
but the outcome, at least in so far as the
criminal justice system is determined by the enforcement of laws,

(01:02:02):
the idea that regardless of wherever you came from rich, poor,
from a nuclear family, or from an orphanage, we have
to play by a set of rules and that if
you don't, you're going to be held accountable, quite simple conceptually,
And we need judges who will fulfill their obligation to

(01:02:26):
keep that leg of the criminal justice standing firm, because
with the without the idea of accountability and being held
accountable for doing harm to someone else and forgiving that, well,
that's when people quit caring about the law and they
do whatever they damn well, please that's my take. Anyway,

(01:02:49):
you may have a different one. Feel free to let
me know six p forty seven right now. If you
have care ceed talk station and for real estate, you
want the best, and I'm telling you the best is
Peter Shabria Keloriam seven Hills. You can find online at
ask TCG. That's the Shabri Group. That's what the TCG is.
ASKTCG dot dot com and check out the programs at
the instant Offer program. I think I just love it

(01:03:09):
because having gone through the process of selling a home.
Movidy about KRC detalk station five one, three, two three
Todd Polls were open Inhio, Kentucky and in Indiana. Get
out and Vote. Frank Loro is going to join the
program at seven thirty to talk about election Day. We'll
get the insights scoop from bright bart News Today the
politics editor Bradley j. We're talking about the shutdown and

(01:03:30):
the national election racers. We'll get the Daniel Davis Deep
Dive at eight thirty, which is the case every Tuesday.
I'll get it update on Russia, Ukraine and Israel and
UH and Hamas. I'm sure our asked the expert from
OHD the cancer specialist. They'll be on at eight fifty
and give us some good news. I'm certain because every
time they come on, they got some positive news. Uh
in an area cancer which is usually just one hundred

(01:03:52):
percent negative. One thing we all agree on in a
politically divided world, cancer sucks. And uh, I don't know
what you can your can your perception of Dick Cheney
as former Vice president, Dick Cheney just passed away. He
was eighty four years old. Just got the announcement a
few minutes ago. The former Vice president died of complications

(01:04:13):
of pneumonia and cardiac and vascular disease, according to the
family statement that was issued this morning. So controversial. Yes, indeed,
Dick Cheney dead at eighty four also controversial. And I
don't know if the Republican ranks are wavering on the
whole idea of the shutdown. But there's some House Democrats
and House Republicans that unveiled a proposal which they suggest

(01:04:34):
may end this impasse. Of course, we're talking about the
expiring Affordable Care Act tax credits, tax credits that were
capped at sixty one, four hundred dollars. That was four
times poverty. That was the way it was written into
law long comes COVID nineteen. You know the story. I'm
going to say it again. They dropped the cap, letting anyone,

(01:04:56):
even people making all five six hundred thousand dollars a year,
take advantage of the tax cap, so they didn't have
to pay the actual premium for Obamacare. So it isn't
reflective of reality, in other words, offloading the actual premium
which is still paid to the American taxpayers. So if
you're working, you're paying. Somebody else is getting a product

(01:05:17):
that will be Obamacare insurance at no cost. So long
time the expiration of the tax credits resulting in this
government shutdown because the Republicans aren't willing to extend these freebies,
these supplements, and they were unlimited. So the representatives I'm
talking about here, Don Bacon, who's a Republican out of Nebraska,

(01:05:38):
a Democrat from New York name Tom Suzi, Republican out
of Colorado named Jeff Hurd, Josh Gotheimer, Democratic New Jersey,
those four together bipartisan release this what they're calling a
broad outline for a potential compromise. This broad outline potential
compromise has got me rubbed the wrong way. The enhanced
premium tax credits which we're talking about, which are the

(01:05:58):
really genesis of this whole thing, which the Democrats set
to expire at the end of the year by their
own hand, would be extended for two years with a
phased out income tax cap for those making between two
hundred and four hundred thousand dollars a year. Now, I

(01:06:25):
don't like to play the class warfare game, but you're
giving a free premium, or basically a premium reduction, or
in some cases, eradicating the premium altogether and unloading that
burden on the American taxpayer, thus increasing our national debt
beyond the thirty eight trillion dollars it already is. And
you're making two hundred to four hundred thousand dollars a year. Huh,

(01:06:51):
all right, that's kind of rubbing me the wrong way.
Surprising Democrats would even allow it to be that low anyhow,
So four hundred thousand dollars year soundary. You'd think that
that person could afford an insurance premium. I suppose if
they were smart enough to go on the open market
and deal with one of these private health insurance companies,

(01:07:12):
they wouldn't need any assistance whatsoever. That's why I am
happy to speak for Cover Senci on those topics. Coming
up at six fifty six fifty five Krcity talk station,
we'll hear from Franklroose to the bottom of the next hour.
Get out and vote, and if you're at a polling place,
feel free to give me a call let me know
if anyone's there. I suspect the crickets are chirping, but
I'd like to think that maybe somewhere out there the
place is packed with eager people looking to make a

(01:07:34):
change for their community. Don't go away and be back
after the top of the hour.

Speaker 12 (01:07:38):
News today's top headlines coming up at the top of
the election headquarters.

Speaker 13 (01:07:44):
We're about to lose the country.

Speaker 1 (01:07:45):
Fifty five krs the talk station seven six Here at

(01:08:08):
fifty five car set detalk station. It's election day. Please
get out and vote. Word or two on that just
a moment here, first offer of opportunity for you to
give me a call. Five one, three, seven four nine
fifty five hundred and eighty two to three Taco with
Ton five fifty on at and T Funds. Remember you
get head on over to fifty five cars dot com.
Podcast when you can't listen live. Today's guests include Secretary

(01:08:28):
of State Frank Lrose coming up at the bottom of
the hour. Of course, it is election day. Frank always
joins a program, but talk about that civic responsibilities, civic
duty and an opportunity to change the dynamic. You've got
great choices here, most notably in the city of Cincinnati,
and please exercise your right to vote. We'll be on
at seven thirty. As I mentioned, fast forward an hour
inside Scoop with bright Bart News the return to Politic

(01:08:50):
editor Bradley Jay, who will be addressing the shutdown in
national election race. Has got some really wild races going
on out here in the United States. Daniel Davis deep
dive the latest on Russia, Ukraine, Israel, Hamas, etc. Asked
the expert. Fast forward to eight point fifty with my
friends FROMHC the launch of THEHC Foundation, So we're going
to find out all about that together at the end

(01:09:12):
of the program. They're doing great work in so far
as cancer is concerned. Usually has some really wonderful information
to pass along to you and me, and they are
indeed my cancer doctors. I'm glad I have them in
my corner. So since I mentioned this so called bipartisan
solution and coming at the tail end of the last hour,
a fun fact I left out. So you've got a

(01:09:32):
handful of Republicans and Democrats over in the House. Mind
you the houses in recess, but they're actually sitting down
and talking to each other try to get rid of
the shutdown. So the potential compromise on the Affordable Care
Act tax credits, the close of which responsible for the
Democrats because they wrote it into the legislation. I know
I hammered that point over and over and over again,

(01:09:54):
but I'm trying to make people remember that this has nothing
to do with the Republicans. This is all the Democrats.
So previous Cap sixty one, four sixty one, four hundred,
the group of a bipartisan folks want to make a
phase out, extend the tax credits for two years, and
then phase them out with an income cap for those

(01:10:15):
making between two hundred and four hundred thousand dollars a year. Now,
I personally am of the mind that you know, we
don't need a handout from government if we are making
between two and four hundred thousand dollars a year. But
that's what the proposal is. I can only pass it
along to you. Now, here's the other component of this
which made me literally laugh out loud, and it gives

(01:10:37):
you an illustration of how colossally screwed up I chose
the word intentionally screwed up this legislation is, and how
most things from the federal government are screwed up. Let
me read you what their proposal includes. Several reforms including
get a load of this, how shocked? Oh my god,

(01:10:58):
requiring a four Care Act marketplaces to confirm the recipients
haven't died. Is that a bold ask? Creating a new
standard for cracking down on fraud and providing more transparency
on the value of recipient's tax credits at a latter point, whatever,

(01:11:20):
But shouldn't it be built into every blankety blank piece
of legislation that comes out of any elective office, whether
it's the federal level or your respective state and local governments,
that there is a provision for cracking down on fraud
and that you have to confirm that the recipient of

(01:11:42):
whatever aid you're talking about is alive. They have to
discuss that as a point of compromise. Hey, Harry, I
think we really need a provision in here which requires
us to make sure that we're handing money out to
people who are on living and they're not giving money
out to people who are dead. No way, man, I'm

(01:12:04):
not going for that. That's a deal breaker, seriously, and
that drives me absolutely out of my mind. Jay, what's
going on? I appreciate you calling this morning. Happy election day.

Speaker 16 (01:12:21):
Hey, Hey Brian, how are you.

Speaker 1 (01:12:25):
Should ask right exactly? I was just trying to I
was struggling for what response I was gonna give a
little bit. I don't know. Frustrated, angry, in a state
of disbelief collectively that we've come this far in this
country that they have to argue over a standard about
cracking down on fraud and making sure living people are
the only ones receiving benefit. I don't know.

Speaker 16 (01:12:49):
That seems insane, doesn't it It is. I spent nineteen
years in Portland. I think I shared this with you before.
I want to urge anybody that can hear my voice.
It's contemplating not going to the polls to go and
cast a vote for Corey Bowman.

Speaker 17 (01:13:06):
I lived there.

Speaker 16 (01:13:07):
I left because the city deteriorated to the point that
I had to pack to go to work in downtown.
If you go to downtown Portland now, it was once vibrant.
There was a restaurant down there called Humors that you
could barely squeeze into. It's gone out of business. It's
a virtual healthscape in downtown Portland. And it was the

(01:13:29):
same policies that AFTAB has brought to us that caused that.
It took a long time, it was a slow move,
but boy, once it came, I don't talk to anybody that.

Speaker 17 (01:13:40):
Lives in the suburbs.

Speaker 16 (01:13:42):
It's willing to go to downtown Portland now. And I
could see that happening with with Cincinnati and we have
a much more vibrant downtown and nightlife down there. It's
scary he could personally destroy the city.

Speaker 1 (01:13:55):
Well, that's what I'm worried about. I mean, I hear
what and that's why I put it out earlier in
the program. I mean, you were listening to me. We're
usually behind everybody so much. And it's like socialism globally,
there's so many countries that went down that path and
it ruined them economically, runaway inflation, collapse, governments, societal disarray,

(01:14:17):
crime in the streets. If you don't have an effective
government of leadership, it's all going to collapse around you.
Look see what happened over there. They're the ones that win.
Socialists on us that what's written down on papers sounds
just glorious and like heaven on earth. Oh my god,
we're all going to live thriving thrives together, and we're
all going to participate, and everybody's going to be equal.
Sure theoretically, but when it happens and they pursue these practices,

(01:14:39):
you end up with a hell hale me and go ahead, Brian.

Speaker 16 (01:14:43):
When you look at downtown Portland, Columbia, Sportswear and Nike.

Speaker 17 (01:14:49):
Are both headquartered there.

Speaker 16 (01:14:51):
They had flagship stores downtown. They closed the stores ten
years ago because their employees weren't safe to walk from
their car into the door of the store. And that
is just continued and continued. I worked in a building
down there called Big Pink. It's the largest office building
in downtown Portland. It just sold this year for ninety percent.

Speaker 17 (01:15:14):
Less than it sold for in twenty seventeen.

Speaker 10 (01:15:18):
Wow do we want that?

Speaker 3 (01:15:20):
Yeah?

Speaker 16 (01:15:20):
Ninety percent.

Speaker 17 (01:15:21):
If you just look it up at their article after
article about that after have Purval is a disaster, and
regardless of the stripes of Corey Bowman and who his
brother is.

Speaker 16 (01:15:34):
He has common sense. If I lived in the city
of Cincinnati, I would vote for him in a heartbeat.
So I hope people will get out and vote. Just
get motivated.

Speaker 1 (01:15:43):
Jay, Thanks for sharing your lived experience in a city
that went down that path and is struggling and suffering
mightily as a consequence. A genuine, real life example happening
real time right now. The before and after pictures are
truly amazing, Jay, and I'm glad you shared your understanding
of what the folks in the suburbs feel about their

(01:16:03):
once thriving downtown Portland. They won't go in. And how
many people, I mean I have talked to many people
have said that already about the city of Cincinnati. My
wife included, and we love going downtown. But she's no moss.
I am not going to be the next person when
you talk about the words of Sarah Heringer that I
read earlier and I probably will read again before the

(01:16:23):
bottom of the hour when we hear from the Secretary
of State, because they are so profound, and she shared
her tragic lived experience. Thanks Jay, truly appreciate it seven
fifteen fifty five K City Talk Station Share Facts Credit
Union Colin A. Foll on unnecessary closing costs. That's right,
Share Facts Formerly Emery will limit closing costs to zero

(01:16:45):
on second mortgages as well as home equity line of credits.
You have some home remodeling to do, you need a
little extra cash for expenses. Regardless of why you need
the money, you can get fifty about car City Talk
Station polls are open, get out and vote. Point smith
Hamen made earlier talk about hey, if westsiders, if you
show up in force with only twenty five percent or
so of the folks are going to vote, you can
make a profound difference. He mentioned sixteen thousand registered voters

(01:17:09):
in Hyde Park alone, yet with the twenty five percent
show up, about only four thousand er show usually vote. Imagine
he asked if ten thousand showed up and just about
match the early vote, secure a Corey Bouman victory, which
would be good for everybody in the city, since the
most notably in the area of crime. And I go
back to Sarah Herringer who lost her husband in there
over the Rhine Home guy broke in who should have

(01:17:31):
been an ankle monitor took cut it off at large
since February, shows up at her place in the middle
of the summer and stabs her husband to death. Bless
that woman. Here's what she has to say. This is
a plea directed I would argue, most notably to those
who be inclined to sit down and not do anything today.

(01:17:54):
Sarah Heringer, God bless her. Why I'm voting for Corey Bouman,
she writes. Let me be very clear, Corey Bowman. I
did this at the beginning of the hour. I know
if you've been listening since five o'clock you've heard this,
but listen to it again. Let me be very clear.
Corey Bowman has not asked me to write this. I'm
not endorsing anyone. I'm speaking as someone who has lived
through what happens when leadership fails. Despite what people might assume,

(01:18:15):
I'm not a Democrat, I'm also not a Republican. I've
been an independent since I was old enough to vote,
and I've voted in every election since. I vote based
on the person's record, their actions, and whether they stood
by their word when it mattered most. Corey Bowman has
been consistent if you've listened to his debates, interviews, or
his speeches, he tells you who he is, and he
doesn't waiver. He's not reading off a script or chasing headlines.

(01:18:39):
He's direct, clear, and accountable. I know some people hesitate
to even consider him because of what's happening nationally with
the Republican Party, or because of who he's related to,
and I understand that concern. But this isn't about Washington.
It's about Cincinnati, our streets, our safety, and our leadership.
Corey's priorities have been local and consistent, spend money responsibly,

(01:19:00):
rebuild infrastructure. Oh quick, grow interjection, real quick. Corey Bowman
just texted me a little while ago. He said they're
starting to pave Sunset, Sorry Sarah. Support small businesses he does,
and restore accountability to in public safety. You don't have
to share his party label to recognize integrity when you

(01:19:21):
see it. He owns a small business in one of
the most dangerous parts of our city, and instead of leaving,
he is investing. That matters because leadership isn't about sitting
safely on the sidelines while neighborhoods fall apart. It's about
standing inside the mess and helping rebuild it. You may
not share his religion, and that's fine, but let's be honest.
If you were a Muslim or Hindu, his openness about

(01:19:42):
faith would be praised as authenticity. Corey doesn't use his
Christianity as a weapon or a slogan. He's simply honest
about who he is. Meanwhile, this current administration has mastered
the art of appearances, endless promises, press conferences, photo ops.
Yet the city is less safe than it's ever been.
My husband Patrick was murdered in our home because of

(01:20:03):
the environment this administration has allowed to fester. A city
that looks the other way on violent crime, a city
that values pr over protection. And if you think that's
the leadership we need to keep, and by all means,
vote for it, or I will interject, stay at home
and don't do anything. But don't pretend it's working, don't

(01:20:24):
pretend we're safe. Don't pretend this city hasn't failed the
very people who claims to serve I Sarah Sarah Herringer
and voting for Corey Bowman because when the unthinkable happened,
he showed up, He reached out when the current mayor didn't.
He didn't need a camera or a headline he to

(01:20:45):
do it. He did it because that's who he is.
I'm writing this because I have been open about everything else,
and because I want to see real change in this city.
What happened to my husband was not an isolated tragedy.
It was the result of leadership that stopped caring for
its people. Every one of us has a voice and
a vote, use it, demand better. Don't hand your power

(01:21:07):
away to anyone who treats safety and accountability like slogans.
My husband's death should have been the line in the sand.
And if it isn't, then what will be There But
for the grace of God went Sarah Herringer. And there
but for the grace of God go each of you
and I. And if the things get worse in the
city and they're on a trajectory to do so, keeping
the same leadership is the wrong way to go. Why

(01:21:28):
would you do that if you think we're on the
right trajectory when crime is going up and neighborhoods have
become less safe and people have less control over their
individual neighborhood. In spite of the fact that we have
fifty two different communities within the city limits, and this
dictatorial government is telling each and every one of them
what they will and will not do. It's time to
go in a different direction. Make us stand. Let's get

(01:21:55):
people wanting to go back downtown. It should be the destination.
It's got everything in the world going for it, at
least conceptually, in practical terms, in real life illustrations and examples.
You know, it's not an inviting place. In spite of
everything that we have to offer within the city of Cincinnati,

(01:22:17):
people don't want to go there. The symphonies there, sports there,
great restaurants, entertainment venues. It's all right there, and yet
people are running from it. Something's not right. It needs
to change. And today's a day that you can change.

(01:22:38):
And today's today that where your vote will probably mean
four votes as opposed to the one. Seven twenty five.
Right now, if you have KRCD talk station Secretary State
Franklerose and he did a hell of a job just
released last week more than twelve hundred criminal cases refer
to the DOJ. He's on the job. Secretary of State
Frank Loro is coming up next that we can stigre
around for that. After a the talk station seven thirty

(01:23:02):
come up with seven thirty one, fifty five KRCD talk station. Hey, look,
it's election day. If you didn't get the memo, get
out and vote, somebody knows all about that works very
hard to ensure that Ohio, the state of ohouse the
gold standard for election integrity. Welcome back to the fifty
five KRFC Morning Show, House Secretary of State Frank Lrose.
Great to have you on the show.

Speaker 6 (01:23:18):
Today, Frank Brian, Happy Election Day. One hour ago the
polling locations opened. I was listening to your traffic report
just now. I was surprised to hear that there wasn't
a massive traffic van at every polling location. Because we're
gonna have huge turnout today. Everybody, well at least it
should be that way, right, Everybody should be really excited
to get out of vote in these local elections. They

(01:23:39):
have a huge impact.

Speaker 1 (01:23:40):
On your life. I mean, this is election year. This
is like a presidential election year for the citizens of
the city of Cincinnati. We got an entire council slate
to vote on and the mayor. A lot of people
dissatisfied with the direction of the city. And I know
there's a lot of other people outside of the city
that have no controller say over it. But what happens
in Cincinnati has a profound impact on all the regions.
And yeah, Secretary of State Frank LeRose, they anticipate if

(01:24:02):
any if the prior, if the pass is indicative of
future a voter turnout would be lucky if we get
twenty five percent of the people to vote.

Speaker 6 (01:24:11):
It's a tale of two different cycles in a lot
of ways in Ohio because when you look at the
even numbered years twenty twenty, twenty twenty two, twenty twenty four,
we've had massive turnout. Like I always laugh when the
leftists and the liberal groups say that I try to
suppress the vote, because if that's my objective, I stink
at it. We're not suppressing anything we've had. We've had

(01:24:32):
huge turnout in Ohio, and we're really proud of that,
really massive turnout in Ohio. And then a year later,
when you have an odd numbered year, when you have
a local election, it drops, as you mentioned, sometimes in
the teams or twenty percent range. It's too bad because
we all know it matters who lives in the White House.
Trust me, as a reservist in the Army, it matters

(01:24:53):
who my commander in chief is, and who our president is.
But what probably makes a bigger impact on your daily
life is not who lives in the White House, but
who works at the courthouse or the schoolhouse or city hall.
And that's the decision that we're making. Those are the
decisions that we're making right now. Here's the other thing, Bran,
I get this from people all the time. They say,
you know what, I know, it's important, but I just

(01:25:14):
don't know enough and I don't want to guess. Well,
that's not a good excuse either. If you just go
to our website vote Ohio dot gov, you can look
at what's called your sample ballot. Heck, this is what
Lauren and I did last night. Literally, we put the
kids to bed. I printed off our sample ballot because
even as involved as I am, I wanted to make
sure I knew all the different judges and city council
candidates and school board candidates. And we sat there as

(01:25:36):
a couple and we talked about our choices and now
we're ready to go. She and Iry's going to go
vote today. So it's easy to do just a little
bit of research. You're not going to find any lines
that you're polling locations. I mean you'll be in and
out in fifteen minutes. You're going to get a free
eye voted sticker. For heaven's sake, you should get out
and make your voice heard today. It really does matter.

Speaker 1 (01:25:57):
Vote Ohio dot gov. And we have a couple of
very important to races here locally, Betsy Sunneman and Josh
barker Witz, both very good and strong on crime, excellent jurists.
And we got a real topic conversation around here, which
is the increase in crime. Well, here's a way to
solve the judicial problem. Vote for Sunderman and Barkerwitz. So,
Frank LeRose, I want to appeal to you.

Speaker 6 (01:26:15):
You want you want tough judges, and those are two
that are tough and fair. You want good mayors and
city council members. At no secret that I've been out
supporting Corey Bowman for a long time. He's a good
man and I think going to do a good job
for the City of Cincinnati. But every election, I can
tell you this is Ohio Chief Elections Officer. I know
who's going to win today. The candidate who gets more

(01:26:37):
supporters to come out and vote. Bottom line, every election
is won by by whoever turns out to vote, and
and today's your chance to do it. Don't miss it.
Polls are open until seven thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:26:48):
Tonight, so many reasons to get out. And Bro Frank Lowis,
I was just talking about the they're endeavoring to come
up with some compromise. A handful of representatives from to
both parties in in DC trying to figure out a
way to open the government dealing with the phased out
income tax, enhanced premiums and all that. One of the
proposals for compromise. And there's a reason I'm bringing this
up to you, Secretary of State, Frank Larrose, requiring the

(01:27:10):
Affordable Care Act marketplaces to confirm that recipients haven't died. Oh,
what a profound compromise that is. I've shocked to even
read that they had to discuss that as a compromise.
This is part of your job making sure that dead
people can't vote in Ohio. And last week you announced
you found twelve are you referred twelve hundred criminal cases
to the US Department of Justice for prosecution. Apparently we

(01:27:32):
had non citizens actually voting in federal and state elections.

Speaker 6 (01:27:38):
And some of this goes back to before my administration.
Twenty eighteen is as far back as we could look
with limitations and that kind of thing. But we said,
you know, listen, voter fraud is rare. Let's put that
into perspective. First of all, with seven point eight million
registered voters, millions of people voting in each election, it's
a really good thing that when we do our work,

(01:27:59):
we find and you know, just over a thousand cases
that need to be referred over the last seven years, right,
and so we've referred those cases to the US Department
of Justice for suspected election fraud that occurs in those
even number of years when there are federal elections on
the ballot. And yeah, these are cases where non citizens
have attempted to register to vote, in some cases, because

(01:28:20):
of human error at boards of elections or whatever, have
actually been successful in registering to vote. A few cases
where we caught people doing what's called multi state voting,
where they vote in Ohio and in another state. And
there need to be consequences for this, you know, the lessons. Oh,
it's so rare, we rose, why do you make such
a big deal about this, Well, because it is a
big deal. Carjackings are rare in my neighborhood, thank god.

(01:28:44):
But when one happens, I want the criminal to be
brought to justice from that place. I mean, this is
like common sense kind of stuff. And so yeah, we're
working with the federal Department of Justice. We also, as
you mentioned, we remove dead people from the voter rules.
We do it on a monthly basis. Shouldn't be controversial.
We get that list from the Ohio Department of Health,
and the High Department of Health knows everybody who has

(01:29:07):
passed away in the state of Ohio. The death record
is generated where the person dies. But the reason why
we needed federal data is because when somebody dies out
of state or maybe even overseas, maybe they're visiting a
friend or whatever else, we have a harder time getting
that death record. And so now we're able to access
federal data. I had to sue the Biden administration because

(01:29:28):
they weren't going to give it to me. Thankfully, the
Trump administration has been happy to do that. And yet
we removed that people every month from the voter rules.

Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
Another crazy reality of the Biden administration didn't want to
share information so we could get rid of dead people
on the voter rolls. That is nefarious. I mean, it
has an out loud statement that they appreciate and embrace
the whole concept of being able to well illegally vote well.

Speaker 6 (01:29:53):
And what's crazy is that the laws says that they're
required to share that data. That's the funny part. And
so last year and I got on the phone with
somebody from the US Department of Homeland Security from the
Biden administration. This person was hired there during the Obama administration.
She said the quiet part out loud. She said, well,
you know, we used to allow election officials to use

(01:30:13):
this information, but we don't trust that they're using it correctly, like, oh,
you hate seeds out in flyover country. Don't know how
this complicated federal data works, and we think you're going
to misuse it, like come on, give me a break.
And so thankfully we have access to that now and
we are using it to make sure that only citizens
are registered to vote, and only living people registered to

(01:30:36):
vote in the state of Ohio.

Speaker 1 (01:30:38):
Great concept. Secretary State Frank LeRose, is it the idea
that once you land in Washington, DC, you're suddenly, you know,
granted all these magical powers that we out here in
fly over country just don't have It's all preposterous.

Speaker 6 (01:30:51):
The elitism. The elitism is a real thing. These people
genuinely think that they're smarter than us, and well think
that we're learning they're not.

Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
Well. Bringing this full circle to the problem we had
with crime locally, the idea of deterrence. We need strong
judges to act as that deterrence. I applaud your efforts.
As small as the numbers may be relative to the
entire population, you have sent a strong message to those
who might consider breaking the law. We will refer you
to the Department of Justice for potential criminal prosecution. So

(01:31:24):
don't bother trying it in the state of Ohio.

Speaker 6 (01:31:27):
There's a good saying out there, but I'll clean it
up for radio, so you don't have to bleep me.
If you mess around, you will find out. And as
just what if you mess around with voter fraud in Ohio,
you will find out you will be prosecuted at either
the local or state level, or we will refer you
to the federal Department of Justice so that you will

(01:31:48):
face justice for doing it. And in fact, in most
cases it's a felony. So if you are a non
citizen who attempts to register to vote and commits a
felony that makes you subject to immediate deportation, and so
people should take take this stuff seriously.

Speaker 1 (01:32:02):
Secretary of State Frank LeRose, thank you so much for
spending time my listeners with me this morning, and thanks
for all the hard work you've done ensuring we are
the gold standard here in the state of Ohio as
far as election integrity goes. And thanks again for working
with Corey Bowman. We really have high hopes for Corey,
and I certainly appreciate your efforts working with him for
a better Cincinnati.

Speaker 6 (01:32:21):
Hey, then get out and vote. If you have an
absenty ballot. You got to get to your Board of
Elections by seven thirty tonight, and thank your poll workers
when you get there. They're working hard for us.

Speaker 1 (01:32:29):
Fifty five KRC the talk station so I forty three
fifty five KRCD talk station High Grain Brewery tomorrow the
Brentwood location for five KRC listener lunch. Hope to see
you there, and I hope we have something to celebrate about.
And I want to thank all the callers who've been
kind enough to hold Paul and Julie hang on. John
you're first. Welcome to the morning show.

Speaker 14 (01:32:49):
Waur and Brian Sims Township at Montgomery Community Church. I
was the thirty fifth voter at seven thirty one hour in.

Speaker 1 (01:32:59):
Actually that's pretty good. I mean I wouldn't expect that
many people to show up out there. That's my neighborhood. Huh.
What was your impression, John, Are you surprised or does
that sound like a low number or.

Speaker 14 (01:33:11):
What seemed a little low to meach for friendly effiction.
I was in and out in seven minutes.

Speaker 1 (01:33:19):
Oh yeah. It's a great operation out there, and a
salute to all those folks. And it's the same people
every year, John, pretty much. I think we all know
them by their first name anymore. Well, John, I wish
it was a higher number, I guess, but honestly, I
would have expected you to say at that hour, maybe
like you were number twenty or something. So we'll see
how things end up at the end of the day.
But thanks for calling in letting us know what's going

(01:33:39):
on out there, John, Not a hot bath of opportunities
vote wise, but there are some levies to vote on.
We have board school boards to vote on, so everybody's
got something important to vote on. Even it's only one
or two things. Paul, thank you for holding. Welcome to
the fifty five KC Morning Show.

Speaker 11 (01:33:57):
Hey Brian, thanks for taking my call. Happy to I
was first one in line at six thirty this morning.
Or go up to the poll. They can't find my name.
Then all of a sudden, they do a different search.
They found my name under a different address in Green
Township when I lived in price of fifteen years, I've
lived in the same place. They changed my address just

(01:34:21):
the last election when I voted vote at the same place,
same people there. I won't know how how did my
address get changed in the Board of Elections when I've
never filled out a change of address card?

Speaker 1 (01:34:35):
Well, Paul, I'm as perplexed as you are. Did they
have any explanation for you? Is this something you're going
to have to research?

Speaker 11 (01:34:42):
They said they took it from a national something from
the post office, a national pool poll or something. I
don't know what they said that the post office gave
them information. I've never lived on Bridgetown Road in my life.

Speaker 4 (01:35:00):
Wow, how did my name.

Speaker 11 (01:35:01):
Get put on Bricktown Road in Green Township when I
live in the city limits. Now they're for venting me
from voting for mayor. Are they trying to achieve to
keep who they want in office? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:35:12):
Well, obviously you've raised some legitimate concerns. The answer to
the question, I think is well worth any effort it
takes for you to find out what the hell happened,
because that sounds terrible, man, and I wish I had
some plausible explanation for how that can happen, but it
certainly doesn't. I don't know how they could unilaterally decide
to change your address without you affirmatively doing so. Anyhow,

(01:35:32):
look into it, man, I'd run up the Board of
Elections flagpole and see if you can figure out what
went wrong, because that is not right. Julie, are going
to have to hang on the talk station to fifty
five KERR CD talk station and head on over the phones.
Julie was kind enough to hold over the brake. I
promised her she'd be first and welcome to the program. Julie,

(01:35:53):
thanks for calling.

Speaker 18 (01:35:55):
No problem at on, I'm happy to hold Hey. I've
called about this before and and I've mentioned this, but
inspired by you, I spent six and a half years
on Central Committee in Butler County and it's a lot different.
I'm in build a house in Sim's township about five
years ago, so it's a little bit differently structured to
this Central Committee. They don't do endorsements here in Hamilton.
I'm sorry, I'm so worse this morning. But anyway, you know,

(01:36:19):
of course it's incumbent upon the voter to seek out
the information. But here's the deal. I really feel like
I don't understand, and I've called and complained about this before,
especially in Sim's township. The GOP, they are not getting
out the slate carbs. It is so important to get
those out in that mail. It's maybe it seems primitive,
but so many people are not going to seek out

(01:36:40):
that website and try to navigate it. And sometimes it's difficult.
Sometimes it's outdated. And I'm telling you as a Central
Committee member, one of the few that did not turning
to brag, but I was one of the people that
cared enough to just, you know, to go door to
door and talk to people. You're not getting that anymore,
and I understand why, you know, because people just are
you know, it's difficult to do it. You know, I

(01:37:02):
had the door slammed in my face once trading somebody
with it was it was when Trump was running in
twelve or twelve sixteen. But you know, the importance of
those sleep slave cards just cannot be stressed enough in
my opinion. And they just don't get them out.

Speaker 1 (01:37:19):
Get them out, you're saying. You know, the blue card
and the pink card, the ones that most people rely
on exclusively to determine who they're going to vote for
because it's either Republican or Democrat. They know what they
are already. They grab that card and they just boom,
mimic what's on the card? That card is what you're
talking about. Correct If they're not handing them out, they're
not handing them out.

Speaker 18 (01:37:36):
No, no, no, we did not get one in the mail.
We have not received one in the meal for I
don't know how long. And honestly there were a couple
of years in Butler, you know where we didn't get
them either. Well, I was going door to door talking
to candidate's handing and those cards out. But that card
that is electronically you can download the PDF on the website. Yeah,
it is that card. And really you don't need all

(01:37:58):
these other districts. They really can specify well, I mean
I guess you would have to. It would have to
be the same card obviously, but you know, per district
and have the people on there, you know, the consider
it the candidates. But it is too hard for people
to go and navigate that website and they're not aware
how many people. It's crazy. It's like, oh, November's coming up,
they're not even thinking about voting.

Speaker 1 (01:38:19):
I'm like you, Julie, I'm laughing. I know they're not aware,
but you'd After talking to Christopher Smithman, who literally has
gone door to door in almost all the neighborhoods in
downtown Cincinnati, is met with people who did not even
know that there's an election today. He's out, he's out
canvas in last week. There's an election next week. I
mean that this word came out of anybody's mouth as
a reflection about how much people care about politics, Julie,

(01:38:42):
and I'm shocked to find out that those cards didn't
go out, because that can be the that's it, That
right there will determine the outcome of an election. Having
that in your hand when you are not an informed voter,
which is apparently most people. Oh, Julie, thank you for
your efforts, and I'm glad somebody out there is listening. Somebody,
I hope I steer the ship. Good for you. Don't stop, Julie,

(01:39:05):
keep up the work. I appreciate and welcome to the neighborhood.
Here's a real quick one on the heels of Frank
LeRose purging twelve hundred illegal aliens or non eligible voters
from the records. It's important that that is done. The
idea that the Biden administration would not provide death records
at all so we could do this work. It's crazy.
It shows you how corrupt democrats might be. And the

(01:39:27):
idea that they don't want to anybody to look at
like SNAP eligibility. They want people who are not eligible
on SNAP to receive SNAP. So here we have a
train wreck and everybody who's eligible, and I'm talking to
you that you want these benefits. You need them because
you are in that life's margin component where it's supposed
to help you out. Shouldn't you be more angry than

(01:39:48):
anyone else that they just uncovered more than seven hundred
thousand ineligible SNAP recipients. Who did it? US Secretary of Agriculture
Brook Rawlins. She asked all of the states to provide information.
They sent letters to all the governors about illegal aliens

(01:40:08):
receiving SNAP benefits. Twenty nine states cooperated, only twenty nine
primarily red states, but there were some blue And with
that one brief effort, and with the cooperation of at
least twenty nine states, seven hundred thousand ineligible have been purged.

(01:40:31):
Imagine what that number would be if all fifty states cooperated,
and how much fraud wasted abuse this one effort, this
one mere review of the records reveals, And going back
to that comment by those people who are trying to
coordinate a brokered solution to the Affordable Care Acts tax
credits expiring, that appointment of negotiation included requiring ACA marketplace

(01:40:55):
to confirm that the recipients haven't died. What a markable
display of bipartisanship along those lines. God, it's got me incensed.
Seven fifty six Right now fifty five Kerrsite talk station
inside Scoop at bright Bart News. After the top of
the hour, news Politics editor Bradley Jay on the shutdown,
speaking of which national election races, and then the Daniel

(01:41:15):
Davis deep dive Stick around me right back.

Speaker 12 (01:41:18):
Today's top headlines coming up at the top of the hour.

Speaker 17 (01:41:22):
The news changes every minute.

Speaker 1 (01:41:23):
Fifty five krs.

Speaker 12 (01:41:25):
The talk station Damps.

Speaker 18 (01:41:26):
Our democracy itself is in the crosshairs your local politics.

Speaker 13 (01:41:30):
Get involved, make it happen.

Speaker 1 (01:41:32):
Your hometown election headquarters.

Speaker 13 (01:41:34):
We're about to lose the country.

Speaker 1 (01:41:36):
Fifty five krs. The talk station Kishai eight O six.
Here a fifty five karrosite talk station bron Town of
Swishing everyone a very happy election day and encouraging your
ready to get out and vote. I know it's an
off year, but you have all the reason in the
world to vote, variety of reason. And then people outside
of the greater Cincinnati area have a whole lot more
reason to vote, most notably some of the gubernatorial elections

(01:41:57):
that are going enough course New York City to talk
about that and so many other races politics that are
from bright Bart News. It's time for the inside scoop.
Bradley Jay, welcome back to the fifty five KRC Morning Show.
It's a real pleasure to have you back on today.

Speaker 4 (01:42:11):
It is always great to be with you.

Speaker 1 (01:42:12):
Thanks for having me, and again a word for the
great website that it is our e baart dot com
book market. You'd be glad you did and check it
out every day. I certainly do in preparation for the
morning show. And I don't know where you want to start, Bradley,
but let's start with a shutdown I my listening audience. Fortunately,
I am blessed, although it sometimes is a curse because

(01:42:32):
they keep me very accountable for accuracy. Bradley, I know
you know what it's like to work with weed dwellers.
But they know exactly what has has caused this shut down.
But we can review very quickly. We have the Affordable
Care Act, which provided some tax credits for folks that
made three times or four times poverty was sixty one

(01:42:54):
four hundred, or roughly if you make less than that,
you got your premium supplemented. Thanks to the original legislation,
COVID nineteen comes along. They get rid of the sixty
one to four cap and give unlimited tax credit, which
means it appears that you're not even paying a premium
for Obamacare, even if you're making hundreds of thousands of
dollars a year. COVID disappears, but in some piece of
legislation I think was one of the Green Policies or whatever,

(01:43:16):
they had a cutoff date for this right it was
the end of this year. The COVID nineteen era supplements
are going away. Why well, COVID's gone away, so that
happens at the end of this calendar year. We're all
prepping for it, and people saw this coming million miles away.
Low and behold thement. Democrats want to continue these supplements
and the Republicans are saying, no, what's the point here.

(01:43:41):
We're going to pass the Clean Resolution. The CR will
be Biden era funding levels. Do you have nothing to
complain about while we busily work and do the work
we're supposed to do, which is the twelve Entitlement or
the twelve appropriations bills. So that's all on hold because
the government shut down and the Democrats won't even agree
to a funding level that is ridicted. I mean, that
was the point. Thomas Massey said, why would we do

(01:44:03):
a continuing Resolution at Biden level funding? We need to
start cutting government. That was his point, good point, But
in order to take the wind out of the democrats sales,
they wouldn't vote for a CR that had cuts in it.
They gave them everything, the moon and the stars and
they still won't vote for it because they want these
tax cuts to continue. I guess forever. I mean, this
is where we are, Bradley, and all the pain that's

(01:44:25):
being heaped down upon people because the Democrats pretty much
get what they want at their prior funding levels. I'm
not confused, am I.

Speaker 4 (01:44:34):
Bron. That's a pretty good rundown.

Speaker 2 (01:44:37):
Look at you to ask Democrats before these enhanced subsidies
were passed, they would have told you that everything is
fine with Obamacare, it's.

Speaker 4 (01:44:45):
Going great, healthcare is chief. Of course, they'd be lying
out their teeth.

Speaker 2 (01:44:49):
They passed those enhanced subsidies because they said, oh, COVID
requires it.

Speaker 4 (01:44:54):
But now they're acting like.

Speaker 2 (01:44:55):
Going back the pandemic's over, but they're acting like going
back to these pre COVID era restrictions would just be
ripping food out of the mouth of babes. And it's
just totally egregious. And look, you're exactly right. They made
this temporary. They did this without Republican votes. They made

(01:45:16):
it temporary because they said it was only a COVID
era thing.

Speaker 4 (01:45:20):
Why did they do that, Well, I.

Speaker 2 (01:45:22):
Think one reason we're learning when they did that is
everything we're learning with arctic frost and how they thought
there was no chance at all that there would be
a Republican president and they would be able to easily
extend that. Because Obamacare is broken, it will always be broken,
and it's a broken model. They thought that they would
be able to just extend this forever. But look, this

(01:45:44):
is the supplements the federal government that taxpayers provide that
go to these insurance companies. There's a lot of evidence
that these subsidies don't even result in lower prices for
healthcare consumers, just a giveaway to insurance companies. The whole
thing is broken, and Democrats know it. They're using this

(01:46:08):
and the shutdown as an excuse to try to force
a national conversation on an issue that they think will
be beneficial to them electorally. It's not about solving the problems,
because the way that they've actually gone about this newt
by partisan conversations to actually address the problem, this is
cynicism at its most egregious from Democrats.

Speaker 1 (01:46:30):
I can double down the cynicism. There's a handful of
Republican and Democrat representatives described as a bipartis an effort
to come up with a potential compromise. I guess some
Republicans in the House are actually working, but Representative Bacon,
Suzi Hurd, and Gothheimer came out with this potential compromise,
and I'll fast forward to this statement quote. But here's
the truth. Democrats and Republicans can sit down, listen to

(01:46:52):
one another, and find common ground operative words here, especially
when it comes to lowering healthcare costs. I literally laugh
out loud about this. This doesn't lower healthcare costs. It
just masks them by offloading it to the American taxpayer
in the form of, well, we're all paying the premiums
that are going to these big insurance companies. There is
no lowering of healthcare. It's just that we have taken

(01:47:14):
away your optical vision of having to pay for it
somebody else, meaning your neighbor or you, if you're a taxpayer,
are paying it through another vehicle the tax code.

Speaker 4 (01:47:23):
You're exactly right. At least. I hate to pick on anybody,
but I love to pick on people.

Speaker 2 (01:47:31):
Don Bacon is one of just I mean, he's a
total moderate squish, which moderate you know that that's just
another term for a lacking conviction. All he wants to
do is pitch this is some type of legacy to
continue his projection that he's somehow above his House Republican colleagues.

(01:47:53):
He's retiring. This is not a serious proposal for him,
and this is not a serious solution to fit the
problems that we have.

Speaker 1 (01:48:02):
No, it's not. And then the other one, laugh if
you will, because I did phased out income tax income
cap for those making between are you ready? Bradley Enhanced
premium tax credits would be phased out for those making
between two hundred and four hundred thousand dollars the year
under this compromise proposal. Since when do people making four
hundred thousand dollars a year need a handout from government?

Speaker 3 (01:48:26):
Well, I'll tell you.

Speaker 2 (01:48:26):
The Democrat Party is now unquestionably the party of the elites.
They're fighting right now, not for working people, because they're
actually shutting down the government and keeping people on food
stamps from getting fed. They are fighting for insurance companies
and for people making over four hundred thousand dollars a year.

(01:48:47):
That is who the modern Democrat Party is. That is
who they become. Is no longer the party of blue
collar working Americans. Trump and MAGA have taken that mantle.
And I don't know as long as Republicans continue fighting
the right fights, they can keep those voters forever.

Speaker 4 (01:49:04):
But this is who democrats are.

Speaker 2 (01:49:06):
They are coastal elites who are fighting for the donor class.

Speaker 1 (01:49:10):
Well, let's pivot over to elections. Brad Lee Jay got
some big ones going out there. One of the most
perplexing from my standpoint, Although it is New York City,
this communist I'll call them, you know, democrats. Socialists is
the working phrase for modern day communists. But in any ways,
Zorhan mam Dami, it's like everybody's predetermined he's going to
be the winner. His policies are, in my estimation, absolutely crazy.

(01:49:33):
But that so many New Yorkers could be duped by
what is going to result in an economic collapse for
New York City. I mean, there's only so much you
can extract out of the rich people before the rich
people pack it up and leave, which, judging from the
real estate activity outside of the City of New York,
like in Connecticut, they're getting ready to leave.

Speaker 2 (01:49:54):
Well, look what we're seeing in New York is the
inevitable consequence of our immigration policy. If you remove the
foreign born from the polls, Mamdannie does not win. That's
a certainty. At this fact and it's not as overt.
But our immigration policies are the reason that we're seeing
a lot of the polling and probable electoral results in

(01:50:18):
the off your elections right now. Look, we have imported
people in such large, large quantities that there is no assimilation,
there is no sense of community. These people are not
real New Yorkers in the sense of they cherish the
heritage and traditions of what was once a great city,

(01:50:38):
and their votes reflect that it's going to be a
dark day in New York City. But look, Mamdani, he
is going to be hung around the neck of every
single Democrat who is running in the midterms next year.

Speaker 4 (01:50:52):
In a lot of ways, this.

Speaker 2 (01:50:54):
Election will be historic because it closes the book. It's
the end of the very least an end of a
chapter on the Democrat Party of yesteryear. We are seeing
a new Democrat Party where Mom Donnie is the standard bear,
unquestionably embracing socialism. This isn't like Obama where they kind

(01:51:14):
of dance around it. They gleefully brag about it right now,
and I think that it will be a turning point
in the history of this nation politically, and it will
forever alter the two party system.

Speaker 1 (01:51:27):
Now, to the extent he does win, and let's call
it a foregone conclusion, are the Democrats going to take
that as a justification for a further shift to the left,
so you have say so called centrist or maybe even
rational Democrats end up moving over embracing this left wing
chunk of the party. Or will they wake up and say,
you know, Mandamie's going to be so bad, we need

(01:51:49):
to regroup and reject that as a concept for the
sake of saving our party from itself. I mean, I
guess it could go either way, couldn't it.

Speaker 3 (01:51:58):
Brian.

Speaker 4 (01:51:59):
I think it's going to rip the party apart.

Speaker 2 (01:52:01):
You see people like Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, who
ostensibly are the leaders of the Democrat Party, you know,
the top Democrat in the House and the Senate. They
are running so far away from Mamdani because they know
that this whole ruin their chances of ever becoming the
majority leaders or the Speaker and their respective chambers. This

(01:52:26):
is not, at least right now with our immigration policies.
God forbid, it doesn't. But one day it might become mainstream.
But this is not a platform that can win majorities nationwide.
It's cancer in a lot of these swing districts throughout
the country, in a lot of these states that are purplish,

(01:52:48):
and most Democrats know that some will cynically embrace it,
because let's be honest, a lot of politicians don't really
have convictions. Their convictions or whatever keep them in power.
But I think that some of the savvyer Democrats know
that this is not something that they can lead a ticket.

Speaker 1 (01:53:08):
You mentioned Schumer in the context of him not embracing
Mamdammi you say, I mean, he's obviously a smart politician.
He knows that that's toxic and bad ultimately, at least
we perceive it that way, like you said, And yet
he doesn't stand up to the aocs within his own
party when he has an opportunity to do so. I mean,
I'm just looking at them from a percentage of the ideology,
and I cannot imagine that a majority of Democrats think

(01:53:30):
along the way that AOC does. And so why wouldn't
Schumer stop them in their tracks and assert his power
and influence over them and his and project his voice
to the rest of the Democrats. Hey, we've got to
get her act together. And they're not the way we
can go.

Speaker 2 (01:53:47):
The reason is that Schumer is the Senate Democrat leader nominally,
but he holds a very tenuous grasp over his conference. Look,
Senate leaders always have a limited ability to actually enforce
anything with their leader, with with with their membership. Trent

(01:54:09):
Lott used to say that being the Senate majority leader
was like pushing a wheelbarrow with one hundred frogs and
every time you grab one and throw it back in,
three others jump out. That's just the way that the
Senate works.

Speaker 9 (01:54:21):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:54:21):
But look, he is a he is a dinosaur. He
is an anachronism in the modern Senate, certainly in the
Democrat Party right now. He has changed and evolved markedly
over the years. I mean he used to bang on
and bang his fist on the table and.

Speaker 4 (01:54:39):
Say we need a wall and we have.

Speaker 2 (01:54:41):
To defend Wall Street, and I mean he's he's just
a completely different animal now, just out of political pragmatism.
But there is there are no Democrats coming up right
now through the Democrat politician pipeline. There are no voters
out there, at least not the ascendant wings of the
Democrat Party who are saying, you know, what we need

(01:55:01):
more Chuck Schumers out there.

Speaker 4 (01:55:03):
It's a question now, not.

Speaker 2 (01:55:04):
Of if, but of when he is deposed as leader
of the Senate Democrats. That's just the direction that things
are going in the Democrat Party, and they're in very
dire straits right.

Speaker 1 (01:55:16):
Part Politics Editor Bradley J. Real Quick New Jersey Virginia
two goobernatorial races, and the Republicans are making a stronger
showing towards the end though, But we are talking about
New Jersey and Virginia. If you had to read Tea
Lea's how are those two races going to work out? Bradley.

Speaker 2 (01:55:30):
In New Jersey, Republican Jack Chiarelli is peaking at the
exact right time. I think he has an excellent chance
at an upset right now.

Speaker 4 (01:55:38):
Virginia is going to be a little tougher road to hoe.
I think that the.

Speaker 2 (01:55:42):
Republican candidate Jason Miarez will win the AG's race. Because
of all that controversy with Jay Jones, it may be
a little bit more difficult hire up the.

Speaker 1 (01:55:51):
Ticket, Bradley, Jay always a pleasure talking with you, and
it's votes count and voter turnout. I think we'll determine
the outcome of these elections. Stantially, it's been great having
you on the show. Keep up the great work at Breitbart, Brad.
They'll look forward to having you back on the show
real soon.

Speaker 4 (01:56:06):
He's great joining you, Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:56:07):
Take take care man. It's a twenty right now. If
you have KRCD talk station box station seven twenty three
fift you have KRCD talk station. Bottom of the hour,
Inside Scoop with I'm sorry Daniel Davis Deep Dive. We
just did the inside Scoop, Brian, wake up. Time to
take Sandy's call. Sandy, thanks for holding over the breake there.
Welcome to the program.

Speaker 19 (01:56:26):
I get Brian. We also in Moer County did not
get slate cards. Not we didn't get slate cards. And
I was up to about four in the morning trying
to find the sample.

Speaker 1 (01:56:38):
Ballot vote Ohio dot go. According to Frank LeRose, who's
on the show this morning, so well, I can't listen,
I can't speak to the slate cards and not being
sent out that is the easiest way to get votes.
I mean, Lord almighty, you boil it down to party affiliation.
You let people know who are Republicans, who the Republican
candidates are who've been endorsed. That's a simple, easy step,

(01:57:00):
and it makes more difference than anything else I think
that you could possibly do. Sandy Well, I.

Speaker 19 (01:57:05):
Didn't catch what party it was. I just heard the very.

Speaker 10 (01:57:07):
End of it and I thought, oh, it was a Republican.

Speaker 19 (01:57:11):
Well, isn't that convenient?

Speaker 13 (01:57:12):
Now?

Speaker 19 (01:57:12):
Who was the mole who did that? Because this, uh,
the Board elections has nothing to do with that. That's
the party, individual party, and so they've got a mole. Okay,
wake up, Gop. You have a mole or mold in
your party that you farmed us out to. So that
was stupid to whoever did it was a stupid So.

Speaker 20 (01:57:32):
That, in my mind is not right. We you know
that is you you know, there are people who that
is convenient to use. They've looked them up or heard
about them, but they maybe can't remember all the names,
so they, you know, put that down. But they don't
have it now.

Speaker 1 (01:57:49):
So this well I can't speak to. I think was
Julia called about that she did not get one, and
she's encountered this before. But boiled down, it's the easiest
possible thing, the best bang for the dollar that you're
going to spend is get these cards out, and I'm
sure the Democrats are painfully aware of this. They mail
them out of the time. Republicans, if you drop the ball,

(01:58:11):
you drop the ball. If there's something the faryus going on,
it's time for someone to ferret that out and figure out, Hey,
we ordered those slate cards. How come you didn't send
them out? Simple questions to ask or a problem that
shouldn't even exist easily overcome, Sandy. Appreciate that I hear
your passion in your voice. I certainly understand it too.
A twenty six right now. Daniel Davis Deep Dive coming

(01:58:31):
up next. I hope you can stick around fifty five
car the talk station.

Speaker 9 (01:58:35):
The Simply Money Minute is sponsored by sheerfaxx Cris.

Speaker 1 (01:58:38):
It's that time. Always look forward to the Insight, or
rather the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. You can find his
podcast wherever you get your podcast. Retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis,
Welcome back to the fifty five Casey Morning Show. Sir.
I'm not anticipating good news, but we'll hit the ground
running as we always do. We got wars to talk about.
Welcome back, my friends. Great seeing your face and having
you on the show. Always a pleasure to be here, Brian,

(01:58:59):
Thanks for me. All right, dealer's choice, Where do the
Where does the guests want to begin? You want to
start with Israel and Hamas. You want to look at
Ukraine and Russia? Where should we start?

Speaker 21 (01:59:08):
Yeah, let's just start in the middle. It's we use
We've usually hit that one second, let's go there first.

Speaker 1 (01:59:12):
Fair enough on that one. I noted that the Hamas
has returned three more deceased IDF soldiers. That just happened,
and according to the reporting I've read on this, they
have eight deceased hostages still believed to be inside Gaza.
The ceasefire that was in place temporarily interrupted the other day,
but apparently back in place. Is this progress we can

(01:59:36):
hang our hat on, Daniel Davis? Or should we be
optimistic about this? Or where where are things? That's what
we have you for.

Speaker 21 (01:59:43):
Yeah, it's it's it's very tenuous at best, and it's
tenuous on both sides of the line. It's tenuous because
of the Hamas side. It's tenuous because of the Israeli side.
I don't think either one of them really wanted. I
think that's the only reason we have even a tenuous
piece is because President tr demands it and there's willing
to put pressure on both sides to get it done.

(02:00:04):
How long that stays and how far that can go,
because it is with it's not without limit because obviously
both of them have agency as well. There's many in
Israel that the last thing that they want is any
kind of a ceasefire. They want a military victory, and
they are are unhappy that they had to go down
this route. And meanwhile, you would think that the Hamas

(02:00:24):
side would be breathing a sigh of relief and would
be thinking they're lucky stars that they got one, because
otherwise they're really the only other alternative is complete and
utter destruction for them and thousands more of their innocent people.
But they still seem to be pretty boisterous and not
wanting to accommodate, not wanting to disarm, and just resisting

(02:00:45):
really across the board. And I think that's part of
the really the the I guess the depravity of the
Hamas side that no matter what their actions are doing
to their people, even given this opportunity to finally end
the suffering, they still keep dragging their feet.

Speaker 1 (02:01:01):
This screams parallels to be drawn with Ukraine and Russia,
doesn't it? I mean Zelunsky doesn't want to give up
any land. He's refused to capitulate. He refuses to give up.
Is that a parallel? I mean is Samas the one
that's being completely unrealistic here? I know the balance of
power militarily speaking, is with Israel. But as you always

(02:01:21):
and regularly have pointed out, and I'll can see the point,
it's a valid one. It's going to require the slaughter
of a whole lot more people for Israel to roll
over and complete what it proceeds to be its military objective.
But I get the sense that they could do it
if they're willing to go down that road. So is
it Hamas that's the unrealistic party here? Where are we?

Speaker 6 (02:01:40):
Well?

Speaker 21 (02:01:41):
There are some similarities and there's some differences between the two.
In the Russia Ukraine war is it is just black
and white. There's one side that can win, one side
that can't, and the side that can. On the Zuwiski
side still keeps acting like he can. That's the distinction
between the Hamas side because they don't believe they can.

Speaker 1 (02:02:00):
When they just don't want to give in Zelensky.

Speaker 21 (02:02:02):
Is still as of today, still thinks that he can
succeed and just is pretending like the things are not
going bad on the battlefield. Maybe more on that in
a second, But the issue for Hamas is they're simply
unwilling to acknowledge reality. Yes, the Israeli side has the
unequivocal and non negotiable advance in capabilities militarily and they

(02:02:23):
can impose their will at a horrific cost that God help.

Speaker 4 (02:02:27):
Us if that actually gets imposed.

Speaker 21 (02:02:30):
But somehow, whether it's the Arab regime whereas the Trump administration,
they're going to have to put some pressure on the
Hamas side to finally just do the only thing they have,
the only agency they have is to stop the killing
of their people by laying down their arms and leaving.
And I think it's going to take more internal pressure
on either the Palestinian side or the Arab regimes that

(02:02:52):
are in the area. I think it's going to take
those to get it done.

Speaker 1 (02:02:55):
Okay, And that was the next question, was going to
ask you further or greater involvement by this surrounding countries,
the Arab nations that are surrounded that would benefit tremendously
by peace in the region. I mean, that's kind of
what the Abraham Accords were directed towards. Listen, Yeah, you're
different countries, you've got different ideologies, you're different wings of
a religious faction. But let's all play well together. It'll

(02:03:15):
inure to all of our benefits economically, So that makes
sense for everybody. I mean, can't we just all get along?
But then you have very very ideologically wed folks or like, No,
I can't capitulate. I've been a war with these people,
and my father and my grandfather, my father's father and
father of law. I'm not going to give in no
muss list.

Speaker 21 (02:03:34):
And there's plenty of grievances that are genuine and valid
on the Palestinian side that need to be addressed, but
you can't even start to address those until you get
the killing stopped, until you get.

Speaker 4 (02:03:45):
The war over with.

Speaker 21 (02:03:46):
And I think the Arab regimes are very focused on this,
and I don't think that they have any confusion on
this point at all, and they I think have been
putting a lot of pressure, at least a fair amount.
I don't know that they've gone all the way yet,
but I think that they really need to because they
can't get to their objectives. They can't get to peace
in the region, they can't get to the issues to
take care of the Palestinian people and address their grievances

(02:04:08):
until Hamas lays down their weapons. So I've got plenty
of things to say about the IDF and things that
they shouldn't have done, But right now, the long pole
in the tent right now is the Hamas.

Speaker 1 (02:04:19):
Side, Okay, And to that end, this exchange of the
deceased and bringing back the remaining deceased Israeli folks, that's
just phase one. I mean that this period of time,
with this ceasefire, was designed to bring about that reality.
We seem to be very close to there being no
more Israeli deceased held by Hamas. So once we get

(02:04:41):
over that milestone, what's the next phase? Daniel Davis? Yeah,
the Phase.

Speaker 21 (02:04:46):
Two is being negotiated. And that's always been my I
keep bringing that up every time President Trump talks about
how he brought peace to the Middle East, because there
hadn't been any peace brought to the Middle East so far.

Speaker 1 (02:04:57):
It's only been.

Speaker 21 (02:04:58):
Phase one, which is a ceasefire and a hostage exchange.
And now you know, deceased remains, exchange, et cetera. All
of the hard stuff has yet to be decided any
even negotiated. So there is you know, I'm not to
the point yet where I'm willing to say, yeah, we're
over the hump here. I mean, we're We're still way

(02:05:19):
on the up down side of the home Yep.

Speaker 1 (02:05:21):
Phase three is profit though, Daniel Davis, never forget that. Now,
moving over to I hope you get that the Ukraine
Russia situation. Thank you, appreciate it. No Tomahawk missiles, we're
still there. But I just read the other day that
we were going to be sending some patriot missiles. That
to me, that doesn't make any sense. For all the
millions of reasons we talked about this before. Patriots aren't
effectivegainst drone swarms. They're really really, really really expensive, and

(02:05:46):
there's only a finite number of them. Does that make
any sense whatsoever considering where we are in this conflict.

Speaker 21 (02:05:52):
Well, back to your comment a second ago about Phase three,
that also applies over here with the profits, and certainly
it's going to make some profits for some people over here. Now,
my understanding is that those patriots didn't come from the
United States that came from Germany and from some other
countries here with apparently some future promise that will backfill
them at a much later date when they can actually

(02:06:13):
be produced, which of course you know is a very
slow process. And listen, none of it makes any sense
militarily or politically or diplomatically. It only makes sense profit
wise that the war cannot be won by Ukraine. They
can't even avoid losing. And it's playing out that way
every day, especially in Pokrovsk, and you have Zelensky this

(02:06:36):
morning still talking about how to know everything's fine, and
Koupiansk and Pokrovsk there's not that many Russians left, and
we're just strowing them every day. And yet you can
just look at the map that just the red grows
by the day. And as of this morning, just before
we came on air, there are reports now that the
final cauldron has been closed in Pokrovsk and the Russians
in the north and in the south have linked up.

(02:06:58):
And now then you've got summer between who knows five
to ten thousand Ukraine soldiers now physically colla circled inside
that in the Mirinograd area because Porkrosk has been about
ninety percent taken already. Only the outskirts are out by all.
In practical points, Porkrowsk has fallen today, and Zelensky is
kind of like Hitler in the bunker, just pretending like

(02:07:19):
everything's good.

Speaker 1 (02:07:20):
It's that bad well, and piling on. I mean we're
already piling a lot. Telegraph reported that nearly one hundred
thousand Ukrainian men between the age of eighteen and twenty
two have left Ukraine in the past two months alone.
I think, first off, Daniel Davis, I didn't even realize
there were that many of that age left in the country,
given how many have died in the conflict, But that

(02:07:40):
they are still fleeing the country is at that rate
is amazing. I mean, Ukraine can't keep up militarily in
terms of boots on the ground, regardless how much hardware
might be laying around.

Speaker 21 (02:07:50):
No, there are three issues at stake here. Number One,
that age group eighteen to twenty two had not been mobilized.
They had been left untouched, so that's why. But then
they were prevented from leaving, and that turned out to
be a big problem with a lot of the European regimes,
and they put pressure on Selenski to open the borders
and let them go, and then there was a flood
and that they went out because they don't want to

(02:08:11):
be the next ones to pointlessly die in a war. Okay,
so you have this big loss, you also have up
to us, by some reports, half a million deserters so
far in this calendar year, half a million that have
left the battlefield, on top of all of the casualties
which continue to pile up every day. And then the
last point is that they're now is just not enough

(02:08:32):
to even force mobilized to come close to matching all
of those losses. So every day the man powerpool shrinks
even further while the Russian side grows.

Speaker 1 (02:08:43):
I appreciate you correcting the record here. I was imposing
US draft eligibility age on Ukraine when in fact they
didn't require eighteen year olds to sign up. I mean
it's a later, later eligibility age. They're correct, it is.

Speaker 21 (02:08:57):
Yeah, that's a choice that they made, probably not unwhire.
But now then they're trying to go into that. There
was a lot of pressure inside Ukraine legislatively to open
that up and to sacrifice yet another generation of men
that they are desperately gonna need if they want to
have a chance to.

Speaker 1 (02:09:14):
Have a future. Wow, we retire Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis.
Always fascinating, if not disturbing, conversation we have every week. Someday,
someday you are going to be talking about a peace
agreement somewhere in the world. I long for that day.
You and me brother, forward to it. You and me brother,
the and the loss of life senseless. May I underscore

(02:09:34):
loss of life must come to an end. We will
be looking for you next Tuesday, sir, God bless you
for coming on the program. Keep up the great work.
Daniel Davis Deep Dive check it out on your podcast pages.
Stig around folks, got more to comment OAHC will be
in studio, my favorite cancer folks, my cancer doctor's got
some what enjoyable experience having my friends from OHC, the
cancer specialists in studio to talk about a really remarkable

(02:09:55):
development today with me in studio. We got a lot
of people today. Kerrie Kuznar, who is a person responsible
helping create this OHC foundation we're going to learn about.
We have the OHC Marketing Director Megan Deeter, and we
have the OAC Human Resources Director Sherry Brubaker in studio
to explain what is the OHC Foundation For my listening

(02:10:17):
friends out there, we all agree, everybody agrees across the
political spectrum one thing for certain, cancer sucks. So if
you need a good cancer doctor, I strongly encourage you
to ohcare dot com. Great cancer specialists. They've been my
cancer doctors for years and years. Well, since I found
out I had cancer and I'm getting I've gotten great treatment,
and I know you're going to get superior treatment at OHC. Well,
my friends in studio, Carrie and Megan and Sherry, what

(02:10:42):
is the OHC Foundation, Who's going to take that one first?

Speaker 22 (02:10:46):
Yeah, I'm happy to Brian. So the OHC Foundation we
focus on three pillars cancer awareness, helping the community understand
risk factors and mention education, and we offer resources and
events to improve the knowledge about screening and early detection,

(02:11:08):
and financial support. And that is assisting adults and families
impacted by cancer, including those outside ohc's patient network.

Speaker 1 (02:11:18):
Okay, ohc's patient network. Obviously they've gotten in touch with OHC.
They realize they have cancer and they want to be
you know, within getting the best cancer treatment they can get.
But how does the OHC Foundation work with OHC and
its treatment and what are you currently using to accomplish
the goals he just outlined.

Speaker 22 (02:11:35):
Sure, So, our mission is to fund innovative cancer research,
to provide combassionate support to patients and families, and to
promote cancer education and prevention. And currently we are accepting donations.
Some of those donations come through memorial gifts, but we

(02:11:56):
welcome any amount of a contribution from anyone who wants
to support the OHC Foundation. And these funds are used
to purchase gift cards for gas and groceries for patients
who are struggling financially, often because they've had to stop
working due to being going through treatment.

Speaker 1 (02:12:16):
Yes, I have. I consider myself the lottery winner of
cancer diagnosis because with love spectrum lymphoma, I have not
had to deal with the genuine pain and the treatment
realities of folks who have much more aggressive cancers. I've
seen them, I've met them, and I can only imagine
the financial struggle because there is no way in how

(02:12:37):
these people are capable of doing a job. So it's
a worthy thing to get these donations. And well, let
me put you on the spot a little bit at
the risk of doing so, and this isn't intentionally designed
to put you on the spot. There are a lot
of organizations out there that are looking for financial contributions.
What lets the OAHC Foundation stand out and be a
worthy choice for finite number of dollars that people might

(02:12:59):
have to donate to cancer research?

Speaker 22 (02:13:02):
Well, Sorryry, do you want to take that?

Speaker 1 (02:13:05):
That's live radio for you, all right, he ask me
that question. Good morning everyone.

Speaker 6 (02:13:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 23 (02:13:12):
OHC Foundation is different from other cancer related nonprofits, slightly
different because our organization is shaped by the OHC physicians.
OHC is oncology hematology care, and our thirty two physicians
helps to really show what our OHC Foundation can become.
So they are the physicians that are fighting this deadly

(02:13:35):
disease day in day out with our thirty five thousand
patients every day. So they know firsthand the toilet takes
on our patients and their families, and they're insight into
providing support to the patients is invaluable. We have one
of our board members on the OHC Foundation is a
practicing physician at OHC and she's very, very committed to

(02:13:57):
the foundation and to the success the foundation as well
as the organization.

Speaker 1 (02:14:02):
All Right, I just turned sixty, not that long ago.
In my entire life, I've been hearing about you know, awareness,
you know, like for example, women doing self examinations, and
that there is still such a need to get information
out about prevention and detection. I'm almost asking myself, how
in the hell has this flown underneath anyone's radar? But

(02:14:24):
it has, in fact flown underneath a lot of people's radar.
That's the reason you need this absolutely.

Speaker 23 (02:14:30):
And our plan is for in twenty twenty six, hopefully
to have a symposium where we're actually doing some community
education both for the public and for physicians and healthcare
providers in the cancer arena, but also healthcare providers that
would be referring physicians or physicians that might come across
patients that need our services. So hoping to have the

(02:14:53):
symposium both to focus on the healthcare and to educate
the healthcare community as well as the public related to
cancer and cancer prevention. So all the screenings that they
could do related to that as well.

Speaker 1 (02:15:08):
So people, even like primary care physicians, are in need
also of some greater awareness of what to look for
and what to think about. I mean, I go back
to my personal experience. I struggled with night sweats for
a long time before I literally stumbled upon that I
had lymphoma. Circuitous route to get there. But you know,
if someone had told me that, if I knew early

(02:15:29):
on night sweats are a big red flag when it
comes to cancer, and here I am after you know,
I was at the time, was like fifty eight or
seven or six or whatever I started having night sweats.
If I'd known that, I'd be like, WHOA should I
be really worried about this? And I'm waking up in
a pool of my own sweat? And the answer would
have been yes. But I lived with that for months
and months and months and months before this circuitous route

(02:15:51):
ended up giving you a cancer diagnost So you're telling
me the physicians out in the world had I mentioned
to my primary care physician, which I never did because
I didn't think it was a symptom of anything. You're
saying he might not have brought that together as a
connection is a red flag potentially. Wow, I find it
hard to believe that. I guess on some level, I don't.

(02:16:13):
There's so much information about the human body out there
and you get into areas of specialty where you don't
put two and two together. So that's another It's just
a component of what you're going to be doing, so
educating physicians as well as the general public. And you're
also going to be doing events, community events, and to
raise this awareness and also have some fun.

Speaker 23 (02:16:30):
I hope, absolutely, absolutely so.

Speaker 22 (02:16:33):
One of the things we did recently is to sponsor
the zero PROS State Walk, and OHC Foundation supported over
one hundred and fifty people men who were there and
raised about one hundred and fifty thousand dollars to support

(02:16:53):
zero PROS State and through that awareness and early detection.

Speaker 1 (02:17:00):
Like you said, well, I guess I really want to know.
Are you going to do the cooking event again?

Speaker 22 (02:17:07):
Are we going to do the cooking event again?

Speaker 23 (02:17:10):
I don't know about that one.

Speaker 6 (02:17:11):
Come on.

Speaker 1 (02:17:14):
That was so much fun. All the cancer doctors came
in and everybody was given a pile of different foods
and they had to create a dish based on It's
like something you watch on TV. We had so much
fun doing it, and the people there had a great time,
the doctors had a great time. Smiles photo ops. I mean,
I'm just throwing it out as a suggestion. You guys
don't have to run with that of the OHC Foundation,
but it was fun.

Speaker 22 (02:17:34):
I think we should run on the I think we
should bring it back because I didn't get to participate
last time.

Speaker 1 (02:17:41):
So celebrity chefs, sure, I would love to do it.
I want to see waterhouse behind the grill at the
next one. All right, So in terms of donations, and
I know that I have a very generous listening audience,
and clearly your objectives here are very worthy, and I
wish they weren't even necessary because you just I just
learned something I wasn't even aware of. But how can

(02:18:03):
people donate? And also in addition to donations, certainly cash
is king, But are you in need of volunteer assystems
to help out with this kind of thing, because quite
often organizations will seek volunteers to help out.

Speaker 23 (02:18:14):
We will be in need of volunteers when we have
the events they are planning those next year, so there
is we're working on a way for people to give
us their names and contact information so that they can
be on our volunteer list for when the time comes.
At this point, you can go to our website and
find out a little bit more information about the foundation

(02:18:35):
and to also donate. We also just recently, actually this week,
are launching some new apparel that's OHC Foundation Apparel. There's
a T shirt and a sweatshirt available on our website
as well.

Speaker 1 (02:18:49):
Well, let me guess you would also welcome some measure
of sponsorship if there's a corporate sponsor out there that
wants to join in and help spread cancer awareness and
provide all of this valuable and said still needed information,
that would absolutely seam up. See, there you go. I
one of the great things about my shows. I got
a lot of business owners out there, and again they're

(02:19:09):
very supportive of charitable work. So there you go. Folks,
get in front of the line. And you mentioned the website,
which is the ideal opportunity for bringing up now since
we're closing up the segment. It's Ohcarefoundation dot org. Ohhcarefoundation
dot org. So if you need cancer doctors, it's Ohcare.
But if you want to work with a foundation, it's

(02:19:30):
Ohcare Foundation dot org. The phone number to reach Sherry
Brubaker to talk to her about this organization is eight
eight eight six nine forty eight hundred. That's eight eight
eight sixty eight hundred sounds like you got big things
coming up in the near future. I will encourage you
to check them out online and help them out and
help them complete this valuable mission. And I figure once

(02:19:52):
you get this thing off the ground and running, you'll
be back to talk more about it, and you'll also
let me and my listeners know about the events of
your planning. Absolutely yes to cook off. I'm sorry I
backed you into a corner on that one, but if
it's on the right day, I'll be there whether you
want me to or not. Folks, get out and vote,
dear

Brian Thomas News

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