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September 26, 2025 149 mins
Tech Friday with Dave Hatter, George Brunemann and Keith Tenhundfeld of RestoreWellness talk health issues and topics, Phil Kerpen on stopping climate craziness plus Patty Scott of HEART for Seniors.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
At fifty five k r C the Talk Dason Happy
Fridays a vacation.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
There there it is. Even though Joe Tracker's not here,
We're still get a blue hooo from for a Friday
and a very happy one to you. Thank you Sean
McMahon covering for Joe's tracker who's on his I guess, uh,
you know, in terms of the work week, he's on
his last day of vacation. Joe'll be back on Monday.
Sean McMahon does a great job covering for the vacationing
Joe's tracker. I think he had a good time. Just

(00:52):
wonder what Joe's been up to anyway. Uh, obviously I'm
happy it's Friday. I'll always happy for Friday for me
and I hope you have some great plans for the weekend.
And I'm gonna be doing the Steady Strides Parkinson's Walk tomorrow.
I'll be there. If you're interested in that five K
information on my blog Patriot you five Caresey dot com.
You gotta scroll back a week or so at the

(01:14):
details on that. But I'll be there in a money
making opportunity for the local Parkinson's folks. To provide resources
for folks dealing with Parkinson's wonderful thing to do, so
exercise for charity that'll be on my plate tomorrow, and
a nothing I'm going to be doing and I mentioned
before thanks to my friends at twenty two three, I'll
be out at the f ND days. Yeah, I got

(01:34):
the FN representatives out at twenty two three on around
forty two between Mason and eleven and between ten and
four tomorrow. You can squeeze off some rounds for free,
try out all the FN products, talk to the reps,
and check out the suppressors. My firearms friends, suppressors are
no going to be subject no longer going to be
subject to the two hundred dollars tax stamp thing or
whatever they call that. You'll still have to go through

(01:55):
the background check and do that extra special sort of
I guess register of the expresser after the first of
the year. That has not been eliminated, but the cost
to do it two hundred bucks, has been eliminated. I
will let you know though. My friends are twenty two
three said, listen, you know you go ahead and pay
that you're still gonna have to register the thing. So
if you do it now, the turnaround time is really short.

(02:16):
I mean you could get the approval from the federal
government within a couple of days. They expect that to
be a huge backlog after the first of the year
because a lot of people are holding off on finalizing
the paperwork and they're happy to hold the paperwork for you.
And then right after the first of the year file
the last bit of paperwork go through the process. But

(02:38):
that impending flood of applications into the federal government is
going to result in substantial delays, at least that's what
is being predicted. So you draw your own conclusions. Pay
the two undred bucks now get processed quickly, or wait,
say the two under bucks after the first of the
year and perhaps wait a couple of months, maybe even longer.
Who knows. Anyway, I just thought I throw that out

(02:58):
there for my firearms owning friends who are interested in
a suppressor. I don't want one enough that I would
go through the registration process personally, haven't needed one to
really personally need one, although I've shot with them before.
Really amazing, How can savior hearing George Reniean actually Tech
Friday coming up at six thirty always enjoy that I

(03:19):
got an interesting, perturbing tech article. I want to mention
just a minute. Dave had to be out at six thirty.
I don't know what the topics are, Sean. Did you
get a list of topics from day many chance?

Speaker 3 (03:27):
Now?

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Okay, Well, Dave, if you're out there, shoot me some
topics or we just hit it, hit the ground running
and do it on the fly. I don't mind. George Brenneman,
Keith tennantfelt our health experts Restore Wellness. They're going to
be in studio for an hour at seven o five.
Excellent advice they provide and offer, and it's a fun
conversation to lighthearted it is, but it's all about your
health today. Florida actions on vaccine mandates, Maha Child Strategy Report,

(03:53):
Common medications with potential downsides. Oh look number one tail
and all. There's this widely circuit relating article and I'm
I don't know that it's true or not. If you
read it on the internet, it must be true. A
pregnant liberal woman suffered a fatal tilenthol overdose after trying
to prove Donald Trump wrong. So apparently she's in her

(04:14):
twenty plus weeks of pregnancy down a whole bunch of
talanol and ended up in the hospital and is I guess,
on a ventilator. The story is horrific and amazing, and
obviously I don't I'm I'm leaning on the side I
don't believe it. Now, there are viral videos going on

(04:35):
out there that are true where women are in defiance
of Donald Trump's warning about tilanhol maybe being a problem,
and you need to consider the potential downside risk. Go
ahead and take it anyway if you want to. But
I'm raving a wed flag that you know there might
be a problem with tilanol. Well, Donald Trump said it,
so I'm gonna eat a talent, all pointing out the
fact that I'm very pregnant. Those videos actually exist. This

(04:56):
is just an anecdotal story relayed by a healthcare worker.
He said that her, this woman who's in the hospital
on a ventilator's husband reached out to her. So take
it with a grain of salt. But that trumped arrangement
syndrome is on full display. But talanhold does carry its
own risks liver failure, liver problems associated with it. There's
other downside risks for talanold. I thought it was rather

(05:18):
comical that the Talonhol's x feed formerly Twitter feed, when
they used to post things about tail and all their
own products, said we never tested an un pregnant women
and recommending the pregnant women. I might would have considered
not taking it anyway. Trumpt arrangement syndrome. They should look
into that as a DSM diagnosable illness. So Keith and

(05:44):
Georgian Studio at seven oh five, We'll catch yourself as
a crime stopper bag guy the week. At the tail
end of that hour, Phil Kerpan, president of American Commitment,
is going to be joining us to talk about stopping
climate craziness. And it was with much shodd and for
it I led an article about this two point two
billion dollar power plant, solar power plant out in California

(06:05):
shut down. What's the largest solar plant in the world.
Two point two billion dollar project and one hundred and
seventy three thousand what they call heliostat mirrors. The mirrors
move to follow the sunlight, reflect that sunlight up into
a giant tower which collects the sunlight and then turns
it into heat and converts it into steam energy. That's

(06:27):
the fundamental nature of the plant, the Ivanpah Solar Power facility.
But this reminded me a cylinder in a one twenty
three back in the Obama administration. Here, look, take two
point two billion dollars, build a plant and find out that,
you know, modern technology is better than this old technology.
And as a matter of fact, the plant never generated

(06:47):
more than seventy five percent of its planned annual output.
Underperforming plan. They are shutting it down. Shut Down procedures
commenced next year, pending regulatory approval. One's close the site.
Maybe repurpose for PV energy production, they say, solar photovol takes,
which are traditional, well not traditional, the more modern solar

(07:10):
panel collectors which collect and directly convert sunlight energy or
sunlight into energy, so as opposed to going through that
you know heat thing with the steam generation. Regardless, another
massive taxpayer assisted project that failed shut down. Add that
to the ever growing list. Maybe we'll talk about that

(07:31):
with Phil stopping climate craziness. And I just keep going
back to California cutting edge, leading edge of zero carbon emissions,
chasing one's tail for no purpose whatsoever, but finding that
economically it doesn't work out. Yeah, California's are the most
expensive state in the world, basically, and you're going to
be paying eight dollars a gallon for gas. You can

(07:53):
see that in your future. Politicians start getting concerned when
constituents are really really angry with them for saddling them
with the regulatory burden that artificially raised the price of gasoline,
making it unaffordable for the average Californian. And that's the
practical reality of the climate nonsense. You do this to us,

(08:15):
you elected officials. You put in all these limitations. You're
not allowed to use gas powered stoves or furnaces anymore.
You must buy everything electric. Your a vehicle must be electric.
We're gonna ban internal combustion engines. We're gonna get rid
of refineries in our state. We're not gonna We're not
gonna allow anybody to drill natural resources in our state.
It sucks to be you. Here are the rules and

(08:37):
regulations you must live by. Who's the fascist? There's that.
But because they're self inflicted, you don't need to keep
that going, now, do you. It's like self flatulations. You know,
you keep whipping yourself in the name of I don't know,
because you're a sinner, and you keep whipping yourself, and

(08:58):
you keep hurting yourself. If you know you can stop
doing that, just stop. And when you're an elected official
and your job may depend on stopping the pain you're
inflicting on people, it's an option, and that's an option
that's been exercised out in California atleast started going down

(09:20):
that road. So even the most leftist climate alarmist nonsense
folks ultimately capitulate when their jobs are on the line.
That's an amazing thing. I thought the world. I thought
we were all going to die. Why are you reversing
these climate mandates? You said you put them in place
because it is an existential, eminent threat we need to
get in front of right now or we're all going
to die. Huh No, We're going to open up drilling,

(09:44):
We're going to try to stop the refineries from shutting down.
We're going to maybe get rid of the ev mandates.
Interesting reality, that, isn't it when you dwelt one in
for a moment. Plus, my dear friend Patty Scott from
Hartford Seniors awesome organization helping out seniors who are living
sometimes in pretty horrific living conditions when they're in senior
living facilities. They've got solutions at a Heart for seniors,

(10:07):
and Patty Scott's going to give us some updates on
the wonderful work that that organization is doing. She'll be
on at eight forty five, one, three, seven, four nine fifty,
five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three talk
pound five fifty on AT and T phones. I'll do
the tech thing that's got under my skin and something
else which is even worse, researchers, sociologists well, legitimizing children's sexuality. Wait,

(10:39):
do you hear this story? Five fifteen right now? If
you five Krecity Talk station, be right back. I'm donalds
ain't Trump? Can I improve this message? Thank you Don
five nineteen A little jump out of bad music.

Speaker 4 (10:59):
Let me.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Thank you coming man to the volume bump. Appreciate that.
Bus me a little motorhead on a Friday, and I
love hearing from folks five hundred two three talk Before
I dive onto these other couple of stories, I wanted
to get out there. Let's do what Keith has got
this morning. Keith, thanks for calling the Morning Show. Happy Friday.

Speaker 5 (11:25):
Hi, Brian, how you doing.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
I'm doing good. It's Friday. I'm always good on a Friday.

Speaker 5 (11:30):
There's something I've noticed, strangely enough about these super top
secret meetings that are taking place next Tuesday at Quantico. Uh,
doesn't seem like our news media or European news media
or Asian news media is asking this important question. Are
there any similar type of super top secret meetings right

(11:53):
now taking place? Are going to take place also in Russia, China?

Speaker 4 (11:59):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (11:59):
It's it seems to me this would be a very
important question that our news media should be asking or
looking into. What you think?

Speaker 1 (12:06):
I suppose would they let the world know? Would they
talk to the media about it? If they the Russians
or the Chinese were getting planned we're planning some secret meeting.
We obviously don't have the details of this meeting that
they're having at Quantico, So why would they offer details
when they live in a closed society with very little
information coming out? So I don't know. I mean, we're
all just kind of questioning, throwing questions out there in

(12:28):
the world.

Speaker 5 (12:28):
Keith, I agree, is there's something I don't know what
to say?

Speaker 1 (12:33):
If you don't know, because you don't know, I don't
know what the meeting's about. No one does. That's in fact,
all the articles that talk about the meeting. No one
knows what it's about. Everybody, this secret meeting has been
called and people are wondering what's it all about? Nobody knows. Yeah,
I'm holding my popcorn in my lap here waiting for
the information so I can comment on it. I know
it's frustrating, man, I know we want it all right now,

(12:59):
right now. Anyhow disturbing. Two disturbing articles, one more than
the other. I'll start with the one that it disturbs me.
This is probably going to be a trend. You can
see it coming. Nine thousand miles away. Washington State forcing
repeat speed offenders to install GPS based speed limiters. You

(13:20):
got those alcohol monitors where eve the breathalyzers where you
have to blow into a tube in order to start
your car, right to make sure you're not drunk. You
must be zero point zero on the alcohol scale or
your car won't start.

Speaker 4 (13:31):
Well.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
Welcome to GPS speed limters. You must install your car
if you're caught driving twenty miles per hour over the
speed limit on highways or ten miles per mile ten
miles an hour over on small roads, and you have
to use the limitter if you want your license back,
works like the breath test, locks instead of measuring alcohol,
tracks the speed through GPS electronically capping the car's top speed,

(13:58):
and must stay installed for at least one hundred and
twenty days one hundred and fifty if convicted. Reckless driving
drivers apparently only get three temporary bypasses per month before
the limitter locks them out completely. Refusing to comply means
more penalties and longer suspension, so apparently active. Once activated,

(14:19):
the limitter does not allow any flexibility emergencies wide oven highways,
or a personal judgment no longer matter, which disturbs me
because I had a personal instance where I had to
grossly exceed the speed limit because a guy was chasing
after me, trying to blank and kill me. If I
had a speed limber on my car, that guy could
have ran right over the top of me. I managed
to escape him at least put some distance between me

(14:40):
and this crazy drug overdose nut. Sadly he was able
to catch up because there is traffic on I seventy
one at fifteen minutes after nine. Anyway, I do have
a couple of callers online who's first there? Sean that

(15:02):
will be Dennis, Welcome to the program. Good to hear
from the Happy Friday.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
Good morning. You know, Bill Gates has been doing the
late night tour lately, and he's come up with a
fantastic idea for the viability of Western civilization and the
rest of the world by suggesting we have to eliminate
a little over fifteen percent of the population, which is
only a billion, little tad over a billion people need

(15:28):
to die prematurely.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (15:30):
So, anyway, this moron has invested heavily in vaccines, and
the reports that Naomi would and Wolf rather included in
her treatise on the Pfizer papers and Maderna papers indicated
that it was successful. A vaccine that was introduced in

(15:51):
the genomets or genetics rather of the of the late
covid vaccine was successful at terminating eighty two percent of
the pregnancy is in the first trimester. That was considered
a favorable result. So when you talked about medications not
being tested on pregnant women, that's a forbidden thing to

(16:13):
do in any drug testing or randomized clinical trial because
of the danger of reenacting POLINIMIDT times ten or one hundred. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Well, the danger to the fetus that might occur or
be revealed during the clinical testing. We're not going to
take pregnant women in the studies because we don't want
to harm the babies. Babies don't have any choice of
whether or not they want to be part of a
clinical trial.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
So Hey, Pediatrics is the highest among the highest insurance
rates for physicians. I think only by NST.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Theologists try to get insurance. If you're an obgen doctor,
right reck, Dennis, Yeah, be prepared to write a very
very large liability or liability insurance policy check. There is
no question about that for Obigen's. Appreciate the call of Dennis,
and you're on par with one of my I don't

(17:06):
want to call her conspiracy theorist, Maureen, if you're out there,
I know your ears perked up when you heard that call.
Five twenty five right now, if you have casy De
talk stations, she's all about global population control and nefarious
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(17:29):
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(18:09):
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(18:33):
You can get a free quote Galaxyconcrete Codings dot com
fifty five KRC dot five thirty one. On a Friday,
yay deck Proud of me, Dave Hatter, I just sent
him an email, ty, can you shoot me the topics
for today? Look forward to talking with you. Happy Friday, Dave.
And I said it to a what was formerly his

(18:55):
Gmail account, the only thing I had on my email account.
I got a kickback reply. As of one one twenty one,
I'm going to be on a permanent vacation from Google
Google because they suck, and I will stop using this
accouta as of that date. He hates Google. Don't use
alphabet products. Uh Proton mails where he goes. So I
boarded one of this new location anyway's going to the phone.

(19:17):
He's got a couple of callers online. Mike was first.
Tom hang on, Mike, welcome to the show. Happy Friday.

Speaker 6 (19:22):
Oh thank you, Ruady back at you. Yeah, you open
the show with this Trump derangement syndrome. I'm sitting here
thinking I'm watching this kid Kimble, I mean son, you
have fame, you have fortune, I've seen his family on

(19:42):
the old interweb. Nice family and above all they're all healthy.
Every second in life is precious. Michter Kimball, you better
wake up, You better wake up quick.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
Thank you for your time, buddy, Thanks for the call.
He's looking out for Jimmy Kibbles. That's that's funny. It's
an interesting twist on it. Very I don't know, very
Christian attitude looking out for Jimmy and his concern for
his future. Tom, Welcome to the Morning Show. Happy Friday, brother,

(20:17):
good good morning.

Speaker 7 (20:18):
And right, there is an example of the difference between
the left and the right, because you have on the
on the left, you have much joy and glee over
the suffering of people. On the right, yeah, right, and
then and then on the right side, we understand that

(20:39):
we gotta we gotta be compassion at some point. What
is one of your favorite sayings there, but by the
grace of God, jo If it wasn't for for God's grace,
if you if you don't want to believe in that,
you know, good fortune. If it wasn't for that, I
would be in that same situation. You know, the Lord
knows we've all made enough dumb decisions to put ourselves

(21:02):
in some crappy situations. True, so you know that I appreciate.
I appreciate that phone call. That was because you're you're
you're looking at your political enemy, and I'm saying that
with quotes. These are people are not our enemies. There
are other human beings. And even though they've got trunk
arrangement syndrome, whatever you want to call it, these are

(21:23):
other human beings. If you have an opportunity to reach
out to them, extend a hand, you know, talk to them, explain.

Speaker 4 (21:31):
Things to them. If you get that opportunity, you.

Speaker 7 (21:34):
Know, while you see a chance, take it. You know,
we can't push things and force things down people's throat,
whether it be your faith or whether it be your
political views. When you get an opportunity, seize the opportunity.
Share what you know, what you believe, what you've witnessed,
things like that, and and maybe hey, maybe you get

(21:54):
a shot. Maybe somebody opens their opens their mind and goes,
wait a second, I get think about that, Ask him
the right question, answer the right answer something you know
what I mean that that and this is this He
threw me off because this is not what I was
calling about. But that that just that really touched me
and I that's a very important part of this, Brian,

(22:15):
that we all. I know, I listened to Christopher Smitherman.
I go back and listen to his his time with you,
and and I hear it in his voice, and and
and various other people on the And even though Christopher's
not a Republican, he is definitely would be on the
right side of the Ledger and and people like that.
It's like, look, I'm staunchly against what you're saying. I

(22:36):
disagree with you wholeheartedly, but you're a human being, You're
another person. If and if for no other reason, we
need those people to vote better, we need to at
least reach them so that they they understand that they
keep voting for those idiots on the other side, we're
just gonna stand the same predicament. And that's that's really

(22:58):
the message that we got to keep throwing out there.
We're just talking politics. It all comes down to election day.
Every time an election rolls around, we need more of
our fellow citizens to vote along with us so that
we can turn things around or make things happen a
certain way. That's that's what it all comes down to.
So even if you want to be selfish about it.

(23:18):
Talk to your friends, talk to your neighbors and tell
them don't vote Democrats.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
Have a great weekend, right, thanks Tom, and underscore mind
your Republican choices as well. Research those. Just because you
haven't r after your name doesn't mean you're the right
person to vote for five point thirty six if you
five case to detalk station Bill got a comment of
the New York City mayor race. Bill like, I'm out
of time in the segment. IM happy to take your
call before we get to the stack and stupid. Other

(23:43):
calls are also welcome here in the morning show. But
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(24:03):
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(24:25):
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(25:10):
five KRC the Talk station. If you are looking, that's
Friday at this time. We always do that five forty
two fifty five Krcity Talk Stations five one three seven
fifty five hundred eight two three talk Time five fifty
one eighty and two founds. Before I get the bill,
you're gonna have to do a base riff in honor
of the vacationing Jostrecker, Missus Joe, looking for having you

(25:44):
back on Monday. That's no slight to Shan Bill. Thanks
for holding over the break there. Welcome to fifty five
KRC Morning Show.

Speaker 8 (25:51):
Yeah, so Mom Doney wants to legalize prostitution in New York.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
YEP.

Speaker 8 (25:57):
Just think, just think about the job creation there and
also all new tourist attraction for New York. That's great,
and he could enhance it further by proposing no tax
on tricks.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
So you know it's Phil.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
Phil. As you were saying that, I said legalize equals taxation.
I wrote that down before you even said that, because
maybe he wants to legalize it. As another form of
tax revenue. Think about it.

Speaker 8 (26:26):
Yeah, yeah, So if he gets all of his proposals
through there, the Escape from New York City won't just
be a screen today, It'll be a reality show.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
That's funny. Another thing that I have. I never said
that out loud, but every time someone talks about Mom
Donnie what he wants for New York, that's exactly what
goes through my mind. Escape from New York. Bill, I
want to give you.

Speaker 4 (26:51):
I wanted to give you a lead into your stack
of stupid.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
You did that. Thank you, Bill, I appreciate it allowing
you to get some of the thoughts I've been percolating
around in my head out of the radio program. Appreciate that.
All Right, here we go, I told Sean to get
the sound bite queued up. We have a retiree who's
now been banned from being in naked in public for
the next six years after being found a large large

(27:14):
number of nude selfies on his camera. Derek Holliday as
the man, was found with three thousand images of himself
naked in public. Recently arrested for carrying out what is
described as a solo act solo sex act on a
golf course. Use your imagination, it won't be too difficult.
Seventy four year old Holiday, sheriff said he posed the

(27:36):
danger of the public into himself and he could be
attacked by horrified members of the public. Maybe he was
discovered with a bag containing swimming trunks, ladies underwear and
a male sex toy. When he was found pleasuring himself
naked in broad daylight, would get deliberate penalties.

Speaker 8 (27:54):
So we could get into the penalty box all by himself.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
Yes, see slapshot for or the reference on the sound bite.
Sheriff Tim Niven Smith imposed an unusual restriction of liberty order,
banning Holiday from leaving his home between noon and eight
pm each day for eight months. Sheriff told Dundee Sheriff
cord this is in a UK. I do believe these
hours of being implosed to reduce risk of vercidivism, particularly

(28:19):
during autumn and winter during the daytime hours. According to
the judge, it seems from your cand that you were
purely paying lip service to that. He was talking about
his previous convictions for public and decency, many many prior
convictions during the time you were engaged in pleasuring yourself

(28:41):
in public whilst in various states of undress and taking
photos of yourself. My sentencing powers are totally inadequate to
protect you in the public. You would probably serve four
months or less in custody. That does not seem to
be adequate. Truth, I want to be your upset five

(29:01):
forty five man. That is a There ain't no flag
for that guy either five forty five eighty five KRC
detalk station more stupid or calls coming up first. Zimmer
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KRC an iHeartRadio station. Picture this You're on a date
the five fifty one fifty five care sud talk page

(30:05):
Teck Friday with day've had are coming up at six
thirty Doctor stack of stupid. I think regular listeners know
how I feel about Greta Thunbird, the angriest, most unhappy
woman on the planet and getting the Manuel Noriega treatment.
Was it at Manuel Norriyega? They blasted metallica outside his
building while he was holed up. Yeah, well, we have

(30:27):
Greta Thunberg and her supporters going to Gaza in a
fifty one vessel convoy heading on over to provide some
aid In Gaza, someone described as opponents hijack their radio
communications to play ABBA on repeat and block out any

(30:47):
other communications between themselves. The Global Samood Flotilla claims the
ongoing radio jamming incidents using the Abba trying to disrupt
their work and going to Gaza. We are witnessing these
psychological operations firsthand right now, but we will not be intimidated. Samood,

(31:09):
which is Arabic for steadfastness protests, is apparently subjected to
hours of relentless playing of one single Abba song over
and over again. That song lay All Your Love on Me.
They think it's Abba because apparently Greta Thunberg, also from Sweden,
accord to one of their spokespeople, they're jamming our radio.

(31:30):
We don't know where this is coming from the sound,
but other vessels are experiencing the same thing now. They
tried to attempt this journey previously, back in June Ah.
They were not allowed in Israel said no and returned
the flotilla, so they're trying. They're having another go out
of it. Israel's told him, listen, you're not gonna make it.
You want to provide aid, hand it over to the
Ashkalan Marina, then we will afford it promptly to the

(31:53):
Gaza Strip in a nonviolent manner. Oh, they're happy to
do that work for him.

Speaker 9 (31:58):
But resist we must, we must, and we will much
about that be committed.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
Now.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
Who could argue with that police arrested a naked woman
following a brief chase and a four hour stand off.
This happened to West Hollywood earlier this week. Please pursued
the naked bandit after locals reported an assault involving a
screaming nude woman. Los Angeles police said the woman, who
didn't they didn't immediately identify, took off in a four

(32:28):
Bronco with a small dog in a backseat. Police surrounded
the Bronco. The woman refused to get out for al
ust four hours, At one point threw a hammer out
of the car window. Mental health experts deployed the scene.
Officers laid down spike strips to keep her from driving away. Eventually,
she climbed out of the window of the Bronco, yes
completely naked, then wrapped in a white sheet by officers

(32:50):
and taking it to custody. An officer at the scene
said the woman decided to surrender when police threatened to
bombard the car with tear gas cannistairs. Yeah, that would
prompt me to get out of the car. And we
got a fourteen year old girl who's dead after she
had a boob job and butt lift, all without her
father's knowledge, and authorities are looking to her mom's plastic

(33:14):
surgeon boyfriend who's now under investigation for possible negligent homicide,
Bloma and Nicole Ariano Escobo died sat Escabido died a
Saturday at a hospital Durango, Mexico, after being in a
coma swollen brain heart problems after this so called secret surgery,
which was performed a week earlier. The teen's dad, Carlos Arliano,

(33:34):
was told she had died from complications at COVID nineteen,
but discovered something different when he was at the funeral.
He said, at the funeral, some relatives told me her
breasts were larger than when she had before, and when
I mentioned it to her mother, she told me that
wasn't true, that she didn't know anything. That got the
ex's family to leave the room so his mom, sister,

(33:55):
and sister in law could help him. The ex father
examined his daughter's body. He said, sure enough, if she
had breast implants, we have photographs of the implants and scars.
We immediately requested an autopsy. He said his ex wife
had agreed to the surgery, which was carried out by
her current partner, forty five year old plastic surgeon. He
accused his ex and anew the surgeon boyfriend, of lying

(34:15):
to cover up the death. Apparently there's no age limitation
in Mexico, but it typically requires both parents to provide
permission when the child's under the age of eighteen. According
to Durango Attorney General, we are investigating a probable lack
of care on the part of the mother for placing
a miner who was under her care in custody in
risky situations. Surgeon, for his part, had his license suspended

(34:38):
and again as being investsstigated from malpractice. Who in the
right mind would allow a fourteen year old girl to
get breast surgery and a butt left? Unbelievable? Five efty
six fifty five care cit Detox station. Plenty of time
between now and Tech Friday with Dave Hadter coming up
at six thirty. I sure hope he can stick around.
A five at fifty five hair CD TALX station. Brian

(34:59):
Thomas right here, wishing everybody very very happy Friday. Tech
Friday Day. We had a bottom in the hour every
Friday at six. Don't have a topics yet from Dave,
but I'm sure it'd be interesting and informative. Followed by
George Rennoan at Keith Tennefeld Restore Wellness dot org is
the the health component of what George Rerunnaman does. Keith
Tennefeld is all about health and improving the ways that
we eat, diet and exercise and everything and learning more

(35:21):
and more about health and a lot of it. You can,
I guess give credit to RFK Junior. Like him, hate him,
doesn't really matter, but it is at least causing us
to engage in a conversation about health. You know, go
back to this ridiculous talent all pill popping thing, you know,
all Donald Trump's is a Talenthol's bad. Here, I'm pregnant.
I'm gonna take TALENTI in defiance of Donald Trump. That
is absolute insanity right there. He didn't say you can't

(35:44):
take it, He's recommended that he might want to consider
potential risks associated with taking it. No testing done on
pregnant women with tilan' all. I mean, okay, is there
a better illustration of Trump's arrangement syndrome than that? I mean,
if they don't want the baby, I got to assume

(36:05):
that a person would suffering from trump to arrangements and
probably would have the pregnancy terminated. I don't anyway, who
am I to try to figure out the mental health
problems the world is facing right now? Anyway, Phil Carpon's
going to join the program, President of American Commitment. We're
gonna be talking about stopping climate craziness. That'll take place

(36:26):
at eight oh five, and then we'll hear from Patti Scott.
She is so wonderful. Heartforce Seniors dot orgs the organization
providing great benefits for those seniors who are in assisted
living facilities and making sure they're well taken care of
in a prompt and timely manner. Really great work, Heartforce
Seniors dot org. She'll join the program at eight forty
five one three seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight

(36:46):
hundred eight two three dog pound five fifty on at
and T Funds story. I wanted to get at get
to in the last start. I didn't get to yet.
And it doesn't relate to really anything that's like prominently
going on, but flying under the radar it may be.
But it was so disturbing what I read, and also
a great illustration of I guess, intellectual psychobabble in the
name of supporting sexualization of children, And one of the

(37:11):
more disturbing elements for me of the LGBTQ plus and
this incorporation of the issues relating to those LGBTQ plus
whichever category you fall into in elementary school requires a
discussion of sex. I mean, what does it mean to
be the B? What does it mean to be the
L and the G? Do we need to be talking

(37:32):
about sex, sex, the act of sex? And I don't
know how that relates the Q part. And just because
you're a T does not mean you're necessarily an L
or a G. But talking about it is creates an
environment where you're discussing sex and sexuality with very young people.

(37:54):
I find that a frightening thing. Children are innocent. They
don't have the intellectual capacity or life experience I think
to handle these very delicate and sometimes troubling subject matters.
With that, you pivot over to this new paper in
the American Sociological Association's journal Sex and Sexualities. I'm not

(38:15):
sure if Joe Strecker A is still getting the hard
copy of that one, probably the electronic And this is
on the heels of other studies who have been done
which are just insane. The article sites papers on something
called echo sexuality, in which scholars eroticize nature and describe
sexual encounters with trees, lakes, and even the earth. Article

(38:42):
also mentioned a disturbing subset takes their friend sexual impulses
into disturbing, even dangerous territory. One paper titled Queering Babies,
published in Spring Nature Journal, explicitly sexualizes infants in this one.
This American Sociological Association's Sex and Sexualities Journal article titled

(39:06):
Childhood Sexualities on Pleasure and Meaning from the margins I'm
not going to read mentioned the authors of the article
doesn't really matter, described as postdoctoral researchers, Peace calls for, well,
basically the elimination of the idea of childhood sexual innocence

(39:29):
from the I'll just quote the abstract. Now, maybe if
you've been through and got a degree, perhaps a master's
degree in sociology, you might understand this. The point of
it comes through in spite of the psychobabble nature in
which the abstract explains what the research determined. Here you go, ready,

(39:50):
sexualities scholarship, and I think that means, you know, the
study of sexuality. Sexualities scholarship marginalizes childhood sexual pleasure, positioning
children as vulnerable subjects. This article repositions childhood sexualities with
pleasures centered, globally oriented and power aware frame informed by feminist, queer,

(40:15):
and decolonial perspectives. Drawing on Southern research from South Africa
and other contexts, we interrogate dominant narratives on sexual innocence
that suppress young people's desires and show how children negotiate
pleasure and meaning amid intersecting hierarchies of age, race, gender,

(40:38):
and class. You following along by centering margins, we reveal
pleasure as both contested and generative, exposing the workings of
domination while opening pathways towards gender and sexual justice. You
getting all this. We argue that rejecting adult centered slash

(40:59):
adultist approaches to sexualities and attending to childhood pleasure is
indispensable for an inclusive sociology and just sexual futures. Close quote.
I mean that even had hurt reading it. But the
fundamental nature of this is, you know, we adults, we
perceive sex and sexuality and pleasure one way, and we

(41:21):
deprive the children by making that subject matter taboo. We
deprive them of the pleasure that they could be experiencing
if we just opened our minds to a more I'll
dare I say, progressive attitude towards sex. And we're talking
about kids here, you know, that's just get your foot
in the door. Add this to the growing body of

(41:42):
literature focusing on children and sex and in some level
justifying it. Go ahead, talk about it, normalize the idea
of children having sex. And I'm sorry you may call
me old fashioned. I find that to be repulsive and

(42:03):
damaging and troubling. And there's got to be a bunch
of psychologists and psychiatrists out there treating women. I think
of women, mostly treating women who were victims of childhood
sexual abuse and are struggling mightily throughout their adult years
with the pain from the recollection and the damage done

(42:24):
to them by the abuse they suffered. This article suggests
we should perhaps normalize that. That's my take on it.
It's crazy six twelve right now, Let's see what Bobby's
got this morning. Bobby, thanks for calling, Welcome to the
Morning Show. Happy Friday.

Speaker 3 (42:38):
Happy Friday to my brother, Faith, Bike, family and Sig Sour.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
You have bood, you always have freedom or FN. I
gotta mention twenty two three because it's f end days
tomorrow between ten and four at twenty two three. So
Sig Sour, get yourself a good one.

Speaker 3 (42:55):
I'm glad you said that, because that's what I live
you in for, hoping you'd say that about two twenty three.
They got a nice operation.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
Out there, they really really do. And I'm telling you what, folks,
if you really want to support some good, solid, traditional Americans,
that will be Wendy and Jeff, the owners of twenty
two to three outstanding firearm store. Anyway, Bobby, thanks for
the opportunity to give them a free plug. I'm happy
to do it. I love them.

Speaker 3 (43:18):
Hey, I'm happy you did. Hey, how about poor old
James Comy. You know, the nice indicted about his two times.
But the nice thing is there's three people within his
own organization that's testifying against you. James Baker will be
one of them.

Speaker 1 (43:35):
Yeah. I did read that. And for those wondering, I
mean the the the the indictment was related to a
twenty twenty testimony. You're like, wait a second, isn't it
counting your twenty twenty five? And isn't the statute of
limitations going to run out next week? And isn't that
amazing timing that they just now got around to it.
Bear in mind, if you're a skeptic or a cynic,
or you hate Donald Trump and you think he's the
one that ordered and directed and caused this indictment to

(43:57):
be brought about, maybe he did have something to do it.
He certainly was outspoken about it. But they got the indictment.
And the reason is maybe they delayed is because nobody
in the Biden administration was going to be interested in
investigating something that they started. This Russia collusion thing that
was that Komy was behind.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
So I tell you another thing was him dropping all
that classified information to the newspapers. Yes, sir, I'll spend
the Times and see that's what he did. He told
lot of his subbortinates to.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Do that, right, and then he denied against it, and
he denied doing that in his testimony, which is what
led to the indictment. Yeah, right, it's going to be nice.
Well maybe maybe not. I I'm going back to keeping
my popcorn out. You know, everybody says you can have
died a ham sandwich. Although the Department of Justice has
failed to get indictments recently in quite a few cases,
so it isn't a guaranteed lock. But Coombe's now onto

(44:48):
the microscope. He says he didn't do it or he
didn't lie, but he's going to have his day in
court due process, right, Bobby.

Speaker 3 (44:55):
Pro bone of my friend. I don't know he'll get
it freeer though, but I'll tell you what it's not
as cool call Steam triple.

Speaker 1 (45:00):
Figures most assuredly. Now, question, and I know you don't
know the answer to this. If you started a go
fundme page, do you think people would donate to it? Yes,
yes they would. George Soros would probably right up in front, Bobby.
You have a great weekend, my friend. Take care six
fifteen right now. Feel free to call five one, three
seven two three thouts and get in touch with Colin Electric,

(45:25):
Culin c U L E and Color Electriccincinnati dot com
is where you find them online and schedule appointment from
the website. Outstanding electricians they are. And they had a
conversation yesterday with one of the sales folks. Lightning strike
in her neighborhood and everyone in the neighborhood's had some
sort of damage. Computers fried out, one family or one

(45:46):
home lost their entire HVAC system lightning strike and it
immediately thought whole house surge protector. I've got one of
those and Cullen installed it. It's so simple and easy.
It's not that expense of considering. It'll stop that surge
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you on everything they do for you. So get the
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but also any other electric projects from small to huge.
They're going to give you great customer service and the

(46:27):
price is always right. Colin Electriccincinnati dot Com five one
three two two seven four one one two five one
three two two seven four one one two. This is
Ted Cruz. Join me Sunday night at seven pm on
fifty five KRC the talk station six twenty at fifty

(46:49):
five karrosd talk station looking forward to Tech Friday with
Dave Hatter. Always enjoy that segment, David, how about you
regulars from beyond? If I sit out my dad. This'sen
Tech Friday every Friday at six point thirty and speaking
of Tech Friday and artificial intelligence, and I know people

(47:10):
are more and more relying on AI, you know, and
reading as much as I do for the fifty five
CACEN Morning show. I've gotten I think I've been able
to kind of figure out which articles we're generated by
artificial intelligence versus those that are actually written by a
human being. Little subtle sign stick out and sometimes it's
just revealed in kind of information really lacks depth. It

(47:37):
sort of just scratches the surface on Like if you
get to chat GPT, for example, and you say, provide
me with an article about the mayoral race in New
York City, it'll provide you with a breakdown, but it
won't be that substantive at least, I'm trying to boil
down my point here. But they're calling it workslop, new
term of art for artificial intelligence, Artificial intelligence being used
to produce what the experts again are calling workslop. It

(47:59):
appears on its face to be somewhat polished, but if
you read it closely, it doesn't have any genuine substance
insight or you know, true value underneath. Jenerator of AI
does churn this stuff out quickly, and it's truly an
amazing phenomenon. If you haven't tried it sometime, just go
ahead and chat GPT and tell it to write a

(48:22):
song about something like, write me a funny song about
Greta Thunberg having to listen to Abba on repeat over
a flotilla going to Gaza, and it'll pop one out.
I recommend you give it a genre of music too,
like do it in punk rock form or in the
form of cannibal Corpse or something. But it does it.
But people are going to chat GPT and other AI
sources and having it generate the work, and then they're

(48:45):
not closely looking at it, polishing it, or otherwise searching
the world for actual substance to include in it. So
it enables this mass production of mediocre, low value content,
and they're pointing out this obvious risk it's going to
de skill and demotivate folks that really have decent knowledge
and skill sets, because if it's good enough, artificial generated

(49:08):
content is just kind of considered acceptables, and employees feel
less incentive to apply their well human insight and creativity
to it. Getting lazy softening the brain, and of course
the bigger one of the bigger problems is it's not
perfected by any stretch of the imagination. The corollary article
I read about the other day, librarians are having to

(49:29):
deal with people showing up at libraries and asking for
artificial genera AI generated book titles attributed to real authors
that authors didn't even write. What are the illustrations is?
I think they talked to some librarians about this. It
was reported on Breitbart. I saw this, but a subset

(49:49):
within the article from Breitbart talking about a Chicago Sun
Times article. This recent blunder raised concerns about AI journalism.
They published a summer reading list in the Chicago some
sometimes a twenty twenty five summer reading list that had
a variety of fake books. In the summer reading list,
they were attributed to well known authors. List apparently appeared

(50:11):
in the sixty four page advertorial supplement called heat Index
created by freelance writer Marco Buscaglia using AI, and out
of the fifteen recommended titles, only five were found to
be real books, the other ten fabricated at a whole cloth.

(50:33):
But you'd think the editorial folks at the Chicago Sun
Times might have done a little bit of review. You
think the article author, Marco Biscoglia, freelance article author he is,
would concern himself about his own reputation. You're gonna let
artificial intelligence generate a list and just go ahead and
publish it without going even to like Amazon and typing
the book titles in to see if they're real. That happens,

(50:56):
and then a number of articles that I've read considering that,
you know, I am still a license attorney, although I
don't practice law. The idea of putting submitting a brief
to the court that includes citations to case law that
does not exist. AI makes this stuff up. There's a
law firm, Morgan and Morgan. They had to have warned
all of their one thousand lawyers about using AI. One

(51:17):
of their lead attorneys cited eight specific cases in a lawsuit.
This is a lawsuit that they were dealing with with
Walmart as one of the parties of the lawsuit. Later
discovered by the judge if I recall correctly to have
been generated by artificial intelligence, specifically chat GPT, this attorney
filed a reef for the court. You know, I'm sorry.

(51:38):
That is just full on malpractice right there. So it's there.
You can use it, but do it at your own
risk and don't let it soften your brain. Don't give
up on those critical thinking skills. Six twenty five. More
tech coming up next with Dave Hatter and what will
be my third mention this morning. It's on the spot

(52:00):
list twenty two to three Indoor Shooting Range Store Training Center.
They do have classes there, they'll teach you how to shoot.
They have an awesome selection of firearms there and awesome prices.
And this weekend, Saturday, I'm going to be there at
some point between ten and four pm because it's f
N days FN. That's right, Firearms Manufacturing. They do manufacturer
some terrific stuff FN, so you can try them out

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for free, test fire at no cost, maybe even consider
a suppressor. They're going to have their FN suppressors there
and again after January first, the two hundred dollars tax
goes away, so try out their long guns, try out
their handguns, try out the suppressors. A fifty dollars range
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A stop by FM demo days twenty two three Route

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forty two between Mason and eleven and ten and between
ten am and two and four pm. And maybe I'll
say hi to you. Maybe not timing's right. I'll look
forward to seeing you there. Twenty two to three dot
comms where you find.

Speaker 10 (52:55):
Them online, fifty five KRC at the Thompson six on
a Friday.

Speaker 1 (53:01):
Happy Friday, It's that time of week. Tech Friday. The
day I've had it brought to you by his company
intrust It. You can find online at interustit dot com.
They will provide you with outstanding computer support. If you
have a business, they are the number one. Just ask
the business courier here in Cincinnati. They say they're number one,
And how can I argue with that? Dave Hadder, Welcome
back to the Morning Show. How did the empower You
seminar go?

Speaker 4 (53:23):
It went?

Speaker 1 (53:23):
It went well.

Speaker 4 (53:24):
We had fun. I always talked too long, as always,
but it.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Was good talk too long. Hey, no problem, man, I
understand Google sucks. I sent you an email this morning
looking for topics, but I accidentally said it to your
old Gmail account, which you deactivated back in January of
twenty twenty one. I'm going on a permanent vacation from
Google because they suck and I will stop using this

(53:47):
account as of that date. So I did forward it
to your actual email. I understand Google is on the
list of topics which I haven't gotten yet, so let's
just hit it. Hit the ground running with the Google Store.
You wanted to mention.

Speaker 4 (53:59):
Yeah, perfect. So I Wired recently put out a video
on YouTube which I thought was really interesting because you know,
this is a big technology online magazine's been around for
a long time. A lot of the topics we end
up talking about here. On Friday, I find in Wired
and they basically made a video about how Google is
making billions of dollars off you and how to how

(54:19):
to do Google? Basically do Google is actually a term,
you know, just like people use Google as a verb
for searching on the internet, de google is a has
become a term. And you know, this article goes through
all the different ways Google is making money off you.
And I want to be clear, Brian, you know, I'm
not a fan of Google only because I don't like

(54:40):
the way they collect your data and they do it
in ways that aren't clear to the average user. And
this is not exclusive to Google. You notice, right, everybody listening.
I'm it's meta, it's TikTok. You know, if you go
in and you read the terms of service and you
fully understand all of the data that's being collected about
you these services, and you can sent to it with

(55:02):
what eyes wide open, what business is out of mind.
But my issue is so much of this stuff is
sort of opaque to or at least translucent it best,
to the average user. You even if you read the
terms of service, you don't understand them because it's eighty
pages of mumbo jumbo. And then they're extracting all this
very detailed data about you everywhere you go, everything you do,

(55:25):
it eventually gets sold to other companies, potentially leaked, you know,
these data breaches that we see every day. And before
I get back to Google, just within the past week, Brian,
I got yet another data break Twitter, this time from
our friends at TransUnion, everyone's favorite credit bureau. Oh right,
so you know, am I doing business directly with TransUnion?

Speaker 8 (55:43):
No?

Speaker 4 (55:44):
I'm not, because the nature of what they do, they
have my data right, like many of it. And you know,
yet another letter shows up this week and all of
this data that's constantly being leaked about us is extremely
helpful to the bad guys, whether it's to take out
credit in your name and perpetrate some sort of identity fraud,
or conversely, they're using that data to spoof you, a

(56:07):
social engineer, you into doing something you shouldn't do because
it feels like you're dealing with a little a legitimate
organization because they know so much about you. So just
to be clear, you know, Google owns a bunch of
different properties and when you go look, yes you can
buy an abroad zone from Google. Yes there are things
the business you can buy from Google, but they make
most of their money from the quote free unquote services

(56:28):
that you're using, quite Search and Chrome and so forth,
just like Meta and a lot of other big companies.
So why Ed did this piece on this? And you know,
essentially how to get Google out of your life, to
share less information online because again it's not just Google.
The less information that's out there about you, the better
off you are. But as you know, we live in

(56:49):
this incredibly digital world. Now it's hard to do that,
but there are other corresponding services. So like instead of Gmail,
that account still sits out there because I have it
for a long time. You can still email me there,
I probably won't read it for weeks at a time
because I set up that auto responder. I use proton Mail.
I don't use the Google Chrome web browser right that.

(57:11):
The web browser is the tool that lets you access
things on the Internet, including Google Search Engine. Instead, I
use Braver or Firefox on the Windows computer and Safari
on my Apple phone.

Speaker 1 (57:21):
That's because the web browsers will put cookies on your
related to your IP address, so it identifies you buy
IP address and collects the data via that mechanism.

Speaker 4 (57:30):
Correct, And they all do that to some extent because
it's really difficult to use the web without cookies.

Speaker 8 (57:37):
You know.

Speaker 4 (57:38):
One of the legitimate uses of a cookie.

Speaker 1 (57:40):
The cookies just the way to.

Speaker 4 (57:41):
Store data on your computer from the web server. And
one of the legitimate uses of a cookie is when
you log in, it stores what's technically known as a
session token, so you don't have to keep logging in
over and over and over and over. So cookies in
and of themselves also not necessarily bad. But Google's Chrome
browser is doing extensive tracking. Other more privacy friendly browsers

(58:02):
are not the Google search engine, you know, Google dot com.
I don't use that I use the Brave search engine
or start page or dout, dot go or something like
that for everything Google offers. There is a more privacy
friendly alternative out there. You know. You know people asking, well,
well what about Apple? You know Apple has their problems.

(58:23):
All of these tech companies collect a lot of your data.
Some of them are more privacy friendly than others, and
I would argue it's because their business model is different.
Apple's business model is primarily selling you hardware and software.
It's not selling your data. Microsoft's business model is primarily
selling you software. It's not primarily selling your data. The
example is selling your data, collecting and monetizing your data.

(58:46):
It's like metas so to the extent you can, I
suggest you get off Google in your email, Brian, and
I'll post it in my notes. I put together a
page on a LinkedIn blog that tells you all of
the privacy friendly stuff I personally use in my personal life.
It's a list you can go check out these things.
I would encourage you to move to more privacy friendly tools.

Speaker 1 (59:06):
Dave Hatter at LinkedIn you'll find him there. Pause, we'll
bring him back six thirty seven right now. If you
have carecy the talk station. Hey, I really appreciate the
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Speaker 10 (59:59):
Fifty five KRC foot.

Speaker 1 (01:00:03):
One pick up r CD talk Dation, Brian Thomins with
interest its Dave adder interest i dot com Dave which direction.
Are we going to this segment?

Speaker 4 (01:00:12):
How about this, Brian, because it's it sort of ties
into the privacy or in a team we just we
just ended, which is Samsung recently announced their new so
called smart refrigerator line, a ka IoT. Internet of Things
is now going to serve up ads on the big
screen on the front of it.

Speaker 1 (01:00:32):
That's what I wanted is that it's like it's like
filling your tank at the gas station. You got to
the advertising on a little screen. There no thank you.
Who would buy that?

Speaker 7 (01:00:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:00:43):
Good question?

Speaker 4 (01:00:44):
Uh, but I would expand your question out to who
buys any of this garbage?

Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Well, I know that's you, and I mean, yeah, the
Internet of Things.

Speaker 4 (01:00:53):
You know, at some point it will probably as hopefully
the business model changes because I'm going to make at
the same time and I made last time. The whole
business model is long for you as a consumer. It's
speed to market, ease of use in market share. It's
not focused on your privacy and security. Most of this
stuff comes from China. Who knows if it has backdoors
it or not. It's designed to spy on you. And

(01:01:15):
I don't necessarily mean in an Orwellian way, although that
is certainly a possibility at a concern, but it's designed
to collect a lot of your data. Right, I can
sell you some cheap piece of garbage and then make
a lot more money off all the data I collect
Because it's sitting in your network, it's potentially listening to you,
it's potentially watching you, you're interacting with it. That's super

(01:01:36):
valuable data. So even if you pay next to nothing
for the equipment itself, it's collecting lots of data. It's
also creating security holds in your network. Because one of
my main issues with all of this stuff, especially for
the cheaper stuff, is after about two or three years,
when they've moved on to a new product model, they
generally stop making software updates for whatever you have. And
that's one of the things that people like the FBI, DHS, Microsoft,

(01:02:00):
Google and anyone that knows anything about security will tell
you if you have something you can't get software updates.
By the way, Windows ten goes into life next month,
so that fits into this bucket. Not IoT, but end
of life. You need to replace Windows ten. You're setting
yourself up for problems, and then you throw into it
now anything that has a screen in it, So if
it adds a camera to microphone, it can and maybe

(01:02:22):
listening to you and watching you. Now it's kind of
screen and you know, I don't I understand why Samsung
would want to do this. And you really drew the
purpect analogy to that idiotic dribble that comes out of
the gas pump while you're pumping your gas, except now
the difference is you're home after a hard day at work.
You want to go in and get a beer or
maybe like you know, hot dog or something, and there's

(01:02:43):
an ad on your refrigerator that you paid for in
your house. I mean, is that not awesome or what.

Speaker 6 (01:02:51):
So?

Speaker 4 (01:02:52):
And these are expensive refrigerators now, well, yeah, when the
screen is idle like it so you know, if you
put a photo on it or something, that won't do that.
But basically, if it's just sitting there, you're going to
be getting ads on the refrigerator. And yes, apparently from
what I read, you could opt out of it. But
that's my issue with so much of this stuff they
put it on you. It's my issue with Google. In

(01:03:14):
many cases, if you know what you're doing, you can
go in and turn off a lot of the Google
data collection. You can't eliminate it, but you can turn
off a lot of it, right, And again, the trade
off your weekend for Google and all the all the
Facebook and so forth is they're not free, right, They're
collecting your data. You are the product, not the customer.
You can apparently turn off the ads on this Sansung refrigerator,

(01:03:35):
but you've got to figure out how to do it.
And that again, the Internet of Things. I understand why
people like it. It's cool, it's convenient. It lets you
do things that you know, make your day a little easier.
But the trade off to you is enormous privacy and
security holes in any environment. These things are plugged into
it at potential surveillance, and now you're going to get

(01:03:58):
ads everywhere you go. I mean, we are headed into
a brave new world because of this Internet of things garbage.

Speaker 1 (01:04:05):
Well, and I guess, go ahead. I was just gonna say,
I'm kind of wondering if this artificial intelligence refrigerator scans
and has an awareness of what's in your refrigerator, what
you consume and go through every week, like, oh my god,
this person consumes too much beer.

Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
It absolutely could, Brian. Now I don't know that it does,
but it could, And I could argue, on one hand, well,
that's helpful to you, because if I could scan everything
you're doing, I could make you a grocery list, I
could order the things you're out of, I could do
all kinds of stuff. The theoretically would be very convenient
for you. The flip side of that, though, of course,
is who else is getting that data? Is your insurance

(01:04:42):
company getting the data? Is your employer getting the data?
Is your insurance company suddenly see it? You know, you
eat twelve pounds of bacon a week and drink six
gallons of milk and the two gallons of vodka, and
suddenly now you can't get insurance anymore. Certain insurance premiums quadruple.

Speaker 1 (01:04:57):
You know that sounds crazy, but it's not out of
the on the possibility, without question. Yeah, Now your GPS
is probably tracking the speed at which you're going, which
may very well be reported to your insurance company as well.
We got out of time with Tick Dave one more
time coming out after the break here at six forty seven.
If if you have KCD talk station, let me mention
Prestige Interiors for great kitchen remodeling work with John Ryan

(01:05:19):
and that is mean. That means working with Prestige interriers.
John Ryan worked with us, sat down from initial design
to final installation like he will with you, and we
came away with a fantastic kitchen remodel.

Speaker 4 (01:05:29):
It was just.

Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
Just watching it unfold, and he delivered what we wanted,
and that's exactly what will happened. In fact, he delivered
better than what we wanted. We didn't have an idea
about some of the storage solutions he came up with.
He didn't. We didn't have the idea about how he
could create more space. And what we thought was a
limited amount of space, isn't it a finite amount? Not
with John's magic. He's been doing kitchens almost exclusively for
like thirty five years. To check them out online, go

(01:05:53):
to Prestige one two three dot com Prestige one two
three dot com. And when you call him telling Brian said,
hi please five one three two four seven zero two
two nine five one three two four seven zero two
two nine.

Speaker 10 (01:06:05):
Fifty five krc OHC six.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Fifty fIF give o KRCV talk station. Interest it dot
com find Dave Hat or its crew to help your
business with all the computer needs that you might have
Dave had or our final segment here, what are we.

Speaker 4 (01:06:18):
Talking about, how still ninety six in the great job
Ohio is doing as a state and with a local
government on the cybersecurity front. So Frior, as you know,
I not only live in Kentucky, but I'm the mayor
of Fort Wright, and I'm constantly trying to work with
the legislature here in Kentucky to get Kentucky to get
on board with the kind of things Ohio is doing.

(01:06:40):
If you live in Ohio, like you, you should you
should be thankful and proud of the fact that your
representatives seem to have a good key and keen handle
on the sort of things that are disrupting local governments.
You may recall there have been some recent cyber attacks
on local governments in the Greater Cincineti area. They've been
attacks on hospitose, etc. We talked about this every Friday.

(01:07:03):
This stuff is very real. So again, from a high level,
Ohio is killing it. Your Secretary of State, Frank LeRose,
I've gone out and done two presentations with a team
they've put together for small business, doing another one October
tenth of the kent State. So it just seems top
to bottom. To me, Ohio's got their act together. Ohio
has something called the Ohio Cyber Collaboration Committee. If you're

(01:07:23):
a small government or a small business, there are all
kinds of resources in Ohio through the Cyber Collaboration Committee
around cybersecurity, for worksforce development, education, for your team. You've
got the Ohio Cyber Reserve, which is part of the
Ohio National Guard. They train with private people like me
to stay ahead of this stuff and to be ready

(01:07:44):
to respond to a critical insight. So again, Ohio really
doing a great job to that end. During this last cycle,
House School ninety six was passed. It creates new requirements
for local governments. If you're in local government in Ohio,
you are subject to these new requirements, some of which
go online at the end of this month September thirtieth,

(01:08:04):
some of which go into effect next year, depending on
whether you're a township, village, couty, or city. But the
basic tist of it is all local governments in Ohio
now cannot pay a ransomware payment as of September thirtieth,
unless and until their local legislative body approves it and
explains why. So you can still make a ransomware payment

(01:08:27):
if you have to. Hopefully you never will, but you
can't just do it quietly behind the scenes. You have
to pass an ordinance for whatever is appropriate for your
legislative body, and you have to explain why there are
reporting requirements. Now, if you have an actual cyber attack,
a cyber incident occurs, you have to report it to
the Auditor of State within thirty days. You have to

(01:08:48):
report it to the Ohio Department of Public Safety within
seven days. There are certain pieces of data each once
there are forms online. Ohio has done a great job
of publishing this. Those go into effect at the end
of this month. Auditor of State Keys Favors, got a
lot of information on this and we'll be responsible for
auditing compliance to this. And then the final pieces. You
have to have a cybersecurity program that's a little more vague,

(01:09:10):
it's a little more broad. Ohio is staked out six
things that it has to include, including training for your employees,
which is very smart. You know, awareness of this stuff,
being skeptical, understanding spoofing super important to avoiding this stuff.
So you have to have an awareness prog or you
have to have a cybersecurity program. They tell you can
be based off of this cybersecurity framework or the Center

(01:09:32):
for Internet Security Controls, which is my favorite. I think
it's the most applicable. But Ohio really has to act together.
If you're in an Ohio local government and you're not
aware of this, look up House Built ninety six, go
to the Auditor of State's website. All the information is
out there. I actually have done some presentations on this.
I'm happy to talk to folks about it if they're

(01:09:53):
trying to figure out how to comply. Again, the two
first requirements going to effect this month, and then for
counties and cities, the cybersecurity program has to be in
place by January first for all other Ohio local governments. Basically,
if you get tax money from Ohio, is the way
I understand it, you have to have a cybersecurity program

(01:10:14):
in place by July first, So I you know, I
get the burden this creates for local governments, but Ohio
has done a great job of information and like Ohio
provides a lot of free training for local government, so
it's not a totally unfunded mandate. I think it's the
right thing for Ohio residents. And again I'm trying hard
to convince my friends in Kentucky to look to Ohio

(01:10:37):
and just follow their leader.

Speaker 1 (01:10:38):
Well, cut and past, They've already done the work for
you here in alive. If it's that good of a thing,
real quick, it's already six fifty five that are risk
running on. I just wanted to know what's if what
is the resistance predicated on They just don't want to
do the work, or is there some fundamental problem they
see with it.

Speaker 4 (01:10:54):
I think it's lack of understanding. There is don't want
to do the work. Maybe it's the cost to come
along with it. I mean, you know, this is going
to cost these governments to implement this money time effort.
But it's the right thing to do. Again two days
to Ohio. You guys got your act together. I think
the people that came up with this at Ohio should

(01:11:14):
be applauded because this stuff affects all of us every day. Now.
You know, if the ambulances can't get out, if the
police can't get out, you know, people's lives are in Jeffrey, So, Ohio,
you got your act together. House Bill ninety six. Good job.
I'm sure it's the first of these steps. And now
I'm going to shut up, Frank, because I always talk
too much.

Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
That's all right. We appreciate your talking. We get great
information from me, and it's nice to hear the world
and the words along the lines of Ohio's got its
act together. We don't hear that too often, Dave Hatter,
So good to have that. Appreciate what you do every
Friday here in the morning show and throughout the week,
and of course your empower you sm on our last night.
That'll be online and empower you America dot org. If
you want to check out what Dave had to say,

(01:11:51):
it's going to be great information. And you can check
out Dave and get his tips and information throughout the
week and stuff that he talked about this morning. Just
follow him on LinkedIn, LinkedIn dot com just search for
Dave Hatter and you will run right into him. Dave,
Thanks for what you do. Have a wonderful weekend, my friend.
Look forward to next Friday and another conversation about tech.

Speaker 4 (01:12:09):
My pleasure. Thanks Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:12:10):
Coming up next, George Breterman, Keith Tennfield in studio. They're
waiting Restore Wellness dot or going to give us some
great tips on health and health related issues. I hope
they can stick around. It's seven o five here at

(01:12:38):
fifty five KARROSD talk station in a very very happy
Friday figure for me Brian Thomas and from in studio
George Breneman Keith Tennenfeld. It is time to Restore Wellness
for a full hour of power with Keith and George
talking about more variety of different medical or health related topics.
They're all about that and check out Restore wellness dot org.

(01:12:58):
Got lots of links there, helpful diet, exercise takeaways, things
you should look out for, things that you shouldn't can
put in your body, including maybe Thilan All. Welcome back, guys,
It's great.

Speaker 4 (01:13:08):
To have you.

Speaker 1 (01:13:09):
Thanks Yan, Welcome to Friday. And Keith's nurse practitioners with
a business called Root Cause, which is in Harrison and
George Brenneman's just taking a keen. You can see Restore
Liberty dot us is George's political site. But you stumbled
upon health and wellness in your own private, personal right,
he decided to make it a cause for you and
everybody else.

Speaker 11 (01:13:29):
It started fourth of July week last year in the
book was lies I taught in medical school. And on
Wednesday we recorded a podcast with the author, doctor Robert Lovekin.
So the book that kicked it all off for me.
And this guy is about as mainstream dock as you
can get U c.

Speaker 4 (01:13:45):
L A.

Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
Radiologists.

Speaker 11 (01:13:48):
And he goes through the story very well, very well
funded by pharma and you know Nih and all those guys.
And then he got sick. You know, he had hypertension,
he had some liver issue his high class probably the
whole metabology diabetes. And he started digging into it and
wrote this book with what he figured out. And the

(01:14:08):
interview will be up there in its finished form later today.

Speaker 1 (01:14:12):
Great, but it was. It was fun talking to him,
it really was. I bet Restore Wellness dot org is
where you find that. I see the mention of the
podcast right there on the top at your the most
recent entry on your website. Well that's good. And obviously
throughout the week they're doing this kind of thing. You know,
regularly recheck it. Restore wellness dot org. Make sure you
stay on top of things. So we got you for
a full hour. And if you don't mind, let's start
with talanod because there's all these crazy reports about pregnant women.

(01:14:34):
After Donald Trump says you might want to consider the
downside risks of taking talanald when you're pregnant. There may
be some connection with autism. That's what they're trying to
find or link to. We find out after these crazy
women who are popping talano in defiance of Donald Trump's
comments while they're pregnant. They're all over the internet. It

(01:14:55):
seems crazy. But talinald has always come with a risk.
We've known about the liver damage risk for a long time.

Speaker 11 (01:15:03):
It's the one pain reliever that you can get over
the counter that has a problem if you take weight
too much, and I mean it's lower than like if
you would eat a bottle of aspirin.

Speaker 1 (01:15:13):
I'm sure you'd feel bad, but thailand all actually affects
the liver right exactly.

Speaker 12 (01:15:17):
You know, tilanol, motron, and aspirin, those are common over
the counter pain medications. A long time ago, they found
that aspron causes rickets, so they avoided aspirin when you're pregnant.
Motren has always been an off label. You can't use
it when you're pregnant just because of the bleeding risk.
And then now you have talanol sitting there and it's
on the market now saying hey, they can cause autism.
John Hopkins and mount seinided studies that showed that there's

(01:15:40):
probably a link to ADHD and autism in the offspring
of mothers who used tilanol, and that's kind of where
this is all coming out of. There's a Sweden study
that shows something different, shows the opposite. But I do
think it's a great opportunity to take one of these
most commonly used medications and review them.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
You know, we have a lot of issues coming down
by exactly, And it's funny it went back to apparently
had its own like Twitter feed back in the day.
You know, they haven't posted since twenty seventeen or twenty
twenty one or something, but that stuff still out there.
Tylnell even posted something to the effect that we've never
studied it unpregnant women's you might want to think about that.
And of course, you know, my wife is of the mind,
and I think I've read this before. Independent of my

(01:16:17):
wife's comments, although she is a nurse or was that
oh lost damn, I lost my train to fly? I
will say, I will say, once a nurse, always a nurse,
So yeah, that's true, mister nurse practitioner ten felt.

Speaker 4 (01:16:32):
But.

Speaker 1 (01:16:34):
The comment that was made is there could be a risk.
They didn't say definitively, right, But you know, when you're
considering your health as like, well, you know there is
a higher percentage risk of filling the blank. Known studies
like if you drink alcohol that you're gonna have a
higher risk of this happening. At least that's information you
can bake into the cake. If you're pregnant, I would

(01:16:54):
think you're going to take a keen interest in your
health and what you put in your body, because it's
going to be put into the body of your infant
or your you're.

Speaker 11 (01:17:00):
But you were talking about TDS side of it, the
Trump arrangement to say that, you know, maybe I don't
agree that there's a risk or I don't think there's
a high risk, but to intentionally take that risk just
because you hate a politician, Yeah, that's that's bizarre, especially
while you're pregnant. She did this, you know, this alleged
person did this while she was pregnant, and now she's
you know, in demise, and you know, if there's uh,

(01:17:22):
motrin will kill your kidneys. There's a study that shows
that you know, if you take motor at a certain rate,
your kidney function will decline at this point in time.
I mean, that's how bad motrin can be up for
your kidneys. Tilenhol is the same way, and I have
had multiple patients when I was working in the ICU
U tilan all overdose is whether it be intentional or accidental,
and that is no way to die.

Speaker 1 (01:17:42):
That is the most one of the most miserable ways
to die is a liver failure. So stop drinking two,
I guess. But well, yeah, and I remembered it FDA
approval that talanol would not be approved for over the
counter prescriptions if it went through a review process today. Interesting,
that's interesting. That was the comment that she made. It
would be it would have to be prescribed. Wow, that's

(01:18:04):
not whether that's true or not. Again, I have actually
read that, and I just can't remember what source it is.
I mean a lot of information I've read over the years.
I forget where I read it. But she did chime
in on that point the other day. And for the
for the layman people out there, a set of metaphine
is also talented. Some people will be like, well, what's
wrong with the set of metaphine? And that is talent
al just a generic version, just like ibuprofen is the
generic version of motrin. They are the same drug instead

(01:18:25):
of instet of metaphine and talent al. So when you're
looking at labels, make sure that you're aware of what
you're getting, all right, So you just use the information
make an informed decision risk analysis. You know, I am
in so much pain that I'm going to take the
risk with a tilent, all right, a single talent, all
to see if it helps me with my pain. But

(01:18:47):
I would think that based upon the information that's come
out that it does perhaps carry a risk that you
better be in a lot of pain, so much so
that you want to take the risk.

Speaker 11 (01:18:56):
Again, if you're pregnant, if you're do you want to
take the risk what we're talking to your liver? But
then also whatever it does to the baby. I mean,
if it is affecting the baby's brain functionality with ADHD,
what's it doing to the baby's liver. I mean, they
have no way to study that now, but you have
to think cause and effect on this. So if we
know for a fact that too much of seed of
benefit attacks the liver, a baby's kind of small, and

(01:19:19):
you're you're pumping it through the same blood system.

Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
You might want to think twice. You know, it's an
excellent point. I mean, we know. I mean, there's nobody
arguing that it doesn't impact your liver right. This isn't
a bonus contention. You think that this is like talking
about defunding Social Security or something like a third bill
of politic Oh my god, he said, maybe we should
consider the risk of taking tone. But they hadn't done
any research along these lines before, had they. I mean,

(01:19:42):
or they're going back to look they intentionally did not
do research on pregnant women, and or just look at
the researchers who's funding that research back in the day
and currently today. You know where's that coming from? Okay,
and let me ask you a specific question on studying
medications and clinical trials on pregnant women. Can they is
that even ethical because the child, of course, can't give

(01:20:03):
some consent. I can see someone signing up for it.
We're going to pay you fifteen hundred dollars, do you
participate in this clinical trial? And they go over the
risk of being in the clinical trial. You can weigh
the benefit of getting paid versus the risks that they've
identified for you, but can you enter into a clinical
trial if you're pregnant? I don't know the answer to
that question.

Speaker 12 (01:20:20):
Sometimes is it's it's kind of a retrog retrospective study
where they taken they ask questions to pregnant people, did
you ever do this? And if so, can we study
this outcome in you? So it's not something that they
intentionally gave to the pregnant lady.

Speaker 11 (01:20:32):
It's more of a retrospect, which is what they've done
with the tailand all studies. None of them were they
gave them. They were asking the pregnant women, did you
take take it?

Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (01:20:40):
And one of the issues I saw in the reports
was people under report the fact that they've taken Thailand all.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
So it may actually be higher. I don't know, you know, honestly,
I can't remember the last time I took any kind
of the motor seeing the metfit anything. I can't remember.
I'm sure I had, but I don't ask me definitively,
I couldn't remember. So that the shaky quality of the
data I think is legitimate. Well, and that's true, but
something is raising the rates.

Speaker 8 (01:21:05):
I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
The other question is what's going on with vaccines?

Speaker 11 (01:21:08):
And you talk about not testing pregnant women for for Thailand,
all the vaccines haven't been tested on anybody for anything
but this, And they're tested against other vaccines, not against placebos.

Speaker 12 (01:21:19):
And there, and there's some you know obgens that are
pushing vaccines during pregnancy just so that you don't have
complications during your pregnancy. So they're getting you know, they're
pregnant and getting vaccine. So that's that's another sketch. The
other thing too that's going on is that when you're pregnant,
the liability issues that happen around around pregnancy is out
of the roof. That's why a lot of OB docs
have literally stopped their practice because malpractice is too expensive.

Speaker 1 (01:21:41):
It's and crazy.

Speaker 12 (01:21:42):
You can imagine why even pharmaceutical companies aren't going to
ne nearly touch them when it comes to medications. However,
you know, same thing happened with the COVID vaccine, and
look look how that turned out. Where they stopped in
the COVID vaccine, they stopped animal studies because animals were dying,
and then they gave it to humans, okay, and then

(01:22:02):
they have a.

Speaker 1 (01:22:03):
Ton of data and I've talked to some of the
researchers who have problems with the COVID nineteen vaccine because
of the complications of pregnancy, losing babies, the menstrual cycle interruptions.
I mean, a lot of women lost their babies because
of the COVID nineteen vaccine, at least that's what I've
been told for.

Speaker 11 (01:22:19):
Very shows or can't get pregnant. I mean, it's having
a huge hormonal effect on people. Again, these are studies
that are out there now because they forced it on
the entire population. But the fact that they they didn't
look at any of this before, it's just crazy. Who's
going to come out and say sorry? You know who's
going to come out and say sorry?

Speaker 1 (01:22:37):
A good one. We'll pause on that note. George Brunvan
Keith Tennefeld in studio Restore Wellness dot organ is where
you find him. And I want to mention foreign exchange
right now. Get your imported car traditionally Asian or European
manufactured or tesla fixed at foreign exchange. And I had
Austin on the program earlier giving us some sound advice
as we approach winter. It's now fall. Guess what's coming next?

Speaker 3 (01:22:58):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:22:58):
Yeah, and it gets cold and you're bat may die
and your tires may be bald, and other things may
be wrong with your car. So I have a multipoint
inspection done with the honest folks at Foreign Exchange. They
give your car a great once over to make sure
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(01:23:19):
It'll really extend the life of your car. And you'll
save a heapload of money on oil changes at Foreign Exchange.
And I assure you they will use the appropriate oil
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have my oil change. Yeah. I know German cars are
expensive to service, but I saved money at Foreign Exchange.
You can too, foreign x dot Com. For in the

(01:23:40):
letter X, I recommend west Chester location. Take the Tyler's
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two streets right on Kingland. You're there online foreign x
dot com the number. Please tell Austin and the crew.
Bryan said, Hi, five one three six four four twenty six,
twenty six. That's sixty four, four, twenty six, twenty six.

Speaker 10 (01:23:56):
Fifty five krc I Harder.

Speaker 1 (01:24:03):
Seven nineteen about cares You Talk Station Brian Thomas with
Keith Tennefeld of Root Cause of the Comparison's nurse practitioner
looking at for folks. Health is what he does for
a living. And of course George Brenneman, he dabbles in
health and he's created this site restore Wellness dot org.
We can get some great health related information that we
were talking about, COVID eighteen, vaccines in generally he's beginning,
but let's put it over to Florida. There are vaccine

(01:24:27):
mandates and then there are vaccine options. So because something
is taken off of a mandated schedule doesn't mean that
that vaccine is not available to you if you and
your physician decide it's in the best interests of your
child or yourself, for example, to get a vaccine right.
And the whole thing in Florida was they made them
all optional, which again the Left is now taking that

(01:24:50):
and saying you're telling kids they can't have vaccines. No, no, no, no,
he said, the parent's got to take a look at it.
That's the leap that really irks me well.

Speaker 11 (01:24:58):
And and the fact that some of the like the
hepatitis be that you can only get sexually transmitted.

Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Why are we giving that to infants? Please? And that's
a great question.

Speaker 11 (01:25:07):
And the side effects of all the vaccines, I think
is still an open question, but at least somebody's looking
at it now.

Speaker 1 (01:25:15):
And the fact cause there may be side effects. Question,
is your baby likely to get hepatitis B? Answer is
clearly no. So if there may be complications related to
the vaccine, then why would you go down that road
if there's no risk even associated with not getting it?

Speaker 12 (01:25:35):
Again, it's a nom that's common sense, right. I don't
understand why why this isn't you know, common knowledge for
some of these people, I don't know actually, And how
got on the list in the first place. It makes
no sense.

Speaker 11 (01:25:45):
I think they're saying, all the mom might have it,
not know, well, shoot tester before you inject the baby.

Speaker 1 (01:25:51):
There's thousands of things we test for in pregnancy.

Speaker 11 (01:25:53):
And yeah, it's it's crazy, but COVID opened the door
for everybody because that first of all, they called it
a vaccine and then suddenly it's oh, not only can
you get the disease, you can give it to somebody else.
And oh, by the way, if you get five boosters,
the odds are pretty high you're going to have that
disease all the time. So I mean it sort of
opened the door to maybe we want to look a
little harder on whether or not all of these mandatory

(01:26:15):
vaccines are required. And I know when RFK started going
after the measles vaccine, my wife and I had the
same reaction. The whole every kid in the family got
measles at the same time. Y'all stayed home from school
for a week, and then it's done.

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Chicken pox. It's like a rite of childhood passage.

Speaker 11 (01:26:32):
You got chicken pox, and basically the parents would put
everybody in the same roube.

Speaker 12 (01:26:37):
So they all go through It was right, And the
question is was chicken pox at bio weapon in the
first place? If you want to do some conspiracy theory, now,
let's let's talk about with Florida.

Speaker 1 (01:26:45):
I think what was really unique a lousy bio weapons
since you get over it in a couple of days, right,
so you never know the long term effects.

Speaker 12 (01:26:52):
But anyway, maybe that explains all the problems uh singles
the Yeah, here you go, there it's a good one.
Florida did a really clever thing that if you think
about it, is they said, you know, my choice, my body.

Speaker 1 (01:27:02):
And where do you hear that from right? You know
you hear that on the left. And so everybody's like,
wait a minute, they have a point.

Speaker 12 (01:27:07):
There, and it's true because if you're out there, you know,
making people do things against their will and their body,
then that's going to go against the left. And then
at the same time, I think parents should have the
right to say, hey, my children don't need to be
injected with this.

Speaker 6 (01:27:20):
Now.

Speaker 12 (01:27:21):
This goes also covers, by the way, healthcare people, college kids,
and children they're school age kids. So if you're a
healthcare worker in Florida and let's say you have an
autoimmune disease and they're pushing a flu vaccine, and you wonder,
maybe did I get the autommune disease from the previous
flu vaccines. I've seen people in my own clinic where
they are coming at me scared that they're you know,

(01:27:43):
that their hospital institution is making them get a vaccine
because they have a wicked immune system that's causing their
thyroid to act crazy. And I'm like, well, we got
to work on this potential thyrooid or the potential vaccine
injury issue. So let's pause on these vaccines for you
and I can give them, with reasonable information and research

(01:28:04):
behind it, a vaccine exemption. Now, I do see in
Florida that they're not necessarily making it like mandated that
you don't get them. It gives you that choice, right,
what a great way that. And I think Ohio is
also supporting. There's there's a company here in Ohio, Ohio
and for Medical Freedom the supporting Florida's decision in this. Now,

(01:28:25):
I don't think it's law yet in Florida. I think
they're still going to go to They got to go
through the legal process.

Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
But you know, during COVID, it was, you know, get
the vaccine because you're going to help stop the spread. Well,
that only works if the vaccine prevents the spread.

Speaker 11 (01:28:38):
Well, and then but again they forced it on children
when there isn't a single child, There isn't anybody under
the age of fifty that died from COVID unless they
had you know, four other complicating.

Speaker 1 (01:28:48):
Cold morbid conditions. Was and should have been the only
justification for the vaccine for those that otherwise are not
at risk. A young person was not going to end
up in the hospital contracting COVID. I mean so many
people didn't even know they had COVID. They went through it.
Some people experience symptoms, but they're over it. They got
natural immunity a little bit. Now, if they weren't at
any risk of death hospitalization. If you were comorbid, regardless

(01:29:13):
of age, you know, maybe obese, maybe you're suffering from
some other medical condition, then get the damn vaccine. Maybe
it will help you out, but maybe it's idea that
I've got to get it to protect someone else. Well,
then you get the vaccine. There was no science behind that,
never was just like the mask, no signs behind that.
I only bring that up in context of like, well,
your kid's gonna get measles and spread. It's like, well,
if you're worried about having spread the spread of measles,

(01:29:34):
then go ahead and get the measles vaccine, right. Yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:29:36):
My question is if you had a choice to say
measles now, which is just a rash much like chicken pox,
that you go through and get it and go overcome it.
And there's a rare case with any virus that some
people can die, or when you're fifty and sixty you
now have diabetes, high cholesterol, heart disease, all because of
a potential vaccine that you received when you were a child. Well,

(01:29:56):
and we forget about the long term effects of certain
things like this.

Speaker 11 (01:30:00):
Like I said, they haven't come out and said certain
vaccines are causing certain.

Speaker 1 (01:30:04):
I was just gonna say that's not been definitively proven,
but they're looking into it. It is a possibility. But
if you look at the fact Tommish community.

Speaker 11 (01:30:12):
Where they have none of them talking about yeah, yeah,
they don't have Alzheimer's, they don't have mental illness, they
don't have any kind of autism ADHD, none of that
existed that popula say.

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
But in a controlled group, you would look at what
is their diet consist of? Do they drink alcohol? Do
they Is that more important than getting a vaccine? All
of those things could be determinative of why the Amish
community apparently are the healthiest people out there, you know,
be Amish and live for nine hundred years or something more.
With Keith and George Restore Wellness dot org, it's seven

(01:30:46):
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Speaker 8 (01:31:50):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:31:50):
You know we have the pivoting off of talent all
and the the the the the vaccine discussions and it
is I guess it's a shot anyway. I keep reading
more and more about a zen and I saw it
was on your list. This is the started out as
a diabetes drug, right, help control diabetes, and then they
stumbled upon the real it's like viagra. They was a
hard medication. They realized, oh my god, this has an

(01:32:11):
interesting side effect. Let's sell it for that reason. Lo
a epic has become this magic pill. It's or magic
cure for weight loss. And it worked. I know several
people who have been using a zempic for a while
and damned if it doesn't work. Well. It was really interesting.

Speaker 11 (01:32:28):
In the discussion Wednesday with doctor Lufkin, he came out
pretty much in favor of it, which sort of surprised me.

Speaker 1 (01:32:35):
It's so new and I don't know how much it
has been studied.

Speaker 11 (01:32:37):
But he made a point about some of the mental
side effects, about lowering addiction tendencies, and he says that,
you know, you lose this appetite and suddenly you're looking
at salads as maybe I'll just eat a salad. And
I think the point he was trying to make and
you can listen to it in the podcast, was basically,
maybe this is a way to kickstart people into the
right diet. And you know, as you you give them

(01:33:00):
the drug and you say, hey, by the way, you
got to up your protein. You might want to get
some fat in your diet. Stay away from all the
processed foods, I mean, exercise.

Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
You know, and think about exercise, which kind of led
us to this off air discussion on ozempic. I said, Key,
you know, the thing you need to do, and I'm
joking here is come up with a pill that creates motivation,
you know, because you're looking at a guy who lacks
motivation when it comes to damn exercise. And I've been
lamenting that for such a long time. I feel like
I got my diet in order. I lost twenty plouns

(01:33:30):
or so since last year. I actually feel a lot better.
Let the make up the weight still that weight thing.
But then you said one of the things they found
about ozembic. It acts as a motivator of sorts. It
interacts with your dopamine levels or something.

Speaker 12 (01:33:46):
What it just makes you make better decisions because evidently
it curbs your your addictive cycles for while you're doing
bad behaviors such as eating instead of working out. And
I'm not quite for sure how it does that, But
the big deal is it's the feedback and reward. Like
if you're looking in front of a mirror and you're
seeing yourself improved and you're like, hey, whatever I'm doing
is doing good.

Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
And that's how I felt after I got over the
keto flu part of the diet, because it's miserable and
I could have seen myself giving up because it sucked.
Right once you get out the other side and you
start seeing the results, like again, my weight loss is
what kept me motivated to continue on the path. But
you know, I can see the stumbling block. I don't
I don't feel like going through this. It's just miserable

(01:34:26):
and I hate it.

Speaker 12 (01:34:26):
Individuals influence each other, for in since you know us
being here might have influencing your decision making in a
listener's decision, but also biofeedback wise is you're telling me
a Keith come up with a motivation pill. So what
I have really honestly done in the last six to
eight months is I have really worked on motivating my clients.
I have instead of spending time on talking about their
cholesterol and all this other stuff, I've said, Hey, let's

(01:34:47):
talk about you and what are you doing and what's
preventing you from motivating you to make these right decisions.
And I think when you can get down into a
little bit of the psychology of this individual, it does
come down to how well are you taking care of yourself?
How do you feel about yourself then enough to take
care of yourself, And that's really a big motivator. And
they often people will tear up because they're like, you know,
I've been neglecting myself because of X, Y and Z.

(01:35:10):
And then I teach them that they're worthy and that
they should love themselves individually and uniquely, and that they
deserve to eat right and exercise, and it gets some
that spark. So I believe the pill of motivation is
really just spending some time with somebody and letting them
know that they're important.

Speaker 6 (01:35:25):
Well.

Speaker 1 (01:35:25):
And you know what, I don't lack a really positive
influence at home. My wife is always regularly you know,
not harping on it, not you know, giving me and
your bust in my way of thos that kind of thing,
but incentivizing and encourage me. You said, Brian, I want
you around for a long time. I don't want you
to struggle or suffer and become ill down the road

(01:35:46):
because you don't exercise. And you think that plea coming
from a place of love will be enough to get
me off my butt now walking a dog or something
like that. Kids will do that too. Well, if my
daughter and her fiance might have a child someday, then
I maybe you'll see difference.

Speaker 11 (01:36:00):
It's like I want to be around and I want
to be able to get on the ground and play
with them and stand back up afterwards.

Speaker 1 (01:36:06):
And so you're saying that once I have a grandchild,
then my prayers will be answered. And then yeah, exactly,
all right. You got to get listening now. I don't
think she's listening anyway.

Speaker 11 (01:36:17):
And what Keith was saying about motivation, we did a
podcast last week, recorded it at the farm meeting we had,
and in there he talks about his motivation approach. So
that's up on the website as well. I encourage you
to listen to that. It's like the whole sale half,
so it's worth it.

Speaker 1 (01:36:32):
I will definitely do that again the website restore Wellness
dot Org. Well, since you mentioned cholesterol, Keith, and that's
something you look out for with your patients, I want
to ask you about statins when we come back. They
widely prescribed. I took them for I think about twenty years,
but it's been at least ten fifteen years since I

(01:36:53):
got off of them, and I did get off of
them for a very specific reason. And I'm wondering whether
my dad's medical problems as he for what he passed
away from may have had a problem, may have a
connection with that. We'll hear more from George and Keith.
After I mentioned Cross Country Mortgage, get in touch with
Suette Low's the camp. I mentioned my daughter again when
she and Eric were looking to buy a house. They
were working with some bank and after a week or so,

(01:37:14):
they still hadn't gotten her answer, and she was lamenting
that to me, and I said, honey, let me give
you Suzette Low's Camp's number. She's with Cross Country Mortgage.
I guarantee you she can get things straightened out within
I think it was two days one phone call, two
days later, locked in financing, and she was so happy.
She goes, Oh my god, I'm so glad you told
me to call her, and that's why I'm recommended to you.
She's got thirty five years experience in the mortgage business,

(01:37:37):
being with Cross Country Mortgage. She can help you in
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Reach her one of two ways, or send her an
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Picture this You're on a day seven thirty eight fifty

(01:38:23):
five Karsey Talks Station Talking Health, George Frenman, Keith Tenfeld,
Restore Wellness dot Org. I commented on statins and my
experience with them because I think genetically, biologically, we just
run high on cholesterol levels. And I'm sixty. I just
turned sixty.

Speaker 6 (01:38:41):
But in my.

Speaker 1 (01:38:43):
Twenties, I think it was like, geez, man, your hdl
LDL levels are really really high, said well runs in
the family. My dad took statins and I think he
was on them almost the moment they hit the market.
He had a doctor friend that was his best friend.
So we're going back to the eighties, I think. And
his joke was, I'm I'm I'm a teflon coated Now

(01:39:07):
I don't have to worry about it. And he you know,
he wasn't overweight, he didn't have any problem with his diet.
My mom was always great about cooking quality and healthy foods.
But he took him his whole life, and lo and
behold he passed away. Obviously, was he diagnosed with Alzheimer's
dimension passed away? And I always had this thought, and
I've read it before. Maybe Keith or George you can

(01:39:28):
comment on whether there's research on that because it affects
fat levels. Your brain is comprised of fat, that somehow
it might have an impact on brain. And the connection
to Alzheimer's at least seems to be a logical one
along those lines. So that came to a screeching hall.
I actually changed physicians at one point and he looked
at me and said, you're thirty something or whatever, why

(01:39:49):
are you taking these status bags? And it took me
off of them. Counts the blessings.

Speaker 11 (01:39:54):
Really yeah, yeah, I was on him for about four
or five years, but I could barely move because every
bone in my body hurt, and my knees, my arms,
my elbows, I couldn't move anything.

Speaker 1 (01:40:05):
I stopped it, and that goes away. The statins did that.
Statins do that to all lit side effect.

Speaker 12 (01:40:11):
It is rabbed in myolysis in a rare situation where
your muscle tissue actually breaks down and the muscle fibers
that are circulating through your system that are broken down
now can cause kidney damage and all kinds of their problems.
So you know, Statin's one of those things where hey, doc,
and you put me on these statins and it's causing
a lot of muscle awaken, the muscle pain, and they
sometimes say, well, we can reduce the dose, or how
about you just try it for a little bit.

Speaker 1 (01:40:32):
Longer and it'll go away. Really, what doesn't.

Speaker 12 (01:40:35):
What happens your body just kind of gets used to it,
and now you're kind of walking around eventually and you're
slow down slowly. And so I recommend anybody who's on
statins to really evaluate their energy level because they can
rob you of your energy pretty quick. You you might
find yourself like I just don't have the energy that
used to have, or muscle pain or muscle stigue when
you are exercising, and take a look at that. There's
other things that you can do like coqu ten and
red yeese rice, which are really really good for cholesterol.

(01:40:58):
But more out taking the stack correct. But more importantly,
let's talk about what is high cholesterol. High cholesterol is
poor metabolism. Your body's metabolic rate is slowed down and
now the fats are not being used anymore.

Speaker 1 (01:41:10):
Well, and have I used to do commercials for among
the other things, was a business that did hormone replacement
therapy and they had all kinds of research. The people
in Europe only do hormone replacement therapy rather than statins,
because if you have your hormone balance right, then your
cholesterol levels naturally just align themselves properly.

Speaker 12 (01:41:31):
Right, your metabolic rate goes up because you have more
energy because of the hormones and actual you know, you're
out there, you're exercising, you're doing the things that you
really really enjoy. Plus, though Europe is different because they
have a whole different carbohydrate mentality, their carbohydrates actually do
a good job and people can lose weight when you
go to Europe and eat their food. Wherever here we
gain food because it's very inflammatory, partly because of the

(01:41:51):
gluten that is being processed with.

Speaker 11 (01:41:54):
Well in our wheat is geo engineered to resist bugs,
which means it's poisoned to which means the outer coating
of the of the wheat is also poison to humans,
which is why you have all the bloating, the gas
and everything else. Our wheat is totally different than what
they use in Europe, and that's.

Speaker 1 (01:42:10):
Why and they will not allow ours no GMOs in.

Speaker 12 (01:42:13):
Europe, not least the ones that are yeah, Lisa, the
ones that are you know, uh, we use here that
Europe says, and you're not allowed to use there. And
more importantly, though, you know what is cholesterol. It's a
total cholesterol that's compiled of your HDL, which is your
good cholesterol, your triglycerides, and then your LDL and LDL
is something that really isn't influenced well with your diet.
But triglycerized and HDL are triglycerides. Are your sugars, your carbohydrates,

(01:42:37):
your pasta, bread, pizza, beer, sugar, pop, cereal crap that
you shouldn't be doing. Fried food in particular, don't eat
fried food, anybody who's listeners. Don't go get your French fries,
don't get your fried chicken.

Speaker 1 (01:42:48):
Fried. Fried.

Speaker 12 (01:42:49):
Fried is bad, bad, bad, unless you're doing a fried
egg and butter or a gee or something that's it's
all animal product. And then we got to the HDL,
which is your good cholesterol, which comes from your omega
three fatty acids, which is like your fish. Think about
our genetics. Where do we come as a human species.
We came from around the Mediterranean Sea. A lot of
fish fishes in the Bible. We need to be eating

(01:43:09):
more fish. But now there were a bunch of land
growers that you know, up here in the hills of
Field Territory, we're not getting that fish.

Speaker 1 (01:43:15):
We're getting carbohydrates. So eat your fish.

Speaker 12 (01:43:17):
And if you can't eat your fish or you don't
like fish, do your Mega three fatty acids. That'll drive
your HDL up, which is good. So now your total
cholesterol is even kind of coming up, but so is
your HDL. Your triegly rides are going down, and now
you're fine. Your clussterol could be a little high, but
your HDLs are protecting you, and your trieglys rides are low,
which is also protecting you. And now you don't have
to worry about your LDLs, and you're feeding your brain

(01:43:38):
well with good fats, and.

Speaker 1 (01:43:39):
You don't have to worry about having the prescription refilled. Yeah,
you don't have to worry about potentially getting Alzheimer's. The
other complications associated with taking a drug and living with
chronic fatigue in the dirty seecreting I'd never heard before,
Keith oh golleg Yeah, statins caused that fatigue. And I'm
praying there's some listener out there who's on statins and
has never been able to track down why they're feeling
that way. That maybe now they have the answer to

(01:44:01):
that question.

Speaker 11 (01:44:03):
There are several books out there, and the dirty secret
with the statins is there are two types of LDL.
There's a large floaty kind and there's a small dense kind.
Heart attacks and that are indicated by the small dance kind.

Speaker 1 (01:44:19):
Guess what.

Speaker 11 (01:44:19):
Statins only reduce the large floaty So the only reason
we take statins is because you can measure cholesterol and
statins will reduce that number. But the catch is it's
not reducing the number that causes heart attacks. Every study
that's done of what's the effect of taking statins versus
not on heart attacks, it's like a one percent difference.

(01:44:43):
Instead of four out of one thousand dyeing, three out
of a thousand die, but all cause death. Meaning when
you look at people taking statins versus people not taking statins,
the statin group has higher death rates.

Speaker 1 (01:44:56):
If they looked at I always sorted statins in connection
with clogging of the arteries? Have they looked at specifically
these statins prevent the clogging of the arteries because that's
usually the predictate for well Keith will tell you, but
the inflammation is why your arteries get claused exactly.

Speaker 11 (01:45:10):
Cholesterol goes to train. It's about inflammation. Oh, information is
what's causing your arteries to be inflamed. And then our
good class comes by and says, oh, that's inflame, let
me pack that in. So the goal is to reduce inflammation,
and reducing inflammation is obviously pretty pretty basic. When you're
doing exercise, stay away from toxins and bad diet. There
your inflammation goes down. Interestingly enough that I was listening

(01:45:33):
to you mentioned was that when you have I had
a guy.

Speaker 1 (01:45:36):
It was a patient.

Speaker 12 (01:45:37):
He was normal, he had high cholesterol in his thirty
five r so they put him on statins. His cholesterol
looked great, his numbers were amazing. He was staying on
the statins. Guess what happened, had a heart attack. Oh jeez,
good figure. Right, your statins on statins cost all numbers
are good, and you have a heart attack.

Speaker 11 (01:45:54):
They're they're reducing the wrong cholesterol. And like you said,
your brain's forty percent cholesterol. You get rid of that.

Speaker 1 (01:45:59):
And that's to me, that was the creepy thing right there,
the connection between the fat levels and the fact that
your brain is comprised of fat. I just like huge
red flag, huge red flag and again fishes brain food.
All right, let's pause, we'll catch our souls, crime stopper,
bad Guy of the week, and then we'll return with
Keith and George after these brief words beginning with Chimney Care,
Fireplace and Stove. Wonderful folks there since nineteen eighty eight,

(01:46:21):
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it inspected by the Chimneycare Fireplaces stove. Same thing with
the chimney woodburner. Folks out there, do it before the
cold temperatures come in so you have peace of mind.
Certified chimney sweep, video camera inspection. Make sure your lining

(01:46:42):
is in great shape. If it's cracked, they can replace that.
They also do chimney waterproofing. They can build you a
brand new chimney if you want, but at least take
care of your safety, including you folks dealing with self feeding,
wood waste pellets, doves and gas fireplaces, baby service and
repair those as well. Showroom is located at four thirteen Wards,
corn Road. If you don't have a fireplace s insert,
I recommend you get one. They're really beautiful and they

(01:47:03):
increase the efficiency of your fireplace. So online find them
at Chimneycareco dot com. Chimneycareco dot com. Five one three,
two four eight ninety six hundred. That's two four eight
ninety six hundred fifty five KRC dot com. Hi, this
is Brian Thomas with Doctor Anna seven fifty one fifty
one krcdtalk station and Happy Friday. A health related discussion

(01:47:24):
we've been having with Keith Tennenfeld and George Brenneman. It's
Restore Wellness dot org and real quick, Keith, you had
mentioned offer before we go in to the break here.
Let me wait real quick, let me get Tiffany Green
from the Sins Police Department. We're gonna catch ourselves a
quick crimestopper, bad guy of the week Officer Tivity Green.
Crime stoppers who are we looking for this week? And
a very happy Friday to you by the way.

Speaker 13 (01:47:46):
Thank you. Good morning. Cincinnati Police fifty three is looking
for Jenner for Morgan. Miss Morgan is wanted for felony,
trafficking and drugs seleny drug possession and misdemeanor of possession
of drug paraphernalia. Jennifer Morgan is a female White. She's
thirty nine years old. She's five three and one hundred
and twenty pounds. Jennifer Morgan has a history of drug

(01:48:08):
trafficking and drug possession and was last known to be homeless.
If anyone has information on where police can find Jennifer Morgan,
please call crime Stoppers at five win three thirty five
two thirty forty or submitted SIP online at crime dat
stoppers dot us.

Speaker 1 (01:48:25):
Sounds like she could really use some help. You know
where she is. Help her out by letting the police
department know. Through crime Stoppers, you'll be eligible for a
cash reward if your tip leaves to arrest, and of
course you'll be doing her and society a huge favor.
Thank you, Tiffany Green, have a wonderful week, and thanks
for everything this insane police department does on behalf of
the community. All right, back to George and Keith. Other

(01:48:45):
common we talked statins, We talked to zampig and how
about some other common regularly prescribed prescriptions that carry along
with it some of these risks like the fatigue that
goes along with statins.

Speaker 12 (01:48:56):
Right, so we've got antidepressant medications such as your ss
our eyes number one, waking, which doesn't help anybody's mental mindset.
Number two, it decreases your libido. So now your relationships.

Speaker 1 (01:49:07):
Stressed enough right there, you stop the discussion. That's that's
the no, thank you. The world gets wrecked with a
bunch of depressed pieces now because that. But no, it's
true though.

Speaker 12 (01:49:16):
You know, I think about you're decreasing your libido and
next you know, your enjoyment and relationship drops, and that's
going to cause more depression too. So think about your
side effects and doing it. Another one commonly prescribed is adderall.
Adderall can increase your blood pressure, can increase insomnia and
nobody does well when they're not sleeping, and then also
increases palpitation. So you have these dis arrhythmic speed, isn't

(01:49:38):
it Yeah, basically fetamines right, and so you know what's
interesting about that is sometimes people think that that adderall
can be basically a sugar problem, people having sugar crashes,
sugar high, sugar low, sugar high sugar lows, so you know,
trimming up the diet and getting well, can also eliminate
some of the mental fog that you have.

Speaker 1 (01:49:57):
Is why you think you might adh. Okay, since you
mentioned I asked you a question you didn't get to answer,
I have a great answer. Okay, I sweeten The only
thing that I think is close to sugars is I
use honey to sweeten my tea. I make green tea.
I used to drink those those soda or those no
calorie energy drinks, and I have all kinds of stuff

(01:50:18):
in it and frightened me away from those. I had
to substitute something for it. And green tea is supposed
to be good for you. I boil up a pot
of green tea and then I sweeten it with some honey.
Am I doing myself a disservice? Now? First of all,
green tea is fantastic.

Speaker 12 (01:50:31):
It's actually has an anti lowering cortisol effect, so you
think that it would raise cortisol, but it doesn't actually
lowers cortisol. At the same time, it gives you energy
and it's an antioxidant, So great choice on that. Number Two, Honey,
local honey is fantastic because it gives you use your
local allergen dose, so you become desensitized if you have allergies.
Number two, it's high in vitamins and polate number three.

(01:50:51):
It is a very punch of energy. It's like a
little nucleus power plant of energy. So when you're taking honey,
you're getting this kind of metabolic energy as well.

Speaker 1 (01:51:00):
Yeah, I feel like I've had three four cups of
coffee in the morning because I'll drink at least a
quart of it during well and prepping for the morning show.

Speaker 12 (01:51:07):
That's excellent. And so I'm I'm a big fan of
using honey as you're sweetener. Now, too much sugar, blah
blah blah. But when it comes to honey, a little
bit goes a long way, and I encourage you to
use it.

Speaker 1 (01:51:17):
I use it in my coffee.

Speaker 11 (01:51:18):
Oh, I'm so glad I asked that question out loud. Well,
so you're not here permission to drink your tea. I
do y, I'm still on track.

Speaker 1 (01:51:27):
I thought it was. I thought I was falling off
the no sugar wagon because you know, plain green tea.
While I can drink it, it's just it's just not
the same. I love the taste of honey. Well, let's
talk about realquie. Another side effect of some medications blood pressure.
A lot of blood pressure medicines can rob you of energy.
Beta blockers are one calcium channel blockers or another. And
your beta is your stimulation, it's your fight or flight.

(01:51:49):
It's your it's kind of gives you that fight in
the game.

Speaker 12 (01:51:51):
And when you take a beta blocker, you don't feel
like fighting anymore, and then your energy gets dropped and
it will also lower your libido again. And so the
question is is how can we lower bloof pressure naturally?
And there's tons of those ways out there. You can
you know, find us on the web. And at the
same time come and talk with this.

Speaker 1 (01:52:05):
Yeah, and going back to the biodentical hormone replacement therapy,
if you don't be scared. If your libido is low,
don't be scared. It'll solve that problem. Okay, So might
consider that as well. Keith George, thank you for what
you're doing out there. You have no obligation to do this,
and I know you're you're genuinely concerned about America's health.
And by providing this information we get to talk about it,

(01:52:26):
we maybe cause people to maybe reflect, you know, do
that cost benefit analysis and your words. I think We'll
encourage people along a line, so keep up the great
work roots Jaron Harrison where you find Keith. George and
Keith can both be found at Restore Wellness dot org.
Stick around because after the top of the our new
is Phil Kirpin, the President of American Commitment, is going
to tell us how to stop the climate craziness. That

(01:52:48):
plus all my dear friend Patty Scott doing wonderful, wonderful
work for the folks that are in assisted living facilities
or senior friends out there. It's hard for seniors. We're
gonna update from Patty at eight forty. I hope you
can stick around. Today's top headlines coming up at the
top of the hours changes every minute. Fifty five krs.
The talk station gathers years.

Speaker 14 (01:53:09):
We will share intelligence for the very latest on interest
rates in the economy Russia.

Speaker 1 (01:53:15):
Fifty five krs The talk station eight o five. Here
a fifty five KRCD talk station. Happy Friday. I'll you
have some great plans for the weekend. Brian Thomas welcoming
back to the fifty five Karsee Morning Show. It's been
too long. Glad to have Phil Kirpin back. You can
find them online at American Commitment dot org American Commitment
Phil Kirpin advocacy group. That what's dedicated to restoring and

(01:53:38):
protecting America's core commitment to free markets, economic growth, constitutionally
limited government, property rights, and individual freedom. Phil Kirpin, it's
good to have you back on the fifty five KRSE
Morning Show, Sir.

Speaker 15 (01:53:49):
Yeah, my pleasure, Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:53:51):
And one of my favorite topics, stop stopping climate craziness.
Going to thinking about Greta Thunberg. As we dive on
into this conversation, let me ask you straightforward questions Hill,
and I think I know the answer. CO two carbon
dioxide is not a pollutant.

Speaker 15 (01:54:07):
Well, you have to convinced me. We've had to convince
the course of that, and that of course the trub
administration is teeing that up. But you know, this goes
back to two thousand and seven when a bunch of
liberal states, led by Massachusetts, sued the Bush administration and
they said greenhouse gases are pollution under the nineteen seventy
Clean Air at excuse me, even though nineteen seventy global

(01:54:29):
warming hadn't been invented yet. People were scared of an
ice age. They was supposed to be for local pollution,
like stuff you breathe in and to make you cough
and hurts your lungs. But they got the Supreme Court
five four decision infamously to say, EPA, you have to
decide based on the science whether greenhouse gases in danger

(01:54:50):
human health and welfare, and if they do, you need
to regulate them. And Bush, as was his style and
many things, did nothing. He punted. He sort of left
the decis vision sitting on the table for Obama. And
of course Obama came in and said, let's go. We've
got you know, we have a door. We're going to
run right through it, and we're going to regulate the
whole economy by saying that greenhouse gases are a glut.

(01:55:14):
And now carbon dioxide is a colorless, odorless gas that's
essential for all life on planet Earth. So the idea
that it constitutes pollution is actually a crime against the
English language in my opinion. So I said, I think
this whole thing is ridiculous. But remember Congress never passed
an economy white greenhouse gas law. That didn't happen. They
barely got one through the House. They didn't even vote

(01:55:36):
on them. In the Senate, they crashed and burned. So
Obama said, I have pen and phone. I'm going to
do the whole thing through EPA. And the Court had
given him the green light even before he got there.
And so that's where all of this came from. All
of this mischief. All of the easy mandates, all the
regulations on the power sector, on the industrial sector, all
of the greenhouse gas regulations we have in this country

(01:55:56):
didn't come from an actual law pass by Congress. They
came from this insanity of the Court saying, you know,
you can use a nineteen seventy while it was for
something totally different. And in Trump's first term he kind
of tinkered around the edges of this. He said, wow,
you know, I'm going to change the waiting for the
cost of carbon dioxide and all this kind of stuff.
But he did not go at the heart of this issue.

(01:56:18):
He did not say, no, greenhouse gases are not pollution
and they should not be regulated under the qlean Arak
in his first term and that let Biden come in
and bring back everything that Obama done and uncumb and more,
and he tried to ban internal combustions e in goals
all times, and brillions of dollars of regulation. Now this time,
Trump is not only getting rid of the regulations, he's

(01:56:39):
getting rid of the endangerment finding itself, the finding the
greenhouse gases in danger human health and welfare, and that
they just closed the public comment period on this this week.
So we're going to see some finalization of that probably
in the next couple of weeks, and then you know,
the green groups will immediately find a judge to overturn
the Trump administration and then they'll go up and appeal.

(01:57:00):
But you know, eventually we'll get back to the Supreme Court,
and my hope is that they will admit they were
wrang in two thousand and seven and that the nineteen
seventy Clean Air Acts cannot and should not be twisted
into an economy white greenhouse gas regulation law. But it's
a tough one to predict actually have the court will
come down because part of the one of the four

(01:57:21):
dissenters in the original five for was Roberts, and you know,
he's likely to switch sides, and so you kind of
probably need the other all five of the other Republicans
appointed justice. So we'll see how it turns out. But
the other thing, Brian and I thought was so encouraging
about the way Trump did this this time, is he
didn't you know, They've got all the legal arguments there,
which are great.

Speaker 4 (01:57:40):
They've got all the economic arguments, but.

Speaker 15 (01:57:42):
They did not shy away from the science this time.

Speaker 4 (01:57:45):
You know, most.

Speaker 15 (01:57:45):
Republicans have kind of said, oh, all the scientists true consensus,
we're all going to die. But you know, with the
legal arguments in the economic art and once you do that,
you've kind of already lost.

Speaker 4 (01:57:55):
Yep.

Speaker 15 (01:57:56):
And this time around, they've got a very very good
study that was done by the Energy Department and actually
had named authors on it, and the lead author is
a guy named Stephen coonan very famous, very distinguished physicist
who is also the top White House science advisor under Obama,
and he's the lead author in the study that basically
says the world is warming, but it's warming very slowly,

(01:58:17):
and they're not going to be any catastrophic harms associated
with that. It debunks all of the doom saying. And
so they've got the science briefs in there, very credible,
led by an Obama scientist. They've got all the legal arguments,
they've got all the economic arguments. I think there's a
good chance that they're going to succeed, and if they do,
it becomes very, very difficult for a future Democratic president

(01:58:40):
to bring all this nonsense back unless they actually pass
along Congress, which, by the way, is the way you're
supposed to do academy wide policy changes, not by dusting
off fifty year old law.

Speaker 1 (01:58:50):
Well, and carbon dioxide is plant food. I love to
point that out. Plants live and thrive on that, and
then they produce oxygen in return for the carbon dioxo
that we provide. And this is the way it's been
going on since the world was created. But we're not
talking about something like mercury that is a genuine pollutant
which does post risk to human beings. So nobody's advocating

(01:59:13):
to let somebody, you know, belch out mercury into the environment.
We just need an acknowledgement that there's no harm related
to carbon dioxide. And that's the thing everybody keeps chasing
their tail trying to do carbon capture. That's why you
can't use coal plants. Now, coal plants do have scrubbers
to get rid of actual pollutants.

Speaker 15 (01:59:30):
Correct, Yeah, we addink coal has become so clean compared
to what it used. By the way, the arch the
army of the whole obsession with you know, with the
solar panels is most of the solar.

Speaker 16 (01:59:42):
Panels are made in China, and they're made with coal
fired electricity power. The plants that make the panels that
we then buy with massive subsidies of tax dollars. And
and by the way, their coal is not nearly as
clean as our cole no, so their whole thing is perverse.

Speaker 15 (02:00:00):
You're right. I think the green groups have become so obsessed,
so corrupted with greenhouse gases, that they do almost nothing
on actual environmental.

Speaker 1 (02:00:09):
Issues, right that That is an excellent point, Phil Curbent
of American Commitment dot org. But I think there's also
a very nefarious element among green this green agenda, and
it's to reduce our economic might in our consumption. I
think behind the scenes, you've got a bunch of crazy
people who are worried about the global population, the worried
about consumption. If everybody goes down the road of America,

(02:00:31):
the whole world's going to use up all of its resources.
We need to stop consumption.

Speaker 3 (02:00:35):
How do we do that?

Speaker 1 (02:00:35):
We declare that basically energy production which allows us then
to even engage in economic activity. Get rid of that
curb it you reduce the wealth and the might of
mainly developed European and like the United States Western countries,
and you flatten that along the lines of socialism. It
also benefits China. China perpetuates this myth that carbon dioxide

(02:00:59):
is bad because what are the ones that get the
economic benefit from it. They're the ones that make all
the green related products. Still, am I onto something?

Speaker 15 (02:01:07):
I think all of that's exactly correct. And you know
they've been proven wrong time after time after time, but
they don't care. They're impervious to reality.

Speaker 7 (02:01:15):
And you're right.

Speaker 15 (02:01:16):
I mean, it's a very anti human view. And you
know this idea of resource depletion, which goes back to
the home in nineteen seventy. A lot of bad things
happen in the seventies, by the way, you know, it's
been it's every prediction they made has been wrong, every
single one. You know why, because human beings create resources.
We don't just consume resources. We create resources as well.

(02:01:37):
And you know, when something actually does get scarce, we
figure out something else. And you know, the economics drives
us in a different direction.

Speaker 4 (02:01:43):
And we can.

Speaker 15 (02:01:44):
You know, we're human ingenuity is what Julie and Simon
called the ultimate resource. And so these predictions are By
the way, I'm very worried about global population also, but
I'm worried that it's going down down. I'm worried that
we've got.

Speaker 4 (02:01:55):
A big shortage.

Speaker 15 (02:01:56):
We've got a big shortage, is what I'm worried about.
I look at birth rates and they they're plunging.

Speaker 1 (02:02:01):
That is true. Well, you know, I guess the only
bright spot in the world's population driving At least China's
dropping as well. Their one child policy was a train wreck,
and now they're on they don't even have replacement level
population going.

Speaker 15 (02:02:13):
On, so they're headed for total demographic collapse. They're headed
for total demographic collots. Really, all the Asian countries are Japan.
The restaurant's not that far behind the restorer room. We're
not that far behind.

Speaker 4 (02:02:23):
So it's a huge problem.

Speaker 1 (02:02:25):
It really is. Now back over to the whole chasing
the tail kind of thing. I mean, have we not
learned about If we all just were able to join
in the chorus of carbon dioxide is not bad, then
all these carbon capture related product projects and all these
carbon offset programs, they all disappear. The European Union might
be able to save itself from itself if that was

(02:02:47):
the world in which we live. I mean, look, California
backpedaling across the board. Their politicians see eight dollars gasoline
as a huge problem for the reelection. Their policies are
what is pushing California toward eight dollars gas gasoline? Shutting
down refineries, not tapping into resources. Oh, look, buying petroleum
products from around the globe, helping other countries that actually

(02:03:09):
produce these products, they're going ahead and using them anyway.
I mean, the European Union won't produce its own it'll
buy this stuff from Russia to keep its economy well along,
at least as little as their economy is generating now.
But it at least help them survive. But they're a
giant red flag for the rest of the world. If
you go down this road, your economies are going to collapse.

Speaker 15 (02:03:34):
Phil Yeah, absolutely. Look, I mean, I think the President
was amazing what he did at the United Nations is
where he just said this directly to these European kinds, said, look,
you reduce your green aff gases by whatever it was
forty something fifty something percent. Congratulations, you impoverished yourselves. You
drove the energy prices through the roof. And China is
laughing all the way to the bank because they're building
a new coal plant every week, so global emissions are

(02:03:56):
going up, not down, and they're selling you a tolobile
and it's like, you know, he really.

Speaker 6 (02:04:01):
Called them out.

Speaker 15 (02:04:02):
I thought that was incredible to watch, And you're right.
I mean, it's been a major major problem holding Europe back.
And you know, we've had entry prices rise in the
US too because of a lot of the same reason,
but compared to what's happened in Europe, I mean, you know,
we're up something like twenty percent and they're of one
hundred percent in the last five years. And so yeah,
it's it's a very very bad situation there, and we

(02:04:24):
certainly don't want to follow them down that path. And
it doesn't accomplished anything, isn't the other thing? I thought
the President was so correct about it. He said, look,
I mean, if you think greenhouse gases this terrible thing
we need to reduce, you still haven't accomplished anything. If
China just increases more than new decrease so like it's
all pain and absolutely no game, and it's just an

(02:04:44):
economic suicide.

Speaker 6 (02:04:45):
All right.

Speaker 1 (02:04:46):
One of the things I've been on for quite some
time now fil Carbon is why do we not embrace
nuclear power so it satisfies the carbon alarmist folks out there?
Because it doesn't produce any carbon. It produces an abundance
and abundance of electricity in a very small what I
call footprint, the small modular reactors. They work. And I
have a nod to my my submarine or friend Cribbage Mike,

(02:05:09):
we call him. He worked on a submarine driven by
nuclear power. Of the American military has operated ships driven
and powered by nuclear power since the nineteen fifties with
no incident whatsoever. Why can't we the general public have it?
Fil if it solves all of our problems.

Speaker 15 (02:05:24):
Yeah, it's a really good question, right because we see
whatever this comes up, you make you make the best point,
because whenever this comes up, they say, oh, it's experimental.
We don't know, experimental every submarine.

Speaker 4 (02:05:35):
Yeah, you know, in how many.

Speaker 15 (02:05:38):
Decades, you know, how many decades can we have a
technology and you still say, oh, it's experimental. I don't know,
it's dangerous but there are few There are few things
around the politics of nuclear and the economics of it
that have made it difficult.

Speaker 6 (02:05:48):
Now.

Speaker 15 (02:05:48):
One is that we've got massive, massive regulations nuclear and
so that makes it much more expensive than it should be.
But also we've got we've got the fuel issue that
spent fuel is because we are the only country in
the world that doesn't allow reprocessing of spend nuclear fuel,
and so we've got a lot more waste than we
should have because we don't reprocess. And there's been this

(02:06:10):
big event. We're supposed to put it at yuck And Mountain,
but they don't want to put it there, so we
sort it in casts on site, which is actually perfectly safe,
but people freak out about that, and so we've got
kind of these ancillary issues related to it. But you're right,
it's ridiculous. It's ridiculous that we can't have sensible regulations
and build nuclear much much more cheaply. And by the way,
it may happen anyway, fight all these crazy policies we

(02:06:32):
have because we've got this massive demand for energy from
data centers, all the AI stuff, and our grid is
not going to be able to supply them. Honestly, and
so what's going to happen, in my opinion, is these
data centers are going to say, we've got to build
our own electricity because we can't get it from the grid.
And for most of them, it's going to make a
lot of sense to put nuclear in there and never
think about it and never worry about again, especially because

(02:06:53):
the tech guys understand the technology.

Speaker 1 (02:06:56):
Right now, I'm thoroughly convinced that Alphabet will have its
own personally paid for and built small modular reactor to
power data AI facilities, and that we will ultimately then
get the benefit of it because we're clamoring for AI.
It's the next thing. It's gonna make everybody billions of dollars.
We can't let China get ahead of us, so we're
gonna go ahead and allow them to have nuclear power
and then ultimately benefit the American people, because well, we

(02:07:18):
need business and industries to stay here in the United
States of America. Hey, you know, Phil, however we get there,
I'll take it. I just know that it seems to
be the answer to all of our energy demand problems,
stopped by self inflicted wounds called regulations. Phil Kurp Andfindament
American Commitment dot org. Phil, keep up the great work man.
You know you always have an opportunity to come on
the fifty five Carsy Morning Show and talk common sense

(02:07:38):
and reason like you did today.

Speaker 15 (02:07:39):
Sir, all right, my pleasure. We are more to Levmees
this weekend because I'm on Met Sam, so we'll see
what happens.

Speaker 1 (02:07:46):
Good luck, good luck in the same boat with the
rest right take care of it. It's coming to an
eighty twenty fifty five Casey detalk station and stick around.
You can call in. Maybe you have a comment or two.
I'd love to hear from you who gets this local stories.
Then we're gonna hear from Patty Scott from Heart Force
Years to join the program at eight forty to give
us an update on that wonderful organization and the great
work that they are doing. It's a twenty right now,

(02:08:06):
and I get to mention Galaxy Concrete. I've already made
the decision going to get the Galaxy concrete from my
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They know it.

Speaker 4 (02:08:16):
I know it.

Speaker 1 (02:08:16):
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Speaker 7 (02:08:58):
Can do it.

Speaker 1 (02:08:59):
Galaxy Conccodings dot Com. Fifty five KRC the talk station
Channel I Weather Report. We got a partly clouded the
mostly sunny day to day. It's going up to seventy seven,
clear skies over night with a low of fifty eight
or high seventy nine tomorrow, to be sunny, clear every
night again with a low of fifty nine and another
sunny day for Sunday with a high of eighty sixty degrees.

(02:09:20):
Right now it's time for chuck with traffic from the
UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (02:09:24):
The u SE Cancer Center offers person of I cross
state cancer care, exclusive clinical trials and treatments you won't
find anywhere else. Called five one, three five eighty five
UCCC sat Bend seventy five slow go in and out
of Lackland. He spent two seventy five. It's improving after
an earlier accident at forty two in sharing bo so

(02:09:45):
is Columbia Parkway now open in both directions between dubt
and tapped. Shout Kingbram on fifty five KRC theat talk station,
Hey thirty one here, fify about KRSD talkstation. Hard for
Senior is going to be on the program next Patty
Scott doing great work dealing with those folks struggling living
in senior living facilities. And I'd always just think of

(02:10:06):
my dad when I think of the great work that
Hard for Seniors is doing. Right now over the phones,
I got Jay on the line. Jay, thanks for calling.
Welcome to the morning, showing a Happy Friday to you.

Speaker 17 (02:10:15):
Hey, Happy Friday, Brian, Hey, excellent guest and one big
takeaway from all of that is when the Democrats had
what I will call their best president Obama, our worst,
he walked into the Oval Office on opportunity with carbon dioxide,
and he walked right through the door immediately and took

(02:10:36):
over the economy.

Speaker 4 (02:10:37):
Yes, our best.

Speaker 17 (02:10:41):
President Trump during his first term came in and decided
to study this carbon dioxide situation for four years after
Bush did nothing, and since Trump did nothing during his
first term, then we got four more years of Biden.
So eight years later, we're almost one year into the
first Trump or the second Trump term, and here here

(02:11:03):
we are. And this is what I call a Republican victory.
Of This is why when the left gets in control,
they can take us left, take the whole damn country
left two hundred miles per hour. And when we get
in control, all we can do is stop the speed
down to thirty miles.

Speaker 1 (02:11:19):
Per hour to the left.

Speaker 4 (02:11:20):
Yeah, it's striking, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (02:11:22):
Well, and you know this carbon capture nonsense. I mean,
they keep getting away with it because they just definite
they say, well, by definition it's a greenhouse gas well
is because some random dude decided had some connection with
the smog out there in the world, it exacerbated actual pollutants.
So therefore we can capture carbon even though it's not
really truly a pollutant. It's a naturally occurring plant food

(02:11:45):
phenomenon that we need to stay alive in this world.
So but once you move away from that conclusion, then
you're looking at something that I like to point out.
Who's the ones that are the fascist It's the Democrats.
Who's the one trying to control every element of your life?
The Democrats, you know, well, and that would always be
met with the retort, well, they're trying to save the planet. Well,
capturing carbon doesn't save the planet. It doesn't do jack

(02:12:08):
squat most notably, even if it did. When you're fighting
the uphill battle, you can't sicaphy and challenge dealing with
China belching out in Turkey and India and the other
countries that don't care a wit about how much carbon
dioxide they're putting out. So go ahead, slash your risk
and your economy, ruin your economy. Limit the amount of
available readily available electricity in the name of reducing carbon,
which doesn't do anything for the global carbon dioxide out there.

(02:12:33):
And then when carbon dioxide increases. If we get away
from this nonsense, we get control back over our own economy.
We quit throwing money that doesn't do us any economic good,
like carbon capture, and we put that into economically beneficial projects. Great,
freeing up capital for something worthy and worthwhile, and giving
us our freedom back. Thank you for bringing that up

(02:12:55):
real quick. Here we were talking about artificial intelligence the
chap GPT, and since I mentioned Greta, I went ahead
to chat EPT. I said, write a song about Greta
Thunberg's flotilla. And here's what I got. It's hilarious. Turn
it out in one second. Oh, the world was burning.
Skyes were gray co two, rising every day from diesel

(02:13:15):
trucks to plastic cups. We'd filled the sea with Starbucks muck.
But Lo a hero, pure and brave. No plane. She'd fly,
no gas. She'd crave with winds of change and sails
full tight. She launched her boat to save the night.
The chorus Greta and the carbon free Armada. No fuel,
no spoke, just quinoa and drama from Sweden, short old
New York. She'd conquered waves with bamboo forks. Turn off

(02:13:37):
your lights, she cried from the sea and instagram or
an instagram filmed sustainably with vegan rations packed just right
in solar panels, gleaming bright, she braved the foam and
oceans swell to tell the un Earth's not well. Her
crew was made of college grads with climate facts and
vegan pads. They filtered water, hugged the seal, and blogged

(02:13:58):
it all for mass appeal. Greta and the Carbon Free
Armada fighting doom with hemp mess gerra, no plastic straws,
just moral might. She'd face timed storms to end the fight.
Science speaks. She waved ashore, then caught a lift back
to Ecuador, so children march and parents squirm as Greta
steers the Echo firm. She's got more followers than God

(02:14:19):
in sales without a carbon pod. Her boat's made from
recycled rage and sponsored by a climate stage, a Netflix doc,
a TEDx talk. She even walks the Climate Walk final chorus.
Greta and the Carbon Free Armada sinking yachts with Echo drama,
with wind in her hair and eyes a blaze. She
canceled cows in seven days. The seas may rise, the

(02:14:41):
fires burned, but Greta shouts it's your turn. One second.
Just enter the search, hit enter, you gotta hit song.
It's amazing, isn't At eight thirty six Heart for Seniors
coming up next.

Speaker 10 (02:14:53):
I can stick around fifty five KRC Football season.

Speaker 1 (02:14:59):
Quick weather John and I says, partly cloudy to mostly
sunny day to day. I have seventy seven overnight little
fifty eight with clear skies Sunday tomorrow seventy nine clear
skies every night, fifty nine another sunny day Sunday with
a high of eighty degrees. Sixty degrees Now traffic time
Chuck from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (02:15:15):
The u See Cancer Center offers personalized prostate cancer care,
exclusive clinical trials and treatments you won't find anywhere else
called five one three five Big five You see see
see Cruis are working with an accident in southbound seventy
one near Dana. They're in the center lanes. Traffics starting
to back up close to the lateral. Southbound seventy five

(02:15:35):
continues slow in and out of Lackland. They're just about
ready to open up winning at North Bend from an
earlier wreck.

Speaker 1 (02:15:41):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station, Hey,
thirty nine fifty five KRCD Talk station. Well, I'm having
fun today and the fun continues, and the great war continues.
Heart the number four Seniors dot Org Hard for Seniors
and Patty Scott's in She's Hard for Seniors. This is
like the third or fourth time you've been on the show,

(02:16:03):
and I am always truly amazed and so so thankful
for what you are doing. And I always think of
my dad. I have this remembrance my father and the
senior living facility, this facility with Alzheimer's and of course
he struggled with continence issues like everybody, and you've got
a solution for that, and you've got great news from
my listeners today. But you also have done other things

(02:16:25):
for that environment, the senior living facility environment, but you're
bringing it to people's homes now too. Patty, welcome back.
It's always so wonderful to see you.

Speaker 14 (02:16:34):
Thank you, Brian. Yeah, you are such an advocate for us.
And you know we're living we're living Sandwich generation right,
taking care of our children, so many of us taking
care of our parents. My parents are eighty eight years old,
still living independently, even though in the last year we've
been in the hospital in and out three times.

Speaker 1 (02:16:53):
Shout out to mom eighty six, still live in independently
eight eighty eight, My mom.

Speaker 14 (02:16:57):
Mom, I love your mom. Your mom's amazing, she is.
It's so supporting, right. So, yes, we've made such strides
in the last year. Yes, we're in the independent long
term care facilities. Any facility that wants our technology, they
just need to hit us up and we will make
sure that we get that technology there to improve quality care.

(02:17:20):
It's an alert response technology so simple. You've got a
wrist wearable, you've got an incontinent smart brief, and it
literally will allow somebody not to sit in there yearn
in their feces for twenty four.

Speaker 1 (02:17:33):
Hours, alert you real time, right, yeah, you're not doing You.

Speaker 14 (02:17:38):
Can actually get true bow bladder reporting and know what's
going on, temperature turning and positioning, all the above. The
great news is is we had so many requests for
my mom's not in a facility, or my dad's on
in a facility where we've got home health care, or
we've got a private caregiver. Is there any way I

(02:18:00):
can get the technology And the answer to the question
now is yes, yes.

Speaker 10 (02:18:05):
So we are so excited.

Speaker 14 (02:18:08):
We just need people to reach out to us on
the Heart for Seniors dot org website.

Speaker 1 (02:18:13):
Art number fours if you're.

Speaker 14 (02:18:15):
Interested in have a loved one at home and need
the technology or want to work with us. We're also
so super excited because we continue to add partner agencies,
people that continue to reach out locally, that that are
their own agencies but have seniors that are really struggling.
So we're trying to help them with getting the outreach

(02:18:36):
out there. And local companies. If there's any companies that
are very interested in really supporting this generation. There's a
local company called Selera. They provide the state of the
art wound care for hospitals and but a lot of
long term care facilities and doctor's offices and surgeons and
all this stuff. And our question was, well, but we

(02:18:57):
could do this at home too, right, I mean, have them,
so why not be able to get them into the homes.
And these are collagen dressings and things. My dad is
addicted to these.

Speaker 1 (02:19:09):
Let me just tell you you explain because you handed
me one. Yes, it's a very unusual type of pad.

Speaker 14 (02:19:15):
So my dad, eighty eight years old, bruises so easy,
and his skin just rips off. It's then the older
you get, the thinner the skin gets. So he'll bump
up against the wall and he'll just bleed and you
put a normal bandage on him and it just rips
the skin off.

Speaker 10 (02:19:31):
It's so hard to get off. Have you ever i mean,
have you ever taken like a cake?

Speaker 6 (02:19:34):
Thought?

Speaker 1 (02:19:36):
I never thought about that.

Speaker 14 (02:19:37):
Yes, paper thin, and you put a normal bandage on it,
and days later you go to rip it off and
literally his skin rip off with it, and then you've
got an open wound and it makes it worse. So
this local company right out of Monroe, Ohio has it there.
It's truly advanced wound care. But what's great is they

(02:19:58):
make them in smaller sizes to where I can actually
take There's one that looks like a bandage that I
literally put on and it does not rip his skin.
It's amazing. I've been I've been driving up there and
ordering online and it's just it's it's insane. It's celerallc
dot com. But they're partnering with Heart and we're now

(02:20:20):
making sure that we can get as many whatever somebody needs,
whether it's a collageen dressing that can actually feed collagen
back into the wound, the advanced wound. Obviously most of
these people have advanced wound care specialists that are working
with them. But sometimes they're just at home, right, No,
I understand, and they can't get out, and so we're

(02:20:41):
just our focus is for any and everything senior, right.
Everybody has a problem, every single and we as Sandwich
generation right trying to help navigate. We just want to
make sure our website. People can come to our website.
If there's a problem, send us an email. We'll help

(02:21:01):
you with your problem.

Speaker 1 (02:21:02):
Well that's what.

Speaker 14 (02:21:03):
We will get you the answers that you need, and
we'll get you the supplies and we'll we'll point you
in the right direction to take care of your mom
or dad.

Speaker 1 (02:21:12):
Patty Scott from Heart the Number four Seniors dot Org,
you guys are so amazing, and you know what, Patty's
got a great announcement. We always wonder about politics and
politicians in this state. Governor de Wines actually on the
right page was something that the Heart for Seniors folks
are involved with. And we're going to continue our conversation
after these brief words.

Speaker 10 (02:21:29):
Stick around fifty five kret uh.

Speaker 1 (02:21:33):
Here's your final look at the weather day channel and
I says not bad, partly clouded it mostly Sunday today
going up to seventy seven clear tonight fifty eight Mars
high seventy nine sunny sky's clear over nine fifty nine
and a Sunday Sunday eighty to hive closing out of
sixty degrees. Let's get our final traffic chuck.

Speaker 9 (02:21:49):
From the UCL Traffics Center that you've see Cancer Center
offer a person of mine for Proud State Cancer Care,
exclusive clinical trials and treatments you won't find anywhere else
called five one three five five you see see see
South Bend seventy one close to a fifteen minute delay
from the lateral to an accident at Dana The Center

(02:22:09):
lanes are currently blocked off South Bend seventy five, breaking
bikes in and out of Lachlan Chuck Ingramont fifty five
krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:22:19):
Hey forty nine fifty five KRSD talk station, Happy Friday,
Patty Scott Hard for Seniors, Hard number four Seniors dot
or They're gonna help you out with all your aging issues,
Your your your anybody who's got a senior they're helping
out apparently and going back to these college collegeen dressings. Patty,
you were giving me a whole lot more information off air.
I didn't. I was not aware of how pervasive this

(02:22:41):
thin skin wound problem is for seniors so bad. Well,
you asked about my mom and you said, listen, Brian,
if you talk to your mom and you know, like
if she had if her skin tears when she's taking
a band aid off or something, she wouldn't bring that
to my attention. But to have these college and dressings
available for them because the college andressing itself heals the wound,
not like a band aid, which just covers it up

(02:23:03):
right scause. And the special bandages that the Celerity he
makes does not stick like a like a band aid.

Speaker 10 (02:23:11):
It doesn't, but it sticks and it's waterproof and it's
it's just amazing.

Speaker 1 (02:23:15):
So you get the healing power of the college and
it heals the womb quickly, yes, and it doesn't tear
the skin coming off. This is like a miracle product.

Speaker 10 (02:23:23):
Their whole product line is just insane.

Speaker 1 (02:23:26):
So you're listening.

Speaker 10 (02:23:28):
C C E l l e r A C E
l l e r A dot com l dot com
L yeah sele yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:23:41):
C E L L E r A l C dot
Com Sierra Celera ll C. All right, so anybody out there,
you can go to the website and.

Speaker 14 (02:23:48):
Order these, you can, or you can just let them
know that Heart for You can come to us email
Heart for Seniors and we will make sure you get
connected with exactly what it is that you need and
for anything else, for anything else problems with seniors, especially
the alert response technology. If you have incontinent parents or

(02:24:08):
cousins or disabled children at home that are incontinent, and
you're concerned that they're sitting in there yearn in their
feces and you don't know when they're going and whatever
the case may be, and you're at work and you're working.

Speaker 10 (02:24:22):
And you have a caregiver, but they don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:24:24):
You got an app that lights up.

Speaker 14 (02:24:25):
You have an app that lights up and talks to
you now and tells you what is going on, and
more importantly, it gives you a report of a pattern
of what happens over the weeks period of time. We've
so gone deep and developed, we've listened to what people need.

Speaker 1 (02:24:41):
Right because people reached out to you and talked about it.

Speaker 14 (02:24:44):
Yes, because of you and your listeners and your shows
help hertfors help you. Yes, we're here. We want to
be a resource. This is not going away. Even the
governor is a department of Aging. We had a conference
last Wednesday because the aging population alone in Ohio is scary.

Speaker 1 (02:25:12):
Well and it's a multi billion dollar health care issue.

Speaker 14 (02:25:15):
It's scary. And I will have to give full credit
Governor DeWine. Even though he always talks children and mothers
and things like that, he has actually claimed a proclamation
that why can we not just completely with quality and
grace and dignity. Ohio should be a state that not
only fosters our babies and children and parents, but it

(02:25:38):
should be a state that we can live with dignity
and care for our seniors.

Speaker 4 (02:25:43):
Well.

Speaker 1 (02:25:43):
In your products and the services you offer helps smooth
out so many of the biggest challenges and problems with
having to deal with that age group. You know, Yes,
I mean that's what's so wonderful about It's why I
like having the show to spread the word about this.
And who knew about this before you came. I never
even I never even thought about it as a concept.
I saw it. It's like, yeah, diaper needs to be
changed again, but yeah, the ripple effect because he had

(02:26:05):
good care. My mom was with him like twenty four
to seven. Even though he's an assisted living facild he
shouldn't leave as side very much. But not everybody's got that.

Speaker 10 (02:26:12):
Yeah, But also fall risks.

Speaker 14 (02:26:14):
Falls ninety percent of the time have to do with
your the lower part of your blood pressure dropping right
or your pulse socks going below ninety and no offense.
But the current Apple watches and things that we all
run around with and wear right are really built for
us young people athletes. They don't drop below and they're

(02:26:34):
not FTA cleared approved things like that. Parts of them are,
but not the entire watch. This our device are was Swearable,
is the only FDA approved device in the United States
that will really track pulse socks below ninety all.

Speaker 1 (02:26:51):
Right, And that is fantastic by keeping an eye on
that pulse ox and that blood pressure. Think about it.
If you know that and the blood pressure has dropped,
you have advance noticed to It's sure they don't just
get up and you know, boom break a hip? How
many hips could you avoid being broken with you have

(02:27:12):
that software.

Speaker 14 (02:27:12):
That app My dad's a perfect example. He is chronic
right now. The last year the hospital visits have been
because his pulse socks has dropped. Typically when the pulsock
drops and I'm not a doctor, so I'm not clinical
in any way, but we've been able to look at trends.
When his pulse SoC drops below ninety typically means his

(02:27:34):
blood pressure that low number has been as low as
forty ooh ooh, right, and they couldn't figure out why.
And I mean, the great news is he's now off
his oxygen so we've been able to manage that and
a lot of it had to do with iron. They've
redone some of his medication, but I'll tell you iron
infusion made all.

Speaker 10 (02:27:53):
The difference in the world.

Speaker 14 (02:27:55):
But at the end of the day, he has peace
of mind because he can walk around with his house
in his house with this on. He can leave and
go to cardiac rehab and not worry that if I mean,
do you know when you're walking around twenty four to seven,
what's your ball sox is or what your blood pressure is?

Speaker 1 (02:28:13):
Of course not. It's like having a little angel on
your shoulders. Brought to you by Heart Number four Seniors,
Heartforce Seniors Dot Org, Patty God bless you and everybody
involved in the work that you're doing, and including all
of those other organizations like for example, solarallc dot com
who've come to the rescue of seniors with solutions of

(02:28:34):
the problems. It's all there for you. Take advantage of it.
Heartforce Seniors dot org. Patty, You're always welcome here because
I'm always excited to hear about what you're doing for
frest Well.

Speaker 10 (02:28:43):
We appreciate you so much.

Speaker 14 (02:28:44):
Your listeners, Please reach out, let us know what your
problems are so we can help you solve them.

Speaker 10 (02:28:49):
That's all we ask.

Speaker 14 (02:28:51):
And companies, if there's any companies that really care about
this population and have a solution, please let us know.

Speaker 1 (02:29:00):
You made it that simple. Art for Seniors dot org, Patty,
Love you, Dear, Thank you so much. Fifty six. If
you five KRSD talk station, check out Tech Friday with
Dave Hatter Excellent as always, George speaking of health, George Betteran,
Keith Ennefeld in studio Restore Wellness dot org offering some
great understanding about vaccines, nutrition information. I'm sure Keith Tennifil

(02:29:23):
is probably nodding an approval when you mentioned the iron
levels for seniors, Patty crime stoppers. We caught one check
it out online and Phil Kirpen, President of American for
commitment about stopping climates craziness podcast at fifty five cars
dot Com. Tune in Monday for Christopher Smitheman and Money
Monday with Brian James. Thank you Sean McMahon for closing
out the week covering for Joe Strecker. You did a
great job, my brother appreciate you folks. Have a wonderful day,

(02:29:46):
wonderful weekend, and stick around because Glenn Beck is next.
Today's top stories at the top of the hour.

Speaker 10 (02:29:52):
It's information that matters to me.

Speaker 1 (02:29:54):
Fifty five krs the talkstation

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