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November 15, 2024 • 152 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Behind those cozy nights at home, Thousands of employees at
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(00:23):
supports across the country. Learn more at VP dot com.
Slash Investing in America.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Five o five at fifty five kr City the talk station,
Happy Friday, so sales.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
Vation.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
This must be Friday. Thank you Jo just Checker for
confirming that to the extent you had any doubt in
your mind. Happy for Friday. From Brian Thomas Hos to
the fifty five Carse Morning Show, Appreciate Joe Strekker for
all he does to make the show go. Without Joe,
the show don't go. He also does podcasts here quick
plug for Just Treker's side business. He doesn't pay me

(01:14):
to endorse him, but if you want to do a
podcast Joe, Just Trekker produces podcast so you can feel
free to reach out to him. There you go, free
plug for you on Friday. Joe get some extra business
going into the weekend, little extra spending money, get yourself
an extra bottle of Shlivowitz. A couple's see optimism. Right there,

(01:35):
you go from one to a couple already. Anyhow, Coming
up on the fifty five carse Morning Show, it being Friday,
of course Tech Friday, one of my favorite segments of
the week. Dave Hatter doing his best to try to
keep us out of trouble.

Speaker 4 (01:50):
Here.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
Let me just interject, get the hell off of TikTok.
Coming up on the Tech Friday segment, Nor to Pass
report the worst passwords of twenty twenty four. He does
this every once in a while. I don't ignored pass
I guess it's some sort of online the newsletter or whatever.

(02:12):
But passwords are critical and one two, three, four, five
six not a good password. If you're using that, I
don't know how or why, but you're gonna get hacked anyway.
Details on that first segment. Second segment, local Kentucky man
stole fifty four identities and the Delhi police are investigating

(02:33):
the scammers. And finally, again a repeat from last week,
smart TVs are spying on you, or that was a
repeat from last month or six months ago or six
years ago. Your smart TVs are spying on you. Last
time we had this conversation, I went home and immediately
started looking to find dumb TVs. Now, if you type

(02:54):
in dumb TVs on Amazon, you'll actually come up with
a handful of them described as lower quality. They're not
as popular as smart TVs because people want, you know,
the convenience of being able to just press a button
and automatically have Netflix pop up or whatever. But they
don't produce that many of them because they lack the popularity.

(03:16):
So the incentive to invest really in higher quality television
isn't there. And just Trekker is right, Black Friday's coming up.
So if you're going to buy a new TV, factor
that into the equation. It will be spying on you, though,
and he'll give us some tips and tricks and hopefully
some ways of getting around that. I have a brilliant
son when it comes to a matter's computer, and he's

(03:39):
going to do a setup in our living room. Our
living room TV's like twelve years old or something like that.
It doesn't even work anymore. I always watch television through
my laptop, so to the extent of even watching television,
his stream my cable there. But he's going to set
up a system that will be completely bulletproof when it

(03:59):
comes to data packets going out and coming in and
all that kind of things. So leave it to the
smart one and the family to manage that. But just
it's a workaround. So what you do is you buy
a monitor and you use a separate device to feed
the television. See if Dave can address that. Burriona Morello
Brionna Morello podcast, she returns. It's been a while since

(04:21):
she's been on the program. She been at seven oh five,
described as doing a victory lab. We'll get her thoughts
about the appointments are Fka Junior making some waves. Get
to that in a minute, just one of many making wave.
Matt Gates, of course, causing bigger waves than I think
the administration needs right out of the gate. But look,
his choice is not mine. I'm willing to roll with

(04:43):
the punches and deal with whoever is appointed and just
hopefully they accomplish something like, for example, the Department of
Government Efficiency and get to that this morning too, Nick Smiley,
I I have a valley associated builders and contractors, the
tools program, team building I'm talking about. It's a seminar.

(05:07):
It's about jobs, it's about employment, it's about well rewarding
your all star workers with fun and meaningful mourning and
all kinds of neat stuff that Nick knows more about
than me. I've got notes. Nick knows all the details.
We'll hear about the Tools program event. And then at
eight thirty, fast forward to eight thirty doctor Naomi Wolf

(05:30):
with the Peiser Papers pfisors Crimes against Humanity. If Maureen
is awake and listening in Florida, I have a feeling
she'll be tuning in for a thirty or listening to
the podcast later on this morning when they are posted
by Joe Strecker, executive producer. I always remember head on
to the podcast page fifty five car se dot com,
listen to Jay Ratliffe, listen to Congressman Massey, and of course,

(05:55):
going back over to the Department of Government Efficiency, listen
to my conversation with Joe to Politana because I started
out that discussion with Hey, I'm really excited about the
Department of Government Efficiency, and he was in a bit
of a mood. That's okay, He's titled to be in
a bad mood, and I know that he's no huge
fan of Donald Trump. But when I mentioned that, I

(06:16):
was excited about that because the idea of bringing really
intelligent people to cut back on the massive, disgusting, burdensome,
ridiculous size of our government. This sounded like a great idea.
And he's like, well, yo, just one more office. It
needs to be funded. And there's no provision in the
constitution for a department of government efficiency, like there's no

(06:36):
provision in the Constitution for the Education Department, et cetera,
et cetera. There's a creative over time, and of course
they're part of the bloat in government. Well, lo and behold.
My point to him back was, and I made it
on Wednesday, well do you really need an apartment? Of course,
the answer is no, you don't. I said, I consider this.

(07:00):
It's like the Heritage Foundation twenty twenty five project. What
is that. It's a bunch of individual groups that put together,
you know, submissions about what they would love to see
in a future Trump administration. It's nothing that Donald Trump approved.
It was independently done, created, put together, bound up, and

(07:22):
presented to the world as this twenty twenty five report.
I don't know if the people who created these individual
ideas and concepts that are included that got paid for
the work they did. But the Trump administration or the
Trump campaign didn't pay the Heritage Foundation to compile it
and put it together. It's just them out there waving

(07:43):
their arm around with the paper in their hands, saying, hey,
consider this. Would you please same thing for this? This
Department of Government Energy or Efficiency start with a couple
of really wealthy smart guys, vive Grandma swimming, Elon Musk,
park them in a room, let them sit down and

(08:04):
decide what needs to be cut and offered as a
submission of the Trump administration, no obligation to follow it
its suggestions, and of course they have an open door
policy conception on how this department's going to work. Hey,
you let us know where there's fraud, wasted abuse in government.
You let us know if there are areas we're considering
cutting that shouldn't be cut, and the reasons why they

(08:25):
shouldn't be cut, and we'll make the recommendations accordingly. Well,
what have we got right now? Elon Musk posting on
x We are very grateful to the thousands of Americans
who have expressed interest in helping us at DOGE. We

(08:46):
don't need more part time idea generators. We need super
high IQ small government revolutionaries willing to work eighty plus
hours a week on unclamorous cost cutting. That's you DM
this account with your CV and Vivek will review the
top one percent of applicants. He then went on to say, indeed,

(09:09):
this will be tedious work, make lots of enemies, and
compensation is zero. What a great deal?

Speaker 4 (09:21):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
Now, Elon Musk doesn't need the money he had previously stated,
if you let him take this role in this nebulous
Department of Government efficiency, which isn't really a department, it
is not apparently being funded. It's analogous to what I
was talking to the judge about when I was trying
to counter his point about the value of this thing.

(09:43):
Wouldn't it be wonderful if other multi billionaires or brilliant people,
people who don't need a salary from the federal government,
who are well off on their own, acted like the
old original founding fathers, the gentlem farmers who left their
fields and came to DC, served their country for a

(10:05):
short period of time, and then went back home. All Right,
I know there's a bunch of brilliant people high IQ
small government revolutionaries out there in the business world. Now,
this is a job maybe like a guy like Bernie
Moreno could have gone for. Doesn't need the money. He
ended up becoming senator, thankfully, but you know he if
he was out there in the world and had won

(10:26):
a centate position, he's an ideal type for this. He's
got money, but he also has business experience and knows
how to lean a business out and make it more efficient.
Volunteer for the position. Be one of those folks. If
you can afford to do it, why not? You know,

(10:49):
at minimum, in spite of the fact that Elon Musk
is right, you will make lots of enemies, you'll also
make lots and lots of friends.

Speaker 5 (11:00):
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(11:22):
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Speaker 2 (11:28):
K and your name being associated with a Department of
Government efficiency. You volunteered. You left your business or your
home and you went to DC to work eighty hour
work weeks in the back room figuring out what needs
to be cut from an overly bloated government. I think
you get great street cred off of that. Who else

(11:50):
is volunteering? You know, In the back of my mind
as I just uttered that, I was thinking, you know,
there are really committed, politically committed people, folks that like
it's like follow up the grateful dead or fish folks
that followed Trump around rally to rally. They didn't get
paid for that. They didn't get paid a campaign for Trump.
Contrast that with the Democrats out there that had to
be paid to show up. You got all this George

(12:13):
Soros funded protesters that are showing up and the you know,
the their designer tents and everything. Everybody's got the same
uniform that was all paid for by someone else. How'd
you get to you know, Boston to protest? Well, you know,
George Soros wrote me a check or whatever. Those aren't
committed people. Those are people that are looking to make
some money in the Department of Government efficiency, as it's

(12:35):
being laid out right now. You're doing this because you
care about your country. You're doing this because you know
the government is too blank and large and obviously too
expensive for us to even afford right now. So you'll
leave the comfort of your own home to go do
the work of the American people. And I think history
will reflect back on you for having done so as

(12:59):
being a decent, honorable, wonderful, well and necessary, proud American
rescuing us from the elected paid officials who have brought
us to this perilous position. Five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty, five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to

(13:20):
three taco with pound five fifty on AT and T phones.
Love to hear from you. Got something to say, feel
free to call. It's Friday, so let's have a good time.
I'll be right back after these preefords. Twenty twenty. Forecast
overcast day to day of high fifty four, over right
clouds and a low of forty three. Tomorrow mostly cloudy
to start with. Afternoon will be sunny though fifty eighth

(13:42):
nine and overnight Lowell forty two with clear skies Sunday
mostly cloudy, high sixty one. Excuse me, fifty one right now,
fifty five Gear CD talk station.

Speaker 4 (13:52):
I'm Donald J. Trump.

Speaker 6 (13:53):
Can I improve this message? Refreshing?

Speaker 7 (14:07):
I mean, do you approve?

Speaker 2 (14:14):
You can't take that as a yes? Related to nothing
I was talking about, and nothing necessarily I may be
talking about later. I just thought this was a rather
interesting tale. We have the FBI arresting a man who
had ties with ISIS, attempted support ISIS planned terror attack

(14:34):
on American soil guys in Houston. He was doing all
of this from his apartment in Houston. Twenty eight year
old Annas Sayid apparently called searching for ways to commit
violent acts in behalf of the Islamic State in the
Greater Houston area, now charge of attempting to provide materials
support to a terrorist group, arrested last week at his

(14:55):
apartment complex, according to the FBI Special Agent and charged
Doug Williams, who said that while in custody, Sayaid admitted
to researching how to conduct an attack on local military
recruiting centers, offering his apartment as sanctuary for ISIS operatives,
bragging that he would commit a nine to eleven style
attack if he had the resources, and attempting to produce

(15:17):
ISS propaganda. According to the FBI Houston Field Office, we
stopped a potential terrorist attack from happening right here in Houston.
Exclamation point. Any day we can publicly say, we can
publicly say that is a good day. I don't deny that,
but get a load of this in so far as

(15:38):
the backstory is concerned. According to Fox News reporting on this,
and I guess this is part of what was the
announcement from the FBI, the FBI has been had this
guy on their radar since twenty seventeen. They got a
tip in twenty seventeen, and I don't know who dropped

(16:01):
the dime on him. And this is kind of a
creepy thing because part of me wants to defend this
well alleged terrorist and part of me is glad that
someone dropped the dime on him. He bought two stickers
in twenty seventeen, leading to a tip. I saw this
Saya guy by two stickers. One sticker contained an image

(16:23):
of a dome of the rock to with an ISIS
flag overlaying the image. Another again sticker showing the white
silhouettle a man holding a rifle with the caption winning
the Islamic Nation. So as a consequence of the twenty
seventeen tip about him purchasing two stickers, which I don't

(16:46):
think are illegal. It's part of the whole free speech
thing we have in this country. You could be a
pro Islamic Nation person. It's a question of whether you
aid a bet or provide them with materials support to
help them cat carry out criminal activity. That's where you
run a foul of the law. But if you want
to stand around with a pro ISIS sign all day
long or by stickers, you're allowed anyway. He was interviewed

(17:11):
four times in twenty eighteen regarding the sticker purchases. I'm
only reading what's been reported, folks, they say, though he
did not support killing in the name of ISIS at
the time, according to the release, during an interview conducted
Honor about January ninety, twenty eighteen, the defendant admitted both

(17:34):
stickers were meant to show support for ISIS, and they
say he admitted his starting support the support the ISIS
ideology from back in twenty fifteen, when his family returned
to the United States from Lebanon. Fast forward to twenty nineteen,
where the FBI did another interview with this guy. He

(17:57):
claimed he no longer consumed radical Islamic propaganda, only used
the Internet for school work and watching sports. Department of
Justice said that wasn't true. According to the Department of Justice,
honor about this October eighteenth. Fast forward twenty twenty three.

(18:18):
Pursuant to legal process, I guess they're trying to underscore that.
I guess his constitutional rights were followed. Pursuing the legal process,
FBI received information from Meta Platforms M working with the
federal government. I guess Meta is regarding eleven Facebook accounts
used he used that showed he continued supporting ices and

(18:38):
the violent acts carried out in his name. Also, his
family members expressed concerns of the FBI in interviews. They
say subsequent analysis the defendant's electronic devices revealed multiple ENCRYPTID
messages applications containing records of his efforts to create and
disseminate propaganda that glorified icess ongoing violence, the evidence underlying

(18:59):
the materials defense charge in the indictment. They refused to
comply with the FBI agents who executed the search warrant
against him, going back to the pursuant to legal process.
So look how long though he was on their radar
twenty seventeen, fast forward all the way up until twenty
twenty three, when they kept investigating, coming up with enough

(19:19):
information compiled that presented to a court presumably allowing them
to get a search warrant based on probable cause that
criminal activity may be ongoing. His posts led to that.
So I understand the case was being built up, But
I just like I stepped back from this one guy,
one guy that bought two stickers in twenty seventeen, now

(19:41):
indicted for working with ices. What of the millions of
people who come across our southern border illegally, the known
got aways, all the people that came from countries that
are known to be run by or harbor terrorists, or
are some authentic to terrorist. You think they've got to

(20:02):
file on all those people? You think they're following up
diligently with each and every one of those folks? Just asking,
just asking, five twenty five, five twenty seven, right now,
fifty five KRCIT de talk stations, local stories coming up.
I'd prefer talking to you if you want to call in,
feel free to do that regardless. If you stick around
local stories follow by the stack of sid stupid at minimum,
hang out.

Speaker 8 (20:22):
About it jelic Christmas.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
There it is your Channel nine first one E weather forecast.
Overcast skys today fifty four for the high end of
forty three, overnight dry and cloudy Tomorrow mostly cloudy start,
but we have afternoon sunshine and high fifty eight out
of forty two overnight clear skies sixty one to high
on Sunday with mostly cloudy skies. It's fifty one right
now for five krc DE talk station about thirty one

(20:52):
near fift five kNs DE talk station five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three talk te five fifty on Atmt Founds. My
dear friends Keithan broke the Aft Destrits. You lost their
dotted a pediatric brain cancer, which is one of the
most aggressive cancers out there. Doing another campaign, and this
one getting ahead of the Black Friday, the Small Business

(21:15):
Saturday and Cyber Monday. Apparently charities, afterthought, at this time
of year, don't have any leftover money to give to
charitable work. Putting your other obviously financial drain days ahead.
So what they're doing now is they have a give first,

(21:36):
Giving First campaign going on. It's give hyphen first dot org.
So getting ahead of the holiday shopping, remembering children who
struggle with pediatric brain cancer and trying to raise some
money for that. Their goal eight hundred thousand dollars this year.
And since the Cure Starts Now is a global organization,
there are Cure Starts Now chapters all over the globe now.

(21:57):
And it all started with Death of the Leyn and
deaths Ritch so many years ago. But they have done
wonderful work. They have funded research that normally wouldn't be funded,
and these type of aggressive pediatric cancers do not get
much money at all for research. There's sort of an afterthought.
So putting them ahead of the pack this year, see
if you can dig down deep and maybe throw a

(22:19):
few bucks at give dash or give hyphen First dot org.
I promise them I'd put a plug into them and
see if we can get Keith on the program at
some point between now and next week to do a
little bit more in depth discussion on that. Okay, not further.
Ado Cruise can't say whether the Dan Carter Dan Carter

(22:41):
Beier Bridge will be reopened because the extent of the
damage is still unknown. According to the HOW Department of
Transportation and Release the other day, there'll be the Big
MacBridge structural issues. They prevented crews from gaining complete understanding
of the damage and we're already a couple of weeks
after the fire closed it. Kathleen Fuller of the o

(23:01):
DOT spokespersons of the bridge's damaged portions are, in her words,
severely compromised. Cruise has not been able to safely walk
on the bridge's deck to inspect the damage instead of
relied on less hands on tools like drones. Thank you
to Bb Hodges from The enquire reporting that gives the
cruise limited picture of the damaged. Cruise assembled shoring towers

(23:24):
this week to stabilize the bridge. They planned to start
up close inspections of the damage today. Miss Fuller reiterated
the mainline portion of the bridge is structurally safe. The
bridge is northbound. Lanes not damaged by the fire reopened
less than twenty four hours after the incident. AH Bridge
impacted by the fire began the early hours of November one,

(23:46):
under the current since any side of the bridge at
Sawyer one thousand hands Playground, and at least three beams,
a road deck and a sign trust will need to
be replaced. The fire well remains under investigation. I kind
of suggested it had to have been arson, But hey, Joe,
don't you think that bursts the bubble on those nine

(24:09):
to eleven conspiracy theorists who said there's no way airplane
fuel could have melted steel resulting in the collapse of
the buildings. Very true. If you can light a children's
playground on fire below a bridge out in the open
air and do that much damage, Yeah, bubble burst jar

(24:32):
your own conclusions. Five thirty five fifty five karsit doalk
Station and Kintuck Cuts with doctor Fred Peck and Megan Frew,
the dynamic duo of dentistry. I'm telling you what. I
am just so pleased with having doctor Peck as my
general dentist for all these years. But he's also a
cosmetic dentists without peer, one of the few fellows of
the American Academy Cosmetic Dentistry in.

Speaker 9 (24:53):
The entire world.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
There are only three of them in the entire state
of Ohio. Doctor Fredpeck one of them. Cosmetic dentistry is
his passion, it's his forte, it's his specialty, and he
is always, always, always keeping his office for general dentistry
and cosmetic dentistry at state of the art level for
you the benefit of his patients. Doctor Meghan Frew working

(25:15):
on her way to accreditation. She is outstanding. If you're
nervous at all about going to a dentist, you know,
you just having your normal teeth clean. Some people get
wigged out about that. That is not me. I look
forward to it. But doctor Meghan Frew mat props for
her bedside manner, if I can even call it that.
Quite a few people have gotten a touch with me
talking about how great she is. But you've got a

(25:37):
pair of wonderful dentists there for all things general dentistry
and the staff at doctor Peck's clinic are truly wonderful people.
You feel like family when you go, so relaxed, head
on in and get your teeth taken care of by
the best in the business. Doctor's Peck and Frew Morgan
online to Peckpeck Peck smiles dot com. Here's the number,

(25:57):
Please tell them, Brian said, Hi, five P one to
three six one, seventy six, sixty six, sixty two one
seventy six.

Speaker 8 (26:04):
Sixty six fifty five KRC for the Claremont County of
Veteran Service Commission.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Here's your nine first one to four k ASS. Pardon
me uh. Overcast day to day with a high fifty
four out of forty three overnight with small clouds. Tomorrow,
cloudy morning, but afternoon sun fifty eighth of the high
forty two overnight clear. Sunday is going to be a
highest sixty one with mostly cloudy skies fifty one right now,
Ready for first traffic here It comes.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
From the ucl Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (26:37):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is home to nationale
recognize paining credit cancer experts who offer personal ice care
plans and new treatments through innovative clinical trials called five
one three.

Speaker 7 (26:47):
Five eighty five UCCC A work crew slowing.

Speaker 10 (26:50):
Traffic just a bit inbound seventy four or left lanes
blocked off before seventy five, add an extra five from
Montana to the seventy five ramps chuck Ingramont fifty five krs.

Speaker 7 (27:00):
The talk station.

Speaker 8 (27:02):
Can you play John the Fisherman?

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Friday five, forty that's what we do, Joe Structor's executive
producer of this fifty five KRC morning show. He insists
on it, so we do it. You have a stack
of stupid, But I do enjoy talking with folks. If
you want to call five one three, two to three,
talk down five fifty if you have an AT and
T phone, ouz and I've into the stacker stupid Welsh.

(27:37):
The Welsh government has been advised to create a dog
or rather has been advised to create dog free spaces
in outdoor public areas after what was described as an
anti racist group claimed that the dogs were making Black
Africans feel unsafe. M the environmental group Climate Simru Bame,

(28:12):
Don't bother Looking it Up issued a report instructing the
government to create dog free areas in local green spaces
their words as part of an anti racist drive to
make the country more inclusive, backed up by the North
Wales Africa Society, which complained that quote one Black affric one,

(28:37):
can I read that word again, one singular individual? I
feel like I'm channeling chorus line. One Black African female
stated that she feels unsafe in the presence of dogs.
That during a focus group meeting. A third group called

(28:58):
Green Soul also warned the food growing groups are run
by the majority slash White British Welsh individuals and older
white people. They say, despite the fact that around ninety
percent of Wales's population is in fact white British, which
would make sense that a majority of people in that
category would run the companies considering the population make up.

(29:21):
Another focus groups responded pointed out that green spaces are
not respected in areas where there's a bigger population of
ethnic minority people, accord to the Telegraph report. Ultimately, the
Welsh government report, which will steer future policy, concludes that
people of ethnic minority background in Wales face barriers created

(29:41):
by exclusion and racism. And I guess that means a
dog in a park is somehow, in some way, shape
or form racist because well, one person doesn't like dogs.
It's in the stack of stupid folks. Let's see, it's Friday.

(30:04):
A stack of stupid often includes naked people, and so
why not naked woman spot a walking along a busy road,
this in Mexico before being struck by a car. Eighteen
year old identified by local authorities as Lose Janith, seen
walking against traffic on a multi lane road in Monterey
Saturday night. They got surveillance video, of course, showing the
young woman walking casually along Garza Sada Avenue and passing

(30:28):
vehicles or as passing vehicles slowed down. Of course, she's naked.
At one point she was seen crossing toward the median
divider in between speeding cars, almost getting hit. Woman reportedly
let go from her job at a bar following an
incident the establishment earlier in the day, subsequently stepping into

(30:50):
the left lane, then struck by the n SUV. Rushed
to a municipal hospital, where she was treated for injuries.
According to a report by local news, she was let
go from her job. I didn't say why, though here
what the hell? Young woman avoided being hit by several
vehicles before ultimately being hit by the SUV. Several news

(31:12):
outlets reported that her boyfriend had contacted her around eleven
pm to pick her up at the end of her shift,
but the phone calls went unanswered. I guess that prompted
him to look into what was going on. Let's see
what New Hampshire Gary's got this morning. Happy Friday, New
Hampshire Gary, Welcome to the show.

Speaker 3 (31:30):
Wooh hoo, there you go.

Speaker 2 (31:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
Hey, I was listening and I was like, the appointment
of Matt Gates. I'll still stick to my words. I
like a lot of what Matt Gates says. What I'm
afraid of is that the issue he'll turn it into
a grandstand about himself, which he be pretty good at doing.

Speaker 2 (31:58):
Yes, yes, he wanted to be.

Speaker 3 (32:00):
You know what I'm saying. Oh yeah, what I want
to do is move the ball down the road. I
think there are other people that could have been more.
You know, throw the bombs that you have to, but
stop making it about yourself. You know which he will do.
I guarantee it.

Speaker 2 (32:16):
Well, now you can go ahead and guarantee it if
you want, if you're doing odds, if you're laying odds,
if you want to back it up, like okay, it's
a two to one, I'll put five dollars down on that.
He doesn't do it. So we're going to find out,
and you may very well be right, but you know,
much in the same way at some point they would
shedd it Donald Trump and got him to put his

(32:37):
damn phone down and not respond to every random comment.
This has been going on for the last several years
at least, and in earnest the last year. So if
you can shut Donald Trump up and get him to
put the damn tweeter down, you might be able to
woodshd Matt Gates and say, listen, Matt, it ain't about you.
Shut up and don't make this an issue.

Speaker 7 (32:56):
And he might.

Speaker 2 (32:57):
So I'm waiting to see what find what happen.

Speaker 3 (33:00):
Well, I will tell you he's very effective. And Matt
Gates is very effective. I've watched him on testimony and
he is very effective. When he he's like a loose gun,
you know, if you point you know, whatever he points at,
he pretty much does a pretty good job decimating.

Speaker 4 (33:18):
And let's just hope that.

Speaker 3 (33:19):
That works out. But I've been in the military and
that I can tell you when the machine gets in action,
the lawsuits and everything that's coming.

Speaker 4 (33:29):
That it's going to be ugly.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
It'd be one thing if we had more control over
the Senate and the House, which we barely hold, and
that senate new Senate leader. He's not necessarily a pro
cutting business or cutting government kind of guy. But we'll see.

Speaker 2 (33:47):
You know, well, that's the job of swimming, you know,
this house house of great legislation. Maybe pairing back on government.
The Senate will have to take it up one where another.
Bills will have to be reconciled and end up on
Donald Trump's desk. Well, how the legislative process works. One
guy is not going to, you know, be responsible for
all of that. It's a multitude of people. It's just

(34:08):
like herding cats, we all know. But I think right now,
if the Republicans are smart, the inclination will be, like
I just pointed out in terms of wood shedding, people
to get people in the back room, close the door
and just yell at them until the message becomes clear.
Do not drop the ball by being that guy. Exclamation

(34:30):
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Speaker 8 (36:01):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
What's up everybody. It's Peter Schrager five ffty three with
five CARCD dogs Day saying Happy Friday, Teck Friday, Dave
Atter six thirty. Over to the phones. I go right now, Dennis,
thanks for calling this morning, and a very happy Friday
to you, sir. A happy Friday to you as well,
thanks maam.

Speaker 11 (36:21):
I one, did the Republicans sign a waiver thing that
they will be the subservient party the minute that they're
in power? Well, I would like to see Matt Gas
go in clean up the DoD give them a seven
hundred and fifty dollars UH severance package like they didna
North Carolina.

Speaker 4 (36:41):
And that's it.

Speaker 12 (36:43):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
I like that seven fifty and then just get to work.
Get to work, that's what I want. I wanted to
get to work. Yes, they may have been signing those
agreements for years and years. I mean I reflect back
on when Republicans have had the majorities UH and didn't
really seem to do anything. It's like they were's raight
of their own shadow. Democrats will just beat up on
Republicans from day one. The moment they get control, beat

(37:07):
them like a baby harp seal. Republicans will step back
woo and they get in powered. It's like, no, they
aren't as aggressive. They don't go after what they have
promised to do. Which again I'm excited about this department
of you know, government efficiency, cutting back on government. That
would be that would be delivering on a promise, maybe
looking and being the fiscal hawks that they often campaign on,

(37:30):
only to go and dip into the trough of the
taxpayer dollars like everybody else. That's why I say, get
them all in a back room, tell them to shut up,
sit down, and get something accomplished right out of the gate. Derek,
Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 13 (37:43):
Happy Friday, Yes, sir, good morning to Thomas. How are
you feeling.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
I'm feeling pretty good today. Thank you for asking.

Speaker 13 (37:51):
Yes, sir, Lacky, hear your boys real quick.

Speaker 4 (37:54):
Ah.

Speaker 7 (37:56):
Some of them are.

Speaker 13 (37:56):
Constituents, the Republicans. We know howlet said Trumpet, and he
picks certain people who he know can handle the pressure,
and some of us need to just wait. Give the
people that he put in office a chance to see
what to do. And we should know that Uncle Trump

(38:20):
don't play and if they don't do it, he will
fire them.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
So it's true, pick and quit given the.

Speaker 13 (38:30):
Democrats any more few and quit acting whining like a baby.

Speaker 2 (38:35):
Thank you, Derek.

Speaker 7 (38:36):
I'm with you.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
Let's see what happens. Let's play nicely together on the
Republican side of the ledger. You know, I'll take the independence, Libertarians, Republicans,
anyone's that joined the coalition to write the sinking ship
of government. Play along nicely and let's let it happen.
Let's not be you know, anticipate so and so is
going to do this? How do you know that we

(39:00):
don't know that. Let's see what happens. This is I'm
a popcorn out bigger than life now. I never would
have thought I'd been excited and happy about an RFK
junior being in a Trump administration. You know what, I'm
actually happy about that. You know, he he's a boat rocker.
Uh weird on a lot of levels, but then again,
so is Elon Musk. I'm excited about Elon Musk being

(39:20):
part of this, this group. Brilliant guy, goofy in many
ways disagree with him, perhaps on some things, but all
in all, I think it's a good addition to the UH,
to the administration. It reflects the diversity of the country.
More to come five fifty six at five KRC, The
Talk Station, Greg. I'll take your call if you don't
mind holding right back after the top of the UR news.

(39:44):
Your voice, your country for reasonable American fifty five KRC,
The Talk Station six six fifty five KRC, The Talks
Dation Bying, Thomas Fishing and everyone are very happy for
write a looking forward to the bottom of this hour
as I always do tech front of a Dave Hatter

(40:04):
Nord pass report the worst passwords out there, top ten
local Kentucky man stole fifty four identities. It looks like
Dell Hi police investigating scammers and again with the smart TVs,
they are spying on you. I guess this is chapter
forty seven about devices spying on you. We'll get to
Dave Hatter bottom of the hour. Brionna Morello returns Brionna

(40:24):
Morello Podcast, doing a little victory lap and talking about
some of the Trump appointments AREFK Junior of course, most
recent one named yesterday Health and Human Services Director that
should be A. I think that's a plus. We'll get
to that in a minute. Nick Smiley, I High Valley
Associated Builders and Contractors. It's a tools program event job
opportunities and get the details at seven thirty on that

(40:47):
which we'll be posted at fifty five KRECA dot com.
And then fast forward to eight thirty doctor Naomi Wolf
speaking of OURFK Junior, the Pfizer Papers Advisor's crimes against humanity.
Interesting That will be with the Doctor Doctor Wolf at

(41:07):
eight thirty five one three hundred and eighty two to
three taco A Town five fifty on AT and T phones.
And remember for five KRC dot com can't listen live,
find the podcast there. Let's see what Greg's got this morning. Greg,
thanks for calling the program, and happy Friday to you.

Speaker 14 (41:23):
Good morning, Brian, and hopefully you get rid of that call.

Speaker 4 (41:27):
Thanks faster than I did.

Speaker 2 (41:28):
Oh my god, I just I'm planning on heavy to
deal with it for weeks. I just got in the
back of my mind. It's just not gonna go away
anytime soon. So fingers crossed. It's actually better, but it's
still there. Thank you though for the well.

Speaker 14 (41:42):
Ash I got it for I can lease make it
through almost a day without coughing my head off.

Speaker 3 (41:47):
But it, like you, it's still there.

Speaker 10 (41:50):
Just in the back of it.

Speaker 2 (41:51):
Yep, yep, it's going around man.

Speaker 14 (41:55):
Anyway, because you were stating that he's a sient one,
a bunch of quirky individuals, which reminds me of when
you see the and this is going to be the
beat to death when they do all the superhero movies.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
They have all the weird characters in there.

Speaker 14 (42:14):
But somehow they managed to do the job. RFK and
Matt Gates and all the others. And I think Matthew
was staying that yesterday on backs show. Matt Gates is
going to open up every single file cabinet and throw
everything out here here, here, here, So that's that's what
I hope he does. Kirk had an idea that if

(42:37):
they don't come do a confirmation of them for the age,
that DeSantis puts them in the Senate, so they'll be
stuck with them.

Speaker 2 (42:47):
One way or the other. Well, I suppose that is
an option. Yeah, I don't think he's necessarily going anywhere.
He is a bit of a lightning rod. But and
you talk about him opening up all the files and
showing us here, here, here, here, As long as that
is being done, and I know the press will paint
him however they want, They're gonna do that anyway. But
as long as what he is doing is being done

(43:09):
in the name of benefiting the American people generally, to
show the American people the level of corruption that is
that is corrept into these various government entities. I mean,
go back to Lowis Learners, Irs. Nothing ever happened to
her in spite of the fact that she deliberately targeted
and used the IRS to go after and undermine conservative organizations.

(43:32):
That is the government being used as a weapon against
a political opposition or her political opposition. Half of America
falls into that side of the camp, that is not
the government being used to our collective best interests. So
as long as this isn't just some sort of witch hunt,
and you know, an effort to avenge Donald Trump, I

(43:53):
want it to be an effort to avenge everyone who
has been attacked by and I would argue an unconstitutional
way by any of the lettered agencies in government. Stay
above board, do it for the common good and bring
about some results. I will be happy as I can be,
whether it's Matt Gates or anybody else in that role.
But I'm willing to keep my popcorn out and my

(44:13):
powder dry and wait to see what happens before drawing
conclusions about what I believe will happen. So fingers crossed
anyway over to RFK Junior. Democratic Governor Jared Paulus actually
singing the praises of President elect Donald Trump because of
Robert F. Kennedy Junior's nomination for Department of Health and

(44:34):
Human Services secretary. How about that? And he pointed out
praising Kennedy's help in Colorado to defeat vaccine mandates back
in the COVID nineteen pandemic area era. Remember that everybody's
losing their jobs. You must get a vaccine or we're
gonna ostracize you. You must get a vaccine in order

(44:56):
to be employed. And the lawsuits are rolling in, folks.
Have you know many years, the wheels of justice do
spin slowly. But when you're in solid legal ground and
you have wonderful arguments that your religion does not allow
you to get a vaccine, and you have no there's
no constitutional right to prevent you from getting a there's

(45:18):
no constitutional or you have a constitutional right rather, Sorry
it's Friday. I'm still waking up. You have a constitutional
right to say no based upon your religion. The free
exercise size of religion must be respected by government. You
got a great argument. You say you're religious, you don't
want a vaccine, they make you get a vaccine or
fire you. You're gonna win more and more of these
lawsuits is pouring in with big million dollar plus verdicts

(45:42):
against the evil forces that were forcing you to get
something you knew in your heart of hearts was not
the right thing to do. So the governor there says
he did a great job here. He helped us defeat
the vaccine mandates. He helped us defeat vaccine mandates in
Colorado in twenty nineteen, and will help make America healthy
again by shaking up HHS and FDA, he wrote in

(46:04):
his David yesterday. He also added, and this is I
agree with the Democratic governor Californio or Colorado on this
one quote. I hope he leans into personal choice on
vaccines rather than bands, which I think are terrible, just
like mandates. What I'm most optimistic about is his taking

(46:26):
on big pharma and the corporate ag oligopoly to improve
our health HM. As for mister Trump, he announced that
he was appointing Kennedy Health and Human Services. For two
long Americans have been crushed by the industrial food complex
and drug companies who have engaged in deception, misinformation, and

(46:49):
disinformation when it comes to public health. Kennedy will restore
these agencies to the traditions of gold standard scientific research
and beacons are transparent to end the chronic disease epidemic
and make America great and healthy again. So bully for them. Now,
him being an HHS means I think I can take

(47:10):
a little bit of comfort in his appointment in that
role because presumably he'll have nothing to do at all
with climate policy, which is an area that I disagree
with Robert F. Kennedy Junior on. So there you go.
And speaking of what did I do with that one?
Oh yeah, it seems related and a whole bunch of

(47:31):
eclectic different things I at least wanted to bring up.
Now I would ask an out of my question, why
in the hell are these things on a school lunch menu? Anyway,
But in terms of writing the ship of our terrible
health in this country, I think one of the things
that moms and dads out there can do is don't
buy your kids lunchables. I see this packages. The packaging

(47:54):
alone is enough to deter me from buying it. You
got like, you know, a pound worth of platastick that
contains about four ounces where the crackers and cheese and
some processed meat. Anyway, lunchables are being removed from school
lunch menus across the United States. They were recently added
last year. They were added the National School Lunch Program. Well,

(48:16):
Kennedy has some control over the National School Lunch Program
in his role as HHS director, hopefully, but some idiots
there approved lunchables for our children to consume in school,
as if those are good for you. Anyway, they had
to pull them because the lunchabules tested positive for lead
and other harmful materials including are you ready high levels

(48:39):
of lead, cadmium, thoull eate and in fact, the version
that was created for the National School Lunch Program even
had more sodium in it than the grocery store versions
of the lunch abules. Craft Hen's public relations representative, speaking

(49:00):
with the last March with Today, said the schools will
receive a specialized recipe that incorporates more protein and whole
grains to help keep kids powered throughout the day, reduce
saturated fat and sodium, and increased serving size. And the

(49:21):
special version for the National School Lunch Program apparently also
added extra lead, academium pallate and extra sodium. So they
read flag of that one and pulled them. So don't
your kids eat that crap. It's part of a problem.
Six sixteen fifty five krst detalk station. Otor Exit probably
would get rid of the smell of a lunch able

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(50:03):
had the experience before at our house. Excuse me, just
how to do it again? I guess it was early
this week. My wife comes in with the dog and Brian,
which of the odor exit products do we use on
Liam when he's rolled in something Yep, happened again, So
wash whatever he has rolled in off and then for
me apply the Oto Exit Concentrate. All I do is

(50:26):
pour that on a rag, rub his face down and
it's gone. The smell is absolutely gone. Works like well magic,
and they do have an exit magic product. That's what
I keep to get rid of, ah the smell in
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In my car.

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Speaker 8 (51:14):
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skuys over night down to forty two, and sixty one
for the high on Sunday with mostly cloudy skies. It's
fifty one.

Speaker 4 (51:45):
Now.

Speaker 2 (51:45):
Let's hear about.

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Speaker 2 (52:22):
Six twenty one at fifty five kar as de talk
station five one three seven fifty five eight hundred eighty
two to three talks David happy, make that at least
two of us happy that it's Friday, feel free to
call another story that I wanted to get to. And
I think part of the part of the reason Trump
won so handily is a outright rejection of this entire

(52:44):
batcrap insanity of most notably within the lgbt Q litany
of letters, the tea part and men getting into little
girls bathrooms and it freaking people out, and vast majority
of people recognize there is a distinct difference between men
and wi. The men shouldn't be able to compete against
women in sports because they have a competitive advantage and
it could be dangerous to women. More and more people

(53:06):
standing up and standing and saying no, rather take a
loss than even compete against these people. And we're making
a stand. I think a lot of voters. Well, that
resonated with a lot of voters. I was encouraged to
see this development. Not sure for me, if you're if
you're if you're not sure, if you're familiar with La

(53:27):
La Chet. It's a group founded in the United States
a long time ago by a group of mothers who
wanted to change societal attitudes toward breastfeeding. So they provide literature,
research support information regarding nursing. The traditional way of feeding children. Well,
they have international chapters as well, and you go over

(53:49):
to the Lache over in Great Britain. The trustee and
public relations director there just quit because their chapter introduced
an inclusivity policy which allows men who pretend to be
women to allegedly learn how to breastfeed. Her name Marian Mayne.
She resigned this week, says she refuses to help men

(54:10):
quote perform a poor imitation of breastfeeding close quote New
York Are The Times of London reported on this corner
the report. Directors at the charity's British arm have already
requested that the Charity Commission intervene over the inclusivity policy,
which permits biological men to seek support from the organization. Again,

(54:31):
an organization for women who actually can and do breastfeed.
Her resignation on the heels of a ninety four year
old American. Marion Thompson, one of the founders of this organization,
quit last week over the charity's policy to admit men

(54:56):
and letters send to the leaders of the organization, she
described the organization as a travesty quote. The shift from
following the norms of nature, which is the core of
mothering through breastfeeding to indulging the fantasies of adults is
destroying our organization. She wrote her resignation in a resignation

(55:19):
at about bullying, lies and cruelty in recent times which
had been unreasonably hard to endure. Quote, I hope that
the wonderful work of hundreds of women is not lost
through mixing causes and politics. Now going back to that,
what was in the stack of stupid the fact that

(55:40):
there was a single African woman in Europe. I came
over which country was complaining about dogs being in parks
as somehow being racist. One woman complained about that, so
they were advancing a no dog in the park policy.
One person, Squeaky Wheel, got de grease. So this allowing

(56:02):
men into la lachet a pushed by a minority, excuse me,
hold on, see it still there by a minority of
the organization's board members in the United Kingdom. So you've
got a small group of loud, cranky, angry people who

(56:23):
defy science, logic, reason, natural biology and everything else to
add a policy allowing men to pretend to learn to
breastfeed when nothing is going to happen. I don't care
how long the child lands on that nipple. It's not
going to feed the baby, So why would you even
include them? What's the point. It's okay, a biological male

(56:45):
claiming to be a woman going in and get a
gynecologist appointment. What possible good could that do? Why would
you even make the phone call? What could a gynecologist
do for you? Nothing?

Speaker 12 (57:01):
Right?

Speaker 2 (57:02):
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Speaker 2 (58:24):
Your morning espresso starts right here. It's the Sean Hannity Morning.

Speaker 15 (58:31):
Many of the things I've been repeating is that we
have got to restore agencies and departments with their former greatness,
and the weaponization of justice has got to end in
this country. Some of the things we need to get
to the bottom of why this was allowed to happen,
and maybe hold some people accountable that abused you know,
the law, or weaponize the law by their own benefit.

Speaker 3 (58:54):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (58:54):
There's a report by Kerry Pickett today that many Republican
lawmakers won Congress to strip the security clearances of those
fifty one former US intelligence officials that claimed without knowing
a thing about Hunter Biden's very real laptop, they never
examined it, you know, was likely Russian disinformation. At the
request of wink and Tony Blinkett to the Sean Hennity

(59:17):
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Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Thanks to interest it, you'll find online at interest dot
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(01:00:47):
great heaving you on the show.

Speaker 4 (01:00:48):
Always my pleasure. Brian, happy to be here.

Speaker 2 (01:00:51):
That looks like we got some repeat topics this week.
You're back to passwords again and smart TVs. Chapter seventeen
the smart TV discussion. We'll get to that at the
tail end of the segment. Let's start with the NORD
past report. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:01:06):
Sadly, once again we see a year after year the
same bad passwords are used. And I know we've talked
about this probably almost every year for the past ten years, Brian,
You know it, people aren't speculating. Now you have these
giant data breaches and they collect that data. They go
in and they look and you know, sometimes that contains

(01:01:27):
passwords in it, which is really unfortunate and one of
the reasons why you should have a strong, unique password
for every account. If you have a password that's easily guessable,
easily crackable, or even worse, has been leaked as part
of a data breach from some system where it wasn't
secured correctly. You know, if you have that same password
on multiple accounts, like so many people do, it makes

(01:01:49):
it really easy for the bad guys to get into
your accounts. And so my long winded point is every
year they collect this data, they look at it and
they say, okay, you know, people improving in their password hygiene,
are they taking the advice from nerds like me and
you know, using strong unique passwords, and sadly, despite the
fact now of many many years of these reports going

(01:02:12):
out and people like me talking about it with people
like you, we don't seem to be making much progress here.
And as more and more things become digital, and more
and more of your sensitive data is online, more and
more of your financial information is out there, information that
could be used to cause you a lot of grief,
including straight up steel your money. It's never been more

(01:02:32):
important to take this stuff seriously. And yet, as we
see from this report, sadly, if folks just seem to
be not taking this stuff seriously. So you know, just
the summary, one two, three, four, five six is still
the most popular password, with over three million people using
it now. Again, this is just from one sample set
of data. Many different organizations will produce these reports at

(01:02:55):
the end of the year every year, and it's the
same kind of thing. Over one point five million people
chose one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight nine,
So they're really they're going to go in for the
extra security there, and I want to I want to
point out that we won't have time for it in
this segment. Every year, an organization called Hive puts out
a chart that shows you how long it would take
using readily available technology to crack a password. So, just

(01:03:21):
for somemantic's sake, you know, if I steal your password,
you know, I get it somehow, maybe it's a fake
login page and you give me your password. If I
breach your password or leak your password, usually when you
hear people say that, they're talking about some company has
a password for you stored in their systems and it
gets stolen, right, someone breaks in steals that data. Cracking

(01:03:44):
is the idea that I'm going to use a computer
and I'm just going to try to brute force it. Right,
I'm going to try to get your password by trying
lots of different permutations. So when you look at this
hive chart, they'll show you basically, the longer your password
is and the more complex your password is, the more
time it would take the brute force it to crack it. Okay,

(01:04:05):
so if you have a password that's like eighteen random characters,
according to their research and their testing, it would take
something like nineteen quadrillion years to crack that password. If
you have a password that's just all numbers like one, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
eight nine, even though that's relatively long, and the general
guidance is now anything less than eight characters is pretty

(01:04:26):
much useless. You want to shoot for twelve or more.
Even with an all numeric password like that, it does
not take that long to crack it right because the
program can test all these different permutations pretty quickly. When
you get into eighteen characters of upper lowercase, numbers, symbols,
et cetera, you know, the amount of permutations is just
mathematically insane. And remember upper case A to the computer

(01:04:50):
is different than lowercase A, So using mixed case adding
symbols numbers makes it more secure.

Speaker 2 (01:04:56):
Using AT, using the AT symbols in lieu of an
A in a word, that is one mechanism around the
standard spelling of the word, that.

Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
Is exactly right. So bottom line, you know, Unfortunately, it
seems like people either they're not getting the message or
they're not taking it seriously, as this study shows you again,
and I really seriously not exaggerating, I can't encourage people
strongly enough. Use a strong, unique password on every account.
Ideally use a password manager to manage this. It'll make
it easier, you'll be more secure. Turn on MFA multi

(01:05:29):
factuor authentication for all your accounts, especially your password manager,
and you're literally going to be exponentially more secure than
anyone that's not doing it. Now. I'm not saying you'll
be absolutely bulletproof at that point, but you will be
a much much more difficult target than the average person,
and in most cases they're just going to move on
to a softer target, as this report.

Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
Shows indeed, and we'll fast forward to next November and
you'll be doing the same thing telling them that nobody's
I hope not Brian, but probably yes someday. Well keeps
you employed, Go away. We got more to talk about
cleating local Kentucky man still fifty four identities. Get eats
on that with Dave Hatter After I mentioned twenty two three.

(01:06:09):
This Saturday tomorrow you can demo the Mantis system. It's
a dry fire or live fire training system and you
can even look online and find out about Mantis, so
you know what you're gonna get into. Tomorrow between ten
am and two pm at twenty two three on Route
forty two between Mason eleven, you can see for yourself
this Mantis live or dry fire training system. You can

(01:06:31):
dramatically improve your accuracy with pistols, rifles and shotguns. It
gives you trackable data. It also gives you, which I
think is the coolest thing, suggestions for improvement. So maybe
your trigger pull is bad or something, it'll tell you
what you should do to write the problem creative challenging drills.
They've got that built into there too. It's a really

(01:06:51):
cool gift idea. So stop by twenty two three on
Route forty two between Mason and eleven and it's a
free Mantis demo day again from ten am to two pm.
Learn more details online about the gun shop all the
Oh my god, it's the greatest place ever, and of
course the owners are fantastic, truly wonderful people. Please tell
Wendy and Jeff Brian said high when you go in

(01:07:13):
and the support staff, they are wonderful, they know everything
about what they sell. Of course, you get the demo
day this Saturday and take time to walk around and
check out the supply and what they've got there. It's
a truly wonderful gun store. To learn more, go online
at twenty two three dot com. That's the number twenty
two follot by the word three spelled out twenty two
to three dot com fifty five. The talk station Hey

(01:07:38):
Channel nine says, going an overcast day with a high
have fifty four cloudi overnight down to forty three. Starting
out cloudy tomorrow becoming the Sunday by the afternoon with
high fifty eight down to forty two overnight with clear skies,
sixty one Saturdays high with mostly cloudy skies. Right now
fifty one. Time for Chuck to Travin from.

Speaker 10 (01:07:55):
The UCL Tranthic Center of the University of Cincinnati Cancer
Center is home to nationally wrecking knife pin I had
a cancer experts who offer personalized care plans and new
treatments through innovative clinical trials called five one three five
eighty five u SEC see henbound seventy four continues to
be a slow go between North Bend and Montana. That's
what's left from the overnight work crew, but had the

(01:08:16):
left lane blocked off near Coleraine. Westbound two seventy five
is problem free this morning. Now Love one Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KAR see the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
Since forty happety back air see the talk station. A
Happy Friday, ATU interest I T dot com thanks for
sponsoring this segment, Dave Hatter and crew moving over to
a local boy apparently stole fifty four identities. What's the
backstory on this one, Dave.

Speaker 4 (01:08:44):
Yeah, this is kind of a crazy story. Apparently a
guy in Florida became a victim of identity theft through
this individual here locally, contacted law enforcement. They worked their
way back here. Apparently accounts are being opened in his
name here locally, and that got local law enforcement involved,
at the Kenton County Police in particular, and they tracked

(01:09:05):
this guy down. I think the more disturbing part though,
while this guy you know, had apparently been collecting data
and about a variety of different people. He had machines
to try to make fraudulent driver's licenses and other types
of identity documents and so forth, so he kind of
turned this into a business. This wasn't a one off thing.
I think the more disturbing thing in my mind is

(01:09:26):
it really a twofold problem, not only identity theft in general,
and why you have to care about these sorts of things,
and you know, sadly there's nothing one hundred percent concrete
you can do to completely prevent it. You can take
some steps which I'll get to in a minute. It
also speaks to the fact that spoofing and the need
to vet things has never been more important. Apparently this

(01:09:48):
guy created a business quote unquote that was supposedly going
to help people repair their credit score. So you go online,
you do a search, this guy comes up, and next
thing you know, you're working with his what you think
is legitimate company. You're providing information which he's then using
to defraud you. And my point is we've talked about

(01:10:12):
this before. There's this whole idea of search engine poisoning,
and I'm not sure that's exactly what happened here, but
it's important for people to remember that just because you
go in line and do a search on any search engine,
I won't mention the one I like the least. I
think we know who that is. Brian Google. Let's yeah,
let's just say you start page reduct dot Go or whatever,
Google being whatever. When you do a search and some

(01:10:34):
something comes up, some business. Let's say you're interested in
trying to fix your credit score or whatever it is.
You can't just assume that because it showed up in
a search engine, it's legit. You know, the volume that
these organizations are dealing with. Makes it well beyond you know,
anyone can go set up a new website tomorrow and
you know, have some sort of nefarious intent for that.

(01:10:55):
There's no way for Google or Microsoft or anyone else
to know that there's ill intent behind that unless it's
like trying to download malware or something, right. I mean,
if it looks real and you're going to get essentially
conned by using it, it's going to take a while
for that information to get out there. So my point
is just because you find something online, even through a

(01:11:16):
legitimate site like a Google search engine or a jobs
website or something, you can't just assume that people behind
it are legit. You know, you need to vet that thoroughly,
especially before you would go down a rabbit hole of
something like trying to repair your credit or fix your
identity theft problem or something. And I think that's one
of the interesting angles in this as it appears that he,

(01:11:38):
you know, created a front and was using that to
collect people's information. I don't really understand how this guy
thought this would be a good long term plan and
he would get away with it, Because if I use
your quote business to fix my credit and next thing.
You know, I have a whole lot more problems. You know,
eventually people are going to connect the dots back to you. Yeah,

(01:11:59):
like did here apparently.

Speaker 2 (01:12:01):
Well, it's like drug dealers selling fentanyl that kills people.
I haven't understood that business model either, Dave, But yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:12:06):
I don't either. If you kill your customers, you're eventually
going to run out of customers. I'm with you. That
doesn't make sense to me either. But you know, adentity
theft continues to be a big problem. This is just
one small example of an interesting way this guy was
defrauding people. You know, so much of it, though, happens
because a company like mc square or National Public Data

(01:12:27):
background check companies have your data stolen or leaked from them.
The bad guys have it, and then you know whether
whether they have fraudulent driver's licenses they're creating with machines
like this guy apparently was, where they're just using your
information to send up new accounts and see what they
can get. You know, it continues to be a huge problem,
and there's really only a few things you can do

(01:12:48):
to try to mitigate that risk. A you know, the
less information you put out there about yourself the better,
although that's harder and harder to do and are increasingly
digital world, right be monitor your accounts, you know, I suggest,
especially if you've gotten a letter from someone that says
you've been breached, you know, I suggest that you sign
up for the free credit monitoring. I think it's worth

(01:13:08):
it for most people in today's world to go ahead
and sign up for that, even if it's not free,
because yes, you can monitor your own accounts and do
all the stuff that they purported to do for you,
but you can't do it at scale like they can.
Are you going to have the discipline to check it
regularly like they will, so, you.

Speaker 2 (01:13:25):
Know, and it will usually come with several million dollars
worth of worth of identity protection in terms of paying
for legal resources and a lot of the additional expenses
that are required to unring the bell of having your
data stolen.

Speaker 4 (01:13:40):
And that's one of the most important points, Brian, because
if and when it does happen, trying to unwind it. Thankfully,
it hasn't happened to me, but I know some people
it has happened to super painful, super difficult, super time consuming,
you know, kind of a traumatic experience form to your point,
you're generally going to have attorneys and experts baked into
your agreement with this company who can help you undo

(01:14:01):
the damage that's been done. So you know, ideally you're
going to catch it quickly before any real damage is done.
But if they do do it, you're able to leverage
their experts to help you unwind it a lot less
with a lot less pain than if you try and
do it on your own. So folks should look into
that and be careful out there.

Speaker 2 (01:14:20):
And get in touch with Experience and your other credit
agencies and freeze your credit. Yes, easy aboard that it's free,
It don't cost nothing. Hold on, we're going to talk
about smart TVs again, repeat of a very important topic
next one more Day've had our tech Friday stick around,
and I want to mention foreign Exchange because I love
the folks at Foreign Exchange who have saved me probably

(01:14:42):
thousands of dollars. I wish I had an actual exact
number to know, because I know it's substantial because foreign
exchange services all traditionally manufactured Asian and European cars, but
they don't charge as much as a dealer. That's the
ultimate point of foreign Exchange's existence, great mechanics, wonderful folks,
their ASE certified factory train, they know what they're doing,

(01:15:04):
They have your manufacturer's technical information. They can fix your car.
They have the software upgrades and all that kind of
stuff for the modern equipment or modern cars. And they
do it for less. My oil change, great illustrations save
about two hundred dollars maybe a little more every time
I have my car's oil change. But they also now
are Tesla service or repair folks. Yes, they've all been

(01:15:26):
through the training to service your Tesla automobiles. So don't
give them money to Elon Musk. You have it done
for less at Foreign Exchange Austin, and the crew will
take great care of you. I assure you of that
BOSH certified business. They are Tylersville exit off of seventy
five East. On Tylersville two streets, you'll see Kingland Drive.
Just turn right on Kingland Drive you run right into

(01:15:47):
Foreign ex Chain. Tom Brian said hi when you do,
and please tell them I said hi when you call
them for an apployment. Five one three six four four
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the letter X dot com fifty five KRC dot com.

Speaker 7 (01:16:04):
Don Junior here, guys, are you receiving letters from.

Speaker 2 (01:16:06):
Their CD talk station? By Thomas speaking with Dave Hatter
from interest It. Thanks for sponsoring to segment, Dave, interest
it dot com for Dave and the team and smart TVs.
Last time I had a conversation it might have been
just last week about smart TV spying. Honest, Dave went
home and look because our television or our living room
is just belly up. It's like twelve years old and

(01:16:28):
it's not smart. And my wife doesn't want to get
a smart TV in the either do Why so I
look for dumb TVs. They actually sell like six of
them on Amazon. You can still find a dumb TV,
although they've always been described as the lower quality versions.
They're not as popular as the smart ones, so they
don't make as many of them because there's not a
big demand out there. But you could do a monitor

(01:16:49):
and hook your computer up to it to a monitor
and have it that way. That would provide you greater protection, would.

Speaker 7 (01:16:55):
It not, Dave?

Speaker 4 (01:16:56):
Yeah, you know there's there's some options, Brian, but all
the options and create friction, and it's really at the
end of the day, it's a question of how widely
distributed do you want your data? And the reason why
I say that is if you buy a dumb TV
or you buy a computer a large computer monitor. I mean,
you know, now you can get super high quality computer

(01:17:16):
monitors that are rather large for not that much money.
I mean, it's probably still going to be more expensive
than your average TV.

Speaker 2 (01:17:24):
That's because the TVs are soaking up data and they
get paid for that. That's why they're less money.

Speaker 4 (01:17:29):
That's exactly right, Brian. They're offsetting the cost of manufacture
these case to you because they want your data, right,
It's worth it to them to almost give you these
things because the long term value is all of the
data that they're sucking up from you over time. You know,
it's not just it's not just a one time thing either, Right,
you pay some nominal fee, you get this thing, and

(01:17:51):
then for the next two or three years they're sucking
up enormous amounts of data from you, assuming that it's connected.
So you're back to your monitor idea. You know, really,
if you use a streaming service, they're going to collect
that data. If you're your Internet service provider, unless you
have a VPN, probably collecting all of that data. Now
what are they doing with it? Who knows? But these

(01:18:12):
TV companies, you know, it's really if you went out
tomorrow and you bought let's say, a new smart TV,
and then you plug in all these different streaming services
to it, it gets connected to your Internet service provider.
There's at least three different sources there that's sucking up
all that data right that the TV people are collecting it,
the streaming services are collecting it. So you know, it
may be that you know, Amazon Streaming or Netflix or

(01:18:35):
whatever can only collect their data, but the TV people
are getting whatever you're watching on there, as are your
Internet service providers. So if you go your route of
I get a monitor and I hook up a computer
to it, you know, if you're going to stream Netflix
or something through the computer, which you could do, you know, Netflix.
I'm just trying to be clear to people that just
because you don't have a smart TV doesn't mean people

(01:18:57):
aren't collecting your viewing habits. If you're watching Netflix and
these streaming services, they clearly are.

Speaker 2 (01:19:02):
Of course, That's how they identify movies they think you'll like.
And make suggestions. You can get around that, and that's
one of the things.

Speaker 4 (01:19:08):
You know, I'm not saying this is always bad, right,
Some of the benefit of your data being collected as
they can personalized services for you. You nailed it right
on the head there. If you watch certain types of
shows over time on Netflix or Amazon or whatever, they
know that's what you like and they can send you
more of that type of content. You know. The issue

(01:19:29):
for me is do I really want the TV people?
Do I really want anyone knowing every second what I'm
watching and you know, potentially through a microphone or camera
in the device, how I'm feeling about it and so forth.

Speaker 2 (01:19:40):
And yeah, that's the other component that's creepy is that
cvs have the cameras and the microphones that are listening
actively so and that really really bothers me.

Speaker 4 (01:19:51):
Yeah, it's it's really pretty insane when you get right
down to it, the capability for surveilling you. And again
I'll go back, so I'm not saying it's all nefarious,
but what I am saying is most people don't understand
how much of their data is potentially collected, how much
surveillance they're under. What's happening with their data, and you know,

(01:20:11):
to kind of tie up a loose end here. Recently
most people have at least heard that the twenty three
and meters the DNA people are on the version of
one out of business. Because once you do a DNA
test once, what do you need another one for? Okay,
that is incredibly sensitive data. You can't get a new
DNA if they go out of business, what happens to
your data? And would I would make that same argument.
Maybe you don't care that Visio or LG or whomever

(01:20:34):
is collecting your viewing habits, but who are they selling
it to if they go out of business? Who might
have it that might do something completely different with it
and something that you wouldn't like. So my point is always,
to the extent you can, you should try to choke
off this data to as many sources as possible and
understand what you're signing up for. And if you go
into it with eyes wide open and you say I

(01:20:55):
don't care about any of this whatever, and you understand
the terms of service all right, ever, but most people
don't understand this stuff. And that's that's the rub for me.
You know, you don't really understand how your data is
being collected, what they're doing with it, who has access
to it, what's the potential long term consequences of that
company going out of business? So yeah, less surveillance is

(01:21:15):
always better. You know, you can buy a smart TV
and not connected to the internet. You can buy a
dumb TV. You could use a monitor with a computer
and at least and with a VPN, and then only
each individual streaming service would know whatever it is you're
watching exactly. I know this probably sounds kind of kooky
and paranoid to people, but there are some options to
reduce the flow of data to these people. It just

(01:21:37):
you've got to think about it and you know, take
some additional steps.

Speaker 2 (01:21:39):
And now I'm one of the people that really in
the final on olysis, I don't care if you know
what I'm watching who He's asked me. I'll tell you
what I'm watching. But it's a matter of principle for
me that I don't want the day. I want as
little data if collected, as possible. That's why I pay
cash for virtually everything throughout the week. I don't know,
don't use my credit card. Then now there's one more option.
I want to throw it at you may consider thinking

(01:22:00):
or talking about this. Is it a viable option? Is
a worthwhile option because it's very inexpensive. A raspberry pie
hole network ad blocking mechanism that you can put in
between your smart TV and your router that prevents the
ads from going back and forth.

Speaker 4 (01:22:16):
Yeah, I mean anything like that. You're having a more advanced,
like an enterprise grade router that will have more filtering
capability using solutions like that. I mean again, there are
ways to reduce the flow of data that you're giving
up and reduce the amount of ads you get and
all that sort of thing, but it typically requires a
higher level of technical skill, adds a lot of friction

(01:22:39):
into the mix. You know, you got to have a
nerdy friend like me to even know about these things,
much less try to set it up.

Speaker 2 (01:22:44):
Well, I got a nerdy sun, So you know, Jerry
is willing to turn me onto that as a solution.
So he's going to be responsible for the living room
television replacement project, which will involve something perhaps a little
more complex. But I do it in the name of
just making a stand about what you're talking about. Dave
Hatter intrust dot com. As you find Dave and the crew.

(01:23:04):
If you've got a business you need Dave and his
crew best practices at minimum, he'll teach him man, he'll
get you out of trouble if you can find yourself
in trouble. Dave, thank you for sponsoring the segment. Best
of the health you and the crew at Interest I
T I look forward to next Friday in another edition,
and have a great weekend.

Speaker 4 (01:23:19):
Brother, Always my pleasure. Brian, I'll talk to you next week.

Speaker 2 (01:23:23):
Thanks, looking forward to it. Briona Morello, Biona Morello Podcast.
She'll join the program after the news. We're doing a
victory lab and get her thoughts on the appointments. Nick
Smiley from the Ohio Valley Association of Builders and Contractors
at seven thirty. I'll be right back your voice.

Speaker 16 (01:23:38):
Thank you for taking me call your country.

Speaker 17 (01:23:40):
Thanks refreshing here every day.

Speaker 2 (01:23:42):
Fifty five krs the talk station seven oh six at
fifty five gar CD Talk Station. Brian Timins wishing everyone
a very very happy Friday and enjoyable experience every time

(01:24:06):
she's on the fifty five Casey Morning Show. Welcome back
host of the Brionna Morello Show. Brionna Morello, It's good
to have you on here. In the Morning show this Friday.

Speaker 4 (01:24:14):
Welcome back, Good morning, Brian.

Speaker 17 (01:24:17):
Yes, thank you for having me.

Speaker 2 (01:24:18):
Oh it's always a pleasure talking with you, and appreciate
your podcast. I recommend my listeners follow you. Just go
to Brionnmorella dot com. You can find her on Twitter
and Rumble on YouTube and truth and everywhere there is
social media. And one of the greatest things about it
is your background in your start in all of this.
You quit Fox News over the COVID vaccine mandate, so

(01:24:39):
I imagine you're probably pretty happy with Trump naming RFK
Junior as the Health and Human Service Secretary Or have
I read the tea leaves incorrectly, Brianna, No, you got
it right.

Speaker 17 (01:24:50):
And you know the best part about it is it's
picking off all the right people. So I approve of
this one.

Speaker 9 (01:24:56):
Listen.

Speaker 17 (01:24:56):
I mean, we've been calling on this for quite some time,
wied to the American people throughout the years, and I
think they've lost the trust and at this point you
need someone that you can trust.

Speaker 12 (01:25:08):
Now.

Speaker 17 (01:25:08):
RFK has done a great job of pushing back and
trying to push for the truth, and a lot of
people just can't handle that. You know, we're watching as
other media outlets, the liberal corporate media outlets are infuriated
by this appointment. But that's just means you got it right.
That just means the people who just money from HHS
the media outlets, because we know they did, based on
a FOIA request during the pandemic to push the vaccines.

(01:25:32):
Pretty much every major media outlet in the United States,
corporate wise, of these young cable news took money from
the bidying and Administration HHS to push the jabs, and
obviously that's contradicting, that's unacceptable, especially on ethical but they
all so, including Fox, and it's all available in a
FOYA request, so we know that it's true. It just

(01:25:53):
goes to show that these agencies need to be corrected
because when they're buying off the media, you've got a
big issue.

Speaker 2 (01:26:01):
I would say that sums it up quite well. The
other component of this that I've never understood it the
world became this giant sort of clinical trial under the
Emergency Use authorization that they provided to these vaccine manufacturers
for just the COVID nineteen vaccine. It was like it
wasn't there one day, and the next day it's there,
and they're under an EUA, which frees them of all

(01:26:23):
potential liability for a product that might harm you. And
then we were all told we must take it, or
must get this vaccine, or well, like you run the
risk of losing the job. And now we're finding out, well, whoa,
there are quite a few parent downside risks for this,
for this vaccine, we're all stuck with it. You can't

(01:26:43):
unring the bell again in a vaccine.

Speaker 17 (01:26:46):
Yeah, yeah, memory the old women who were pregnant that
it was safe, and then it turned out they actually
did not know. They didn't have any data on that. Right,
that statements for ALCI that that should that's give you
a lifetime presence did at this point, the fact that
you a lot of the American people and tell them
such nonsense should land you in prison. It's enraging because

(01:27:08):
you know, there's a couple I mean, okay, so everyone's
always like, oh, let's look at the vera's report and
the verre's what happened in your vaccine injured? The hospitals
fail out or report on that. But the reality of
it is is a lot of these doctors are just
so afraid of Big Farma and the monster that it's
become that they don't fill out these forms. And I
know someone very close to me who had two seizures,
actually four seizures immediately after getting the vaccine, and the

(01:27:31):
problem with that is he turned to and whichs been hours,
so it was very obvious that that's what caused it.
And the problem is that the hospital refused to fail
out avanage report. So this isn't like a single case
where the hospitals are refusing to fill out these reports
because they don't want to report vaccine injuries. This has
been happening all across the country now for the last
couple of years. So we don't know how many Americans

(01:27:54):
are injured by these vaccines. In fact, I think the
last we saw there was over a million cases of
vaccine and it's probably triple at that point because so
many doctors and this is a problem with the machine,
So many doctors are afraid to come out and say
you've been injured by the vaccine. There's a couple of
brave ones who have been very sharp and on board
the entire time throughout the pandemic, but again, there hasn't

(01:28:16):
been There hasn't been enough, and sadly, so many Americans
have paid the ultimate price for that. So many Americans,
you know, are having issues having children.

Speaker 7 (01:28:26):
Now because of all of this.

Speaker 17 (01:28:27):
I mean, if you recall Brian during the pandemic Facebook Instagram.

Speaker 4 (01:28:31):
If you're a.

Speaker 17 (01:28:32):
Woman and you missed your mentoral cycle or you were
having issues with your mental cycle, and you post that
about that after getting the vaccine, you were banned, that
posts were moved, and then now we're hearing that, oh yeah,
there actually is issues with that. So it's just it's
in furying. This is a big monster that needs to
be taken down, and maybe the American people could trust
HHS and all these other three letter agencies when you've

(01:28:54):
put people like RFK Junior in charge.

Speaker 2 (01:28:56):
Yeah, he's a quirky guy and all admit that. I
don't agree with him across the board, but at least
in HHS he's not going to have control over much
control anyway over environmental policy, which I would disagree with
RFK Junior on a lot of levels. So I like
that one. I like that he's outside of the box.
He's not a traditional Republican. Of course, he ran previously

(01:29:18):
as a Democrat, so this is sort of an interesting
open cabinet which allows me to pivot over to the
favorite couple of people that I'm looking for to seeing
them actually get some great work done. Viva Gramma swimming
and Elon Musk in this government efficiency department which isn't
even really an apartment. And I just by way a background,
I have Judge of Paulatano on my program every Wednesday

(01:29:40):
at A thirty and I mentioned at the outset how
excited I was about an actual area that would be
just designed to cut back on the fraud, waste and
abuse in government, the bloat, the overlapping, the redundancy. And
he's like, well, it's just one more of these the
administration agencies that doesn't exist, not constitution. It's going to
have to be funded and blah bl And they said,

(01:30:00):
well wait a second. Now, you could just park VW
and Elon in a room that already is unused in
government we're paying for anyway, they could sit down and
go through the books and start cutting things and just
offer a solution here. It's like the Heritage Foundation putting
together the twenty twenty five stuff. They didn't nobody asked
for it. They put it together and offered it up
outside of government with no charge of the taxpayer as

(01:30:23):
solutions for some of the problems we face. That's what
this sounds like it's going to be. They're asking for
volunteers with business experience to sit down for free and
do this hard work. I think they're going to get
a lot of people to do that.

Speaker 17 (01:30:39):
Yeah, well, I'll give you a little little fun nugget here.
I was actually just at Marloga last night and so
with Elon Musk, and Elon Musk here has been here
for quite some time, so I'm pretty sure he's been
working very, very hard on all of this. These are
the kind of people you want in charge. These are
the kind of people that you want to do this.
And he did a great thing with Twitter. When he
came into purchase Twitter, he quickly had it with eighty

(01:30:59):
percent of the staff fire them and Twitter's never run
more smoothly and it's profitable now, like we're all making
money off of Twitter. So I'm extremely confident that they
could get the job done. I just think it's really
annoying to sit here to launch the reports if people
are trying to in the corporate world, trying to get credit.
Elon Lesk and Vivek, I think it's going to be

(01:31:20):
great service to the American people. You know, our government
has grown too large and it needs to be shrunk.
You know, if you look at the job support on
Area Biden, a lot of the jobs that have been
created our federal jobs. The government has created these jobs,
and so it's not even a real you're not getting
a real sense of how our economy has grown over
the years. You're literally just getting a sense of how
our government has grown over the years. And I think

(01:31:42):
that's the scariest part in all of this. You know,
most people, I don't know if you saw the video
after hercie Kleine in North Carolina. I believe it was
border patrol. It might have been. It was definitely one
of the energies of their dahs.

Speaker 2 (01:31:56):
But they had like a.

Speaker 17 (01:31:57):
Line of like twenty employees, fifteen twenty employees passing a log,
handing down a log, and then they're sending or saying
that this is their rescue efforts, and.

Speaker 18 (01:32:05):
It's one log that's being just passed to a bunch
of people down the line to go throw it away,
and it just it totally wraps what our issue with
all of this is.

Speaker 17 (01:32:16):
It's the fact that most federal employees, not all, but
most of the federal employees are actually just useless and
you don't need them. And I think, you musk, it's
going to do a great job approving just that those
who are going to keep their job, they're going to
work a little bit harder to keep their job. And
there's nothing wrong with that, you know, and especially the
younger generation. I'm not that old when I say this,
but the younger generation is extremely leafy. Anybody wh've hired

(01:32:38):
anyone who is under the age of thirty, that's the
first thing I doic because they don't have a work ethic.
So you know, let's make Americans work for their jobs.
That would be great.

Speaker 2 (01:32:47):
That's always been my experience. I'm fifty nine, I'll be
happy to admit, and you always had the work hard
or you know, as a lawyer when I was practicing
law of law firm they let you go. So you know,
that's just the reality of look long hours and hard
work and it ultimately pays off. Now one of the
more lightning rods, I guess criticism seems to become a

(01:33:08):
little bit bipartisan criticism. Of course, we can expect the
Democrats and criticize literally anybody who Trump wants in the
cabinet of the administration, but Matt gets as the attorney
General seems to be drawing the most scrutiny. What's your
reaction to that one. I'm going to take away and
see approach. I don't know what he's going to do.
Some people are guessing this is what he's going to do,
and I'm like, how do you know that? What do
you think, Brianna?

Speaker 17 (01:33:31):
Yeah, well, I think that there's a lot of rumors
going around about Matt Gates, and I think that if
Matt Gates was the person at the court of media
trying to frame them out to be right now, if
there was any type of criminal behavior in his past,
given the fact that the Biden regime would probably prosecute
him for jaywalking just because he's conservative, oh right, I

(01:33:51):
think they would have charged him. So I don't think
he has any legitimacy a lot of those things. I've
also spoken in former staffers and may say that he's
a great personal work with and they burn with for years,
and so they don't believe any of this stuff either.
But when it comes to being confirmed, it might be
a little bit of an upheld battle. But you know,
this is why the Department of Injustice does these things, right.

(01:34:12):
They want to stop people like Congress and mckaye from
becoming as big as he can become, from being able
to take them down. And so that's that's kind of
my issue with all of this. I think that number one,
you don't really have evicting to come forward. I know
that they said that there was somebody testified hut of Congress,
but again, I just don't you could if you one thing,

(01:34:34):
if they went immediately after and reported something. But I
always think a lot of things are politically motivated at
this point, given the fact that we've seen it time
and time again. So I'm always heaven ten. I think
Congress of Macache will make a great age. He's scaring
all the right people. I mean, there's always reports with
people at the DJ The individuals over there are like
resigning over the fact that they even say that he's

(01:34:55):
going to be able to make his way in. So
that's usually a really good signor you need someone to
the back from the agenda and.

Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
It's good, all right. Well, let's just it's looking just
at the Republican side of the Ledger do you I'm
hoping the answer is no, that they're all going to
get in the back room. Everybody's going to tell everybody
just shut up and play nicely together. But do you
expect to have much out loud in fighting, you know,
reflected in the media of the news, or are there
going to be a bunch of Republican naysayers or obstructionists

(01:35:22):
drawing lines in the sand or do you think we've
we've entered a different era now?

Speaker 17 (01:35:27):
Yeah, I think there's going to be those individuals who
are going to try to stir up controversy and they'll
be in the media and they'll be the leftovers of
at Someone's not fire, but they don't agree with the
President Trump's agenda, that they might start leaking. But I mean,
from what everyone everyone last night looked like they were
having a great time. And there's a lot of people
who are essentially going to be named the Trump administration

(01:35:48):
who were at the event that I was at last night.
There was a bunch of people who have been named,
and so everyone seems very very friendly, very very happy,
and very very enthusiastic. So I don't think internally that
the pro maggot folks will be the ones to cause
the issues. It's going to be everyone else, and you
got to purge them out. Anyone likely anyone who complies
with a vaccine mandate, it's usually your first set that

(01:36:10):
they might not agree with the Trump agenda, especially they're
an aggs. So I don't know, I would have to.
I think you have to really do a great job
at purging a lot of these employees. You know, the
XBI pointed a lot of Trump haters throughout their field
offices at the highest levels, and you got to you
got to figure out who they are, and you got
it's awesome. They can't have high positions because they are
politically biased and they won't carry out the agenda. You know,

(01:36:33):
the SBI is no longer a police force for the regime,
and that needs to be a clear message sense.

Speaker 2 (01:36:38):
So moving away just talking generally about the outcome of
the election, I imagine rather euphoric feeling at mar Lago
among those that you were interacting with, feeling of praps
enjoying a little shod in freude. Were they.

Speaker 17 (01:36:53):
Well, you know, I think everyone kind of liked the feeling,
like they knew they were going to win. It was
just a matter of one when they going to find out,
and I think most people that I've spoken with, and
I'm even me too, I thought we're gonna find it
like a couple of days later. We're very surprised that
we shout out as quickly as we found out. And
so I think that's kind of.

Speaker 2 (01:37:12):
The thing behind that.

Speaker 17 (01:37:13):
I mean, the fact that he got the Senate, I
think got the House too. I mean that is pretty.

Speaker 2 (01:37:19):
Impressive, and popular vote by almost five million. Oh yeah,
and that I really truly believe that Brianna was the
most fundamentally important thing about the election is that it
really knocked the wind out of the sales of all
the far left Antifa type groups who otherwise would have
been screaming about we need to get rid of the
electoral College. Sorry sucks to be you, that's not happening.

Speaker 17 (01:37:43):
I know that they always mentioned that part, and I'm
very excited that, you know, it doesn't work out what
I'm when it done. So yeah, I mean, it's incredible
that he was able to win a popular vote. If
you look at the map and the entire country is
practically read at this point, you know, America's defind up
with the Wolk agenda, and we're done with all of this.
We don't want to keep getting all this done our throats.
We want to live in a normal society. And I

(01:38:03):
think Americans have spoken up on every half. It's incredible.

Speaker 2 (01:38:07):
Yes, it's a reflection that, yeah, we do know what
normal is and the what the Biden administration, Harris administration
would have been offering not normal. Off that path, Brianna Morella,
you are always welcome on a fifty five CARC morning show.
We'll be listening to your podcast Brionnamarella dot com. You
can find her literally everywhere. I encourage you to do that, Brian.
Until we get to talk again, I hope. I wish

(01:38:27):
you the best of health. Have a wonderful weekend you
as well.

Speaker 17 (01:38:31):
Thank you, Brian.

Speaker 2 (01:38:32):
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turn Sunday by afternoon fifty eight for the high down

(01:39:58):
to forty two overnight clear sky and a mostly cloudy
Sunday for game day high at sixty one fifty one degrees.
Right now, traffic time chucks.

Speaker 7 (01:40:07):
From the uc Traffics Center.

Speaker 10 (01:40:09):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is home to nationally
recognized paying credit cancer experts who offer personal lives, care plans,
and new treatments through innovative clinical trials called five one, three,
five to eighty five UCCEC southbound seventy five. That's a
bit of a slow go out of Baklan. Then they
just cleared an accident on southbound seventy five at seventh

(01:40:31):
northbound four to seventy one. Slows just a bit coming
across the bridge. Chuck Ingramot fifty five KRC ain't talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:40:39):
At seven thirty. Here fifty five CARCD talk station. Happy Friday.
My pattern observer friend Maureen in Florida is looking forward
to eight thirty. We're going to have doctor Naomi Wolf
with the book of the Pfizer papers, Crimes against Humanity
on the heels of our discussion about RFKA Junior over
at HHS. In the meantime, the return of the associated
builders and contractors. Welcome to the fifty five Krsey Morning Show,

(01:41:02):
Nick Smiley to talk about the Tools Program. Good to
have you on today, Nick, Happy Friday.

Speaker 19 (01:41:07):
Good morning, Brian, Happy Friday of you. Thanks for having
me on again. Always a pleasure to be here with you.

Speaker 2 (01:41:12):
I love the whole concept of what you're doing, getting
young people away from the idea they need to get
a four year degree in college, waste a lot of
time contemplating their navel and taking stupid classes like music appreciation.
Why well, because you needed to get a degree, you
can get a degree, and that you can get a
trades training, work while you learn, make money while you

(01:41:34):
are learning as an apprentice, and then off you go
to a journeyman level and maybe even going off to
start your own business. This is the Tools Program.

Speaker 19 (01:41:43):
You said it, Brian. The key nowadays is letting people
know that right now, careers are available. We can get
you out there. We've got a lot of students. I'll
tell you the influx this year is electricians. I'm not
sure what's in the water we're drinking, but everybody wants
to be an electrician, which is great because we need that.
But as we progress through this school year, we've already
started taking scholarship applications, So big things happening in the program,

(01:42:07):
all positive, making sure that our students have the resources
they need to get transferred from high school directly and
in the skilled trades industry.

Speaker 2 (01:42:13):
Well, I can see why electricians would be in high demand.
Of course, we're reworking the entire grid, we're expanding it.
Anytime you get a severe weather event, they call electricians
from all over the country to show up to fix
you know, high power lines and regular lines, and that
just is an endless supply of work. Not to mention
you know, new construction type work as well as you know,

(01:42:34):
like my friends had calling electric do just resid regular
residential electric. It's just it's an unlimited supply of opportunity there.

Speaker 19 (01:42:42):
That's the truth.

Speaker 3 (01:42:43):
Right now.

Speaker 19 (01:42:44):
Statistics say that we're about a five hundred and eighty
thousand short in terms of our workforce for our pipeline.
So if you can imagine somebody highering four or five
people a year, they're probably looking to hire six or seven.
That's just more opportunities. All of these students are taking
advantage of that. They're seeing the potential. Like you said,
become a journeyman just three to four years out of school.

(01:43:05):
I like to tell them all, by that time, you'll
be able to buy a house and to buy your car.
And when I say your car, I don't mean a car,
right what we can afford when you go to the dealership.
It's the car you want to.

Speaker 2 (01:43:15):
That point, good sale job on that one. We're talking carbonry, craft, labor, electrical, HVAC,
pipe fitting, plumbing, roofing, sheet metal and actually sprinkler fitters
on there as a separate category as well. Now where
I know there are listeners, because there always are listeners
that are following over with you. What was the name
of that website? What was the name of the program?

Speaker 4 (01:43:36):
You know?

Speaker 2 (01:43:37):
I got my son doesn't want to go to college.
He's eighteen years old and he thinks the trades might
be a great way to go. Or you got someone
out listening audience who's thirty five years old is interested
in maybe pursuing a career in the trades. It's never
too late, right, Where do they go and how do
they makeform? Yeah? Where they go and how do they
get the information before we starting about it? Before we
start talking about the fundraiser.

Speaker 19 (01:43:57):
So two places you can go to toolsprogram dot org
our websit. It is up and running. That gives you
the ability to reach directly.

Speaker 4 (01:44:03):
Out to me.

Speaker 19 (01:44:04):
But I'm not afraid. Nick at OVABC dot org is
my email. If there's a parent out there right now
that's got a student in high school that's looking for
a little help getting them transitioned, or you're just looking
for some resources to help them out, they can apply
for our scholarship program. Feel free to reach out to
me directly.

Speaker 2 (01:44:21):
Now, does the Ohio Valley Associated Builders and Contractors work
with high schools that don't have trade programs to try
to get them to implement trade programs? Because I know
that's something that we moved away from. It was always available,
like Diamond Oaks, Scarlett Oaks, you had an option when
you were in high school to pursue the trades as
opposed to that college education focused education. But not everybody

(01:44:43):
has that available to them. I guess that's still the case,
but they're becoming more and more popular and in vogue.
So do you do that type of work with high
school We do.

Speaker 19 (01:44:54):
Ohio Value Construction Education Foundation is our educational wing here
at ABC, and so the main focus with that is
we also have we use the ncc R curriculum, which
is a nationally recognized credential, so we do help students
well schools directly, I should say, offer those programs to
their students. And one thing that we have seen Brian
in the past, you know, five years going on our

(01:45:15):
six school year of the program being in effect is
shot class is coming back good, and we are seeing
more high schools that are offering something like that because
we have a lot of students. And you talked about
it when you talk about the Oaks and you talk
about trade schools. The Tools program is now in over
forty schools stretching from Van Wert down in northern Kentucky.
Our footprint is quite large in this region. And what

(01:45:36):
we're seeing is is we have all the trade schools
already participating and majority of the schools we actually have
our high schools who are looking for something for those
students who didn't get picked for the trade schools because
they can only take so many students.

Speaker 2 (01:45:49):
As you know, excellent, excellent, excellent. I'm gonna pause because
I know you have this Tools Program foundation fundraiser. It's
the main event. Got details on that in the A
pause from because a out of time. In this segment,
we'll be back with Nick Smiley to talk about that
associated builders and contractors and my listeners. You know you
will know because I'm telling you now and I'm asking
Joe to do it at the same time. Put the

(01:46:10):
link to the tools program on my blog page fifty
five KRC dot com along with the other information. Thank
you Joe's tracker. And speaking of the trades I mentioned roofing,
fast and pro roofing, I'll tell you what, these are
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What they do custom copper and metal work they do
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at first they're honest. You don't get that in the
roofing business very often. I say that with they did
with a frown, because it's a sad thing that there

(01:46:51):
are people out there that purport to be you know,
honest tradesmen. They just want to rip you off and
get money from your pocket. That's never the case with
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They'll be happy to do that inspection and the price
will be right, and of course the work is beautiful.

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Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:48:36):
In this week's Marketers Report, Jane and I and tells
us this is going to be an overcast day going
up to fifty four degrees, so it'll be cloudy over night.
Forty three for a low I have fifty eight tomorrow
start off cloudy and becomes sunny later in the day.
Clear skys over night down to forty two and mostly
cloudy day Sunday with the highest sixty one fifty one degrees.

(01:48:56):
Now time for chuck with traffic from the uc.

Speaker 10 (01:48:59):
Up Anthons Center, the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center right,
it's home to nationally recognize pink credit cancer experts who
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Speaker 7 (01:49:27):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:49:31):
Seven forty Here fifty five KRC DE talk station Brian
Thomas with Nick Smiley from the Associated Builders and Contractors
talking about the tools program. We're gonna get to the fundraiser,
but mix so you know you're not alone, and you
are right. I got an echoing your sentiment about the
trades and the need for more folks in the trades.
One of my listeners, Jeff who's with a machine tool company,

(01:49:51):
mark on. He said, absolutely, we desperately need more young
people in the trades, especially if we're going to rebuild
the United States as President Trump wants to. So there's
one guy in the machine tool trades that said, yes,
good paying jobs are in fact available. So you got
some echo sentiment out there. Just want to let you
know that, Nick. And beyond that, what is the foundation

(01:50:14):
fundraiser all about for this tools program? Because you do
offer scholarships.

Speaker 19 (01:50:18):
Right, Absolutely, the main event fundraiser which is at the
main event, right, nice play on words, There is actually
one for the Tools program scholarship fund. All proceeds go
to that. It's really a fun event. I think the
main focus that people need to keep in mind with
this event is a it's all about having fun. Everybody

(01:50:41):
who comes as a blast, and it's also a way
to reward your all stars. So it's a team of
four you send out. They compete in billiards, bowling, laser tag,
there's a ropes course, some video games. Large competition will
have probably twenty five to thirty teams of four. It's
got to get in. Early registrations is only until probably

(01:51:03):
two days before the event. The event is December sixth,
But it is a really great time. And the thing
that I like to say is that the dollars that
go there don't stick with us, right, The dollars that
come in from these fundraisers are creating the scholarships for
these students as they transition from high school in the
skilled trades industry.

Speaker 2 (01:51:20):
So who's invited.

Speaker 19 (01:51:23):
Anyone? Anyone that wants to come down.

Speaker 4 (01:51:25):
We all have.

Speaker 19 (01:51:26):
We have a bunch of members that participate in the program,
our contracting members, so they support the fundraisers. They're going
to be there, But it's open to any and all.
And if you can't make it on our website there,
I'm sure Joe has that wing for you. Yes, there's
plenty of opportunities for scholarships. And I just want everybody
to know that at the Tools Program, one hundred percent

(01:51:47):
of all resources we bring in for the scholarship fund
go directly back out. We don't keep any of that
in house. Our goal this year is to eclipse the
thirty eight scholarships we gave out last year. We're shooting
for fifty to sixty this year, So any dollars that
we can generate and any support that anybody wants to
throw our away always welcome. We'd love to see you
actually out there competing. We'd love to see some more

(01:52:07):
teams get involved as well. But if you can't make
it for some reason and you still want to support,
there is the option for those sponsorships.

Speaker 2 (01:52:14):
That's wonderful, and I know there are options for businesses
to get engaged in this program as well.

Speaker 19 (01:52:20):
Absolutely, the key to our program right now is our
supporting members. We can provide all these resources for the
students right get them the scholarships. I have a partnership
with Milwaukee Tool. They're my exclusive hand and power tool sponsor.
They provide the toolkits that these scholarship students get. But
if we have nowhere to place them, we're kind of
at a loss, right So the goal is to make

(01:52:42):
sure that any companies that are looking to hire, if
you're interested in our younger generation, because truth be told,
that's where your workers of the future are going to
come from. We want to make sure that we get
you connected, get you involved, get you partnered up with
a couple of schools. The key to the program, and
that aspect is you're there first and foremost.

Speaker 14 (01:52:59):
Right.

Speaker 19 (01:53:00):
You can touch. You can reach out and touch these
kids multiple times a year. You can find out that
you know, Mark wants to be an electrician quarter one,
work with him throughout the year. He might start co
opting his senior year with you, and then as soon
as he graduate, comes on full time. It's almost like
a dating program, right. You have all the time to
work with the student. The student can find out if
he really likes the company, and then by the time

(01:53:22):
he graduates, everything should be in line. We've got him
a scholarship. He's ready to transition day one. He comes
with every tool he needs. The goal is to really
just make sure that everything that student needs to transition
is there for him, and that our companies are finding
all the gems that are coming out of our high
schools and we're not losing them to you know, Amazon
or McDonald's or something along that.

Speaker 4 (01:53:43):
Well.

Speaker 2 (01:53:43):
That Nick and because this requires work, responsible people who
are you know, dedicated and committed to doing a really
good job on behalf of excuse me, their customer. And
if you get him young enough, maybe you can either
train them in the idea of customer servi and the
concept and benefit of hard work, and get them before

(01:54:03):
they get corrupted by the apparently corrupt system. Because I
had a caller earlier is pointed out, and I've heard
this time and time and time again, how lazy the
young workforces these days, and this is an opportunity to
mold some young person and get them to be a
responsible worker and on their way to a successful career.

Speaker 19 (01:54:22):
Brian, you couldn't have hit the nail on the head
any better before I started doing this. For anybody that
doesn't know, I was a carpenter for fifteen plus years
time in the field, I know what I'm talking about.
The one thing that is on the forefront of most
people's minds when they want to hire is how many
bad habits do we have to break? Right, if you're
a carpenter of ten plus years, you might have some

(01:54:44):
bad habits that they need to break.

Speaker 2 (01:54:45):
Measure twice, you get a long one, young and new.
What's that measure twice? Cut once?

Speaker 19 (01:54:51):
Yeah, exactly. But when you get the student out of
high school, you have given him pride in what he
does because he knows that his skills that he just
learned yesterday are valuable today. He will run through brick
walls for you. And the further point is he doesn't
have any bad habits you can only you can just
teach him the good habits as you go along. Right,
the perfect scenario is get a young student out of

(01:55:13):
high school that has a passion for the trades, get
them partnered up with one of your journeymen, right, Bill
that's forty fifty years old, knows every tip and trick
of the trade, and get him partnered up so that
that student can go from taking thirty minutes to do
a task to taking fifteen minutes to do a task
because he's learned those tips and tricks from somebody who's

(01:55:34):
tried and true.

Speaker 2 (01:55:35):
Great concept, Just an awesome concept. And you know what,
I've dabbled in things like carpentry over the years. You know,
being a poor homeowner. You know, necessity is the mother
of invention. You can't call some buy an higher amount.
You learn how to do it yourself. At least that's
the way I always approached it. And the one thing
I can tell you, as good or as bad, there
is so much pride you can have in the work

(01:55:58):
that you've done, even if it's for somebody else. You
step back from a carpentry job and you look at
it and you can beam with pride that is going
to be there long after I'm gone. I did a
great job. The customer's so happy. And man, I'll tell
you what that'll That'll set you free in and of itself.

Speaker 19 (01:56:15):
Pride and work, looking back on what you've accomplished at
the end of the day. All things that construction workers
fuel themselves on being able to say I built that. Yeah,
I think I told you this last time we were
on the radio. My kids hates here, and then I
built almost every building would drive by when we're driving
down seventy one. It's just what happens. But you know,
it's it's that pride. It's it's that ability to look

(01:56:36):
back and say, I built that. That's what I did today.
It doesn't get any better than that.

Speaker 2 (01:56:42):
Amen to that. Nick Smiley from the Associated Builders and
Contractors get all the information just putting the links up
on the blog page. Fifty five kcy dot com careers
are there and they are waiting for you. Just take
advantage of the opportunities that they're providing. Here with this
Tools Program and get in touch with this foundation. Fundraiser again.
It's the main event Entertainment on Oxford Way, Westchester, Ohio,

(01:57:03):
December sixth. Looking for what teams before. Registration is right
there at fifty five carecy dot com. I wish all
the success on the event. I want to thank you
Nick and everybody involved with these programs and keep churning
out the wonderful, hard working young people.

Speaker 19 (01:57:19):
Can I snag ten seconds from you, Brian, Of course
you can. I just want to send the big shout
out old school style, as we would say, to the
Tools Program Executive Committee. This is a board slash committee
made up of the titans of our industry here in
our Ohio Valley footprint. Without them, the program wouldn't be
headed in the direction it is. I just want to

(01:57:41):
It's all volunteer work, right, They don't get paid to
do it, So I just want to shout them out
and let everybody know that the Tools Program Foundation is growing,
We're doing big things. We're headed in the right direction,
and primarily that comes from the fact that we have
such a great executive committee helping lead this operation. And
I just want to thank them personally.

Speaker 2 (01:58:00):
And that thanks may result in more folks out there
in the community saying you know what, I want to
be a part of that group. So good luck, and
I encourage successful business folks out there to participate and
get these young people on the right path. Nick, it's
been great having you on the program. Have a wonderful weekend,
my friend. We'll talk again soon.

Speaker 4 (01:58:15):
I hope.

Speaker 2 (01:58:16):
Thanks, Bret, My pleasure seven forty nine. Right now, if
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One that's going to run you gets worse when you're
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You get a contrast with it, it's six hundred and
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(01:58:58):
I apologize your hospital imaging probably does not. It'll be
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to five thousand dollars for the CT scan, you get
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(01:59:39):
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Speaker 10 (01:59:53):
It's the stuff college students people are talking about scanning.

Speaker 16 (01:59:57):
We are Hamash just turns my hum.

Speaker 2 (02:00:00):
Fifty five KRZ the talk station eight oh five fifty
five KRCD Talk Station, Happy Friday. I hope you have
some great plans this weekend, or you have no plans
whatsoever and you got a free weekend staring you ahead.
Either way, I put a smile on your face. It
is Friday, and a happy one to everybody. U five one, three, seven, four,

(02:00:20):
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to
three talk hit pound five fifty on AT and T
phones if you'd like to call in. I hope you
can stick around to the bottom of the hour. Doctor
Naomi Wolf with her book The Pfizer Papers, Pfizer's Crimes
against Humanity. Perfect time to talk to her about that book,
given that RFK Junior not exactly a big COVID nineteen
vaccine guy, so it should be a wonderful conversation bottom

(02:00:42):
of the hour. In the meantime, I promise Marcie she's first,
Dennis hang on, I'll get with you in a moment.
Thanks for holding over to break Marcy. It's a pleasure
to have you on the program this morning.

Speaker 20 (02:00:50):
Good morning, Brian. We so enjoy your show every morning.
I just wanted to tell you. Our daughter lives on
Cape Cod and they she told us that there are
two and three year waiting lists into all the trade
schools there.

Speaker 2 (02:01:06):
Oh my word.

Speaker 13 (02:01:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 20 (02:01:09):
I guess the majority of people who live in that
area and Cape Cod live in New York and New
Jersey and so they're not there all year round because
their houses are vacation rentals. So the schools like the bricklayers, electricians, carpenters. Yeah,
their high schools have waiting lists to get in there.

Speaker 4 (02:01:33):
Wow.

Speaker 20 (02:01:33):
And I guess it's been like that for well, she's
lived there for the last ten years. So yeah, it's
really it's really big there.

Speaker 2 (02:01:42):
Well you think, I mean with the demand being that big,
that they would have done something to meet, you know,
meet the demand by providing a greater supply these programs.
I mean, well maybe they.

Speaker 20 (02:01:54):
Maybe they are, maybe they have. We just haven't had
that discussion. But when we go up there and visit
for frequently, and there are always trucks and services doing
everything for everybody there.

Speaker 7 (02:02:07):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 20 (02:02:07):
Landscapers, Yeah, well, the trades.

Speaker 2 (02:02:10):
Make the world go around. You mentioned landscapers, and we
have a we work with a professional landscaper from time
to time to do the really big work that we
my wife and I aren't doing that stuff at our
age anymore. And he always he'll talk about it. You know,
you can make a really good wage. You're out in
the open air all summer, you having a really good time.
People you work with are great. But he was complaining

(02:02:32):
about not getting young people, American young you know, doing
the jobs, and Americans won't do kind of stuff. And
he's like, that's not what we're doing. We have career
opportunities here and it's it's an enjoyable thing to do
for a living. So it troubles me that there's such
a huge demand out there that's not being met, particularly
when people are just idling their hours away getting really

(02:02:53):
really really stupid degrees at a significant cost, and you know,
going into debt for something it's not going to him
a witsworth of opportunity career wise. You know, a humanities degree,
come on, yeah, I got a I joke about my
own degree, political science degree. If I go back to
knowing what I know now when I get a political
science degree, no, I probably get something that's more Worthwhile

(02:03:15):
I did go to law school, but that's the only
reason I had a career after I graduated from college.

Speaker 20 (02:03:20):
M Well, one thing I heard is that Hamilton County
are taking their kids that are in juvenile detention. And
I believe there was a gentleman in Avondale who lives
in the neighborhood and he started what's called a weekend camp.
So when these kids get out of juvenile detention, they

(02:03:41):
just aren't let go. They have a requirement where they
have to go to this weekend camp. And they are
taking these kids to Cincinnati State and giving them a
tour of the school and saying, you know, you can
become a barber, you can become a chef, you can
become a plumber, an electrician. And one of the young

(02:04:02):
men who went on that tour was interviewed and said,
what do you think about how did you feel about
going to this camp and being on this field trip,
And he said, I didn't know that. I didn't even
know that that was possible for me. I didn't know
that anybody even cared that.

Speaker 17 (02:04:21):
You know what I did in the future.

Speaker 20 (02:04:24):
Yeah, well that was amazing. I thought that was amazing.

Speaker 2 (02:04:26):
Well, I appreciate the info. And look, what we're saying
here is it's basically coast to coast. I think that's
why Nick mentioned there are five hundred and eighty thousand
unfilled trade jobs out in the world, just waiting for
someone to come in and grab a hold of the
apprentice program concept and work while you learn and then
go off on your own or stick with the company.
But great opportunities for true career employment and worthwhile stuff.

(02:04:51):
I appreciate the info Marshall really doing. Thank you so
much for the kind words. Can't thank you enough for
listening to the show. Dennis. Welcome to the program, and
a happy Friday to you, sir. I.

Speaker 21 (02:05:03):
It's impressive that you've got the Angry Wolf coming on
later today. That Gal has really uh.

Speaker 3 (02:05:12):
Been what do you want to call it?

Speaker 21 (02:05:14):
Ostracized cancels outside of the culture she brought up in
and was educated indoctrinated into and the uh what do
you want to call it? The wine and brie crowd
in uh society of New York, but after she was
driven out of it and uh in fact, most of
the society that she embraced the culture of of community

(02:05:38):
and Odega's and uh being able to walk to your
local doctor's office in New York City has all been destroyed,
and she has ended up making new friends, real human beings,
not the vacant Siddans that have literally trillions of dollars
with the assets come after us, and the old story

(02:05:59):
is we're not paranoid, but they're really out to get you.
She made acquaintance with the gentleman by the name of
Michael Nells. He wrote another book that goes to the
core of memory that makes a person a person, and
she wrote the forward in his book and absolutely brilliant

(02:06:20):
analysis of what we're up against and between her and
her network.

Speaker 19 (02:06:26):
Of genuine human beings.

Speaker 3 (02:06:29):
That have compassion.

Speaker 21 (02:06:32):
Or might be part of what saves us from literally
the destruction of not only the Republic but what amounts
to Western civilization. With the critical thinking at the basis
of it all you did, you're pulling off quite a
crude again, dam we won't on way on the radio.

Speaker 2 (02:06:50):
Well, I appreciate that. I will give one hundred percent
of the credit to Joe Strucker for wining her up
in one qualification because I agree with you, Dennis. I'm
looking forward to having her on this reading the book.
I just don't want to jinx it because sometimes authors
get hung up or the appointments, get quires, get crossed
or something. And I hope we make connection with her
at the bottom of the hour because I am been

(02:07:11):
looking forward to talking with her since I saw she
was on the rundown this morning. I appreciate it. Dennis,
stick around. We'll find out together. She's joining the program
at eight point thirty. Again the name of the book,
the Pfizer Papers Pfizer's Crimes against humanity, and I have
a strong feeling that she too will embrace the idea
of RFK Junior being appointed in the role of Health

(02:07:32):
and Human Services director. Out of the box thinker he is,
but getting some big kudos on that even from In fact,
I gave credit to Democratic Colorado Governor Jared Paulus, who,
after hearing about Donald Trump nominating RFK Junior to be
the next secretary of the Department Health and Human Services,
was singing RFK Junior's praises for the work that he

(02:07:54):
helped accomplish in Colorado regarding defeating vaccine mandates. Now you
got most of these Democratic governors were along the lines
of maybe some Republican governors who bought into the nonsense.
And if you look at Florida, and Governor of Santas
he wouldn't have anything to do with lockdowns or shutdowns
of vaccine mandates. But apparently Governor Paulis in Colorado felt

(02:08:16):
the same way. Elon Musk to the rescue helping them
defeat that and the other bright light in all of
this with regard to just looking at COVID nineteen vaccine alone,
people are winning. Those lawsuits are finally getting concluded. Where
you got fired because you refused to get a vaccine
because of perhaps your religious convictions. And after getting fired,

(02:08:40):
you stuck to your guns. You retained a lawyer or
maybe one, volunteered for pro bono work, took your case
to court, and next thing you know, you got to
check for what, thirteen million dollars in your pocket. Yeah,
that would take the sting out of the last several
years of perhaps being unemployed. But you took a stand.
You knew you were right when you took that stand.
Thing about you know, religious exemptions for vaccines, you know

(02:09:03):
some people just turn there, Oh that's ridiculous. Yeah, they
actually tried to apply a standard and analyze whether or
not you were sufficiently religious enough to make that claim.
I'm sorry if you're an entity that is part of
the federal government, or you receive federal dollars, you have
an obligation to honor people's First Amendment rights for the

(02:09:24):
free exercise of religion. You cannot question one's conviction or
loyalty to any given religion by ojemed oh when you
go to church, that doesn't matter. You could be one
of them.

Speaker 4 (02:09:38):
I've met.

Speaker 2 (02:09:38):
I've met some of the most religious people in my
life who do not even believe in the idea of
having a physical church because it takes away some of
the money the donations from the community that might need them.
Part of your Christian values is to help those that
are poor, struggling, those in need. Well, every dime that

(02:10:01):
goes into a church is one less done that's going
to those that need it. So there are many people
that share that perception. So whether or not you attend
an actual church or not has no bearing on your
religion or how devalue you feel about religion.

Speaker 22 (02:10:15):
But again, this is the story of the one who,
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that vintage charm historically needs constant attention, which is why
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They turn to Granger, with easy access to a million
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(02:10:36):
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Speaker 2 (02:10:47):
By filing suit and sticking to guns and standing on
principle and constitution, people are well winning fighting back against
the system, and I love that. And that's one of
the things I find about RFK Junior. As weird as
I think he is in some areas, hey just put
an exclamation point on it. Thank god he's not going

(02:11:08):
to be in charge of the energy policy, because I
believe he's one of those green he thinks you're exhaling
the world into annihilation kind of folks. But one where
one place I know he's strong on is you know
your ability to choose a personal choice on whether or
not you get a vaccine. I don't want him to
eliminate them. I want you to be able to choose
to do so. I never want to run into another

(02:11:30):
system a period in time where some lord and master
in elected capacity that knows literally nothing about medicines, vaccines
or the propriety of putting one on the market free
from any liability and then telling you you must get
that jab eight sixteen fifty five K's Detalk Station, Steve

(02:11:52):
your next hang on one second. I woan't mention Peter
Shabria Colorway from seven Hills. That guy, Peter Sbier Kelloorwilliams,
seven Hills. He's just a brilliant man and he's assembled
the best team in real estate here in the greater
Cincinnati area. Number one, that's the Sabri Group at Keller
Williams seven Hills. You can find him online at seven

(02:12:13):
zero eight three thousand dot com. They offer all kinds
of programs nobody's going to offer. And I always joke
about it having been through selling a house and being
here in Cincinnati while my wife is in Oak Park, Illinois,
trying to sell the house over a period of several months.
She has to keep the place clean, get the dogs
out of the house, stage it, do all that.

Speaker 4 (02:12:29):
You know.

Speaker 2 (02:12:30):
You can just get out of dodge. Go for the
instant cash offer option. Call Peter Shabier Kelllorwilliams, seven Hills
and within forty eight hours of them seeing your home.
You have a cash offer, which means like less than
three weeks from today, you're done, no staging, painting, improving,
carpet changing, nothing. You get a great offer from the
Saber Group and you get to move on with your life.
It's one of the many programs they offer. They provide

(02:12:52):
great value. Their team is top notch, so you're working
with the best, whether buyer's agent or sellers agents. Seven
zero eight three thousand dot com call them up. It's
five one three seven zero eight three.

Speaker 8 (02:13:05):
Thousand, fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (02:13:10):
Nine for forty Onether forecast. You got some clouds today
and it's going to go to fifty four overnight, more
clouds than a forty three a mostly cloudy morning, five
by a sunny afternoon high at fifty eighth tomorrow, then
overnight down to forty two with clear skies, mostly clouds
on Sunday, sixty one fifty one Right now traffic time.

Speaker 7 (02:13:30):
From the UCU Traumphon Center.

Speaker 10 (02:13:32):
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is home to nacally
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nude treatments through innovative clinical trials called five one three,
five eighty five. Ucc see southbound seventy five continues to
run an extra five in and Adam Backland northbound seventy
five clearing out at Buttermilk slows just a bit at Mitchell.

(02:13:54):
There's a wreck on Harrison at Race Road. Choking from
Hunt fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:14:01):
Hey, toty one fifty five KIRC detalk station. I go
straight to the Phones's got several callers online before we
get to fingers crossed Doctor Naomi Wolf the Pfizer papers,
pfisors crimes against humanity. Scary stuff, folks. Scary stuff that, Steve,
thanks for holding over the breake. Welcome to the program.

Speaker 16 (02:14:20):
Yeah, thanks, Brian. I'm a retired school psychologist and I
got interested in vaccines way back in the nineteen seventies.
I worked with autistic kids and their parents, and I
get a detailed medical and developmental history from the mothers,
and so many of them said that the autism came
right after a vaccine, and so I've been studying it.

(02:14:44):
One thing, you can check this out with Naomi. The
medical community, pharmacyical community has pushed vaccines because of those
deadly child diseases. Well, I'm seventy nine years old. I
don't remember anybody dying of any childhood disease. I had

(02:15:05):
them all measles, mumps, reubella, chicken pox, my brothers and
sister did, all our friends school mixed did Nobody died.
So I've been asking older people seventies and eighties and
nineties for the last five years or more, whenever I
did a chance think back to your childhood, how many
children died from any childhood disease.

Speaker 2 (02:15:26):
Nobody.

Speaker 16 (02:15:26):
I saw one man one I found one man who
had one twelve year old who died. So how necessary
are these questionable vaccines? That's a question you might.

Speaker 2 (02:15:41):
You know, it's interesting you raised that I was reflecting
back on my own childhood and I also had measles
and chicken pox, and I presume that these vaccines were
available back then. And I'm not saying my mom and
dad were some sort of you know, neglectful and there
and they're taking care of me, because I do remember getting, like,
for example, the polio vaccine, but that's far more deadly
than say about a chicken pox, which you can, you know,

(02:16:04):
with a little bit of fever and some minor itching
for a week and you're over it. So maybe something
to what you say, and once it's run its course,
you have natural immunity, right, I had COVID nineteen natural immunity.
I got checked a year after having that bad about
of COVID and my immunity level was off the charts.
I mean it was just I mean through the roof
in terms of where I registered in my level of immunity.

(02:16:26):
So I like the natural component of that. I'm not
going to say. I'm not the kind of guy who's
going to say never get a vaccine. I'm not a
never guy. I'm a choice guy. Do your own research,
read the pfisor papers, read about the problems associated with
potentially getting on some sort of a spectrum when it
comes to autism. But the information's out there and you

(02:16:48):
should look into it for yourself and draw your own
conclusions and have regular conversations with your medical providers. Let's
see who's next, Joseph Nick, thanks for calling this morning.
Happy Friday, Hi.

Speaker 12 (02:16:59):
Y, Happy Friday to year. I guess this morning he
should call me the other Nick, because the first Nick
was the guy that builds things and I'm just the
guy who writes about them anyway. Anyway, what I wanted
to say is, you know, the reason that Trump was
elected twice is because he's a genius. And he surrounded

(02:17:22):
himself with other geniuses like Francis Musk and Matt Gates
and a lot of other people. But one of the
most important geniuses that he never really talks about very
often is Frederick Douglas, who was the greatest thinker and
I believe, the greatest author and speaker in our nation's history.
And Frederick Douglass pointed out the fact that the founders

(02:17:45):
of our country wrote the Constitution to make sure that
this country would run the right way for a long time,
and that there should be no variation from that constitution.
And when I started writing books, I thought that about
fifty percent of what our government does was wrong and
shouldn't be done. And as I went along, I learned

(02:18:07):
that maybe it was sixty percent, and maybe it was
seventy five percent.

Speaker 3 (02:18:11):
And then when I.

Speaker 12 (02:18:11):
Wrote this last book I Got Given Freedom, I realized
that about ninety percent of what the government does is unconstitutional.
It's just not right and it shouldn't be done. And
you know, at this point, you know, we have to
look at I think one of the greatest geniuses of
our time right now is Mike Lindell, the guy that

(02:18:32):
sells the pillows and the towels. And Mike Lindell came
up with the came up with looking at this and
the election machines, and he said that, you know, when
you put everything into a computerized electronic voting machine, you
don't have any way of knowing what you're voting for.

Speaker 2 (02:18:49):
Oh yeah, and we're out of time, but I will
notice that Trump did win, and he won the popular
vote by almost five million votes. Of the idea that
somehow the vote was manipulated, I think many of my
life listeners have concluded, well, at least not this time.
Good hear from me. Nick got a run, looking forward
to having the doctor on in the next segment. Pfizer
papers Pfisers crimes against Humanity by the next guxt doctor

(02:19:11):
Nami Wolf. In the meantime, save up the twenty two
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(02:19:52):
Brian said high five one three five two one ninety
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Speaker 22 (02:20:04):
This is the story of the one who, as a
maintenance specialist for a historic high rise, knows that vintage
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Speaker 8 (02:20:34):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 7 (02:20:38):
The simply Money minute.

Speaker 2 (02:20:39):
Is push Quick Channel nine. First warning weatherforca ASK. I
know it's cloudy day to day. I have fifty four
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out flatty, ends up sunny, fifty eighth for the high,
thirst guys overnight, forty two for the low, and a
sixty one high on Sunday with mostly cloudy skies fifty one.
Now time for traffic.

Speaker 10 (02:20:57):
Chuck from the Use Tramphing Center the University of Cincinnati
Cancer Center. It's home to nasially reconnize paint craded cancer
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five minutes and and a of ackland. Everything else much improved.

(02:21:20):
Us a little bit of a slow down North Pound
seventy five pasts Mitchell to the Lateral, Chuck Ingram on
fifty five KRC, The Talk Station.

Speaker 2 (02:21:29):
A thirty Here fifty five KRC, the talk station. Very
Happy Friday made even extra special. Welcome back to the
fifty five KRC Morning Show, Doctor Naomi Wolf. She is
the author of The Pfiser Papers and What an Indictment.
The title of this book is The Pfizer Papers, Pfisers
Crimes against Humanity, Doctor Wolf. Everybody my listening audience as

(02:21:50):
well orwever. She is a best selling author of multiple books.
A calumnist, she does speeches speaking truth to power about
the threats to liberty and democracy, providing audiences with the
tools to fight back against powerful institutional forces like the
pharmaceutical industry. Doctor Wolf, it is a pleasure to have
you back on the fifty five CASE Morning Show.

Speaker 9 (02:22:09):
Thank you so much for having me.

Speaker 2 (02:22:10):
I appreciate it, my pleasure and I you know, my
background is I was a litigation attorney for sixteen years
before I started radio eighteen years ago. But I'm big
on the source information. You can say anything you want
in a book and make pronouncements, but it's really it
hinges upon what you relied on in reaching your conclusions.
And this damning indictment, as I pointed out, with the

(02:22:33):
name of the title, Fi's Crimes against Humanity, you have
and based it on the primary source, Peiser clinical trial
documents that were released as a consequence of a court order.

Speaker 23 (02:22:46):
Exactly, No, you're well, you're right to have that level
of evidence, you know, before you claim something is true.
And there's no way to escape the factual nature of
this green this crime against humanity that we document in
the Pfizer books. It's a book that was assembled by

(02:23:08):
thirty two hundred and fifty doctors and scientists who responded
to Steve Bannon's prompt to me on the air when
the Pfizer documents were being released. And these are four
hundred and fifty thousand documents released under court order after
a successful lawsuit by lawyer Aaron Siri. And these are
documents that the FDA had asked the court to keep

(02:23:29):
hidden for seventy five years.

Speaker 9 (02:23:31):
And wow, are we going to find out all the
reasons why? With our junior now running HHS.

Speaker 23 (02:23:37):
But our team, you know, we were looking at documents
that couldn't be analyzed easily because they're so voluminous and
so technical. So Bannon proposed that we crowdsource with experts,
and that's what this is. These thirty two hundred and
fifty doctors and scientists worked for over two years as
volunteers for the good of humanity, and so what this

(02:23:58):
book is of their most important reports that linked directly
to the Peiser documents. There's no way to get away
from the factual nature of what they've discovered. And again,
what they documented is the most catastrophic crime in recorded
history and human history, and all of our leaders knew

(02:24:20):
about it.

Speaker 2 (02:24:21):
Well, let's talk about clinical trials. One of the things
that always struck me is rather odd and suspicious is
it was one day we didn't have a vaccine for COVID,
and the next day we got this brand new vaccine
that's rolled out under emergency use authorization, which frees them
from any liability associated with anything that might happen as

(02:24:43):
a consequence of taking the vaccine. And as your book documents,
there are a lot of things that apparently Pfiser knew
about and that its clinical trials were deeply flawed. But
sadly the US Food and Drug Administration also knew about
these problems and forced it down our throat anyway, and
had that emergency use authorization. I guess I wonder as

(02:25:05):
I step back, Pfizer had profit in mind. And I
understand that it's evil profit motive when you're harming people,
when you're putting a product on the market that isn't
advertised truthfully. But why would our government lie to the
population about this when it knew that there were all
these problems with the clinical trials.

Speaker 23 (02:25:24):
Well, unfortunately, you know what I had hoped I would
see is exactly what you've just described. You know, Oh,
they cut corners Peiser. You know, it was careless to
need a major public.

Speaker 9 (02:25:35):
Emergency, you know, greed, sloppiness. That's not what the Pfisier
documents show. What the pfiighter your documents.

Speaker 23 (02:25:42):
Reveal is that both for many months before the November
twenty twenty rollout of the injection, and for three months after,
Pweiser was showing the government and doctor Lensky and doctor Fauci,
and you know what set of emails goes right up
to the White House in fifteen White House staffers, how

(02:26:04):
many ways this injection destroyed human health and especially reproductive health.
So and then very importantly when you assess, you know,
what's the intentionality here. In November of twenty twenty, a
month into the rollout the formal you know, get it
into your arm, safe and effective messaging, Pfeiser excuse me,

(02:26:27):
concluded that the vaccines did not work to stop COVID,
and their language internally is failure of efficacy and vaccine failure.
And in fact, the third most common side effect in
the Preiser documents is COVID And in fact, one of
the reports, which is the most shocking, shows that Pfiser
hid the death illegally hid the.

Speaker 9 (02:26:47):
Deaths of eight vaccinated people who died with COVID.

Speaker 23 (02:26:51):
In order to falsely claim to the FDA to get
the emergency use authorization that you're better off, more likely
to not die and not be hospitalized if you're vaccinated,
when the truth is, if they hadn't concealed those depths,
you're more likely to be hospitalized or die with the vaccine,
which is what all the data are now clearly showing.

(02:27:13):
So everything that followed the mandates, the lost jobs, that
athletes dropping dead on playing fields.

Speaker 9 (02:27:23):
Was all based on a lie, and Pfizer knew it.
The FDA knew it.

Speaker 23 (02:27:26):
Doctual Lensky knew it, the White House knew it. But
against your point, you know that the centerpiece of the
Pfiser documents is not even COVID, right, it really isn't
because COVID is a respiratory infection. What's so shocking and
striking about the Pfiser documents is the centerpiece of what
they're looking at is stopping human reproduction.

Speaker 2 (02:27:48):
That is the motive. Then it is Malthusian type of
doctrine in origin, like we need the global population is
too big, so we need to force the to get
a vaccine in the name of saving their lives, but
ultimately it will reduce the population, and ergo it's a
good thing. Is that kind of the nefarious cavona behind
the scenes here?

Speaker 17 (02:28:10):
Well, these are.

Speaker 23 (02:28:11):
All like technical scientific documents, So there's no memo that says,
oh good, you know, thank you for showing us how
thoroughly you've just disrupted the menstrual cycles of sixty five
thousand women in this chart. Even though there is a
chart of about sixty five thousand women with their menstrual
cycles horribly, horribly disrupted. You know, there are babies dead,

(02:28:32):
in utero and Pfizer concludes due to maternal exposure to
the vaccine, they're an eighty percent miscarriage rate. In one section,
there's you know, Fiser knowing that the injection poisonous breast
milk and causes convulsions and death in convulsions in many babies,
death in one baby. Siser knew that there was something
in the sperm of vaccinated men that could endanger either

(02:28:56):
you know, unvaccinated women or the zygote or the fetus.
It's not clear what they warned vaccinated men not to
have intercourse with that two reliable forms of contraceptions.

Speaker 4 (02:29:07):
No, on and on and on.

Speaker 9 (02:29:09):
I mean, it's just unbelievable.

Speaker 23 (02:29:10):
They knew that the LIPI nanoparticle core blocking ovaries of women.

Speaker 9 (02:29:15):
I mean, the damage is catastrophic.

Speaker 23 (02:29:17):
There's a section in the size the documents where they
conclude that sixty two percent of the adverse events are
in women, and of those, Sisor concludes sixteen percent of
reproductive defailures. Those are Pisor's words, compared to two point
two percent for men. So my point to her question is,
did they know they are not looking at oxygen levels,

(02:29:40):
They're not looking at breathing. They're not looking at lungs,
they're not looking at mucaus, membranes, all the things ostensibly
COVID does because it's authentically a respiratory infection, right, or
a respiratory disease.

Speaker 9 (02:29:52):
They're not looking at that. They're looking at disrupting human reproduction.

Speaker 23 (02:29:55):
So there isn't a memo saying, oh, good look, FDA
and doctor Orlenski White House, we've destroyed human reproductions. But
every centerpiece of what they're studying shows that that's their
goal and that was their outcome, because now we're thirteen
to twenty percent down in live births and midwives and
well just midwives really, because doctors and monstitricians are still

(02:30:17):
enthralled to the contracts of the money they took from
the FDA to stamp message.

Speaker 9 (02:30:21):
Or the cities.

Speaker 23 (02:30:23):
But they're warning that stillbirths are at an all time high.
People are having a horrible time getting pregnant. When they
do have babies, the placentas don't develop normally, the babies
have to be delivered early. There's a forty percent rise
in maternal death rates. I guess all I'm trying to
say is to me as a journalist, it's so clear
that it's a deep population agenda and outcome. You know,

(02:30:45):
as I warned, like I got deep platforms by the
White House for accurately warning in June of twenty twenty
one that women were reporting menstrual symptoms upon receiving the injection,
and that you know, lawyers have voided an Attorney's General
that those communications they go up to the highest levels
of the CDC. My accurate tweet they lifted out, and

(02:31:07):
then they leaned on Twitter and Facebook to deplatformed me
in warning about this. Why would you do that unless
you wanted women not to know that their fertility is
going to be destroyed. So that but it's also old people, right,
I mean there's also deaths. There are twelve hundred and
twenty five deaths and a million people are self reporting

(02:31:28):
has disabled every month in America, according to former black
Rock hedge fund manager Ed Dowd. So I think, like,
if I'm extrapolating as a journalist, it's depopulation, but it's
also replacement because the thirty million newcomers from places that
don't have a tradition of a constitution, are you know,

(02:31:52):
the illegal aliens that right have border, they don't have
to get vaccinated, so it's a political erasure of Western
Europe and North America. And lastly, you know all these
boomers that are starting to retire, they need so security
money that doesn't exist, so it gets rid of a
lot of old people. And then finally, my independent research

(02:32:17):
showed that the vaccine, this Pizor vaccine, is manufactured in
an MoU with China, our existential enemy, that created a
billion doses, not for internal use, for exports. They opened
fourteen manufacturing plants in Western Europe, eleven in the United States.
In twenty twenty one, the ip was transferred to China.

(02:32:37):
So you know, as my husband who spent his career
and intelligence points out, China wants our land, they want
our food supply, they want our water supply, they want
our grid, they want our ports, they don't want our population.
So this is also clearly a.

Speaker 2 (02:32:53):
Bioweapon frightening frightening stuff. And then you also have the
reality and new categories. You point out on the book
something called covax disease, which apparently is a multi system,
multi organ i just an impact from the COVID vaccine itself.
So it's just you got reproductive issues, you've got the

(02:33:17):
myocarditis you've talked about, and then now this multi system,
multi organ component. So there's I mean massive problems on
all this. And as you point out in the book,
Pfizer Papers, Pfizer's Crimes against Humanity, they knew about all this,
and apparently our government did it well. This is the
most disheartening thing ever. So you alluded to it a
moment ago. I guess you were happy, as many of

(02:33:39):
my listeners are that RFK Junior is going to be
heading up HHS.

Speaker 9 (02:33:43):
Very happy, thrilled ecstatics so happy.

Speaker 2 (02:33:46):
Well, yes, you can count on him to shed some
light on this, and thank you. It's a naming doctor
Nami Wolf. Editor I should say editor, because this is
a collective work, the Pfizer Papers, Fiser's Crimes against Humanity,
Doctor Wolf. It's available on my blog page, and my
listeners know where to get a copy of the book,
and I'll strongly encourage them to get it. Fifty five
KRC dot com. Keep up the great work and I'll

(02:34:08):
look forward to having you back on the show down
the road after you learn more, and I'm sure you will.

Speaker 9 (02:34:13):
Thank you so much. I appreciate it, and I appreciate
the chance to share with your audience.

Speaker 2 (02:34:18):
Have a great tame, my distinct pleasure to be here,
to be able to do that for you and my audience.
It's eight forty three fifty five kr CD talk station
stick around.

Speaker 8 (02:34:27):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (02:34:29):
You have financial questions, chnswers are

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