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June 23, 2025 • 146 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five. I think about k r C the
talk station Happy Monday.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
It was a.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Damn hot, real hot?

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Were you born on the Sun's damn hot?

Speaker 1 (00:36):
If I had to place a wager on which sound
by Joe would start to show it this morning, probably
a lot of money wouldn't have been going on that one. Uh.
Welcome to fifty five Caursy Morning Show. Brian Tima s
right here, hope, but it had a wonderful weekend in
spite of the heat, and the heat which continued. You
think the world was coming to an absolute end. Oh
maybe it is World War three breaking out, don't know.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
Anyhow, coming up in the fifty five Carsy Morns Show,
it is money Meaning at seven we hear from the
former Vice Mayor of the City of Cincinnati, Christopher Smith.
Event for the Smith Event, and we'll enjoy learning together
what's on his mind money money with Brian James today,
how the Iranian attack will affect the market, oil prices, inflation, stocks,
US dollar dollars and cats Let me together. The round's

(01:19):
already threatened and voted to shut the Straightah horror moves down.
They suggest that would increase oil price per barreled twenty
dollars or twenty dollars sending oil north of one hundred,
although they carry significant risk doing that. We can talk
about some of that and the impacts of whether or
not that will happen, and what might happen to the
Iranian Navy in the event they try to do that.

(01:39):
Keep FED rates right where they are, that's what the
Fed's doing. And finally, new drop dead date for when
so security runs out of money. Frightening prospect because it's
sooner rather than later. This has been a problem that
we have seen coming for years and years and years.
And you know, Congress did anything, doesn't want to do anything.

(02:01):
Third Reil politics can't not. Oh my god, I won't
get voted back into office if I if I try
to fix the thing. You know, say what you want
about whatever needs to be done. The problem is obvious
and it's looming large and getting closer talking about cutting
the benefits. You look at your current so it's a
security check and or what that sheet is which I

(02:22):
just got mine recently, the sheet which tells you what
you're going to get on a monthly basis depending on
when you choose to retire. Reduce that by twenty five percent. Basically,
that's looking to be what is going to happen in
so far as SOS security is concerned. So twenty five
percent less than what you're getting now or what they're
telling you you're going to get when you do retire,

(02:42):
and maybe even worse than that. So you got to
do something, You got to act or not, as the
case may be. Let's see what Jonathan Turley had to say.
Because of course Donald Trump and Congressman Massi, you're going
back and forth Congress of mass He does not believe
that the strike was legal constitutional. He's made this statement
out loud before the calling for a vote in Congress

(03:04):
warpowers act. Whether or not that were to pass or not,
Whether or not people are on Congress and Messy's side
or not doesn't matter. Congress never acts and it likes
to not have to act and let the president go
ahead and go on his own. So really, whether or
not Donald Trump's actions were constitutional or not, it just
doesn't matter, and history is a guide on that. Jonathan Turley,

(03:29):
he's a brilliant analyst legal analysis, writes for Fox News
all the time. The Democrats in Washington talking again about
impeachment's politician put it through, expressing outrage over President Donald
Trump attacking Iran without prior authorization to Congress. For Costablanca,
friends out there. One of my favorite movies of all time,
Claude Raine's the police lieutenant there shocked. I'm shocked, shocked,

(03:52):
that's gambling going on here and use that as a
mechanism to close down the bar run by Humphrey Bogart's character.
And then someone comes up to him your winnings, sir.
So of course he knew there was gambling going on there.
He was gambling himself. So that's the point that it'
turley making, he says. The Claude Raines school of constitutional law,

(04:15):
where politicians are shocked, shocked that Trump is using the
authority that they accepted in democratic predecessors, and he puts
out a whole litany of him. There's in multiple arguments
about the constitutional role of Congress in connection with this
bomb dropping. Nevertheless, Democratic members are now calling for impeachment,

(04:36):
while others are declaring the attacks on unconstitutional sentimentorari. Leader
Chuck Schumer particularly shocked that Trump took the action and
is calling for a vote under the war powers Act
Schumer and insisted that no president his words, should be
allowed to unilaterally march this nation to something as consequential
as war, with erratic threats and no strategy. That is

(04:57):
a statement from House Minority Leader. Hawking efforts, well, I'm sorry.
He issued a similar statement, probably verbadim analogous to the
Schumer statement. I just quoted Shimmer, the same politician who
was silent or supportive in earlier unilateral attacks by Democratic presidents.
In twenty eleven, Obama approved a massive military campaign against Libya.

(05:18):
Jonathan Turley said, I represented a bipartisan group of members
of Congress challenging that action. We were unsuccessful, as were
such prior challenges. He said, I've long criticized the abandonment
of the clear language of the Constitution on the declaration
of wars. Only eleven such declarations have been made in
our history. That has not happened since World War Two

(05:38):
in nineteen forty two. Over one hundred and twenty five
military campaigns have spanned from Korea to Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
It is not a rule honored solely in the breach.
Democrats were supportive when Clinton launched Cruise missile attacks under
Operation Infinite Reach on two continents. In August of nineteen,

(06:01):
he ordered attacks on locations and Khartoon and sued on
coast Province in Afghanistan. Warpowers Actor has always been controversial
and largely ineffectual. Presidents have long asserted the inherent powers
to conduct such attacks under their article to authority as
the designated commander in chief of the armed Forces. The
War Powers Act requires the President to inform Congress within

(06:24):
forty eight hours in a written notice to the Speaker
of the House of Representatives and the President pro time
of the Senate of the action well when the action
is widely reported in the press that moment it happens.
It seems to be a bit of a formality, but
President Trump reportedly did immediately notify Congress after the attack

(06:44):
under the War Powers Act. Warpowers Act further bars the
use of armed forces in such conflict for more than
sixty days without congressional authorization for use of military force.
That will be the authorization of use of military force
that only this action has been Trump's action in bombing
the Iranian nuclear facilities. He's relying on the nineteen ninety

(07:07):
one that allowed US to well start bombing all kinds
of targets in the Middle East post nine to eleven.
That's what Congressman wentz Or, a former Congressman Winstrop was
making the point of when he was on the program
last week. That thing's still in effect, and Iran falls
within the designated group of people supporting terrorism, So you
can drop bombs on the various nuclear installations under the

(07:30):
nineteen ninety one aum off. That's one argument anyway. Presidents
have long maintained the right to deploy military assets unilaterally
without congressional approval to address imminent threats, all the way
back to President Thomas Jefferson, who did so when he
went to war with the Barbary pirates at the start
of the nineteenth century. Residents have also routinely ignored the

(07:52):
War Powers Act when it limited their ability to conduct
four military operations. Back in nineteen ninety nine, Bill Clinton
ignored this sixty day deadline and continued to bomb forces
in Kosovo. His actions were also challenged, but the court
in Campbellvie, Clinton just shrugged off the violation and said
it was a nonjudicical political question. In responding to the

(08:17):
current demands, Trump could look at a curious ally. Hillary Clinton,
Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton pushed for unilateral attacks during
the Obama administration. She dismissed the need to consult, let
alone secure authorization from Congress. In March twenty eleven, Clinton
testified that there was no need for such consultation and

(08:38):
declared that the administration would ignore a sixty day limit
on unauthorized military actions. Obama also defied the War Powers
Resolution on Syria. He actually did ask for congressional authorization
to take military action in that country in twenty thirteen,
but Congress refused to approve it. He did it anyway,

(09:00):
Congress expressly denying authorization for the introduction of the United
States Armed Forces. Both Obama and Trump did precisely that
Trump was wise to notify Congress. You notice that when
you look back at history like this, and it's just
such stark reality of what happened before, and the screaming

(09:21):
and yelling and wailing and the national teeth about Trump
doing exactly what his predecessors have done, setting the stage
for this lucy goosey reality we have when it comes
to war making. It's pretty amazing. And note that nothing
happened there was no consequence for these prior uses of
military force without congressional approval. People scream, people wailed, people

(09:44):
gnash teeth. The actually passed resolution denying the authorization, and
yet the presidents went ahead and did it anyway with
no consequence. Fact to Turlie, Trump was wise to notify
Congress and is currently in compliance with War Powers Act. However,
what occurs after that is anybody's guess. The War Paras
Act and the Authorization for Use of Military Force have

(10:06):
been paper tigers for decades, and most in Congress wanted
it that way. Politicians long ago abandoned the responsibilities to
declare war. What remains has been little more than political theater, Amen, Jonathan.
Even under the WPA, Trump would have sixty days to
prosecute this war and another thirty days to draw down
forces without congressional approval. The court in that case I

(10:29):
mentioned before, Campbell versus Clinton, noted that even if Clinton
violated the WPA by continuing operations after the sixty day period,
he was technically in compliance by withdrawing forces before the
end of the ninety day period. That's an additional thirty
day drawdown period. Trump could likely prosecute this campaign in

(10:51):
ninety days. Indeed, if he goes beyond the ninety days,
we would likely be facing a potential global war with
retaliatory strikes on both sides. In such an environment, very
unlikely the Congress would withhold support for our ongoing operations
in the meantime. Calls for impeachment are absurd given the
prior actions of presidents using this very authority. Once again,

(11:12):
some Democrats appear to be intent on applying a different
set of rules for impeaching Trump than any of his predecessors.
Trump can cite both history and case law and allowing
presidents to take such actions. At most. The line over
the War Powers is murky. The framers wanted impeachment to
be based on bright line rules in establishing high crimes

(11:34):
and misdemeanors. This is all part of the Claude Raine
school of constitutional law. Members will once again express their
shock and disgust that the use of the same military
authority that they once accepted from prior presidents Trump has
a great number of risks in this action from global
military and economic consequences. The War Powers Act is not

(11:55):
one of them. If history is any measure it, I mean,
you know, you can argue Trump, and Trump's got his arguments.
As Turtley illustrates, it doesn't answer the real, the constitutional question,
which of course has been dodged. It's like the five
d's of dodgeball when it comes to that. And I'm

(12:16):
in full agreement with Massy or with Jonathan Turley's observation,
this is exactly what congressional members want. They don't want
any responsibility for dealing with what power has been delegated
to them under the Constitution. We'll just play fast and
loose with it. Hence the nineteen seventy three War Powers Act,
which again has never been subjected to constitutional scrutiny, even

(12:37):
though it delegates authorities specifically resting in the legislative branch
to the executive branch. There you go five three, seven, four, nine, fifty,
eight hundred and eighty two to three top pound, five
fifty on AT and T phones. Much larger and bigger
problems facing US. I think given the UH open borders

(13:01):
that we have here, lots of people raising red flags
about that. Sleeper cells, for example, are one critical problem
we're facing right now five eighteen, Right now fifty five
kr SE detalk station.

Speaker 5 (13:13):
Fifty five karc.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Our h D five KRCD talk station at temperature jump
it all over. I show up this morning seventy three,
then it tells me it's seventy seven, and now it's
say in seventy four, Todd if you check on your
loved ones and make sure you go to fifty five
kr sea dot com. Of course, Tech Fighter with Dave
Hatter a particularly eye opening segment with Dave Hatter revealing

(13:38):
that sixteen billion actual passwords have been hacked and some
strong you know, encouragement case get a level of desperation
and trying to help people to save them from themselves.
Get a password manager. He did point out one that
he uses creates really complex passwords that you couldn't possibly remember.

(13:59):
He had like twelve fifteen thirty different sites you go
to do every single one is supposed to have a
different password for it because a lot of people use
the same password for every single site that they have,
creating a problem, especially if your password gets hacked. Hackers
know that a lot of people use the same password,
and then they'll jump around to all kinds of different websites,
including your bank site, and liberate you from your assets.

(14:23):
It'd be pretty easy to do if they have your password.
So heed his advice and moving away from the bombing.
And you know, I'll tell you what, say what you
will about that bombing. Wildly of you is wildly successful.
Not quite sure what Iran is going to do other than,
you know, make good on their their threat to cut
off the Straight of Horror Moves, which is described by

(14:44):
the Wall Street Journal as a major gambit, so they
might get away from it. Get away with it for
a little while and look at the map when you
see the Straight of Hormoves and realize that so much
of the oil flows through that particular little narrow alleyway
two miles, they said, they iron kid serve. We'll do
some short term damage. Shipped patches through the strait is
two miles at its narrowest and vulnerable to sea mines.

(15:10):
Say Irankant harassed ships with its naval forces. They got
those high speed patrol boats and as well drones and
missiles that they could fire from on shore. But at
least as far as the Journal's analysis, US has ample
navy resources in the region that can clear the mines
in pretty short order and of course eliminate the entire
Iranian Navy if it tries to shut down the straight

(15:31):
because they have little boats and we have big boats
with giant guns. So oil futures are dropping around. But
downplaying that threat just slightly, but just going back to
a story that has unrelated to anything else, like that
recent study. Thinking of Dave Hatter who talks about you know,

(15:54):
artificial intelligence and chat GPT all the time, and I
actually have tried it out and is pretty amazing. But
it takes the need for you to exercise your brain
power and does it for you. So MIT Media Lab
did a study on exactly this, and it's pretty much
I guess you could come up. You could know the

(16:14):
conclusions of the study before even hearing them. Findings over
there suggest that a long prolonged use of the language
model could negatively impact an individual's critical thinking abilities, especially
in young younger adults. Study involved dividing subjection into three groups,

(16:36):
those using chat GPT, those using Google's search engine, which
requires you to find the information and then you know,
put it together, and then what they called a brain
only group that relies solely on the individual's knowledge. Each
participant's brain activity was monitored using EEG's electro and cephalobgraph

(17:01):
feed results described as shocking. Subject to use chat GPT
over a few months consistently demonstrated the lowest brain engagement
and underperformed at neural linguistic behavioral levels. Say Initially, the
chat GPT group utilized the LM also to ask structural
questions for their essays, but by the end of the

(17:23):
study they were more likely to simply copy and paste
the generated content, in other words, not exercising one's individual
You know, it rewrites. You know, when you scratch things out,
you rewrite it. Well, chat GPT said this, and I
don't like the way that's phrase using your own brain
power to some degree, but they ended up just saying, nah,
that's fine. The Google search engine group showed moderate brain engagement,

(17:47):
while the brain only group exhibited the strongest most wide
ranging neural networks, suggesting that rely on lllms like chat
GPT can have detrimental effects on the user's cognitive function
and over time. Shocking no one. I just think we're

(18:08):
all getting just basically dumber because of the Internet. Generally speaking,
you don't have to remember anything. It's always the answer
is right there here. Let me look it up. What
was the phrase? In that song that you were you're
talking about with your wife and like, what was the
name of that song? It's like I can't remember. Don't
turn back into your your your files in your head.
Just bough out the smartphone and get the answer, get
the question answered right away, and move on with your life.

(18:30):
The more we do that, the dumber we're all going
to get. And this is just something that that study suggests.
So there you go. Five twenty seven fifty five KRSIT
Talk Station, Local stories coming up. Alternatively, phone calls are
always welcome here in the morning show regardless. I'll be
right back.

Speaker 6 (18:44):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
Join the roads when they face them.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
Fifty five KRSD Talk Station by one three seven hundred
eight two three talk. It's time to hear from Tom. Tom.
Hope you at a wonderful week and welcome back to
the program, my friend.

Speaker 7 (19:03):
Oh man, it's gonna be sweltering in the Jays all.
I can't stand this heat. I'm not a fan of
the heat. I even grew up in South Florida and
I can't stand it. Yeah, yeah, it's not it's no good.
It's no good.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Yeah, People complain about sub zero conditions the middle of winter.

Speaker 7 (19:19):
I hate it.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
I hate it, I hate it. And then you get
the summertime. You get humidity coupled with north of ninety
degree heat, and people hate it, hate it, hated. You
can't win. Moving target here.

Speaker 7 (19:29):
Somewhere for about three and a half days in like April,
it's really nice, and then you get it again in
like October. Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
Yeah, you're right.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
Everybody is happy.

Speaker 7 (19:41):
For those like seven or eight days for the year.
Otherwise somebody's bitching, no doubt about it. Your your study
there is obvious. It's obvious. It's like, that's the Captain
obvious study. You don't have to use a muscle or
your brain cells. They're just gonna sit there and and

(20:02):
they're gonna get weak and you're not you know, you're
just not gonna use them and and uh, yeah, you're
just gonna become more and more stupid pretty much. Uh
and and and the problem with that is is that
you revert to using your emotions more. You react to
your emotions, and you don't think. Uh, you don't use
critical thinking, you don't stop and wait, wait a minute,

(20:25):
hold on, what's the consequence of this going to be
if I do this and and uh, you basically you
turn into a Democrat, which is it's no good for anybody.
So and and I, I mean I that's kind of
a crack and a sarcastic remark, but there's a lot
of truth to that, because if you look at what
did what a lot of the Democrats are screaming about

(20:47):
and hollering about and getting all set about, it's all emotions.
It's just it's there's no common sense rooted in in
the and like the platform of the Democrat Party, at
everything that they are, that they stand for, everything that
they rail against it like you guys are being stupid,
and and we just gotta we just got to stay

(21:09):
the course with what we believe to be the right
thing and keep putting people in there and electing people
who are gonna use some common sense. We got, we
got everybody sallible. Everybody's gonna make mistakes. I'm not I'm
not happy with Obviously, we've talked about this a nauseum
about what all the Republicans are doing. They make they
make plenty of mistakes, but you know, if you add

(21:29):
it up all together, there's no way it's gonna be
okay for Democrats to be in charge because they have
no common sense to their to their side, they everything
that they're for is goes completely against what what those
of us who use our brains, you know, understand is reality.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
So what I guess amid all this, I mean, I'm
hearing some very coherent statements. Specifically, they do tend to
rant and scream a name, call a lot, and their policy,
the Democrat plat presently as it currently exists, seems to
be just simply saying no to anything Donald Trump or
the Republicans proposed. That's without any analysis as to the

(22:10):
value of any given proposal or articulating specific reasons why
it's bad. It's just a scream, Oh my god, you
know you're taking away medicaidive people are going to starve
and die. Well, if that's not no, that's not true.
I mean, give it a thoughtful analysis. And also, while
you're screaming about the efforts of the Republicans to try
to save the program and get able bodied adults off

(22:32):
of a program that wasn't created for their benefit of
the first place, explain to us the Democrat proposal to
save it, like social Security. Just screaming and ranting about
Social Security and you can't touch it is gotten as
closer to the day when they're not going to have
enough money coming in to pay for the program, it's
rapidly approaching. Have you got an explanation of how you're

(22:55):
going to fix it? Do you have a platform?

Speaker 2 (22:57):
No?

Speaker 1 (22:57):
What you hear is just screaming and wailing and gnashing
of tea with nothing to run on. And that's okay.
If they have nothing to run on, that's okay with
me because that means people won't vote for them.

Speaker 7 (23:07):
But let's ho so. But unfortunately they are. They are
pandering to just the you know, the side of our
voters that all they care about is their emotions. That's
all that matters to them. And we've got to reach
those people too. You got people that you know who
who vote Democrat just blindly anti Trump everything and and

(23:30):
oh no change, no dictators. I mean, you got to
find a way to reach these people and somehow or
other get them to understand, don't vote Democrats.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Have a great day, Ryan, Thanks tomm you do the
same five point thirty five Jay, hang on, get you
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Speaker 6 (24:44):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
I'm at Evan CE five forty on a Monday, and
a happy one to you. Christopher Smith min at seventy
twenty for the smither vent Money Monday with Brian James,
a Hi five and phone calls anytime you want to
call in Yeah on those two segments five eight hundred
eighty two to three Talk Jay, thanks for holding over
the break.

Speaker 3 (25:06):
Welcome back, Hey, Thanks Brian. Hey.

Speaker 4 (25:09):
Wanted to build on your comments about artificial intelligence. I
recently had a client who asked me to create a resume.
First time. I had to dust that thing off and
I don't know how long. So I really hated the
idea of doing it. So I got on one of
these sites that helped you put together your CV, and
of course it had artificial intelligence help. So I laid out,

(25:33):
I did the best I could, fed it into this
thing and it was when I first read it I
was blown away because under my work history, let's say
I would have three bullet points for each place that
I worked. It turned it into five and it was
like an A plus plus until I looked a little
bit harder at it. About the second third time I

(25:56):
went through it, I realized of the five bullets, the
first two looked like a professional writer was awesome, took
what I wrote and made it like ten times better.
The third one wasn't really any better than what I wrote,
And the last two looked like Kamala Harris wrote it.
It was just pure word salad is just yeah, well,

(26:19):
just regurgitated and repackaged what was the first three bullets.
So I would tell young people out there, don't rely
or anybody out here, don't rely on that thing. To
just do it one percent, because I don't think you're
going to.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
Get away with it.

Speaker 4 (26:37):
If I was reading that resume, I would have picked
up on it that the last two bullets under the
work history were just garbage and just taking up space,
which doesn't really reflect well. No, at least in my experience,
it wasn't as good as what is cracked up.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
To be well, any of the other the funny component
of funny sad pathetic at the same time. You know,
modern businesses, larger businesses I've been led to leave using
artificial intelligence to review the resumes, to weed through, you know,
the weed from the chaff. You know, no, this person's

(27:11):
education background is not sufficient for what we're looking for,
et cetera, et cetera. So it takes away that the
need for an individual to actually go through a huge
stack of resumes, most of which are lurking online and
employment websites for someone to find. So in order to
find the people who might be eligible, they use artificial intelligence.
So it's AI looking at AI. Oh my god, garbage in,

(27:32):
garbage out jays. Basically what this is coming down to.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
And don't vote Democrats.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
Okay, they're double it down. Good to hear from you, man.
You can feel free to call it to In the meantime,
even though the world's falling apart around us, we still
have a stack. Is stupid, because I'm not going to
let the problems of the world stand in the way
of the lighter part of the five o'clock hour. So
let's start in Florida. Got a woman recently arrested after

(28:00):
several syringes and a fentanyl were found quote inside her
person quote thirty four year old Jessicarina. That person stands
accused of myriad crimes, including smuggling and controlled substance possession
of fentanyl corner to the Flagler County Sheriff's Office records
started out June fifteen, pulled over for a mismatched license

(28:22):
plate allegedly assigned to a Ford car, but a fixed
to her Chevy pickup driver's side seat belt also is
dangling near the door. Accord to the charging affidavit. Deputy
wrote that such seat belt is consistent with the driver
not properly wearing their seat belt, and a traffic stop ensued,
but the deputy said Renos seemed to be taking her

(28:43):
time quote upon her activating my emergency lights and sirens,
the vehicle tapped its breaks several times, but it continued
to proceed without stopping for approximately thirty seconds, despite having
several safe lit areas to pull over. While making contact
with the driver, she stated that she was on the
phone and was talking to her daughter, which is why
she didn't immediately pull over. I then inquired if the

(29:04):
female was the registered owner of the vehicle, and she
said yes. While attempting to get the operator's driver's license,
she stated that she does not have a license and
has an upcoming court date regarding her driver's license suspension.
The traffic stop apparently confirmed the license plate was on
the wrong vehicle. Reno was driving with a lapsed registration

(29:25):
and without insurance. When asked about her seatbelt, she alleged
apologized for being in a rush. Following her Miranda rights,
she allegedly admitted that she was aware of her suspended
license and had an upcoming court date previously being caught driving.
She also said that she had her friend's license plate
after her own license plate, in her words, blew off

(29:46):
her truck. Then came the drug component.

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Quote.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
Upon placing Jessica underarrest with the above noted criminal charges
of female debuty was requested to perform a search incident
to arrest. During that time time, it was explained to
Jessica that if she had any other contraband on or
inside her person, she'd face additional criminal charges if it
was located at the inmate facility. She said she did not,
then booked in the local jail that's where the drugs

(30:14):
were found. According to the affidavit, the booking decty detective's
discovered a black sock tucked into the area of Jessica's
huh my words, not the one the affidavid. Within the
black sock that he's located six capped syringes in a
bag of white, powdery substance. While inquiring about the substance,

(30:36):
she said it it was fentanyl. Utilized the mobile to
detect fentanyl field test kick. The substance weighed proximately three
grams total package weight two grams if fentanyl inside the package.
Booked into the inmate facility, she initially stated that she
forgot the items were in her person. However, she later

(30:58):
stated that she was afraid to say it because you
did not want to get sick. I suppose that would
mean as a consequence of fentanyl withdrawal, ultimately booked in
a multiple drug and driving related accounts, posted eleven thousand,
five hundred dollars beyond and got out five forty six
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with the free consultation. Five one three eight four seven
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seven zero zero one nine fifty five the talk station. Hey,
if you're listening to me, five fifty one if you
have KERR CV talk station, back to the stacktor stupid

(32:23):
going to Iowa for this one. Not a lot of
stupid coming out of Iowa.

Speaker 3 (32:27):
Iowa.

Speaker 1 (32:27):
Woman recently arrested for falsely reporting than the man she
was supposed to go on a date with to the
police because and she, in her words, got cold feet
and didn't know how to tell him. Eighteen year old
sam Maya Thomas no relation, supposed to go on a
romantic date with a man she met through online dating app.
When the date showed up on her doorstep, the young
woman reportedly got cold feet and decided you didn't want

(32:48):
anything to do with them with the date. So instead
of simply ignoring him, making up some sort of excuse
to cancel the date, or flat out telling the guy
she didn't want to go out with him, she called
nine to one one, made ridiculous story about the man
banging on her door being in an abusive X with
whom she was seven months pregnant, and asking police to

(33:10):
have him removed. North Liberty woman told nine to one
one that the man on her porch was threatening to hit, punch, kick,
and stab her. Police dispatch a car to the location.
Officers showed up to her house, didn't find an angry assailant,
but a calm looking man leaving her property, and police
stopped the man and asked him about his relationship with
the eighteen year old woman. He said they just met

(33:30):
a week prior to a dating Appum, we're supposed to
go on a date that night. Conversation showed he was
being honest and he really did just meet this female.
But the man's led victim insisted that they'd known each
other for two years and that she even was pregnant
with his baby. She claimed that he'd been abusive through
the relationship and shown up on her doorstep threatening to

(33:51):
cause her physical harm. Police let her discovered that she
had deleted some of her texts with her date to
cover her tracks. Then, after repeating questioning, she admitted that
she made the whole story up and that he was
indeed a man that she recently met online idiots doing
idiot things because that idio is yes, indeed, let us

(34:13):
see here. Police dash cam video captured police officers struggling
with a convicted jewel thief in an attempt to keep
the man from swallowing stolen Tiffany diamonds worth more than
three quarters of a million dollars. What Florida Highway Patrol
video camera recorded this apprehension of Jathan Gilder, who was

(34:37):
thirty two on I ten Guilder driving a rented Mitsubishi,
was pulled over by troopers who had received the be
on the Lookout alert from the Orlando Police investigating the
robbery earlier that day at Tiffany in Company. His rap
sheet includes a litany of jewelry robbery is suspected opposing
as a representative of an NBA player interested in purchasing diamonds.

(34:58):
After being shown in a private room, the man grabbed
two sets of diamond earrings worth six hundred and nine thousand,
five hundred dollars and one hundred and sixty thousand dollars respectively.

Speaker 8 (35:10):
Geez Louise.

Speaker 1 (35:13):
Anyway. After being pulled from his vehicle on handcuff, Gilder
was being walked to a squad carmen. A trooper noticed
that the detainee was talking with a closed mouth and
was moving an object around using his tongue tongue phrasing
mm hmm, as seen in the arrest video, which was released.
Troopers repeatedly ordered him to open his mouth and spit

(35:33):
out what was inside. You're gonna get tazed, one trooper
warn another declaring he swallowed something phrasing as troopers grabbed
his throat and jaw, Gilder, through gritted teeth, replied, I
don't have to. When he was told to open his mouth,
police initially thought he may have been swallowing illegal narcotics,

(35:54):
notre than he was I had white matter on his lip.
Gilder's was a rev which is described as a cold
sore cream. Field test did not detect any illegal substances.
When a search of guilders vehicle turned up tifty and
company price tags and ear ring cards from the stolen jewelry,
the trooper concluded he probably did swallow the ear rings.

(36:15):
One of us scator wondered whether the diamonds would perforate
something internally, resulting having to result in surgery, taking a
local hospital, where refused treatment evaluation while stating the items
he did not want his stomach to be X rayed.
Subsequently hospitalized under guard. Guilder first refused to take any laxatives,

(36:35):
claimed to be a practicing Muslim who would only eat
after sundown and before sunrise due to it being the
holiday of Ramadan. After two weeks, he passed the gems
items cleaned by Tiffany Mastered jeweler, and eventually turned over
to a company's security manager. Accord to the Policers Board,

(37:01):
they said, the diamonds are presumably back on the market.
When if you have to issue a warning to someone
about that prior notice this fair disclosure. I'm with you, Joe.
You pay six hundred and nine thousand dollars for a
pair of earrings. You hope it hasn't been down that path.

(37:27):
Oh yeah, pulp fiction with Christopher walking in the watch
good good recollection. Joe, don't go away. Got plenty to
talk about and a warning that'll start keeping your eyes peeled. Folks,
gonna get really dicey out there. I'll be right back.

Speaker 5 (37:43):
Co Hus happens fast, stay up to date at the
top of the hour.

Speaker 3 (37:47):
Not gonna be complicated. It's gonna go very fast.

Speaker 9 (37:50):
Fifty five krs the talk station, just at the top
of the hour, check in. Oh god, we'll tell you
every day you need to know. Fifty five krc the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
The shot at six or six, I think about RCV
talk station. You try to have Pappy Monday. Didn't get
any local stories this morning, but like six articles, all
of which involved shootings, and Gesture just sported me he
had another one another shooting. I guess this morning, hospitalizing
two women. But it's safe to go downtown, right, Joe?

(38:28):
Now what after Parvall said, don't worry about it five
one three seven fifty hundred eight two three talk. And
that's just the random acts of violence from crazy people
on the street waving guns around and just randomly shooting
people for a particular particular reason apparently, But what if
there was a particular reason they heard? The State departments

(38:48):
issued a global travel war in the United States. This
in the aftermath, of course, our bombing of the various
nuclear sites in Iran. Ron doesn't really have any air
craft left to defended space. Those are going to be ongoing.
Those strikes, of course, most notably launched by the Israelis,
but we we did an assist on the bunker busters,

(39:09):
and of course iron Is vowed retaliation in the form
of maybe closing the Strait of horror moves and maybe
just apparently announcing a global ghot against the United States
and its interest. So you got to worry if you're traveling,
most notably and particularly hotbed areas, ones that probably would
come to your mind immediately. But now we have the

(39:32):
the concern over domestic problems here, major US cities on
high alert after aristracts from Ronnie nuclear facilities. We've got
New York issuing and a lot of cities issuing virtually
identical warnings. It's because the Department of Homeland Security has
suggested that we may be in for a real world
to hurt thanks to the Joe Biden open border situation.

(39:56):
Who in the hell came in our country? And who
are the two million gataways? Tom Holman going on a
tear on that the other day. Anyway, New York issued
this following statement, which mirror is the ones that were
issued in other major cities, including Los Angeles and Miami.
We're tracking the situation, unfolding it around out of an
abundance of caution. We're deploying additional resources too, religious cultural

(40:17):
and diplomatic sites across New York City, and our coordinating
with our federal partners, will continue to monitor for any
potential impact in New York City. Again, comparable announcements from
you know, mayor bass out in Los Angeles and Miami.
Dade Police Department also says they're actively monitoring the situation,
increasing patrols throughout the county. But note you have limited resources.

(40:42):
We always have limited law enforcement resources. So if they
focus their attention of religious, culture and diplomatic sites, what
about that power station that's down the street in near neighborhood.
What about American military bases? Now, you may recall the
and coup that the Ukrainians were able to pull off,

(41:03):
setting up and launching drones from within the interior of Russia,
much to the surprise of the Russian military. You may
not also note that Israel was able to load up
some cell phones and some walkie talkies with explosives and
blowing up a bunch of It's a terrorist over. I
believe that was Amas. Get my organizations a little confused

(41:24):
these days. Of course, the military strike itself that Israel launched,
a lot of which came from within the interior of Iran,
much to the surprise of the Iranians. But what about
the United States. There's an interesting article and I'll give
credit to the Epic Epoch depending on how you like
to pronounce it, Epoch dot com, Good Place, Epoch Times

(41:46):
dot com, Epic Andrew Thornberg doing the analysis on this one,
pointing out US military now prioritizing the protection of its
bases here in the United States from drone attacks, noting
the ones that I mentioned before, these attacks from the
interior of the country, which came out of complete nowhere
for the least of the local officials. US military leaders

(42:09):
increasingly concerns that similar attacks, which leverage low cost commercial
drones against ex expensive weapons systems, could pose a lasting
threat to bases in critical infrastructure throughout our entire country.
And think of all the critical infrastructure I mentioned the
power station plant down the street. A commercial drone, you know,

(42:30):
hooked up with some sort of explosive device, fly it
right on in there and blow it up, be in
and out and no time, wouldn't it. We got a
lot of crazies out there in the streets. US military
leaders concerned about similar attacks, they point out how to
defend them is very complicated. First off, all the states
have different rules regarding the use of drones. And then

(42:55):
if you look at overseas military installments that they're allowed
to identify with with drones approaching the base before any
potential harm can occur, military lacks that authority here in
the United States unless the drones directly enter a facility's airspace.
But even then, they point out, the options are limited.
Use of kinetic symptoms that would simply shoot down a

(43:16):
drone are out of the question. American soil corn to
military personnel. One, they're not cost effective. Two running the
risk of injuring civilians and damaging property when the debris
falls of the ground, which no one cares about. In
foreign military basis, lack of counter drone systems also a
problem that are customized to deal with emergent threat. It's

(43:37):
the basis here in the United States. Again without endangering civilians,
they say, Well, the military and federal government do have
electromagnetic weapons that can knock out drones by interfering with
the electrical and navigational systems. They're typically poorly suited to
environment rich in aerial traffic because they affect all electronic
systems within a given area. So here comes a drone,
you aim your electronic jamming device at it, and you

(44:00):
bring down a commercial airliner, for example, to such issue
as laid bare March first, with more than a dozen
flights on final approach to the Wagan National Airport outside
Washington received false collision warnings, prompting at least six flights
to abort their landings. FAA later stated that a false
positive is caused by government testing of counter drone technology

(44:23):
near the airport. He writes, because of that weakness in
the system. The Army is now exploring the use of
directed energy weapons and its counter drone operations, including variants
of weapons using lasers, microwaves, particle and sound beams, all
in development, but also presenting some challenges because of how

(44:45):
much energy they use.

Speaker 3 (44:47):
According to the.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
Congressional Research Service, Pentagon's newest counter drone weapons would draw
one hundred kilowatts of power to fire a laser in
a counter drone capacit, which is described as more than
the average household uses in three days and doesn't include
the additional power requirements for cooling. The significant amount of

(45:08):
heat generated by those weapons, making defending military installations on
US soil from drone attacks an infrastructure problem as well
as a defense problem. Secretary of the Army Daniel Driscoll
spoke about that at a hearing recently, said the directed
energy requirements for defending US bases and supply chains from
future drone attacks simply can't be met with today's power systems.

(45:32):
Like to throw in a mens interject my own personal
mention on uh AH, solar panels and windmills can't provide
the necessary power to make these things work, Driscoll said,
for a lot of the tools that are coming out
direct energy. For example, they have incredible energy requirements. He said,
You're going to have to have spikes of energy come
through the lines that are just not set up. Current

(45:57):
technology not sufficient for it. It's a grid problem, folks.
Key to solving the nation's direct energy issues is the
creation of nuclear microreactors, small modular nuclear reactors that would
generate power for an individual base and its weapon. The
answer to all of our problems, the elusive answer in

(46:18):
front of us, says Driscoll. Push toward nuclear power matches
and executive vorder signed by Trump last month directing the
Army to deploy nuclear reactor at a US base by
twenty twenty eight. Accord to the Order of vanced nuclear
reactors include small modular reactors, microreactors, and stationary mobile reactors

(46:39):
that have the potential to deliver resilient, secure and reliable
power to critical defense facilities and other mission capable resources. Well,
you know, if you really need it to defend a
military base, maybe you're going to get it. But us
out here in the general population, we're not allowed to
have them. For reasons unknown. Driscoll pointed out the drone

(47:01):
sidings over US military installations have been increasing, and the
defending the nations munitions and other supplies also going to
require rethinking how they store their material. So if you
look at the abilities cheap drones that contest logistical lines,
we know that we have got to spread out our
preposition stocks. In other words, you can't line up the
airplanes at the military base. It makes them too easy

(47:23):
to just hit them with drones. How do you protect them?
He said, It's no longer going to be sufficient to
have big warehouses with a lot of American equipment sitting
as a target. Right They've tried to drone proof or
facilities because cheap commercial drones are so readily available, by

(47:44):
creating specialized enclosures. They cite Seymour Johnson Air Force Base
in North Carolina. They're investigating the feasibility of erecting physical
barriers to protect the F fifteen E fighter aircraft station
there from being attacked by small drones. Well, you know,
it's one of those things that they're working on it.
But the threat is right now. Going back to the

(48:08):
warnings about US terror sleeper cells, the United States officials
sounding the alarm regarding the threat of terror backed sleeper
cells in our country. This after the drone or after
the B two bomber attack, Department Homeland Security released a
new memos sounding the alarm to a heightened threat environment
environment in the United States from the National Terrorism Advisory System.

(48:33):
Didn't sit any specific threats, but well, the Iranians have
threatened retaliation, and we know by everybody's agreement, the border
crisis under the Biden administration exacerbated the threat of terror
cells in the United States. And while maybe they might
be activated now, Bolton says the likelihood of violent extremists

(48:54):
in the homeland independently mobilizing to violent response to the
conflict with likely increase if the Iranian leadership issued a
religious ruling calling for a retaliatory violence against targets in
the homeland. I'm not quite sure they haven't done that already,
Department of Homeland Security said in the statement. It's our
duty to keep the nation safe and informed, especially during

(49:15):
times of conflict. The ongoing Israel Iron conflict brings the
possibility of increased threat to the homeland and the form
of possible cyber attacks, acts of violence, and anti Semitic
hate crimes. Now in the background of that, you got
all these nngos non governmental organizations funded by maybe some
of your tax dollars, but at least far left wing
nut cases who hate the United States and are organizing

(49:37):
a protest basically regarding anything they can come up with
an idea to protest over. Now we've got the strikes
on Iran, which people have already gone out on the
streets and started a protest, coupled out with crazy terrorist
cells that may very well be out there. He got
a recipe for chaos, and there's a number of illustrations

(49:58):
of basically how this has already happened. He got a
terrorist that he was arrested and Antifaugh terrorists arrested for
tremping to blow up a freeway. He built an IED.
Fortunately they were able to find it after engaged in
some unruly, unlawful activity throwing cones at cars and boards

(50:19):
with nails in him, which drew police attention to this guy,
and that's when they found the IED. That just happened
last week. And over the United Kingdom, he had a
leftist action group, Palestinian Action that's the name of it,
engaging in a campaign of violent sabotage of Israeli links,
supply chain since the October seventh attack, they claimed responsibility

(50:44):
for a strike against UK United Kingdom's Royal Air Force.
Two activists were able to infiltrate RAF Breeze Norton, which
is the base, causing damage with paint filled fire extinguishers
and crowbars, waving a Elset Indian flag before getting out
of the area without being caught. The area described as

(51:05):
a legally protected place in British law heavily guarded, which
of course leaves serious questions about the state of its defense.
Giving two activists on east scooters were able to cause
damage undetected, got in, did the damage and zipped out
on their East scooters at a military base. Started already

(51:28):
this frightening stuff, folks. And then there's that grid infrastructure
that's so exposed, and there aren't enough law enforcement in
the world to cover all the potential risks that we face.
Five three seven, eight hundred eight two to three talk
fifty on AT and T phones. Really happy topic this morning, huh,

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fifty five KRC dot com Our Hyard Radio Music Fast

(52:57):
sext twenty four of the Long Wind in the last second,
So New Hampshire, Gary, just hold, would you mind? I
promise to take your call first out of the gate anyway?
Former FBI Assistant Director Chris Wicker on the same issue.
Because of the open borders, we are at a serious
catch up phase. We don't know where those thousands of
Iranians are, and they know specifically that a bunch of
Iranians were let into the interior of our country. He

(53:20):
said it. Who knows how many of the others got
across the border. We missed an opportunity when they caught
and released those thousands. We missed the opportunity to gather
intel by interviewing them and thoroughly vetting them. We just
simply let them go, which is gross negligence on the
part of the Biden administration, they say. Reportedly, over twelve
hundred Ranian nationals reportedly entered the United States during Joe

(53:41):
Biden's time in office. White House Border z Our Tom
Homan speaking with Sunday Morning Futures. Maria Bartoroma over the
weekend said the challenge the United States had, I'm sorry,
the federal four nationals flowing into the US raises concerns
regarding the possible domestic sleeper cells driven by foreign terrorist organizations.

(54:02):
That's and you know, this isn't something we talked about
this while it was going on. And it really takes
one conflict to set these crazies off. Six twenty five
to five k s Detalk Station Gary, You're first when
we return first. Maybe a place we need we all

(54:22):
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I've KRC the talk.

Speaker 3 (55:06):
Station turned out be your radio.

Speaker 1 (55:10):
Channel's first one weather forecast. Hot Yeah sunny Heat advisor
in effect ninety four real degrees feeling more like one
hundred and one hundred and five with the index mostly
clear of a nineteen seventy four. They're hot and even
day I said it. Afternoon storms are possible tomorrow ninety
four for the high no heat in next mentioned, but
I'm sure there is one cloud overnight Claudi over night
dry those seventy two in a high of ninety three

(55:31):
et X index near one hundred and five for Wednesday
with a chance of pop up storms as well, seventy three.

Speaker 3 (55:37):
Time for traffic. You see how Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (55:41):
You see how you'll find comprehensive care that's so personal
and makes your best tomorrow possible. That's fountless care for
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working with the wreck on one twenty eight that's above
Smith Road outside of Ross traffic elsewhere do we okay?
No major time toilings to deal with on the highways
as yet northbound seventy five underd ten minutes between Florence

(56:04):
and downtown chat King Vermont fifty five s DE talk station.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
Six point thirty. I fIF you have Garric De talk
station Christopher Smithvan come out at seven twenty with the
smither vent that further Ado. I promise you'd be right
out of the gate, New Hampshire, Gary. Thanks for holding
over the break and welcome back to the morning show.

Speaker 11 (56:21):
Another goo on Brian as an ex military, I could
tell you I was aviation, but I was in one
sixtieth and everything on a flight line is lined up
up and down in nice little ducks in a row,
you know, Yeah, I mean everything's laid out and open.
So yeah, I know that exists. There's many ways to

(56:43):
combat that, putting out decoys. You could put out gates
and fencing to prevent first person drones and stuff like that.
My mind races when I think of cells and terrace cells,
and like, for example, the chuch and rebels back in
the nineteen nineties, what they did to Russia just take

(57:04):
over a school and then burn it up. They killed
six hundred children over in Russia like that the terrorists did. Yeah,
and then I seem to remember they took also took
over a theater, and I think that killed over two hundred,
although that might have been negligence from the nerve gas
that you use trying to get the people out, you know.

(57:27):
But still, while you've got people over here, you're going
to attack over here. Soft targets are everywhere.

Speaker 1 (57:33):
Everywhere they are, and you know, everywhere one of the
things that was cited. In addition to power infrastructure the grid,
you also have places where people gather together, you know,
like concerts and festivals, and I don't know anti Trump protests.
I mean, there are always masses of people around anywhere.
How can you possibly protect against all targets? Everything is

(57:55):
a target, as you illustrate, Gary.

Speaker 11 (57:58):
Absolutely good luck taking your kids to the Macy Thanksgiving parade.
And actually I'm not saying but there's rumors right now all.

Speaker 7 (58:09):
Over the rumor mill that.

Speaker 11 (58:11):
The fourth of July would be a good hit back date.
You know, who knows they're on their time schedule, not yours.
So terrorism is a hard thing to really deal with,
especially now with all the new electronics exactly.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
I mean, you know, it wasn't that long ago the
idea of having a drone readily available was outside of
the financial reach of the vast majority of the population,
or was exclusively the purview of the military or police.
Go ahead and pull it up on Amazon by a
drone and crazies out there, Yes, can do that. And
if they aren't getting them online, you know, just on

(58:48):
commercial level, they can get them from their crazy terrorist
sponsor nations.

Speaker 11 (58:54):
I got one better for you.

Speaker 7 (58:56):
I got one better for you. I was listening to
the Enforcer on X and they go deep into psyops
on that and one of the things they found out
with the operation going on with the drones inside Iraq,
they were manufactured by the Massad who hired Iraqi engineers

(59:19):
who thought they were working for their own government. Oh wow,
and this was started a year ago. So don't think
that you know, these guys have had time to work
on this, and you know it could be an operation
nobody even knows about you.

Speaker 1 (59:36):
Yeah, oh, I know, Gary that the realities of what
could be and what might possibly be are frightening as hell.
Yet four years of open borders under the Biden administration
and that's ample opportunity for selles to coordinate, prepare, and
be ready for the Green light to launch an attack.
I hope to God it doesn't happen. But if you know,

(59:58):
the Israelis worked a couple years on getting all the
things set up for the most recent operation, getting the
materials into Iran, for example. I know the Ukrainians worked
for what was reportedly a year and a half or
two years ahead of time before they launched their strike
from within the Russian territory. But there's been a lot
of time for all these organizations with the massive humanity

(01:00:19):
that came into the United States with the open borders,
ten to twenty million, coupled with two million known godaways,
all of whom could be sinister in motivation. Appreciate your
service to.

Speaker 11 (01:00:31):
Our country, Gary, okay, Boddy, take care.

Speaker 1 (01:00:35):
You too, man, which you know I'm thinking about boy
Scott motto, be prepared. Got a story to talk about
what you can assist in being the eyes and ears
against something like this happening just recently happened in Michigan

(01:00:56):
the other day. We talk about that in a minting.
But yes, real quickly in terms of shootings, two people
in the hospital after a brawl. It took place this
morning about three o'clock in the morning at seventh in Walnut,
twenty nine year old woman shot in the thigh and
hit with a shrapnel. According to you Since at please
starting Philbacina speaking with Fox Nineteen other women also injured.

(01:01:16):
She was kicked in the head during the fight. No
information on the identity of the shooter. Incident remains under investigation.
Got a man hospitalized getting shot yesterday Downtown Officers were
called the Central Parkway Kroger at five point thirty in
the morning. The man got shot in the leg at
Third and Walnut. What's with Walnut Street? He then ran
up Central Parkway and collapsed there by the Kroger. No

(01:01:40):
suspect at this time. Investigation ongoing. I guess there's a
stack of shootings out there. I hope it's not going
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Speaker 6 (01:02:38):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station at six.

Speaker 1 (01:02:43):
Forty here fifty five car CD doog station and Happy Monday. Yeah,
a lot of concerns about drones. Talk about that this morning.
They're worried about American military bases given the realities of
the Chinese Communist Party members and other potential paper cells
from evil nations that want to do us harm. Being
around military basis difficult to protect military basis from the

(01:03:07):
short drone strike. I mean you're only a couple hundred
yards away. You get a drone in virtually no time,
the limited ability of us to shoot them down, given
civilian areas around that could deal with the shrapnel and
other problems that are raised, as I mentioned in that
one article from Epic Times. But now again you've got

(01:03:27):
just crazy individuals, maybe with a political motivation, maybe with
a fundamentalist motivation, maybe just batcrap, insane and off their medications,
which is maybe a scenario we had unfolding Wayne, Michigan
Sunday morning. Suspect open fire on the congregation in the
middle of the service. But there's a positive lesson to

(01:03:51):
be learned from this one. The Wayne Police Department showed
up to the active shooter at cross Point Church. Upon arrival,
officers determined that a security guard for the church had
shot and killed the suspect. One victim to get shot
in the leg Gumman, described as a thirty one year

(01:04:11):
old white guy from Romulus. Motivations unknown, but they say
it appears he was suffering from a mental health crisis,
one of many reasons someone might want to open fire
on an innocent group of a congregation gathering for worship.
Police officer Chief Ryan Strong said, you know, our interactions

(01:04:34):
with him in the past were quite limited, nothing of note,
he said, So this was not someone who was on
anybody's radar. Showed up wearing tactical gear. There's video of
the congregation ducking and moving to the back of the
church and things of that nature. Strong said one staff
member got shot in the leg by the suspect. Happened
just quarter in noon local time. Outlets said. The armed

(01:04:57):
suspect on his way to the Christian church when a
p person outside the church tried to stop him using
a truck. Accorded Chief Strong, several staff members from the
church approached the government. A parrishioner struck the gunman with
his vehicle as the gunman shot the vehicle repeatedly. At
least two staff members shot the gunmen with what were

(01:05:22):
fatal wounds. They were armed staff there. Chief Strong said
he believed the gunman was intending to commit a mass
shooting based on the prelminary investigation. They don't think he
had any affiliation with the church either. Doesn't really quite
matter though, does it. In the wake of the shooting,

(01:05:53):
Paul County, Florida Sheriff Grady Judd urged those going to
places of worship to be cautious and alert for suspicious activity,
mirroring the notices that went out by the various mayors
of the cities of New York and Miami and Los Angeles,
be alert. We have this bombing that just recently went on.
The Iranians are bat crap crazy and a lot of

(01:06:15):
fundamentalists among them that would love to do you harm
just in the name of I don't know, are striking
their military base, are stopping or at least hoping. I'm
waiting for the outcome on that one. It's still some
big question marks floating around about how damn much damage
there was done to that Fordham nuclear facility it got hit.
Some are suggesting really severe damage, although not definitively so.

(01:06:41):
But I'm hoping we set back their nuclear program into
the Stone Age. Regardless of whether you believe it was
appropriate constitutional for a president of unilaterally launched that, I
think the results we can say are good, at least
in so far as keeping around from getting a bomb. Remember,
Iran funds the crazies in the world, and there are

(01:07:01):
a lot of copycat crazies out in the world, people
who hate the United States. We've seen a lot of
that of late, haven't we from Antifa to BLM to
the protests have been taking place recently, just absolute outright
anti Semitism being expressed in the streets now, protests related
to just Trump generally the no King's protest. It's Trump,
it must be bad. A lot of organizations out there

(01:07:26):
funding those protests, getting them all organized, and even paying
some of the protesters. It's been widely reported that that
is in fact going on here. Look, we got another
opportunity to get a bunch of people together to protest
Donald Trump for his actions against the Iranians. Let's take
to the streets. Let's get out there and protest the
deportation of criminal illegal immigrants. There's a group stir the pot.

(01:07:53):
But at least you look at Wayne Michigan in the church.
They had a active shooter protocol. They were prepared, and
they neutralized the threat with no loss of parishion or life.
The only loss of life was the guy who was
going to try to come in and kill them. That's

(01:08:17):
my going back to the boy Scout model. Be prepared,
you can actually have an impact regardless of the motivation
of the crazy person. And I'm gonna lump anybod who
would actually try to go after someone, whether it's a
political motivation or they're just off their meds, they're crazy
and the world's filled with them. Six forty six I

(01:08:40):
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It's out of the reach of a lot of people
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one of those cameras on it now, so if you
get in a minor Fender Benner, it could be thousands
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Speaker 5 (01:09:54):
Dot com fifty five, KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:09:57):
Five KRC detok Station five eighty two three talk Go
Time Play fifty five have an AT and T phone list.
So what Steve's got to say this morning? Steve, thanks
for calling the Morning show. Welcome.

Speaker 12 (01:10:10):
Well, since you tossed that phone number out there, I
think I'll use it, why not and put my two
cents in. And I mean this in a very respectful
way to the two people. It's directed to you, to
everybody listening. I don't mean it to come across in
any way flip into anything about the president taking out

(01:10:34):
the nuclear sites. Bottom line, I don't think he wanted
to be the president of the United States who allowed
Iran to get a nuclear weapon and it happened on
his walk, you know. So yeah, there you go. Now,
let's look my my representative, Thomas Massey, and I have
voted for him every time in the primary and general election.

(01:10:56):
I'll continue to do so. I really liked the guy
at some point. And here's where I don't want to
offend anybody. If you remember Michael Decoucus nineteen eighty eight
running for president against George H. W. Bush in e No, no, no,
not that. Yeah, we could. That's that's the easy one.

(01:11:17):
If you go back to a debate, he was asked
by one of the moderators, and here's where I don't
want to offend. What would And it was maybe a
death penalty question or something like that. He was the
governor of Massachusetts. I believe, what would you do if
your wife was raped? And he answered, matter of factly,

(01:11:38):
letter of the law, Well, here's what would happen? Da
da da da da da da da. When I think
everybody watching, ninety nine point nine percent of the men
were thinking I'd get a gun, I'd hunt the guy
down and blow is, you know, head off. But that's
but you know, and so and again I don't want

(01:12:00):
to offend. But Thomas Massey at some point, I know what,
you know, I don't know the Constitution as well as
he does. I know that, you know, he's a man
of principal. Napolitano is a man of principle. There's a
reality in the world too. We don't want Iran to
have a nuclear weapon. You know, you you're also you've

(01:12:20):
got an executive branch that has grown stronger over the decades.
Congress has permitted this to happen. It is, it is.

Speaker 1 (01:12:30):
And if you if you were listening to five o'clock
our Steve Jonathan Turley, actually I was.

Speaker 12 (01:12:36):
I went to work at that time.

Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
Okay, no, but Jonathan Turley and you can find it yourself.
Jonathan Turley, he's you know.

Speaker 12 (01:12:43):
Have you read that yet?

Speaker 1 (01:12:44):
Yeah? And he explained, I mean that that's the point.
Congress doesn't want the role of waging war. They don't
want any responsibility for it. And president after president after
a president, both Democrat and Republican have done exactly the
same way, sometimes with more impunity. Than Trump. Trump, at
least under the War Powers Act, gave Congress the required
notice within forty eight hours that this happened and was

(01:13:06):
going to continue to happen. There's a sixty day period
that he can continue to do this, and then a
thirty day wind down period, effectively giving him ninety days
under the War Powers Act. Now, if you ask Massy,
he would say, well, the Warpowers Act and Neapolitano are
not constitutional. They've never been tested in court. No one's
interested in testing them because our congress people don't want

(01:13:26):
to have to deal with the responsibility of making this
kind of decisions, especially a dysfunctional Congress like we've got,
who would never in a short enough period of time
make a decision. They'd be harumphing it over in subcommittees
for months and months. Meanwhile, you know that Ron builds
himself a nuclear bomb. I get all I.

Speaker 12 (01:13:45):
Can say, Yeah, if I can say one more thing
or about Massy, and again, I like the guy, and
I'll continue to vote for him. I've sent money to him,
so I mean, I really don't have a problem with
But at some point, you know, and I know the
letter of the law, and you're do you know again
go back to what the caucus was asked and how
he answered it. So with Massey, at some point you

(01:14:07):
look at the people that are sitting around you in
the room. I'm not talking about the four hundred and
thirty four other members of Congress. I'm talking about the
people that now supposedly agree with you and have your back.
And look at those people and say, oh my god,
these are the people that are supporting me, and you've

(01:14:29):
got AOC and you've got the whole gang of them.
At some point you might want to rethink and say, maybe, maybe,
maybe I can understand why this was done. You know,
that's my only point. Yes, he's not gone to offend or.

Speaker 1 (01:14:45):
Anytheam you're not. This is the thoughtful analysis that we
go through. He is a constitutional purist, like Judge of Politano.
There aren't that many around anymore, and they stand out
like outliers. When I chuckled out a lot of your
comment because it's a valid one. When you find yourself
in a moment of absolute agreement on a topic with AOC,

(01:15:09):
you might want to step back from yourself and ponder
it a little bit. Six fifty five at fifty five
KRSD talk station. I'm just looking for laughter wherever I
can find it. Right now, crazy world. We got a
little more talk about it. Then we get to hear
from Christopher Smitheman with the Smith a van coming up
at seven to twenty. I hope you can stick around.

Speaker 5 (01:15:28):
News happens fast, stay up to date.

Speaker 3 (01:15:31):
At the top of the hour, we're moving very quickly.

Speaker 5 (01:15:34):
Fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 13 (01:15:37):
This report is Sponsoredvite.

Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
Seven oh six. Here thinking about KRCD talk station. Happen
Monday Christer Smith then coming up back every Monday seventy twenty.
But the former Vice mayor of the City of since
nat Doim what we call the Smither vent and Brian
James fast forward one hour. We'll talk about how they
run attacks, affect oil prices, inflation, stocks, the dollar, everything bad,
keeping rate high or keeping the rates right where they are,

(01:16:18):
and also a new drop dead date for when So's
security is going to run out of money, another something
something else that Congress neglects action to save a program
that so many people rely on. SO And it's really
not good news at all when it comes to the
social welfare safety net. But our Congress is largely ineffectual,

(01:16:41):
and going back to Stee's point, I think it was
a valid one. The whole Dacaucus conversation about you know
what if your wife got raped, and you know, the
vast majority of us out here in the real world
dealing with practical realities and practical solutions, if our daughters
or our wives were attacked and molested in some way, Yeah,
we'd like to go ahead and take a baseball bat
to the guy who did it, or even worse, going
shoot him. And what is the consequence of taking that

(01:17:04):
into your own hands. Obviously you could be prosecuted criminally.
Maybe you throw yourself on the mercy of the jury.
Maybe you hope that they exercise their right to find
you not guilty even if there's guilty on a reasonable doubt.
Jury nullification always found it strange the defense attorneys can't
actually raise that and say, listen, you don't have to
find him guilty. You are free to find him not guilty.

(01:17:27):
He shot the guy who raped his child. You know,
it's a compelling defense, isn't it. But what are the
consequences if the president violates a constitution? Now we can
all look at the War Powers Act, and you can argue,
as Congressman Massy believes, it is not constitutional, and that's
sort of jud judgment Politana's argument, because there are lots

(01:17:51):
of Supreme Court cases which basically say you can't delegate
powers that lie specifically in the hands of, say, in
this particular case, Congress. The declaration of war handed over
to the president, even for sixty days or ninety days
like under the War Powers Act, never been tested, but
it exists. Presidents have asserted the inherent powers to conduct

(01:18:11):
these types of attacks requires the president to inform Congress
in forty eight hours in a written notice. Donald Trump
reportedly did immediately notify Congress after the attack under the
War Powers Act. So he's followed the letter of the
War Powers Act. Now he's got sixty days not without
congressional authorization to use military force he is currently operating.

(01:18:35):
I would I think he would argue, as did a congressman,
former Congressman Brad Weinster of last week, that that nineteen
ninety one authorization for Use of military force following nine
to eleven encapsulates Iran and specifically mentions Iran, but were
so far removed from the nine to eleven attack that
it kind of causes one to pause and say, really,

(01:18:55):
that thing's still around.

Speaker 3 (01:18:56):
Yeah, it is.

Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
It's been the justification for literally everything that's gone on
in the Middle East militarily speaking, since, of course, the
authorization for use of military force was passed in nineteen
ninety one. But then Donald Trump also has history as
on his side, because so many other presidents, most notably
Democrat presidents, have done the same damn things, sometimes with
absolute outright impunity. So going back to you might having

(01:19:20):
consequences for gunning down a person who raped your child.
The prosecutor may come after you for doing that. That
would be the consequences. What are the consequences for a
president who, as the Democrats and Loan Thomas Massey claim,
has violated the Constitution? Is it impeachment? Is that a
high crime and misdemeanor? Well, nobody ever else has been

(01:19:44):
impeached for doing the same thing, and even worse, Hillary
Clinton the leading example of or Obama anyway, Buttertley pointed
this all out and that op ed piece I read
this morning about the status of the law, noting that
president's routinely ignored the Warpars Act when it comes to
their ability to conduct foreign military operation go back to
nineteen ninety nine. Clinton ignored the sixty day deadline, continuing

(01:20:07):
to bomb Kosovo that went to court. His actions were
challenged Campbell versus Clinton. His Turtly puts it, just shrugged
off the violation and said it was a nonju justicical
political question. Hillary Clinton, Secretary of State, push for unilateral
attacks during the Obama administration, dismissed the need to consult,

(01:20:28):
let alone secure authorization from Congress. March of twenty eleven,
she testified that there was no need for that consultation,
declared the administration would ignore the sixty day limit on
unauthorized military actions. Obama defied the War Powers Resolution on Syria.

(01:20:49):
Did ask for authorization to take military action, but Congress
didn't approve it. He did it anyway. He asked for
an authorization for use of military force. Now, so, in
that particular case, Conress expressly denied the authorization for the
introduction of US armed forces. Both Obama and Trump did

(01:21:09):
precisely that, and, of course, Turtly notes, at least Trump
notified Congress in accordance with the War Powers Act by
providing them with written notice, so he'll have sixty days
plus thirty days to wind down, and that's currently what's
going on. So where does what are the ramifications if

(01:21:32):
Trump did in fact violate the Constitution, which is a
very complicated question, as I pointed out, since the War
Powers Act does seem to provide some measure of authority
for him to engage in this activity and not parenthetically,
he may have saved the world from one of the
most tyrannical, evil and batcrap insane administrations or governments the

(01:21:56):
world has ever seen from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Keeping
my fingers crossed and praying to God that those bombers
actually did blow up sufficiently that Fordam Nuclear base. There's
still question marks swirling around the effectiveness of those bunker busters,
but by all accounts, it looks like mission accomplished, which
is a great thing for the globe. And many global

(01:22:18):
leaders are kind of keeping their mouths shuts or praising
Donald Trump for doing just that. Russian's the only one
that's they're raising hell about it, suggesting that Iran may
very well get nuclear weapons from some other country, question
mark who that might be. Chinese have been kind of quiet,

(01:22:38):
but impeachment if when you look at the parallel killing
the rapist of your daughter and then being held accountable
by the United States justice system, whether it's a local
prosecutor or maybe some federal charge. You'll go through the
process and you may be held accountable for violating the
letter of the law. But in this particular case, the

(01:23:00):
only thing they've got to go on is, I guess impeachment.
So is the operating pursuing to a justifiable use under
the Authorization for Use Military Force from nineteen ninety one?
Question mark? Is he authorized to do this under the
War Powers Act in nineteen seventy three? Question mark? And

(01:23:24):
if you get past those and you conclude that no,
he's not, and know he didn't or he isn't, leading
to what would be then an arguable outright violation of
the Constitution. Is that a high crime or misdemeanor for
which he can be impeached? And like Jerry nullification, whether
or not it is, and that's a legal question in

(01:23:45):
and of itself. Are there sufficient votes in Congress to
impeach him? I would argue the answer to that is no,
Even if you got all the Democrats in the line up,
coupled with Thomas Massey, I don't think the rest of
the rest of the Republicans would be voting in that direction,
and you've got to get a pretty sizable number of
representatives to vote. Then it goes over to the Senate.

(01:24:09):
Right thinks it's a bit lopsided in the Senate in
favor of the Republican side of the Ledgers, so the
likelihood of them getting an impeachment is slim, and none
left the room. So lots of variables out there, lots
of legal questions on the route to a potential impeachment hearing,

(01:24:29):
none of which look very good and none of which
are clear. Most notably given the history of presidents going
all the way back to Reagan. Reagan sent troops into
Grenada to protect Americans on the island against pro Kami
forces without congressional approval. So there's another illustrations George W.
Bush or an invasion of Panama to kick out Manuel Noriega,
no congressional approval. There's Clinton the airstrikes against Yugoslavia to

(01:24:54):
protect Kosovo, no prior approval. Obama committing the US troops
to international military force in Libya, hmm, no approval and
my point, no consequences. So I think Trump has a
reliance argument to make as well. And there is something

(01:25:16):
in the law where if you have sufficient legal grounds
to rely you know that that establishes a foundation to
justify your actions and unanswered questions. Seven fifteen fifty five
krc DE talk stations. Stick around. We're going to hear
it from a former vice mayor of the City of
Cincinnati doing the Smith event, Christopher Smith Aman up next.

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Speaker 6 (01:26:52):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station Cower.

Speaker 2 (01:26:57):
I'm here just pondering all the violence and sits to
that in downtown, you know, to to wake up to
a sixteen year old shot in his apartment who runs
outside and dies on the sidewalk out there, essentially rushed
to the hospital to this morning, there's a brawl down

(01:27:17):
there at a bar.

Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
Just unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (01:27:23):
I don't know who's partying at three am on a
Monday morning. I mean jobs work, what you know, I
don't know what that is. But you know, all I
do is see All I do is see young people,
you know when I turn on the on the news
being shot. And you just don't feel the urgency of
city hall to do anything real about it, Brian Thomas.

(01:27:48):
And the first line of defense is your police. But
they spend so much time undermining the police, you know,
not supporting them. The proactive policing of our day is dead,
and so they're they're they're concerned about approaching the teenager,
you know, and just saying it's beyond curfew. We're going

(01:28:09):
to hold you accountable. You're not supposed to be downtown.
You're not supposed to be downtown. So I don't you know,
I don't get city Hall. I don't know what the
mayor is doing. And this is on the backdrop, you know,
of the of the citizen Sarah who said that her
husband was stabbed to death in his apartment. We all

(01:28:29):
know that's true. Patrick lost his life. What is it
gonna take for city hall to take to say I'm
gonna get my arms around it. I'm gonna get my
arms around it. By first supporting the police. I have
not heard a statement coming from city Hall or the
mayor of Cincinnati that just says, I support my police department.
How do they know if the leadership keeps saying we

(01:28:51):
want to reimagine the police department or we want to
defund it, or you know, just being unclear like in
the thing we just had, and it takes them, you know,
over a month to decide whether, oh man, we're not
going to prosecute this this police officer. How the officers
at the end of the day, how do they know
that they have the support of the leadership down at

(01:29:13):
City Hall and we and we just constantly see this
kind of shooting, these kinds of deaths. That's that's what
I'm is. It is key on my mind when I
wake up and see a sixteen year old kid, I mean,
you know I have a child in that age band
you know, says he went to tatt he was a
good kid, was volunteering, had several jobs. He's dead today.

(01:29:37):
And I don't want to just run through it because
by doing it it almost it almost feels like I'm
making it normal and it's not normal.

Speaker 1 (01:29:48):
Well it isn't. I mean either are so many challenges
that elected officials face, and I agree with you wholeheartedly.
The elected officials, the council members, and the mayor should
do more by way of out loud expression of support
for law enforcement. They should do more by way of
out loud support for people within any given neighborhood or

(01:30:10):
community working in cooperation with the police to improve their
own safety for the benefit of every human being in
the city. They keep quiet on it. Now, that doesn't
solve even the out loud expression of support for the police.
I don't think would solve the problem of crazy kids
with guns running around shooting. That is a broader societal
problem we face, and we could point to any other

(01:30:31):
number of sociological reasons for that to break down to
the front of the nuclear family. I don't know the
online chatter and influence that goes on. Maybe that's a
component of it. I'm sure there's a whole mixed bag
of things that would justify, or at least in the
mind of a sixteen year old or a young person,
to go out and just gun somebody down or randomly

(01:30:52):
shoot into a crowd of people. It makes no sense,
but it would help.

Speaker 2 (01:30:58):
Brian. But when you see city council introducing resolutions on
Israel and Hamas as an example, and spending loads of
time on that subject matter which they have nothing to
do with, nothing to do with, and then you see

(01:31:18):
all of these other things that are happening. You see
a city council and a mayor that are distracted from
the things are the reasons we elected them. That's the problem.
You have a distracted councilor they're so busy. You know,
just a week ago, they're downtown with bullhorns, you know,
engaging with protesters about King's Day, you know, trying to

(01:31:38):
protest the President of the United States. Now, if they
could walk into gum at the same time, meaning the
things that they're supposed to be doing, they're doing, well,
maybe we give them a break. But when you wake
up and three or four people are shot downtown and
then the only thing City Hall says is downtown is safe.
These are isolated incidents. You're okay, come on down to

(01:32:01):
the bank. Somebody was beat up down here and shot.
I promise you, your wife, your kids, and you will be safe.
Come on down. It doesn't make sense now, and that
is what is so frustrating. Brian Thomas, Well.

Speaker 1 (01:32:13):
The escalating crime and the violence in downtown since then
is ruining their marketing component. They want people to come
and live in downtown Cincinnati, and it's ruining it for
people who even might consider It's like, wait a second,
do I want to move down to that crime infested
environment where people are getting shot every day of the week.

Speaker 12 (01:32:29):
Nah?

Speaker 1 (01:32:29):
Maybe not. Let's bring Christopher back. I know he's got
more in his mind. Seven thirty one fifty five KRC
Detalk Station. Brian Thomas here with Christopher Smith van during
the Smith event. All right, Christopher, Well, what else is
on your mind, my dear friend.

Speaker 2 (01:32:42):
Well, brother, I'm going to stay on this a little longer, sure,
because we're at we just started the summer, and as
you indicated as we went in the break, it's getting
hot and we know that the kind of violence that
you and I were just talking about increases as it
gets warmer, because people are out at parks, their families
are out doing different kinds of activities, and we have

(01:33:06):
officers out here who are trying to do a job,
trying to keep us safe. But the barrage of trying
to just share officers down it just it just never stops.
And so this notion, for example, the legislation that's out
there that basically says that police officers will have no

(01:33:26):
immunity in their job. And if something like that passes,
you know, through the state House, and no one's gonna
want to be a police officer because you're making split
second decisions. And so this notion, you know, still we
have a country divided, and you and I can have
a discussion about why it's divided around race, but you

(01:33:48):
and I know that if a white officer, male or female,
in uniform or out of uniform, kills a youth in
Cincinnati and are anywhere in the United States of America
who is African American with a gun like we just saw,
that officer's life will be changed, not just because you

(01:34:09):
took the life of a human being, which is bad enough,
but because of what society is going to say, do
and scrutinize. And so the reality of it is, you
see all these guns that are that are in these
young people's hands in downtown.

Speaker 7 (01:34:22):
It's warm.

Speaker 2 (01:34:23):
We've got police officers who are being asked to do
a job, but we want to reimagine you and they
know that they're being second guess that's why they're leaving drop,
which means they're leaving their employment early to retire because
they know the stress of the job and what has
taken place at city halls across the United States of America.

(01:34:43):
It's the perfect storm, Brian Thomas, for this violence to
continue to proliferate. And it's sad, as you indicated that
it seems like the mayor in our city and the
council and our city are focused more on just trying
to collect money. They want people from the to just
keep coming downtown. But when you're watching the news and

(01:35:04):
you wake up and you got sixteen year olds walking
around with guns. The big fight that happened over by
the air and off it looked like about fifty sixty
youth just teeing off on each other. How can you
with a rational sense say hey, it's safe to come downtown.
I just don't get it, Brian Thomas. And I'm hoping
that city hall someone is listening, saying you got to

(01:35:26):
get your act together. This is not just about opening
up new pools. It's not about just making sure the
rec centers is open. It's making sure that your police
know that you have their back. And you have to
do that with a proclamation. You have to do that
standing with your police shoulder to shoulder, saying we want
proactive policing in Cincinnati. And when we get the proactive policing,

(01:35:51):
we have their back. We don't have one member of
council or a mayor who is willing to stand with
our polic in this city, and that's why the crime
continues to get worse.

Speaker 1 (01:36:04):
Well, there's certainly an argument in there, Christopher, and I
can't fault you at all for really hoping that they
would become more proactive in their enforcement or engagement with
law enforcement and support of law enforcement. I don't see
there any downside at all, and one of the upsides
might be well, safer communities.

Speaker 3 (01:36:21):
How about that?

Speaker 1 (01:36:26):
Seven here fifty about CAIRCD talk station Monday Monday is
Brian James how the Iran attacks going to impact well,
literally everything, And that's one of the topics with Brian
James at the top of the our news. In the meantime,
we continue with the former Vice mayor of the City
of Cincinnati what we call this smither vent, Christopher Smithman.
You have the floor.

Speaker 2 (01:36:46):
Let me just say, with the elephant in the Room
number one. You know, I support the decision to attack
the nuclear sites in Iran. I like the fact that
it was only limited to those sites period. I think
we shouldn't go any further than that. And I don't

(01:37:09):
support Masthey, Senator Massey out of Kentucky saying that he's
going to impeach the president over the decision. These are
really tough decisions. Many presidents before this president had to
wrestle with this decision.

Speaker 7 (01:37:24):
This is not new.

Speaker 2 (01:37:25):
This is a country that has been saying death to America,
death to Israel, death to anybody. Really yea, and and
and it's it was incredibly important for Iran not to
get their hands on a nuclear weapon. That's our interest.
Our interests is that and that only so if we

(01:37:46):
can stay out of it from that point, allow Israel
and Iran to work this out. Uh, continue to get
people back to the table to have conversations about peace.
That's where we should be. And I hope that Congress
and the Senate supports that very limited military strike that

(01:38:10):
happened over the weekend. It's over now. Of course, if
Iran said, hey, we want to take an action, then
things are going to have to be reassessed. But I
hope that where we are today as a country is
we don't take another step, We don't attack anything else
over there. We stay out of it, and we now

(01:38:33):
just allow Israel and Iran to work it out. They
might continue to fight for the next three thousand years,
but we can't have Iran. We can't have Iran with
a nuclear weapon. Yeah, saying they want death to America.

Speaker 1 (01:38:49):
No, I'm accord with you. And I think in so
far as additional actions by US military now, I don't
think that's in play. And Trump has even said that,
you know, it's up to the wrongs if they attack
our interest, guess what we're coming back. And you know
the Israeli forces, and of course, as demonstrated by our
involvement with the bomb strikes, there is no air deterrence

(01:39:10):
in Iran aitymore. They don't even have any airplanes left
as far as I understand, and a lot of their
surface to air missiles apparently have been wiped out. Clearly,
we were able to get in and get out with
a whole bunch of airplanes over the weekend, and Israel's
been proving that day in and day out as well,
and there's a lot of other targets Israel could easily target.
They have told them you better step back and you

(01:39:33):
better negotiate, because we're coming after your electrical grid and infrastructure.
I mean, they could shut the power off. There's so
many more steps that can be taken to act as
a further deterrence or retaliatory action against the Iranians. So
the Ruanian has got to be sitting back and going, hmmm,
maybe we shouldn't And that would include maybe we shouldn't
launch missiles into American military bases which are within very

(01:39:56):
close striking range of the capabilities of the Iranians missiles.
So you know, it would be a really bad idea.
I mean, you know, if you're sitting down with the
Supreme leader of Iran, you're like, dude, you really want
to go down that road. You see what they just
did here Fordham Nuclear Base the other day. Do you
see what the Israelis are able to accomplish in twelve

(01:40:17):
days and how they've wiped out thousands of your rockets
and destroyed so much of your military infrastructure and killed
almost every single member of your top military command. They've
had a hands off approach to the other political leaders
in Iran, the non military political leaders there all could
be targets. And nobody's interested in regime change. Now, Donald
Trump said, I mean, they're trying to mince his words,

(01:40:39):
but he said, I Am not interested in regime change,
and I'm not going to continue to wage a war
in order to overthrow the Ayatola. God knows who'd step
up into his place, but that could very well happen
if they start launching missiles into our military bases or
otherwise attack US interest. Christopher, I'm most concerned about the
wave of illegal immigrants under the Biden ministry, the two

(01:41:00):
million known got aways that very well could represent a
threat right here domestically, and there is a lot of
talk about that this morning.

Speaker 2 (01:41:08):
Yeah, that's that is that is also very true. You know,
I'm one of those families. I have a son in
the military, and you know, he could be called up.
He's in the Guard. He did four years active duty
and now he's in the Guard and he could be
called up. And so so these these kinds of discussions

(01:41:28):
for my family are, like many who are listening, are
very very real. And you know, as a as a guy,
as a father who has somebody in the military, and
I always say I've got skin in the game because
my baby is in it, or can be in it,
could be put in it. That the decision to stay

(01:41:49):
very focused. People who are listening to me maybe don't
follow this closely understand. But you had a country saying
they wanted a nuclear weapon, and they on it death
to America. And this has been going on for about
forty years, and at a certain point there are other
presidents that said, hey, we have more time because they
weren't close, let's negotiate. I'm not getting into the weeds

(01:42:13):
of the previous president presidents and what information they had.
There was enough information, I think here for anybody to
come out and say, six months from now, one year
from now, a short period of time, Iran had the
ability to have a nuclear weapon, put it on the
put it on the head of a missile and firing. Well,

(01:42:35):
that can't happen.

Speaker 1 (01:42:37):
Well, I agree with you, it can happen. Will be
extraordinarily dangerous, given how unhinged the leadership is there and
their outright, absolute desires to eliminate Israel and the United States.
They've demonstrated that by all the missiles they've been launching
on Israel through their terrorist proxies now for decades. You know,
that's what they want. And think about the reality of
them going after a nuclear weapon. Wasn't that the predicate

(01:42:58):
for these nuclear discussions and accords that Obama was negotiating
with them back in the day they were moving towards
a nuclear weapon. We had reason to sit down and
try to get them to stop doing that. They agreed
that they would stop, you know, along a bunch of
guidelines not enriched uranium up beyond twenty percent. They ignored that.
They continued to enrich create a uranium beyond that for

(01:43:19):
what purpose? You don't need enriched uranium to that level
for civilian energy generation, which is what they kept saying,
you only need about three or four percent. In Richmond
they were at sixty sixty.

Speaker 2 (01:43:34):
And let's I want to remind Christians, which I am
a Christian Catholic, and the Israel is the holy land
for us. It's ground Zero's where Jesus walked, It's where
he was buried, is where he rose, is where he
was crucified. It's where David the King was. They just

(01:43:57):
found artifacts a city. It is a it is an
incredibly important area for Christians, and I think it's important
for Christians sometimes just to say that out loud. It's
not like people think Israel. They think of the Jewish community.
That is true, but it is the holiest land for Christians.

(01:44:18):
And we just have to remind ourselves that not a
nuclear weapon blowing all of that up. It's just a
red line that no one crossed and Iran. Iran continued
to say that was their goal, that was their purpose.
They didn't say their purpose was, you know, just to
enrich uranium for power. They were saying death to America

(01:44:43):
and death to Israel. And they got closer and closer
to putting two plus two together, which would have been four,
and that's a nuclear bomb. And so anybody listening who
would say, well, this president, former president should have done this,
I'm gonna just say those former president they weren't as
close to putting it all together as they are now.

(01:45:04):
And this president said, listen, we can't have it. It
cannot happen. He attempted to speak with them, they decided
they didn't want to have that conversation. Yeah, and this
White House decided that they were going to neutralize those
three sites. Now, what I will say in conclusion, I
pray that that is as far as we go.

Speaker 3 (01:45:24):
Yeah, I do too.

Speaker 2 (01:45:25):
I pray unless there's any other action or aggression, we
should stay out of that three thousand year fight. Let
it continue to roll if that's what they want to do.
It's not our interests. We've got other things that we've
got to focus on. They now cannot put a nuclear
weapon together.

Speaker 1 (01:45:42):
Amen. Brother didn't call looking for an argument with me,
that's for sure. And at least, you know, Trump, Trump
at least has demonstrated that he puts a red line
down and you cross it that he makes good on
his promises, unlike prior administrations. You know, he's already told them,
don't hit us. World of hurts coming down on you,
gonna rain down and you like hell fire if you
if you hit us. He's on record, and I think

(01:46:04):
now at least under this administration, Iranians probably believe them.

Speaker 2 (01:46:09):
And I think that Putin. I think Putin believes them
right now, which is the next real discussion. So you're right.
The the decision to do this also has other ramifications
that could be very positive that other leaders around the
world understand that just going and killing Ukrainian and sending

(01:46:30):
in drones and doing that in the public square, uh
you know, of the capital of Ukraine. You just can't
continue to do it. And it's just been amazing how
Putin has been calling for peace when he's in the
middle of a war himself. So hopefully some of the
other leaders will get the message, Brian Thomas and and
we can make some progress for peace in Europe and

(01:46:54):
it and it also serves as as a deterrent for
China as they say they want to take Taiwan.

Speaker 1 (01:47:00):
Yeah, well we will see. One could argue that China
is getty with excitement that we're involved in. All of
our military resources are focused in the Middle East, so
they can continue their nefarious actions in the South China
Sea and elsewhere. Another topic. A very complicated world we
live in, Christopher. I share it. I share your prayers
that you don't get further involved in it and embroiled

(01:47:21):
in the larger conflict. God bless you, Christopher. Look forward
to next Monday. Have a great week by friends. Got
a well hot day to state in the obvious ninety
four heat advisory north of one hundred degrees, sunny skies
clear every night, seventy four. Tomorrow partly cloudy with isolated
storms possible in the afternoon ninety four. And I'm sure
the heat index north of one hundred clear every night

(01:47:43):
down to seventy two dry and more heat ninety three
for the high on Wednesday, and again another heath in
dex north of one hundred plus better chances for pop
up storms on Wednesday seventy six degrees. Right now, it
is time for a traffic update from Chuck Ingram.

Speaker 3 (01:47:57):
From the US UP Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:47:59):
You see healthy, You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal
it makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for
a better outcome, so expect more.

Speaker 3 (01:48:06):
You'd see health dot com.

Speaker 10 (01:48:08):
Northbound seventy five, the heaviest of the highways. That's over
a five minute to lay out of earl Linger into
downtown snapbound seventy five. Now break likes past the Reagan
Highway in northbound forth seventy one, a bit slow right
side of the bridge making the ramp to westbound Fort
Washington Way. Chuck Ingramont fifty five KRZ, the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:48:30):
Seven four at five care Seaton Talk Station, Good morning, Jonie,
I just got a text message to my friend Jonie,
so she and her friends are listening to Christopher Smithman and
I talk and saying they're really enjoying the conversation. I
certainly appreciate that. I appreciate you tuning into that. And
folks who are just pulling up the show this morning,
maybe on your smart a, your iHeartMedia app which you

(01:48:51):
got at fifty five care sea dot com, always remember
to get the podcast at fifty five care sea dot com.
Really important podcast from last Friday's Tech Frider if Tech
Friday that made the top of the air news this morning.
Sixteen billion passwords out there in the dark web that
would be passwords to your Facebook account, Google, access, Apple,

(01:49:14):
and of course the breakdown from Dave Hatter on Friday
explained how that happened and how it came about and
what you should do to protect yourself. So heed his advice.
I always recommend important segment to listen to if you're
not up at six point thirty when he is on
the program live. Just had one undred to fifty five
KRC dot com and get that information valuable. It is

(01:49:35):
value information for money. Money's Brian James. So just checking
the futures market, and really they're down, but only just
by a tiny fraction, you know, SMP, dal Jones, NASDAC
and others. So maybe the conflict isn't going to impact
the markets, but we are going to talk about that,
most notably oil prices are up some but will they
stay up? Will the straight of horror moves be shut

(01:49:55):
down by the Iranians probably to their detriment if they
try it? That stocks US dollar all the impact that
the conflict is having fed keeping rates where they are.
And then finally we'll talk about the drop dead date
for when SOSIS security runs out of money. Yeah, not
good news in that department. Brian James up after the news.

Speaker 5 (01:50:18):
Big things are happening, breaking news happening.

Speaker 1 (01:50:20):
Now we'll tell you more at the top of the hour.

Speaker 9 (01:50:22):
Is too aggressive and over the top fifty five KRC
the talk station.

Speaker 3 (01:50:28):
This reporting spongor.

Speaker 8 (01:50:29):
Dome now too, that's our new word of the years. Yeah,
heat dome.

Speaker 14 (01:50:32):
Remember when his hook echo was the first thing, and
then it was direct show or direct show.

Speaker 1 (01:50:36):
Now it's a heat dome. So I feel that heat
dome looks like thunderdome. Get our weapons out and start
beating the crap out of each other, which certainly could
happen anyway. Obviously, we attacked Iran over the weekend, the
United States b two bombers dropping the bunker busters, so
we can get to the nuclear centrifugees at Fordham, clearly
on the heels of Israel really having a very successful

(01:50:57):
military effort against the Iranians. Question Mark what happens next.
I know the Iranians are a little miffed. They have
threatened to do certain things, including shut down the Straight
of Horror moves And if you look at a map, boy,
they got a lot of square miles along that straight
and that that narrow its point, it's only two miles wide.
And it was reported I saw in the Wall Street

(01:51:18):
Journal that it's susceptible to mines, for example, as well
as launches from the Iranian soil onto the shipping lanes
and Straight of Horror moves. Although probably not a really
smart idea for them to do that twenty percent of
the global oil supply moves through that strait. That is
a substantial amount. Brian, Where are we in terms of

(01:51:39):
futures and how this looks?

Speaker 14 (01:51:41):
Yeah, and you're right, and that's not something I had
looked at in a very long time. But you're exactly
right about that map. That's that's beach territory apparently. Yeah,
I look on a map that the entire Straight of
Horror Moves runs along the Iranian border. So where we
are right now is the headlines. We gotta be careful
with these headlines, as always, read the article, not the headlines.

Speaker 8 (01:51:59):
And to make tu it's to say that I know.

Speaker 3 (01:52:01):
So the Straight of.

Speaker 14 (01:52:03):
Horn Moves as of now, as of this moment right now,
has not been closed. They voted to close it, but
it still has to go through Iran's Supreme National Security Council.
They have different layers of management or different layers of
decision making bodies similar to we, and of course everything
goes through this supreme leader, the IE told. But anyway,
Parliament voted to close it, they have not made an

(01:52:23):
official decision. It is impacting transit. Some tankers are going
the other direction or pausing their movement through there were
just avoiding it entirely. In merchant shipping is also being
advised to avoid those waters. However, the Strait of horm
Moves is open for now. The reason why haven't they
just slammed the door. Well, like you just said, twenty
percent of the world's oil moves through that strait. They

(01:52:46):
can't do that without hurting themselves. So if they just
wanted to hurt everybody else, then they'd have done it
already and it probably never would have been opened in
the first place. But that will have an impact on Iran.
They have to be careful what they do to themselves.
You know, cut off the nose to spite the face.

Speaker 1 (01:53:00):
And you know, honestly, we have to acknowledge this is
all over the backdrop of Irani and oil being subject
to sanctions right now and their biggest customer China, and
they would be the biggest loser if they shut down
the Straight to hormeuse these these these tankers wouldn't be
able to get to make their way to provide China
with the oil it needs. And in fact, Secretary of
State Mark Rubia made the point over the weekend's they

(01:53:21):
urged China to remind Iran against the problems that they
would face by closing the Straight. And China, of course
is a bigger friend of Iran than anybody else is.
So that's that's a lot of pressure that could come
from China. Yeah, and don't forget India.

Speaker 14 (01:53:36):
India is not not far behind China in terms of
buying oil from Iran. So yeah, and this is where
one of those things where it would if you've been
frustrated with globalization and disappointed at how that outcome has been. Well,
globalization could be saving us from larger wars right now
because everything being connected to everything else means that nobody
can do anything unilaterally. Anything that one one organization or

(01:53:58):
one country does will impact any other countries that maybe
they don't even want to impact. Maybe that's not that's
not the country that's particularly in the crosshairs, but there's
always going to be a ricochet action, so it's not
as easy to disrupt.

Speaker 1 (01:54:10):
As it used to be. Oh and then when you
look at the map as well, on the other side
of the of the strait from Iran, you've got Kuwait,
which looks like that's the only avenue to get its
oil out. The United Arab Emirates as well, And while
Saudi Arabia does have a lot of square miles along
the straight or Horn moves, I've read that they do
have pipelines that should allow them to get their oil
out by alternative means they do.

Speaker 14 (01:54:31):
Yeah, and so again, nothing is ever as simple as
it seems forever. So there's going to be a major
impact here, but it's going to be a whole lot
of headline, any and article reading this week. We don't
know what's going to happen this week. But what we
we have just begun this particular chapter of global history here, Well.

Speaker 1 (01:54:48):
Yes we have. And the other thing we benefited from
our own fracking, which allowed us to be one of
the largest oil producers in the globe. Thankfully we have
our own resources here, so maybe we'll have less of
a sting although it being a global commodity, the price
of a barrel of oil that don't necessarily go up
if it does get shut down. What about inflation, any
impact that this conflict's going to have on inflation? I

(01:55:09):
saw the headline from USA today what an attack on
Iran can mean for oil prices, inflation and the US dollar.
Your take on inflation in the US dollar, Bryan, Well,
it's not gonna help, let's put it that way.

Speaker 14 (01:55:18):
So, yes, so these strikes did drive oil prices up briefly.
As we're sitting here right now, things aren't too too crazy.
Stock market futures are up just a little bit, and
oil is kind of calmed down. So early panic, of course,
because whenever we get this initial headline, we just don't
know exactly how far this is going to go, how
long it's going to last, So of course there's always
a shock. Golf and Israeli equity markets moved around, okay,

(01:55:43):
but oil had a big spike. The infrastructure, however, it
still remains intact. Right This was not an attack on
oil infrastructure, of course, It was an attack on the
nuclear side of things. So this is going to be
more about the handshake agreements that are now probably no
longer agreements, and seeing how everybody wants to react to it.
But to your question, if oil settles in about the

(01:56:04):
eighty to ninety dollars range right now it's about seventy
seven bucks of barrel, then headline inflation could be looking
at it, maybe a bump of point three to point
four percent this summer core inflation. We're not looking for
that to move whole lot, and the growth drag from
those higher gasoline prices is going to be offset a
little bit by more defense spending and stronger shale activity.

Speaker 8 (01:56:24):
For those fracking reasons you just mentioned.

Speaker 14 (01:56:26):
So at this point, knocking furiously on wood or whatever
this desk is made of, we're not looking for any
major impacts. Obviously, Let's check again next week and see
how we come out.

Speaker 1 (01:56:35):
Right, Honestly, when I saw the futures markets and you
indicated that up a little bit, they were only down
when I saw them this morning by like zero point
one point five pretty much across the board. So clearly
this has not impacted what people's expectations are about the
market oil notwithstanding. Do you find that puzzling or do

(01:56:56):
you think that's like I guess market force has been
looking at the it's the globe. It's a globe. It's
a conflict in one small regional the world airgo. It's
not going to impact my trading, It's not going to
impact you know, the companies that I'm invested in. I mean,
I guess I really expected it, just because of the
bleak realities of war, that the futures will be down
a lot more.

Speaker 14 (01:57:16):
Yeah, And I think I think some of this has
to do with the idea that over the past several decades,
the world has just gotten used to chaos, you know,
I've mentioned this before, but I believe the eighties and
the nineties where largely nothing happened. And I'm speaking comparatively. Certainly,
lots of things happened, but comparative to the last couple
and a half decades, then the eighties and nin ninety

(01:57:38):
were kind of the anomaly, and I think we all
lulled ourselves to sleep thinking that that was normal, that
things just just just kind of hummed along and really
nothing crazy, super crazy happened. But reality, if you look
before that and since then, chaos has been the norm,
and that's kind of where we are. So I do
believe that this is another place where the never ending
news cycle of headlines has helps a little bit because

(01:58:01):
we're always we are bombarded with yeah news, good, bad,
and different whatever news news news, that's all we hear,
so I think it kind of lessens the impact of
all of it in the short run. But obviously we
do have volatility. As you just mentioned. I think you
just called me out here a little bit. When I
first got my cup of coffee, Brian, futures were down.
By my second cup of coffee, they were up, and
you just pointed out they're down again, not very much.

Speaker 1 (01:58:22):
But when we're down a fraction of a person, yeah,
tiny little bits. And again I really expected, you know,
a couple of single digit numbers and at least some
of those markets, and I was pleasantly surprised. You know,
maybe maybe we can just take away something positive from this.
The world isn't in perfect place. There's chaos going on
all the time in the world. We just know about
it more now because of the Internet. And look, we

(01:58:43):
all managed to live, thrive and survive, notwithstanding in the
challenges here and abroad. So something positive might come from this.
Who knows. Anyway, We'll continue with Brian James, Fed keeping
rates right where they are. I was reminded to Carter
pay Jimmy Carter and Paul Brian mean, we will have
a little conversation about that, given Trump and his arguments

(01:59:04):
with the FED on interest rates. A D fifteen right
now fifty five Guy Zeed Talk station quick mention for
Gate to Heaven Catholic Cemetery. You know, summer invites reflection
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honoring life on sacred ground and more than a cemetery,
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(01:59:47):
of Heaven dot org you learn more all about it,
and maybe you would consider being buried there. Okay, Catholic cemetery,
you know the information Gate of Heaven dot.

Speaker 5 (01:59:55):
Org fifty five KRC seen right now if you have KRSE.

Speaker 1 (01:59:59):
The talk station Happy Monday, right Thomas with Money Monday's
Brian James talking money issues and of course the ongoing
battle between the Trump administration and the FED chair Jerome
pal rates. I guess it currently are four point two
four to four point five percent, and he announced he's
planning on leaving them there. I guess there's a lot

(02:00:20):
of question marks floating around labor market. I guess is
growing at what he called a solid pace uncertainty expressed
about the impact of US tariff policies on inflation, and Brian,
let's start there, because the whole world was going to
come to a screeching halt. We're all going to die
because of Trump's tariff policies. And I know he's sort
of used it as a mechanism to sit down with

(02:00:42):
some of the countries and negotiate better terms and conditions.
But regardless of whether anything's been negotiated or agreed upon,
it doesn't seem to have had a profound impact on
our day to day lives, has it.

Speaker 8 (02:00:53):
No, not really. I mean there are those out there now.

Speaker 14 (02:00:55):
I'm sure there's somebody screaming at they're always advice or
when shield or whatever, saying hey, this hit me in
the face last week. And I do have personal friends
who who have had to deal with the China tariff,
specifically the own factories and things that bring over raw materials,
and this has been an extremely stressful time for those folks.
So certainly don't mean to imply that it's not out there. However,
I think what you're saying is this has not changed

(02:01:18):
the daily routine and the lifestyle of the average American,
and I can and I can vouch for that myself.
I sit down with average Americans every single day at
this table and we do financial planning, and the only
real concerns I hear is just general complaints about the
price of things in general, not so much that somebody
has had to absolutely change, you know, what they what
they what they're doing. And I think this that's why

(02:01:38):
we're still seeing the you know we were talking about
earlier that even the crazy headlines have not impacted the market.
The market is actually almost up to an all time high.

Speaker 7 (02:01:46):
Again.

Speaker 14 (02:01:46):
We of course gave back a little bit obviously with
when the strikes became news last week, but at this
point we're not so much concerned about yet about having
to change how we do things. That would be coming
through if if consumers were changing their thinking, then that
would be coming through in the markets rather quickly. However,
consumer spending came out okay in the most recent report.

(02:02:07):
Remains to be seen, of course, what comes in the
following months, But at this point, knock on wood, we're
not it's not looking so scary out there.

Speaker 1 (02:02:14):
Well, and you know, I'm old enough to remember how
bad things used to be. I mean, four point five percent.
It's a lot compared to where it was before. But
it isn't eighteen or whatever percent it was back in
the Carter days when he was screaming at Paul Volker about,
you know, lowering the interest rates. We had stagflation going on.
That it was a very complicated situation.

Speaker 7 (02:02:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (02:02:36):
Now now again, I always want to be fair to
people who aren't in your and my fortunate situation of
having ridiculously low mortgage rates. I would not want to
be buying a house right now, not necessarily because of
the interest rates. You're right, that's a relatively short term thing,
and historically speaking, a six seven percent mortgage is still
low over the last century. That is still a low
mortgage rate relatively speaking. It's the purchase price, Brian, that's

(02:02:58):
the part. When you couple that with the interest rate,
it just makes it unattainable. And that's what's making it
really hard for you know, for our kids, yours and
mine are at that age to really pull the trigger there.
So people want to see those rates come down. The
President certainly does, but Jerome pal is not convinced yet
that if he does that we won't quickly quickly quickly
see inflation.

Speaker 1 (02:03:17):
Any tea leaf reading on the housing market, You're right,
houses are outrageously expensive, and of course that came on
the heels of COVID nineteen, when every man, woman and
child would realize they could work remotely and then started
buying up properties in the four corners of the United
States of America as they fled California, New York. But
California New York real estates still outrageously high. And I
just don't see an end in sight on this. There's

(02:03:40):
not a big, at least from my impression, a big
build up of builders out there in the world that
are building what you and I might call affordable homes
or more affordable homes. So as long as the market
is what it is and they keep building these large,
you know, eight, nine hundred thousand dollars homes, there's not
going to be any way to solve this problem them
for the younger folks.

Speaker 8 (02:04:01):
Yeah, And it's it's really.

Speaker 14 (02:04:02):
It's the affordability that you mentioned there, that that's really
not where the builders are. There's plenty of building going on,
that's that's not the you know, that's not the issue.
There's I'm up here in Liberty Township and we've lost
a few more cornfields here over the last month and
a half or so. I'm sure it happening. But but yeah,
numbers wise, housing starts are down about ten percent, building
permits dropped about two percent.

Speaker 8 (02:04:21):
So these are very recent numbers here. So that suggests
that the.

Speaker 14 (02:04:25):
That the market's going to see, you know, not a
whole lot of upside in the months ahead, But that
does I don't I don't think it's lack of upside
we're looking for. I think we're looking for for downside
for like you said, for affordable housing. Affordable housing doesn't
mean that we build a small house and price it
where it is right now.

Speaker 8 (02:04:40):
They're currently unaffordable.

Speaker 14 (02:04:41):
We need to find a way for younger people to
get a foothold so that they can start their lives,
start their families, and begin to grow forward, because that's
ultimately what's going to drive the economy over the next
several decades, not you and me buying you know, a
nice house.

Speaker 8 (02:04:55):
To retire into.

Speaker 1 (02:04:57):
Yeah, you know, what really bothers It's almost like the
answer to the problem is some sort of you know,
massive recession come depression kind of thing in order to
force the prices down would be catastrophic.

Speaker 8 (02:05:09):
Of course.

Speaker 14 (02:05:10):
Yeah, and that's you know, we're certainly not rooting for
that neither, right, We're rooting for more of this soft
landing stuff. Remember in three years ago or so, when
soft landing was kind of the best outcome anybody could
ever think of. Yeah, we never had that soft landing.
We just kind of stopped talking about it, which I
think is what a soft landing is.

Speaker 1 (02:05:25):
I think you're right, we just got used to it.
Although the norm is not good for America's younger folks
who are looking to start out and you know, invest
in a home and at least get some equity build
up as opposed to just paying rent the rest of
their lives. Brian James the bad news coming up next.
Not that this always rosy news, but yeah, the reports
out so Security, the timeline's not looking good. One more

(02:05:48):
with Brian James from all Worth Financial.

Speaker 5 (02:05:50):
Be right back fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (02:05:53):
Hey, if you're listening to me right now, and we
may as well get everybody the cold, hard bad news.
So Security administration's got new trust fund depletion dates. I
saw the Wall Street Journal article published on the nineteenth
of June, social Security ICEBERG gets closer. Official trustees now
estimate the need for a twenty three percent cut and
benefits plus eleven percent to medicare in eight years. You know,

(02:06:17):
our elected officials can ignore the problems that we're facing
all day long, and they have been for years. I mean,
you and I have talked about this before as a topic.
It's been a generally running topic of conversation for decades
in terms of where the direction social Security was going.
And it seems like the day of wreckoning is now
coming a lot sooner than anybody really projected. We're looking
at insolvency in twenty thirty three. Yeah, here's the thing.

Speaker 14 (02:06:41):
I want to make sure everybody knows that insolvency does
not does not and I want to stamp my feet
and say this does not mean there will not be
a Social Security check right now. There is more money
flowing into the Social Security system than flows out. That's
the surplus. It's not a pile of money that slowly
draining to zero over here years. Next time you get paid,

(02:07:01):
look at the top half your pay stub. Look at
that fight a ligne. That is what you are paying
for Social Security. The only way that the fund will
completely go away is if that fight a ligne comes
off of your pay stub. Now, there's those out there
who would very much want the whole system to go
away and for taxes to just not be a thing.
That isn't realistic. We're gonna have an awful lot of
people wandering the streets in their golden years. That ain't happening.

(02:07:23):
So FICA taxes will be there, we will be paying them,
and Social Security will be distributing income as it always has.
So what does it actually mean though? So this is
what Brian, would you just said? So benefits at this
point are estimated. If nothing changes, then the inflows that
the socicurity system will receive from those pay dubs will
only cover about seventy seven percent of the pre crisis

(02:07:47):
of Social Security benefits. So simply means that you, whatever
your report says, if you're trying to do your own
financial planning, look at your financial report that you can
pull off of SSA dot gov or my Social Security report.
Take that number for full retirement age, which is going
to be somewhere between sixty six and sixty seven. That's
the dollar amount you're supposed to receive every year or
every month and knock about twenty to thirty percent off

(02:08:10):
of it. As we're sitting here right now, that is
the direct impact that we will see unless something changes
over the next eight years.

Speaker 1 (02:08:16):
Well, do you think this would change the direction of
people's behavior in terms of their planning for their own
financial future. It certainly sends a warning shot over about
folks who are relying on so secure like, oh my god,
I'm gonna have to deal with twenty five percent less
or whatever. But if you're young enough, we can start
planning for your future. You can get around this problem
that's looming.

Speaker 8 (02:08:35):
Absolutely.

Speaker 14 (02:08:36):
But then, and the answer to that is the same
as if there weren't a problem. Save and save a
lot of money. You know, you want to be in
control of your future anyway, regardless of social securities issues.
You still want to be able to call your shot.
So the answer is, make sure you're saving and saving
a good chunk, invest aggressively, don't make a mess of
your credit. Do those things for thirty thirty to thirty
or so years if when you're just getting started, and

(02:08:57):
you'll be okay in the long run. Now that's said,
there's a lot of things that could change. Something has
to get We can't simply plow forward here. But as
a society, we have been unwilling to elect people and
unwilling to listen to those elected about the sacrifices that
we will need to make. And it is quite simple.
There's a million ways we can do this. But at
the end of the day, Brian, we are either lowering

(02:09:18):
benefits or raising taxes. There's a lot of ways that
could happen. We are lowering benefits by simply reducing the
dollar amount. We could raise the retirement age, make it
have to be older before you receive that money. We
could also in terms of raising taxes. It's not necessarily
just a percentage that could be raised. They could raise
the wage cap. Right now, nobody who makes over one

(02:09:38):
hundred and seventy six thousand dollars, nobody gets taxed above
one hundred and seventy six thousand dollars for Social Security
that is capped. They could remove that. They could raise it.
They could increase the payroll tax rate. There's a million
ways this can happen, but more needs to flow in,
or less needs to.

Speaker 8 (02:09:53):
Come out, or more likely a combination of both.

Speaker 1 (02:09:55):
Yeah, the one hundred and seventy six thousand dollars that's
been around a long time, hasn't it.

Speaker 8 (02:09:59):
Oh yeah, it goes up. It goes up, you know,
every year a little bit.

Speaker 14 (02:10:03):
But the point is there's a lot, a lot of
income earned by people that are that is way above that.
If we simply remove that cap, which that's a pretty
low cap when you think about the three hundred and
thirty million people out there and the range of incomes
that exist in this country, that cap is really really low.
If we remove that cap, that was the one thing
that we did, the whole problem goes away. It goes
poof overnight, Brian. But we're not willing to do that.

(02:10:24):
That's a sacrifice. This country, the society is not willing
to make sacrifices yet. We're going to be forced to eventually,
but we prefer to kick the cant so far.

Speaker 1 (02:10:32):
Yeah, and maybe there's a bright light in this inability
to buy a home reality younger people are facing. You know,
I know there's always the problem of rent, but rent's
kind of static, Brian. And you don't have to replace
the roof when you're paying rent. You don't have to
replace the water heater.

Speaker 3 (02:10:46):
You don't.

Speaker 1 (02:10:47):
I mean, there's a multitude of things that go into
home ownership which are very unpleasant from time to time.
Maintenance enough, keep a loon, plus insurance. Maybe they'll find
a better resource in putting their money and socking their
money away in an investment. And since not having to
deal with the expense of home ownership, it can be Yes.

Speaker 14 (02:11:05):
The thing that scares me though, is now one of
your largest expenses is completely subject to inflation. Your and
my mortgage payments aren't going to change based on the
inflat but rent absolutely will.

Speaker 1 (02:11:16):
Yeah, and there's always that pesky energy bill which keeps
going through the roof as well.

Speaker 8 (02:11:20):
We're all stuck with that.

Speaker 1 (02:11:22):
Lots of layers on this, Brian James, but I certainly
appreciate you raising and bring us everybody's attention each Monday.
On Monday Monday, have a great week. My friend will
do this again next week.

Speaker 8 (02:11:31):
Stay cool, talk to you next week.

Speaker 1 (02:11:33):
Yeah, you too, man, It is hot out there. Five
one three seven fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two
three talk pound five fifty on AT and T phones.
It's got something you want to talk about. It's a
great time to call in. Got a couple more segments
to deal with here in the morning show. I hope
you can stick around. I'll be right back.

Speaker 6 (02:11:49):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio Station.

Speaker 1 (02:11:53):
Hey thirty nine. If it's five KRCD Talk station, Thomas
inviting phone calls, you care to talk about something specific?
Five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five, eight hundred
and eight two to three talk Pound five fifty on
AT and T Founds. I went through the constitutional realities
that are obviously brought up with Trump's use of military force.
Many arguing he's well within his powers under the War

(02:12:14):
Powers Act. I'm arguing that he has authority under the
Authorization for Use of Military Force from nineteen ninety one.
Of course, the likes of Congressman Mass you believe it
to be an unconstitutional declaration of war which power resides
exclusively in the hands of Congress, unless you look at
the War Powers Act, which pretty much says it doesn't.
So whole lots of questions out there, and you know

(02:12:37):
this has been done so many times before by so
many different administrations, going all the way back to Reagan.
You got Bush, you got Obama, you have Clinton, they've
all done this, and I know, two rights don't make
a wrong, or two wrongs rather don't make it right.
But you have like a dozen quote unquote prior wrongs.

(02:12:59):
It does provide some measure of justification for Trump doing
what he did. He can point to history and you
know what, what is the accountability? I go back to
Steve's call, you know about you know if your daughter
or your wife got raped? You know is the whole
Michael Dukaukas question. He danced around it and gave this
very straightforward legal response, like, well, the system will end

(02:13:20):
up dealing with the situation when many people, you can
probably include me among them, would probably take matters into
our own hands and let a jury of our peers
decide whether or not whether or not we can get
a nullification verdict from the jury. But what's what's the
accountability here? I mean is the answer impeachment? I all

(02:13:45):
I can say is good luck on that one. I
mean this, this shouldn't be a question of whose ox
is being goored since Democrats have done this many times before,
see Clinton, see Obama. Nobody called about impeaching them, and
there was some flagrant violations. I mean they didn't even
pay attention to the War Powers Resolution in terms of

(02:14:07):
the timing and the length of time when they entered
into military involvement. So, but you got a lot of
complicated layers here, layers that have never been resolved in
the courts anyway, Like the War Powers Resolution. Is it
an acceptable delegation of military authorization from Congress to the
president under the War Powers Resolution of nineteen seventy three.

(02:14:30):
It's never been tested in courts. So Trump would stand
behind that and say, listen, I follow the rules. I
notified Congress within the appropriate time. The sixty day window
from military activity just started ticking on Saturday, so he's
got a couple of months before he has to start
widening things down, and that gives him an extra thirty day.
So it's a total of like ninety days at least

(02:14:51):
as of right now, there's no more military action involved
in that. Ball is squarely in the Iranian's hands now.
I think it's easy to figure out what we might
do if the Iranians directly started launching military actions against
our bases that are in the area. Other American assets
tried to blow up some of our ships at sea

(02:15:12):
out there that are trying to protect the region any
number of things where Iran is directly engaged. But how
do they have they been waging their wars, of course
against Israels through their terrorist proxies. The Iranians weren't shown up
and mowing down the Israelis. That was the you know
Hamas or you know the Huthis or whichever rebel Iranians

(02:15:34):
supported terrorist group out there you want to put your
point your finger at.

Speaker 8 (02:15:37):
That sort of.

Speaker 1 (02:15:38):
Removes Iran from the equation. Yes, they are funding them
and supporting them, but is that sufficient? And I use
that in the context of what Trump might do in
the event, and it's on everybody's radar. Homeland Security and
everybody else has got major US cities on high alert

(02:16:00):
stemming from the unregulated, unchecked flow of humanity during the
Biden administration and the two million known godaways and what
affiliation they may or may not have with the various
forces out there like Iranian terrorist groups, and so New York, Miami,
Los Angeles, all the mayors are saying, hey, we got

(02:16:21):
heightened alert here out of abundance of caution. We're deploying
additional resources to religious, cultural, and diplomatic sites across in
this particular statement from the New York mayor across New
York City, but a similar statement was issued by Mayor
bass Out in Los Angeles regarding the same kind of
thing places of warship, community gathering spaces and other sensitive sites.

(02:16:41):
We're going to have more law enforcement and it could
happen anywhere at any time. The background of all this
is what we've seen now for the past I don't
know how many years since the first Trump administration, organized
activities paid for and funded by and organized by angry
non governmental organizations who are trying to undermine the United

(02:17:03):
States written large, and you know, even I predicted it,
no magical prediction when the illegal immigrant population was coming over.
If you get an administration that's interested in forcing immigration
law and it's wanting to deport them, they will organize
and take to the streets, which clearly they did. You
got the No King's Rally. That's just basically an anti

(02:17:24):
Trump rally, period, end of story. Anything Trump does we
don't like. We think he's just this outrageous person and
you know, no Trump, okay, But then you have people
that actually have committed ideological motivations, like for example, terrorist cells.
So let's assume for the sake of discussion, that there
are terror cells out there, and that Iran does if

(02:17:45):
he issues some fotware or whatever they want to call it,
you know, death to America, unleashes the terrorist cells, tells
them to do their dirty work. Are you going to
be able to trace that back to Iran? A domestic
terrorist action? Here? You got a group of crazy religious
fundamentalists which come in all stripes. These days, the Internet's

(02:18:08):
been an amazing thing. It's had a tremendous impact on
the minds of our young people, so much so that
some crazy philosophy can creep into the mind of your
child in your basement on the computer that would turn
them into some crazy religious zealot willing to do some
harm to society. Now, if that influence came from the Iranians,

(02:18:29):
or they were fundamentalists Muslims, would that mean that Iran
is behind any given attack? Providing Trump with a means
to make an argument that further military involvement is necessary
over in Iran, that's a stretch. I mean, as long
as is Ron's fingers aren't directly on the trigger, then
you're gonna have a difficult leap to get from something

(02:18:51):
happens here to a justification for further attacks on Iran.
So be ever vigilant and be careful. And you know
I would argue, don't participate in don't get involved in
the craziness, because there's going to be a lot of
craziness out there. There already is, and I just only
see it as getting more in the aftermath of this.

(02:19:12):
It's one more thing for people to protest about. As
if we didn't have enough things to protest about. They
already started this anti strike on Iran protest not very
well attended. If you see the photographs, it'll it's actually
worthy of a chuckle. But this is just getting started.

(02:19:33):
A forty six fifty five Kara see the talk station.
Feel free to call, be right back after these brief
words fifty five the talk stage one more time from
the Channel nine first one to weather forecast Heat advisory
in effect Sunday today ninety four were the heat index

(02:19:54):
in one hundred to one hundred and five territory. That's
going to be the same tomorrow overnight to night seventy four.
Claisky got a chance of storms in the afternoon tomorrow,
coupled with a high ninety four and that heat index
overnight clear in seventy two ninety three with a big
heat index and a better chance. They're saying for pop
up storms on Wednesday, eighty degrees. Now time for final traffic.

(02:20:14):
Chuck Ingram from.

Speaker 8 (02:20:16):
The UCL Traffic Center. You see health.

Speaker 10 (02:20:17):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal it makes your
best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect
more at UCHealth dot com. Sethbound seventy one. There's broken
down in the center lane above the Reagan Highway.

Speaker 3 (02:20:33):
After you've got to pay a stiffer.

Speaker 10 (02:20:35):
That traffic back eight up to two seventy five southbound
seventy five continues slow and in outa Wachland northbound seventy
five getting better between Buttermilk and Kyle's Chuck Ingram on
fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:20:51):
Eight fifty to fifty five KRSD talk station Christopher Smithaman
this morning all about crime and the failure of the
City of Cincinnati elected officials to really say anything in
support of the police and the headlines this morning they
didn't get to the local ones. We had a shooting
in downtown this morning at seventh and Walnut, twenty nine

(02:21:13):
year a woman got shot in a thigh after a brawl.
All the other headlines man hospitalized after shooting in downtown Cincinnai.
This one on yesterday. Guy got shot at third and Walnut.
Crawled all the way up to the Kroger on Central Parkway,
where he collapsed. It's okay, apparently no suspect on that one.

(02:21:35):
One person got shot outside of a Forest Park restaurant.
Happened Sunday afternoon, three pm. Mail thirty five years old,
shot once in the chest. Condition currently unknown. No suspecting custody,
Gallatin County. You're not free of it. Five juveniles attained.
One still at large after at least one suspect opened

(02:21:58):
fire at a vehicle and then led deputies on to chase.
Happened Sunday morning. Man fatally shot mount Orbs. Suspecting custody
in that case. Happened Sunday morning, three thirty in the morning,
Brookshire Way. Twenty year old Ryan Ranke. The other one

(02:22:20):
thirty nine year old Gary Teeter Theater, suffering from multiple
gunshot wounds, pronounced dead at the scene. And a woman
pulled a gun out during a parking lot dispute at
a Northern Kentucky costco Florence, Kentucky. Do you think we're
all on maybe a little bit of edge here, a
little too much high tension, people willing to just do

(02:22:42):
really stupid, stupid stupid things. Thank you, Joe Strecker. You know,
it's like the world and people have turned into happy Gilmore.
Remember that movie Hockey Player Plays Golf. They ended up

(02:23:02):
getting to play golf because he had a drive. Anyway,
his temper was Adam Sandler. I mean, you know, I'm
not a fan, but his temper was just about as
short as any temper could be, and he would just
immediately resort to some violent act, like beating the living
crap out of someone over something they said. There was
kind of a funny, uh part of the movie where
he and Bob Barker were playing in a pro am

(02:23:24):
together and he tried to beat the crap out of
Bob Barker, and Bob Barker beat the crap out of him.
But the point being, we're all acting like that character.
Cooler heads need to prevail, you know, in so far
as this, you know, my concern over the growing number
of protests and all these activists in the street and

(02:23:46):
some of the violence that springs from it. I get
this massive concern living in the back of my head
this is going to provide if it gets worse, And
it just seems with current state of affairs and my
point about people having a short temper and engaging in
terrible activities and their willingness to really literally break the
law in the name of their cause, that if this grows,

(02:24:12):
then it's going to provide this administration an excuse to
declare martial law. How well would that go over? Suspension
of the rid of Habeus corpus or means those evil
police forces can pick you up and lock you up
and maybe drop the key someplace and not explain to you,
like Franz Kafka's the trial, what's you are charged with?
Maybe they can't have anything and no lawyer can pull

(02:24:34):
you out of jail. With the suspension of the rid
of Habe's corpus a worst case scenario, I will agree,
And maybe that's what the evil forces are looking for,
a way to attack the system of government that would
suspend your constitutional rights, a constitution that they all seem
to uniformly hate. I don't know just make an observation, folks,

(02:25:02):
but considering the gunman is dead after opening fire to
religious church service having a Wayne Michigan, remember there is
something you can do, and that is be prepared, a
point I did make earlier in the program. This crazy guy,
they think he was emotionally imbalanced. They had no prior
records of him. He was not on a police radar anyway,
armed in tactical gear, had a long gun and a handgun,

(02:25:22):
and he started opening fire. Only one person got shot.
No one died except the person who wanted to engage
in what they believed to be was a mass shooting.
They had a plan in place. They had security officials
at the church, people who knew how to operate a
firearm and successfully operated putting this crazy person down. When

(02:25:46):
police are minutes away, seconds count. It helps if you're
in the same position of these folks in Wayne, Michigan.
If that church were Crosspoint Church. Congratulations for thinking ahead
and preparing for hopefully something that never ever, ever ever
would happen, but could have eight fifty five afty five

(02:26:07):
KR see talk station Daniel Davis Deep Dives chamorrow. That
should be a fascinating conversation with a retired lieutenant colonel
military analyst, Breitbart Inside Scoop, the return of that phone calls,
and a whole lot more topics to talk about it.
I hope you can tune into the Morning Show tomorrow.
Thank you Joe Stracker, Executi producer for Lina Up, Christopher
Smith and Brian James. This morning again the podcast at
fifty five krs dot com. I hope you have a

(02:26:27):
wonderful day. Try to stay cool, folks, and check in
on those folks who may be at risk of dealing
with heat problems and milkle Wegg Glenn Becks up next.
Big things are happening. This justin will tell you more
at the top of the hour.

Speaker 4 (02:26:39):
What they are doing is terrorizing immigrant families.

Speaker 9 (02:26:42):
Fifty five KRS the talk station

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