Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five o five at fifty five k r C the
doalk station. Happy Monday, Sesay.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
S a vacation.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
I'm the dude, mayn you may be. I'm Brian Thomas.
Ho's to the fifty five k Morning show and we're
gonna be talking at Christopher Smith. And at seven thirty
it is Monday, we get the former vice mayor every
Monday at seven thirty. That is appointment listening at least
I'd like to.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Call it that.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
I always has some wonderful insights and observations. We will
he will share those with us collectively this morning at
seven thirty. Coming up at h after the eight o'clock
hour begins a few minutes into a John Barrett Western
and Southern EBN fireworks are going on a Monday Era Sunday,
and we'll be getting the insight from John Barrett, who
is I believe CEO of Western and Southern CFO. He's
(01:06):
got it. He's a huha, no doubt about that one.
John joins the program every year to promote the fireworks.
So that will be going on this weekend Sunday. Everybody
is off. I'm off on Monday, Joe, are you off
on Monday? They let you off. Good. Joe gets the
day off as well. So there you go. Short line
up today. No shot at Joe Stregger. Prayers for more
(01:31):
guests on a Monday, because Monday is the hardest day
to get my engine going, particularly in the five o'clock hour. Anyhow,
managed to muddle through. We got a lot to talk
about today. Of course. RFK dropping out of the race,
endorsing Donald Trump, that's a big one. Israel going on
the offensive, attacking has Ball all a moment, practically seemingly
moments before the Hesbal was getting ready to launch a
(01:53):
rather substantial volley of rockets into Israel, Israel getting the
upper hand on them on that one and spurring some
such in peace talks. Hold your breath for that one.
Probably not a good idea. Good idea that would be
to call in here the fifty five Carrecy Morning Show.
I love to hear from you. Maybe you got something
on your mind. Direction you'd like to go five one, three, seven,
four nine, fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two three
(02:14):
talko with Top five fifty on AT and T founds
And always remember, never forget yes the word for fifty
five carecy dot com. You can stream the audio directly
from the website Get your iHeart Media. Have to listen
on your device wherever that device happens to be, and
of course listen to the content, including the podcast. Jack
Addton return to the program last week and always enjoyed
Jack's just brilliant observations historian and of course pays quite
(02:38):
close attention to politics. Brilliant commentary by Jack Adtherton. I
also talk with Peter Shabrie about the new real estate
compensation rules and how they affect you, and pretty positive
for the home buyer, and I can just pivot over
since I'd mentioned Peter Spreen just real estate generally speaking,
people aren't following through with their home deals apparently because well,
(03:02):
they're worried about the upcoming presidential election, and they're praying
and hoping and perhaps against hope that the Fed's going
to lower the interest rate, which of course may result
in the home home mortgage rates dropping probably will. It's weird.
Sixty thousand Americans have ended their home deals because of
high prices and concerns about the election. Sales of existing
(03:23):
homes rose point six percent over the month in July,
but fell two percent year every year the lowest July
level in records. Records only go back to twenty twelve,
according to redfin, so lowest on record average interest rate
(03:43):
now dropped a six point four nine percent. It was
seven point two to two percent in May. That was
the peak. So home buyers are saying, hey, maybe the
interest are going to drop further. Why would I get
tied into a thirty year fixed mortgage? Although I could refinance,
but why would I'm going to get tied into it
right now here? Let me tear up this home purchase
agreement and wait and sit it out, and see what
(04:03):
happens in the presidential election, and see what happens with
the Fed. And it's rumored that the interest rate will drop.
Redfinn get a load of this meeting. Sale price to
the home has increased over last year four point one percent.
Median price now four hundred and thirty nine and seventy dollars.
(04:26):
Affordability rather elusive, and don't look to Kamala Harris to
make your home more affordable with all her promises of
government handouts and giveaways that only exacerbates the problem significantly.
And maybe infusion of optimism I listened to I listened
to every single word of RFK Junior's speech dropping out
(04:50):
of the race. It was a little long winded, but boy,
I thought he made some fantastic points, and he delivers
mess that come across very clearly. They're absorbable, they're understandable,
they're easy to, you know, listen to and understand. You can,
of course disagree with them, but at least they make sense.
(05:11):
Kamala Harris engages in these platitudes and talks about joy
and you know, I'm going to do this, but never
explaining anything. Very Particularly, Donald Trump a little stilted in
his wording. I think he gets out a little bit
more messaging. But sometimes, you know, especially if you read
a transcript of Donald Trump's words, you know he's more
of a face to face communicator. You know, if you're
(05:31):
contextually speaking, you kind of need to hear how Donald
Trump is saying them in order to fully understand them.
But it comes across as stilted and not real easy
to read. Well, you know, RFK Junior, you read the
whole thing and it comes across quite clearly. Now, of
course it was a prepared speech, but there's a certain
sense of optimism. It came across yesterday, and dare I say,
(05:54):
dare I say, perhaps joining forces with Donald Trump? That
might ensure that Donald Trump siphons off some of the
six percent plus or minus that RFK Junior was polling with.
It's no guarantee that the RFK supporters are going to
go with Trump, but he comes across with a better message.
He was on Sunday programming yesterday and he's talking about
(06:18):
the term make America great again. He said the phrase
has troubled liberals who think it's a call for a
return to an America before civil rights, gay rights, and
women's rights. And let me pause on that observation, because
that's what the left tries to spin it as. Donald
Trump just wants to go back to you know, Jim
Crow era. Donald Trump wants to take away rights from gays,
(06:38):
Donald Trump wants women back in the home, that kind
of stuff. That's a bastardization of Donald Trump's message, and
of course Kennedy points that out. He is, but I
RFK Junior have a more generous interpretation, one that is
truer to my experience of Donald Trump as he is
here today. Why because RFK Junior actually has sat down
(06:58):
with Trump they have had meeting in advance of RFK
Junior pulling out of the race. Donald Trump was open
and willing to discuss things with them. When RFK Junior
reached out to the Harris administration, she basically raised her
metaphorical middle finger by refusing to even sit down and
talk with him. Plus the lawfair they had been engaging
with him, which really really obviously got under Rfk's skin
(07:19):
every time he turned around their filing a lawsuit against him.
The Democrats said, they dragged us into court state after state,
attempting to erase the work and disappear with the will
of the voters which signed those petitions, in other words,
the petitions to get him on the ballot. Each time
our volunteers turned in those towering boxes the signatures needed
to get on the ballot, they dragged us into court,
(07:42):
he pointed out. His running mate Nicole Shanahan put it
out there, facing no fewer than nine lawsuits from the
Democratic Party against the RFK Junior campaign, same thing they
did with Donald Trump to try to ke him off
the ballot. They're going after anybody who represents even a
(08:02):
possible threat. So the relationship started warming earlier this year.
They spoke last month after the assassination at ten against
Trump met in person the following day. He said, they've
had a series of long, intense discussions. He said it
was a surprise to discover that we Trump and RFK
Junior are aligned on many key issues. In those meetings.
(08:25):
We went back yesterday going to a statement he us
make America great Again, recalls a nation brimming with vitality.
This is why I sort of wrote Reagan next to this,
with a can do spirit, with a hope and belief
in itself. It was an America that was beginning to
confront its darker shadows, could acknowledge the injustice and its
past and presence, yet at the same time could celebrate
(08:46):
its successes. In other words, no, America is not perfect.
It never has been, but it has been working toward
perfection and bettering itself from the outset of the Republic.
And we celebrated that success in the form of our
economic might, our military might, our military successes, and most
notably our successes within the country along the lines of
(09:07):
civil rights. He said, it was a nation of broad prosperity,
the world's most vibrant middle class, and idealistic belief, though
not consistently applied in freedom, justice, and democracy. Was a
nation that led the world in innovation, productivity, and technology,
and it was the healthiest country in the world. I've
(09:29):
talked to many Trump supporters, I've talked with his inner circle,
I've talked to the man himself. This is the America
they want to restore. And I think my Trump friends
out in the audience always believe that way. They never
thought Magan then going back to Jim crow era or
oppression of women or anything else along those lines. That's
the spin that Democrats get away with because they literally
(09:50):
own the media. And I've got a lot on suppression
and media control, multiple argues from both sides of the globe,
and it is frightening the direction we are going in.
They do not want you to have a free and
open debate online or anywhere else for that matter. They
do not want you to run for office because well,
(10:10):
you're not them. Well they are going to take you
to court and stop that from happening. They're going to
stop your project from moving forward with Lawfair. They're going
to stop Donald Trump from moving forward with a campaign
through Lawfair. They're going to go after him with every
single tool in the arsenal of toolbox, including making up
crimes and then applying them to Donald Trump where those
crimes didn't even exist, so they could hang the tag
(10:34):
fellon on him, even though I think by all predictions
legal scholars across the whole wide spectrum have suggested those
things are going to get thrown out on appeal. That
appeal couldn't come soon enough given the current circumstances. As
we run headlong into November, and here we are at
what is a day thirty five without anything from Kamala Harris.
They're trying to hide, of all folks, and so far
(10:55):
they're getting away with it. Maybe RFK Junior's infusion of optimism,
Maybe his revelations to the general public because people might
listen to him when they wouldn't listen necessarily to Harris
or Trump on the subject. Maybe him pointing out the
lawfare that's been waged against him merely because he wanted
a shot at running for president. That's the sin he
(11:20):
ran for president. I remember initially as a Democrat, Donna,
if you don't mind hanging on, just looked up at
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Speaker 4 (12:56):
Five fifty five KRC the toxic and now he's a
fifty five KCD talk station Monday Liking or Not five
one thirty seven fifty eight hundred eight two three talk Don.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
I thank you so much for calling this morning and
hanging out, hanging out over the break, Welcome to the program.
Speaker 5 (13:13):
Thank you.
Speaker 6 (13:15):
I have just been trying to find out if there's
any truth to the fact that Donald Trump called the
fallen back. I think he listened twenty twenty maybe that
the Fallen were suckers and losers.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
Now, I think all the all those have been debunked repeatedly,
over and over again. They're always lacking context. It's like,
you know, there were some good people, or there are
good people in that crowd that was the anti favers
is the Klan, And you know you can if you
look at it contextually. He pointed out that, And I've
made the analogy like if you look at a stadium
full of people, eighty thousand people, there are some good
(13:52):
people in there. There's also probably some terrorists and races,
some jerks, some anti file folks, whatever, But you know
there were people there just watching and observing the outrage
and expressing their own opinions on what was going on.
That's what he was referring to. And yet it became
this Donald Trump supports the clan. There are good people there,
Those are good people. So you have to look at
(14:14):
the context and the whole quote. There are a lot
of witnesses to these statements, and they refute the narrative
given to you by the Democrats, the spin and it's
another sad reflection of the media bias because anybody who
knows the context of those statements when any given politician
repeats them and says, Donald Trump said this, that interviewer,
(14:35):
that reporter, that person can stop and say no, no, no,
you didn't put it in context. What he really said
was and fill in the different blanks and provide the
statement's context, which shoots down the narrative. They don't do that.
I mean, you know, we're living this reality every single day.
So now i'd say no collectively across the board. If
you hear it repeated, it's like misogynist, racist, et cetera,
(14:57):
et cetera. It's just some simple, boiled down meme like
points they like to make about Trump to keep the
outrage against Trump alive. And well, so I'm going with
a heartbelt on that one, very be very skeptical. Yeah,
you know what you can do here, here's what I recommend.
You know, Trump said suckers and losers. Now, if you
(15:19):
can go out on the internet and type in Trump
suckers and losers, what you're gonna get is a whole
bunch of CNN MSNBC articles where it says Donald Trump
or some politician repeated the line that Donald Trump said
suckers and losers. But ultimately you get back to the
original quote and the context in which it was made
and the other people who witnessed it and heard it
and provide that context, and you realized, Hm, maybe they
(15:41):
have overstated their case on that one. So and you know,
I think actionally speak louder than words, whatever he said,
contextually or otherwise. I think you can look at his record,
which was very strong on national defense, was very supportive
of the American military. We have the walk the walk
and there to talk the talk part. People like at
(16:02):
campaign promises, We'll say things and then don't follow through
with them or take a different direction. At least if
you reflect back on Donald Trump's four years in office,
he's demonstrably pro military, he was seeking additional funding, and
I think he had a firm grasp on foreign policy.
Give him strong credit for what he was able to
accomplish in the Middle East, unlike whatever it is we're
seeing unfold right now, which looks like World War three.
(16:24):
So you know, just always step back and remember somebody's
got invested interest in making Donald Trump look like an
absolute evil person who really would embrace a statement like
our military folks, our suckers and losers. I think reality
demonstrates something far, far different than that. I do appreciate
(16:44):
your call, Donna. I hope you have a wonderful week.
Thanks for tuning into the program. Five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two three
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Speaker 7 (18:33):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Yeah, there's your weather forecast. Joy, you just run that
meet in one of me just reading the weather five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred eighty two threes. O go with pound
five fifty on an AT and T phone. In the meantime,
have some callers. We're gonna go with some local stories.
See we've got a firefare now facing multiple charges accused
of harassing and stalking a woman, Devin Court to the
(19:00):
court records of firefighter and paramedic with the Madera in
Indian Hill Joint Fire District, arrested last Thursday by to
ear Park Police. They believe the twenty seven year old
twenty seven year old Rather went into the victim's home
without permission on July thirteenth, went into her bedroom where
she was with someone else. According to the documents, More
repeatedly sent the victim threatening text messages and tried to
(19:23):
reach her through email, group chats, and social media, even
after she asked them to stop. In August Amen Joe Amen,
police said Moore also took photos of the victim during
a sexual encounter without her knowing, and then sent photos
to the photos to her do what the hell? Victim
(19:44):
now apparently too scared to stay in her own home,
according to police, more facing charges of menacing by stalking, voyeurism,
telecommunications harassment, and dissemination of an image of another person.
Fire Chief says Moore is currently on administrative believe thank
you Fox nineteen or rather enquire reporting on that with
Fox nineteen's assistants Jesu Louise, get over it. You know
(20:07):
you walk into somebody's house. We have the Castle doctor
in here in Ohio. Let me remind folks of that
if someone breaks into your home, you are allowed to
shoot them. There is a presumption that they are there
to do you grievous bodily injury or otherwise put you
out of your life. Got so many idiots out there. Sorry,
(20:32):
The local news does provide me with an opportunity for commentary.
Since an police apartment hosted a cookout Sunday for survivors
who have lost friends and family to violence, Fox nineteenth
Jessica Smidt was there, said that since Aint Police and
Hamilton County prosecut and Melissa Powers announce that they are
teaming up to create a task force to work on
cold cases. One woman, Tracy Morris, lost her son Antoine
(20:53):
Morris back in November of twenty one when she said
he was shot and killed while working as a handyman.
She and know the survivors who have lost loved ones
from crime, and since we're there for the cookout more so,
you know, there's a lot of us who lost loved
ones and some of us are fortunate enough to have
a person apprehended, and there's the ones that are here
that still don't have any closure, have no one to
be accountable for these crimes that have been committed against
(21:13):
their families. CPD Victims Assistant Liaison Unit spokespirsu in Carol
Ramsey said that the candidates are for the judge and
Prosecutor's office. We're also there to speak to the survivors,
saying it's important for these families, families with solve cases
and unsolved cases, that they're informed on who's running for
what and how that will impact the life of their
(21:34):
loved ones. CPD is signing two detectives to work on
cold case homicides and powers is having four of the
retired homicide Invector's investigators work with the Cincinni Police Department.
Monica Betton with the CPD, so it's important people contact
them if they have any information. There are services to
help protect witnesses, So to report information about homicides, please
(21:57):
call crime Stoppers three five to two thirty forty. You'll
remain anonymous and your tip might help solve one of
these cold cases and provide some closure for those poor families.
You know, pause and reflect when you have a criminal
situation like compared to Chicago, where dozens of people are
shot many killed every single weekend, the amount of resources
(22:19):
needed to go gather evidence and interview people in order
to get a case built up to put one of
those people behind bars. That work is unbelievably onerous and
time consuming. That's how cases end up turning cold. That
with people not helping out. You got info, please help
the police, help us and the community. Union Township police.
So they're investigating a body that was found Sunday in
(22:41):
Amelia near the Tom Youm restaurant. Officers said they were
called the eleven hundred block of Ohilepike. Ten Am found
a male body lining in a ditch. Officers said they
hadn't determined how the person died as the Fox nineteen's
last reporting. After further investigation, Union Township Police sent a
release yesterday saying that the man died of a self
inflicted gunshot wound. Five thirty five Right now fifty five
(23:08):
KRCV talkstation stackers stupid, rather substantial. Stack is stupid this morning.
Certainly not going to get all through it and get
through less of it if you call, but I'd rather
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Speaker 7 (24:26):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station kickoff is
almost hot.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Ninety four with sunny skies today over ninety seventy one
with some clowns tomorrow mostly sunny, ninety eight of the
heat index to one oh one, overy nine down to
seventy to the slight chance arrange another hot day on Wednesday,
ninety nine real degrees they say will be our high
and a slight chance of storms, suggesting to me humidity
any seventy degrees right now. If you've got KRCD talk
station time for first traffic.
Speaker 8 (24:57):
From the ucup Train Fake Center.
Speaker 9 (24:58):
Right at the UC Gardener and Uroscience Institute, you can
access the leaning brain, spine and nerve experts right here
in Cincinnati. Highway Traffic's not bad at all to start
off your work week. No accidents to deal with, not
even an overnight work crew going to add any extra
time inbound seventy four less than five minutes coming down
the hill from North Bend to the seventy five ramp.
Speaker 8 (25:20):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR. See the talk station.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
Twive forty on a Monday, no money, my I did day.
We're talking about the d in fireworks with John Barrett
from Western and Southern. That'll be at the eight o'clock art.
We still get here from Smithman at seven thirty. And yes,
of course I do have a stack of stupid in
front of me. Alternatively, feel free to call if I've
went thirty seven, four, nine fifty five, eight hundred eighty
two to three talk. I tell it's like multiple awards
(25:48):
we can give out in this morning stack of stupid, Joe,
So you decide we have a chief anesthesiologist for a
New York hospital, chose to drug and abuse his family's
nanny as what he described I guess as the easiest target.
Speaker 10 (26:06):
What happens?
Speaker 1 (26:07):
This plan fell apart when the suspicious woman installed a
surveillance camera and caught him in the act, according to authorities.
Let a report from The Journal News, Prosecutors in Puttnham
County credited the twenty five year old woman for her
bravery and willingness to testify against Paul Gea Colpelli, sixty
years old, who pleaded guilty to sexual abuse in the
first degree and assault in the second degree. Defendant used
(26:30):
to serve as a chief antasthesiologist Putnham County Hospital. Authority
said he drugged and abused the woman as she was
sleeping on the count of his home. Suspecting that she
was being abused in any installed that surveillance camera behind
a dehumidifier of a turtle tank in the living room.
Diamond said Geocappelli abused her four times. Sarah's investigator, Keith Simone,
(26:53):
testified in front of the grand jury that Geocappelli told
him about having a chloroform fetish his words. Defendant said
he considered the name of the no flag for US
no kidding. He considered an Any the easiest target because
she was a heavy sleeper. That's according to his own testimony,
seen fondling her in multiple incidents in which he put
(27:14):
a rag infused with the anesthetic Silverefloraine over her mouth
and nose until she fell unconscious. Not only did he
confess to bringing drugs from the hospital to his home,
search warrant turned up fentanyl and other substances, accord to
online state records, New York to part of Health precluded
him from practicing medicine in the state until he either
(27:35):
either the final resolution of the matters under the investigation,
or such time as this order is modified or rescinded.
Woman also reportedly sued Geocippelli, north Well Health Incorporated, Putnam
County Hospital and Montefior Nayak Hospital. Hospitals argue that this
guy did not act in the context of his work.
(27:56):
Sentencing November twelve, as part of the plea, he is
expected to be sentenced to f or to four years
in prison with post release supervision of up to ten years,
and he also must register as a sex offender four
well if it was Hamilton County. He wo let him
off on time. Serve Joe, we all know that it's
(28:17):
stories about that coming up in the local news as well. Ah,
let us see here. Go to Tampa, Florida, and why not.
Two women end up in a fight with each other
during an attempted dog adoption. Happened Saturday in Tampa. According
to police, officer shouted up at nineteen Hudred Block a
(28:38):
Meadowbrook around twelve pm. During the altercation, authority say one
of the women pulled out a gun. Officer took reports
from the women involved in the fight INFRA witnesses. Both
women told police conflicting stories, of course, about what led
to the fight. Police say the gun used during the
incident was seized as evidence. Tampa Police Department of State
Attorney Office are both investigating the incident. Determined the most
(28:58):
appropriate car charges. That investigation ongoing. See A gun should
never be necessary in a dog adoption. I know I'm
stating the obvious, Thank you, Joe. Let us see here California,
(29:18):
where authorities claim a woman tried to kidnap an eight
year old while professing to be Russian police. She had
then pulled out a switch plade on a man who
saved the child. Courtney Pironi thirty nine charge of attempted
kidnapping of a victim under fourteen years old, falst imprisonment
by violence, and assault with a deadly weapon. Lord almighty
(29:39):
if you could see this woman's mugshot frightening court at
Santa Monica Police, Los Angeles Prosecutors. The eight year old
victim was in an alley helping an adult neighbor put
his dogs into his vehicle. CoP's throat, the suspect approached,
saying that she was Russian police and that she was
taking the child. Bernie Nelton put her arms around the child.
(29:59):
In a tug of war between the neighbor and Peroni,
it ensued. The neighbor put the child in the front
seat of the vehicle and told Pirni to leave. She
ignored him an attempt to open the door of the car.
When the neighbor confronted her again, she produced a switchblade
knife lugedly fled on foot to the parking a lot
of aglease in Supermarket, where she had parked a white
BMW's she had been living in. She was arrested, held
(30:23):
on a one hundred and thirty five thousand dollars bond
translated to four hundred dollars here in Hamilton County. Perni
facing the maximum six and a half years in prison.
She pleaded not guilty at the arrangement. Her defense voiced
doubt about her competency. Police said she has a criminal
history shocking no One, including a warrant for forgery and
intimidation stalking on probation for a twenty twenty four conviction
(30:47):
in Nevada for assault with a deadly weapon. Also arrests
out of state for assault and battery, resisting arrass, possession
of a controlled substance, and trespassing as a tradition five
forty five. I was waiting which SoundBite you were picking
Joe five Cary Cindy talk station. Kitchen remodeling the one
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person you need to talk to you if you want
to have your kitchen roommodel. John Ryan of Prestige Interiors.
You can find John online at his company's website pressedge
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is in our family, the heart of the home. Spent
a whole lot of time there, like Over the weekend
we spent hours in the kitchen doing more canning and
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food prep, made kibby, got my mom some dinner for yesterday.
All worked out grade. I love our kitchen thanks to
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you just call John and he makes it happen. That
was my experience and that'll be yours as well. A
plus of the Better Business Bureau National Kitchen Bath Association
membership of course, Prestige one two three dot com. When
(32:13):
you call him, telling Brian said hi please five one
three two four seven zero two two nine five one
three two four seven zero two two nine.
Speaker 10 (32:19):
Fifty five KRC and now another insurance on.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Five on three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred eight two three talk before we die back into
the stack of stupid. Let's see what Hanks, Scott Hanks,
thanks for calling this morning. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 11 (32:31):
Thanks Brian. Uh A lot of the shows you do
in the morning kind of seem to intertwine with what
I'm going to talk about, UH, mostly bed upbringing in
mental illness, and what I'm talking about. What I'm talking
about is along several months back, my wife and I
were had a little conversation. I'd been watching the morning
(32:52):
news and there was something on there about some clown
driving by and shooting at a party and killing a
kid or something every day. Yeah, well actually it was
here in Cincinnati. And I turned to my wife and
I said, what the hell is wrong with people? And
she thought a second, and she said, the government's doing
a lousy job or raising their kids.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
So that's that's part of it.
Speaker 11 (33:18):
But the mental illness part of it comes in where
you look at places like New York, Chicago, La, San Francisco, heck,
California in general, all these places that have been run
by Democrats for years and they're they're basically turning into
lunatic asylums and gladiator academies. And I keep wondering, what
(33:43):
kind of idiot, what kind of mentally ill person can
ignore the fact that basically the way Democrats do things,
they could screw up an anvil with a rubber mallet
with one hundred people watching in the news media would
still report it was the Republican's fault.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
How about this. Maybe it's because our children and young
people generally speaking, having been victims of government education, lack
critical thinking skills. Can't read, as demonstrated by the underwhelming
school scores from public schools, you know, single digit mathematic performance.
If you can't think critically, you can't look at your
situation and step back from it and do an analysis
(34:22):
of how it ended up that your state, your city
was a demilitarized zone. It was filled with crime and lawlessness,
and people who would go around and for whatever reason,
randomly dry by and just wantonly shoot into a crowd
of people that have no connection with them or their lives.
So idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots, And the
reason they're idiots is because they aren't properly educated and
(34:44):
more fundamentally. You know, when you put your kid in
school and have the school educate them, including now you
know pre K education, that's like sending your problems to Washington,
d C. For a one size fits all solution. The
true fixed to problems is on a local level. You know,
Fred wants his street fixed. You know where Fred would
(35:04):
get his street fixed from City of Cincinnati, because they're
responsible for maintenance and upkeep of a city, not from
a grant from the federal government, which would go through
multiple channels and end up perhaps being allocated to the
city generally speaking, leaving it up to city authorities again
to have the decision making over which road gets fixed
or which doesn't. You know, you have responsibility your children.
You want to educate them correctly. You want to teach
(35:25):
them critical thinking skills. It is within your power and
ability as a parent locally, that's as local as it
gets inside the four walls of your home. You can
send them off to school. You have to send them
with the right skill set so they can critically analyze
what they're being taught in school. Ah, I appreciate the call,
my friend. Yeah, it's a pretty funny comment you made,
but sadly it springs from societal decay. Yep, let's see here.
(35:52):
But I'm bump, bump. They've got time for another one, Joe,
I think looks like I do. All right, I can't
believe I'm even reading this, going back to this titled decay.
All right, Joe, here, we have an award we have
to give out. An Iowa man arrested last month for
his role in a group that created and shared. So
there's more than one idiot and sick pervert involved in
this created and shared so called animal Crush videos in
(36:18):
which monkeys were brutally tortured, sexually abused, and killed in
sadistic ways, according to prosecutors in a statement on Friday,
Philip Colt Moss, forty one, arrested August eighth, charge in
US District Court here in Cincinnati with conspiracy to create
and distribute the videos, with the disturbing videos themselves. Also
(36:39):
named in the indictment against him on Nicholas Dryden of
Ohio and gian Carlo Morelli of New Jersey. We're also
charged in Gum with the same counts. Dryden, who prosecutor
said it paid a minor in Indonesia to film the videos.
Charged with creation of animal crush videos, as well as
with production, distribution and receipt of a visual depiction of
these sexual abuse of children because the minor was paid
(37:02):
to abuse the monkeys. Moss and Morelli were two of
the mister Dryden's customers, according to prosecutor, between February and
April of last year, Moss sent Dryden fourteen hundred and
forty seven dollars for the videos, discussed them, and mentioned
plans to take a trip to Indonesia with mister Dryden
to make crush videos. Lawyer for the three men did
(37:22):
immediately respond requests for common probably because he has no
defensible way or no way to defend these guys. Moss
and Dryden appeared to become friends court to the charging documents,
mister Dryden even offering to give Moss free videos. In
one text, if you're low on bred, brother, I'll throw
you a couple for free. According to the reports, Moss
(37:45):
called Dryden a good friend, responded that he appreciated the offer,
insisting on paying them because quote you work hard to
make that all happen close quote. If convicted on all accounts,
Moss could face a maximum sentence of twelve years in prison,
which doesn't see em sufficient this election.
Speaker 12 (38:02):
I could do this job mistakes if this race couldn't
be hired.
Speaker 13 (38:04):
This story the president has to have. Community is changing
by the minute. What came out today fifty five krs
the talk station so Ye fifty five GARCD talk station.
Speaker 1 (38:17):
Brian Thomas here wishing a very happy Monday, trying to
make it so anyway. Trust me, I struggle with Mondays
as much as anybody else. I never struggle with having
Christopher Smithment on the program, former Vice mayor of the
City of Cincinnati. First guest this morning beyond at seven thirty,
and we're gonna hear from John Barrett from Western and
Southern about the fireworks taking place this coming Sunday. I
hope you have Monday off like Joe Strecker and I do. Joe.
(38:39):
Who's filling in on Monday?
Speaker 3 (38:41):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Gary, Jeff Walker, Good Gary, Jeff, you're out there. Thanks man.
I appreciate when you cover for me. I also appreciate
when folks call in. If you like to call in,
feel free to do so. Five one three, seven four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three Talk
found five fifty on at and T phone. I don't
know to where. I struggle with which to address first,
because I wanted to talk about this, this crackdown on
your and my ability to communicate.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
Now.
Speaker 1 (39:03):
Fortunately, here in the Morning show, I'm not told what
to say or how to say it. I formulate my
own opinions that I offer them here, and I've always
suggested that they my personal corporate lords and masters tell
me what I can and cannot say. That'll be the
last day, will beyond radio, because I can't abide that.
I believe in free speech. I believe in the free
change exchange of ideas. I believe that it is through
(39:24):
that that we become better, smarter people. If you're willing
to sit down and have an engaged discussion without calling
each other names, without suppressing any given message, that the
better message ultimately floats to the top. I can engage
in a conversation on racism, and I think ultimately the
bottom line is if you're a racist, work, through conversation
and communication going to determine that, and we will talk
(39:45):
about all the ways why that is a terrible thing
and why it is not good for society collectively. If
you're going to hate a person simply based on the race,
then you've got an indefensible problem on your hands. But
if you're going to determine that some any given individual
is hard canful to society, perhaps based upon their political ideology,
like for example, you don't embrace anarchy, you don't embrace
(40:07):
socialism or communism, or maybe you're an anti capitalist. We
could talk about economic philosophy and hopefully come up with
a better way, but you are entitled to have a
sort of look down your negative impression of someone based
upon something like that, a thought or opinion which can
be changed through the exercise in exchange of free ideas.
(40:27):
And we don't have that anymore, and it's eroding rapidly.
And I like this op ed piece by Vince Kanyer.
It was an American thinker, and I just will cut
to the chase and I can ignore the background. He
provides he grew up in Britain, or actually he talks
about his growing up and his observations about Britain its
development over a thousand years. You know what it brought us,
(40:48):
the Magna carta, the interesting cultural reality of what they
are as people generally speaking. But basically how that has
quickly erode is a consequence of unchecked, unfettered regu and
then we get to censorship, so let us start there.
This is the genesis today's dystopia began almost three decades ago,
(41:09):
when immigration took off in the late nineteen nineties and
early two thousands. Remember this is talking about Britain, but
many parallels can be drawn, folks. They're just basically two
baby steps ahead of us in the outcome of the
aftermath of unchecked, unregulated immigration. So the number of EU
immigrants averaged over non EU immigrants, I should say non
(41:29):
EU immigrants averaged over two hundred thousand a year per
decade or for a decade, and then skyrocketed after twenty twenty.
A nation of fifty five million is in two thousand
is over sixty five million today, with almost all of
that growth coming from immigration, a majority from non EU nations,
particularly for the Middle East and Africa, countries that don't
(41:52):
share British culture or importantly religion. It's also likely that
many of the ostensibly EU immigrants are rich in non
EU countries, so they don't even have a foundation or
connection with the European Union. He says, as a consequence,
London came to London. London alone, home to twenty percent
(42:12):
of England's population, has gone from approximately eighty percent Native
British White Native British in ninety one to thirty six
percent in twenty twenty one. He points out native populations
surely shunk more since twenty twenty one. The result of
this transformation of Britain from a largely British nation to
(42:35):
something else has been monstrous. Possibly the single most despicable
example is the twenty plus year Rotherdam child rape scandal
that saw hundreds of Pakistani Muslims rape over one thousand
British girls right under the nose as a police who
did nothing for fear of being called racist. As if
that wasn't bad enough. Of those who dared report on
(42:55):
the various trials, he cites multitude of examples. He has
links to the the prior reporting on it found themselves
jailed before doing so. Here's where censorship kicks in. At
the same time, London has become a killing ground for
knife attacks, the overwhelming number being committed by all minorities
that have entered into the country since in this past decade,
(43:17):
country has become beset with machete attacks. The crime was
historically unheard of in Britain, which is in common with
the Third World. In July, the seventeen year old son
of a Rwandan immigrants son of Rwandan immigrants knifed ten
little girls, killing three of them, with the government with
holding information on the killer. Online post claim he was
(43:39):
an immigrant, not true son of immigrants, tensions rose and
across the US, Britz protested the unfettered invasion of immigrants,
the violence being perpetrated by immigrants and Muslims, and the
systems seeming duplicitous two tiered approach to justice when it
came to immigrants and Muslims versus white Brits, all of
(44:00):
whom the government and state run media invariably characterized as
far right. These protests drew the new Labor government's ire
and it launched a wave of arrest and a propaganda
campaign against the far right anti immigration racists. If we're
(44:21):
sentenced to prison for channing who the f is Allah?
Although they were neither violent nor making threats, shouting You're
not English anymore at the police or selling stickers that
say it's okay to be white, resulted in threats of
arrest or actual arrest, seeking to curtail what it claims
is misinformation and incitement. The government warned the British citizen quote,
(44:42):
you may be committing a crime if you repost, repeat,
or amplify a message which is false, threatening, or stirs
up rachel slash religious hatred. They also warned potential anti
immigration protesters, we're watching you. So basically, the government decides
what's false, what's threatening, and what is hate speech, and
(45:05):
if you post anything about it online you'd end up
in jail, or at least you could. And if threatening
BRIT's freedom of speech wasn't enough, the government threatened online
platforms Elon Musk for example. They want to arrest him,
by the way, if they allowed what the government determined
was prohibited speech. Nor did the government stop there, promised
(45:27):
to extradite citizens from other countries, including the United States,
if they engage in such prohibited online speech, even if
not in Britain at the time. And because there's not
enough room in British jails to hold all these anti
immigration racists, the government plans to release five thousand criminals
from jail to make room for those who are guilty
of what the author describes as wrong think going back
(45:50):
to his or well, the Tories are responsible for the
unfettered immigration over the last one and a half decades.
July's election, which put labor in power, represented a leap
in transforming Britain into a tyranny. A free Britain which
took over one thousand years to evolve, essentially became a
(46:11):
Stalinist police state in less than two months. While Britain
is not the United States, he observes our shared history, language,
and similar culture and political trajectory over the last twenty
years suggests that what is happening there could easily happen here.
Contrast the kid glove treatment given the twenty twenty one
bom antiphile rioters with the draconian treatment of the j
(46:34):
sixers recalled Democrats' ill fated disinformation government's Governance Board which
freaked everybody out. And look at what's been done to
Donald Trump, and you see the writing on the wall
as we head down the dark authoritarian path like Turkey
and Venezuela before at Britain demonstrates that a single election
(46:54):
can make the difference between freedom and tyranny. As we
approach November fifth, we might just want to take note, Yeah,
and look, Pentagon officials are warning about Elon Musk potentially
being arrested. Yeah, they're talking about arresting Elon Musk. They
just recently arrested the French guy, pavlol Durov, Russian born billionaire.
(47:21):
He's the one that founded Telegram messaging app, and he's
been arrested for all kinds of crimes for merely having
a platform that allows people open and encrypted communication so
they can communicate with each other without sort of being
bothered by anyone telling them what they can and cannot say.
It's a rather free thinking type of platform. Yes, there
are terrible messages being exchanged on there, but merely providing
(47:44):
the vehicle through which messaging is well performed. If you
got in a telephone and exchange messages along the lines
of what he's being prosecuted for, well he wouldn't be prosecuted,
would he, because you're using a different platform. But because
he founded this platform, he is now under and they
want to do that too Elon Musk as well. Douglas McKinnon,
(48:06):
who is the former White House and Pentagon official, had
this to say, as someone who pays close attention to
the politics in the media, in the United Kingdom. In Europe,
I began to notice a shocking narrative emanating from a
growing number on the left there calling for the arrest
of Elon Musk as well as the cancelation of X,
the social media site he ends. Surely, I thought these
people can't be serious, but they were and are deadly serious.
(48:31):
For them, Musk and actually become public enemy number one.
They want to censor the free speech that is allowed
on X, mostly noting Russia's war in Ukraine and some
of the comments, as well as the ongoing Israeli war
on the Iranian back terrorist groups of Austin AZBWA E
European Union's Theory Breton, a French businessman who's the European
(48:53):
Commissioner for Internal Market, actually sent a letter to Musk
warning him against spreading so called dis information, at least
as they see it, before an interview with the Republican
President Donald Trump, which must announce as an anti Trump
election interference attempt. He's going to interview Trump, They threaten
him ahead of time for spreading disinformation before Trump even
(49:17):
utters a syllable. Now, as reporters, you're supposed to take
these syllables uttered and if you say it's if you
believe it to be disinformation, explain through reporting why what
Donald Trump said is a lie or disinformation or misinformation.
You don't censor it ahead of time. At least that's
been the tradition here in America anyway. So they want
(49:38):
to arrest Trump or they want to arrest Musk. McKennon wrote,
why have so many in the left and then this
media seemingly fallen in love with centering free speech or
canceling those who whole different opinions from themselves. I am
old enough to remember when democrats, liberals in the media
were all about free and protected speech. Yep, it's an
(49:58):
obvious point. It's become a chilling and dangerous trend. That's
the point. You get chilled because you see reports of
people being arrested for simply saying, well meme phrases, and
it causes you to pause. Do I dare post what
I'm gonna post it's about a matter of political I
(50:20):
may be censored, they may be yanking my account. Hell,
Facebook got caught for censoring Hillsdale College the other day
they launched a new course on Marxism, socialism, and communism,
put a post up on Facebook over that Facebook pulled it,
(50:42):
and of course they had to put it back up
because they had absolutely no basis whatsoever to pull that
post in the first instance. Six eighteen fifty five ker
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Speaker 10 (52:16):
Fifty five KRC. Get ready to win your way.
Speaker 1 (52:23):
Hot hot, hot pod. That's the forecast in a three
word nutshell Sunday Today ninety four over nine seventy one
with some clowns ninety eight with a heat index of
one oh one Tomorrow mostly sunny, partly cloud every night
with a slight chance of raining storms, dropping a seventy
in a sunny, hot day with a slight chance of
storms on Wednesday, going up to ninety nine seventy Now
time for traffic.
Speaker 9 (52:43):
From the UC Health Tramphing Center at the UC Gardner
Neuroscience Institute. You can access the leading brain, spine and
nerve experts right here in Cincinnati.
Speaker 8 (52:51):
Highways are doing just fine for your Monday morning commute.
No REX to deal with.
Speaker 9 (52:55):
I'm not seeing any major problems on two seventy five
across the top westbound must less than ten minutes between
Milford and Montgomery northbound fourth seventy one wide open pants
Grand John King Bramant five KRZ the talk station.
Speaker 1 (53:13):
Six twenty three big about kr City talk station work
at the CJ even RFK Junior was talking about simborship
over the weekend mentioned a couple of these points. In
the last hour, I said, it became thir to me
that I did not have a path to victory. Sixteen
months of censorship, of not being able to get on
any network except for Fox brought out when Rossboro ran
the ten months that he ran, he had thirty four
appearances on networks. I had two appearances in sixteen months.
(53:37):
So I was blocked out of the networks, and I
was blocked out of the debate. I had no path
to victory censorship. Let's se what CJ's got. CJ, thanks
for calling and holding there. Welcome to the fifty five
Carrecy Morning Show. Good morning. I hope you had a
good weekend.
Speaker 14 (53:51):
I was actually calling as you were talking about that,
because I was reading about the arrest yesterday of the
French he's a French citizen now, but of the founder
of telegram. Yeah, And all I could think of is
that Voltager and somewhere in France is turning over in
his grave as he and ready to jump out of
his grave. The really the true founder of the concept
(54:14):
of free speeches. He gives his famous line of I
may hate what you say, but I will die for
you to say it. And the reality is is that
we have gone so many years now where we have
ring doorbells, watching people in their house or outside their house,
cell phone spying on you constantly and sending you ads
(54:36):
that people are just numb to the fact that free
speech is not just a matter of freedom, but it's
a matter of privacy as well, and they're willing to
in order to gain privacy back, throw away the most
important aspect of life, when in reality, you don't have
(54:56):
to buy a ring, doorbell or have a cell phone
that's by on you, but you do need to have
the First Amendment in order to protect your freedoms.
Speaker 1 (55:05):
You didn't call looking for an argument for me, my friend.
You're right, it's crazy, isn't it? AND's scary as well,
and ultimately the chilling effect cannot be overlooked. If you
here read about Pavel Pavel Dura of the founder of Telegram,
which apparently has what nine hundred million members or something
(55:26):
crazy and yeah, nine hundred million active users. Obviously, he
provides a vehicle through which people can communicate. He put,
he provides a vehicle through which folks can discuss anything
they want encrypted plate a person to person. You know,
here in the United States you need a Fourth Amendment
search warrant to listen in on the conversations you have
with any given individual. All on course, unless that is
(55:48):
an individual from a foreign country, then they get caught
up in the NSA spy ring. But you know, I
can call my next door neighbor and have a conversation
literally say anything in I want at all. I can
talk about the concept of terror, we could talk about narcotics.
We could actually engage in conversations regarding criminal conduct. And
if the government becomes aware of the probable cause the
(56:08):
criminal activity is being discussed or is being engaged in,
or where people are working in concert in furtherance of
criminal acts, and go to court, present the court with
evidence that they have legally obtained and get a warrant
and then listen in on conversations. But prior to that
they can't. Now if you move over to this platform
at least the court of the European Union and movie
(56:30):
in that direction. Here in the United States, if you
discuss these matters via the Internet, then they obviously are
real time monitoring. I guess everything that you do or say,
and we'll sloop down in on and arrest the person
who provided the vehicle. It's like providing telephone lines. They
provided the telephone lines, where they did nothing in terms
of controlling what you say and can't say on their platform.
(56:53):
That becomes an arrestable offense. And of course Pavel Durov,
multi billionaire and creative of a vas vehicle that apparently
a lot of people globally used nine hundred million, is
now behind bars six twenty seven fifty five care se
detalk station. So is that Low's cam? She is the
one to call. She that's the one I referred my
daughter to in terms of getting a mortgage. My daughter
(57:15):
was struggling with the bank. It was taking them a
long time. And I know that ultimately they would have
gotten financing, but why is it taking so long? They're
leading us in limbo and we got a house we
want to buy. You know, housing gets bought up quickly,
people move on. It's all to somebody else if you're
struggling with getting financing. And I said, honey, he just
gives uet Low's camp at Cross Country Mortgage a call.
She will definitely help you out in Boom. Within a
(57:36):
couple of days that she and Eric had financing. They're
now living their lives. Thank you, Suzette for taking great
care of my daughter. She'll take great care of you
thirty five years more. Actually in the mortgage business, being
with Cross Country Mortgage, she can help you regardless of
which state you in or Puerto Rico. My Puerto Rican
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Speaker 10 (58:29):
Fifty five krs and two to fifty five kr CD
talk station.
Speaker 1 (58:32):
Hope you're having a decent Monday, feel free to call in. Otherwise,
let's jump back over to local stories. That's just absolutely
outrageous and disgusting on this one, and I would observe
again Castle Doctor in Alive and wal in Ohio. You
go into somebody's house uninvited in the middle of the night,
you could be shot and the homeowner will be justified
and without I pivot over to this local story where
(58:54):
we have a firefighter facing multiple charges after he was
accused of harassing and stalking a woman. That guy, Devin Moore,
firefighter and paramedic with the Madera in Indian Hill Joined
Fire District, arrested this past Thursday and deer Park, or
by deer Park Police. Police say the twenty seven year
old went into the victim's home without permission July thirteenth,
went into her bedroom where she happened to be with
(59:16):
somebody else. They say, More repeatedly sent the victim threatening
text messages and tried to reach her through the email,
group chats, and social media, even after she asked them
to cut it out. Police say Moore also took photos
of the victim during a sexual encounter without her knowing,
and then sent the photos back to her. She's now
apparently too scared to stay in her own home, according
(59:37):
to police, and More facing charges of menacing by stalking, voyeurism, telecommunications, harassment,
and dissemination of an image of another person. Fire chief
said More currently on administratively thanks to Fox nineteen and
since I inquire for providing the details on that one
uh Claremont County. We have Union Township Police saying they're
(59:59):
investigating a body. It was found Sunday in Amelia near
the tom Yum restaurant. Police called her the eleven head
of lock of how Pike ten Am found a male
body lying in a ditch after further investigation. Again props
the Fox nineteen for local news reporting and Union Township
Police sen a release Sunday afternoon stating that the man
(01:00:20):
died of a self inflicted gunshot. Women police are still
investigating the matter. Residents described as frustrated in an apartment
complex in Avondale, I would be too. They say their
questions have gone unanswered and their issues on resolved. For
months of residents have been dealing with an issue such
as bed bugs, plumbing issues, buckled floor and more. These
(01:00:45):
health and safety issues continually plaguing this apartment complex in Abonale,
and they say they're hearing very little from the Cincinni
Metrol Housing Authority. Stephanie Kinley, one of the people that
I guess lives there. Since the November incident, we're still
going through plumbing issues. She was one of ninety one
residents forced to move out of hotels due to a
burst in or rather into hotels due to a burst
(01:01:05):
pipe underneath the apartment building on Reading Roads, since a
metropolitan Metropolitan housing authority moved residents into hotels in Sharonville,
where they had to stay for weeks. Since residents moved
back after the burst pipe, and he says management and
the lack of maintenance have only gotten worse. So there's
a smell of sewage and bucking floors in one apartment.
(01:01:27):
Kenley speaking with WCPO reporting on this when she said
in seven p. One to three the the apartment there
was a bedbug infestation. They were supposed to do something
months later, though, so the problem persisted, including plumbing issues.
No action had been taken to treat the bedbugs. Lack
of action led her to put out her own type
of exterminating powder that's in quotes. So most of our
(01:01:49):
we're people of color and disabled. We need help. We
need liverable, habitable, safe, habitable conditions. We deserve that. We
are not asking for anything extra. Since a Health Department
records show the property was on August ninth, record show
inspectors found hot water supply pipe leak in the basement
and because of this defective plumbing, it caused unsanitary conditions.
In a world where there was justice, they would immediately
(01:02:12):
go after the owners of the apartment complex and hold
them accountable to do the repairs. Quite often, though, they
find the ability to get in touch with and nab
these folks rather elusive because they're absentee. I don't know
if that's the case in this one, but the wheels
of justice spend very slowly for folks living into those
uninhabitable conditions. Six thirty six to fifty five KR CED
(01:02:32):
talk station more on censorship and some frightening stuff. A
continue a theme here in the six o'clock hour after
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Speaker 7 (01:03:47):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station six.
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
Forty fifty five CARCD talk station. A very happy Monday
to you sattened by the surveillance state that's growing suppressing
our free exchange of ideas and thoughts on in Europe.
And European Union, as well as here domestically. Why is
the TSA using a terror watch list a spying Americans?
Asked Senator Rand Paul. He wrote to the TSA wanting
(01:04:11):
to know why they appear to be using the terrorist
watch list to surveil Americans based on their political opinions.
Letter sent to TSA administrator David Pikowski, citing recent revelations
from a former Democratic and Democratic representative, Tulsey Gabbard, as
well as a woman married to a federal Air marshal whistleblower.
(01:04:33):
Both have been apparently placed on something called the Quiet
Sky's Program watch list and subjected to enhance surveillance. Apparently,
Gabbard was added to the watch list after a Fox
News interview during which she criticized the deep state. Oh
my god, can't do that, while the air marshal's wife
added that after attending Donald Trump's speech on January sixth,
(01:04:57):
despite not moving to the Capitol Building after he spoke,
Paul quote, Take together, these incidents seem to be part
of a broader pattern to which TSA has repurposed Quiet
skies to surveil individuals based on their political activities, even
when there's no evidence of wrongdoing these incidents, and his
words echo concerns highlighted in a previous report by the
(01:05:19):
Department of Homeland Securities Office of Inspector General, which identified
critical deficiencies in TSA's management of the Quiet Sky's program.
Wolves are in charge of the Henhouse is basically how
I interpret that deficiencies, including his words insufficient oversight, inadequate
safeguards to protect against the misuse of passenger data. H
(01:05:42):
whistleblowers have confirmed that Gabbart has been monitored by Air
Marshes on at least eight flights over the past month.
So there's that using the weaponizing the governments who spy
on people, and again the chilling speech effect. If you
get word out that you are going to use the
nation's resources which are supposed to be going after bad
guys and evil doers. If you utter a syllable of
conservative leaning speech or otherwise critic the criticize the lettered
(01:06:06):
agencies in any way, shape or form, you two will
be surveiled and then pivot over to the private sector.
This is mind blowing and thanks to the editorial board
on this one. Over at the Wall Street Journal, SEC
Chairman Gary Gensler. Apparently, the Securities and Exchange Commission find
(01:06:26):
twenty six financial firms for failing to track employee what
they refer to as off channel communications. SEC chairman apparently
wants to surveil what Wall Street traders are doing on
their personal phones. Fines total three hundred and ninety three
million dollars. And that's just the latest rounds in their
(01:06:47):
effort to go after what's appened sweep it up. More
than five dozen firms have already been fined some two
billion dollars because these trading firms allegedly violated the SEC's
record keeping rules because some of their employees, not all, mind,
you used non company phones and messaging apps to communicate
about business. Now pause and remember, so did like everybody
(01:07:10):
in government? What do we find out with the investigations
and the hunter Biden, Yes that Joe Biden had aliases?
What do we find out in the investigation of Hillary Clinton? Yes,
she was communicating in non governmental servers using aliases. Doctor
Fauci communicating using aliases? Why so it wouldn't be caught
up in a foyer request for information? You're regarding use
on government equipment. Move Over to something else, it's okay
(01:07:35):
for our lettered agency folks to do it, but no, no, no,
not in the private sector. Apparently this whole ass all
started in twenty twenty one. They went after the largest
of the Wall Street firms, and now they're working the
way down to the smaller ones, and that's how we
got this new three hundred and ninety three million dollars
in fine. Sec has demanded that these firms and I
say firm private companies that engage in trading right search employees,
(01:07:59):
personal old phones, and handover evidence of business related communications.
Also pointed out smaller fines for firms that comply, oh,
if you work with us, we won't find you, or
we'll just give you a small fine. Relative and compared
to the other finds we've been meeting out against other
people in similar circumstances. The agency has says firms are
(01:08:20):
required get a load of this by the nineteen thirty
four Securities in Exchange Act and nineteen forty Investment Advisors
Act to preserve business records for regulators to review in
audits or investigations. Fine, but it's noted the business records
back in nineteen thirty four and nineteen forty were paper documents,
(01:08:42):
and now it's impossible for companies to police and preserve
employees electronic communications. It's a lot harder even with devices
that are issued by the company and subject to limitations
and rules, which they have. But what about the employee's
private devices. Nearly all the firms find accord to the
don't have policies in place prohibiting employees from using those
(01:09:03):
personal devices and messaging channels like WhatsApp, for example, for
business purposes, Much like our government employees are prohibited from
using the private devices for government business. Are we going
after them? They also record employees communications and activities on
work devices, which is of course a perfectly acceptable thing
(01:09:26):
if you're working for the company. We need to retain
the information you're doing for company. Businesses or business companies
don't want employees using unapproved platforms because of security reasons,
something Dave had Ter talks about all the time. My
wife's got a computer server it tooked up directly to them.
She can't use that computer for anything other than to
log into the company's secure server. If she wants to
(01:09:48):
log in anything else, she needs a different device. These
rules are all over the place, difficult to enforce, though
it's noted well. The agency claims off channel communications by
Wall Street employees is pervasive.
Speaker 8 (01:10:02):
Listen to this.
Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
The consent decrees with the fined individual firms cite only
a handful of examples with very little detail about the
substance of the communications. And they don't even say that
they've uncovered evidence of securities violations. It's just that, Oh,
one guy mentioned a particular work matter on his private device,
You're fined. SEC apparently quibbles that the use of personal
(01:10:27):
personal phones may have impeded other investigations. The agency can
always subpoena traders personal phones in probes, ah they they'll
have to have probable cause, and of course they face
legal resistance. And the Journal points out that's why Gensler
wants firms to surveil personal phones for him. Why because
private companies don't owe you a Fourth Amendment right to
(01:10:49):
be free of unreasonable searches and seizures and don't have
to go into court to get a sorce warrant to
listen to your devices. What Gensler really wants is to
have all trading records and communications at the SEC's fingertips.
It's also the goal of the SEC's Consolidated Audit Trail,
which sets up government a government database to track in
(01:11:09):
real time the identities and transactions of everyone who invests
in the stock market. It's kind of like a kin
of the NSSAY scooping up literally every communication you and
I make online. What they do with it is anybody's guests.
At this point, can the government actually surveil literally every
person who invests in the stock market real time? Are
(01:11:32):
there that many government employees as artificial intelligence capable of
doing all of that sifting? And to what end and
for what purpose? The problem? There is no SEC rule
or law obligating these firms to obtain employee communications not
in the firm's possession like a personal phone, Nor are
(01:11:55):
firms required to ensure perfect employee compliance with the policies.
Just another example of mister Gensler trying to regulate by enforcement.
Six forty eight. Coming to a theater near you and
a job near you, d Nash hang on your call
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Speaker 10 (01:12:39):
That.
Speaker 1 (01:12:39):
Plus, it's the greatest gun store around, run by and
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Speaker 10 (01:13:02):
Fifty five KARC in Today's Marketers Reports and what Denish
has got today.
Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
Denish, Welcome to at the five KRC morning. It's your
long time this speak welcome back.
Speaker 5 (01:13:10):
Well, thank you Brian, how are you doing.
Speaker 1 (01:13:13):
Doing great man. What's on your mind today, Denish?
Speaker 5 (01:13:15):
I'd like to share with you some update of what's
going on with the Ohio elections records and data. I
don't know if you have been sharing with your audience
the most current developments of taking place with the Secretary
of State's office.
Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
What removing illegal immigrants from the voter ranks.
Speaker 5 (01:13:34):
No, it's got deeper than that.
Speaker 1 (01:13:36):
Go ahead, get get it out Danish.
Speaker 5 (01:13:38):
Okay. Doctor Corse, who's a resident of Ohio, had been
researching on what happens to the electronic data after the
person votes at the pulling data okay, pulling statis so.
What he discovered through his own technical surveys and research
(01:13:59):
is that some entities have access and secretly placed hacking
I guess software changes which manipulates the vote of the
voter into what that party wants to get done. So
(01:14:21):
the net result is, by the time we hear the
final result, they're not actually the total voting results of
what the voters want, but rather what these controlling agencies
or whoever they are are doing. That and has been
going on since twenty ten, so people have been talking about,
(01:14:44):
like doctor Franks and Colonel Waldron and others and showing
that hey, listen, we're finding out anomalies out here that
are not normal. That if one hundred people vote and
sixty of them votes for cand the X and the
other vote Wendy, why that should be the results showing
up at the Secretary of State's office. No one has
(01:15:08):
taken the second and third steps to look into all
these complaints and evidence they've been sending to them all
these years to finally doctor. Of course, they got the
attention of the gentleman mister Carts, who is the appointee
by the Sexuary of State to look into this, and
(01:15:30):
they had a meeting last week and he presented to
them all the details to exactly what's happening. And we're waiting,
we're holding up breath to find out what will they do.
So from my perspective, I've been calling your station for
years and saying that, hey, our election results are being corrupted,
(01:15:52):
and now who's doing it is the responsibility of the
county commissioners and the sheriff. They're really the initial elected
officials who are supposed to watch over elections.
Speaker 1 (01:16:04):
Your local board of elections.
Speaker 5 (01:16:05):
Yes, and so that part of it is that majority
of the American people have been kept in the dark.
So there is an organization separate from doctor Corthy's who
did a very technical detail of how does the data
get processed. So here's a quick review for you. When
(01:16:30):
the pulling data is taking place, the information is being
sent to New York Times and other agencies, and it's
the I guess the agency that's been handling that information
is not a government agency, it's a democratic control agency.
And they take that data and finally to the Department
(01:16:56):
of Defense, and also it goes all the way up
to Ireland and other places. And this data has been
massaged all this time. So what this group did was
they said, okay, we cannot get all that information because
none of the government agencies are cooperating to get us
that information. So they start taking the New York Times
(01:17:18):
data of votes real time and they've computerized it. And
here's what they're found. That the votes are changing by
this second. They go up, they go down, they go down,
they go up, so at at times one they lose
this vote, the other one gains it. So they went
further and looked.
Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
At the Danash I am really start, we are way
out of time. I am appalled what I'm hearing, and
I certainly would love to see some links to the
factual information, the doctor Corsi's information. How this has been demonstrated,
because I'm operating in a factual vacuum. My initial question
is why in the hell would any of this information
leave the state of Ohio or the individual boards of
(01:17:59):
election That's where the bots are supposed to be counted,
tabulating oversight with parties. Were both Republicans and Democrats overseeing
it to the extent there's something embedded in the software.
I would love to hear an explanation from the Secretary
of State's office, because that should be easily discernible and identifiable.
I could go on, but again, Dnash, thanks for the info.
I'm out of time. Six. We can talk about it more,
(01:18:19):
calling after the top of the R News six fifty eight,
fifty five krc DE talk station, be right back.
Speaker 15 (01:18:25):
It's what motivates your vote.
Speaker 5 (01:18:27):
The Democrat racious now and they were the racious back.
Speaker 15 (01:18:30):
Then, fifty five KRS the talk station, this REEK.
Speaker 1 (01:18:48):
Seven six or a fifty five krc DE talk station
and a very very happy Monday to try to make
it so anyway, fun over here. Five one three seven
four fifty five hundred eight two three talk found five
fifty on AT and T phones and thank you to
d Nash. I wish I had more time with the
Nash And thank you to Maureene, I said out loud,
I would love to see the reporting on that. And
(01:19:09):
about two seconds later, Maureene Astucci is and the person
I knew who would have that article or that information
forwarded the link directly to me. It is from the
Gateway punted, and I'm always quick to point out Gateway
pointed very very very conservative site, biased conservative the way
many left leaning sites are biased left wing. But information
is there. Nonetheless, I'm not completely dissing the reporting on this,
(01:19:31):
and it is Jerome Corsi, very respected guy. So he
and apparently this Andrew Paquett, PhD, along with their attorney
did meet with the Housecretary's Secretary of State's Inquiry and
called to investigate Corsi's claims that there is indisputal evidence
of secret algorithms encoded into the High State Board of
(01:19:55):
Elections Information so Ohio voter registration database, with as the
article reports, a presumed purpose of facilitating mail in ballot fraud. Now,
i didn't have time to do the deep dive into
the entire article, but it's out there. If you want
to check it out. Just type in Jerum Corsian Andrew
Paquette and if you look and gateway punt it, you'll
(01:20:17):
find the headline Corsiu and Piquette presented to the Ohio
Secretary of State's voter Integrity Inquiry with evidence of secret
algorithmic codes embedded in voter rolls. My cursory brief overview
of the article suggests that the folks that should be
in the know really don't know how this came about.
(01:20:38):
So concerning, yeah, absolutely concerning, absolutely concerning anyway, five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talks
found five fifty on at and T phone. I think
what bothers me most about this is that these questions
are swirling around us, and we are a moment in
time away from probably the most most important presidential election
(01:21:02):
at least in my lifetime. I mean, the country's future
is teetering in the balance here. Anyway, Over to Kamala Harrison,
we're still struggling. This is what day thirty four, in
which he has not released policy positions that were left
(01:21:23):
to speculate. A list of finla at The Journal was
speculating as well, because they did during the Democratic National
Convention go after oligarchs and corporate monopolists, destroy wealth creators
so they can spread the wealth among their own. Is
the conclusion we can reach on that corporate greed is
the only one true enemy. Cord of the NIOUD Autoworkers
(01:21:46):
President Sean Faint Bernie Sanders, the Party must take on
big Pharma, big oil, big ag, big tech, and all
the other corporate monopolists whose greed is denying progress for
working people. That's of any Senator Bob Casey rallied against greedflation,
accusing corporations of extorting families and his for his part,
(01:22:07):
Barack Obama saying Donald Trump and his well heeled donors,
in his words, quote for them, one group's gain is
necessarily another group's loss for them. Freedom means that the
powerful can do pretty much what they please, whether it's
fireworkers trying to organize a union or put poison in
our rivers to avoid paying taxes like everybody else does.
(01:22:32):
Hum She observes Democrats treat wealth as a zero sum game,
and so mister Bama's straw men are rich. They keep
getting richer by making everyone else poorer. Taking away from
the well off is the only way to enhance the
lives of the poor and the middle class, say the Democrats,
including Kamala Harris. That's why they want to tax so
(01:22:53):
called billionaires and businesses who already pay get to the
top one percent of those the evil earners, those evil
folks that are out there with big businesses that actually
employ people. Top one percent pay forty five point eight
of federal income tax. Yeah, and the federal income taxes,
of course, which funds government services and all those welfare
(01:23:15):
programs for the bottom suffering half. So without those evil billionaires,
take away forty five point eight percent of the federal
income tax coming in, or if you overtax them, say
goodbye to this sizable chunk of federal income tact you're
going to get from them, because they will contract, their
businesses will not grow, and there'll be fewer employment opportunities
for us because they're busy managing and own insurmountable taxation debt,
(01:23:37):
and they Ilica Finley notes that Obama forgot that his
own Environmental Protection agency caused the twenty fifteen, gold King
mind disaster spilling toxic waste into Colorado's Animus River. So
so much for only evil oligarchs and businesses poisoning rivers.
Are federal governments quite capable of managing that on its own.
(01:23:59):
And I like this, Yes illustrates His speech brought to
mind a recent homily by my local parish priest about
the dangers of class warfare and envy, one of the
seven Deadly sins, as the priests explaining, success isn't a
zero sum game. When a businessman succeeds, he creates jobs
(01:24:23):
that help the poor. Ending and tearing down the successful
makes everyone poorer. Rather than plunder the wealthy, society should
celebrate success and try to help everyone prosper. This is
something I firmly believe in. Democrats derisively refer to the
such ideas as trickle down economics. They denounce and diminished
business success inclaiming the wealth you have profited from greed
(01:24:45):
and government support. Obama twenty twelve. Remember, if you've got
a business, you didn't build that. Rather than try to
make it easier for businesses to succeed, hey like, let's
reduce taxes or ease government regulation, which the Trump campaign
wants to do. Democrats do the eye opposite, calling for
leveling the playing field, growing the middle class, out euphemisms
for taxing success so the government can be the one
(01:25:08):
handing out the money. But government doesn't create wealth. The
people they take it from are the ones that are
the creators. Well. Business successes in zero sum government growth
can be it's expansion. Government makes it more difficult for
businesses to thrive. The result fewer jobs, lower wages, less
tax revenue, which finances essentral public services like law enforcement
(01:25:32):
and the safety net for the indigen It always bothers
me why Democrats can succeed in this confiscatory tax reality.
Since confiscatory taxes lead to less taxes overall, they reduce
the influx into government of taxes, which supports every damn
program the left once and accordingly, they turn to the
printing press to print the dollars that they're not bringing in. Ah,
(01:25:55):
it's just so simple. Trump's appeal in twenty sixteen stem
from the slow economic growth we held felt under Obama's presidency.
Republican promised to make Americans richer. He did. His deregulation
and tax cuts work during the Trump administration, average real
wages increase nearly seventy percent faster than during the first
(01:26:17):
three years during in his first three years than during
Obama's entire presidency. Results work Look, deregulation equals more money
in your damn paycheck. Now we are all poorer under Biden.
Government spending, of course, is fueled inflation, which has eroded wages. Naturally,
it erodes wages. Your wages may have gone up, but
(01:26:40):
when inflation exceeds the amount of your raise, you have
less money reality speaking wise than you do on paper.
Job growth has become increasingly concentrated in the sectors that
depend on government spending, right, because they're picking the winners
and losers. Hey, let's say you used to work at
A one to twenty three before the Obama when the
Obama administration handed you over hundreds of billions of dollars.
(01:27:03):
You're not working there anymore because it went under because
it was a failed business model. Sorry, sucks to be you.
When Democrats talk about boosting the middle class, the list
finly observed, they mean the class of government workers. Get
a load of these stats. Government education, health care, and
social assistants account for more than sixty percent of new
jobs added this year in the last year anyway. In
(01:27:26):
the seventeen states where Democrats control the governorship and the
legislative chambers, the whole trifecta the share of job growth
ninety eight percent in government, education, healthcare, and social assistance.
Ninety eight percent of government controlled jobs are where the
(01:27:46):
new jobs came from. It was forty seven percent in
the twenty three states where Republicans have complete control. Pointing
to average wage growth since the start of the pandemic
lower in high state taxes like Illinois, New York, and
California compared to low s date taxes like Florida, Texas
and South Dakota. You're talking about ten plus percent less
(01:28:10):
average wage growth in Illinois, New York, and California than
you have in Florida, Texas and South Dakota. The illustrations
provided two points out If middle plest Americans want to
get richer, they ought to move to Miami, Dallas or
sous Falls. Yeah, and that's the whole Green New Deal. Folks,
(01:28:30):
Oh my god, we're all gonna die. And once you're
convinced to that, only government is capable of making things
better by picking and choosing the winners and losers in
the green economy. You needn't apply, Trust me, your application
will be rejected seven sixteen fifty five K see de
talk stations. Feel free to call more to talk about
We've got Christopher Smithman coming up to the bottom of
(01:28:51):
the hour, and we're also going to hear from John
Barrett from Western and Southern about the EBN fireworks taking
place on Sunday. He'll be on a date a little
after eight, sometime in the eight o'clock hour anyway. Kind
of a moving target on that one. In the meantime, though,
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Speaker 7 (01:29:49):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 10 (01:29:53):
Get ready to your win.
Speaker 1 (01:29:54):
You few about KIRCD talk station. A very happy Monday
to you. Christopher Smidmen had come out of the next
hour and I talk a lot with tech Friday's day've
hatter about artificial intelligence last week was one of the
Hey artificial intelligences and it all it's cracked up to
be in one out of every three AI projects apparently
shut down, not get any value out of it. Get
(01:30:17):
a load of this one. This just blew in my mind.
Unrelated anything we've talked about this morning, other than the
government wanting to control every component of our life. Obviously,
rents a problem. We know where the rental problem came from.
At least I hope you're familiar with the economic realities
of that. Anyway, Department of Justice filed a lawsuit on
Friday against a rental software company. Now what this company does.
(01:30:37):
This program, it's artificial intelligence. It's a tool for landlords
to use in assessing the rental market prices. So they
go to this vendor, this software who compiles all the
rent information and I guess they pay for the service
and observe what the rents are going for. This allows
(01:30:58):
them to see if they're pricing their apartments, you know appropriately.
It's called real Page. The dog claims they violated antitrust
law by contracting with competitive landlords who agreed to share
with this real Page non public, competitively sensitive information about
their apartment rental rates. So you voluntarily show up to
(01:31:22):
them and you show them what you are charging. They
put that into their algorithm and they come up with
a large data set that just provides any given rental
company with the information. It doesn't tell them what they
need to set their price at. It doesn't allow them
to collaborate directly with Like if you were a manufacturer
of you know, a widget, and you got together in
(01:31:43):
a quiet room behind the scenes and sat down with
the other widget manufacturers and you all agree to set
the widget price collectively together, so there's no movement. Everybody
pays the same amount for a widget that would violate
anti trust laws. This is merely an artificial intelligence tool.
Took the time to put the software together which enables
the compilation of this data. Welcome to the AI world
(01:32:06):
in which we find ourselves. Apparently it's easy to do.
Sign up for it, and you too can have the
information do what you want with it. We're not telling
you to set your price. We're just letting you know
what everybody else is charging. Kamala Harris called for a
ban on the using these algorithms by rental companies. Her
campaign says it lets them collude with each other and
(01:32:27):
jack up rents dramatically. No, they're not directly colluding. They're
merely using the information that is out there and available
thanks to this real page software. Of course, they deny
the allegations. They point out what I've been pointed out.
It just advises landwards about whether they should set rent
for a given unit higher or lower, although it doesn't
(01:32:48):
encourage them to keep units off the market, and only
uses non public data in anonymized forms, which takes out
that collusion part. You don't know where the other rental
units are or who the other rental unit ore are.
It just lets you know what the price is in
any given market. Company points out at its own website,
customers decide their own rent prices always have one hundred
(01:33:09):
percent discretion to accept or reject software price recommendations. They
are never punished for declining recommendations. It's just a neutral
third party, and yet they're being sued because somehow this
neutral third party, which merely provides the information, can somehow
be construed as the one facilitating an SEC violation. Governor
(01:33:34):
Or Quiz, former founder and president of Americans for Tax Reform,
criticizing the investigation of this rental software, So the problem
smells of an effort to set up a national rent
control which has been discussed by other parts of the
Democratic Party, who said that the software suggestion is not
compelling landlords or renters to offer or signed leases at
a suggested rate. Everybody can ignore it and will if
(01:33:55):
it doesn't make any sense, he pointed out, which is
why it's so ridiculous for people whose answer is govern
implos mandated prices to suggest that when someone says, here's
what prices look like right now that that's somehow collusion
and causing a problem. One of many great points made
in opposition to this. But here's your Department of Justice
(01:34:15):
got an idea, a concept. It sounds like a good one.
Data collection. Everybody's doing it. Google collects all of your
data all the time and uses it on its artificial
intelligence algorithm to try to get you to buy products
it thinks that you want by putting them in front
of your face. Do you have to buy them?
Speaker 5 (01:34:35):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:34:37):
Seven twenty five fifty five k SE detalk station Christopher
Smith Aman good event ispleen next former Vice Mayor of
the City of Cincinnati with his thoughts and comments about
some subject today. We all find out together and I
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That's c U. L. E. N. Colin Electriccincinnati dot com
(01:35:43):
fifty five KRC.
Speaker 8 (01:35:46):
In this week's Marketers Report.
Speaker 1 (01:35:48):
Uh A student, political commentator and observer of things in life.
Christopher SMITHM and former vice mayor, Welcome back, my friend,
is always always wonderful to have you on for the
Smither vent. I hope you had a great weekend.
Speaker 3 (01:35:58):
I did, brother, and thank you so much for having
me on. I'm going to start with with, in my
mind is the most serious thing, which are you know,
the third anniversary of thirteen servicemen and women that lost
their lives in cabal in Afghanistan. And I just I
sit back and I think about all of these families
(01:36:18):
that are just suffering today, all thirteen of them who
really just don't have answers, you know, things running through
their minds. Did my children die in vain because we
had an administration that failed them and so they withdraw
to Afghanistan. Everybody who looks at this with any common
(01:36:41):
sense would say things did not go well, things weren't planned. Well,
You've got people in Afghanistan with our equipment doing parades
with our equipment a week ago. Uh. Just but my
hearts just go out to all thirteen of those those
families and which would also just rub me the wrong way.
(01:37:01):
And by the way, Caleb, my son, Caleb, I told
you his last day was a week and a half
ago or so. He just got home this weekend and
so you know it wasn't like, oh, you just walk out.
He just he had a process that he went through
and took him a week to you know, get him
hisself together. But he made it back, but he's signing
up for the Air National Guard. He's being sworn in
(01:37:24):
this week, going right back into the Air National guardens
things like this, Yes, and you see things like this,
and you go, that could be my kid, That could
be my child. And so these thirteen families that are
suffering and they're watching the President of the United States
on vacation, no real honor for them today, Like the
(01:37:46):
White House sent out some type of press release, but
there's nothing really there that they're going to do today
to honor the greatest sacrifice that these thirteen servicemen and women.
And it's just because they know it was boxed.
Speaker 1 (01:38:01):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:38:01):
You didn't hear anybody at the DNC convention, you know,
talk about it, you know, bring reference to our military
in that kind of way. Holding a flag just one
you're listening to audience to know who they already noticed
holding a flag. Doesn't get it, Like that's not the
only piece they had opportunity to really, in their words
(01:38:21):
and in their deeds, highlight things. This would have been
one of those things. This three year anniversary of those
thirteen servicemen and women who lost their lives because of
poor decisions that were made in the White House.
Speaker 1 (01:38:35):
Well, yeah, I mean, they have no incentive whatsoever to
bring it up, even if it's just to sort of,
you know, reflect and honor that they did lose their lives,
which would be a justifiable thing to bring up. But
of course it's going to invite criticism on the botched
pull out from Afghanistan. Those men would not be dead
but for the hurried yanking out of and and plug
pulling from from our presence in Afghanistan. Not that conceptually
(01:39:00):
it was necessarily a bad idea, but it was almost
like they up came up with the idea over breakfast
and then implemented the pull out that afternoon. It wasn't
very forward thinking. They didn't get out those who had
helped us throughout the conflict, whose lives literally are in
danger every moment of the time that they still remain
in Afghanistan. But you know, it didn't get out a
(01:39:20):
lot of our own service people, and of course invited
that attack which resulted in the death of so many
American soldiers. It's just, you know, there's no upside for
them apparently in bringing it up, because there was no
upside to their actions.
Speaker 3 (01:39:34):
And this is where I say journalism is dead because
you see stations like ABC, NBC, MSNBC that will not
dig in and even honor these thirteen servicemen because they're
rooting for the vice president to be the next president,
knowing that she was a part of making the decision.
(01:39:56):
So the major networks, if somebody is why watching them,
and there's somebody's listening to this watching them, this is
where we say what they don't talk about. It's not
just what the news media talks about, it's also what
they don't talk about. And journalism in this country is
just dead. Meaning there you know, you have someone running
for president who won't sit down and answer basic questions
(01:40:20):
about their policy, and we're acting like it's just a
little thing. Ryan, This is this is huge. That you
have a presidential candidate who early voting starts in some
states in September, obviously in Ohio early voting starts in October,
who hasn't sat down with any major news outlet of
(01:40:42):
sitting across the table asking this person, what is your
public policy positions, what do you plan to do? What
are your forward thoughts about the United States of America.
So no one's been able to ask her because she said,
I was the last person in the room whenmen's thirteen
servicemen and women lost their lives. What were the decisions
that were made? How did it happen? Journalism is dead
(01:41:06):
in this country. I don't understand why it's so difficult
for people on the other side to say, it's important
for the candidate that you're supporting to come forth and
just answer basic questions about what they stand for. Brian talks.
I am shocked by all of that.
Speaker 1 (01:41:22):
All of this well, going back to my comments, why
would they bring up Afghanistan even to acknowledge those who
lost their lives when it would invite open criticism and
you open old wounds about that failure. Same thing goes,
why would she utter a syllable about what her policy
preferences are. If she had great ideas and the ideas
that were sellable to the American people, she'd be out
(01:41:43):
touting them, who to whoever would listen to them. Maybe
we should just look at silence as deafening as well
as well keeping us all in the dark and ignorant.
Thirty secs.
Speaker 3 (01:41:55):
One more point on it, it doesn't matter your political persuade.
On the conversation, we just had no, whether you're a Democrat,
republic independent, libertarian, if you're a citizen of the United
States of America, you should be saying the same thing
you and I are saying. Your candidate who you support,
whether it's Donald Trump, whether it's Vice President Kamala Harris,
(01:42:16):
you should want those candidates to come forward and tell
us what their public policy positions are.
Speaker 1 (01:42:21):
Amen to that, we'll bring back Christopher Smith. And it's
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Speaker 7 (01:43:44):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station would.
Speaker 1 (01:43:48):
And seven forty two fifty five Krcity Talk station Brian
Thomas with Christopher smithm and doing that Smith event, thang, Christopher,
what else is on your mind, my friend?
Speaker 3 (01:43:58):
Well, brother, I usually don't talk about the Federal Reserve.
I've been a person who's been quite supportive of the
Federal Reserve, and you know, as a you know what
I do as a profession I'm a financial planner. But
I'm very very suspicious. You know, the Federal Reserve really
announced last year that they were it might have been October, November, December,
(01:44:22):
and the last quarter they were thinking about cutting rates.
The Federal Reserve, as you know, controls monetary policy for
the United States of America, and some would say might
be one of the most powerful institutions we have because
of it. And so this notion that they're advertising. There
are two things that happened that I found very interesting. One,
(01:44:45):
the jobs report came out sixty days ago or so
that you know, the job market was stable with maybe
even a little hot which put the Federal Reserve back
on their heels on this discussion about whether they were
going to cut rates. Mysteriously, this month, eight hundred and
eighteen thousand jobs just disappeared. They just said they didn't happen.
We were wrong about it. And I'm sitting here going
(01:45:07):
what the hell just happened? Well, what that did was
it gave the door opening for the FED to cut rates. Now,
I don't know about it, and I haven't watched this closely,
and you know what the FED is doing, but know
that when the Fed is you know, when the FED
is cutting rates, right, that that could have a juicing
(01:45:28):
effect on the market. Mean, it could make the market
go higher, it could stabilize the market. So this notion
that they're advertising in September, when early voting is starting
in some parts of the country, when early voting again
is starting in October, that they're talking about we're going
to start easing rates. Well, by the way, that is
going to negatively impact our seniors who for a ten
(01:45:50):
or eleven year period of time could not get a
CD rate that made any sense for them. So they
finally have fixed rates at a reasonable rate, and right
for the election, they're going to cut the legs off
of those seniors who benefit from those CD rates. They're
not advertising that, but would agent possibly augment the stock market.
(01:46:11):
I just find it very interesting that the FED is
announcing and really pretty clearly that we're going to go
twenty five or fifty basis points in September, while the
citizens of the United States might be voting for the
next or we'll be voting for the next president of
the United States of America.
Speaker 1 (01:46:27):
Ran Toms sounds a little cynical about the reporting there.
I mean, come on, let's it just illustrates I'm right
out of the gate, assuming that you know, notion Indians,
everything was above board. It just shows you how bad
they are crunching numbers. How is it that they missed
the mark by eight hundred and twenty thousand jobs. I mean,
that's not an insignificant number, Christopher. I mean there have
(01:46:48):
been reporting quarters where that's the entire the entire increase
in jobs. So I mean correct, you know so, and
then and then timing because it's such a profoundly large error,
and like you're pointing out, the timing couldn't be more
questionable in terms of, you know, it's potential influence on
the election, that rate lowering phenomenon, and your point being,
(01:47:09):
if the job's rate wasn't erroneous at the outset, they
might not be talking about lowering their rates in September.
Speaker 3 (01:47:15):
Correct, Jeez, I mean this is so big because it
really just gives the FED the runway that is needed
right to say, I'm lowering rates based on what's happening
in the job market, that the market is softening, and
so now I can lower rates. But the reality of
it is we're right in the middle of an election.
(01:47:36):
And what it made me think about it, I said,
you know what, there should be a policy that unless
it's a national security issue like we have a September
the eleventh, the FED should not be intervening Why lowering
or raising rates sixty days out from any presidential election,
because it undermines the institution in my mind, if you're
(01:48:00):
doing it in January, but like sixty days out or
early voting, because most you know, this country didn't early
vote fifteen years ago, so this is also a new
thing where early voting is happening. And the FED is
also cutting rates, which absolutely helps people who want to
buy homes. I get it, first time buyers, brings rates down,
get it, But why are you doing it right in
(01:48:23):
the middle where people are voting for who the next
president of the United States? It just raises red flags.
It's like a referee and I'm not a sports person,
as you know, It's like a referee in the last
three seconds of a basketball game throwing a file that
ultimately puts somebody on the file line shot that ultimately
wins the game. Meaning stay out of the race. And
(01:48:44):
by lowering these rates, which you know they're not going higher,
whether it's twenty five or fifty basis points, I think
it puts a shadow over the FED. Are you interfering
in a presidential election?
Speaker 9 (01:48:54):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:48:54):
And can you be trusted with the numbers you give
us which determine these outcomes? Apparently the answer that one
is no. I guess the only question I have. And
I appreciate it and understand where your suggestion comes from.
And it sounds sound, but you know, every time I
talk to anybody who's involved in the markets and they say, well,
the FED dropped the interest rate, it looks like the
market didn't react. And it's always well because the market
(01:49:15):
had already factored in that interest rate change way in advance.
They anticipated it, and so that's why we had a
change in the stock market two months ago when they
were alluding to a cut in rates as opposed to
waiting for it actually to happen. So there's all that.
Speaker 3 (01:49:30):
So that's why I said, stabilize it, make it go up.
But the bottom line is they're intervening, right, they're announcing
they're doing something, and I just think their intervention right,
it's making me suspicious because the FED was appointed by
the current administration, and they have a vested interest in
(01:49:52):
the current administration being reelected because it protects all of
their jobs. They obviously know that if there's a new administry,
the possibility of them not being appointed is really high.
So I just think they should stay out of it.
And obviously what I'm saying on this radio show isn't
going to change anything, but I think people should be
(01:50:12):
thinking about this. In the last point I want to
make is that you know, we saw RFK Junior say
that he's not going to run for president. There are
a couple of things that I want to highlight in that.
Number one, he said that Kamala Harris, the vice president,
or their Harris campaign team wouldn't meet with him. Now
that's concerning to me, because whoever the president of the
(01:50:36):
United States is, you gotta be willing to meet with everybody.
You've got to be willing to sit down and at
least have a conversation so that kind of alarmed me.
Number two, he talked about as an independent, which I
was when I ran for county commissioner, and I had
to collect over three thousand signatures just to get my
name on the ballot. And this he said, his team
(01:50:57):
had to collect a million signatures to get his name
on the ballot, and how the Democratic Party was blocking
him state by state.
Speaker 1 (01:51:07):
Yes, lawfair.
Speaker 3 (01:51:10):
About that, yes, yes. And so in the back of
the DNC they're talking about we stand for democracy, we
stand for democracy, but they have a candidate whose uncle
was assassinated. You know, My point is the Kennedy brand
as a Democrat. And what he ultimately said is I
haven't left the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party has left me.
(01:51:30):
And that's ultimately what he said. And he said, listen,
I'm going to support Donald Trump. Now. What I want
to say. My last point about this is family is
so important to me. I mean, family is at the
core of everything. I'm shocked that the family is saying
these horrible things. I think about him as if he's
some traitor. This man has the right to support whoever
(01:51:53):
he wants to support. It has nothing to do with
his family. And so this notion that his family is
saying I don't like you, I don't appreciate you. You're
really not a part of our family because you're supporting
you're supporting a candidate that we don't support. Wow. Does
it speak to who they are as people and who
(01:52:13):
they are as a family. It doesn't speak to who
RFK Junior is. In my mind, he speaks to who
the Kennedy family, who they are as a people that
they are so entrenched in their ideology that they would
throw a family member out of the window publicly almost
saying I don't love you, I don't like you. You're
(01:52:35):
not a part of our family.
Speaker 1 (01:52:37):
Wow, that's what it's come to these days. And he
just merely stuck with the original democratic leanings of of
John F. Kennedy and the other Democrats in the sixties,
not the far left alexandrier Casio courtet wing a socialist
which the Kennedys apparently have become. Well, except for RFK Junior,
Christopher Smith And always a distinct pleasure having you on
the program, brother, We'll do it next you mind me, Hea.
Speaker 3 (01:52:58):
People can follow me at voat Smithman on social media.
Speaker 1 (01:53:03):
Take care good to hear from me. And it was
great to hear from Peter Sabia Kelwiam seven Hill joining
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Speaker 10 (01:54:09):
Fifty five CAR the talk station to the White House.
Speaker 1 (01:54:14):
Anything can something hit me?
Speaker 15 (01:54:17):
And will happen?
Speaker 1 (01:54:20):
Fifty five KRC the talk station at six fifty five
kr C the talkstation Happy Monday, try to make it
happy anyway. And I have to go to this on
a Monday. Well, at least you have the same psychology
and mindset that I do. But here I am Brian Thomass,
fifty five KRCY. Morning. She has been an interesting conversation.
We've had all morning, a variety of different topics, and
(01:54:42):
I want to see what Seawan's got. He was kind
enough to call him this morning at five one, three,
seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty
two three talk sew Welcome to the program. Thanks for
calling in.
Speaker 16 (01:54:52):
Thank you sir, Thank you sir for taking my call.
Please do it's hard work. It's heartwarming to hear you
five days a week. Someone the only person on radio
that I hear saying what I am thinking. As far
as the Kennedy subject, Yeah amos amos, Chapter three, Verse
three says can two walk together, except they be agreed.
(01:55:14):
Jesus loves you, sir, good day.
Speaker 1 (01:55:16):
Thank you very much. I suppose they can if they
form a coalition. If you look at our European friends
and neighbors, quite often they form a coalition government. They
have mindsets that are similar more similar than the mindset
of say another group of political up parties. They have
multiple political parties, and so in order to get control,
they'll form a coalition government. And well, I don't profess
(01:55:38):
to know everything there is to know about coalition governments.
It doesn't mean that they're all lockstep unified behind one
specific set of principles that would be one party. If
there's no difference between say, the People's Liberation Front and
the Campaign for Free, Free Galilee, then they're basically the
same thing. Rfk's platform differed in certain respects from Trump's.
(01:55:59):
And yet when RFK jor reached out to the Harris campaign,
he got nothing but silence. They wouldn't even take his
phone calls. And as he saw himself up against the
wall thanks to in large parts censorship, we can get
to that in a moment he reaches out to the
Trump campaign, or actually the Trump campaign, I think reached
out to him. But in either case they sat down
and they had a discussion, a discussion, and as Kennedy
(01:56:24):
said the other day, he invited Jnald Trump. He invited
me to form a unity government. This is why I
mentioned coalition government. We agreed that we'd be able to
continue to criticize each other on the issues where we
don't agree, but these issues are so important and they're
a way of unifying the country. Speaking of course, as
(01:56:45):
to the issues upon which they do agree, which would
far more issues than anything the Kamala Harris campaign well,
I want to say, has come up with or articulated,
but based upon her record, what they're willing to talk
about and not talking about the talking heads like you
know Chucky Schumer, who actually went out and literally talked
about their agenda, at least the agenda as he saw
(01:57:07):
it unfolding over a Harris administration, which is basically another
three and a half years of what we got so far,
another four years basically of the Obama administration and the
Biden administration's failed policies. A start contrast between that and
the Trump administration what he was able to ring about,
So might they differ on green agenda items. Yes. Might
(01:57:29):
they differ on other yes, But in large part RFK says,
you know what, the Trump campaign has far better ideas,
and I'd much rather support a Trump campaign than a
Harris campaign. And that's how we find ourselves in this position.
And again you go back to the lawfare component of it.
Put yourself an RFK junior physician. He campaigned originally as
(01:57:51):
a Democrat. Obviously they weren't thrilled with him being the
party nominee. If he could have made it, I don't know,
but they refuse to acknowledge him. And then and of course,
after he works his butt off and his people work
their butts off collectively to get enough signatures to show
up on a ballot, what do the Democrats do? They
went to court. They went to court much in the
(01:58:11):
same way they went after Donald Trump. When you're afraid
of the American people and that the American people might
reject your party and elect the guy from the other party,
or in this taste, either guy, then you go to
court and you try to stop it from happening. When
your government approves a drilling project or something along those
(01:58:32):
lines and you don't like what it's done, you go
to court under an EPA lawsuit or claiming some environmental
damage or some other it's I don't know heritage land,
and you make an argument and you stand on the
way a bit. It's lawfair. This can drag things out
just forever. It's very successful lawfair depending upon which side
of the ledger you're on. It works for both sides.
(01:58:53):
But RFK Junior felt it in spades. He felt it
during an interview he was talking with Fox News just yesterday,
was Shannon Breen, and he said, listen, my campaign couldn't
gain traction because of censorship by the media. And this
is something I talked about earlier in the program. Beyond
(01:59:13):
this particular issue, but censorship generally speaking. And look to
Europe and look at the UK and what they're doing.
You know, we may be seeing the writing on the
wall arresting people with certain political ideologies while allowing lawbreakers
to run amuck. But anyway, he said, became clear to
me that I did not have a path to victory
(01:59:35):
sixteen months of censorship, of not being able to get
on any network really except for Fox. And he had
a parallel to draw. It was Ross Pero's campaign. He
say when Ross Perot ran in the last ten In
the ten months that he ran, he had thirty four
appearances on the networks. I had two appearances in sixteen
(01:59:59):
months two. So I was blocked out of the networks
and I was blocked out of the debate. I had
no path to victory, he said. Trump started reaching out
to his campaign from time to time. Said they even
spoke just a few hours after that would be assassination
attempt on Donald Trump. That's when he made the point
(02:00:20):
about he invited me to form a unity government. It's
a good idea. There are you know, RFK Junior supporters
out there. I know quite a few people in my
listening audience like his position relative to vaccines, and that
those folks. If RFK Junior is in the on rather
the winning side, if he chose wisely and went and
(02:00:43):
backed Trump and Trump goes on to win, I mean
the RFK people can view that landscape and say, you
know what, if my guy joins forces with Trump and wins,
my guy's policies are at least going to be near
the presidents. He will have the president's ear, and then
maybe we'll be able to advance what I want out
(02:01:05):
of a candidate, and here's my list from RFK Junior
and why I was in favor of RFK Junior. If
RFK Junior gets a cabinet position or some other prominent
position within the Trumpet Mission administration. It hasn't been stated
that he will, but it's certainly a possibility, then Trump
perhaps will enjoy the benefit of getting those RFK Junior voters.
(02:01:26):
And he had about six percent, and that is six
percent roughly, depending on which pole you're looking at any
given pole, it's in the single digit. It was as
high as double digits at certain times. But he at
least gets the benefit of five to let's say, ten
percent of the electorate who would have gone with RFK
Junior had they not well try to get him chucked
(02:01:48):
out of any given states ballot or otherwise alienated to
the point where he had to drop out of the
rate through this censorship that the RFK Junior is complaining about.
So there's that possibility, and so again coalition government comes
to mind, unity ticket comes to mind. In any event,
those are voters that are yet to be decided, and
I suppose it's going to be rather interesting polling from
(02:02:08):
this point forward. Now that RFK Junior has done what
he was expected to do, which has drop out of
the race and move forward with the Trump campaign. And
why would you go with the Harris campaign if you're
RFK Junior In spite of what your family members say,
they clearly have been co opted by the far left
of the Democrat Party. I don't think I don't think
John F. Kennedy Junior would have anything negative to say
(02:02:30):
about RFK Junior's position on this, because if you look
back at what John F. Kennedy Junior campaigned on, you know,
like things like free speech, equality among the individuals in
terms of race and religion, good old school Democrat. He
fought for civil rights. Great, there's nothing wrong with fighting
(02:02:51):
for civil rights. Well, some people might claim that the
civil rights victory was achieved and accomplished. Of course, as
soon as Barack Obama got elected, civil rights started becoming this,
you know, the immediate default buzzword, you know, racism and racism.
It was lurking around every corner almost instantaneously when we
could all look back and look at all the progress
(02:03:13):
we had made over the years. And I think it
rather interesting observation in hindsight to hear Barack Obama scream
about racism all the time, when the United States of
America collectively had just got done electing a black president
after decades of electing black governors and black senators and
black representatives both in state and federal elections, black individuals
(02:03:37):
in charge of corporations and running companies and having leadership
positions in multiple organizations. Every single place you can turn
over the past twenty thirty forty years, you're surrounded by
folks of all different races and creeds and ethnicities that
we have made wonderful progress. Whatever happened to those days,
(02:03:57):
I don't know, but my suspicion is this will certainly
inure to Donald Trump's benefit, especially with him sounding RFK junior,
sounding reagan esque. And I use those words delicately. But
yesterday he was speaking about this whole maga thing, Maga
(02:04:17):
make America great again. He said it should be embraced,
he said quote. The phrase has troubled liberals who think
it is called a return to an America before civil rights,
gay rights, and women's rights. But I have a more
generous interpretation, one that is truer to my experience of
Donald Trump as he is today. Make America Great Again
(02:04:38):
recalls a nation brimming with vitality, with a can do spirit,
with hope, and a belief in itself. Was an America
that was beginning to confront its darker shadows. Could acknowledge
the injustice its past, and of its past and present,
yet at the same time could celebrate its successes. A
(02:05:00):
nation abroad prosperity, the world's most vibrant middle class, and
an idealistic believe though not consistently applied in freedom, justice,
and democracy. It was a nation that led the world
in innovation, productivity, and technology, and it was the healthiest
country in the world. That I've talked to Trump, to
many Trump supporters, I have talked with his inner circle,
(02:05:20):
I have talked to the man himself. This is the
America they want to restore. And noticeably absent from the
left is that last part of his first sentence. We
have all of this. We can acknowledge our injustice, we
can acknowledge the past and present. But we have such
great things going on here. Yet at the same time,
at one point, we could celebrate its successes. The left
(02:05:44):
never wants to celebrate anything at all. It's all dark,
gloom and doom, and the only thing out there to
salvagees from this darkness and this gloom and doom is
to put your life and control the federal government and
expand its size. And Rea pa eight eighteen fifty five
KRCB Talk Station. Feel free to call in first word
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Speaker 15 (02:07:11):
Five KRC dot com.
Speaker 10 (02:07:13):
Another insurance story, Ay.
Speaker 1 (02:07:15):
Twenty two fifty five KERCD talk station. It's the big
weekend coming up, something we all look forward to and
have now for what forty eight years? The Western and
Southern WDN Fireworks kicking off at Sawyer point Yateman's Cove
on Sunday. John Barrett, CEO Western and Southern, the big Huh.
The entire place is in house to talk about the event.
Welcome John every year. It's always great to see my friends.
(02:07:37):
It's always great to be here, and you're looking forward
to another very successful little It'll be.
Speaker 2 (02:07:41):
It'll be as big and as as wonderful as ever.
Speaker 1 (02:07:45):
You know, the I've had an opportunity to see the
fireworks from multiple locations. Over the years, I've been in
Covington to watch it. I've been invited to friends houses
in Newport. I actually got to watch it from the
parking lot at the boat House once, which was the
best you I've ever experience. I got a great place
to visit this year, the iHeart Area, So I'm going
to be there with my wife looking forward to seeing
(02:08:07):
the fireworks. That's ground zero, it is, and it is
an amazing sight to behold. I mean, fireworks with Rozsi's
is always just without. They don't have a peer in
the industry, but the way they do them now and
they make letters and words and signs, and it's just
times so perfectly with the music, it's just awe inspiring.
Speaker 12 (02:08:25):
I would you know, I asked, iHeart or not? iHeart
asked the Rossies if I could get up on the
Purple people bridge over the top of them, they would
let it. But I think that'd be the best place
in the world. It's possible to be dangerous because it's
stuff can still be hot coming down, but going off
all over the place and be I mean, I you
can see ten people up there you know with life jackets, yeah, parachutes.
Speaker 1 (02:08:47):
Yeah, helmets. So I want to thank personally Western and
so and for helping out with this, because without a
sponsor like Western and Southern, you just can't pull an
event like this off.
Speaker 12 (02:08:57):
Well, you know, it's just one of those things where
it's a community deal, a Cincinnati community deal, and forty
eight years is a big deal.
Speaker 2 (02:09:05):
We've been in a thing for eleven.
Speaker 12 (02:09:07):
But the important thing to me is that we keep
it going and that people in the city they leave
the city at twenty two whatever or eighteen to go
to college, that at thirty or thirty five or forty,
when Labor Day weekend comes up and they're somewhere else,
they remember their old times back there, and a bunch
of them kind of circle back, you know.
Speaker 1 (02:09:26):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:09:27):
There's so many people in sort of like porch parties
that have used of the river all over the place.
It's it's really neat.
Speaker 1 (02:09:34):
And you know, Lord knows. And I'll try to keep
politics out of this and don't even gravitate towards politics.
We could all use an infusion of fun and of
smiles and of a unifying activity. And who could be
against enjoying the fellowship, the fund, the food, and those
beautiful fireworks. It's just I'm sure somebody's upset by it,
the hell of them. They don't need to hear from them,
(02:09:57):
so whattimes the kick off.
Speaker 2 (02:09:59):
I think the firework actually hit the air at.
Speaker 12 (02:10:02):
Nine fourteen, nine fourteen, not nine thirteen, not nine fifteen,
nine fourteen. It's all about when the sun goes down.
Speaker 1 (02:10:08):
Well, And I've observed over the years, and I don't
want to paint too rosier brush on it, but I
don't recall it ever being a problem in terms of
crowd control management. There's you know, if people mind their
p's and q's, it is truly a family event, I guess,
is what I'm pushing for you. No, that's right.
Speaker 12 (02:10:23):
People are down with their families and they do a
pretty pretty good job of policing the area so that
the tufts realize that it's not the night for.
Speaker 2 (02:10:31):
Them, you know.
Speaker 1 (02:10:32):
Yeah, and well they're outnumbered. Big crowds are good for safety, absolutely, Yeah,
there is safety in numbers.
Speaker 12 (02:10:39):
Yeah, But it's a place to be, so everybody's going
to be there, whether you're a good guy or a
bad guy or whatever. And there's an awful lot of
stuff going on that night. Are we allowed to talk
about what might be happening before the fireworks?
Speaker 1 (02:10:53):
Well, you're not looking at me. You have someone you're
asking that question. We are I would say, Yeah.
Speaker 12 (02:10:59):
Here's what I would say. Don't be late, Bally, if
you get there, be there around seven. Anyway, there's going
to be some pre fireworks festivities.
Speaker 2 (02:11:10):
In the air.
Speaker 1 (02:11:10):
That'll be neat well and at minimum, I might observe
being a watcher of people. There's nothing I enjoy more
than Neil kicking back and watching folks just walk by.
It's an awesome people watching opportunity. So if you have
some time to go that's built in right there.
Speaker 2 (02:11:25):
It's a great day.
Speaker 12 (02:11:26):
We have our company picnic down on the Sawyer's Point
area down there, and our people just love it. They
can park in our garage, walk down, have a great
time and you know, food whatever, it's good.
Speaker 2 (02:11:40):
I was talking to the guy bought the.
Speaker 12 (02:11:44):
Crew tower in the old Macy's building, and well, he
liked about what we were doing in Cincinnati. This is
one of those things, he said, you guys get the
three f's that make a city great. Food, fun, and
the feeling of safety. We have to have all three
of those and tons of them, so any one of
those is a loser if it's by itself right. And
(02:12:07):
so you know, you've got great food options downtown now,
and they're typically not chain stores. They're typically local chefs, yes,
and most of them trained by John Robert.
Speaker 2 (02:12:18):
I think, I mean, I believe legacy.
Speaker 12 (02:12:21):
Lasts and the fun that goes with being downtown and
the fireworks, all the things that we have to offer.
Speaker 2 (02:12:29):
I don't know if you've been up to the light
of park since they've redone that it is just cool.
Speaker 12 (02:12:33):
Yes, got a quarter of a mile rubb rised running
track in it, and all times the day there's people
out there either walking or running on that track, and
the park would be underutilized if you didn't have something
like that.
Speaker 2 (02:12:46):
It's fun.
Speaker 1 (02:12:47):
It is fun, and that's the point. And the more
opportunities for fun, the more time more you're going to
draw people there, and more you're going to experience that
feeling of safety that we just mentioned earlier on so
exactly right, you can go to the Evan fireworks in safety.
Make sure you plan in advance, John you mentioned, and
get there by seven. Some of the roads are going
to be shut down there. I might be I might
(02:13:07):
be late on that. It might be you want to
go earlier. Maybe, yeah, yes, we have. We got nods
of approval throughout the room here, so yeah, earlier. It's
like I heard media aviation expert Jay Ralli will say,
get to your flight two hours before it takes off.
You need the extra time, so plan accordingly with the
EB and fireworks, the Western and Southern w EVN fireworks
(02:13:30):
as well. Now you're talking there, you go, it's going
to be a great day. I'm going to be there.
I hope to run into my listeners and I know
I will be having a good time. And there are
prohibited items. Again, there's gonna be some roads shut down.
There's some general policies, and Joe Strekker will put a
link up on my blog page fifty five caresee dot
com to the link that has all the events, the activities,
starting times, the p's and q's we need to mind
(02:13:51):
while we're there. And so everybody's going to have a
fantastic time from behalf of all my listeners and really
everybody in the greater Cincinnati area and all those people
who will come in from out of town enjoy it
and there are a lot of them. Thank you CEO
of Western and Southern John Bearffer, coming to the morning
show and letting us know about it. And I can
see the enthusiasm on your face as we talk this morning.
Speaker 2 (02:14:10):
Thank you, Brian, and thank you all the listeners.
Speaker 1 (02:14:12):
God bless you, sir. We'll see you downtown on Sunday.
It's a twenty nine year fifty five r C the
talk station. And I get to mention but Herbert Motors
since ice hometown lawn equipment deal, they are the absolute
best of customer service. You're dealing with a Herbert family
member five generations. I got my commercial push mower from
Honda through Bud Herbert Motors after an absolutely awful, horrific
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dot com fifty five KRC the talk station. This is
(02:15:18):
this simply money Man. Channel nine says we're gonna be hot.
It's a hot day to day ninety four for the
hot maybe higher sunny skies over night, low seventy one
with some clouds partly ninety eight. The predicted high frid
Tomorrow with the heat index several degrees higher than that,
sunny over nine seventy with a partly cloudy skies and
just a slight chance of rain maybe storms. Wednesday, even hot,
(02:15:38):
they're going up the ninety nine with the slight chance
of storms, so I'm guessing it's going to be humid
as well. Seventy three degrees right now. Time for traffic.
Speaker 9 (02:15:47):
From the U SE Tramphing Center at you see Gardner
Neuroscience Institute. You can access the leading brain, spine and
nerve experts right here in Cincinnati. So I've found seventy
five continues to run an extra ten out of even
Dale through wack On southbound seventy one delayed times dropping
closer to the fifteen minute mark, although fields hurdle off
and on down to the lateral northbound forth seventy one
(02:16:10):
break lights from Grand there's a wreck on seven forty
seven near Milliken.
Speaker 17 (02:16:14):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc the talk station. Hey,
thirty four fifty got KRCD talk station. I was let
in on a secret and I was told that, yeah,
you can go ahead and tell folks.
Speaker 1 (02:16:27):
This is what John Barrett was struggling with. He had
his advisor with him telling him what he could and
couldn't say, which is kind of funny when he runs
Western and Southern sou Folks there to keep track of
the details. Anyway, the special event that he was a
little relucking to talk about, which he stuck his head
back in the studio and said, you can go tell
people they're going to be doing a drone display, which
(02:16:51):
you can imagine if you've seen some of those the
coordinated drones. It is the coolest thing, one of the
coolest things ever to just watch and realize the level
of sophistication and coordination those things can do and accomplish.
But also if you've seen it in the context of
modern warfare, it will scare the living hell out of you.
(02:17:11):
At least it scares a living hell out of me.
So I don't know how any iron dome can manage
to uh to deal with thousands of drones being launched
at one time in coordinated effort, all flying in different
directions pursuant to specific command. So anyway, drone display you
can see it for yourself, sometime in advance of the fireworks,
(02:17:32):
of course. So just one other little detail for the
event again, this Sunday, eight thirty five, right now fifty
five caurios to the talk stations. I'd love to hear
from you if you've got something you want to talk about,
maybe heading and been brought up or elaboration on things
I've been talking about this morning. Five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
talk pound five fifty on AT and T phones, or
just call up and talk with Jess Strecker as he's
(02:17:53):
doing right now with one of the callers in the meantime.
I hate to have to bring this up, but you know,
someday you may have the same thing happen to me,
that the same thing happened to you that happened to me.
And regular listeners know what I'm about to say. You
have cancer. That's not what you want to hear from
your doctor, but it does happen every single day, and
with me when it happened, I obviously felt terrible. Your
(02:18:14):
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you need are great cancer doctors. So I always give
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Speaker 7 (02:19:13):
This is fifty five KARC, an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 15 (02:19:17):
This week's marketer.
Speaker 1 (02:19:18):
Hey forty here, fifty five KRC Detalk station, are very
happy Monday to you. Real special day this morning. Actually
for two reasons, really kind of minor, I suppose in
the grand scheme of things. But I'm just so wiled
by technology. I just I get the biggest kick out
of when folks listening to the fifty five KRC Morning
show and they don't even live here. I mean, I
know the Internet, it's a worldwide, global concept. I could
(02:19:38):
have you know, friends in France listening right now to
the morning show. But this morning I was commenting on
something about the integrity the elections. Denesh called the program
to let me know about this article he read about
from doctor Corsi, Jerome Corsi, whose name may be familiar
with here. He's a brilliant guy. He met with a
hoiuse Secretary of State to investigate Corsi's claim that they
(02:20:00):
indisputal evidence of secret algorithms that are encoded into the
Ohio State Board of Elections Ohio voter registration database with
a presumed purpose of facilitating mail in ballot fraud. And
so Densh was going through the details of that and
his call unfortunately ran into the top of the hour.
We had to take a break before all the details
(02:20:21):
got out. So I say, listen, I need the information.
I want to know where this came from. And so
marine like within thirty seconds forward to meet the link.
It was from Gateway Pundit, which is a very very,
very very leaning right site. I just want to warn
you ahead of time in case you can't figure it
out for yourself. It's very very conservative leaning, and I
would argue to a certain extent like MSNBC, perhaps too
(02:20:44):
much so. But they're the ones that provided the reporting
on this. This meeting with actually did take place. They
did do the research that made up the purpose of
the meeting. What will be done with it remains to
be seen. But the neat part about it is Maureene
lives in Florida. Normally she's listening from Florida, same time zone.
She moved there from the Greater Cincinnati area some time ago.
(02:21:05):
But she's in Hawaii. I'm here in Hawaii. I'm listening
to You Live. It's one o'clock in the morning. She
doesn't miss the morning Show, so I thought that was
really cool. And then while I'm on the break there,
Joe Strecker is talking on the phone with someone who
called in at seven four nine fifty five hundred and
going back to Florida. Jim from Punta Gorda, Florida called in.
(02:21:26):
He was telling Joe, you heard about the WBN fireworks
and or the Western Southern WBN fireworks. Thank you, John Barrett.
He's gonna come all way up to Cincinnati just to
see him. So I'm not sure if he had plans
to do that before the conversation, but he knows about
him now and it is the forty eighth annual and
it is worth a trip. So that's just neat. So
the power of the Internet right there on full display
(02:21:48):
this morning on the Morning show. So thanks to all
the folks out in the listening audience who are tuning
in from places far and wide. I just always get
a huge kick out of it. I have you know
guys I went to college with. Occasionally i'ming in from
you know, Cleveland, folks I worked with in Chicago chiming
in from time to time, and you know, like Mississippi
James calls in, which is cool. Just anyhow, it's the
(02:22:10):
neat part of the radio. You're connected with so many
people and sometimes you're just not aware of it. And
this morning I became aware of it from a couple
of instances. So thank you for a while me to
get that out of my system, and thank everybody who's listening.
And I'm going to pivot over because I heart media.
Aviation expert Jay Ratlers on the program every Thursday at
eight thirty, and you kind of imagine being an aviation expert.
(02:22:30):
We've been having a lot of well, sort of shodden
freuda in a way. It's a goofy. We don't want
Boeing to go under. Obviously Boeing a massive employer of people,
but let's face it, they have their fair share of
problems on their hands. Brought about by their own stupid
decision making, And how would you like to be Butch
Wilmore and Sunny Williams or Sonny perhaps they're the ones
(02:22:54):
that are stuck on the space station because they flew
up in a Boeing spacecraft. You need to have to
sound like I got comedy in the back of my mind.
But yeah, it does sound that way, doesn't it. NASA
has decided they're going to bring the stranded Boeing Starliner
aircraft aircraft rather home alone. The stranded astronauts will not
be on it. Decided it's too dangerous. It's like a
(02:23:17):
it's a test run basically, according NASA administrator Bill Nelson,
he said, well, testified by nature, is neither safe nor routine.
This is decision as a result of the commitment to safety.
Not an easy decision, he said, but absolutely the right one.
So they're gonna let it come return unmanned and hopefully
land safely somewhere out in the western desert. Boeing had
(02:23:44):
counted on Starliner's first crew trip to revive the troubled
spacecraft program after years of delays and ballooning cost. The
company had insisted Starliner was in fact safe based upon
all the recent thruster tests, both in space and on
the ground, and yet here we find ourselves. So you've
got sixty one year old Wilmore and fifty eight year
old Williams, both retired Navy captains, stuck, and it looks
(02:24:09):
like they're going to be stuck until February. So who's
coming to the rescue. Who will rescue the stranded astronauts?
Huh SpaceX evil Elon Musk. I'd say evil because folks
in the European Union are planning on arresting them while
they arrest everybody else with a social media platform that
(02:24:31):
actually allows you to speak your mind and engage in
the free exercise and exchange of ideas. Yeah, the sin
of allowing people to communicate back and forth without well
with freedom, that's a no no in the European Union,
and that's a no no in the UK where they
are rounding up people based upon their political ideology. And
trust me, if you're of the conservative mindset, you're the
(02:24:52):
one that they're targeting, not people who are committing acts
of mass hysteria, multiple stabbings and committing crimes. And then
of course they're going to go after Elon for allowing
a platform where people can exchange ideas that the government
does not like. Then you thank god for folks like
Elon Musk, because without SpaceX, perhaps Butch Wilmore and Sadie
Williams wouldn't be coming back at all. Sorry state of
(02:25:16):
affairs for Boeing. But again I can't say that maybe
their poor oversight in terms of manufacturing had anything to
do with this specific capsule. But you can mark down
yet another failure for the folks at Boeing. Comeing up
at eight forty seven and feel free to call got
a moment, a few moments to talk after the break,
and the break begins with odor exsit gets rid of
(02:25:38):
the stench of politics. They probably could use it in
the space station. Yeah, I don't know. There's no gravity
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go to the website because that's where you figure out
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There's a search engine right there on the web page
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area that sell the products ODO RXIT. You know, eotor
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eggsit dot com works on everything except the stench of politics.
Speaker 10 (02:26:47):
Fifty five KRC celebrate Labor Day weekend this year with the.
Speaker 1 (02:26:55):
Sunny hot ninety four overnight down to seventy one, partly
cloudy sky's hot or Tomorrow night eight for the high
heat index north of one hundred, mostly sunny over night,
you got a slight chance of raining storms down to
seventy degrees, and Wednesday ninety nine for the high no
heat index provided. But I imagine it's going to be
hotter than that slight chance of storms, sunny otherwise seventy four.
(02:27:15):
Right now, time for final traffic shocks.
Speaker 9 (02:27:18):
From the UCL Tramfics Center at the UC gardner In
Neuroscience Institute, you can access the leading brain, spine and
nerve experts right here. In Cincinnati, statbound seventy one continues
to run an extra fifteen minutes from two to seventy
five pass slow lateral northbound four to seventy one's clearing
out into town. Northbound seventy five closer to a ten
minute delay now between Erlanger and the bridge and statbound
(02:27:40):
seventy five slow go out of Evendale through Lachlan Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KR Sea Need talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:27:49):
Hey fifty one, fifty five KR CIT talk station, Happy
Eat Monday. Try to make it a happy day for
yourself anyway, if you get a chance to listen to
Christopher Smitheman. Great conversation is always every Monday at seven
thirty with the former Vice Mayor. You can find that
a fifty five kr sea dot com link. I guess
by this point to the information about the Western and
Southern Indian fireworks will be on that blog page as well,
(02:28:10):
fifty five car sea dot com. Tomorrow. Of course, Tuesday
means the Bright Bart Inside Scoop, which we do at
eighth five every Tuesday, and Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Daniel
returns to the program at eight thirty, as is typically
the time for Dan, and we'll hear what he has
to say, most notably, probably since he usually gives us
his analysis of things war being a retired lieutenant colonel
(02:28:31):
with a lot of warfare experience, probably bring up the
attack on his Bawa, the Lebanese terrorist organization. You know,
since October eighth, they have fired more than six thousand,
seven hundred missiles and drones into Israel, and of course
most of the Israelis have fled the northern part of
(02:28:52):
the country given the reach of these missiles. So Israel said,
you know, what the hell with this? We see we
can tell from our intelligence and our obvious satellite operations
and everything else. But they had by way of intelligence
that Hesbala is getting ready to attack US. So more
than one hundred is late, rarely jets. The sentence shot
off hundreds of rockets and blew up rocket launchers in
(02:29:14):
southern Lebanon at four forty five in the morning, preempting
an attack by Hesbala, who now admits was scheduled to
launch an attack on Israel at five point fifteen. So ye,
say anything you want about Israel. I may disagree with
your conclusions about Israel, but one thing for sure, they
have great intelligence operations. And that's why that October attack
(02:29:34):
on Israel was viewed to such an intelligence failure because
normally they are four steps ahead of it. Anyway, rather
than the thousands of rockets that otherwise would have been fired,
the terrorists of Hisbala fired about two hundred rockets and
twenty drones, most intercepted by the Israeli defense forces in
the dome and everything else they used to shoot down
those rockets. So Hesbala called it salvo a great success
(02:29:59):
on inspite the fact, like bag Dad Bob, it was great. Yeah,
most of the stuff got blown up on the ground.
We didn't get a chance to light off those bottle
rockets or otherwise shoot those missiles into Israel, but we
got away two undred and ten of them, and it
looks like nothing really happened. One Israeli woman was lightly
wounded by rocket shrapnel, and sadly, one Israeli soldier was
(02:30:21):
killed by shrapnel from an interceptor. So best direct hit
apparently was on an Israeli chicken coop. Thank you to
the Wall Street Journal for that fun fact, which I
wasn't aware of anyway. Many are condemning Israel for the escalation,
(02:30:41):
but of course, if you get rid of the ability
to attack your own your country by blowing up the
rocket systems on the ground before they're fired, I think
you go a long way into de escalating. You're taking
the teeth away from them. So we'll see how things go.
No word on whether or not has Bat is finished
(02:31:03):
or not, but many think that that's been kicked back
on its heels for a while, so keep your popcorn out. Sadly,
as we watch potentially World War three unfold and are
left with a multitude of lingering questions about where a
Harris administration might be on foreign policy in addition to
(02:31:23):
all the other issues about which we have no idea.
She's like day thirty four or thirty five. She's getting
away with it, and at some point there's got to
be some accountability. And I can't imagine someone on any
side of the political ledger wanting, not knowing, or caring
to know what a candidate is running and claiming to
hope to get passed by way of legislation or the
(02:31:45):
wielding of the executive pen. Don't you think that's an
important component of your vote? I sure do. RFK Junior
knows what Trump's running on, and that's why he's over
on his side of the camp now forming what I
like to call a coalition party there, and good luck
to him. Coming up an eight fifty six. I hope
you have a wonderful day. Fifty five KRC dot Com
to podcast when you can't listen to line and get
(02:32:06):
your iHeartMedia app tuning, and tomorrow again to Breitbart as
well as Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Have a wonderful day,
and thank you Joe Strecker for all that you do
to keep the program going. I appreciate you, sir. I'll
be back tomorrow.
Speaker 15 (02:32:18):
Three You're just minutes away from refreshing your news feed
at the top of the hour.
Speaker 6 (02:32:22):
I have never seen anything like this.
Speaker 15 (02:32:24):
Exclusively fifty five KARC talkstation.
Speaker 10 (02:32:28):
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