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March 6, 2025 • 159 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Five O five.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
If it's five k r C detalxation Friday.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Evenings, it was a vacation.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
This is a tasty burger. Yeah, presumably SoundBite in reference
yesterday's Listener lunch, where I did not enjoy a tasty burger.
It was a spicy chicken uh caesar wrap Joe, and
I didn't eat the rap trying to keep my carbs low. Anyway,
Thanks everybody you' showing up Listener to lunch today. It
was a fun time. Always a great time at Listener

(00:51):
lunch regardless of the venue. But thanks and props to
March First Brewery. Some excellent bruise. I had some kind
of orange I p A was really wow. I'm an
IPA fan. I know people. People are either on board
with the IPAs or they hate him. It's the same reaction.
Oh yeah, or hate those too, hobby. Anyway, blood orange

(01:11):
IPA at March First. I'm giving it a props. An
interesting alternative and refreshing option. But they had like nine
thousand beers there. Matt Damarus from Vets and Bruce was
there and at least one veteran got a free beer.
Some veterans that were there didn't want a beer they
were offered them, so Vets and Bruce. Great organization and

(01:32):
thanks Matt de Marius for showing up listener lunch yesterday.
It was good seeing you, as it was good seeing
everybody that was there. Good scene, Jo direking the production
booth where he belongs and coming up with a fifty
five care See Morning Show two hours from now seven
oh five with Merrill candidate Corey Bowman. Hey, Joe, do
you know if anybody will look back at see if
Corey had any tweets supporting left wing causes or radicals.

(01:56):
I'm sure they will, but no, I don't know any
Unlike the other guy, I can't remember his name. Who
was it, Joe, Oh, Brian Frank, That's right, he was
on the Morning Show. Didn't have a whole lot to
say by way of policy, but it's been revealed it

(02:18):
He has a lot of tweets that are very very
very very very very revealing and in the sense that
he's pro as a Democrat. I don't know wolf in
Sheep's clothing. I don't know what he's trying to accomplish
other than throwing a plant. That's Joe Strecker's conclusion. He
may very well be. We've seen those in the past,
haven't we. Christopher Smithman, It is all about that O'Neill

(02:46):
speaking of O'Neill's otherwise Donovan Neil seven thirty with Americans
for Prosperities Donovan and Neil quote one Small Step Campaign
closes quote We're going to learn all about the one
Small Step campaign when Donovan joins the program at seven thirty.
Looking forward to that. Mary Gray bar with a book

(03:06):
debunking FDR Myths about Franklin Den Roosevelt Live On for
the Left. FDR a champion of the working class and
the oppressed, suffering abuse as a trader to his class.
He gave up lifestyle the Hudson River gentry to lead

(03:28):
his country out of the depression and victory against fascism
from any on the right. FDR, out of his depth
on economics, blood provided Americans with the optimism and confidence
necessary to prevail during the depression and gained victory of
World War Two. Debunking FDR the Man and the Myths
exposes the suppressed and distorted facts about FDR's life and

(03:50):
legends about him promoted by generations of historians. Ooh, that
should be a fun conversation. Looking forward to that and
that'll happen at eight oh five Fall by iHeartMedia aviation
expert Jay Rattle of and speaking of myths and perpetuated lies. Man,
I'm telling you, I really enjoyed talking to doctor to
doctor Robert Malone his book cy War Enforcing a New

(04:13):
World Order. H just really exposing how we are lied
to and the coordinated efforts to lie to us to
for the benefits of you know, in some cases, like
for example, the pharmaceutical companies, how did you know? And
I asked them about you know, these experts that pop up,
and you're all, I'm sorry, he's the expert. You can't
say anything against what he says. Well, no, one man's

(04:34):
got an opinion. One man reaches conclusions doctor Fauci, among others,
and they're held out as the end all, be all,
final voice on all things factual, when in fact they're
not factual, and they're all kinds of other alternative, you know,
points of view. I pivoted over to global warming. Same
damn thing with global warming. We've been selling, We've been

(04:56):
sold lies for the benefit of some selected members of class.
You know, some business or industry gets the largest the
benefit of your taxpayer dollars. It's handed over to them
in the name of getting rid of carbon dioxide from
our atmosphere, which is plant food. It's a big global lie.

(05:16):
How come we can't have nuclear plants when they provide
carbon free, pollution free electricity inabundant supply. And I know
we're moving away from that narrative and getting to the
point where, well, not the narrative that it's carbon free
and pollution free, but from the idea that nuclear plants
are bad, as he pointed out, and we've all observed
if you get all the big data companies together, and

(05:39):
they all need massive quantities of power, he pointed out,
one data center requires the equivalent of all of the
natural gas electricity producing plants in the entire state of
Texas one data center. You need small nuclear plants good,
If they get them, we get them. Hell, they've been
on American nuclear sub marines. Cribbage mic out there. I

(06:01):
hope your wife, Cindy's doing better. I miss seeing you
at lunch yesterday. But they've been on submarines and empowering
battleships now for decades and decades. Any incidents, any problems now,
And if you can fit a nuclear plant on a
submarine or inside of an aircraft carrier, I think you
can probably find room for one in a city or

(06:24):
in an area that is near a city. But forever
we've been told no, they're bad. Oh my god, three
mile while we're all gonna die overlooking the fact that
technology has well rapidly evolved, and we continue to work
on technology, And in spite of the fact that nobody's
building nuclear plants in this country, with notable exceptions, they

(06:46):
still work to perfect the concept. How about we bring
them on board? Okay, rather than throwing money at electric
vehicle manufacturers. And I know that's a stretch of a pivot,
but I have this story in front of me, and
yet another failure I talked about one yesterday. The Biden
administration gave this Canadian electric bus maker called Lion Electric

(07:09):
Company one hundred and sixty million dollars in subsidies to
manufacture a whopping four hundred and thirty five buses for
schools here in the United States. I guess maybe now
they would be subject to Trump's tariffs. I don't know anyway,
Now the company's nearing bankruptcy, laid off half of its
employees are close to half. Ninety five million dollars worth

(07:31):
of buses have not been provided. Washington freebeaking uncovering this.
Some of the sixty five million dollars worth of buses
that were delivered are not without problems. EPA investigating Line
Electric four oh fraud after the buses it's sent to
went through public schools in Maine were unusable for a

(07:53):
year and a half because of faulty parts. Oh Lin
Electric received the third most money of all manufacturers subsidized
by Biden's five billion dollar Clean School Bus program, and
there are still fifty five school districts waiting for their buses,

(08:15):
which they apparently are not going to get now. Notable
Line Electric stock has fallen to ready eight cents per share.
It was thirty three dollars and forty eight cents back
in January twenty one. HUH facing issues with disclosing its finances.

(08:37):
Group of investors sued the company last year for its
allegedly grossly unrealistic financial projections, and the Securitiest Exchange Commission
issued a warning last August over inaccurate numbers. AH Yet
another so called green company financed by your taxpayer dollars.
Can't even stay afloat in spite of the subsidies and

(09:00):
grants and loans. Do we have to go down this road.
But if you didn't believe in the religion, if you,
like me, rejected the notion that carbon dioxide aka plant
food isn't harmful of the planet, and that a bunch
of scammers are after this money. This is it's it's

(09:20):
its own economy, the green stuff. If you if you
just rejected the religion, and for some that will be
like Christians rejecting Jesus Christ. That's how web they are
to that, going back to doctor Malone, because they have
been sold a lie. And there is a heap load

(09:47):
a ton of evidence refuting the conclusions of the likes
of al Gore and the angry, sniveling Greta Thunberg and
everybody else who just goes around on screaming and wailing
and gnashing teeth that we're all killing ourselves than we
are responsible for the climate change that has always gone
on in this world. Plenty of contrary evidence of that.

(10:11):
You gotta go look for it. Robert Malone pointed that
out you have to seek out alternative viewpoints, and you
have to weigh the evidence. You have to use critical
thinking when drawing conclusions and not be wed to the
narrative that your you know, corporate lords and masters, or
politicians or other people with hands in the cookie jar
are trying to sell you, most notably when your country

(10:37):
has broke from overspending on things like oh yeah, the
Green New Deal. Feel free to call five one three
seven fifty eight hundred eight two three talk. I have
no idea how I ended up where I am right
here on this morning show. I didn't know where I
was going to start. Actually, I thought I was going
to start with Hunter Biden. Get ready for some shot
in freud of folks. You at that in the next segment,

(11:02):
or you can steer the topic of conversation by giving
me a call this morning. Regardless, I hope you can
stick around. I'll be right back.

Speaker 4 (11:08):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Is your New Year's resolute time Here it is Chata
nine first morning on the forecast. Got early clowns today,
mostly sunny later today I have forty four down to
thirty one overnight with bell clear skies. Earlier clouds will
build up though, got a wintery mix tomorrow and a
chance of rain because we're going to see a high
a fifty one overnight down to thirty five, cloudy, maybe

(11:33):
a few showered Saturday, another partly cloudy day, high a
forty eight. Let's see right now with my disappearent, they're
thirty four to fifty five care c DE talk Station
five nineteen on a Friday, even a happy one. T
you five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eight two three talk found five fifty on
eight and t phones. I saw him over across the room,

(11:56):
but I didn't get a chance to talk to him.
Welcome to the fifty five carres Say Morning Show, mister Tuba.
Good to see you yesterday. I apologize I was making
my way around the room and we didn't get a
chance to chat.

Speaker 5 (12:06):
Well that's okay. We're chatting now.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
Yes we are, and I appreciate your call today. Mister Tuba.
Of course, renowned for calling what like three hundred plus
people annually and playing Happy Birthday to them on the
tuba for their birthdays and honor the birthdays. I think
that's just such a nice gesture. Man.

Speaker 5 (12:22):
Well, it's a lot of fun too, I bet it is.

Speaker 6 (12:25):
Yep.

Speaker 5 (12:25):
Anyway, I'd like to offer a little different paradigm on
the events of November fifth to the present, and that
is that the core of the whole thing is a
populist revolt. Shall we say that precedes doctor Donald Trump's

(12:45):
original candacy candidacy, and that it's not really about Trump.
It's that Trump has joined the peasant revolt, of course.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
And.

Speaker 5 (13:00):
So take some of the burden off of Trump, and
we don't have to accomplish everything before January twenty twenty nine,
and the baton can be passed to other people who
may or may not be president. And I think if
we keep it in that, you know, keep it in mind,

(13:22):
that way, that things might work a little just work
a little better, at least inside people's heads.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
Okay, and fair enough. There's no way everything can be accomplished.
I mean, if you have a list and your president
of what you want to accomplish. I don't think any
president can get finished their term and say see, we
got it all done. It's never going to be all done.
I get that. But the idea I think you're suggesting
is the momentum of this populist revole, this rejection of

(13:51):
huge government interaction, overreach, dictation that dictates and mandates and
edicts and control over our lives. Every single aspect of
our lives, which has been growing over the years, is
rejected wholeheartedly. And this woke ideology rejected by the vast
majority of Americans.

Speaker 6 (14:09):
All of that's correct.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
Now, I guess my question for you is, and this
may be a challenging one for you, mister too, because
it's challenging for me, and it's challenging for all of
the Democrats out there who lost what used to be
their base, which was the middle class, working class Americans
who they always catered to and tried to say, our
policies are going to help you, blah blah blah blah blah,
got them elected a lot of times. What are they

(14:32):
going to do if the Republicans maintain this sort of
you know, concern and care and policies that are designed
to help the average American worker, which I think that's
what they're doing. What's the Left going to do? Are
they going to cling to the woke ideology which has
been rejected, or how are they going to pivot themselves
out of this hole they've dug themselves into.

Speaker 5 (14:53):
And that's a very good question, and I'm not sure myself.
I will also throw out that we cannot trust establishment Republicans,
and establishment Republicans are going to claim that November fifth
was their victory and it's not.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
No, it's not.

Speaker 7 (15:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
A double down and exclamation point underscore in bold that
exactly the Mitch mcconne's of the world, their days are
numbered and they better wake up to that fact. That's
what I'm worried about this reconciliation, mister Tuba, because you know,
there's a lot of Republicans who've got their hand in
the cookie jar and are going to demand that they're
you know, they get their way and they get their funding,
or they get their pet projects or however it works.

(15:35):
But when it comes to cutting and pairing back the
federal government money coming in, there are a lot of
Republican state elected officials are like, no, no, no, not
my territory. And that's the problem.

Speaker 5 (15:47):
It is indeed. And keep in mind also that the
far left started working their stuff in Woodrow Wilson's time,
if not earlier, and they've done it in increments, and
we may have to accomplish this in small increments ourselves,
and I hope the general public will realize that small

(16:10):
increments can be important.

Speaker 2 (16:12):
Yes, you know, I've always observed that, and I'm not
the only one, and that the left has always played
the long game. They're more than happy to get baby steps.
Every election cycle. They get a little bit more and
a little bit more. And I think what happened to
the Biden administration because they had well, a drooling idiot
as president who was asleep at the wheel, they were

(16:33):
able to advance their agenda very quickly, and we all
saw that, and they advanced it, I think too quickly
for American's paletts, most notably in the areas of this
wokeness DEI. The whole transgender movement was all shoved literally
shoved down all of our throats, and it flew in
the face as so many people's logic, reason, and basic

(16:53):
fundamental core values. They went a little too far in
their reach in that, and people soundly rejected help re
elected nazi, evil orange man. Oh my god, in the
face of all that criticism leading up to Donald Trump's
election last November. You know, I think they bit off
more than they can chew because they had an opportunity
because Joe Biden was asleep at the wheel. I think

(17:15):
a younger Joe Biden probably would have appreciated the political realities,
the idea that you know, there's only so much you
can accomplish, and you don't want to do this a
little too hard or people are gonna wake up to
what you're doing. I think we did appreciate the comments there,
mister tub But I hope you have a wonderful, wonderful day.

(17:35):
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Speaker 8 (19:16):
One nine fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
On a Friday night and a happy one to you
five one seven fifty five eight h y two three talk.
I did wax poetic about my conversation with doctor Robert
Malone yesterday. I really encourage you to listen to it.
I even had my son listen to it. I never
I never self promote at home, but uh, he's all

(19:42):
over the idea that we are being manipulated. So I
think it's a worthy conversation to listen to and then
get a copy of his book A fifty five krcy
dot com. Also, I f'm rissing pointing overlooking that I
did also talk with Congressman Dave Taylor. He offered his
thoughts and opinions about Trump's address. Steve Belzo from the
Klima County Veteran Service is helping folks and vet my
veteran friends out there navigate the challenges of actually logging

(20:05):
onto THEVA dot gov website. It's all for your benefit, though.
They're trying to incorporate two or they are incorporating two
factor authentications so people can't rip off your information. So
a little challenging for some out there, especially in the
senior community and folks that are still carrying around flip
phones that don't have texting. Yeah, he was advocating you

(20:25):
might want to do an upgrade on that. Plus the
incomparable brilliant Jack Atherdim with his thoughts on the Trump
speech as well. Fifty five cares dot com for all that.
I also get your iHeartMedia why you're there? Over to
local stories. Woman's been charged with identity theft after court
records say she opened more than two dozen credit cards

(20:48):
in her daughter's name thousands of dollars in debt. Yvonne
Garner has taken out twenty nine credit cards since twenty
nineteen in her daughter's name, according to Hevin Kenny court records,
is nearly two thousand dollars in debt because of her
mom's actions. According to the documents after David's and the
say the debt and a daughter's name is making it
difficult for her to make large purchases and she cannot

(21:08):
close the accounts because Garner used her home address, phone number,
and email address. Thanks mom. Credit to Fox nineteen Alexis
Martin for reporting she would police save when the daughter
first filed the complaint November of last year. She did
not want to prosecute her mom. She's one of the
accounts closed. Now police say she's pressing charges of identity

(21:28):
theft against her mom after she claims Garner mailed her
fifteen credit cards with instructions to pay them off. Garner
even threatened to report her daughter to the nursing board.
What Legal analyst Mark crombine and speaking of Fox nineteen, said,
an identity theft is a low level felony but could

(21:50):
have harsher penalties. When a person does take a child's information,
you know, they don't they can't stop it, he said,
that's their parent. So I think it's even more even
more be seen as a serious by more serious by
the courts if the accusations are true. So identity the
cases are common, but the circumstance of this case unique.
Of course, they're unique because moms usually treat their daughters

(22:11):
with much greater respect than that man. I think that's
a that's an award winning level of fence there, Joe,
thank you.

Speaker 9 (22:21):
The biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies,
there's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top
the pinnacle of deucee them good going, dou your dreams
have come true.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
Award that will be shared with forty seven year old
McLean Morris, who's the one responsible for stopping traffic on
the four to seventy one bridge yesterday morning. He broke
in the apparently according to the reporting here credit to
The Inquirer's David farra On this one, broken and stole
two large bottles of fireball liquor from a store, chugged

(23:02):
them in the parking lot, and then led police on
the chase that briefly closed the I four seventy one Bridge.
Bellevy Police say McClain morris, forty seven, and drove a
sedan into the front of One Stop Liquors about three
point thirty in the morning, got out of the car,
walked into the store, stole to one point seventy five
liter bottles of fireball cinnamon whiskey and a couple of

(23:27):
packs of smokes. Guzzled both bottles in the parking lot
before taking off in his car. Officers responded to the
liquor store every night watched surveillan footage of the break
into the store's owner wasn't Bellevue police's first run in
with this guy, and officers were able to identify him
in the video. According to Bellevue Police Chief John McClain,

(23:50):
the department's been dealing with him for years. No Kentucky
police from Bellevue, Fort Thomas Dayton, Newport went to Morris's
home on David's Street, their Division Street. He wasn't there.
As officers were speaking with neighbors, they spotted him driving
by on Lafayette Avenue and the car he used for
the liquor store burglary. Officers do maanity exit the car.

(24:12):
He refused, instead ramming into a Newport police cruiser and
several other neighbors cars with his vehicle. He drove it
several officers, forcing them to take cover court of the department.
He took off through the neighborhood on a sidewalk and
then fled north on Washington Avenue. Police pursued him at
low speeds onto the I for seventy one bridge. He
stopped his car at the bridge and shouted profanities at

(24:34):
the officer for an extended period of time, leading police
to close the bridge. There you have it. As he
was stopped officers placed strike strips spike strips under the
tires of his car in case he tried to take
off again. They did deflate one of his tires because
he continued into downtown Cincinnati since the police began pursuing
Morris with Northern Kentucky officers and stopped him at Third

(24:56):
Street in Broadway, where he was taken to custody. Now
facing several charges from the police, including burglary, criminal mischief,
want an endangerment, fleeing if aiding, among others. I would
expect other charges might include operating a vehicle while intoxicated.
He was driving a vehicle stolen in Cincinnati. Morris also

(25:18):
faces charge of receiving stolen property, obstructing official business, and
not complying with an officer's orders in Hamilton County. He's
in custody at the Hamilton County Justice Center until his
extradition back to Kentucky. Apparently, according to the enquire one
Stop Liquor opened for business yesterday about the front door,

(25:39):
a wall, and displayshelf with liquor bottles were heavily damaged
during the break in. Yeah I know, thirty six fifty
five CA detak station Wow that's a big, big, big
big wow. Oh, and put a word in here for
my friends at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Montcomer. It's

(26:00):
a beautifully maintained setting for remembrance and reflection. They have
beautiful rolling hills, mature trees, peaceful landscape, winding roads, pathways,
the beautiful monument statues and shrines. And then when you
get to spring season, all the flowers, the trim lawns
and reflective water features. It's a tranquil atmosphere and it's
the perfect location for prayer and reflection, especially during this

(26:21):
Latin season. So you can find comfort and peace at
the cemetery's quiet reverend surroundings. They're open to everyone to
enjoy ministering to the Tri State for over seventy seven years,
honoring life on sacred ground. Learn more, head on over
to the website and check it out. It's Gate of
Heaven dot org. That's Gate of Heaven dot org.

Speaker 8 (26:39):
Fifty five car the talk station Get Ready for the.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
By forty one krs de talk station Happy Thursday, Got
a stack a stupid in front of me? We pivot
from local story involving a woman opening multiple credit cards
in her daughter's name and racking up dad, ruining her
daughter's credit rating, and rendering her daughter incapable of well
shutting down those credit cards. Hey, thanks mom, man. We

(27:05):
live in a screwed up world. Welcome to another screwed
up story in the stack of stupid. I mentioned Steve
Blzo about the VA benefits and how you can access
your records online. He was on the air yesterday. We
go to Indiana Tel City. Specifically, we have a woman
arrested for allegedly falsifying a marriage license to marry her
biological father in order to receive his VA benefits while

(27:28):
he was in prison. What Kimberly Temple, forty four years
old created a fake marriage license application allowed her to
marry her biological father, with her lying about the familial
connection between the pair and intentionally hiding the fact that
she was already married to another guy. Her fifty nine

(27:48):
year old father, Brady McCollum, in prison for a probation violation,
had previously been charged with crimes related to child porn.
Oh you know what's going on going on, Joe, all
of which Temple lied about in a marriage application. Temple
and mccom's marriage was finalized when she was in the
process of getting divorced, meaning she was married to two

(28:09):
guys at the same time, aka bigamy. Mccom's sister reportedly
told the police that Temple falsified the application in order
to get mccum's three hundred and fifty dollars VA payments.
Shauser reportedly provided police with evidence from a DNA service
that showed Temple and McCollum had a near one hundred
percent chance of being biological father and daughter. Temple arrested

(28:32):
in charge with bigamy and falsifying a marriage license.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
Man.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
This stack was filled with award winners Joe and before
I get to Mississippi, James. One moment you heard at
the top of the ur news or if you're just
tuning in, there are really really, really, really really really
stupid people in the world, so stupid that someone bought
a Pokemon shaped cheeto for eighty seven and forty dollars.

(29:01):
It's a Cheeto, do what happens? Shaped like what is
described in the article KSL dot com its associated press
article Beloved Pokemon Charizard is what this allegedly looks like.

(29:21):
Gold Knox House listened to the sac snack as sold
on Sunday. Quote presented is a three inch long flaming
hot Cheeto in the shape of a Pokemon cherizard a
fixed to a customized customized Pokemon card and encapsulated in
a clear card storage box with the words made in
China on it. I might add it was initially discovered

(29:42):
and preserved sometime between twenty eighteen and twenty twenty two
by First and Gloal Goal Collectibles. The Cheetos surged in
popularity on social media platforms in late twenty twenty four.
Why I don't know someone at eighty seven and forty
dollars burning a hole in their pocket and he bought
a blank and cheeto, Mississippi James. Thanks for bearing with

(30:03):
me on that. Welcome to the Morning Show and a
happy Thursday to you, sir.

Speaker 10 (30:07):
Good morning doctor Brian. Hey, I think it was your
last caller that you that was talking and not just
line up.

Speaker 11 (30:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (30:16):
That aligns up with my theory as the penulum swinging. Yeah,
so yes, it's swinging back to the right and Trump
is the head of that. Another traditional Republican. They sort
of getting spun off in this swing.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
But is it traditional right in the sense that you
and I have grown up with it seems like it's
it's more like a party is trying to become a
party of common sense. Now, I can't abide spending literally
millions and millions of dollars going out in the world
for really stupid programs. The DOGE is identified. I can't
abide the Social Security Administration having people that are older

(30:55):
than you and I and Joe collectively together's age. Those
should be eradicated from books. There's a lot of things.
All this seems to be more common sense. I can't abide,
you know, a man claiming he's a woman and then
I'm supposed to agree with that and say, no, you're
a woman. I mean, these are all just common sense.
So I don't view it as a you know that
hard right, traditional Republican party type of stuff.

Speaker 10 (31:19):
Okay, Now, each time it swings, it comes back, come
back in a different form. You know, we can go
back as far as we want to talk about it.

Speaker 6 (31:29):
Yeah, And each time it's pilling the swing, it.

Speaker 10 (31:31):
Come back in a different form. But contest the Democrat form.
They went down some deep rabbit holes that they never
should have went down with common sense.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
That's right, God have.

Speaker 10 (31:43):
Taken them down there and the same thing swinging back
the other way. We're gonna go down some deep rabbit hole.
Concerning uh wills all the.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
Class warfare game. Yeah, the class warfare game. Well, that's
one that the Left is truly hung their hat on
with some great success. I will acknowledge waging class warfare.
I get that, But you see the problem with that
and the direction they had to go. They became the
party of these elite wealthy people. Over the last quite
a few years, they've married themselves with these tech billionaires,

(32:17):
and the tech billionaires glombed onto the democrats parties ideology
as well as they're well they're they're they're they're they're
the spending because they were getting the benefit from a
lot of it. But how can you have it both ways?
And you can't. So this is the problem the struggle
with the Democrats are going to deal with. Okay, we
had all these tech billionaires in our quarter for a

(32:39):
long time. They seem to have gravitated over to Donald
Trump at this point. What are we going to do?
How which how are we going to get the pendulum
swinging back in our direction? What are we going to
offer the people by way of messaging that will be
appealing enough for them to vote for. And I think
that question is looming large among the Democratic Party. They're
not quite sure how they're going to get what ultimately

(33:00):
is James, you and I both know how they're going
to get their power back. And that seems to be
what politicians are all about, regardless of political stripe. It's
about power and control and I hate that. I hate it.
A bunch of narcissists in it for their own self interest.
Good man, James, I hope you have a wonderful, wonderful
week and I want to write Experience the Comfort and

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Speaker 12 (34:09):
Look, this country was founded on Freedom forty four overnight
little thirty one with clouds building, wintery mix possible, and
we get some rain on high fifty one overnight tomorrow
thirty five for the low, few showers.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
Late into the evening Friday night and on Saturday partly
flatty day with.

Speaker 13 (34:26):
A high of forty eight thirty four Right now traffic
time from the UCL Traffic Center. When it comes to
multiple sclerosis, trusts the experts at the UC Gardener Neuroscience
Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care. Learn more at U
see health dot com. Hi ways are doing just fine
this morning. No rex to deal with. You have some
wind and you have some wet roads to deal with

(34:48):
in some spots. But I'm not seeing any trouble because
of the weather issues. Inbound seventy four running less than
five minutes between North Bend and the seventy five ramp.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five kr seat the station the
shy seven to fifty two fifty five kir C detalk station. Again,

(35:10):
plenty of awards to hand out this morning. We're gonna
jump into another one worthy award winners they are. We
go to Los Angeles, where thirty officers at a southern
California juvenile detention facility have been charged with their role
in facilitating what they call gladiator fights between youth in
their care grand during Diamond alleges, the officers that lost

(35:31):
Pedrina's Juvenile Hall in Los Angeles County allowed and sometimes
encouraged nearly seventy fights to take place between July twenty
three December twenty three. More than one hundred and forty
victims between the ages of twelve and eighteen involved. Attorney
General Rob Banita or Banta quote, we believe that this
was planned. It was intended.

Speaker 2 (35:52):
They often wanted them to happen at the beginning of
the day and at certain times in a certain place,
in a space and time that was created for the fights,
and the plan was for the fights to have happened.
Officers face charged including child and dangerment, abuse, conspiracy, and battery.
Twenty two of the officers are scheduled to be arraigned
the other day. Investigation began after Los Angeles Times first
obtained and published footage showing a seventeen year old being

(36:15):
attacked by at least six other young people coming at
him one by one. Is the officers stand by watching.
Some of the officers appear to laugh and shake hands
with the participants in the beating video made public during
your court hearing, in which the seventeen year olds public
defender argued to a judge that he was not safe
at this facility and should be released ahead of his trial.

(36:37):
Indictment singles out two probation officers who were leg told
staff members ahead of the time that the fights would
be occurring and that quote they were not to say anything,
write down anything, and just watch close. Quote someone talked
about fight club. You're right, Joe. They broke the rule.
Also Ledgis, one of the officers told youths involved to

(36:59):
refuse treatment when they went to medical to get treated
by nurses. LA County Probation Apartment that runs facilities said
in a statement that it fully supports and applauds the
Attorney General's Office for the indictments. Attorney representing the seventeen
year old in his family in the civil's case against

(37:19):
the county called the indictment the tip of the iceberg
of a systemic problem in the probation apartment. He said,
there's a culture that promotes a lack of accountability, violence,
and policies that encourage officers to look the other way,
as evident in the video the reaction of the children
who were eating their lunch. They really didn't seem shocked
or surprised, which tells me this is a daily occurrence.

(37:43):
He also represents several other families with children harmed at
this facility, including one who was left with a traumatic
brain injury after being knocked unconscious in a classroom. You
think there are placing bets on those, Joe, Isn't there
a South Park episode about that one? Wasn't the Baby
Fights or something like that? Yeah, life imitating comedy. And

(38:09):
Gigi Wu's no longer a social media scar a star.
She's dead. Apparently she was renowned for scaling mountains donning
a bikini called the Bikini Climber on social media. Found
dead in Taiwan's Yushah National Park on Monday. According to
multiple media reports, she was seriously injured after falling to
her vine during a solo hike. She used the satellite

(38:32):
phone to contact emergency services, but poor weather prevented the
rescuers from deploying the helicopter until a day later, but
temperatures went below freezing overnight and she was dead by
the time they got to her. They say she died
of hypothermia. Described as an experienced hiker with thousands of
followers on Facebook question mark why, where she routinely posted

(38:54):
fixtures of herself wearing swimwear in natural settings. They say
she would change into the swimwear after completing a climb
inappropriate gear. Died in the middle of a twenty five
days solo hike through the mountains in Taiwan. There's social
media for you. Five fifty six fifty five krsitytalk station
plenty to talk about. We'll finally get to some shot

(39:15):
in Freuda with Hunter Biden to the top of the
hour news. I'm sorry, I can't feel sorry for the
guy sticker Out'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days.

Speaker 8 (39:26):
Every day America's deadline is over.

Speaker 1 (39:30):
Fifty five krs. The talk station Red spans.

Speaker 2 (39:36):
At six oh five and fifty five car cit Detalk
Station Friday Eve and a happy one. Thanks again everybody
made the listener lunch yesterday. Had a fantastic time at
March First Brewery. We're gonna be Barlecorns in Kentucky for
the next listener lunch and market down your calendar. First Wednesday,
coming up one hour from now, Meryl candidate Corey Bowman
to talk about a campaign kickoff and then taking place

(39:56):
at Bad Tom Smith Brewing March sixth Thursday night, five
thirty seven thirty pm. And that's located on Madison Road
in Cincinnati, Ohio. Looks like fifty eight hundred. I'm looking
at the Facebook posting on that one. Anyway. Coyle joined
the program coming up in an hour. It's the second
time he'll be on the fifty five case Morning Shoe.
Does a Republican have an opportunity to win in the

(40:17):
city of Cincinnati? Giant question mark looming out there in
the world. Donovan and Neil Americans for Prosperity one small
step campaign. He'll explain all about that and how you
can help out, and I encourage you to help out.
Americans for Prosperity does a great, great work. He'll be
on at seven thirty. Fast forward a couple hours, Mary
Gray bar with a book debunking FDR. And finally, of

(40:39):
course it's Thursday. Jay Ratliffe. I heard me the aviation expert.
We'll talk about Amsterdam Airport having a solar panel problem,
got a Canadian airline offering sale apparently to anywhere but
the United States of America, plus hub delays, and speaking
of tariffs. You're her top of the air news there
if you're paying attention, or may not, because I know

(41:00):
people have our critical of NBC news. It's out of
my hands, folks. The US automakers who are part of
the United States Mexican Canada Agreement USMCA, which was signed
into law I guess or agreed to during Trump's first term,

(41:23):
they got a one month exemption from the tariffs that
went into effect on Monday. Karen Levin announced this yesterday
during a White House press spot conference. We spoke with
the Big three automakers, She said, we are going to
give a one month exemption on any autos coming through
the USMCA. Reciprocal tariffs will still go to effect April second,

(41:47):
but at the request of the companies associated with the USMCA,
the President is giving them an exemption for one month.
And here's the part that I find interesting. So they
are not at an economic disadvantage. Apparently, Lantis four and
General Motors were the companies that spoke with Trump on this.
They requested the call. She said, they made the ask
and the President is happy to do it. It's a

(42:07):
one month exemption. Well, doesn't that just specifically acknowledge that
this is going to create an economic disadvantage? Means, she
said it does the economic disadvantage disappear after one month?
Are they going to shut down the manufacturing facilities in
Canada and Mexico between now and the next month and
bring those manufacturing and production into the United States to

(42:30):
avoid the economic disadvantage they're going to face with the
tariffs that go into effect. I mean, I gotta ask
it out loud. It's not my aim to be critical
of Trump, and I understand he's trying to level the
playing field in a world where we are at a
competitive disadvantage. Other countries have tariffs on us, they have

(42:53):
burdened some regulation, they have value added taxes, government subsidies,
and exchange rate policies, problems that we face that we
have to deal with because of course it's expensive to
do business in the United States of America, because we
heat down massive regulatory burdens, and we have OSHA regulations
and all the other unions, of course, which drive up
hourly wages. A whole host of reasons that we're in

(43:14):
an economic disadvantage. So I get the point. But as
president of promise to lower inflation, this obviously is counter
to lowering inflation. I understand the points, I understand the reasons.
Maybe we'll get some results as a consequence of it.
And I know there's been some out you know, foreign
companies that have already offered and are planning on investing

(43:35):
billions and billions of dollars in the United States. Is
it a consequence of tariffs? I don't know, dangling carrots
of incentive perhaps just puzzling over this tariff thing. And
that's the one area where I think the Democrats might
end up having some leverage against in the next election.

(43:57):
If the inflationary pressures don't go down, and many people
are talking about stagflation. Those who are alive in the
Carter administration remember what that was all like? No jobs
in the price of all the goods and services going
through the roof. That'll be the pendulum, as James liked
to talk about it, swinging back to the left. If
they think they have a plan to deal with inflation,

(44:19):
the question is will they and can they? If this
administration is hell bent for leather untackling inflation, and I
do believe they are. But if they can't achieve their goals,
what are the Democrats going to offer by way of
a solution that didn't work for the Republicans? And it's
not going to be higher taxes anyway, Over to a
moment of shadenfreudy. You can all enjoy this together with me,

(44:45):
Fox Fox and issue reporting. Hunter Biden's legal team apparently
filed a motion to drop his lawsuit against an ex
White House aide who published the contents of his laptop.
Why he's out of money? These are the lawyers going
into court dropping a lawsuit that they were representing him

(45:06):
in because he can't pay them. That's my conclusion of
a motion filed in Los Angeles relates to this former
Hunter Biden rather lawsuit against Garrett Zieger. Court documents apparently
outline the financial and personal issues Biden's the Hunter Biden
is currently experiencing, including being a victim of the wildfires

(45:30):
in the Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles. He filed this
lawsuit back in September of twenty three, but quote does
not have the resources to continue to litigate this matter.
Close quote. Also in quotes, plaintiff has suffered a significant
downturn in his income and a significant debt in the
millions of dollars. Range, Ah, is this what happens when

(45:54):
Dad is no longer in office and he can't use
the Biden family name to make millions and millions of dollars?
Which apparently you're so financially in that and incapable of
managing that you ran out of it already. Drugs much
Maybe I don't know. Court to the report, in the
house Biden was renting in Los Angeles now described as unlivable,

(46:19):
and it says Biden had difficulty finding both a new
home here you go and a new job. Whatever happened
to the gas companies. Isn't he a gas company expert? Joe,
what do you think somebody would invite him to be
on the board, court to the document. Moreover, this lack
of resources has been exacerbated after the fires in the

(46:41):
Pacific Palisades in early January upended plaintiff's life by rendering
his rental home unlivable for an extended period of time,
and like many others in this situation, plaintiff has had
difficulty in finding a new permanent place to live, as
well as finding it difficult to earn a living. The

(47:02):
document further states, so plaintiff must focus his time and
resources dealing with his relocation, the damage he has incurred
due to the fires, and paying for his family's living expenses.
As opposed to this litigation, another document found court yesterday,

(47:25):
Biden wrote a letter explaining that his income has, in
his words, decreased significantly. You'll love this, Biden what wrote
in his own words in the letter attached and filed
with a court. In the two to three years prior
to December twenty twenty three, I sold twenty seven pieces
of art at an average price of fifty four thousand,

(47:49):
four hundred and eighty one dollars and forty eight cents.
Do the math on that. That's a lot of money.
But since then, I've sold only one piece of art
for thirty six thousand dollars. Similarly, for my book sales
in the six month period before this, before the statements
April first, twenty three through September thirtieth twenty three, based

(48:11):
on the September thirtieth, twenty twenty three statement, three thousand,
one hundred and sixty one copies of my book were sold.
But in the six months after my statements, only eleven
hundred books were sold. So the math works out to
about a million and a half on the artwork, and
again that was since December twenty twenty three. Now, personally,

(48:38):
if someone handed me and or I earned one point
five million dollars in that very short period of time,
I'd have some left. I think he's got a spending problem,
or maybe his lawyers took it all fight in mitigation.

(49:00):
I don't know. Lawyers are expensive. I pointed to that
out multitude of times over the years on the program.
Uh the Uh, yeah, he is a lawyer too. I
think he's been suspended, but he is a Yale Law
School graduate. He wrote that he expected to land paid
speaking engagements in appearances after the success of his book,

(49:20):
but in his words, that has not happened. Quote. This
significant decrease in revenue has also impacted my ability to
pay off my significant debt, which has been reported in
the press as being several million dollars. As a result
of this, I am not a position where I can
borrow money. Well, karma has landed, which of course gives

(49:49):
me an opportunity to experience some giddy shot in freude.
Five point three seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eight two three talk pound five fifty on
AT and T phones, Hey, can you some help steer
in the direction of the conversation. I got a multitude
of places to go, but really don't know where I'm
going to go on I return, But I'll figure something out.
I got like forty seven articles laying around me. But
I got an opportunity for you. If you're a member

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zero eight seven. Federally insured by NCUA. They are an
equal housing lender. Fifty five KARC the talk station. Then
this is Jeff for try stated generaline weather forecast. We
have clouds this morning, it'll be sunny later in the day.
Forty four is going to be all high down to
thirty one overnight. Clouds will build it through the overnight hours.
Wintery mixed possible tomorrow morning with rain following. It's gonna

(51:13):
go up to fifty one. So they predict lower thirty
five overnight with maybe a few showers late Friday evening,
and they describe a Saturday as being partly cloudy with
a high forty eight. And then you get to move
your clocks forward overnight Saturday thirty three degrees. Right now,
time for a traffic update, Chuck Ingram from the UCUP

(51:34):
Tramping Center.

Speaker 13 (51:35):
When it comes to multiple thorrosis, trusts the experts at
the UCE Gardner in Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive
Care and learn more at u S health dot com.
Highways not bad to deal with this morning, and even
with some wet roads from the overnight snow floorings northbound
seventy five and northbound for seventy one role getting a
little bit heavier, still not a major time to lay

(51:57):
into downtown Chuck ingramon fifty five K see the Dogs Facier.

Speaker 2 (52:04):
Fifty five Karrose talk Station Friday. Even a happy one
to you, yeah, I commented on getting the given the
automakers a one month tarriff exemption. White House said fine
on that to avoid the economic problems they would face
as a consequence of it, economic disadvantage pivoting over to Canada.

(52:24):
According to Ontario Premiere Doug Ford, if they want to
try to annihilate Ontario. I will do everything, including cut
off their energy with a smile on my face. They
rely on our energy. They need to feel the pain.
They want to come at us hard. We're going to
come back twice as hard. And it's sad for me

(52:46):
to learn. And I knew this was the case, would
be reminded. I suppose this little display of anger from
and I s understand it from Ontario premiere Doug Ford
that we do rely on their energy. We are a
major customer of Canada's electricity. Why going back to Trump's policies,

(53:07):
he campaigned on it, Drill, baby drill. In other words,
more broadly, intervatives, we need to become energy independent. We
are not energy independent, and we have no reason to
be dependent upon Ontario to provide electricity to the United
States of America. It's just dumb. Why don't we do it?
Cord reporting Ontario provided one point five million homes in

(53:31):
the United States with electricity, a major exporter of electricity
in New York as well as other border states like
Michigan and Minnesota, ones that I think are chasing their
tail in effort to become carbon neutral. But it's like
Germany relying on Russian gas. I mean, is that not dumb?
They're the ones that had this. Oh my god, it's
an existential threat. Russia is gonna take Ukraine. They're gonna

(53:53):
come out for the entire European Union.

Speaker 1 (53:54):
Blah.

Speaker 2 (53:55):
You're funding their army for God's sake by refusing to
happen to your own resources and chasing this carbon neutral mantra,
which is all a lie. Again, so you can what
virtue signal while using Russian gas because you don't produce
your own, shutting down nuclear plants in Germany and further

(54:17):
creating reliance upon Russian energy sources. Welcome to the United
States of America having to rely on Ontario, Canada to
get electricity to run Michigan, Minnesota, and New York. Asked
about Ontario Premier Doug Ford's threat, Governor Kathy Huckle said

(54:38):
Tuesday she didn't expect him to follow through because of
their friendly relationship. Oh really, quote, I'd be happy to
have additional conversations with him on how we can support
each other during this crisis. So I feel positive that
anything within his power that he can control, that we
do not have a target on our backs. I think

(55:00):
it's out of your hands. You're not responsible for Trump's tariffs.
You don't have any control over what Trump does by
way of tariffs. And if he's reacting to the tariffs, sorry,
you're in the sucks to be you category. You and
the State of New York. Another Canadian News, Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau and the Trump tariffs are having an

(55:25):
interesting reaction that while while the more more and more
Canadians were rejecting Trudeau's administration and he looked like he
was going to see the exit door in his political future,
they're starting to rally around him a little bit more,
something that we call an unforeseen consequence. He said they're
gonna launch a twenty five percent tariffs on twenty point
seven billion dollars worth of US imports, including orange juice,

(55:49):
peanut butter, wine, spirits, beer, coffee, appliance as a parel, footwear, motorcycles, cosmetics,
and pulp and paper, another one hundred and twenty five
billion on imports if Trump's tariffs are still in place
in twenty one days. According to Jujoe So, he's got
a list of additional tariffs he's going to impose on
American Goods, one of our biggest trading partners. Anyway, this

(56:11):
would not be a threat. Premier Doug Ford's threats wouldn't
even exist if we were energy independent, and we easily
could be. Six twenty five fifty five Care c Detalk
Station Jimmy Care Fireplace and Stove. You get your chimney

(56:33):
and swept and inspected this year. It's never too late.
It's getting cold, it's still cold, it's still sort of
kind of winter time, you know, and it's never a
bad time to have your chimney inspected. You should do
this annually. I think that's recommended by the American Fireplace
Association or so there's some getting safety entity out there.
It doesn't come to mind immediately, but it's about safety

(56:53):
so you can enjoy the comfort without any worries. Right now,
they're doing the wood burning sweeping evaluation. It's the winter
special and is in a low low price of one
sixty nine ninety nine plus tax. They'll come in to
do a video camera inspection of your entire chimney, see
if it needs any it has any problems at the
flows right make shoot me make sure your lining isn't
been cracked by a prior fire because you didn't do

(57:13):
the annual inspection. Yeah, the creosoap builds up and it
does catch on fire. It's a bad, bad thing. Don't
want your house to burn down. You don't want to
have a carbon monoxide problem. Get your carbon monoxide detector.
But keep your home safe and cozy. Book an appointment
for the wood burning sweep and evaluation. Just do it online.
It's easy to do it and learn more about the
services they offer and the products they sell. The showroom,

(57:34):
which is located at four thirteen Wards Corner Road, including
fireplace inserts and free standing stoves and self fitting wood
waste pellet stoves. It's Chimneycareco dot Com a plus the
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Brian said, how when you do so, it's five one
three two four eight ninety six hundred five one three
two four eight ninety six hundred fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (57:58):
Sure it up your rate.

Speaker 3 (58:00):
Here's a Sean Hannity Morning Minute.

Speaker 14 (58:04):
Last night was an unmitigated disaster for the Democratic Party.
They did an awful lot of damage to themselves last night,
incalculable damage to themselves, Not that I really care.

Speaker 1 (58:19):
That's who they are.

Speaker 14 (58:21):
These are the injustices that went on that most people
didn't pay attention to last night. America saw it last night.
You got to see the soul of that party, and
it was void and empty. You don't stand for moms,
and you don't stand for a thirteen year old cancer survivor.
You don't stand for a kid getting into West Point.

(58:43):
That to me is a party that is soulless and
rudderless and visionless.

Speaker 15 (58:49):
Check out the Sean Hannity radio show later today right here.

Speaker 16 (58:58):
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Of course, I'm talking about the precious metal gold Right now.
Thousands of Americans are looking to precious medals like gold
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(59:20):
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Speaker 2 (01:00:02):
Channel I insists today is going to be a cloudy
day in the morning, it's going to get it sunny
later in the day forty four to the high clear
overnight clouds will build throughout the night hours thirty one
for the over night low fifty one the high Tomorrow.
They should will get a wintery next I think in
the morning that'll be rain cloudy over night thirty five
to low. Saturday's going to be perfect Claudia as well,
and a high of forty eight thirty three. Right now,

(01:00:23):
time for traffic update.

Speaker 17 (01:00:24):
Chuck Ingram.

Speaker 13 (01:00:26):
From the US to Traffic Center when it comes to
multiple scleorosis, trusts the experts of the Usta Gardner Euroscience
Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care and learn more at
uc health dot com. Highway traffic inside the two seventy
five loop not a major problem at all to deal
with ASM yet, just beginning to get heavy your south
to seventy five at the bridge after the Lawrence Perg

(01:00:48):
ramp problems. Outside of Wilmington seventy three is blocked ofphin
seventy one due to a wreck.

Speaker 1 (01:00:54):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five kres the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
Six thirty up and six thirty one to fifty five
KCD talk station five one three, seven four nine fifty
five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talk found five
fifty one eighteen t phones. Care to comment, Love to
hear from you. You know I love talking to listeners
without further ado that we'll get into local stories. Not
in my backyard, say Hyde Park Square residents and business owners.
Thanks to Jay Shakor WCPO reporting business owners and residents

(01:01:24):
at Hyde Park upset about the redevelopment plans for Hyde
Park Square We've talked about this before. Developer PLK Communities.
They want to have the project greenlighted to quote unquote
redevelop Hyde Park Square. They want to build a eighty
foot structure in an Erica area zoned for fifty feet
max corner. To a statement from Nicholas Lingenfelder, chief Development

(01:01:47):
officer of PLK Communities, this isn't about bringing in national
chains or just building this massive structure. It's how do
we look at what's there today and figure out where
we're going in the future and build that right, Okay.
Speaking with Kristen Fosenlogan, who apparently has owned a twenty

(01:02:07):
five year been for twenty five years the owner of
a stationary shop there. We don't want to be too dense,
she said. We don't want traffic problems, parking issues. That's
why we have the zoning in place that they do.
She and a lot of other residents in the area
aren't convinced that the additions, including a new hotel, apartments,
and underground parking, will improve their neighborhood. Fosloger quota as

(01:02:31):
saying one of the vision statements that's been put forth
by this developers that they like to save the failing
community of small businesses in Hyde Park Square. And I
take personal offense of that. I am a thriving small
business and I'm surrounded by fifty other small businesses, twenty
five of which have all been here for more than
a decade. To Shay, apparently there are some signs promoting

(01:02:53):
the pushback against the development floating around the High Park area.
She said, we've already experienced ten small businesses is that
have either been closed or displaced completely because of the
movements of this development. So, in a massive concession, PLKA
community decided that they would shorten the height of their building,

(01:03:14):
the proposed building anyway from eight or eighty five feet
down to eighty feet. But of course the neighbors say
that's not enough. High Park resident Jennifer Millman interviewed by WCPO,
it's fifty feet. Several neighborhoods like High Park that all
have business centers, little tiny business districts, and those are

(01:03:34):
mostly all of fifty feet. That's the zoning law. Once
this happens here, warning shot for everybody else in the
city area. This can happen in all those other neighborhoods
because the precedent has been set. Yeah, city council, you
can thank them for it. Let's see what Pat's got today. Pat,
welcome to the Morning Show and a very happy Thursday

(01:03:56):
to you.

Speaker 4 (01:03:58):
I heard, you know, people talking about their potholes. Well, yes,
yesterday I left the message with the Coverine Township about
a pothole on my street which was getting pretty deep,
and I thought maybe somebody, not realizing it there, would

(01:04:21):
hit it and would damage your car. Sure well, Brian,
I have to give high praise to Coraine Township because
within an hour or two I didn't even realize there
was a man out there and he was patching that hole.
So I mean, this can be done. I mean, he

(01:04:42):
just had a truck at whatever, but he and then
I try to holler to him.

Speaker 15 (01:04:47):
Of course I don't have a very large voice anyway.

Speaker 4 (01:04:51):
I just have to give high praise to Coorine Township
because it was a pothole that was patched within a
few hours.

Speaker 2 (01:05:00):
Welcome praise out of Korean townships or credit to government
services where credit is due. I don't think the residency
of the City of Cincinnati generally feel that way about
the services that have been rendered for them or or overlooked.
Joe Streker lives there too, and he didn't argue with
your praise. I guess dah Jo didn't have any potholes
in front of his house, though, Why because Joe Strecker

(01:05:26):
and Joe would make it widely known directly or through me.
I'd be happy to voice his concerns if he did
have a poddle in front of his house. So no
problems for Joe. Six fifty five car se detalk station.
Oh my hey, check on the three one one numbers,
see if it's still out of service for the city
of Cincinnati. Would you, buddy and get in touch with

(01:05:47):
but Herbert Motors. Fantastic folks. They are so proud of
what they do. They are proud of but Herbert Motors.
It's the family name on the business, been around more
than seventy five years. This is now the fifth generation
of family in an operated but Herbert Motors. Who will
provide you with the best possible customer service, the best
possible products. And we're talking about lawn equipment here. They

(01:06:11):
got big tractors, they got small tractors, They got John Deere.
They only carry the best brands out there. You got
John Deere. You got x Mark Mower's Steel power equipment,
Honda Power Equipment. It is where I got my Honda
push mower, and the Herbert family told me it'd be
the last one I'd ever have to buy. I just
still get a big kick out of that. I mean,
I know I'm getting up in years, but to know

(01:06:32):
that that lawnmower is going to last me until the
probable date of my death, this is amazing. That's how
well built they are about the commercial grade Honda push mower,
and it just starts right up. They service everything they
sell and truly knowledgeable about the equipment. You're going to
get the level of service and knowledge that you get
from Butterber Motors if you went to a box store,
and trust me, you don't want to go to a

(01:06:53):
box store. I had a terrible experience there which led
me to Bud Herbert Motors. Thanks as always the west
Side Gym key for same dude, just call Bud Herbert Motors.
That's pretty much a quote for what he says. Like
I did, and I had that mowre delivered to me
within within the day. I love that thing. So rely
on them for service, knowledge, expertise, and you will be

(01:07:14):
speaking with a Herbert family member when you give them
a call that number five one three five four one
thirty two ninety one five one three five four one
thirty two ninety one online Bud Herbertmotors.

Speaker 8 (01:07:25):
Dot com fifty five krc.

Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
Uh CHETNA nine first one and weather forecast cloudy morning
Sunday afternoon and a high forty four. There's guys with
clouds building overnight thirty one for the overnight low fifty
one to hi tomorrow and they start out with a
winter remix, but it'll turn to rain because of the temperature,
of course, thirty five overnight, maybe a few showers late
into the evening Friday, and then Saturday described as partly
cloudy with a higher forty eight. Spring forward thirty three.

(01:07:56):
Right now, it's time for a traffick update.

Speaker 13 (01:07:59):
What do you see traffic center when it comes to multiples,
Thorosist trusts the experts at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute
for Innovative and Comprehensive Care. Learn more at UCHealth dot com.
Report of an accident on eastbound two seventy five. Before
you get to seventy one, they're over on the right shoulder,
traffic elsewhere, not a major problem. On two seventy five,

(01:08:23):
but seventy three shut down at seventy one in Clinton
County outside of Wilmington due to a wreck.

Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR se le talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:08:34):
It's six forty here, but it's a five KRECT talkstation.
Happy Thursday to you. Jim Jordan representing Ohio and the
American people. They had a well come to Jesus meeting,
if I can call it that, with some of the
mayors of these sanctuary cities. Jim Jordan coming on glued

(01:08:59):
on Denver Mayor Mike Johnston for upolting the sanctuary city policies,
ignoring an ICE detainer request and only giving federal agents
one hour notice before the Denver Sheriff's Department released Abraham Gonzalez,
who's a twenty three year old Venezuelan illegal immigrant who's
been charged with assault, menacing, and theft of a vehicle.

(01:09:23):
After being released by the Denver Sunty Denver Sheriff's Department
on February twenty eighth, he assaulted ICE agents attempting to
apprehend him, according to the state by ICE. ICE has
stated those sanctuary city policies in Denver are preventing law
enforcement from honoring detainers and cooperating with federal authorities, and
that that poses a significant risk to to agents and
the public, which, of course it does. And despite of

(01:09:47):
Jim Jordan coming in glued on him, Johnson apparently doubled
down in the city sanctuary policies, vowing to direct law
enforcement to resist the administration's effort to deal with illegal
immigrant criminals. During the hearing, Jordan showed a picture of
the notice slip that was given by the Denver Sheriff's
Department to the ICE, in which the location of his

(01:10:08):
release listed. Are you ready for this? Denver's Sheriff's Department
location of the release listed as streets Hey, thanks for
the help there, Jordan said, talking to the Denver Mayor Johnston,
three hundred and forty five days you had him in custody,

(01:10:31):
and I says, hey, can you give us a forty
eight hour He heads up, you gave them one hour notice.
For his part, Mayor Johnston and asserted the Denver sanctuary
policy does not shield people from law enforcement. Brother quote
provides services close quote. He claimed there were six ICE
agents present when Gonzales was released, but admitted that the

(01:10:53):
illegal immigrant was allowed to walk freely out into the
parking lot. They didn't say, hey, heads up, Ice, he's
coming out there. Like Jordan said, guess what happened in
the parking lot. One of the ICE officers got assaulted,
didn't he. They had to tasee the guy, didn't they
An officer got assaulted because of your policy, which says
we're going to release him in your words, not mine,

(01:11:16):
to the streets. They have to arrest him in the
parking lot. They bring six officers when they could have
just had one or two. Just come into your facility,
into your jail and take the guy there. But you
won't do it that way. Hmm. He also pointed out
sort of a problem that Mayor Johnston got in himself,

(01:11:37):
got him and got himself into using his words, Jordan
pointed out, you used the word safe, safer or safety
thirteen times talking about my job is the safety of
the people of Denver. Were prioritizing making sure it's everyone
is safer. That's a lie. It was not safer for
the ICE agents who are part of your community. No

(01:11:58):
way it was safer. The safe thing to do is
say Ice we've got him in custody, come here, we'll
release him. Instead. It's we held him for three hundred
and forty five days. We can't hold him a second longer.
We can't wait for you to come inside the building.
We've got to let him go, so you have to
arrest him in the parking lot. That's how stupid sanctuary

(01:12:19):
policies are, and that's why they mean. That's what they
mean to the community that you put at risk into
the ICE officer who assaulted you or who was assaulted.
Johnston said he was open to making adjustments his word
to how releases are conducted, but insisted that this was
the first instance of an ICE agent being assaulted during

(01:12:41):
arrest on his city in his city, well first or
one hundredth. The point is, you created the situation that
led to the assault by just letting the guy walk
out the door, rather than just handing him over from
your sheriff's deputies directly to the custody of the ICE agents.
Jordan said, it's a simple question. You can release him

(01:13:03):
in the parking lot, give Ice one hour notice and
they got to send six officers to arrest this guy.
Or you can say, here's what we're gonna do. We're
gonna hold him. You come in, bring two officers in,
and turn him in. Why not do it that way?
You know, why don't do it that way because you're
a sanctuary city. That's the whole point. Amen, Jim Jordan.

(01:13:29):
You get back these people in a quarter, you get
to illustrate the absurdity of what they are doing. ICE
is gonna come get the guy. He's a criminal. They're
gonna throw him out of the country. He's not here legally.
Why make the problem difficult for ICE? What are you
trying to prove by way of doing that that crime

(01:13:51):
doesn't have any consequences that breaking the law and coming
into our country in the first hand. And you can
probably say, well, that's a stupid law, and I don't
care if they broke the law coming to the country,
But that creates a situation where the person is possibly
going to be deported. The fact that that particular person
in the category that the administration is going after fall
into the subheading of criminal illegal aliens, those that have

(01:14:18):
committed some horrific crimes. That's why we're trying to kick
them out first. And yet you help them in some
way and create a difficult situation for the officers with
arresting them. In what possible way? Is that a help
to anyone? It isn't. Congratulations Jim Jordan six forty six

(01:14:42):
fifty five KR. See the talk station. Feel free to
call five one three seven four nine fifty five hundred
eight entity two three talk and get in touch with
Affordable Imaging Services. New calendar year, new out of pocket
liability and responsibility. And it's massive if you've got to
get a scan at a hospital the imaging department of
the hospitals. I pointed out time and time again, thousand
and thousands of dollars for something that will not cost you.

(01:15:04):
I mean, I think the most expensive scan you can
get it affordable imaging services is like six hundred and
fifty bucks or something. No, eight hundred dollars echo cardiogram
with enhancement eight hundred. I think that's the most you're
ever going to pay it affordable imaging services. So your
doctor says, un an echo cardiogram, head on over to
the hospital that owns my practice. Say no, I'm going
to head on over to Affordable imaging Services. Who can

(01:15:26):
get me right in hospital imaging department where they're going
to charge me thirty five hundred bucks or more. Said,
I got to wait for a month to even get in. No,
I want it done now. It's my health and I'm worried. Well,
call Affordable Imaging Services will get you in and you
pay five hundred dollars for that echo cardiogram without an
enhancement and early eight hundred with and every image comes
with the price included the board certified radiologist report. You'd

(01:15:48):
like to point out, I've had images done there and
I got one schedule for April for my CT scan
for my cancer. It's low overhead, folks, low overheads, don't
expect a whole lot visually, but it's the same equipment hospital.
Do you care if there's a marble statute and like
a water feature or something? No, what pay for that?
Five one three seven five three eight thousand five one

(01:16:11):
three seven five three eight thousand. Learn more online all
the pricing and information at Affordable Medimaging dot com.

Speaker 8 (01:16:18):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:16:20):
Did you know that virtual dolphins could be the key?

Speaker 3 (01:16:27):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
Tene nine. Just as far as the weather forecast is concerned,
says We're da gonna have a cloudy day this morning.
It'll become sunny later forty four to the high today,
overnight low of thirty one, with clouds building overnight. We
got a wintery mix in the morning. Tomorrow rain also
following cloud these guys, of course, with rain fifty one
for the high, overnight cloudy, maybe a few showers late

(01:16:47):
tomorrow evening low of thirty five. Saturday described as a
partly cloudy day with a high of forty eight, and
then you get the spring forward with your clocks over
Saturday night thirty three.

Speaker 13 (01:16:56):
Gras. Right now, it's time for a traffic update. Chuck
Ingram from the UC UP Traffic Center. When it comes
to multiple sclerosis, trusts the experts at the U se
Gardner Euroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive Care.

Speaker 1 (01:17:09):
Learn more at UC health dot com.

Speaker 13 (01:17:11):
Northbound seventy five, All of a sudden, I'm seeing very
heavy traffic approaching the Brand Spence Bridge. I'm looking for
a problem in Covington southbound seventy five, still in good
shape through Walkland. There's a couple of accidents near Harvey's
prior gone seventy three. One over seventy one in Clinton County.
Chuck ingramont fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:17:34):
Six fifty one. If if you have KCD talk station,
A very happy Friday, e to you FTV after the
top of the dow glob Bryan, come on after the
top of the hour, News Lawyer pays down, Brian, get
the words out correctly. You've got a campaign kickoff event.
We're going to be here hearing from Corey Bowman, the
Meyrill candidate for the City of Cincinnati, fighting a course
assist Vian challenge, trying to elect a Republican in the

(01:17:56):
city of Cincinnati. Can it be done? Is Corey Bowman
the man for the job? From Corey about the campaign
kickoff event, you can go there and help support him.
Donald Andeil one small step campaign. We'll learn about that
together at seven point thirty in an hour a little
more than an hour eight oh five with Mary grey
bar book debunking FDR and of course I heard media
AVAH expert Jay Ratliffe. And as we find out how

(01:18:16):
much money we're spending countless, countless, countless gazillions of dollars,
you gotta wonder why does Columbia University really need money
from the American taxpayer? Now they got all these anti
Jewish people protesting and disrupting events at Columbia University notable
for their anti Jewish sentiment all over, not Columbia University specifically,
but the so called student body, and many people speculate

(01:18:39):
no Pine and I think accurately so that these are
not members of the student body, more likely outside agitators
coming into protest. They had former Israeli Prime Minister Knaftali
Bennett show up for a speech there the Columbia Bernard
Hillel School of International and Public Affairs INSTITO, and they

(01:19:00):
had to do it as a invite only event because
of the protesters there, creating a dangerous situation. Columbia JVP
and the Columbia Palestine Solidarity Coalition SPLITTERS co organized the
protest against the event.

Speaker 6 (01:19:17):
Why.

Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
Spokesperson for the Craft Center who was doing the event,
Brian Collens, said, hey, listen. Students of diverse backgrounds and
political leanings listened to a world leader and asked challenging
questions as one would expect at a world class university.
That's the kind of thing that's supposed to take place.
But aside from the protests, Federal government Task Force to

(01:19:38):
Combat Anti Semitism. There is one of those, and you're
paying for it, considering halting fifty one point four million
dollars in government contracts to the university, which is, in
my estimation, a lot of money. Fox News also reporting
though the task force is also reviewing get a load

(01:19:58):
of this. More than and five billion with a B
in federal grant commissions to Columbia University five billion dollars.
What the hell are they doing there one university? Let's
see what Todd's got this morning. Todd, thanks for calling

(01:20:20):
this morning. Welcome in the Morning Show, and a happy Thursday.

Speaker 15 (01:20:22):
To you, sir, having you Thursday.

Speaker 17 (01:20:25):
Yes, I'm planning on being out at the Empower Youth
Seminar tonight with the Peter Bronson speaking.

Speaker 2 (01:20:31):
Oh great, you'll. I guarantee you as sure as I'm
sitting here, Todd, You're going to enjoy it. He is
just a brilliant and engaging guy, and I'm sure you'll
be able to do Q and A with him, So
take advantage of that.

Speaker 17 (01:20:43):
Yes, and he sells his the he'll sign copies personal
so personally assigned copies of his book, usually for sale.

Speaker 2 (01:20:50):
It is going to be for sale. Bring twenty dollars
with you and you'll have a copy signed by Peter
Browns and himself.

Speaker 11 (01:20:56):
And they're a.

Speaker 17 (01:20:56):
Different location now, they're at the Scarlet Oaks campus.

Speaker 4 (01:21:01):
That is.

Speaker 2 (01:21:02):
I thank you for pourting that out, Todd, and empower you.
America dot org is the website. I think Joey's on
link on my blog page as well for that one.
So you don't go to the wrong place or log
in from home if you don't want to be there
and get a signed copy of his book. But I
recommend getting the book.

Speaker 17 (01:21:17):
Yes, and sometimes we get to sing the national anthem,
and even if you're at home, join in because singing
raises your oxygen level in your blood, so it gets
your brain primed for the for learning things.

Speaker 2 (01:21:28):
So I so all I need to do is sing
because I my cardiovascular systems. Probably I could use some
explicit to describe it. Probably not in the best shape
because I haven't worked out in like fifteen years. My
wife is listening to me, so maybe I'll just start
to hum. I think I'll just sing. Joy is that

(01:21:49):
it tides that what's on your mind today? Just reminding
folks and thankfully doing so great. I appreciate the call
and the reminder. Yeah, Peter Bronson a hell of a
great and he writes great books. So that's the night
being at seven o'clock with the information on your health
and at seven thirty with Peter Bronson, empower You America

(01:22:10):
dot org. Stick around, we're gonna hear from Merril candidate
Corey Bowman after the top of the air, news plus
Donald O'Neil at seven thirty. One Small Step Campaign. I'll
be right back from a full rundown and the biggest
head lines there's minutes away.

Speaker 1 (01:22:24):
At the top of the hour.

Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
I'm giving you a fact now, Americans should know fifty
five krs the talk station.

Speaker 8 (01:22:30):
This report is sponsored by Miami.

Speaker 2 (01:22:49):
Son oh five Fast Person, seven oh six here fifty
five car ce De Talk Station, Americans for Prosperity, Donald
O'Neil at the bottom of the hour, one small Step campaign.
But prior to that and joining the fifty five case
morning show, returning, I should say Meyrill candidate for the
City of Cincinnati, Corey Bowman. Corey, welcome back, my friends.
Good to have you back on.

Speaker 6 (01:23:09):
Great to be back.

Speaker 2 (01:23:10):
How's the campaign going.

Speaker 6 (01:23:13):
It's going great.

Speaker 18 (01:23:14):
We've done a lot of foundational work in the last
few weeks since we got certified with our signatures and
we're officially having our campaign kickoff tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:23:24):
All right, well, I have to ask you out loud.
I know Joe Joe asked you before we started talking.
Do you have any interesting or tweets out there that
you might regret from pri if you're running for a
Republican As a Republican, you didn't buy any chance endorse
Democrats or push anti Trump narratives or anti Republican narratives online.

(01:23:46):
Did you buy any chance?

Speaker 5 (01:23:49):
No?

Speaker 6 (01:23:49):
I was cracking up with that joke, but no, I
don't think you'll be finding.

Speaker 19 (01:23:53):
Any of that.

Speaker 2 (01:23:54):
Glad to hear it a problem that Brian Frank apparently
has run into anyway, moving away from him. Not to
give him any lip service, but if you want to
check his x account you'll see exactly what I'm talking about. Anyway, Corey,
I understand you have an event you want to tell
people about, a kickoff campaign, kickoff event. Let's start there.

Speaker 18 (01:24:12):
Yeah, I really appreciate the opportunity to tell people about it.

Speaker 6 (01:24:15):
You know, we, like I said, we've done a.

Speaker 18 (01:24:17):
Lot of foundational work, getting our branding, website, contribution. You know,
accounts all set up and strategy these last few weeks,
and so tonight at Bad Tom Smith Brewing which is
at five to nine zero zero Madison Road, it's an
event that's available for all. It's our official campaign kickoff

(01:24:38):
and it's going to be happening from five thirty to
seven thirty pm.

Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
Bad Tom Smith Brewery.

Speaker 18 (01:24:46):
Yes, sir, yea's the Massville area.

Speaker 6 (01:24:49):
Great location.

Speaker 18 (01:24:50):
We're going to be able to have, you know, some
light food and refreshments available for everybody.

Speaker 6 (01:24:55):
We're going to be giving away some free merch for
our first official merch of the campaign.

Speaker 18 (01:25:00):
And then a lot of people been asking about, you know,
where we stand on certain issues. Yeah, we've been you know,
we've been doing issue we've been doing interviews and stuff.
But we're going to be laying out a lot of
very specific things tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:25:13):
Well I'm glad to hear that because that's really critical
to running a campaign. You got to have issues, You
got to talk about critical important things. What is Numero
uno for Corey Bowman? If you had to assess the
landscape and you were elected mayor, what what would be
your first order priority?

Speaker 18 (01:25:30):
Absolutely Number one is money management, and I'm going to
be talking about that tonight. But we see what's happening
with the federal government. We see the abuse, the waste
of the corruption, and what I tweeted this a while back,
or on the night of the presidential address, that the
last stand for all this corruption abuse is going to
be these downtown cities. And so we have to have

(01:25:53):
proper money management in these downtown areas. For the budget,
we've got to know where the money is going, and
we have to prioritize the budget not for you know,
certain issues that look good on paper. We've got to
prioritize the issues that actually make the lives of the
residents better.

Speaker 2 (01:26:10):
Well, you know, I think about that, and we've been
having a lot of well some several jokes, but it's
not really a joke. When you've let your infrastructure deteriorate
over the years and you're so far behind in road repairs,
I mean millions and millions of dollars behind and hundreds
of miles behind the road repairs. You got to take
care of your neighborhood.

Speaker 6 (01:26:29):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:26:29):
It's that broken windows theory. The worse the neighborhood looks
the word, the more likely it attracts crime. And the
more likely people are not going to want to move there.
So I would hope that an order priority would be
for you. And I'm asking out loud this question, are
you going to deal with the backload of infrastructure problems
we have rather than and I think you alluded to it,
pursue you know, fun new shiny objects.

Speaker 6 (01:26:53):
Yeah, you absolutely have to do that.

Speaker 18 (01:26:54):
And that's why money management is my number one when
I talk to people. There's a lot of hot topic issues.
When we talk about the pension, when we talk about
the streetcar, when we talk about the infrastructure, and I'm
telling you, all of these come back to the root issue,
which is the money is not being prioritized.

Speaker 2 (01:27:14):
Well, we do have a pension problem in the City
of Cincinnati. Do you think the administration will get all
over it because there's a lot of folks out there
that are relying on that for their future in retirement.

Speaker 6 (01:27:24):
Absolutely.

Speaker 18 (01:27:25):
Yeah, these are issues that all relate to just terrible
prioritization of.

Speaker 6 (01:27:30):
The funds and the budget that's coming into the city.

Speaker 18 (01:27:34):
And so whenever you look at a lot of these issues,
if you focus on that, then we're going to be
able to tackle a lot of other issues.

Speaker 6 (01:27:40):
As well, you know, like the infrastructure.

Speaker 18 (01:27:42):
I'm tired of Cincinnati losing bids for major sporting events,
and a lot of it's just because if you go
out on a Tuesday afternoon with no event, it's wall
to wall traffic. We can't take any of any more
congestion in our city for these events. It's because the
infrastructure is not in place to do it. And then
obviously the potholes. You know, I'm sorry, but I'm not

(01:28:03):
going to be the type of person that just puts
on a vest and pretends like I'm fixing a pothole.
I'm going to prioritize people actually fixing the potholes well.

Speaker 2 (01:28:14):
And prioritize fixing the three to one one system so
when you call it, you don't get a message that
says it's down and not working. We discovered that the
other day when we tried to call it here on
the fifty five Casing Morning Show.

Speaker 7 (01:28:25):
If you're attempting to use has been restricted or is unavailable,
please contact Customer Care for assistance message s C four
zero four sixty five.

Speaker 2 (01:28:38):
Corey.

Speaker 7 (01:28:39):
That wow.

Speaker 2 (01:28:39):
That is as of this morning. Joe called it again
this morning.

Speaker 18 (01:28:43):
And it's still no way yes, morning, still this morning,
even after the promotion for it.

Speaker 2 (01:28:48):
Wow, yeah, yeah, and I guess it they able to
provide you please contact customer service. They don't even give
you a number to contact them, Like, well, okay, I'll
contact them, but how do I do that? So still
a number of potholes reported and allegedly being fixed is
pretty substantial. But there are obviously some massive, massive road
problems out there that have gone unaddressed for decades. It's

(01:29:10):
just it's mind numbing to me.

Speaker 18 (01:29:12):
So otherwise you might want to institute a seven sixty
five number.

Speaker 6 (01:29:18):
And if you look on that, that stands for SOL.

Speaker 2 (01:29:24):
It's the state of affairs right now in the city,
which is why maybe we need a change in administration.
I don't want to be negative about this, but you're
dealing with the city of Cincinnati, which has been Democrat
dominated I think since Ken Blackwell at Charter right back
in the late eighty early nineties was mayor. You're facing

(01:29:45):
an uphill challenge. I know that, I know you're up
to the task. We talked about this before. How do
you can how do you maintain motivation? And are you
going to be visiting some of the more bluer neighborhoods
and reaching out to folks in those neighborhoods to try
to convince them that your message and your playing in
action is the right path to go on.

Speaker 18 (01:30:03):
Yeah, we have to you know, the days of like
I mean, we obviously this has to be a grassroots
movement as people like to call it.

Speaker 6 (01:30:11):
It has to be something.

Speaker 18 (01:30:12):
But I think the biggest thing you have to think
is we have to think creatively and strategically on what
it's going to take. Because there's been a lot of
campaigns that have come through this city that have attempted
what we're doing and flipping the city. But I think
that this is, you know, for the lack of better words,
this is a kind of a perfect storm event to
where we have the momentum of people just fed up

(01:30:34):
with what's going on. We have the right people. I
really believe I've met some incredible people the last few
weeks that are willing to get on board with this
and are willing to make a change in this city.

Speaker 6 (01:30:47):
And then obviously, what you said, those communities that are the.

Speaker 18 (01:30:51):
Bluest of blue, I've visited those areas and I'm just
telling you there's a lot more disgruntled people than you realize.
And whenever where they they speak, they don't ask you
whether you're red or blue? They ask are you going
to fix this? Do you care about connected community? Do
you care about this? These issues that people are frankly

(01:31:11):
pissed off about.

Speaker 2 (01:31:12):
Well, and you know you used to anticipate in my
next question, because they're just going to and got done
writing down connected communities. Because the folks in Hyde Park
are a little agitated about the plan development there, but
seemed to be snatched from their local control by this
connected communities thing that was passed out of council. Where
are you on that? Would you unring that bell? And
are you and when you mentioned that that you hear
about connected communities in these neighborhoods, what are they saying

(01:31:35):
about connected communities?

Speaker 6 (01:31:38):
Well, we're in the West End.

Speaker 18 (01:31:40):
And the affordable housing or the government subsidized housing, whatever
you want to call it, the approach that this city
is taken has might It might have provided housing that
people can afford, but it's not providing them the way
to get out of the system. And that's ultimately what government.

Speaker 2 (01:31:59):
If there's a.

Speaker 18 (01:32:00):
Government program that is to help people, ultimately it's to
get them out of needing that help from the government.
It shouldn't be a process that you're going to be
caught into the system the rest of your life. So
I've witnessed those processes and those policies firsthand. When you
have concentrated affordable housing in areas that is keeping people
in the in that bondage. And then whenever I looked

(01:32:22):
at the details, because I'll be honest, you know, as
a few months ago, I didn't know what the Connected
Communities was. I researched it, talked to people about it,
and when you look at it, you realize that this
is just a trojan horse for those same policies. You're
you're giving the jobs of to the developers that are
big time instead the small developers that really are the

(01:32:45):
they that's some of the greatest value of our city
is these small businesses, these small developers that can flip
one or two properties at a time. You're taking away
the historic aspect.

Speaker 6 (01:32:55):
Of a lot of these amazing buildings.

Speaker 18 (01:32:57):
And then you're, like I said, the trojan horses you're
putting in these policies that are just going to implement
the housing policies that have kept people on bondage for years.

Speaker 2 (01:33:08):
Yeah, I share your assessment of that, and I like
the idea. You know, again, going back to infrastructure, if
the infrastructure is solid and sound, you create a welcoming environment,
an environment for a developer that like, well, listen, I
got really great roads, I got great lighting. It's a
developable community. That means it's worthwhile for me to acquire

(01:33:30):
one of these rundown properties, turn it around, make it
livable and desirable, and then you have more housing. So
I think that's a recipe for success. It's been a
great success for so many entrepreneurs that are doing that
in other neighborhoods.

Speaker 18 (01:33:45):
No, absolutely, I mean, I mean, you remember, not too
long ago where we went to the super Bowl. The
whole city was just celebrating. Well, whenever we went to
the super Bowl. I was living off Fourth Street in
the West End with our church and our business.

Speaker 6 (01:34:00):
And then what happened was that I.

Speaker 18 (01:34:03):
Would watch local developers walk around with investors.

Speaker 6 (01:34:07):
And everything all around the downtown area.

Speaker 18 (01:34:10):
They were hungry to invest in our community. They were
hungry to improve these buildings, to flip buildings, and to
provide housing and to do all this, and sure enough,
two years later, those developments haven't happened because the policies
of the city choke that out.

Speaker 6 (01:34:26):
Oh you have to do it by b zoning. There's
a lot of red tape.

Speaker 18 (01:34:29):
It doesn't agree with our vision for this area. And
there's so much potential specifically, I mean I'm talking about
in the West End, but in so many of these
neighborhoods in Cincinnati, there's all this potential of these empty
properties that developers, local developers would jump at the chance
of flipping and turning into an amazing business and residential area,

(01:34:50):
but they are being choked out by the policies.

Speaker 6 (01:34:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
I remember going back quite a few years and understand
there's a whole lot of red tape in developing literally
anything in the city of Cincinnati, and that needs to
be eliminated. Elmer Hensler, the late owner of Queen City Sausage,
wanted to expand his manufacturing facility and he it took
him years in years, and this is, you know, a
commercial area, and there's commercial space. It's not like he
was going to change the whole dynamic of a neighborhood.

(01:35:15):
He was just going to build onto the business he'd
already developed in this commercial area. But why were they
standing in the way. It was the idea of creating
more jobs and more space and ultimately more tax revenue
for the city, and that they made it so challenging
for him, it's just dumb.

Speaker 6 (01:35:30):
Well, yeah, and then you've got to realize this too.

Speaker 18 (01:35:32):
I mean, I'm going to open up the can of
worms here, But there's organizations and NGOs and nonprofits in
the city that basically work hand in hand with the
city to hold properties empty on their portfolio books so
that they can have better investment opportunities other places.

Speaker 6 (01:35:50):
And so you've got to realize that.

Speaker 18 (01:35:52):
You know, whenever you have let's say, an organization in
the city that holds millions of dollars worth of property,
but when local investors reach out to purchase their property
that's for sale and there's a year waiting list on
that property, and then it has to go on line
with the affordable housing zoning and all sorts of other
stuff of the policies and red tape, then it chokes

(01:36:13):
out any type of development.

Speaker 2 (01:36:15):
That's just that's crazy. Because I keep hearing they want
more people to move into the city of Cincinnati too,
and in other words, get more tax revenue from tax payers.
And the way you do that is you create housing
that people want to live in the idea of standing
in the way in it, so some other neighborhood might
might get the benefit of those development dollars, which may
not happen because the infrastructure is not there or some

(01:36:38):
other problems. It's just dumb. Somebody wants to invest in
any area of the city of Cincinnati, the skids should
be greased for them to do exactly that. Corey Bowman
greased the skids. Show up tonight time bad Tom Smith Brewery,
fifty nine hundred Madison for the campaign kickoff event. Do
you have the website up and running, Corey.

Speaker 6 (01:37:00):
Yes, sir, Coreybowman dot com.

Speaker 18 (01:37:02):
We've got the campaign kickoff there, We've got our donation page,
we have a lead form that you can fill out
to let us know if.

Speaker 6 (01:37:10):
You want to get involved.

Speaker 18 (01:37:11):
And then after tonight we will be updating that with
all of our bio and policies.

Speaker 6 (01:37:17):
And getting the word out on that as well.

Speaker 18 (01:37:19):
Brian, I'd like to personally invite you and Joe to
tonight as well, if you're.

Speaker 6 (01:37:23):
Able to make it.

Speaker 2 (01:37:24):
I appreciate the invitation very much. I have checked the
calendar and with my wife the boss of the house,
see if we can make it. But I wish you
all the success in the world on the launch campaign
Coreybowman dot com. Corey has been great having you on
the show. Best of luck on the campaign trail.

Speaker 6 (01:37:39):
Thank you, Brian, have a great day.

Speaker 2 (01:37:41):
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Speaker 8 (01:38:42):
This is fifty five KARC and iHeartRadio station. Milder temperatures record.

Speaker 2 (01:38:48):
Jennie tells us today we'll have clouds early and sunny
skies later today forty four for the high. Overnight low
a thirty one. Another wintery mix is possible in the
morning tomorrow, then comes the rain. It's going to warm
up to fifth one overnight cloudy. I may have some
few late showers late into Friday evening thirty five the
other night low with forty eight for a high on
Saturday and partly cloudy skies. Let's see here thirty three.

(01:39:11):
Right now, it's time for traffick update from the ucl
Transings Center. When it comes to multiple thorrosis.

Speaker 13 (01:39:17):
Trusts the experts at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute for
Innovative and Comprehensive Care and learn more at UC.

Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
Health dot com.

Speaker 13 (01:39:24):
South Pound seventy five continues to be a slow go
between Middletown and Monroe. Four car accident blocks the left
two lanes above sixty three, then slow out of downtown
to an accident in the Cotton. The hill left lane
is blocked North Pound seventy five. That's a slow go
out of Erlbanger into downtown. Shot King ramon fifty five
KR and see the talk station seven.

Speaker 2 (01:39:46):
Thirty or fifty five KRCD talk station Happy Thursday. With
regard to my conversation with Republican Canada from Aria City.
Since Sint Corey Bowman, I didn't ask him a question
I've written down to ask him, which is is he
getting any support excuse me from the amn't County report
looking party? So I had Joe reach out to him.
He said he is. They've been very supportive, no question,
no answer yet as to whether they've given him any

(01:40:07):
money yet. So fingers crossed that he does get supported
from the party without further ado, Welcome back to the
Morning Show, Donovan and Neil for Americans for Prosperity. It's
always a pleasure for having you on the program. Donald Brian,
good to be with you before we dive into this
one Small Step for Prosperity campaign. You're launching your reaction
to the President's address the other day, I have to ask,

(01:40:31):
I was fired up.

Speaker 15 (01:40:31):
I mean, we're talking about the important stuff, right, We're
talking about getting making the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act permanent,
raining in the out of control bureaucracy, and securing our borders.
This is the stuff our volunteers were out there knocking
doors and support of policy champions on all last year,
and the President's set up firm AGENTA on what we
need to get done to get this country back on track.

Speaker 2 (01:40:53):
Great. You know, it seems to be sort of cross
party red meat for everybody it keeps shouting out loud about.
You know, the the Democrats right now sitting on their
hands during that debate but having really nothing to say
except just generalized opposition to what Trump and most notably
Doge is doing, farting out fraud, wasted abuse, and that

(01:41:15):
they could even support some of the crap that they
have revealed to the American public. It's not Democrat or
Republican that would be against the idea of setting millions
and millions of dollars overseas to fund some sort of
I don't know, fill in the blank campaign circumcisions and Mozambique.
I mean, how do you defend that. I think we
got him back on their heels. Donovan.

Speaker 15 (01:41:37):
Yeah, I mean I think they thought the whole ploy
of you know, being disruptive at the beginning of the
Stay of the Union and then you know, holding up
their signs we're gonna was gonna was going to work.
But I think which you saw there right as Americans
across the country tuned in and heard the president's speech
and the agenda that he's laying out for Congress to tackle, uh,
you saw two sides.

Speaker 6 (01:41:56):
You saw one that's.

Speaker 15 (01:41:57):
Ready to go get things done for the American people,
and you saw other that was sitting there angry, arms crossed,
not for anything. And it's it's a reality to Democrat
Party right now. But we can't just sit on our
hands and say, hotday, they're mad, they're not doing anything.
They're working overtime, and that's why we got to stay
engaged and involved because if we want to make these
things happen, like tax cuts, border security, and reining in

(01:42:20):
out of control spending, we got to stay active and
stay in the fight.

Speaker 2 (01:42:23):
Yes, keep the ball rolling. It's a snowball that can
grow as long as it goes downhill and gain speed.
And gaining speed is what we need. He can keep
the traction and the emphasis and the effort going and
tap into the enthusiasm we have that seems to be
going on and again crossing more party lines. Donald Trump
got a lot of votes from the other side of
the ledger. A lot of folks that numberally would have
voted Democrat came over to Trump's side. That's why he

(01:42:44):
won the popular vote. And it's these logical and reasonable
approaches and campaign promises that he's delivered on that are
resonating with the American people. His polling numbers are good
and people like what he's doing. And again that crosses
party line and a lot of what your new one
Small Step campaign I think does just that it taps

(01:43:06):
into these generally recognized positive vibe, appropriate and positive for
the American people across all political lines, racist cultures and creeds,
and can advance those and get more accomplished through I
would argue limited government my number one favorite thing. That's
why I was a Tea Party fan. It's almost libertarian
and its concept it got derailed a little bit back

(01:43:29):
when it was popular. But fiscal responsibility, limited government, and
free markets, you know, I mean that's what it's all about.

Speaker 15 (01:43:37):
Pretty pretty simple stuff, right, Pretty pretty simple stuff here. Yeah.
So what you know, as we approach our nations two
hundred and fiftieth birthday, there's you know, going to be
a renewed, hopefully a renewed spirit of patriotism in this country.
I'm seeing it. I think it's out there, and what
we want to be able to do is tap into that, right,
we want to tap into that American spirit or tw

(01:43:59):
hundred and fifty anniversary and encourage folks to take action
and get involved by taking one small step. And it's
like Kimberly from Trumbull County. She's way in northeast Ohio,
but she started off just attending an AFP Ohio meeting
about eight months ago. She knocks the doors with AFP
action and support of Bernie Moreno. She joined us in

(01:44:21):
Columbus as an attendee, sitting in the committee room to
oppose bad energy policy back in December, and then just
this week Brian Tuesday, she drove three and a half
hours to Columbus, sat four and a half hours in
a packed committee hearing room to testify and support a
school choice. Now, Kimberly took one small step eight months
ago that's led her to standing in front of her

(01:44:42):
elected officials demanding that they empower families with school choice.
It's those small steps that add up and make big
differences here in not just the state of Ohio, but
the content trail large.

Speaker 2 (01:44:54):
Every little bit counts. Let's pause, will bring donald'neil back
to talk about some of the things that my listening
audience can do. It's not that difficult to take one
of these small steps, and the more people that take
one of these small steps, the more likely it is
we can achieve our desired outcome fiscal responsibility, limited government,
and free markets. Let's pause, we'll bring it back just
a moment. I want to mention Zimmer Heating and air Conditioning.

(01:45:14):
Proud they are at Zimmer, a family and an operator
for more than seventy five years. Chris Zimmer is the
man you be dealing with at Zimmer Heating and Air
condition Now he won't be working on your furnace himself,
but they've got an outstanding crew and they can service
a whole huge line of different manufacturers if you need
a new one. Though, they're specialist in Carrier and they
make a fantastic system. So HVAC from Carrier is the

(01:45:36):
way to go. And Zimmer, of course, the folks that
have them take care of you. They also have maintenance
programs you get on that you'll extend the life of
your heating and air conditioning system. Lord knows, nobody wants
to have to go down the road to replace it
sometimes though you know the maintenance programs will extend that life,
keep it running in top order, and keep your home efficient.
Efficiency is key and they are great at efficiency, so

(01:45:58):
count on Zimmer. It's easy to get into such when
you can bok an appointment online even after hours. Appointments
at the upper right hand corner on the website go
Zimmer dot com and if you call for an appointment
until Chris Brian said, Hi, five one three five two
one ninety eight ninety three. That's five one three five
two one ninety eight ninety three.

Speaker 8 (01:46:16):
Fifty five krc you.

Speaker 2 (01:46:18):
Know channelnine weather forecast, cloud's early sun later today forty
four for the high overnight lo a thirty one. We
have a wintery mixed tomorrow morning. They suggest man some
rain there after. What up to fifty one degrees down
to thirty five overnight, Maybe a few showers late Friday
evening Saturday at partly Fridayay with a high forty eight

(01:46:38):
Bring forward Saturday night thirty three degrees. Right now, let's
get a traffic update from the.

Speaker 1 (01:46:45):
UCF Tramfhiic Center.

Speaker 13 (01:46:46):
When it comes to multiple sclerosis, trust the experts at
the U S. Gardner in Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and
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Speaker 1 (01:46:53):
Learn more at uc health dot com.

Speaker 13 (01:46:55):
Southbound seventy pie continues to struggle into Monroe thanks to
the left flames off with a multiple vehicle accident, backing
tramping to Middletown, then slow through Lachlan and slow out
of downtown to a wreck that blocks the left lane
in the cut. Northbound seventy five an extra fifteen minutes
out of Lawrence. Chuck ingram On fifty five KOs the

(01:47:15):
talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:47:17):
Seven forty fifty about KRCD talk station Very happy Thursday
to you talk about Donovan and Neil for Americans for Prosperity.
Every little bit counts. When you have a whole bunch
of people doing just a little bit, it really does
make a profound difference. So you don't have to spend
hours and hours every single day to make a difference.
Just do something small, like the woman from Northwest Ohio

(01:47:39):
that you mentioned advocating for school choice, which I embrace thoroughly.
All right, Donovan, what do we need to do? What
can we do? What are these small steps that we
can take in this one small step campaign?

Speaker 15 (01:47:51):
Well, the first thing we need folks to do is
go to AFP volunteer dot com. AFP volunteer dot com
was where you can sign up and there's a number
of different small steps folks can take by going there.
It's doing things like, uh, just coming out to a
community event that we're holding, reaching out via social media

(01:48:12):
to your elected official and reminding them to make the
Trump tax cuts permanent. Uh, to more, you know, more
things that might be outside your comfort zone, like going
out and knocking some doors with us on a day
of action, or even coming up to the state House.
What we need folks to do Brian right is get
get in the fight, get involved.

Speaker 6 (01:48:30):
Right.

Speaker 15 (01:48:31):
Uh maybe maybe last election was the first time you voted, right,
you're a newly registered voter and you got out, you
voted for folks like Bernie Moreno, Uh, don't let it,
don't let your activism into there. Come out and join us,
get involved, because it's what it's going to take to
defend this country and keep uh prosperity, freedom, individual liberty

(01:48:51):
at the forefront of folk of your neighbor's community and
elected officials' minds.

Speaker 2 (01:48:56):
Well, maybe you confirm what I have been told that.
You know, I think people think it's an exercise and
utility to reach out to their elected official, like you know,
call your congressman or email your congressman. I my understanding
is most people don't do that because they think it
is a waste of time. But that when congress people
actually get say fifteen twenty thirty calls or emails on

(01:49:20):
any given subject and it's all leaning one direction, that's
a huge volume for them. Often.

Speaker 15 (01:49:26):
Yeah, for someone at the state House who represents you
in Columbus, a state representative, if they get twenty twenty
five emails or calls about a issue into their constituent
inbox that gets flagged. In fact, I know a number
of elected officials who talk to who at the end
of the day or end of a week, sort of
whatever their reporting cadence is, they'll have their aid let

(01:49:47):
them know what bills constituents called about, and that helps
influence draw their attention to where they can sit with
their constituents are concerned about. There's not a lot of
folks who make those calls. Not often that folks in
Columbus get that kind of outreach. And so when they do,
or they see a spike of ten, fifteen, twenty people

(01:50:07):
calling and saying, hey, I want to talk to you
about House Bill fifteen and I want you to support it,
they pay attention to that because it's unique, right Brian.
Not too many people are calling or wondering what they're
doing up there. But when they get those calls, they listen,
they pay attention. It makes an impact.

Speaker 2 (01:50:21):
Yeah, it does, And that's one of those tiny steps
you can make. It doesn't take that much time to
reach out to your elected official here in the state
to do something exactly like that and know you're not
going to get into a conversation with your elected official
in Columbus. You're just going to convey the message and
a staffer will pass it along. So it's not like
you have to be prepared to engage in a debate, right.

Speaker 15 (01:50:43):
Well, yeah, that's right. And you know, by going to
ASP volunteer dot com, you can sign up and you'll
get action alerts, so we'll keep you up to date
on all the things that are going on in Columbus
and you know, if it's something you care about. For instance,
we had Amy who back in February, just a couple
of weeks ago, signed did just that. She signed a
few petitions and we reached out and we got her

(01:51:04):
involved and said, hey, thanks for taking action with us.
What would you like to do And she said, I'm
just going to take digital actions. I want to you know,
I just want to send a note and let my
representative Monica rob Blaze, they'll know what I care about. Well,
guess what, Brian ret Blaze. They'll called Amy and said, hey,
thank you for reaching out and supporting energy abundance here
in the state. I want to understand your perspectives. I

(01:51:26):
can take your story to the state House and the
committees and legislate you know onto the floor of the
conversations I'm having until one small step.

Speaker 2 (01:51:35):
Amy took.

Speaker 15 (01:51:35):
That small step, took some digital actions. Doesn't want to
do more than that right now, but it led to
her representative reaching out and asking for her thoughts and
appreciating her for being involved in the process.

Speaker 2 (01:51:45):
And I bet that blew her mind when that happened.

Speaker 15 (01:51:50):
To get a statement elected official calling yu, I know.

Speaker 2 (01:51:52):
Someone actually cares. Oh my god, I'm actually being represented.
It's amazing. Will you make it so easy a AFP
volunteer dot org. Get on the mailing list or the
email list so you know when these action plans pop up,
when the legislation comes up. Americans for Prosperity is great
about staying right on top of all the important things

(01:52:12):
that my listening audience cares about here in the state
of Ohio. Donovan, I understand you were at the farm
last week with George Brenneman from Restore Liberty dot Us.
I was Bryant.

Speaker 15 (01:52:23):
They've got something real special there, I said to the crowd.
I have about seventy five folks out getting involved. These
are patriots who were in the white George is phenomenal.
His wife talked about the impact if we don't make
the tax cuts permanent. She's a tax prepared So it
was really insightful. Great.

Speaker 1 (01:52:39):
I mean, if we had groups.

Speaker 15 (01:52:41):
Like what George has to restore Liberty dot us and
every one of the eighty eight counties in this state,
we'd be number one in all the measures of economic freedom, education, freedom,
can you name it, we would be doing it.

Speaker 6 (01:52:52):
So George is doing God's work and it's a phenomenal group.

Speaker 2 (01:52:55):
They've got there. Yes, it is, and he is a
terrific guy, without question. So restore Liberty dot us. You
can put that on your bookmart list as well, along
with AFP Volunteer dot org. Donovan and Neil for Americans
for Prosperity to keep up the great work, and thanks
for making it so easy for people to take these
small steps and you know, put together a coalition and
let our representatives and officials know exactly which direction we

(01:53:17):
want the state about how to go.

Speaker 15 (01:53:19):
Absolutely well, thanks for sharing your megaphone with me here today.

Speaker 2 (01:53:22):
Happy to do it, my friend, as always, happy to
do it. We'll talk again real soon. Keep up the
great work. Seven forty six. You can call love to
hear what's on your mind five one three, seven nine
fifty eight hundred eight two three talk, make your voice
heard and get over to Gata Heavens Cemetery, Montgomery. They
have just an absolutely beautiful surrounding there. It's a great
setting for remembrance and reflection. The beautiful rolling hills and

(01:53:44):
mature trees, landscape gardens. Wait till springtime there. Oh, it's
amazing striking monuments of course, the seasonal flowers, trim lawns.
It's a perfect location for prayer and reflection, especially now
it's a Lenten season. Take advantage of the beautiful surroundings
and come to you know, get get in touch with
God in this natural environment. You can find comfort and
peace in the cemetery's quiet reverend surrounding. They are open

(01:54:06):
to everyone to enjoy ministering the Tristate for more than
seventy seven years and honoring life on sacred ground. Learn
more all about it. Go to Gateofheaven dot org. That's
Gate of Heaven dot org.

Speaker 8 (01:54:18):
Fifty five card talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:54:22):
There's channeline weather Cloud's early sun later today forty four
for the high going down to thirty one overnight. We
got a wintery mixed tomorrow morning and possible rain after that,
possible mix and possible rain. Anyway, you get the idea.
Tomorrow's high fifty one down to thirty five overnight and
a partly cloudy Saturday with the high of forty eight
thirty three degrees. Right now, let's check on traffic conditions

(01:54:43):
with Chuck Ingland from the uc.

Speaker 1 (01:54:45):
OFF Traffic Center.

Speaker 13 (01:54:46):
Every when it comes to multiple sclerosis, trust the experts
at the Usting Gardener Neuroscience Institute for Innovative and Comprehensive
Care and learn more at U See how dot com
stap pund seventy five heavy between Middletown of Monroe, but
the reck's clear above sixty three. Then slow out of
downtown to an accident in the cut that blocks the
left lane. Right leans block northbound two seventy five with

(01:55:07):
an accident ft again passed the Milford Parkway. Scheck Ingram
on fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:55:14):
Seven fifty fifty five KERRCD Talk station. After the top
of the air, news Mary Graybar with their book Debunking FDR.
A lot of myths, rumors, lies, accusations, and innuendos about FDR.
We're going to talk about debunking that Jay Ratliff at
eight thirty I heard media aviation expert and all round
awesome guy in the meantime over the phones.

Speaker 11 (01:55:33):
I go.

Speaker 2 (01:55:33):
Let's start with Carl. Carl, thanks for calling this morning
and welcome to the show.

Speaker 20 (01:55:37):
Hey, Brian, I heard you talking about the difficulties that
Joe was having when calling three to one one. I'm
a three one one ambassador and three one one only
works inside the city of City Cincinnati. It is based
on the zip code. So I had the back door
secret telephone numbers that Joe can call to get a

(01:55:57):
hold of somebody to report a pothole in the city
of since and those telephone numbers are five to one,
three five, nine to one, six thousand. That is still valid.
I called that a little while ago and I was
able to get through. That is the old customer service number.
The other number that is available for use is five
to one three seven sixty five one two one two.

(01:56:17):
That is the old non emergency police number. But they
will both be routed into the three one one system. Okay,
if you're down along the riverfront and you're trying to
call three one one, uh, you may get routed to
a cell tower over in Kentucky and three one one may.

Speaker 2 (01:56:34):
Not work all right. I guess on some level can
understand the reasons you might limit it. But you've got
people that live outside of the Cincinnati that drive into
the city of Cincinnati and do pay taxes there if
they're employed in the city, they encounter potholes. So make
it a little bit more difficult for people outside who
still deal with potholes to report the potholes they deal
with when they're in the city.

Speaker 20 (01:56:54):
Yes, it's a work in progress.

Speaker 2 (01:56:57):
Okay, that's cool, Carl. You know, I'm glad you called
so five nine one, six thousand or seven sixty five
one two one two for those outside of the city's limits,
you can get your potholes taken care of. Thank you.
And you know, and I know you're working hard on
the potholes, Carl. I don't mean to give you guys
too much of a hard time, but this has been
a long time coming, and I know the winter's been

(01:57:18):
harsh and we've had problems with the snow and ice
and build up and the freestaw cycles, and I get it.
It makes it worse, but you know, Sunset Avenue, maybe
just just throwing it out there, Jay, Welcome to the show.
Thanks for calling this morning. Happy Thursday.

Speaker 15 (01:57:32):
Hey, good morning, Brian. I wanted to encourage your listeners
on a specific, one small step that they can make,
and it's a god blessing so called Republican really a
rhino who was pushing through right now. Stay SB oneh nine,
which is three hundred million dollars for public school free lunch,
free breakfast, and three hundred million dollars if that's going

(01:57:55):
to go into the schools. That's funded through property tax, folks,
So seventy percent of your property tax is school tax,
so that's a two hundred and ten million dollars increase
in property tax. I did send an email to his office.
I received a response that said that from one of

(01:58:16):
his legislative aids that said that he will take my
views into consideration, and then goes on to say the
blessing is in favor of lower property taxes and is
working on this. So at the same time he's drilling
a hole on the bottom of the boat and letting
more water in, he's bailing it out. So I think everybody,
let's see if we get ten people today to reach

(01:58:38):
out to him and tell him no on SB one
oh nine.

Speaker 6 (01:58:42):
We are tapped out.

Speaker 15 (01:58:43):
We cannot afford our property taxes go up and free
everything into school is it is not a plant on
a Republican platform as far as I know, take care
of your kids. Those are your kids. I took care
of mine, take care of yours. It's not that hard
to feed a kid and lunch. When did the school
turn into a public pantry for the entire community?

Speaker 2 (01:59:06):
Well, and most notably you know, and I understand it's
a challenge for folks on life's margins, but we do
have a multitude of different, you know, assistance plans like
the snap plan, which allows you to have taxpayer dollars
to purchase groceries. So if you're getting it on that end,
why wouldn't you have a meal prepared for your child
to take to school. I struggle with that one quite often, Jay,

(01:59:29):
I really do. We don't need another plan. We just
need people take advantage of what is out there and
what works, and mind our taxpayer dollars. So yeah, it
kind of it's a head scratcher with him being on
board with that very very expensive program. Jay, I appreciate
you standing on top of these issues, and I appreciate
hearing from you when you call so folks, So hope
you can stick around. We're gonna have Mary grey Bar

(01:59:49):
on the phone with her book Debunking FDR and one
of my favorite times a week eight thirty. Have some
funny games in the aviation world with Jay Ratliff or
iHeart Media Aviation Expert. So stick around. I'll be right back.
Confuse happens fast, stay up to date at the top
of the hour, not.

Speaker 1 (02:00:07):
Going to be complicated.

Speaker 3 (02:00:08):
It's going to go very fast.

Speaker 1 (02:00:09):
Fifty five KRC the Talk Station.

Speaker 8 (02:00:12):
This report is sponsored by Freud and Abuse.

Speaker 1 (02:00:16):
They're looking for it.

Speaker 2 (02:00:17):
Ever been wasted for aud and Abuse?

Speaker 21 (02:00:18):
Don't just find a things, find out.

Speaker 2 (02:00:20):
All about it on fifty five KRC the Talk Station.
Just shive eight o five You're a bitch. Five KRCD
Talk Station. Happy Thursday. My next guest her name Mary Greybar.
She's a resident Fellow of the Alexander Hamilton Institute for
the Study of Western Civilization and the founder of I
Love this name of the organization. The Dissident prof Education Project,

(02:00:45):
taught a college level for twenty years, most recently at
Emory University. Or work has been published by the Federalist,
town Hall, Front Page Magazine, City Journal, American Greatness, and
academic Questions. And she's written a book we're talking about today,
Debunking fd R, The Man and the Myths. Welcome to
the fifty five Ksey Morning Show. Mary, it's a pleasure
to have you on this morning.

Speaker 21 (02:01:03):
Well, thank you, it's great to be here.

Speaker 2 (02:01:06):
When I think of FDR, I first think of my grandfather,
who was a lifelong Democrat, because FDR gave him a
job when he was a teenager in the Civilian Conservation
Corps and that was enough to win over his long
lifelong support for the Democrat Party, even though he was
voting for the indefensible quite often. We used to get
in political arguments when I was younger. But God rest

(02:01:28):
his soul. But he also was the father of term limits.
We're bringing about the twenty second amendment.

Speaker 21 (02:01:37):
Yeah, well, I've heard of others, you know, who had
warm feelings for FDR. Because of the Civilian Conservation Corps,
people were very desperate, and so that was part of
his strategy, was to give things to people who were
suffering under the depression. I mean, it wasn't from his

(02:02:00):
personal fortune, it was from taxpayers. And then to seem like,
you know, the magnificent leader. Yes, and so you know,
you have those emotional resonances and they still exist and
it's passed on, you know. I mean, some people can
understand while this was part of a strategy, but others think,

(02:02:24):
you know, well we need to continue with that.

Speaker 19 (02:02:25):
Kind of program.

Speaker 2 (02:02:27):
Well, people easily refer to him in such awe was
his great or all. He was a great guy. He
got us we won World War Two. He got us
out of the Great Depression, and perhaps maybe we got
out of the Great Depression because of World War Two.
I've always kind of looked at it that way. It
put a lot of people to work in the defense
industry and put a lot of people overseas fighting wars,
and that in large parts help us helped l us

(02:02:49):
turn around the country, didn't it.

Speaker 21 (02:02:52):
Well, Yeah, and it's a little deceptive because you know,
you had, you know, millions of working age men who
were fighting overseas, So those unemployment figures were deceptive.

Speaker 6 (02:03:05):
Uh.

Speaker 21 (02:03:05):
It wasn't really until after the war that the economy rebounded, so,
you know, and a lot of people at the time,
you know, leading up to the war, we're thinking, you know,
he's such a failure. I mean, the economy is still
so bad, you know, twenty percent unemployment, and hey, maybe

(02:03:26):
he's thinking of Lord to get us out of this mess.

Speaker 2 (02:03:29):
Yeah, and Europe, of course, that's what there is, go ahead.

Speaker 21 (02:03:33):
I'm sorry, Oh yeah, I mean that's what a lot
of the critics were saying, you know at the time.

Speaker 2 (02:03:38):
Yes, and you know, we the United States, remained completely unscathed.
So the rest of the industrial complex around the world,
you pretty much bombed out mess of all of Europe
and in England. So we seem to be the recipients
of a lot of business potential and opportunity because the
rest of the world still needed goods.

Speaker 21 (02:03:57):
Yes, And it was the same thing, you know, after
World War One, so you had the industrialists, the manufacturers,
you know, rebuilding Europe. Yeah. And the thing was, you know,
the war could have been ended a couple of years sooner,
according to many historians. But h you know, Franklin Roosevelt,

(02:04:21):
this is one of the things I point out as
I go through his early history and his early political career,
he just had this hatred of Germans. And I'm not
talking just about Nazis, I'm talking about your you know,
your ethnic German. And he would not consider uh you know,
having an agreement and uh you know, ceasing fighting even

(02:04:45):
though there were uh you know Germans resisting Hitler at
the time.

Speaker 4 (02:04:50):
Uh.

Speaker 21 (02:04:50):
He insisted on unconditional surrender. He wanted to make Germany
completely pastoral, wipe out all industry, uh, divided up into
different segments, and maker completely powerless.

Speaker 2 (02:05:06):
My understanding he had, he was in thrall of Stalin.
And I mostly remember uh FDR along the lines of
the guy that sold out Eastern Europe at Yalta. So
did I mean, did he not cave in or capitulate
the Stalin at Yalta in giving up the European of
the Eastern European countries and turning them into communist nations.

Speaker 21 (02:05:30):
Absolutely, and that happened even before Tehran. And you know,
he was infatuated with Stalin. Anything Stalin wanted, uh you know,
uh FDR was like this defrauded lover, you know, appealing
to him. I mean, he had so many opportunities, you know, uh,

(02:05:52):
you know, with lens lease and supplying uh you know,
military equipment and food and every everything else to you know,
rein him in, but he never did I mean he
was an absolutely awful negotiator, and he carved up Poland
and told him. You know, but I can't announce this

(02:06:14):
until after the election in nineteen forty because you know,
American polls were voters, and he wanted them to vote
for him, and they were you know, pretty solidly Democrats.

Speaker 2 (02:06:25):
Well, did he also have a hatred for Japan because
he is famous for rounding up Japanese American citizens. Most
only one of my dad's friends, who was a very
young child at the time, ended up in an internment camp.
They lost their house and we're we're in a camp.
I mean that that to me is like, I mean,
one of the bigger human rights abuses that have ever
been conducted by a president.

Speaker 21 (02:06:46):
Well, and he also did that to Germans. You know,
Germans who lived here in the United States. You know,
there was no due process. You know, if someone heard
a neighborhood someone speaking German or getting German publications, they
were put under suspicion. I mean, there was no due process.

(02:07:07):
And they were also interns. But yes, Roosevelt did hate
the Japanese. He had a soft spot for the Chinese
because and he'd never been to China, although he you know,
claimed to be an expert on China, but it was
because his grandfather made his fortune by pushing opium in

(02:07:28):
China and he thought Japanese. Yeah, yeah, I go into
that quite a bit. And he always denied it in history.
A lot of historians have downplayed it or outright denied it.
But yeah, he was an opium pusher.

Speaker 2 (02:07:42):
How about This is the first time I've ever heard that.
We always hear the stories about the Kennedy family making
money off prohibition, but I was not aware of that history.
That's that's frightening.

Speaker 21 (02:07:55):
Yes, and it's been suppressed for a long time. And
I go into quite a bit of detail about it
in my book. And you know, on the point of
the Japanese even before he was inaugurated, he told you know,
his future cabinet members that you know, he foresaw war
with Japan. So this is you know, in nineteen early

(02:08:19):
nineteen thirty three. He was inaugurated in March, of course.

Speaker 2 (02:08:23):
Wow, But there have been rumors swirling for years that
maybe he even knew about the impending and bombing of
Pearl Harbor. Is there any truth to that notion?

Speaker 21 (02:08:35):
Well, I don't know if that will ever be proven
because a lot of the records have been destroyed and
he did not keep diaries. But he did tell Admiral Richardson,
James O. Richardson, that he would not remove the fleet
from Hawaii. Richardson said, you know, they're vulnerable. So he said,

(02:08:59):
I can't do this election years nineteen forty. So he
you know, put Richardson in a different spot and put
in Kimmel, who was more you know, agreeable, And so
he was warned about that, and he was trying to
provoke war. I mean, you know, as I point out

(02:09:19):
in an article that I had published recently. Also, you know,
when he and Churchill met at Placentia Bay, he said,
you know, I am going to provoke war. I want
to have a provocation. I want an incident. He was
hoping that it would be around the Philippines. You know,

(02:09:40):
he didn't think that the Japanese were smart enough to
send such a bombing mission, you know that you know,
destroyed the fleet and killed almost three thousand men. But
they were you know, he thought that the Japanese were
sneaky and not very smart.

Speaker 2 (02:09:56):
Well, I know he's perceived as this, you know, champion
of the working crass and class in the press. Obviously
he had a great depression to campaign on along those lines.
I suppose the failure of the Hoover administration helped him.
But what was his driving motivation? Is it just simply
a typical politician power struggle and wanting to be a powerful,
controlling man.

Speaker 21 (02:10:18):
Oh. Yes, he wanted to be a dictator. He was
called a dictator when he was first inaugurated. Some people said,
we need a dictator to get us out of the depression.
But his ambition from the time he was a boy,
or at least a freshman at Harvard, as he told
a girlfriend or he hoped would be his girlfriend, that

(02:10:41):
he thought he would be president. And he followed in
the footsteps of his cousin, his distant cousin, Theodore Roosevelt,
and you planned out his political path of you know,
one a seat to the New York State Senate, then
became assistant Secretary of the Navy, just like you know

(02:11:01):
t R. Was ran for vice president with Knox, with
Cox I'm sorry, and you know then of course came
down with polio and but he did you know when
the governorship served two terms and you know, he was
looking for an opportunity. A lot of people think he

(02:11:21):
was just you know, floundering around, well meaning during the depression,
But as I point out from a speech that he
gave at the People's Forum in Troying, New York in
March nineteen twelve, he believed that the Founding Fathers had
it a little wrong. They wanted independence, but what they

(02:11:41):
really wanted was cooperation and interdependence. And he already was
talking about the compulsory programs that he would set up
in the New Deal. So this is nineteen twelve.

Speaker 2 (02:11:55):
Well, was he a fan of the Woodrow Wilson style government?
You know, dictatorial from top down and you know, the
the the the government of experts dictating the terms of
condition of our lives.

Speaker 19 (02:12:06):
Is that his mold.

Speaker 21 (02:12:09):
A little bit. He was not a great reader or
a student, you know, he was you know, living in
that milieu of progressivism. I don't think he consciously followed
Woodrow Wilson's program, but they coincidentally matched. Because Franklin Roosevelt,

(02:12:31):
you know, grew up in the Hudson Valley in the
kind of feudalistic system. He thought of himself as you know,
being sort of lord of the nation, and that top
down system, you know, aligns with progressivism. Yes, so he
had these kind of vague notions. But and he, you know,
he did see himself as being powerful, more powerful than

(02:12:55):
the other two branches of government.

Speaker 2 (02:12:57):
Well, and I guess I have to ask, because you know,
mister side chat Fdr. Everybody's like sort of grandfatherly figure
offering us, you know, comfort and solace in our in
our difficult times. Excuse me, ma'am. What was he really
like behind the scenes? Was he that you know, decent
reasonable guy or was he kind of boil it down?
Is there? Was he kind of a jerk because a

(02:13:18):
lot of people's public persona is not the way they
really the run the ship.

Speaker 21 (02:13:23):
That's right. Yes, he was a master of the radio.
That was a new medium. That was you know, and
so was Mussolini. But I quote extensively from a fellow
Grouten student, Francis Biddle, who became his U Attorney General ultimately,
and he writes about what he would do to the

(02:13:46):
people closest to him. H he had a way of
catching them when they were most vulnerable and then sort
of attacking them with something that was very hurt full,
and he had pleasure in doing that. There's something sadistic
about him, and even I don't know if you know,

(02:14:09):
I'm not a psychologist, but when he was a boy,
he wrote this letter to one of his governesses about
how he liked to watch squirrels die after he shot them.

Speaker 2 (02:14:24):
Yeah, sounds or esque.

Speaker 21 (02:14:29):
I know it's there was definitely a mean streak, and
he really was impervious to people's suffering. He was very callous.
He's yeah, yeah, he sent this maybe lieutenant on a
He wanted to send him on a suicide mission to

(02:14:49):
provoke the Japanese. And you know, given given what I've
discovered about his early life and his pre presidential career,
that sounds, you know, like it would be true. I mean,
that was his character.

Speaker 2 (02:15:07):
Well, I'm sure there's a DSM diagnosis for somewhere in there,
without question. Name of the book, Debunking FDR The Man
in the Miss my guest today, Mary Grebart. Mary, we
put your book on my blog page fifty five cars
dot com so my listeners can easily get a copy
learn about the realities of FDR rather than the myths
and legends we've been fed all these years. Mary, It's
been an interesting conversation. It's a wonderful book and I

(02:15:29):
know my listener is going to really enjoy reading it.
And I can't thank you enough for the time you
spoke my listeners today, just scratching the surface of the
man who is or was FDR.

Speaker 21 (02:15:38):
Well, thank you for having me. It's been a pleasure.

Speaker 2 (02:15:40):
It's been my pleasure too. You take care and have
a wonderful week. It's eight twenty right now, folks. If
you five KRSD talk station cover Sincy. And you know, folks,
it's not just the Greater Cincinnati area for cover Sincy.
It is nationwide and it is them acting as your broker.
They are working for you. When it comes to medical insurance,
they will they plugged the holes in the bucket. As

(02:16:01):
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You're not covered in a whole lot of respects. They
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(02:17:06):
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them up five one three eight hundred call five one
three eight hundred two two five to five. Jenn and
I in first morning weather forecast, it's going to be

(02:17:29):
flouty morning and a sunny well sunny sky's later today.
At some point they don't say when forty four will
be the high, predicting an overnight low of thirty one tomorrow.
Uh wintery mix in the morning, rain in the afternoon,
both possible fifty one for the high, end of thirty
five overnight with clouds and a party thirty Saturday, I
have forty eight, and of course the clocks change over
Saturday night spring forward thirty four degrees. Right now, it's

(02:17:52):
time for a traffic update.

Speaker 1 (02:17:54):
From the UCUF Traffic Center.

Speaker 13 (02:17:56):
When it comes to multiple scerosos, trust the experts at
think you See Gardner and Euroscience Institute for Innovative and
Comprehensive Care.

Speaker 1 (02:18:03):
Learn more at u see health dot com.

Speaker 13 (02:18:05):
Southbound seventy five continues slowly through Lachland better out of
downtown through the cut the earlier accident gone left lane's open.
Northbound fourth seventy one facts past Grand Northbound two seventy
five slows a bit with what's left of the wreck
before twenty eight in Milford. They're on the right shoulder.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:18:28):
Hey thirty if at five KRCD talk station. If being Thursday,
it's that time of week. I always look forward to it.
Get to talk with iHeartMedia aviation expert Jay Ratlift Jay,
Welcome back to the morning show, my dear friend. It's
always a pleasure to have you on the program.

Speaker 19 (02:18:40):
Seems like it's been for other brother it is well.

Speaker 2 (02:18:43):
You know, I did take a day off last week,
went to lunch with my mom. I was supposed to
get my eyeball surgery for glaucom and do, but I
had to put it off because the other eye, which
had been done the prior week, still hadn't healed up
enough that I could use it to read, and I
didn't want. I can't do my show if I can't read,
so any they'd be another delay at some point or
another day off. But removing away from that. Just before

(02:19:05):
we get to the subject matage, you know how I
start your curveball see if you're still on on your toes.
What in the hell is it with Boeing not being
able to deliver on the Air Force one. It's taken
them years and years. How long does it take to
build a damn airplane?

Speaker 19 (02:19:18):
Jay, Well, it takes a while. And remember they years ago,
they had issues with parts, they had issue with production,
they had COVID that slowed him down. But look, remember
President Trump negotiated a deal with Boeing for not one,
but two new seven forty sevens, and he locked it
in at a price. And I forget the exact price.
I won't quote it because I don't like getting emails

(02:19:40):
like that, but the price that he had him nail
them in, they went by that years ago. I mean,
they are so far over a budget and it's not
costing the usax payer a dollar past what President Trump
and then negotiated during his first administration. So anything with
Boeing tends to be delayed, you know, it just they've

(02:20:03):
just got this reputation right now that you know, everything
has been slowed down. And of course I'm really hoping
that the Trump administration remains as vigilant as as we
had with the Biden administration trying to keep Boeing accountable.
Boweing lied to US five six years ago coming out
of the Boeing Max crashes, saying that they learned their lessons,
they were going to return to the bowing of old

(02:20:24):
and all of these shortcuts were going to be a
thing of the past. Well we found out that wasn't
the case. They lied to us. In fact, if anything,
that got worse at it, And which tells me anything
they say now, I could care less. It's a lot
like the politicians in DC on both sides of the aisle.
They're talking. I'm not listening because I don't believe anything
they're saying. So I'll believe the results after we've seen

(02:20:46):
bowing over the next few years and not having a
serious recall, or twenty six more whistleblowers coming forward saying
you're not gonna believe what we're doing now because those
things have just continued to happen at an alarming pace.

Speaker 2 (02:20:58):
Well, any prudent business person would know the longer you delay,
the more likely it's going to go up in price.
We always have inflation every year, even if it's kept
to like two or three percent. But they had this project.
They knew what they were going to get for it,
and I mean this is a reflection of the poor
performance generally speaking, they're now going to lose a lot

(02:21:20):
of money delivering on something that was ordered such a
long time ago. Everything's gone up in price, but that's
a risk they ran when they entered into the agreement.

Speaker 19 (02:21:27):
I think at this point in time, it's almost double
what we oh my god. Oh yeah. So when you
look at that, it's but again it's it's reflective. I
think of what the Boeing the leadership has been over
the years. I'm holding off on any conclusions of the
new CEO. I like him a lot. I like his
past management style, but a lot of times, when you

(02:21:48):
get involved in something that's this deep, sometimes it can
impact you. It was the same concern that we had
to a much greater extent when Donald Trump was elected
the first time. Going into Washington, d C. We liked
the businessman and we thought, oh my gosh when he
was elected last time, is Washington going to change him?
Or is he going to change Washington? And he went

(02:22:09):
in and stuck to his guns and did exactly what
he said he.

Speaker 2 (02:22:12):
Was going to do.

Speaker 19 (02:22:13):
And that's really what I'd like to see the new
CEO for Boeing do come in there and say, look,
we've had issues in the past. We're changing those, We're
changing the mindset. I know that Sean Duffy and others
are going in and conducting some intensive inspections, the FA inspections,
the unannounced ones, which were always a pain in the
butt anytime they showed up unannounced at any airport that

(02:22:36):
I was in charge of. Slows things down considerably. But
they said they're going to continue to increase the number
of unannounced inspections and look for violations. And I just
really hope they're going to hold Boeing accountable in a
way that is punitive, because at this point, every single
thing they've done has been met with I think kid
gloves from fines and different Nobody went to jail when

(02:22:59):
Bow intentionally put forward a product that resulted in the
deaths of hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people, knowingly
putting forth a product they knew had serious issues, and
they get a fine. I mean, somebody tell me what
the incentive is to change your future behavior when that's it.
In this latest round, when they agreed to the latest thing,

(02:23:22):
they accepted the responsibility, but there was no criminal charges.
They wouldn't let it go to trial because they knew
what was going to happen, not only with the outcome,
but with all of the things that were going to
come out in the trial with regards to the shortcuts
that Boeing was taken. Bowie's a great company. They have been,
they are not now. They need to get back to
the Boeing of old and I really pray they get

(02:23:42):
there soon.

Speaker 2 (02:23:43):
It's like, get your blood pressure up a little bit,
Jay rat.

Speaker 19 (02:23:46):
Those curveballs you mentioned that B word. It happens every time. Brother,
I know it, I know it, and I know Joe
and you say watch this and then yeah, that's when
you throw it out. So yeah, it was That's fun
at my expense.

Speaker 2 (02:24:00):
Oh I'll you enjoy the banter. Jay Ratt left getting
help help you get it out of your system and
remind people of the problem that exists in Boeing. Stick around.
We've got more to talk about with Jay Ratler.

Speaker 1 (02:24:12):
I love that one.

Speaker 2 (02:24:13):
Don't away, folks, We'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (02:24:16):
Fifty five KRC do you have more than ten thousand
dollars in credit?

Speaker 2 (02:24:21):
Hey? Thirty nine fifty five KRCD talk station during our
aviation segment with Ihart Media aviation expert Jay rattle of
every Thursday and every Thursday try to throw a bit
of a curveball real quick. I gotta ask you ever
had SSSS on your boarding pass? Jay rattleft Really.

Speaker 19 (02:24:38):
Yeah. I can't get into the specifics of how that's triggered,
but I can tell you when you see it, you
hope you're early because you're going to get some real
good attention at the TSA. They're going to make sure
you don't have anything you're not supposed to have.

Speaker 2 (02:24:53):
No kidding is that it's a random thing that can
just sort of sort of arbitrarily just stamp it on
your boarding pass because you travel a fair amount, I
would argue.

Speaker 19 (02:25:01):
I do, but a lot of times if you buy
your ticket the last minute, one way with cash, yeah,
you're going to get attention without saying too much, and
I probably just did. You gonna little flags are gonna
go up and you're gonna get a lot of extra attention.

Speaker 2 (02:25:17):
Okay, so it'll pay for your ticket and cash well,
you know, and.

Speaker 19 (02:25:22):
That's that's one of the things that they look at
because you know, it's like when you mail a package
and use a credit card. Uh, it can be a
certain weight if you pay with cash. Uh, it can't
be over a certain weight because they have no way
of tracking who sent it. Oh wow, you run into
that a lot of times with the stamps that you'll
get out of the machines and things. But you know

(02:25:43):
it's with an airline ticket. You buy something last way
one way, it's it's going to raise some flags. You
raise in the form of payment can dictate the level
of screening that you're going to get. And it's it's
a good thing because if somebody makes the last second reservation,
be for a very good reason, but it could also
be for other reasons where you're starting to, you know,

(02:26:04):
not be detected on things. And believe me, you're not
going to get away with it. With our friends at the.

Speaker 2 (02:26:09):
TSA sosss on your boarding past, be prepared for the
body cavity search.

Speaker 19 (02:26:14):
Yeah, don't blame Trump thinking it's some hitler thing.

Speaker 21 (02:26:17):
It is not.

Speaker 19 (02:26:18):
It's been there for ay.

Speaker 2 (02:26:20):
No fan of the global warming religion. Am I We
go to Amsterdam where apparently they have a solar panel problem.

Speaker 19 (02:26:27):
Oh yeah. The Skipple Airport in Amsterdam has been one
that for a number of years has been climate change
central in Europe. In fact, it was a couple of
years ago Brian they indicated that to reduce the global
footprint of commercial airlines, they were going to reduce the
flight activity by like ten percent. Now, this is a
very popular airport in Europe. In fact, it's one of

(02:26:47):
the I don't want to call it a low cost airport,
but it is. It's certainly a low cost alternative for
a lot of people to fly into London and many
times you'll have people going into Amsterdam and then going
to other countries by rail because it's a cheap airport
to get in and out of. The more that they
reduce the flight activity in and out of Skipple they're
in Amsterdam, the more that the average airfare is going

(02:27:10):
to go up and up and up. Well, they decided
a number of years ago to install as many solar
panels as they could in order to be you know,
climate climate friendly. The problem is some of these solar
panels are located with in an area at the airport
grounds in nearby, and so many of them that as

(02:27:30):
certain airplanes come in on a specific runway at a
specific time of day, it blinds the pilots they can't
see oh geez. So what they have to do is
to close that airport runway that's specific runway at certain
times during the day. Because of this, and of course
it begs the question, but it's easy to answer, would
not have someone.

Speaker 1 (02:27:51):
Maybe thought about that?

Speaker 19 (02:27:53):
But the problem is it's designed by non pilots. Anytime
that you know each trade who's my broker of choice,
try to upgrade the trading platform, it always seems to
be done by people who've never traded a stock in
their life, because instead of making things easier, they make
it harder. And in this situation, I think it's the
same thing. Yet a bunch of engineers who said, hey,
our goal is to do this, let's do it without

(02:28:16):
any regard whatsoever of what might you know the impact
might be on commercial aviation coming in and out. And
I mean it just blinds the pilots. But given the
fact that the Skipple Airport has seen a reduced number
of flights, it's probably less of an issue now than
it could have been. But I mean in Europe, I
think it was France a couple of years ago that

(02:28:37):
made it a law that you could not have air
service between two cities within France. If you could get
from one spot to the other by rail two hours
or less, because again, airlines are bad even though it's
single digit numbers, and the aviation world is trying to
get carbon free neutral by twenty fifty, which is never

(02:28:58):
going to happen. But it's really a nice little you know,
sounds that, it sounds really good. But look, commercial aviation
engines keep getting better, they keep getting cleaner. The aviation
fuel that we're trying to develop, Sustainable Aviation fuel SAS
is something that is based on oils, vegetables, those kinds
of things, and those are things that as they're produced,

(02:29:19):
is just going to make aviation even even nicer. I
wish other industries were as dedicated as the airline industry
was to trying to make things cleaner.

Speaker 2 (02:29:28):
Well as a global industry, I suppose, and many of
them do you know, go overseas. They have to do
global compliance, which means you want to fly in the
Airpean Union, you're gonna have to cut down your carbon output.

Speaker 19 (02:29:37):
So, oh yeah, you have certain engines that are of
a certain age and they're maintained in a certain way,
and I have no problem at all with that. It's
some of these things are just a little bit over
the top, like you know, but you know, what, what
is it that people the countries turn to the minute
that there's some sort of a natural disaster. They look
for the airline industry to come in with, you know,

(02:29:59):
a number of flights, bringing in supplies and the specific
experience personnel to address the issues that are ongoing. It's
the airlines that come to the rescue. And yet so
many times are made up to be the bad guys.
And yeah, I take incredible exception with that.

Speaker 2 (02:30:14):
Well, it's a convenient target since you know, a lot
of the people can't afford necessary to to fly on airplanes,
and so it seems to be sort of the elitist
form of transportation in the minds of so many people.
So it's an easy target to go after anyhow. Well,
and in terms of talk about.

Speaker 19 (02:30:29):
It's cheaper now the fly bride is than it ever
has been in the history of aviation. So I don't
think we're the bad guys. I think the private jet
people are the bad guys. But thank you, Yes, so
you talk about enough about that, I don't have to comment.

Speaker 2 (02:30:43):
There you go, and I just observe, you know, they
should have done a little advanced planning like you said,
with the solar panels blinding pilots, as if you couldn't
see that a mile away. Hey, they built the Fukushima
nuclear plant in its tsunami zone, so there's that as well.

Speaker 1 (02:30:55):
What could go wrong?

Speaker 2 (02:30:56):
No, nothing here, No consult a lot of experts before
finally putting the project to final completion. We're going to
bring Jay back for one more and a hub delay update.
We've got problems with Canada as a result of terroriffs here,
bet that in a second hang on, we'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (02:31:14):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 15 (02:31:15):
Get ready.

Speaker 2 (02:31:19):
One more time for the nine first morning with a
forecast clouds in the morning, sunny skies later today at
some point forty four for the high overnight low of
thirty one tomorrow is going to be a media winterry
mixed segue into some rain tomorrow. Fifty one for the
high down to thirty five overnight with clouds at a
partly cloudy Saturday high of forty eight closing out at
thirty four degrees. Time for that final traffic update. Chuck Ingram,

(02:31:39):
But you.

Speaker 13 (02:31:39):
See up Tramp takes center when it comes to multiple sclerosis. Trusts,
the experts at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute for Innovatives
and Comprehensive Care.

Speaker 1 (02:31:48):
Learn more at u S health dot com.

Speaker 13 (02:31:51):
Southbound seventy five break lights continue in and Adam Acklin
just under a ten minute delay northbound seventy five, getting
better under a five minute delay now from a four,
buttermilk into the cut northbound for seventy one. Also improving
between Brand and downtown. Chuck Ingraman fifty five kre see
the talk station eighty eight coul.

Speaker 2 (02:32:12):
Eight forty nine fifty bive KERCD talk station bright thowmas
was I heard media aviation expert Jay rattlift, Well, tariffs
have consequences, and sometimes companies do well childish things. This
is segue over to it's an airline called Flair.

Speaker 19 (02:32:26):
Yes, Flair, it's a Canadian company. When look, I think
they've got twenty whole jets, so of course we haven't
heard of.

Speaker 2 (02:32:31):
Them twenty So what's the deal with Flair?

Speaker 19 (02:32:36):
They're having fun and I do have a problem with this.
They have a fare sale that's going on. It's they're
calling it a tariff sale. In other words, we will
give you a discount. Besides, well, I think it's like
twenty five percent off their low fares and they've been
flying around in Canada for like twenty years and they
have thirty four to thirty five destinations and they said,
we will give you a discounts tariff discount to fly

(02:32:58):
to any destination other than the United State. It's kind
of they're pushed back on the tariffs. And they also say,
Brian for added good measure. Nobody's gonna trump their deals
because it's a good deal. So their Spirit Airlines has
many times taken the headlines of the day and created
I mean they once had a wiener sale because of

(02:33:19):
some politician that was in the Northeast. It was having fun.
So I mean, I never have a problem with the
marketing department having a little fun with you know, with
the headlines. And that's what they're doing. And you know,
if they want to have, you know, have this alone,
that's great. And like I said, it's not going to
impact a whole lot of people. Yeah, I know that
the political ping pong has been going back and forth

(02:33:40):
on the tariffs and a lot of the publicity has
caused a decrease in the demand for travel for people
flying from Canada into the United States. And I know
that there have been some Canadian airlines that have reduced
their flight schedule as a result. It's been minor, but
it's been measurable. So you know, Flair is, you know,
having some fun here and you know they're based out

(02:34:01):
of Toronto, so you could fly up there Air Canada,
connect to Flair and go from there. But yeah, it
was fun to talk about.

Speaker 2 (02:34:07):
Yeah, and it's free publicity for Flair.

Speaker 19 (02:34:10):
Yeah, for all their twenty airplanes that we just came
a free plug. Some of these major carriers we have
in the United States have like over nine hundred if
you need to add a little perspective to this conversation.

Speaker 2 (02:34:23):
And you know, I did see an article. I didn't
realize they had a name, just sort of moving away
from that subject matter to another one that I had
on my shortlist to talk with you about before we
get the hub delays, Jay, I didn't realize there was
a name for them. But those people, those pesky people
who don't board when they're assigned boarding is announced, they're
called gate Live. Didn't know that.

Speaker 19 (02:34:44):
Now, we may not use the overhead airport PA two
to announce them, but these are people that are in
maybe boarding zone nine and they try to board boarding
Zone five right, kind of kind of pressure their way
past the gate agent. And American air Airlines it's been
a ton of money developing a system that, Yeah, if
somebody in Zone nine tries to board with Zone five,

(02:35:06):
some loud alarm goes off to not only embarrass them,
but notify all. Excuse me, we have somebody here who
feels like they're more important everybody else, trying to cut
in front of everybody. They're trying to embarrass these individuals.
But look, the problem is those people can delay a
flight yep, and if you have enough of them, you
can cause the flight to be dispatched late. And American
Airlines is saying, look, late flights cost us a lot

(02:35:27):
of money. We want to be a more reliable airline.
We need people to board when they're supposed to. And
if you've got a ticket that's so cheap that you
board last, guess what you're going to board last. Don't
put your butt up there sooner to try to board
earlier than you're supposed to, because we're going to embarrass you. Now,
I love the attempt, but knowing these kinds of people

(02:35:48):
because of the decades I worked at the Airport Bran.
You know it's not going to mean a thing to
them at all. I don't know what we could ever
do to embarrass them, but I promise you some alarm
with people looking at them, people they'll never see again.
They don't care what people think of them. They're going
to try to do it anyways.

Speaker 2 (02:36:06):
That's so a gate lice. I just got the biggest
kick out of that. Again, didn't know that term existed,
all right, looks like.

Speaker 19 (02:36:12):
It's an official airline germ these days, believe it or not.

Speaker 2 (02:36:15):
That's great. Well, I can anticipate that your hub delay
will include flight disruptions in Minneapolis, Saint Paul.

Speaker 19 (02:36:22):
Having some issues there, also Boston, Salt Lake in LA
when related weather related having all kinds of fun out
there pretty much from one end of the country to
the next. But you know, other than those kind of bookends, Boston,
LA got Salt Lake in there as well as Minneapolis.
The rest of the country is in pretty good shape,
especially if you're going to be headed south. The problem
is if your airplane from Cincinnati to Saint Florida, which

(02:36:43):
would be a great place to go today, is being
routed through Minneapolis. You might see a delay. That's why
if you go to flight aware dot com you actually
put in your flight number to see you know when
it's being tracked. You can actually track the inbound flight
using that free app and see where your inbound airplane
is located to see if you're outbound flight's going to
be on time. Flight aware dot com.

Speaker 2 (02:37:03):
Flight aware dot com always helpful information and funny information
occasionally from Jay Ratlift. Jay, we'll talk again next Thursday.
Good luck and congratulations on the exceptional trading week you had,
he always said to you, not week.

Speaker 19 (02:37:16):
I'm up one hundred and forty three percent for six months.

Speaker 1 (02:37:19):
Oh my god.

Speaker 19 (02:37:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:37:22):
Daytrade fund dot read thanks for reading my emails.

Speaker 19 (02:37:24):
I appreciate that.

Speaker 2 (02:37:25):
I love reading. I'm so happy and proud of you
and what you're able to accomplish on your own, just
for a few hours of work. Every day you meet
more than most people make during a week.

Speaker 19 (02:37:34):
Jay Ratlin stocks brother, that's my passion.

Speaker 2 (02:37:37):
Daytrade fund dot com right free plug. Check it out,
Jay Ratleve. We'll talk next Thursday. Best I have a
great week and better luck. A best luck to your
better half, or good luck and love to your better half,
I should say it's a fifty four folks, fifty five
kars de talk station, Meryl, Canada. Corey Bowman got a
campaign kickoff event taking place on March six. Talk to him,

(02:37:58):
get the podcast A fifty five care seat com Marketing
on your calendar bad Tom Smith Brewing on fifty nine
hundred Madison Road next Thursday, March sixth five point thirty
to seven thirty. So an event worth attending is that tomorrow?
That's actually today, isn't it, Joe? If I lost track
of time, I have it's tonight. Where did the month
of February go? I don't know what planning I'm on anyway.

(02:38:21):
Podcast and Information fifty five krc dot com, domin O'Neil
Donovan and Neil Americans for Prosperity. All you gotta do
is one small step, take one little effort to advance
the agenda here in the state of Ohio for all
of our benefits. The information again blog page fifty five
cars dot com. It doesn't take much. Just in volume,
we can truly make a difference. Mary Greybor with her
book Debunking FDR. You can easily get a copy of

(02:38:43):
that right there. Fifty five krs dot com and encourage
you get your iHeartMedia app while you're there as well.
Tune in tomorrow. Jostrekker's gonna be out. That's okay, Joe,
I wish you well on that and Tech Friday with
Dave Hatter will be on regardless. Joe, thanks for all
that you do producing the program, my friend, and I'll
miss having you on the UH in the booth tomorrow. Folks,

(02:39:04):
have a wonderful day, and don't go whig glund Beck's
coming right up.

Speaker 11 (02:39:07):
News happens fast, stay up to date. At the top
of the hour, We're moving very quickly. Fifty five KRC
the talk station. This report is sponsored by the Music
Saved Me podcast.

Speaker 15 (02:39:20):
I'm

Brian Thomas News

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