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May 1, 2025 169 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five O five. If you about d r C decalk
stations Friday eight.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Some sense, I'm the dude man and.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
I'm Brian Thomas, not the dude. Happy Friday Eve to
you and uh, I hope you're having a wonderful morning.
If not, try to turn it around, make it a
good day. Stick around here all morning.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
Seven O five. Our first guest George Brunneman and Keith Tennenfield,
the Restore Wellness is going to be in studio talking
about wellness from Restoring It.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I've we had quite a few conversations with George and
Keith and they're really, you know, kind of taking the
ball and running with this hopefully growing trend to transfer
America's you know, obvious health problems and morbid obesity problems
and all the other things that are going on in
the world, you know, this RFK Junior sort of movement.

(01:13):
But they got good things to say in positive information.
They got a website that you can turn to with
lots of resources and information. So looking forward to having
George and Keith back in to talk about that. That's
again seven O five Adam Taylor. He'll be in studio
ATO five talk about the Bengals and the county and
the county and the city wasting our money, which kind

(01:35):
of makes me think about issue too, which is a
statewide issue constitutional amendment it is, So maybe we'll get
to that here. In a moment, I heard media aviation
expert Jay Ratliffe passengers Susan American Airlines over a groping incident.
Lufton's Airlines flight forced to make an unscheduled landing because
of a laptop. That's a funny. One update on the

(01:58):
Blackhawk d see plane crass investigation and the real ID
deadline which is Monday. Some people are concerned about real IDs.
I know some various arguments about real life. I've had
one for a long time. I didn't find it very
difficult to obtain, and I never really gave it much

(02:18):
of a thought. I knew it was part of the
you know, that was going to be required in order
to fly. I knew I was going to be flying
at some point, and I really didn't even contemplate it
or really give it any thoughtful analysis. But uh, real
IDs Monday, So do you have one? Are you planning
on flying? So, before I get to it, wasn't really

(02:44):
excuse me get my pipes clear to the morning show
utter a syllable before the mic comes on in five
oh five, So apologies for that. Not sure which direction
I was going to go? Is maybe going to dive
into issue too, but I'd rather talk to you five
one three, seven, four nine fifty five eight eight two
three taco a Town five fifty on eighteen t phones.
Let's see what Keith Scott this morning, first caller out

(03:05):
of the gate. Keith, thank you very much for calling.
I wasn't sure where he was going to go. So
you start the program off.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
Well.

Speaker 5 (03:13):
I don't know if people in the listing audience realize this,
because the news really hasn't hit yet all that much
in the United States, but last night, at four o'clock
in the morning, world War three is probably broken out
Indian Pakistan right now are fighting with each other, yeah,
on the Indian Pakistani border and in the area known

(03:35):
as Kashmere, And believe it or not, countries are already
choosing sides. Like in World War One. The Greek government
and the Italian government, just a little few minutes after
the fighting broke out, has said that they firmly stand
on the side of their ally India in this confrontation.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
Well, you may be right on that. I mean, do
you know which side we're on? Have we decided yet?
Or is it like that scene from Banana in Bananas
where the CIA is on both sides because they they
don't know which side they want to be on.

Speaker 5 (04:13):
Well, I would say we would probably be on India
side because Pakistan is bigger allies with China, and everybody
over in that part of the world wants Kashmere. And
that's what all this confrontation for years has been about.
Everybody wants to control kish Mire.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
And both both sides are nuclear armed.

Speaker 5 (04:38):
Right, and that's what making things more scary, And uh,
it's not. I don't think it's going to get any better.
I think this is like the start of World War three.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
Maybe, Well let me just contemplate that for a moment,
because this came out of left field for me. I
wasn't even thinking about this conflict when you called. But
or world War two broke because people did take sides
and we got involved. Now is it possible that we
all just I mean if I mean, obviously it's theoretical

(05:10):
because everybody wants to get involved and we'll have something
to say about it, and there will be requests for arms,
and there'll be arguments back and forth, and somewhere along
the line. Of course, the United States will be involved,
because apparently we're involved in trying to deal with every
single conflict globally. But theoretically, if everyone stayed away from
it and didn't engage, and we just let Pakistan and

(05:32):
India sort it out, what do you think the result
of that might be?

Speaker 5 (05:37):
The result of that would be we're all dead, because
when they start fired nuclear missiles at each other, we'll
get to fall out too.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Well, there's certainly that possibility. But don't they also face
the threat of assured destruction. I mean, this has been
the argument for years and years about nuclear war, mutually
assured destruction. If one side decides to go nukes, the
other side's gonna go nukes and everybody dies, thus preventing
people from even considering using nuclear weapons. That's why they
stick with conventional weapons.

Speaker 5 (06:08):
But you have to remember, the people that are running
Pakistan are radical, crazy nut jobs, just like the people
in Iran, and they think if they die they will
go to their their they're virgins in heaven, so they
don't care.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
Well I mean that paints with a broad brush because
you know, there's a lot of let's just say, take
the Christian faith. You know, they believe that fine, you know,
if I die, then I'll be embraced in Jesus and
everything's going to be fine and dandy. But they don't
want to die. I mean, the idea of living transcends
this whole idea of of of you know, like martyrdom.

(06:48):
Most people don't want to be martyrs. They'll say it
out loud, but when push comes to shove, they're not
really willing to die for the sake of you know,
going to Allah or going to Heaven, et cetera. That's
just sort of of human nature to want to live
and not die. So just because some of them might
want to be martyrs and there's people out there willing

(07:09):
to blow themselves up in the name of Allah, the
vast majority of them do not. I mean, you know
that that is a percentage of any given religious faith,
there very few willing to really go that step, right,
I mean that, and leaders know that.

Speaker 5 (07:26):
I agree with that. But the nuts that are in
power over there in Pakistan and also Iran, or the
type of radical nut jobs that they don't care if they.

Speaker 6 (07:35):
Go to heaven.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
How do you know that? Have you talked in the
Nandara Modi? I mean, do you really think that Prime
Minister motive.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
You're not talking about I'm not talking about mister Mody.
He probably doesn't want to die and go to heaven.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
Well, there you go.

Speaker 5 (07:48):
People on the other sides that are.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Nuts a tool of Tarar past Pakistan information Minister Pakistan's
credible intligence, any intensive carrying out military action against Pakistan
and then twenty four to thirty six hours this is
what you're referring to on the pretext of contact and
the basis allegations of involvement in the pacast of Polygam incident.
They're just I mean, I don't know, it's posturing by

(08:11):
world leaders. I really don't think that you know they're
interested in going to Allah.

Speaker 6 (08:16):
I hope so well, you know that's not.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
If I'm not going to say the word.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Well, okay, now look pause and reflect on the Like
I said, did the idea if we all step back
and let them argue about among themselves, we're not going
to get it with a nuclear weapon. We blew up
countless nuclear weapons in the Pacific Ocean and in ground
testing out in the Western States during the Cold War.
We didn't die from that, did we. How many nukes

(08:46):
are going to be blown off in Pakistan and India?
I mean, are we really going to get the fallout
from all of that?

Speaker 5 (08:52):
Well, you have to remember those bombs that were exploded
during the times you were talking about now in modern
day society would have been referred to as tactical nukes, okay,
because of the size of the mega tons.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
Yeah, and I don't know what kind of mega tons
they have over there.

Speaker 5 (09:10):
Uh, Indian Pakistan, and it's widely known for a long
time they got the big ones, right.

Speaker 6 (09:17):
Well, I mean that's the problem.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
I'm just left puzzling over the whole thing. Honestly, don't
know a whole lot about the region, the conflict between
the two. Wasn't aware until you brought it up that
it was it was escalating to full on war. So
you did catch me off guard, which I don't mind.

Speaker 6 (09:34):
But it just.

Speaker 5 (09:36):
Happened like four o'clock, I mean in the morning, you know. Now,
And like I said, most people in the United States,
they don't know what's going on now because the news
really hasn't hidden, you know.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Yeah, exactly like well, Keith, including me, I meant to
laugh about Oh no, no, no, no, I'm not suggesting you are.
I'm not suggesting for a moment you are.

Speaker 5 (10:00):
Yeah, I mean, it's just all of a sudden, four
o'clock in the morning, this stuff breaks out.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
Yeah, I can.

Speaker 5 (10:07):
And it's and it's a crazy situation because everybody over
there wants cash Mirror, India, Pakistan, and China. They all
want to control kash Mirror because of the minerals there
that are there. And it's just weird. This happened last
night after that mineral deal was signed with Ukraine.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
Yeah, I don't know that tour connected there's apparently started
as okay, yeah, well, and you know, you speak of
the mineral deal. That was one of the things I
was going to try to address this morning. The mineral
deal is going to join us further to Ukraine and
obligate it is probably the continue funding the war effort.
You know, there's there's a component of this ongoing war

(10:48):
there that is now probably inextricably intertwined or intertwined with
our our mineral deal. So now that we've joined with
Ukraine for the extraction of minerals, we're going to have
an obligation to for provide them with weapons. In fact,
I do believe I read that, so I'm not real
thrilled about that component of it. Joining US with Ukraine.

(11:10):
That suggests probably our military involvement down the road. Thus
else escalating perhaps your concerns about World War three, given
that Rush is on the other side of that conflict.
But yeah, apparently this escalation you're referred to is the
consequence of a terror attack in Kashmir that killed twenty

(11:30):
six tourists, which they say infuriated the Indian government. India
blames Pakistan for the terrorist attack. Now, isn't it weird
you think about the the way wars get started, the crazies,
terrorists or sometimes assassins can kick off global conflict. Frightening stuff, Keith.

(11:52):
I appreciate your bringing it to my attention. I really do.
And that's what the Morning Show is all about, hearing
from you and you know, steering the direction of the conversation. Wow,
a lot to absorb there, five sixteen right now, five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
talk downt fight fifty on AT and T phones. Be
right back after these words.

Speaker 7 (12:12):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
Thinking about buying your first home. About twenty fifty five
KSh you talk station. All right, So I was springing
from that. I was just looking at some moss ABC
News reporting. So, yeah, there was a terrorist attack and
it's escalating the conflicts between India and Pakistan. Pakistan and
India blaming Pakistan for it. Pakistan, of course, denied that

(12:38):
they had any connection to it. Apparently the terrorist attack
did target a specific religious group, which Pakistan, you know Indian.
Accord to the Prime Minister, it was a targeted targeted
a certain community, the Hindus, targeting our secular fabric. Media report,
citing survivors of the attack said the militants identify tourists

(13:00):
by religion, shooting only Hindus. India hasn't yet provided any
evidence on how Pakistan was involved. But there in lies
the challenge, one side saying one thing, the other side
saying another. So in terms of nuclear conflict, Lieutenant General Shukla,
let's see who that guy? Who he is? Tribes quickly

(13:25):
trying to get to the bottom of this, Folks, sorry,
because nuclear war kind of does bother me. Crisis could
be bloody and it could be a long haul. Retired
Indian colonel and defense commander A.

Speaker 6 (13:36):
GI.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Shukla said both countries were in a difficult position. Unless
there's something to diffuse these tensions, something that provides a
face saving way out, there's very little anyone can do.
G He sounds like Ukraine Russia. One professor hall military
retaliation against Pakistan likely, nature of the response unprecedented. I
would anticipate that we would again see something new this time.

(13:58):
It's entirely possible they try to strike our in Pakistan
using sea based missiles because Pakistan's air defenses are on
high alert and watching very carefully across the line of
control in Kashmir, whatever we see will be essentially be
a surprise. While experts say conventional military confrontation is likely,
a nuclear conflagration is not. India has no first use

(14:22):
policy on nuclear weapons, whereas Pakistan said will use them
if it faces an existential threat. Now, in terms of
nuclear arsenals, it's abc reporting. India has one hundred and
seventy two nuclear warheads, Pakistan has one hundred and seventy,
so equal playing field in terms of nukes. Lieutenant General
Shutklus said members of Pakistani establishment were intelligent and would

(14:44):
not go up the nuclear ladder, despite leaving that option open.
Between terror and the nuclear threshold, there is a whole
lot of space for conventional operations, which of course is
where it logically would start. They would fight using conventional
weapons until something someone like Pakistan faces an existential threat

(15:06):
and says, geez, we're losing the war, and they may
be unloads on nuclear weapons. But he's speaking with ABC
for New Delhi. He said that international community would not
allow that is highly unlikely. So there's where your world
powers come in. He said, China would definitely intervene on
Pakistan's side, and the US and Russia would try to
play honest broker and matters would grind to a halt

(15:28):
without a conclusive ending. That's how we get involved. So
that's where I suppose your your your world War three
comes into play, with both sides taking sides with nuclear
massive nuclear warhead arsenals, with global world powers like China

(15:49):
and the United States and Russia coming into play on that.
Washington based South Asia analyst Michael Kuglman told ABC that
an all out war is unlikely, but it couldn't be
ruled out. Ah See, there you go. You can. Maybe
it will, maybe it won't, says. The fact that both
countries have nuclear weapons acted as a deterrent to full

(16:09):
blown conflict. See therein lies that whole idea of mutually
assured destruction. And if you think about if you're a
leader of Pakistan or leader of India, you're millions and
millions of your own people are going to be wiped out.
Even if the rest of the world stayed out of it,
and we weren't worried about nuclear fallout and we didn't
have to interject our thoughts and opinions on the matter,

(16:30):
and and and and and reach out to these world leaders. Oh,
cool things down. We're all gonna die. Their own population
is going to get devastated by this. It's the problem
of being a world leader. I don't know. It's frustrating,
isn't it. It's a shame stating the obvious. We all

(16:52):
just can't get along nicely. Why is that? Think about that.
It's like the divisions we have within the United States.
Under our own little umbrella here we have freedom and liberty,
and we can all mutually play together if we just

(17:13):
stayed out of each other's spaces, left each other alone,
went to our job, performed our task, earned our salaries
in our living, and then minded our own business. There's
nothing wrong with that concept of freedom and liberty, right.
Why can't Pakistan just play in its own yard and
India stay in its own yard? And I don't know
what the people in Kashmir want, no idea, I don't

(17:38):
know that. That really threw me a curve ball this morning, Keith,
I gotta be honest with you. I just I really
not quite sure how to process that situation. But you know,
damn well, we're going to be involved with it, because geez,
we always are. Five twenty five or talk station. Oh

(18:01):
look I have local stories. Or if you want to
talk about World War three, you feel free five one
three seven five eight hundred eight two three talk found
five fifty on AT and T phones. Remember fifty five
KRC dot com get your podcast or I heard media
app use the way you can. We may not be
around tomorrow.

Speaker 8 (18:20):
Be right back fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
Elections are about choices. Five on three seven fifty two
three talk pound five fifty on AT and t punds.
Let's go to the phones. I do have local stories
talk about, but I got New Hampshire Gary on the line.
Maybe he can solve the problem. New Hampshire Gary, welcome
back to the program. Good to hear from you, my friend.

Speaker 6 (18:42):
Hie Hey, Brian, good to hear from you. I'm just
gonna throw you a curve ball.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
Oh great, keep me on my heels, knock me out.
Keith's Gary. I'm sorry kidding. I didn't really to be
thinking about World War three this morning, So go ahead.

Speaker 6 (19:04):
I'm sorry. I don't mean to take you.

Speaker 1 (19:06):
No, No, it's okay. I'm rolling with it.

Speaker 6 (19:10):
I do believe we're heading towards World War three. It's
probably going to take another couple of years before it
gets there. But I have been watching this over the
Pakistan for weeks. This has been going on for weeks.
It's now escalating, but it all came from the PTERIS attack,
the cutting off of water rights from Pakistan, and basically

(19:32):
it's going to scar them. But something else I know
that I've been watching for the last three years is
that isis K along with ISIS, has been attacking the
nuclear facilities that are holding the nuclear bombs over in
Pakistan ever since we left Afghanistan, and they're trying to

(19:56):
get to the news, you know, and if you throw that,
you know what, you're always weakest. You let your friends
argue amongst themselves at Tagistan and India, and then when
you know they're going to be busy going other things,
that's when you would like to attack. That's how that
could escalate, you.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
Know, the diversion.

Speaker 6 (20:15):
Yeah, and they are world leaders and they are more
they don't care. You know. It's things like that that
could I'm not saying, well, but could and you probably
would throw that in with China is probably going to
march in blockade uh Taiwan.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
Yeah, that see. You know, if I had yet asked me,
you know, at the outside of the program, where do
you think World War three would actually start? I would
think it'd be more likely with the invasion of Taiwan.
But yeah, well, I mean we got a mixed bag
going on out there, as you illustrate, you know, the
Chinese with their desires for Taiwan and they're they're they're
taking over the h the South China Sea. We got

(20:59):
Rush in Ukraine to deal with, We've got the crazies. Now,
going back to keys points, I think that I would
like to think and pray here. I am praying that
the leaders of Pakistan and India might have cooler heads
about the idea of using nuclear weapons. But when you
and I pointed out to that not everybody's a fundamentalist
willing to die. But if you talk about people like isis,

(21:22):
that's a collection of crazies. Now I'm not quite sure
how many there are, but you know, if you had
to identify a particular seemingly organized, although loosely so, group
of people that might represent an existential threat if they
got their hands on NU because they most certainly, in
my mind, would probably use them, not sure to what success.

(21:42):
But that's a group of crazies, right, I mean, And
that kind of value you take that you're you're you're
willing to fall on the sword for your faith. Not
already in every nation it feels that way. So I
don't know a lot to digest this morning, kind of

(22:04):
putting a damper on a Thursday Friday eve, But this
is the world we find ourselves in. Five on three
seven nine fifty eight hundred eight two three talk pound
five fifty on at and t phones. Well, I guess
maybe that's an incentive, you know, because every day we

(22:24):
face the reality that we might not be here tomorrow.
Our loved ones might not be here tomorrow. The world's
an imperfect place. Bad things happen unexpectedly, losing loved ones.
Or maybe you are the one that's lost and your
loved ones are left to you know, reflect and contemplate
on Well, I wish I'd have spent more time with

(22:44):
the person that I love because they're not here anymore.
Perhaps a suggestion we should perhaps live in the moment
a little bit more and be thankful for what we
have while we have it. None of us know in
the day, Donovan and New Americans for Prosperity was then

(23:08):
moving over in another direction on the program the other day,
talking about the energy bill. Well, after nearly six years
of higowallmakers passed Hospital six legislators, I'm sorry dealing with
Hospital six, remember the notorious one that resulted in corruption
in the collapse of administration. Yeah, hio SMIT unanimously approved
Houspill fifteen energy bill to generate more energy without raising

(23:30):
Ohioan's bills. Through several changes, now we eliminate fees on
Ohio's electric bill to pay for two coal plants, and
I thought that was rather bizarre. Coal plants owned by
the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation, including one in Indiana. Those fees,
which have been collected more than four hundred and sixty
seven million dollars since twenty twenty, were added to a
nuclear bailout bill to Garnimore support. House Bill six was

(23:52):
at the center of the State House paid a play scandal.
Senator Kent Smith from Euclid Hospital fifteen contains huge wins
for consumers that have been scarred by a house Built
six scandal, but most importantly keeps money in the pockets
of hard working on highlands. And that's the conclusion that
Americans were prosperted down on, Neil said. He said, we're

(24:12):
all going to sort of benefit from this. Reduces taxes
on business property, tangible personal property for new energy generators
from twenty five percent down to seven percent, for new transmission,
distribution and pipeline infrastructure from eighty eight percent down to
twenty five percent beginning in counter of your twenty twenty
seven eliminates fees for a Little Use solar energy program.
YAY requires utilities to refund refund customers after a House

(24:37):
Supreme Court finds their fees were unlawful, improvener improper consumer
advocates wanted full refunds. Instead, require utilities to publish heat
maps of their capacity on their websites and not quite
sure how that's going to impact you and me, submit
a full review of what they plan to charge customers
called rate cause every three years they need to tell

(24:58):
us about it. Also eliminates electric security plans that allowed
companies to tack on fees with limited oversight, and finally
creating priority investment areas speeding up projects, and eliminate tangible
personal property tax for five years. Overall. You know, Donovan
and Neil was pointing quite a few of these out
in a little bit more detail yesterday you can listen

(25:18):
to the podcast. But it passed and that he anticipated.
So now he's going to be on a drive to
for us to thank our senators and our representatives for
moving forward with this and providing us, hopefully with some
recognizable relief on our energy bills and hopefully paving the
way for a more productive Ohio along the lines of

(25:40):
maybe some modular nuclear plans. Set five point thirty six
here fifty five kc DE talk station. Do a stack
is stupid, but again, rather talk to you, even if
it's about World War three five three two three talk.
I'll be right back, fifty five the talk station.

Speaker 7 (26:00):
If you're living with.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
CA's your channel nine weather forecasts. Scattered afternoon storms developing
around one pm today. Seventy eight will be our high today,
Overnight low fifty nine with a slight chance of storms.
Scattered afternoon storms tomorrow, otherwise mostly cloudy with the highest
seventy two, slight chancering overnight with the low forty five,
and then for Flying Pig Marathon Saturday's body showers with

(26:26):
the titty with a fifty percent chance of range sixty
three degrees for the high. Right now lost my time,
it disappeared. Let's just get the first traffic from the uc.

Speaker 9 (26:39):
UP Tramfhics center you see helpway loss center offers comprehensible
Bcdcaren advanced Sarge to co expertise caught five one three
nine nine two two sixty three nine twenty two sixty
three High rate tramfics doing fine. To start off your
Thursday morning with no problems or delays at the moment,
but cruis are working with an accident with an entrapment
on Gobret at seventy five also wreck in Middletown on

(27:03):
Central at University chuck Ingramont fifty five K see the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Sixty seven is the answer to the question sometimes the
computer just doesn't want to cooperate with me. Got them
at five forty fIF five KOC talk station. But it was stacking,
stupid and considering conversation about World War three is a
little concerning and catching me off guard.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
It will be a nice, lighthearted thing to dive on
into that, but first let's see what Steve's got to say. Steve,
thanks for calling this morning. Welcome to the program.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
Yes, sir, sitting by an open window, beautiful breeze coming
in this morning, fresh air with after the rain. It's
just really nice.

Speaker 1 (27:39):
Living in the moment. You're living in the moment, Steve.

Speaker 6 (27:41):
Good for you enjoying life.

Speaker 4 (27:43):
Well, I'll tell you what before you chase me back
into bed and I pull the covers over my head.
We need a little levity.

Speaker 10 (27:50):
So I cannot wait until the Cutting Edge News update
at six o'clock and we find out which celebrity which
celebrity is getting divorce or getting married, or.

Speaker 4 (28:03):
Who got nominated for an award? So, uh, what's your
shows out of the way. We'll get the cutting edge
news and we can all you know, the world will
be okay.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
Have you ever noticed that sometimes that you know, the
news just sort of cuts off, usually when it's.

Speaker 4 (28:20):
A celebrity related that the electrical system wire it's just
your coincidence. I have no idea.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
I know, and I all the time and it's like,
I don't know, man, I don't know what happened.

Speaker 4 (28:37):
The funniest thing is they're allocated I don't know, thirty
seconds or for whatever time they've got, and it'll be like,
you know, major things happened, and they always put something
in there that is so irrelevant. It's just not even
it's not even funny.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
But a widely shared perception of the news media organization
that we're affiliated with. But you know, when you buy discount,
that's what you get, Steve, That's why we have it.
Who's the cheapest out there that we can use for
our national news here? I got my hand up, all right,
We'll take you. Sorry to be critical, but that's just

(29:15):
the reality of what we deal with here, which is
why I love the fact that Joe Strecker's producer of
the fifty five Casey Morning Show, because we don't have
to digest that crap at least sometimes. Ah Man, and
they bet they won't be reporting about the situation between
Pakistan and India. Okay, we go to South Ogden, Utah.

(29:37):
Residents described as shocked after a seven year old boy,
along with his sister younger, drove his mom's car through
several towns on a ten mile trip eight a m. Sunday.
Officers with the Ogden Police Department got to call it
a reckless driver, specifically at twenty first Street and Wall Avenue.
The caller said the car wasn't staying in, it's laying in.

(29:59):
The driver to be really young, Yeah, I'd say really
high traffic area. Police found out the boy and his
younger sister had actually gotten behind the wheel of this
ten mile trip. One person who works near where the
car stopped honestly crazy to me. I can't believe that
he had the knowledge to really know how to drive

(30:21):
a car or even reach the pedal. Yeah, that's what
was puzzling me. Police cut up with the juvenile driver
that tried to pull him over, but he didn't stop.
They didn't chase him out of safety concerns. They later
found the car about three miles down the road from
where it was called in near fortieth Street. The car
had hit a parking strip and was disabled. Police said
both children were okay and back with their guardians. No

(30:42):
injuries reported. It's the Augden Police Department and the Mayor
of Ogden declined an interview Local News Arcadie, Florida, DeSoto
County Sheriff's Office offering a criminal fashion tip tiger print

(31:05):
isn't camouflage. Funny picture. Deputy's looking for a woman they
say stole an adult tricycle from a residence on Southeast
Plumb Drive, seen on a doorbell camera wearing a giant
tiger print onesie. Thanks to social media, suspect quickly identified
as Emily Hesters. According to the Sheriff's office, attempts to

(31:26):
locator have been unsuccessful. Her voicemails full of her old
address says she's not welcome and the tricycle remains missing.
If you spot someone riding off in a tiger runsie
on a tricycle and they gave a phone number The
Sheriff's Office announcement set five forty five five cairs de
talk station. Oh my god, Foreign Exchange. Get your car

(31:49):
repaired to Foreign Exchange. You got a traditionally manufacture from
an imported car. I always like say traditionally, because you
know a Toyota is considered import even though maybe made
right here. But Foreign Exchange is the point, because the
point is you want to save money, but you want
your car under full. You're repaired with a full warranty
on parts and service. You get that, you get great
customer service. I would argue more than likely, if not definitely,

(32:09):
better than the dealership. People are quite unsatisfied with dealership
customer service. But you're gonna be treated wonderfully at Foreign Exchange.
I can assure you of that. And of course you're
going to pay less, which is the reasons for their existence.
They know you don't have to be charged as much
of the dealer charges you. So have an a SE
certified Master technician work on your car. Get a fixed

(32:30):
to your satisfaction. You got a loaner vehicle need They
got them there Bosch certified business it is. I choose
the Westchester location of Foreign Exchange, where awesome. The team
will definitely treat you right. That's a Tylersville Legs at
offic seventy five head east, just two streets hanging right
on Kinglin and you are there. You're there online at
foreign xform theletterax dot com. So save some money. I

(32:51):
know car repairs are really expensive and can be they're
just going up. But this is an opportunity for you
to be very happy and keep more money in your pocket,
which I always love to reach them by phone five
one three six four four twenty six twenty six five
one three six four four twenty six twenty six.

Speaker 11 (33:07):
Fifty five KRC dot com. What if you had an
extra thousand?

Speaker 1 (33:11):
Round one o'clock, we may start getting some afternoon storms.
Today's high is going to be seventy eighth Opennight slight
chance of storms continues with mostly cloudy skies and are
dropped to fifty nine. Seventy two to the high tomorrow
with mostly cloudy, scattered afternoon storms possible. Also slight chanceer
rain overnight forty five and for the flying Pigs Saturday,
spotty showers fifty percent chance and a high of sixty three.

(33:35):
It's sixty seven right now. Let's hear about traffic.

Speaker 12 (33:38):
From think U see up Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (33:39):
You see how weight Ball Center offers comprehensive of bcdcaren
advanced searge of co expertise call five one three nine
three nine two two sixty three. That's nine three nine
twenty two sixty three. Highway traffic not fad to deal
with early on this Thursday morning. No accidents on the highways.
There is a wreck on Gabbarth just off of seventy

(34:01):
five with an entrapman North Bend seventy five under seven
minutes between Erlinger and town chock Kingbram on fifty five
k see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Fifty fifty five kers. Detalk stations always say without Joe,
the show don't go, and I always appreciate everything. As
as executive producer pointed out, the Flying Pig activities begin
on Saturday, and my weather report just say is flying
Pig on it? So that's all I was saying. Not
a Marinton or am I. But the five k's and
other events kick off on Saturday. Apparently the marathon itself
is Sunday, so weekend activities and there will be road

(34:34):
closures and the like. So if you're planning on going
downtown and are not familiar with the Flying Pig, don't
plan on participating. You may get caught up in the activities.
So just a heads up for those planning on heading
downtown over the weekend. So thank you, Joe. Well what
I do Without you? I think I would retire? Oh well,

(34:56):
we got a local guy made it into the stack
of stupid. Props to Kevin Groscher from this since the
inquirer for bringing this to my field division. He writes
the actions of one time you see health doctor who
performed ultrasounds in his apartment on the genitals of men

(35:18):
who actually went there for heart scans. A judge ruled
inappropriate and incomprehensible, but that he didn't commit any crimes.
What bench Trabigan. April twenty ninth, Heimil Kennynsipal Judge Jenia
Trotter Bratton found Rudell Saunders not guilty of misdemeanor's sexual

(35:42):
imposition and voyeurism charges in addition to performing the ultrasounds
in the bedroom of saunders North Side apartment. The examinations
were video recorded. Judge said it was difficult to make
me not guilty finding quote because everything about this is inappropriate.

(36:03):
She said city prosecutors didn't prove that the contact was
for the sole purpose of sexual gratification and not for
any medical purpose. She said she had I can think something,
but it's not what's been proven. His medical license was

(36:24):
revoked in twenty twenty three. Now he still faces felony
charges of practicing medicine without a license. State medical boards
and twenty twenty three said the ultrasounds were done quote
without any legitimate healthcare purpose close quote and without patient consent.
Rutcord show Sunder has appealed the license revocation. Well, pause

(36:46):
for a moment. Let's assume, for the sake of discussion,
that the license is reinstated. Would you go to this guy?
Seems to me the word would get around, reputations, slightly
turn it and the judges sitting in a decision. Trotter
Branton said that there hadn't been any testimony showing whether
or not there is a legitimate medical purpose for ultrasounding

(37:08):
someone's testicles. She said, there was, in her words, a
gaping hole, and I see why I paused. I knew
Joe's going to hit that. In the prosecution's argument, asking
her to find that Saunders' actions didn't have any medical purpose. Quote.
This court can only make a determination based upon what
evidence is put into the record close quote. No doctors

(37:33):
testified during the non jury trial. Three men, all had
become friends with Saunders through a running group took to
the standard described how he convinced them on various dates
in twenty twenty two to come to his home for
the ultra sounds. It's an apartment. One of the men,
in his late twenties at the time, said he and
Saunders would run together regularly. The man told Saunders about

(37:54):
how his father suffered a heart attack at a young age. Saunders,
he testified, told him that his father's experience would be
a good reason to look at his heart health. Also,
according to testimony, Saunders told the man that he was
required to complete one hundred ultrasounds for a certification, something
that the State Medical Board said was false. Man went
to Saundra's apartment June twenty two for the ultrasound. After

(38:17):
asking the man to take off his shirt, Saunders had
the man lay on his back on the bed with
a towel covering his midsection. He was wearing shorts. The
man held Saunder's cell phone on one hand, which showed
the ultrasound's images. After checking the man's heart and next,
Saunders told the man that the last part of the
exam would involve his testicles.

Speaker 6 (38:38):
What.

Speaker 1 (38:39):
In the video which played to the court, the man
could be heard saying, what perfectly timed sound by Joe.
He tested that. I was shocked when he said it.
It all just happened really fast. I didn't really know
what to do. Apparently that part of the examination lasted
a few minutes. A quarter of the testimony. After leaving

(38:59):
the apartment, the man said, I texted his wife and
asked her to call. He said, I was really uncomfortable
and upset about what occurred, and I walked. I wanted
to talk to her about it. It's good to have
someone to get things off your shoulders. All three men
apparently consented to the medical evaluations, and Saunder's demeanor was
quote unquote professionally support of his attorney. No evidence that

(39:19):
Saunders derived as sexual gratification from anything that happened. There's
no flag for us. There you have it. Thank you, Joe.
Coming up a five to sixty five kis of the
talk station. Anything you want to talk about? Coming up.
I'll take it. I just I'm still reeling from World

(39:41):
War Three and then the conversation we had earlier in
the program and it's kind of got me down. I'll
be honest with you, regardless, we will continue after the
top of the our news.

Speaker 11 (39:51):
News happens fast, stay up to date at the top
of the hour. Not going to be complicated.

Speaker 2 (39:56):
It's going to go very fast.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
Fifty five KRC the talk station all about the presets
is the.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
Five ifinky five PERCD talk station. And try to have
a happy Thursday. Fin time is here welcoming phone calls.
Still reeling from the Keiths call this morning. The'll come
at the situation unfolding between India and Pakistan and H.
I just I was reading updates on that. H everybody's
expecting this thing to escalate and pretty quickly, which is

(40:25):
delicately stated, unsettling to say the least, considering both are
you know, have one hundred and seventy or so nuclear
weapons and so Pakistan is right now saying it. I mean,
within the last thirty six minutes an article came up
as Pakistan has credible intelligence India is planning imminent military
action against it. So tensions obviously really high. Pakistan's Information minister,

(40:53):
a guy named Attulah Tarar, claiming the information showing India
could launch an attack within the next twenty four to
thirty six hours. Again this is reported. They just came
up within the last hour, So frightening stuff there. China,
of course on the side of Pakistan, but really limited,
so they have there's just hesitation to really conclude how
much China would be involved. And of course India has

(41:17):
the backing of a number of countries. So that's how
you end up talking about World War three, which again unsettling. Yeah,
just a scoch coming up one hour from now, lighthearted
conversation in the name of Wellness. George Brunneman and Keith
Tennenfell returned to the program in studio to talk about

(41:37):
Restore Wellness, the work that they are doing to get
us all in touch with a better way to live,
try to, you know, treat our bodies better, eat better,
engage in healthy lifestyles. And they're just they're really they're
great guys, and I'm glad to be able to move
in that direction for an hour after the unsettling conversations
we had in the last hour, and probably unsettling conversations

(41:57):
in this hour Adam Kahler, he returns the studio, we'll
talk about the Bengals in the county and the accounting
of the city wasting our money, which kind of makes
me want to talk about issue too, Jay Rattler if
I heard mediaviation expert out. After Adamant leaves the study,
he'll be on at a thirty. We've got a variety
of things to talk about with him, and I always
love those conversations. Is a good way to segue into

(42:19):
a Friday. So that'll take place at a thirty. You
can feel free to call five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three
pound five fifty on eight pound five fifty on AT
and T phones. Now, you know a lot of people
have been asking about this issue issue too, which everybody's
going to be voting on. It's a reason to vote
gon decide whether to renew a program that apparently helps

(42:42):
local governments support public infrastructure projects. It's a constitutional amendment,
and I am puzzling over the need for it. Now.
Apparently every ten years, voters choose whether or not to
renew the state's ability to issue billions of bonds for

(43:05):
the State Capital Improvement Program SCIP and the Local Transportation
Improvement Program LTIP. Last year, the amount would be two
point five billion. The resolution will increase the annual amount
for this program from two hundred million to two hundred
and fifty million per year, paid for through the state's
general obligation debt, which means it's just paid for by

(43:28):
the state taxpayers. Right the grants. The bonds that are
issued under this roads bridges, water supply, wastewater treatments, stormwater collection,
solid waste disposal, and they must be used for these
types of projects. I guess it's limited use. Can't be
used for other types of projects, like, for example, the
bonds that are going to be issued maybe for the

(43:50):
Cleveland Browns Stadium six hundred million dollars in bonds. Apparently
it's not related to that kind of stuff. It's reported
that it has bipartisan support to how Chamber of Commerce
and each trade union also reported they're no official active
campaign against it. But what are our current taxes going for?

(44:13):
Why do they need more money? Why do we have
to go into debt to pay for these types of projects?
See this to me is boils down to a reflection
of the expansion of government and the giving in by
our elected officials to every single whim and demand that
any given person wants to impose upon government. Ergo the
Ohio taxpayer. If our infrastructure is collapsing, why is that

(44:38):
the case. It's like the city of Cincinnati. You know,
you got all these roads and bridges or brother potholes,
and all this infrastructure need and demand that has gone
neglected and ignored for decades. They have obligations to repair
a certain number of road miles annually, and they never
meet that demand. They never stay up on top of

(44:59):
what they already are responsible for. And yet at the
same time they go out and build more projects and
take on more obligations. They pursue green new deal kind
of stuff and engage in and and and and impose
upon us additional burdens while ignoring what they've already burdened
us with, and go further into debt and create further

(45:21):
problems by neglected infrastructure. We got to deal with the
roads every single day. Oh my god, look at this
road I gotta drive on. How come this hasn't been repaired?
While they're over there busy doing something else. I mean,
part of me wants to recommention the streetcar and we
put that's it's already there. But they build a streetcar
and we're obilgeted to pay five million dollars a year
for maintenance and upkeeping debt service on that thing, and

(45:43):
we're gonna be continuing to pay for that forever. It
doesn't benefit that many people while they ignore things that
we all use. You pay tax, and you got tax,
and you tax, and the state's gonna borrow more money
to do infrastructure. What about using what they already take

(46:06):
from us to take care of the infrastructure and quit
chasing other things. State Representative Jennifer Gross Westchester pointed out
the original project that this issue to deals with was
about one billion dollars, goes back to nineteen eighty seven.
She said the bond issue in nineteen eighty seven under

(46:27):
Governor's Celeste was because our roads, etc. Were in disrepair.
Back then, it was critical to address a backlog of
local infrastructure needs as aging roads and bridges strained existing
revenues amid rising costs and traffic demands. Why do we
keep renewing it with increases, she posted, it's a good question,

(46:55):
And to me, this represents an opportunity to strangle government
and say, you know what, how about no? How about
no deal with it? Say no to people who are
trying to put their hand in the cookie jar for
additional things that they want from government. No, I'm sorry,

(47:15):
We're tapped out. We have roads that we need to
take care of, and that's what this tax money is
supposed to go to. That's what our gas taxes for,
that's what part of the income taxes for, the which
we'd like to eradicate. Just how about no. They feel
the need to do something. You know, we need to
build a new, bright and shiny object. We know we
need to scape park. Let's put a skate park in.

(47:36):
Have you allocated revenue to take care of that as
it gradually falls into a state of disrepair over the
years after you've built it. No, we actually didn't think
about that. I'm a no on this one. Voting yes
renews the public works project and expands the amount and

(47:58):
let us more from the let's not site of the
fact that it's a constitutional amendment, You're not going to
get a chance to undo it. It's gonna stay in place,
you know. And I've been just sort of summarizing it
as a slush fund. You know, it's a slush fund,

(48:20):
and God knows where it's gonna go. And they see
there in lines also the challenge. You know, it says
it's for roads and bridges and water supplying wastewater treatment.
What particular type of project is it going for? And
you know why unions love this. They're in favor of
because they're the ones that are going to be building
the projects at a significantly increased expense over maybe non

(48:40):
union contractors who will probably be out of the loop.
It's too hazy, it's too ripe for abuse in my perspective,
if you give them money, and how could you really
really give any voter the comfort that it's not going
to go to some wasteful perhaps like global warming related

(49:01):
project wastewater treatment.

Speaker 2 (49:03):
Hmm.

Speaker 1 (49:04):
Now there's a way to treat waste water, and there's
another way to treat waste water, and I'm supposed that
the global warming or climate change folks are going to
demand it to be done a certain particular type of way,
which will make it a far exceed what we could
do on a more efficient way. But you see, if
you give them the money. That's what they're gonna do.
They're gonna be all these arguments about each individual program.

(49:24):
How woult we just say no, I've had it. Stuff
drive me out of my mind. Government has gotten way
too big and they're way too inefficient, you know. I mean,
that's one of the reasons I like Doege. It's like
they're pointing out what they do with your money. There's
not enough oversight, there's not enough fiduciary responsibility by our

(49:47):
elected officials for what we do each and every day,
which is go to work, and they take our money
from us, and they throw it away on things that
do absolutely nothing to be to fit us, the ones
who generated the revenue. And it's never enough, is it.

Speaker 6 (50:06):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (50:07):
Look, thirty six trillion dollars in growing Hmmm. You can
feel free to talk me off the ledge and I'm
on right now. Five one, three, seven, nine fifty five hundred,
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KRC the talk station the Hamilton Here it is here
Channel nine. Weather forecasts scattered afternoon storms developing around one
pm today seventy It'll be our high today over night

(51:56):
a little fifty nine with a slight chance of storms
remaining cloudy. Sky is tomorrow with some scattered afpnon storm
of a possibility, highest seventy two with an overnight goal
of forty five. It's light chancer in and the beginning
of the Flying Pig activities starts Saturday. It's gonna be
spotty showers, fifty percent chance of rain and the highest
sixty three sixty eight degrees. Right now, it's about care

(52:16):
CEV talk stations traffic.

Speaker 9 (52:19):
Probably you see how Tramphing Center and you see Wayball
Center offers comprehensive obesity care and advanced sarge Co expertise
called five one three, nine three, nine two two sixty three.
That's nine three, nine twenty two sixty three. Highways are
doing fine this morning, no major problems to deal with
at the moment.

Speaker 12 (52:36):
Northbound fourth seventy one included.

Speaker 9 (52:39):
That's under five minutes from two seventy five into town
in Bend seventy four.

Speaker 12 (52:43):
Looks good.

Speaker 9 (52:43):
Do at Montana chuck ingramont fifty five. Care see the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (52:55):
It's six twenty one if if you have KRE see
the talk station five one three in four nine fifty
five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three. Talk
with Pound five fifty. If you have an AT and
T phone, feel free to call. Take me in any
direction you want this morning. As World War three breaks
out in Indian between Indian and Pakistan, let us see here.

(53:16):
You know it's stone that a ran about issue too.
And turning back to the City of Cincinnati. I thought
there was a Bill Frost who was an opinion contributed
to the Cincinnia Choir, and this was making the rounds
on Facebook the other day. And you know, I am
still just incense by the just colossal disregard of the
elected officials. Since any city council members and the mayor
for disregarding the will of the people in connection with

(53:38):
their desires for their own communities within the limits of
the City of Cincinnati, ignoring town councils and imposing their
will and on zoning. You know that high Park contingency
was against the waiver of the city authorized. I mean
overwhelmingly they seem to be against the city offering this

(54:00):
waiver and allowing the developer to put this massive new
development in, you know, big of the hotel and exceeding
the height limits and changing and transforming the nature of
Hyde Park Square. And I feel for them in that regard.
They have a unique thing going on. Say we you
know what about Hyde Park Love it, hate it regardless.
It is a beautiful little, you know, square they've got.

(54:22):
And I can understand their desire to want to have
their own direction and steer. What type of developments are there?
Why wouldn't you it's your community. Ah, But the city's
got other ideas, And so Bill Foss writes, and thankfully
the Cincinnaian Inquirer published it. Remember you have choices with

(54:44):
the ballot within the City of Cincinnati elections coming up
to say a counselman Mark Jefferies, he writes, made a
troubling comment on wvx U Cincinnati edition during April twenty
eighth panel discussion about the city Council's vote on the
highly contested Hyde Park Square development. During a back and
forth about the validity of community councils community councils, Jeffrey

(55:05):
said a neighborhood council once asked for a kickback from
a developer to get approval for a project, as if
that doesn't happen on city council. He didn't provide any
details or proof of his claim. However, his comment was
used in a way to vilify and dismiss our community councils,

(55:25):
unpaid volunteers who cared deeply about their neighborhoods and the
residents who live around them. See, it's a valid point
about local control, isn't it. The further away from local
control you are, the less likely it is that your
lords and masters in elected capacity are going to care
or understand what you want. Brian interjects over the words

(55:46):
of Bill Frost. Sorry Bill for interjecting your commentary, but
it's a great illustration to that very point. This pompous
attitude right shows the slight regard that council has for
city residents. With the Connected Communities legislation and the complete
sham of a community process before, it comes as no

(56:07):
surprise that our city leaders believe they know better than
residents and will do as they please despite often vigorous,
professional and well organized feedback. The city Council now on
two year terms instead of four, approved as a way
to remind elected leaders who put them there. It's hard
to imagine what we have to do to get a

(56:29):
council that actually represents our city, listens to the electorate,
and has a willingness to work with other elected bodies
to find the best solutions. For Jeffries to throw out
an allegation against a neighborhood council about development fraud so
soon after one third of city council was found guilty
of corruption is full of irony. It's time our city

(56:53):
Council got back into the business of communicating, discussing, and
listening to the city residents in business says, and less
time thinking about the missions passed down by their party bosses.
Cincinnati deserves a representative council. This is a Council election year.
I hope everyone remembers the attitude this mayor and a

(57:15):
large number of this council when they have a chance
to make a statement voting early November. Bill Frost, thank
you for writing that. You make great points. He's a
board member of the Charter Committee and former president of
the pleasant Ridge Community Council. Yeah, Corey Bowman, how about

(57:36):
giving him a shot. Let's get Corey way ahead of
a have to have provoll in the overall vote and
as we head in November, and give him some momentum.
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Speaker 11 (59:04):
Turn out your radio. Here's a Sean Hannity Morning Minute.

Speaker 13 (59:10):
Look this this one hundred days of Trump have been
nothing short of historic. One of the things you've you've
got to understand and maybe appreciate throughout the next you know,
three and three quarter years that we have left with
Donald Trump here is you're not going to see any
or three and two thirds, whatever whatever the number is

(59:33):
years that we have left with him, assuming stays healthy,
assuming that that you know, there's not another would be
assassin out there, God forbid. And there's been so much
violet rhetoric it's it's absolutely chilling. But let me tell
you this, this is not a president you will see
often in the course of history.

Speaker 14 (59:55):
Check out the Sean Hannity radio show later today right here.
Attention retirement savers. JP Morgan predicts a twenty twenty five
recession as tariff's rattle markets. According to Forbes, twenty twenty
five recession risks just increased significantly, and Ray Dalio warns

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Speaker 1 (01:01:04):
Fast and Pro Roofing a reputable company that provides quality
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nine weather forecast. Let us see here afternoon storms they
say they develop around one pm today seventy eight or

(01:01:24):
high overnight low of fifty nine with a slight chance
of storms. We'll have mostly blottiest skies tomorrow. Scouted afternoon
storms are possible seventy two for the high, down to
forty five overnight with a slight chance rain. Beginning of
the Flying Pig weekend starts Saturday, We're gonna have a
fifty percent chance of this body shower and a high
sixty three sixty eighth degrees right now for the five
ker cite talk station let us hear about traffic conditions

(01:01:47):
chuck Ingram from.

Speaker 12 (01:01:48):
The UCF Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (01:01:50):
You see how waybat center offers comprehensive of vcity care
and advanced surge at CO expertise called five one, three, nine,
three nine two two sixty three. That's two sixty three.
Highway traffic continues to look pretty good, just beginning to
build a bit. Southbound two seventy five approaching the Carroll
Cropper Bridge and southbound seventy five is doing fine through

(01:02:13):
Macha chucking from month fifty five KR see deep talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:02:18):
Thirty one fifty five kersee talk station I've won three seven,
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on AT and T phones and don't forget fifty five
KR Sea dot com get your iHeart media apt there
and here what Judgeennaapolitana had to say. Get a copy
of Scott Miller's book, The Most Dangerous Man in Washington.
That would be the State of Washington. But he was

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one that was sort of metaphorically crucified by the community
at large because he spoke truth to power during COVID nineteen,
trying to keep people out of hospitals, because he had
patients that were sent to hospital that died. He had
a different path to choose. And he's one of the
guys that was making fun of at the time, like,

(01:02:59):
how is it that you can go maskless and wade
around in the ocean, but as soon as you come
out of the ocean you got to put a mask on.
I mean, is that not on its face? And just
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he ended up losing his license for a while. It's crazy.
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(01:03:21):
The Countess and the nazis here. The conversation you probably
want to listen to that as well. Less than there's
a conversation with Jack aided him from Tuesday, which was awesome.
It always is. Local stories. Gorilla mask wearing suspect part
of a group of suspects accused of breaking into and
damaging vehicles in a Claremont County neighborhood Emelia. Detective Eric

(01:03:43):
Bankleman with the Claremont County Sheriff's Office said that they
received between six and ten reports of attempted break ins
in the Amelia neighborhood. Amelia Park neighborhood ring camera video
showing the group, which included one person in a gorilla
mask trying to get into vehicles in the neighborhood and
Wooded Ridge Drive have videos of the same group, including

(01:04:03):
a person in the gorilla mask, attempting break ins. Detective
Benckelman says these suspects were out between twelve a m.
And two am, causing a significant amount of damage. He
said shattered windows, shattered turn signal. Majority of the damage
was the vehicles, said. The Sheriff's office is working to
find the teenage suspects. Where are your children? Extra patrols

(01:04:28):
for the Sheriff's office in the neighborhood to make sure
something like this doesn't happen. Detective Beckaman said to the
kids who do these kind of activities, we will find
you and you will be criminally prosecuted when we do.
He urges residents not to keep anything of value in
their vehicles and to keep the doors locked. Put your
junk in your trunk or bring it inside. Here's something

(01:04:51):
else we need. Since we have so much money. City
of Cincinnati making a move to attract major sporting events
by establishing the Cincinnati Regional Sports Commission. We don't have
one of those, so we need to establish one. The initiative,
apparently is to try to promote the city as a
competitive player to host large scale events like the NFL

(01:05:14):
Draft that took place in Green Bay, which drew six
hundred thousand attendees. Julia Cavert, CEO visit Cincy speaking with
Local twelve. We're a city that wants to win. We're
a city that can do big things. Commission will focus
on coordinating bids for significant events while highlighting the Cincinnati's
rich sports history. Commission has received financial backing, with Hamilton

(01:05:39):
County commissioners allocating one hundred and fifty grand and the
city contributing two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Joe, how
many potholes can you fill with two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a lot? Do you know anything about real estate?

(01:06:01):
Cincinni City Council members Seth, my dad is smiling from
heaven right now over that comment. I'm sorry that was
kind of inside baseball. City of Cincinnati Council member Seth
Walshaw said, the potential return on the investment, the two
or fifty thousand dollars is a small drop in the
bucket for a huge roi for the city. If you
think about it. When Taylor Swift came to town, she
brought in a million dollars in direct tax money to

(01:06:23):
the city. Did we have this Cincinnati Regional Sports Commission?
When Taylor Swift decided to come to town, he asked, rhetorically,
you know what, I bet if we polished up the
city and we fixed all the roads and bridges, we

(01:06:44):
kept up our infrastructure, we probably wouldn't need to have
one of these things. It's a welcoming, inviting city. And
I know we have other commissions to promote and advance
the city of Cincinnati, generally speaking, without focusing merely on
our sports and our well connection with sports. One more
thing from government. Now, I'm sure this will solve the
problems that we face right away. Six thirty five fifty

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Speaker 12 (01:08:33):
All right, Gary, solve it here for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
Here's your channel nine first one and wee forecast scotted
afternoon storms beginning around one pm. They're saying seventy eight
for the high over nine fifty nine with a slight
chance of storms. Clouds tomorrow with scattered afternoon storms of possibility,
seventy two for the high down to forty five overnight
with just a slight chance rain. And for the outset
of the Flying Pig weekend spotty shower Saturday, they say

(01:08:58):
fifty percent chance of rain. Sixty three'll be the high.
It's sixty seven degrees right now. In time for a
traffic update from.

Speaker 9 (01:09:06):
The UCUP Trampings Center, you see help Weight Boss Center
offer his comprehensive obcity care and advanced sergic O expertise
called five one three, nine three nine two two sixty three.
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three southbound two
seventy five beginning to slow a bit between the Lawrence
program and the working on the bridge northbound seventy five.

(01:09:27):
That's also beginning to fill in between Dixie and Kyle's.
But no accidents to worry about. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five KR Seed the talk.

Speaker 1 (01:09:35):
Station sixty up at six forty one if you've got
kersee talk stations. Hey, Joe, I was just thinking about
that comment about Taylor Swift coming to town. We need
more people like that to come to town. And this
with this new commission's all about. Uh didn't she play
at pay Corse Stadium? Yeah, huh. If you open up

(01:09:56):
a venue like pay Corse Stadium to entertainment acts, it
rings in people. Well, there's a thought. And doesn't our
lease agreement with the Cincinnati Bengals prevent that stadium and
that facility from being used unless the Brown family approves
it for alternative use and they get a slice of

(01:10:16):
the action. Huh, there's something to think about. Let's go
to the phone and see what Ron's got. Hey, Ron,
thanks for calling this morning. Welcome to the program.

Speaker 15 (01:10:26):
Hey, Brian, I know how much you like school levies
wes Claremont. Wes Claremont's got one on this week.

Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
I know, go ahead, Ron have because everybody's calling in
about this one because they are really unsettled by it
and you need to get out and vote. And Ron
is going to explain exactly why it's worth going to vote.
Go ahead, Ron. Sorry, Well, they're.

Speaker 15 (01:10:48):
Trying to double dip on us. They're not only trying
to get with property tax, they're also trying to put
an earnings tax through. So they wanted to nail the
homeowners twice yep with it, which I which I do,
so I don't agree with ALR paid about seventy five
percent of my tax build out goes to the school district.

Speaker 1 (01:11:08):
And and didn't you, and I've heard from other Klement
County residents in your tax build your property tax bill
jump by like sixty three percent.

Speaker 15 (01:11:17):
I went up some I can't remember.

Speaker 6 (01:11:19):
How much, but yeah, they just built the new high
school out there.

Speaker 15 (01:11:23):
Which you know the thing about this this levy is
that there's very little information begin to send out about it.
I got one newsletter and that was back probably about
three months ago about the levee even going.

Speaker 6 (01:11:36):
On the ballot.

Speaker 1 (01:11:37):
That's the idea. Keep it low, let you know, keep
don't don't explain it to the voters, don't raise awareness
that it's even on the ballot, and then of course
the supporters of the levee will come out in large
numbers to get it passed, and people unaware of the
reality of it won't even bother to get up and vote.
That's the problem with these, you know, these off cycle elections.

(01:11:57):
That's the point of having them now, as opposed to
waiting around November when the numbers of voters are increased
substantially and awareness is raised substantially. It's rather nefarious, but
this is what happens all the time. Ron. I can't
thank you enough for bringing it up, because my Claremont
County friends need to be aware of this. You'd make
your own informed decision. Maybe you think it's a worthwhile endeavor.

(01:12:18):
But we're all overburdened with taxes right now. I think
we have been for a long time. And again, you know,
you're aware of what's going on in your school district,
so be aware about the levy and what it's going
to do in terms of your property taxes and your
oh I guess the revenue tax as well, jeez weeze
I had my friend Mike called the other day said

(01:12:38):
his property tax pill went up but sixty three percent
in that last assessment, and it broke it down in
terms of numbers, and an overwhelming amount of that obviously
went to the school district. So they do get a
lot of money. Now, if you think about this, maybe
the Trump administration's kind of stepped we had it was
taking a step back approach to trying to resolve the

(01:12:59):
Russia Ukraine war. You see him sort of moving away
from further military support. And I think we figured out
the reason why, because yesterday Ukraine signed the deal with
the United States to give US access to their rare minerals.
Their economic minister flew into Washington to sign the agreement.
On behalf of the government Ukraine. I signed the agreement

(01:13:19):
on the establishment of a United States Ukraine Reconstruction Investment Fund.
Together with the United States, we are creating the fund
that will attract global investment in our country. Trumpet previously
said he wanted the rare earth minerals from Ukraine as
a condition for continued US support in the war, describing
it as reimbursement for the billions that we threw at

(01:13:40):
the war and gave the Ukraine HM. The agreement will
establish the United States Ukraine Reconstruction Investment Fund to help
accelerate Ukraine's economic recovery. According to Treasury Secretary Scott is
sent in a statement, he said, this agreement signals clearly
to Russia that the Trump administration is committed to a
peace process centered on a free, sovereign, and prosperous Ukraine

(01:14:02):
over the long term. President Trump envisioned this partnership between
American people and Ukraine people to show both sides commitment
to lasting peace and prosperity in Ukraine. And to be clear,
no state or person who financed or supplied the Russian
war machine will be allowed to benefit from the reconstruction
in Ukraine. What does this do It establishes a business

(01:14:22):
presence in Ukraine. We will be inextricably intertwined with Ukraine
for the purpose of extracting and benefiting from these minerals. Right, so,
with American interests physically in Ukraine, that suggests to me
that a ratchet up our need to protect them militarily.

(01:14:43):
We're talking about World War three breaking out between Pakistan
and India this morning unsettling. Yes, it was, and I'm
still sort of reeling from that because it really looks
bad what's going on right now before our very eyes.
But this ratchets up the likelihood of further and stronger
US military involvement in Ukraine. From my perspective, maybe you

(01:15:04):
share a different one. I think it's positive in the
sense if we didn't have war going on between the
two between the two countries, that it would be really
cool to be able to extract some minerals. We have
them here in the United States as well, but to
the extent we're furthering trade and furthering the potential for
revenue generation building, helping Ukraine build. That's a wonderful thing
by itself. But in the middle of a war with

(01:15:26):
a nuclear power, you talk about, you know, escalation of
something that might you know, further these steps toward World
War III, this may represent one of those steps, don't up.
So I'm viewing it positively, Richard. I see you're on
the line. Apologize out of time in this segment, but
I'll be happy to take your call if you don't
mind holding for just a moment. I want to positively

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Speaker 8 (01:17:02):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:17:04):
UH TENNA nine first one to one forecast get scatted
afternoon storms beginning around one pm UH seventy eight to
high today down to fifty nine tonight with a slight
chances storms tomorrow high up seventy two, mostly cloudy sky.
Scattered afternoon storms are a possibility forty five the overnight
low with a slight chancer rain. And for the beginning
of the Flying Pig activities on Saturday, fifty percent chance

(01:17:25):
of spotty showers. Highest sixty three sixty eight degrees. Right now,
time for a traffic update from.

Speaker 9 (01:17:31):
The uc UP Traffic Center, UC HOW Whitehall Center Office.
Comprehensive of bcd caaren advance sergic OH expertise called five
one three nine three nine two two sixty three. That's
nine three nine twenty two sixty three northbound two seventy
fives ramp to thirty two in Eastgate currently blocked off
due to an accident. I'm also seeing slow traffic westbound

(01:17:52):
thirty two coming out of a Tavia for an accident
before a la brand Stonewick eastbound two seventy five through
northern Kentucky at the Petersburg Grant Chuck.

Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
That's six fifty coming up in six fifty, Want if
you buy a ker CD talk station. Christopher Smithman just
texting me. He's taking two people to vote today that
otherwise would not have voted. He's going to get them
to presumably vote for Corey Bowman. Get Corey Bowman out
ahead of the pack again because city Council's complete disregard
for the residents of the very diverse neighborhoods and they're

(01:18:30):
wanting to direct and control their own future. It's go
to phones. Richard, thanks so much for holding. Welcome to
the Morning Show.

Speaker 16 (01:18:38):
Hey, Brian, I've got another topic for you on that
complete disregard. Yeah, and this is kind of piggybacking right.

Speaker 17 (01:18:46):
Off the left.

Speaker 16 (01:18:46):
Fire mook stuff gott to notice in the mail the
other guy from Pierce Township that they have automatically signed
us up now for one of the alternative energy suppliers.

Speaker 17 (01:19:04):
For one year.

Speaker 16 (01:19:06):
At a rate that they determined, and the only way
that you can opt out on it is to call
the energy supplier. My wife did that. She was hung
up on three times in a row. Ohe And when
you call Pierce Township they just say, oh, well, we've

(01:19:28):
been receiving some calls about this, but you have to
call the energy supplier to get out of it.

Speaker 1 (01:19:34):
Oh that's so.

Speaker 16 (01:19:36):
You're locked into it for one year. And they say that, oh, well,
energy prices may go up, blah blah blah. Currently I'm
paying less just going straight through Duke than what they
are currently charging.

Speaker 1 (01:19:52):
So so if you want to continue to go straight
through Duke, you got to contact this this new energy supplier.

Speaker 16 (01:19:59):
Yeah, I contact a new energy supplier to get out
of the Piers Township plan.

Speaker 1 (01:20:05):
Oh that's crazy.

Speaker 16 (01:20:07):
Well, anyone sin Pierce Township is automatically locked into this
plan unless you call and opt out of it. And
they should have received a letter in the mail, but
it's really difficult to get out of it.

Speaker 1 (01:20:22):
Well, Richard, I just sort of have to ask out loud.
I mean, you probably don't know. How is it that
this particular energy supplier was selected among the various suppliers
of energy out in the world. I, Brian, I do
not know that.

Speaker 16 (01:20:36):
Yeah, that you know, it was kind of like out
of the blue for us that they actually did this.
We just got the letter in the mail that said, hey,
you've been selected you and you've been signed up for
this for one year and then after one year it
goes to a variable rate unless you switched it.

Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
So the Peers Township trustees and would push this through.

Speaker 16 (01:20:59):
I it must be, must be, you know. That's that's
I don't have any further information than that, but yeah,
it's It's funny how the u N gets the buyers work.
I got to hook into one one time and tried
to get out of it. They kept calling me back,
and I was I was literally on the phone with

(01:21:20):
a guy for like an hour, just playing around with him,
and I almost talked him out of his job. At
one point, literally I almost talked him out of it
and said, hey, you need to go to someplace else
with your sales skill.

Speaker 6 (01:21:35):
If you could go someplace else and make a hell
of a lot more money.

Speaker 16 (01:21:38):
But you know, the uh, these guys are are crazy
on you know, once you try to get into him,
you know you're hooked on it, and they just keep
calling you back and keep calling you back until you
just kindly just go off on him and then they
eventually stopped. But yeah, Pierce Township, it is doing something

(01:21:58):
weird on this and it's you know, it looks like
you're saving money on it, but right now, you know,
I'm paying probably a couple of cents less than what
they're rady has at.

Speaker 17 (01:22:12):
The moment.

Speaker 16 (01:22:14):
For the energy supply.

Speaker 2 (01:22:16):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:22:17):
Well that sales guy's probably now working for a time
share company. Pressure. Well, thank you for raising awareness my
friends in Pierce Township. Richard, I really appreciate that. And
that's the Shenanigans declaration right there. You are locked in.
You cannot get out unless you contact the partly the
supplier that they selected for you. Did they offer any

(01:22:40):
public comment opportunity? Did they bring anybody in and then
and and offer an open meeting to explain the direction
that they were going advanced awareness? I don't have any
information along those lines, but.

Speaker 6 (01:22:52):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
That sounds I don't want to say corrupt, but that's
the word that immediately came to mine. Move it away
from the head of your topic. I'm getting in George
Brennan and Keith Tennant fell back in the studio talk
about restore wellness. A couple of great guys, just really
interested in our overall health. So we'll spend some time
and still you'll spend some time in the studio in
the next hour, and then we're gonna hear from Adam Taylor,

(01:23:15):
who's going back to Shenanigans, the Bengals, the county and
the county and city wasting our money. Adam's all over that.
He'll be into datoh five, and of course it's Thursday,
so we get I hurt me the aviation next for
Jay Ratlif at eight thirty. I hope you can stick around,
be right back.

Speaker 11 (01:23:28):
News happens fast, stay up to date. At the top
of the hour, you're moving very quickly. Fifty five KRC
the talk station.

Speaker 3 (01:23:37):
This report number one precent for instance, access to your world.

Speaker 11 (01:23:41):
Couldn't live without it. Fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
It's seven to six. I think you about AIRCD talk
station cigh of Relief now that I have your run
them in in Keith Ennefeld in the studio to talk
about health and wellness, moving away from the discussions of
World War three and tax levies and all that. It's
nice to exhale for a while and talk positively. Welcome

(01:24:21):
to the program, George and Keith. It's always a pleasure
to see you in that morning. Appreciate the work you're doing.
You can find their website at Restore Wellness dot org
and it's a worthwhile endeavor to do that. They got
some great resources there, some reading materials and you know,
some ways to take some positive steps toward taking better
care of yourselves. Guys, got a lot of good things
going on in this particular area, don't we Yeah, it

(01:24:42):
seems that way.

Speaker 18 (01:24:42):
We're finally getting some progress out of DC on you know,
some issues that everybody's been talking about, and I think
overall the attitude in the United States is sort of
changing towards health.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
I hope COVID really really.

Speaker 18 (01:24:55):
I heard you earlier talking about the COVID nineteen and
the doctors that got you know, thrown out because they
said the truth.

Speaker 1 (01:25:01):
Keith Lee, you lived through that, so I mean I
think that.

Speaker 18 (01:25:04):
Woke everybody up to hey, there's a different way to
look at some of this stuff, and I think it's
going to be beneficial.

Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Well, quite often we're being duped. I mean, I want
to cast the conspiratorial Paul over the discussion and start
out by saying, you know, we're all being lied to
and we need to go in a completely different direction.
But you know, there is the standard of care within
the medical community which tends to push doctors and people

(01:25:31):
away from sort of alternative ways of viewing things, like
you know, maybe it's treating the symptom as opposed to
looking at well, wait a minute, what caused the symptom
in the first place. Is there some different direction that
we can go. It's going to prevent the problem problem
from happening in the first place. And of course we've
learned so much about diet, and I think the last
time we were here we talked about the different ways

(01:25:52):
of the government's recommendations on what we should be eating
have changed and evolved over the years, and that the
food industry has a profound impact on what we are
told we should be consuming. I mean, yeah, I think
about this SNAP program. I mean, isn't it obscene when
we know that sugar beverages like Coca Cola and Mountain

(01:26:14):
Dow and all that soft drinks generally speaking, have absolutely
no nutritional benefit, none whatsoever. They just do nothing but
pump needless sugars and calories into our lives. And yet
it's covered by a governmental program designed to give people
nutrition that can't afford it well. And that's one of
the things that's happening right now is they're trying to
push that out, you know they are, and who's standing

(01:26:36):
in the way. And I saw an interview with RFK
where basically they came back and said, you know, snap's
not about nutrition. They're allowed to eat whatever they want.
So wait a minute.

Speaker 18 (01:26:44):
The end stands for nutrition, and there's no nutrition in
sugar drinks. And the weird part is that I think
we talked about this the last time. The diet stuff's
actually worse. At least when you put the sugar in
your system, the insulin comes and has something to do.
When you put an artificial sweetener in your system, your
liver doesn't has to digest all this crap, and you're

(01:27:06):
still producing insulin because your body thinks it's sugar.

Speaker 1 (01:27:09):
But there's nothing for the insulin to do except destroy
all your cells. So in other words, you're saying that
the diet soft drinks actually are a contribute to diabetes.

Speaker 19 (01:27:18):
There's a lot of sense where the chemical is just
in general and all the artificials can cause a huge
indocrine system disruptors, whether it be you're pancreas or you're thyroid.

Speaker 1 (01:27:29):
So, yeah, I do. So the diet stuff.

Speaker 18 (01:27:31):
That was one of the big revelations in the first
couple of books that Nancy and I went through is
that the diet stuff, if you think about it, your
body thinks it's sugar. That's why you drink it, and
it tastes great and you like it, and so your
body starts attacking it like it's sugar. It's like, okay,
I got to get this out of my bloodstream, so
I'm going to pump the bloodstream full of insulin. But

(01:27:53):
there's nothing there and the same thing, it has nothing
to do, and it's chemically designed to release dopamine. I mean,
the chemists are designing these artificials so that it just
releases this dopamine hitting so you get addicted to this stuff.
I'm curious to find out let's let's talk about research.
What is the research health risks of people who are
on Snap? What are their life outcomes, what are their
life diseases compared to the general population who's not on Snap,

(01:28:16):
and then say, hey, maybe we have a look at this.
The other thing that I'd like to look at is
if we're going to approach the third leading cause of
death in America, which is medical mistakes, why is that
the third leading cause of death? And where we where
we as a USA, you know, government and healthcare system
moving that mark? Why can't we make it the fourth
leading or the fifth leading cause of death? If it's
if it's you know what.

Speaker 1 (01:28:37):
A why aren't we doing this?

Speaker 18 (01:28:39):
And the key right now is they're taking the first
small step. So the obvious one was they got rid
of the red dye yeah, which I thought was really
interesting because it was removed from cosmetics because it causes cancer.
So you couldn't put this this red dye and lipstick anymore,
but you could still eat it. Yeah, what's the logic
behind this?

Speaker 1 (01:28:59):
I don't get it? Because you have to have bright
red colored fruit loops. I guess.

Speaker 18 (01:29:03):
Well, so that's the first thing that I wanted to
mention that they actually did now is they've outlawed the
petroleum based died no.

Speaker 1 (01:29:10):
And that you know, I just started reading that when
they when they began talking about getting rid of the
dies that I learned that they were made from petroleum products.
Let's let's fuel out of the human bodies diet. Now
that sounds like a great idea, I know it does.

Speaker 18 (01:29:25):
And and still they would to say, wait a minute,
it's going to take us forever to put natural out
in there, So we need two years to get rid
of our supply of carcinogens.

Speaker 1 (01:29:34):
And yet they have been doing this in Europe now
for years and years. I mean, they had no problem
adapting to die free food in Europe and they know
how to do it there. So how is it so
difficult and why does it take so long to phase
in the removal of these from our from.

Speaker 18 (01:29:46):
So here's the here's the main issue that is underneath
all of this. In the United States, there's something called
generally recognized as safe g r as, so you can
put anything you want in the food without testing, without
the government involved, if it's generally recognized as safe. In
Europe and everywhere else, you have to prove it safe.

(01:30:08):
So in the United States we have ten thousand chemicals
that we can have in our food, and in Europe
they have four hundred because they've tested them.

Speaker 1 (01:30:15):
They don't test them here, they just throw them in. Well,
can't we rely on their testing if it needs least
rigorous standards, you know, if they're you know, medically ethically
peer reviewed standards. And I know we have to choke
on that because there's been a lot of so called
peer reviewed stuff that turns out to be a bunch
of lies. But you know, I mean, these are the
authorities that we typically rely on, and I know the

(01:30:36):
European Union's pretty good about their standards, think they're good
on Even more so for me, being a limited government
kind of guy, I hate when we talk about, you know,
government solutions to problems and running it through some administrative
agency before we get to do something that runs a
foul of my you know, free market, free loving principles.
But we're talking about something that can kill you potentially.

(01:30:57):
You know, when we rise to that challenge and we
think about that, we have to rely on some experts
and we need the information. This is why I like
product labeling requirements at least I get to know what's
in it, you know, and and it's a mandate from
government that they have to tell you what they put
in the product. I like that. It gives me information.
It helps me be an informed consumer. I don't know

(01:31:20):
what the hell FDN c red does.

Speaker 6 (01:31:24):
What is that?

Speaker 1 (01:31:24):
And you know it's made from petroleum? No, I didn't
know that. There's information I could use.

Speaker 18 (01:31:29):
What's interesting is the orange I think comes from squashed bugs.

Speaker 1 (01:31:33):
Yeah, I've read that. Yeah, there's actually the beetles. Yes,
I don't know, but I would like to have somebody
study that.

Speaker 19 (01:31:39):
And then also, let's not let's be clear about the
advertisement when they say no added sugar, Well, what is
that supposed to mean?

Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
Is that mean no more added sugar? Compared to my
banana here has natural sugars in it. There's no added
sugar in my banana. I don't be labeling on my
banana because it contains banana. If you look at any juice,
it'll say no added sugars. But then you look at
what the number one ingredient is, it's almost always either
apple juice or grape juice. Well's sugar the two sweetest

(01:32:09):
juices you can find, which is weird because when they'll
they'll recommend, you know, don't go with with with with
sugar beverages like SODA's drink fruit juice. Well, that's just
concentrated sugar. If you ate an apple, you wouldn't be
getting the concentrated sugar the fiber to slow it down.

(01:32:29):
It's much more nutrition to have the apple than to
drink the apple juice.

Speaker 19 (01:32:32):
Right, And so that's why I mean, my point is
says when someone picks up something that says no added sugar,
they're thinking, oh, there's no sugar in it, being misled.
So we need to stop this misleading advertisement all food products.

Speaker 1 (01:32:42):
Right, But I think most of the label and at
least will shugar you how many grams of sugar are
in it, and then below it it'll say added sugars.
If you're educated or desire to look, oh, you know,
and that's where you know, people need to fend for
themselves and if the product is properly labeled and the
information is there, which it is in most things in
terms of food. Like when I quent on my Keto
diet and I took all the sugars out of my diet,

(01:33:04):
and I always look at the labels, and that's what
I was looking to catch up. You know, I got
tablespin a ketchup. It's like four grams of added sugar.
A third of it is all sugar. But the question,
though is is is sugar bad? That's what the general
population is going to ask that question. What's wrong with sugar?
Sugar is and everything it's in fruit? It's it's natural fruit. Whoa, whoa,
whoa back up, very inflammatory, you don't always need to

(01:33:24):
have it. And sugar itself, like you said, contains fiber.
And you're not getting a huge sugar rush when you
eat an apple, but a huge here rush when you
drink it. All right, let's pause from its seven fifteen
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Speaker 11 (01:34:26):
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Speaker 1 (01:34:57):
Fast as Ayula, here's your Channel nine weather forecast. We
have a uh the storm of scattered storm supposed to
show up around noons at around one pm today, so
you got that going for you. Maybe seventy eight for
the hyge today, down to fifty nine to night with
a slight chance of storms, remaining mostly claudy. Friday with
scattered afternoon storms of possibilities seventy two for the high

(01:35:20):
overnight little forty five with a slight chance of rain.
The beginning of the Flying Pig weekend, We're gonna have
a fifty percent chance of spotty showers on Saturday. Sixty
three will be the high. It's sixty eight right now.
It's time for a traffick update.

Speaker 12 (01:35:33):
From the uc UP Tramfic Center.

Speaker 9 (01:35:35):
You see howthwaite Ball Center of Hers Comprehensive Obesity Karen
Advanced Sergico Expertise called five ONUM three nine three nine
two two sixty three. That's nine three nine twenty two
sixty three. Crews continue to work with an accident on
the ramp from northbound two seventy five to thirty two
in Eastgate. Traffic is getting by now on the right

(01:35:55):
hand side south bend seventy five break rights out of
Lachland northbound seven twenty five heavy and buttermilk Chuck ingramon
fifty five KOs the talk Station.

Speaker 1 (01:36:07):
Joshy I seven, twenty fifty five KRCD talk Station, Happy
Thursday Talk and Health Restore. Wilms dot org is where
you find George Brenhaman and Keith Enfeld and they're trying
to just expand our awareness about healthier lifestyles, healthier eating choices,
and uh well just giving us the information that fortunately
we're finally getting from the likes of RFK Junior. At
least that guy a lightning rod he may be, but

(01:36:30):
I just I was really happy that Trump administration selected
him because your lifelong Democrat, you know, this sort of
left leaning, green New Deal kind of goofball. Uh but
he is and has always been on the cutting edge
of all things healthy and it just raises awareness generally
because he actually makes it into the news. If it
was just some random bureaucrats selected to lead this the department,

(01:36:52):
I don't think we'd be hearing as much about it.

Speaker 18 (01:36:55):
And that was a genius move, you know, putting three
Democrats in your cabinet. Yeah, I don't know how you
argue with that. And RFK is just focused on kids.

Speaker 1 (01:37:05):
Yeah, So we just got no control over the things
that we will be worried about them otherwise, like oh
my god, rfka's and there we're going to have this
windmills in our backyard or some nonsense like that. Yeah,
but so he's he was always focused on autism.

Speaker 18 (01:37:18):
And and when you look at the data, and I'm
a data kind of guy, when you look at those graphs,
it looks like it's just taking off. I mean it
was kind of around Okay, you mean the numbers of
the numbers, pure percentage, Okay, I want to I want
to start this conversation because I know we're going to
talk about some other areas related to autism, or at
least arguably related autism, like raising awareness about these products

(01:37:42):
and chemicals and things in our food and bringing us
to a level of understanding, to finally come to an
understanding that they're.

Speaker 1 (01:37:47):
Bad for us. Autism in terms of awareness has been
elevated over the years. More and more people are being
in tune to it. More and more people are looking
out for signs and symptoms that their children may be autistic.
And it's thought of as a sum Now, so that's
a low end episode, doesn't that necessarily suggest the numbers
are going to go up because we're looking in places
we didn't look before.

Speaker 18 (01:38:07):
Yes, but not from one in ten thousand to one
and thirty one. I mean, that's the change that we've
seen in the last three decades. It's gone from one
in ten thousand kids to one in thirty one now.
And I heard his response to that exact question and
what he basically says, I'm focused on the ones that
can't talk, can't go to the bathroom, you know, the

(01:38:28):
end of the spectrum where you.

Speaker 1 (01:38:30):
Can't miss it.

Speaker 18 (01:38:31):
I mean, there's obvious, and he's saying, there's no way
that doctors in the past missed this kind of autism.
That but there are others on thes Isn't that the
name of Thebergers.

Speaker 1 (01:38:42):
I have a bit of that.

Speaker 18 (01:38:44):
Elon Musk has that as you concentrate. So I'm okay
with some of this, right.

Speaker 1 (01:38:48):
And I have a friend of mine who's shot is
that way, and he is absolutely brilliant. Now he lacks
the social component. He finds it difficult to interact with people,
but generally speaking, I mean he's a history buff. You
can ask him anything about any point in time in
the world's history. And he knows the answer to it,
and he's gainfully employed. He lives on his own, I mean,
he's independent. So you know, that's a different end of Ausburger's.

(01:39:12):
And I suppose in decades ago, a couple decades ago,
that he wouldn't have been diagnosed with anything other than
just having a problem, you know, dealing with other people
was introverted. Yeah, I'm used to hearing there. So that's
a person now that will be diagnosed, right, But the
high end has just gone crazy.

Speaker 18 (01:39:32):
I mean the amount of kids that are walking around noncommunicative,
can't go to the bathroom themselves, that kind of stuffs skyrocking.
So the question is why in the same way that
you see obesity going up, and it correlates exactly with
when the food pyramid came in and the whole carb
focus came in and packaged foods. You know, there's a correlation.

(01:39:53):
The correlation doesn't mean causation, but there is definitely a
correlation between the number of vaccines that a child gets
versus the blow up of autism. Now, I think what
he did is he said, we're going to study it,
So we're going to actually look at the data, look
at the correlations. Do a peer reviewed study of autism

(01:40:13):
to see if if indeed, you know, some of these
side things are the cause, or is it truly just
geneticist is coming out. Well, in order to do an actual,
realistic study, you'd have to have a consistent group of
at least two different types of children, ones that have
never gotten a vaccine and ones that have in order
to do a true which is why they did all

(01:40:35):
that study of the homage where they can't find an
homage kid that has autism just doesn't happen.

Speaker 1 (01:40:41):
Well.

Speaker 19 (01:40:41):
The other thing, too, is that what about all the
food that these kids are eating, such as these fruit
loops like you mentioned, these food coloring and dyes, and
are they going to exclude that in the data?

Speaker 1 (01:40:49):
To say, okay, we're going to.

Speaker 18 (01:40:51):
Control for this is pretty broad, which is why the
homage is a great way. They eat nothing but what
comes out of the ground. They don't take any drugs,
they don't take any vaccines, and they literally I think
it was like a ten year study. I may be
wrong on the duration, but Flora's to study because it
showed that none of them had it. There was no
autism in the Amish community at all. How many Amish

(01:41:12):
are there out there?

Speaker 11 (01:41:13):
More than you think.

Speaker 18 (01:41:13):
Apparently they're you know, rebuilding homes in North Carolina, and okay, again,
I'm just looking for all the potential variables that might Yeah,
the control is to me, that the challenge because vaccines
are required well, and that was the other thing that
he revealed to go to school and that kind of thing,
none of them are safety tested. It's it's sort of

(01:41:35):
like they generally recognized as say, vaccines in the United
States don't get placebo trials to test safety and effectiveness.
It's a really strange situation, and I'm glad they're studying it.
Same with the florid thing. We want to talk about that.

Speaker 1 (01:41:52):
We'll take a break here and we'll bring that up
because I've been hearing almost my entire life. You know,
it started out as this, it's a communist conspiracy to
put floor right in our water and they're doing it
to kill us all. And that was kind of a
laughable argument. But then we come to realize that, oh,
maybe it's not the magic bullet and positive thing that
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Speaker 1 (01:43:17):
Today, I Heart Radio A Minute of Hope is brought
to you by the Linder Center of Hope Linders Center
of Hope dot org. His Brian Thomas, host of the
Videybot Carasey Morning Show with Lauren Niece or Lauren is
a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner at the Linder Center
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six Hope.

Speaker 21 (01:43:37):
So there's lots of different ways if someone is looking
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(01:43:57):
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Speaker 1 (01:44:15):
Information on mental health. Go to Lenders Center of Hope
dot org or call five one three five three six Hope.

Speaker 8 (01:44:21):
You don't think about it, you don't.

Speaker 1 (01:44:23):
Talk about Channel and I. On the forecast, scattered afternoon
storms we should develop around one pm today. That's seventy
eight for the high. Another chance of storms overnight just
to slight one fifty nine for the low. Tomorrow, scattered
afternoon storms are possible to why it's just the mostly
fidy day with a high of seventy two overnight Friday
slight chance of rain forty five and at the beginning

(01:44:44):
of the Flying Dag activities this weekend, we'll have spotty
showers on Saturday with a highest sixty three sixty eight degrees.
Right now, time for traffic.

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(01:45:15):
at Eastgate due to an accident. Chuck ingramon fifty five
k RC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:45:23):
Seven thirty. If any above cares of the dark station
on air, head off air talking with my friends from
Restore Wellness dot org. You check out the website. Uh
in STU. We got George Brunneman and Keith Tenfeld and
we're gonna have Adam Kaylor in studio talk about county
and city issues and wasting our money. Adam would joined
the program at the top of the air news so
we can stick around for that. And I meantime, we

(01:45:44):
were we just touched slightly upon the topic of floride
and this has made it in the news of late
and I find out and I wanted to know the
genesis of the removal of florid from the water, because
did you mention the state of Utah voted to do that. Yeah,
the fire sited in the law. But there have been
rumblings going on about the dangers of fluoride and its
impact on our cognitive function, Right, doesn't it lowers IQ

(01:46:06):
and kids? Lower's IQ and kids? Is the claim? Is
there new studies and research out now that has pushed
this over the edge to make people motivated to remove
it from water. What's what's again?

Speaker 18 (01:46:15):
I think it's an outcome from COVID. People are now
tuned up to this and they're like, Okay, the key
thing with fluoride is once it passes past your teeth,
there is no useful function performed by fluoride. So in
your body, there's nothing good it's doing. And if if
you use the fluoride toothpaste, why do you need it
in the water.

Speaker 1 (01:46:35):
Okay? And now remember when I was a kid, this
is before water fluoridation. You took a fluoride tablet or
you went to the dentists and they put this gel
on your head. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, gread flavored.

Speaker 14 (01:46:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:46:48):
God, stuff is awful, I get say. And you still
kind of they still have that option at the dentist.

Speaker 18 (01:46:53):
They do it now it's in the paste that they
used to, you know, grind your teeth and polerate them
and polish your teeth. So the catch is there have
been a couple of studies since cities and states have
started taking this fluoride out of the water, and what
they're finding is there's a twenty five percent. The claim
is there's a twenty five percent increase in childhood cavities.

Speaker 1 (01:47:14):
Maybe that's because twenty five was entirely in the lower
income brackets, because it's probably not brushing on a regular
basis or seeing dentists.

Speaker 18 (01:47:21):
And they might be on snap and drinking. So does
all exactly. Yeah, a mountain dew is gonna get So
there's a ton of confusing things. But in mind view,
the main thing is there is no benefit to swallowing fluoride,
none whatsoever. And even if there's a little bit of problem,
who are we saving by sticking it in everybody's water?

(01:47:43):
And I always go back to when I stuck the
filter on my water system that got rid of fluoride.
It was like, wow, this water tastes great.

Speaker 1 (01:47:52):
Yeah, I literally search it out, and I'm sure that
filter also filtered out about a bunch of other things.
Oh yeah, yeah, I got want to get you everything.
But don't put the entire blame on the removal of florid,
but or benefit. Rather, it's interesting that the use case
for that was two things.

Speaker 18 (01:48:07):
It's a waste product from things like aluminum smelting and
coal fired florid plants. Yes, it's a side product when
you smelt the aluminum war they wanted to find some
way to do it, just like crisco was a side
product of a I think it was corn production, and
so crisco was invented as a way to eat more

(01:48:27):
of the more decide to throw it in the water
because we had this fluoride laying around as a byproduct
or cold well, but there was a correlation with helping cavity.
So there is no doubting the fact that if you
put fluoride on your tooth enamel, your enamel becomes stronger
and you don't get you don't get cavities. But is
the most efficient way to do that toothpaste or ingest
it in the water.

Speaker 19 (01:48:48):
Or is there something else other than fluoride that is
healthier and more able to be there for the more
expensive toothpaste, And that's what I'm using now, But there's
a different chemical that does a similar thing. Okay, so
I just research on that chemical to find out whether
or not it has percussions. Now they'll say, oh my god,
you using the expensive toothpape. You want to use chloride? Yeah, okay,

(01:49:10):
you get cancer. Or something you see, it's one thing
leads to enother. Well, and that's why some people just
use baking soda and peroxide. You just mix those too,
but you don't get any benefit, and your teeth aren't
protected like they are when you use a Florida fluoridated toothpaste.

Speaker 1 (01:49:24):
Which is let's just do that.

Speaker 18 (01:49:27):
Don't swallow the toothpaste, don't stick it into water. Well,
I'll be fine, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:49:31):
But there are studies, legitimate peer reviewed studies that show
that fluoride does impact IQ. The question is on how
high of a concentration. So some of the studies were
higher concentration. Some cities have a higher level than they
think because their water source has fluoride in it. So
there's a problem. It's not really regulated.

Speaker 18 (01:49:52):
It's one of the things they sort of dump it
in and then don't look at the output to see
what it actually.

Speaker 1 (01:49:57):
Chordinating a pool exactly there. Okay, if it's burning my eyes,
it's too much.

Speaker 18 (01:50:02):
Yeah, if my kid can't watch cartoons, maybe it's too
much fluoride.

Speaker 1 (01:50:07):
Well, a lot to digest here on that one, I guess.
You know, how do you control and figure out that
IQ goes down? As a consequence of the florid itself
and not some other environmental factors and other things.

Speaker 18 (01:50:20):
The key is taking it out of the water doesn't
take away from the fact that it's in the toothpaste
and you get the same benefit right.

Speaker 19 (01:50:27):
And that you have access to it if you want it.
You're not forced to take it, but you have access
to it if you want it fair enough, and that's
the libertarian to me, loves that point. The more informed
you are, the more informed your decisions are, and the
better decisions you can make. And of course by not
having it in the water automatically you get the choice
of whether or not you want to have any fluoride
touch your body at all.

Speaker 1 (01:50:48):
I'll take the toothpaste. Seven thirty five fifty five kc
DE talk station Stigram more to talk about in the
area of health. But first affordable medical imaging. Speaking of health,
you're gonna need an image at some point, most everybody does.
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Previously we'd go to the hospital imaging department for like
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(01:51:10):
Now last several scans I've had done at Affordable Imaging
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Speaker 8 (01:52:04):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:52:06):
This is Jeff for Tri State Jedi Leather says we're
gonna get some afternoon storms scattered anyway, should develop around
one PM today. Today's high seventy eight, slight chance of
storms overnight as well with a low of fifty nine.
Scattered afternoon storms Tomorrow with the highest seventy two overnight
sly chanceer rain forty five, and for the beginning of
the Flying Pig weekend sixty three. The high on Saturday

(01:52:29):
with the spotty showers sixty eight. Now time for a
traffic update from the UCF Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (01:52:35):
You see how weight Boss Center offers comprehensive out b
city care and advanced sergeco expertise called five one three
nine three nine two two sixty three. That's nine three
nine twenty two sixty three. Highway traffic getting heavy once
again exiting to thirty two in Eastgate from northbound two
seventy five thanks to an accident. Then I'm seeing some

(01:52:55):
heavy traffic out on Milford making your way towards Ward's Corner.
There's an accident with injuries on River at State Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KRC.

Speaker 12 (01:53:04):
The talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:53:08):
At seven forty here fifty five KRC the talk station.
Enjoying the conversation this hour, learning a lot about health
and what we're learning at more and more every day
about what we can put in our bodies and about
what we have been putting in our bodies may not
have been the right thing and got George Brennan and
Keith Ennefeld in studio. The website Restore Wellness dot org.
You guys do a podcast too, don't you. We do

(01:53:29):
a podcast.

Speaker 18 (01:53:30):
The big thing anymore is the extreme or Twitter, whatever
you want to call it. Nowadays, there's a lot of
stuff going on there and the Restore wellness dot org
Twitter page. We keep reposting all of the top issues,
so you'll see a ton of cool stuff there. In fact,
that's that's my preferred way to get the information anymore.
Is I just get subscribed to restore wellness dot org

(01:53:52):
and you'll see is it the industry, restore wellness dot org,
restore well org. If you just type and restore wellness
will come up on Okay, okay, So add that to
your x feed and you'll get real time information from
the guys and what they're talking about and what they're posting.
Or the website again, Restore Wellness dot org. All right,
which directionally moving into this segment.

Speaker 19 (01:54:11):
Fellas, So I'd like to give everybody a biohack, you know,
giving people some information that they can really use on
a personal level. If you're having difficulty managing your high
blood pressure where your doctor's prescribing your medications, you're not
seeing results, or you're having cardiovascar disease despite all your
diet and exercise changes, or you're struggling from depression, anxiety,
gut issues inflame, gut irritable bow thyroid, even thyroid problems

(01:54:36):
out of immune thyroid problems, and these things are kind
of where they coming from.

Speaker 1 (01:54:39):
What's the cause of them?

Speaker 19 (01:54:40):
I suggest you highly look into a possible genetic disorder
called MTHFR methylene tetrahydrofoilate reductase. It's a situation where you
have a deficiency in the ability to reduce folate and
therefore your mitochondria, the energy powerhouse of your body of
every single will sell isn't being fed proper nutrition. And

(01:55:03):
the reason it's not really a mainstream concept is because
most people don't even know how to manage it, and
there are certain hospital organizations that don't even test for it,
and when you start addressing these issues, for instance, has
your doctor ever done a home assisting level on you?
You need to ask your doctor to do a home
assisting level on you and check your vitamin B levels
because if you have this deficiency, you are deficient probably

(01:55:24):
in vitamin BEES and that is essential for energy production
atp production, and if that's not working right, it's going
to jack up your home assisting levels and cause all
kinds of problems, including fast.

Speaker 18 (01:55:35):
Basically how the body creates energy or creates the functioning
DNA and the chemicals inside exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:55:44):
I had never heard of it until very recently.

Speaker 18 (01:55:47):
It's all over Twitter now there's a ton of people
talking about MTHFR.

Speaker 1 (01:55:52):
Get the tasks. So is a blood test? It's a
blood test or a cheek swab. There's two different DNA. Now,
if I went into my doctor and I said, hey, Doc,
Richard MTFHR, will you check me for that? You would know?

Speaker 19 (01:56:04):
He would know And you go, well, there's not much
you know, blah, you know because of it. It's the
lack of education they're presenting in the residency program.

Speaker 1 (01:56:11):
It's one of those things that's not a money.

Speaker 18 (01:56:12):
A lot of press but it's like I think the
statistics from GROC we're saying it's like thirty percent of
the population fifty And what's interesting about that is when
I test my patients, I at least I can guarantee
you eighty percent of my patients have some variant because
they're a patient, because they came in with these problems,
and that I'm actually looking for it. And then and
some of these fixes are very very simple. For instance,

(01:56:34):
we talked about a lot of this bad stuff in
your diet folic acid, particularly enrich flowers, a cereals and
breads and weed and pasta and pizza and beer have
all this folic acid in it, and people are consuming
it left and right, and they're wondering, wait a minute,
it's low salt, it's it's low carb version of folic
acid or whatever it might be. But it's causing bascularin

(01:56:56):
information and therefore there's your blood pressure and that's why
your blood pressure medicine isn't working because your vascular beds
are inflamed. Let's start getting you the right fold eate
through healthy meats, healthy diets, and a methylated multi vitamin,
and before you know it, over the next usually three
to four months, your.

Speaker 1 (01:57:13):
Blood pressure points will begin to drop. Wow, what about
all the other symptoms you mentioned, like anxiety and depression depression.

Speaker 19 (01:57:20):
I have a fantastic situation where I had a sixty
seven year old actually I think she's seventy six years
old and anyway, seventy six year old female who did
not know she had MTTFR, and she suffered from social anxiety,
stayed in her house, was very anxious about anything, overthought everything.
We started her on an MTHF or treatment plan, and
before you know it, she's out and about and happy.

(01:57:41):
And her family's like, wait a minute, what happened, where's
my old grandma? She's this isn't her, but she loves
being this person. Now she's energetic, she's exercising again, she's
feeling great all because of MTTFR.

Speaker 18 (01:57:54):
So it's an energy thing, just like the chronic illnesses
of trace to the way your body is seeing energy
from salt or sugar versus fats.

Speaker 19 (01:58:03):
Exactly part of that methylation disorders. There's a thing called
comp t c O MT, and that's one of those
neurological inflammatory situations where you start treating that you have
a resistant child is depressed or anxiety, has a lot
of anxiety.

Speaker 1 (01:58:17):
Get them tested. See what that comes up at interesting,
that is something brand new to me. Mt FHR, mt
hfr oh mt HFRS. Yeah, wrote, I'd write it down right.
I'll be posting this.

Speaker 18 (01:58:30):
What we talk about today will be up on the
website by later today, so you can go there, listen
to the podcast, and then we'll have a link.

Speaker 1 (01:58:38):
I just re listened to this podcast. There you fast
forward to seven forty three and start listening or this segment. Anyway,
it's seven thirty five and mt HFR all right, I'm
gonna have to look into that mind. I'll give you
some I'll give you some treatments on the other side
of the break. Yeah great, because I'd love to know
what you prescribed for that woman that transformed her life,
because people got their curiosity p because I sure do.

(01:59:00):
First though, Suzette Lowe's camp Across Country Mortgage, Cross Country
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they are literally cross country. If you get in touch
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Puerto Rico, you also can call Susette to talk about mortgages,
anything related to mortgages. She's the best in the business.
I will tell you she is just the most sweet
person you'll ever work with, and you wouldn't you want

(01:59:21):
to work with someone that you at least enjoy talking
with when it comes to mortgage is the biggest financial
thing you'll ever transaction you'll probably ever be involved with.
Suzette Loe's a camp get you through the entire process quickly,
as she did with my daughter and her fiance. I
think two days is all took to Locke in financing,
and they had been sort of screwing around with a
bank who wasn't very responsive for at least a week
or so. They were getting a little anxious. Susette took

(01:59:42):
good care of him and she my daughter was so happy.
He's like, oh, Dad, I can't I'm so glad you
recommended Susette. He's like, well, you know, don't you listen
to your dad? Five one three three one three fifty
one seventy six. She'll get right back with you five
to one three three one three fifty one seventy six.
If you want, you send her an email. She'll get
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(02:00:04):
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foreign x dot com. Attention, here's your Channel nine with
a forecast scattered afternoon storms. They should kick in or
develop anywhere around one pm. Channel nine says seventy eight
for the high overnight low of fifty nine with a
slight chance of storms. Scattered afternoon storms tomorrow seventy two.

(02:01:30):
Otherwise just cloudy day tomorrow overnight slight chance of rain
in low forty five. Blingtag Weekend begins on Saturday and
there is a fifty percent chance of some spotty shower.
Sixty three will be the high sixty nine. Now time
for traffic.

Speaker 9 (02:01:43):
From the UCUT Traffic Center u See Healthwaight Boss Center
offers comprehensive OBCD care in advanced start to CO expertise
called five one three nine three nine two two sixty three.
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three. Crewz continue
to work with a cuppall of accidents. North Found two
seventy five is ramped to thirty two in Eastgate Traffics
packing onto the highway and on river at State with injuries.

(02:02:07):
Nort Found seventy five at an extra fifteen minutes out
of Florence. Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc DE talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:02:21):
Seven fifty fifty five kr c DE talk station. We
are Restoring health, Restoring Wellness dot org gun them on
axit's Restore well at Restore well and they are George
Brenneman and Keith Tenenfeld. Keisa what you what are your
specific title? Nurse health practitioner, nurse practitioner, nurs practitioner and
you have a clinic. Can you help people with this?

(02:02:42):
And you told us about m t HFR very good
and it can blood pressure is impacted by this condition.
If you're struggling with blood pressure issues, got health you mentioned,
you mentioned anxiety, depression, all these because maybe your body
is not processing homoyste Almo and fol A. Yeah, all right,

(02:03:07):
well let's just take that on face value, even though
I really don't know what that means on a biological
level or what fuley does to you. But if it
causes these problems, obviously might we might want to get
rid of them. Right, So you put the woman who's
struggled with social issues and was an isolationist and I
mean just anxiety ridden person that it just impacted her

(02:03:28):
life and you transformed her life. What kind of program
do you put on what what do you do to
treat this particular condition, since you said thirty to fifty
percent of the people have to struggle with.

Speaker 19 (02:03:39):
It exactly, And not only does it do the things
that you mentioned, but it can increase your risk if
you're it can't sorry for cancer, for miscarriages or reproductive
health to do for those other people that are out there.
So fol eight is really really good. Folic acid is
not good. So you first, that's the one thing that
the addresses your diet. You bring in high rich folate
and anytime like for instance, you might be on a

(02:03:59):
multi vitamin now and you spin around the back and
it's going to say foll eate, but if you look closely,
it'll say as folic acid.

Speaker 1 (02:04:07):
Throw it away.

Speaker 19 (02:04:08):
Now with that, other supplements you want to take is
a methylated multivitamin or a methylated B complex. Methylated we'll
say things like methyl fol eate or methylcobalamine, some very
good quality things that are already methylated.

Speaker 1 (02:04:22):
So you don't have to worry about converting that fole
eate because it.

Speaker 18 (02:04:24):
Gets around the genetic problem by already doing it externally.

Speaker 19 (02:04:28):
Exactly, we carry a product called mitocore, and if you
will reach out to us.

Speaker 1 (02:04:32):
I can get you in touch with it.

Speaker 19 (02:04:33):
But mitocore is a fantastic multivitamin, but more importantly, it's
methylated and it also has a high dose of antioxidants.
Antioxidants is another problem with MTHFR. You don't get rid
of oxidative stress. So other things like NAC and reserveritrol
that are in a multivitamin methylated design for MTHFR, and
you can simply type that in show me vitamins that

(02:04:54):
are designed for MTHFR, and you have a good variety,
but they're not always complete.

Speaker 1 (02:05:00):
You solved it with supplements, not with pharmaceuticals.

Speaker 19 (02:05:03):
Correct, very much so, right, and so getting the full
fullic acid out of people's diet and getting them on
a method of multivitamin, having them eat foods that are
rich in betaine are also known as TMG, which are
things like spinach and beats and quinoa can actually increase
your betaine levels, and batain is what drives down your
home assisting levels. Once your home assisting levels are driven down,

(02:05:26):
your blood pressure drops, your neuro and flamment and inflammation drops,
the depression begins to ease, the anxiety begins to ease.
The blood pressure begins to ease, and it's a win
win for everybody.

Speaker 1 (02:05:36):
Can you think of how many people, I mean, I'll
take it face value what you're telling me. I don't
think you guys are in the business to steer people
the wrong direction. You're interested in really improving people's health.
So let's assume, for the sake discussion, even though you
like you opened a fire hose of information in the
last several minutes, you could solve one of the broader

(02:05:56):
problems we have in society at large, which is everybody
on these psychological medications.

Speaker 19 (02:06:04):
By the way, SSRIs are not necessarily the research on
them is very very poor.

Speaker 1 (02:06:08):
Yeah, I'm probably going to get backslash for that, but
but you know, I fine, But I mean, I'm just
thinking of all the problems you associate with this metabolism
sort of disorder, which can be solved through vitamins and
changes in diet. There's a lot of people on these
on pharmaceuticals because they struggle with like, for example, anxiety.
You know, they're oh my god, and they go to

(02:06:29):
a psychiatrist and they get put on a med and
then they're on them for for a long time. When
in fact, a diet and changes in lifestyle can really
profoundly alter that symptom or that that diagnosim And that's
why I.

Speaker 19 (02:06:40):
Believe MKHFR isn't really being discussed in your doctor's office
because of look at the pharmaceutical side of things, and
essentral hypertension is basically people who have high blood pressure
and they don't really know the cause of it, so
they throw these blood pressure augmenting medications at it, and
before you know it, they're not. They're no better than
there are doubling the dose and whatever have you. I've
gotten people off Bloo presture medicines before.

Speaker 1 (02:07:04):
That's amazing. Well, there are different ways to look at
medicine and it's not always the standard of care that
your doctor might recommend. That's why you need to talk
to guys like George and Keith and why we have
them around, and that's why I like bringing them on
the program. Of course, it gives a different viewpoint. Maybe
encourage people to look into this. You don't need to
just immediately buy into it, but read about it and

(02:07:24):
find out and maybe.

Speaker 18 (02:07:26):
Try a different Yeah, the main thing problem shift your
focus from treating an illness to preventing it. Let's let's
go after wellness, not treating a problem I already have.
Let's just make sure the problem never occurs in the
first place. And I think that's the whole paradigm shift
we're trying to encourage, is you don't go to your

(02:07:47):
doctor just because you feel bad. What if you went
to your doctor and said, how can I feel better?
You know, how can I avoid hypertension? How can I
avoid you know, heart problem or bet or But yet
I have these illnesses.

Speaker 19 (02:07:58):
How about you just let's just focus on wellness and say, Okay,
let's let me get well with my diet, my hydration,
my exercise, my sleep, sleeps very important, and my relationships.
Let's fix those first, and then we'll look at my
high blood pressure. Then we'll look at my aches and pains.
Then we'll look at my depression, whatever. And if I
don't have it existly still have a good point. You
still still have it.

Speaker 2 (02:08:17):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (02:08:18):
So he's been fascinating conversations, and I'm hoping that we
peak in this conversation. We peak the curiosity of my
listeners to look into it and learn more, and maybe
there is indeed a different path that'll make you feel
a lot better than taking that pharmaceutical pill every day.
It's seven fifty six. Guys, Keep up the great work
and again check them out on x Restore well or

(02:08:38):
just go to Restore Wellness and it'll pop right up
there on the top Restore Wellness dot Org as well.
We'll talk again soon, guys, Again, keep up the great work.
Adam Kayler returns to the studio after the top of
the our news, we'll talk about the Bengals in the county.
I'm sure he's going to just go crazy on that one.
Plus county and city wasting our money. Adam is always
on top of those issues. Plus thank god I hurt me.
The aviation expert Jay Ratlis joined us every Thursday at

(02:09:00):
eight thirty. He's coming up as.

Speaker 11 (02:09:01):
Well, covering Trump's first one hundred days, every day, every day,
Promises Made, Promises. Kevin fifty five KRZ the talk Station.

Speaker 18 (02:09:11):
This report is sponsored number one precinct for instant access
to the information that affects you.

Speaker 3 (02:09:17):
Always on fifty five KRC the talk Stationtato.

Speaker 1 (02:09:23):
Six f fifty five kr CED Talk Station. A Happy
Thursday to you. Freddy e, Resident expert on all things local,
County and city. Adam Kaylor returns. He's in the studio
to talk about really fun stuff the Bengals in the
county and the stadium negotiation, as well as the reality
about the city and the county and city wasting our money.

(02:09:45):
Adam Keayler, welcome back to the studio. Man, it's always
great saying thanks Brian, you too. Anyhow, let's start with
the stadium because this also it deals with state issues
as well. As you and I were talking about before
the this segment started. That the ridiculous, insulting, crazy proposal
of funding the the the multi trillion dollar Cleveland Brown Complex.

(02:10:08):
These well connected team owners with their millions and if
not billions of dollars, the idea that taxpayers are supplementing
and supporting what funds their millions and billions of dollars
and and for for like bread and circus kind of stuff. Here, Oh,
the stadium six hundred million dollars in bonds which are
ultimately going to cost the taxpayers of the state of

(02:10:30):
Ohio what a billion dollars When you thought factor.

Speaker 7 (02:10:33):
In tracer every year every year, it's like, you know,
tens of millions of dollars. It's going to cost us. Yeah,
it's not free money. It's no, it's no, that's.

Speaker 1 (02:10:39):
Yeah, And that's my point. And there's a finite amount
of money in the world. And I always like to
point out everybody's got a list of stuff and things
they want from government. I have a limited list, like,
let's take care of what we've built already, so we
don't go further into whole and you have to ask
for more money from me, Like, let's take care of
roads and infrastructure and provide us with a safe community
and then we'll take care of the rest. We don't
need munch of stuff to.

Speaker 7 (02:10:59):
Think Roan, I got, you know, maybe twenty thousand dollars
with a landscape and I'd like to get done at
my house.

Speaker 4 (02:11:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:11:04):
Really, you know what, I'll tell you what, why don't
we have everybody listening on is pay tax to take
care of your landscaping?

Speaker 6 (02:11:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:11:10):
But anyway back to the stadium, So the commissioners and
the Bengals work out this phase one of what it's
supposed to be four phases. Yeah. Now, the Bengals, you know,
because they know that they got a pr problem and
a good will problem. Because they have this, we're going
to take our team and run away if you don't
give us what we demand. Mentality, which is fueled by

(02:11:31):
the terrible stadium deal that we got into originally.

Speaker 7 (02:11:34):
Ye, the worst in the Nation's the absolutely worse. I mean,
it's documented that it's the worst. There's experts that have
come out and said it was the worst.

Speaker 1 (02:11:41):
So do you think any of the voters that are
still around, the voted for that had any understanding of
how lopsided this thing is that we are going to
perpetually be obligated to keep up with the Joneses in
terms of stadiums in this country.

Speaker 7 (02:11:54):
Well, the sales tax never ended, I know, remember that
was supposed to get sunseted and that never ended. And
that's what we're fun this with. That's what the county
portion of the money is supposed to be coming from.
Is that sales tax that they just continued to save
up that they never you know, they they never stopped
charging us for. So that's that's where the money's coming from.

(02:12:15):
In the Bengals, money's actually alone from the NFL. Part
of it alone from the NFL. That G six or
G seven money or whatever it is. Yeah, some of
that's involved here. It's like one hundred and eighty five
million dollars they're going to pony up for this phase. Yeah, yeah,
they're gonna pud up one twenty, which the Bengals getting
credit for. But ultimately it's a loan or is it
a gift or a loan? It's a kind of a gift.

(02:12:36):
So it's future revenue. It's it's like a loan on
future revenue that they're going to get anyway.

Speaker 1 (02:12:41):
Okay, but it makes them good look good on paper,
like see, oh yeah, look what we did. We don't
have any obligation or the least to do this, but
here we are funding part of the upgrades. But the other,
the other component of this is what they're what we collectively,
This what the stadium collectively is going to get from
these upgrades. And I have to ask out loud because

(02:13:03):
you know, I sound like a bit of a populace
and all this, but I keep pointing out a lot
of this money is going toward like the boxes where
the rich people play.

Speaker 7 (02:13:11):
Some of that is yeah, yeah, there's some electric upgrades.
There's like escalators. They're moving things around, they're shifting the
way things are, and you know, they're trying to keep
up with the demands of the NFL, like some of
these other cities that are, you know, building brand new stadiums.
I mean in Jacksonville, they're doing a billion dollars worth
of upgrades to their stadium. A team that sucks worse

(02:13:31):
than the Bengals have you know, failed us over the years,
and you know they're doing they're spending that kind of
money just on upgrades and we're at like eight hundred
and thirty million something like that. Eight hundred yeah, yeah,
to make the Bengals happy. But you remember, they can
renew that lease. They have what five different times or
is it two five year extensions or is it five

(02:13:52):
two year extensions.

Speaker 1 (02:13:54):
It's one of the two. My recollection is it's the latter.
But it doesn't matter. They can cause this thing to
last another ten years.

Speaker 7 (02:14:01):
Or what they drag it out before, and then they're
going to ask for a new stadium at that point,
like you know this is gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (02:14:06):
It makes my head just spind Yeah, and after.

Speaker 7 (02:14:09):
That draft, I don't know, but you know, I just
keep going.

Speaker 1 (02:14:12):
Back to this. You literally could have the Bengals play
on a high school football field.

Speaker 7 (02:14:18):
Yeah, they get it.

Speaker 1 (02:14:19):
I mean, the game is played on that finite amount
of space predetermined by the rules how big a football
field must be. And the idea in a day when
you considered home with an eighty inch TV screen with
nine gajillion cameras watching the game like you're sitting on
the field high resolution, missing nothing by your drinking your
own inexpensive beer and using your clean bathroom. The idea

(02:14:42):
that we keep building and expanding and building expanding these
elite stadiums where most of the masses can't afford to
even go, is just it just frankly pisses me off.

Speaker 7 (02:14:52):
Well, and I think the general public has become more
cognizant of the fact that we don't have this kind
of money, Like right, the taxpayer just keeps getting beat
down more and more and more, and it affects the
middle class more and more and more. And if anything,
Trump and what they're doing with Doze and Elon Musk
and all this other stuff where they're uncovering all this waste,

(02:15:13):
I mean, it almost makes you wonder. It kind of
opens up the door for the conversation of what else
are they wasting our money on? Why can't we come
up with with some money for this stuff. Why is
it so hard to do this and we're broke, Like,
I mean even Dwine said it, he said, we do
all the money for this kind of stuff. Right, So
the general public is now like, hey, maybe money doesn't

(02:15:34):
grow on trees. And the average voter, you said, you know,
twenty five years ago, thirty years ago, whenever they did
this this last lease, I think it was twenty five
year lease. You know, did the average voter know what
they were voting for and knowing what they were getting into, know,
because I mean if you talk to the average voter,
they're busy taking care of their kids, they're body doing
their you know.

Speaker 1 (02:15:53):
It boiled down to like, I don't want to lose
the Bengals in Cincinnati. Now that's what the vote was for, right,
because if we don't build a new stadium, then they
may move to another city.

Speaker 7 (02:16:06):
Yeah exactly. And you mentioned people that are in politically,
this is what's going on up there, right, And it's
not just sports teams, it's it's everybody. It's developers, it's
I mean, you see this with the connected community situation
and High Park. It's it's other businesses that hey, move
to Cincinnati, move to Hamil County. We'll give you tax breaks.
And that's your competing against every city and every municipality.

(02:16:29):
They're all trying to attract businesses. They're all trying to
bring things that are going to excite the citizens to
their city, and they're always offering some sort of a
tax break or some sort of a And now you've
got FC Cincinnati saying, hey, look, we spend all this
money on this stadium. We're building this billion dollar plus
entertainment area in the West End. Can we get some
of that money back? State of Ohio like, hey, we'd

(02:16:52):
love two hundred fifty million dollars or whatever it was,
or they spent two hundred fifty million dollars in a stadium.
They want a little bit of that back. So you're
going down a slippery sl lope. And Senator Blessing he
mentioned this recently where he's like, look, you know, you
do this for the Browns. Next thing, you know, you're
doing it for the Bengals, You're doing it for the
Blue Jackets, You're doing it for the Reds, right. I

(02:17:12):
mean it's beautiful last couple of days and the Reds
had five thousand people in the stadium, you know, or
whatever it was. I mean you you know, yes, you
could play it on that field, right, you got fifty
thousand seats in that stadium and ten percent of a field, right, So,
I mean the teams have to put a good product
on the field, which lately the Bengals have been, even
though they missed the playoffs and they shouldn't have last year.

(02:17:32):
But you know, the fans are saying, hey, look, what
are you giving us, Like, yeah, you can leave, but
at the end of the day, you're still going to
put a good product on the field. And how are
you giving the Browns six hundred million dollars? They haven't
put a good team on the field in decades. They
can't even get a.

Speaker 1 (02:17:48):
Quarterback, I know. But and that that even is a
concept that we're talking about the potential of the state
taxpayers funding the Cleveland Browns project. Yeah, I mean that
those words are coming out discussing it as a concept
is just to me, it's mind boggling. Yeah. Yeah, and
maybe all these problems and concerns and all the finite

(02:18:11):
amount of money that is taking it in Columbus and
that that that are elected officials, I mean, have it
as a written proposal.

Speaker 7 (02:18:18):
Yeah to think it's Haslam family. Know what kind of
photos do they have of our elected officials. Well, they
donate money, so they donate money to the right people.

Speaker 1 (02:18:28):
So there is that.

Speaker 7 (02:18:29):
But also, I mean the Browns packaged up their deal
and you know, they put it together the right way,
They got it in in time, and here come Zamon
County the day a day later, Uh, it's too late,
after the budget was already passed, saying hey what about us,
here's we want some money too, And it just looks.

Speaker 1 (02:18:47):
It looks bad. It looks bad.

Speaker 7 (02:18:49):
Yeah, but Brian, they had twenty five years of work
on this. Yeah, they've had twenty five years of work
on this. They kept kicking the can down the road.
They wait last minute the Bengals mentioned it. They said, look,
we don't know what's going on on, Like, what's are
they talking to us? And you don't know if that
was them play. I mean, they negotiate with multimillion dollar
you know, entitled football players all the time, right, so

(02:19:09):
they know how to negotiate and they're dealing with these
you know, these agents and everybody all the time. I mean,
it's not like the three people sitting in Hamilton County
are anything like sports agents when it comes to negotiating, right,
they just had to pay some what was a guy
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year to help
them negotiate the deal with the Bengals in the first place,
this guy out of New York.

Speaker 1 (02:19:29):
That's because our elected officials don't know much about the
subject matters over which they legislate, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 7 (02:19:35):
That's and most of them aren't, you know, business owners.

Speaker 1 (02:19:39):
They're just they're politicians, politicians with no background experience in
any given subject matter, and yet they're pulling the strings
and making the calls on these matters. It's just absolutely
mind boggling. Yeah, we'll continue with Adam Kahler one more
segment before we get to Jay Rattle if at eight sixteen.
Right now, fifty five ks the talk station.

Speaker 3 (02:19:56):
George Clooney's play good Night and good Luck is be
careful trusting the media.

Speaker 11 (02:20:03):
The Democratic Party is lying flat out in the er.

Speaker 3 (02:20:07):
The play itself ends insinuating that Elon Musk gave a
Nazi salute our.

Speaker 11 (02:20:12):
Key supporters lying to the American people.

Speaker 3 (02:20:15):
It was so profoundly dishonest by Clooney, Klay Travis and
Buck Sexton. George Clooney, We're doing our surgery on you
crub up today at twelve oh six on fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (02:20:26):
The talk station elections are about choice Jana nine first
one well working as sometime around one pm we may
get some scattered showers and storms. Seventy eight for the
high today, slight chances of storms over nine, fifty nine
for the low cloudy day tomorrow, all day with scattered
afternoon storms of possibility seventy two for the high, down

(02:20:47):
to forty five overnight with a slight chance of rain
for the kickoff of Flying Gig weekend. Saturday is going
to be a high of sixty three with a fifty
chances some showers. It's sixty nine degrees right now. It's
time for traffic update from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 9 (02:21:02):
Do you see how payboss center offers comprehensive of BCDKIR
and advanced surgical expertise called five one three nine nine
two two sixty three. That's nine three nine two two
sixty three step found seventy five. An accident above Union
Center is over on the shoulder. It adds to some
heavy or traffic through Westchester, then slow again through Blackmunt.

(02:21:22):
Crews continue to work with an injury accident on river
and state that traffic backing up past Fairbanks, chucking from
on fifty five KRC he talked station.

Speaker 1 (02:21:33):
A twenty year fifty five KRCD talk station. Should I
say happy Thursday? It's like the subject matter we've been
talking about all day, I mean, from Indian Pakistan breaking
out in war, all the way to this ridiculous stadium
conversation we're having. Just yeah, I can't find inspiration this morning.
Adam Taylor and studio breaking it down for us, and

(02:21:54):
of course, in the aftermath of the revelation, they and
he reached a memorandum of understanding here in Hamlin County
with the Bengals for phase one of what ultimately will
be an eight hundred plus million dollars stadium upgrade deal.
And in the background, we've got Columbus approving or at
least moving in the direction of allowing six hundred million
dollars in bonds to go to the Cleveland Browns. And
one of the things and I talked about it, I

(02:22:15):
guess it was last week when the details came out
about that Adam Taylor, and you had mentioned it a
couple times off air that the legislation itself limits these
these the funding of sports teams to one counties with
one million or more yep, which means Hamilton County is
out of it because we only have eight hundred or

(02:22:35):
so thousand people in Hamilton County. So that would mean
Columbus and Franklin County in Cuyahoga County. Are those the
only two qualifying counties?

Speaker 7 (02:22:44):
They are the only two. Yeah, the House added a
rule only counties with a million plus residents can get
stadium funding.

Speaker 11 (02:22:50):
And since Hamilton.

Speaker 1 (02:22:51):
County, which meant Hamilton County obviously was designed to exclude
the Bengals and of course seasons.

Speaker 7 (02:22:58):
Well, we always get treated to like the head of
step child. I mean, we put more into the state
every year than we get back from the state.

Speaker 1 (02:23:05):
Yeah, you had mentioned that figure off air, and my
Hamilton County friends might be interested in knowing. So how
much does Hamilton County pay in taxes?

Speaker 7 (02:23:12):
So we pay about two and a half billion dollars
a year in taxes, we get back one point eight
five billion in state controlled spending. Now we get money
from the federal government and everything. That's not the same
thing though, No, But if you're talking about money we
put into the state versus money we get back, we
essentially subsidize. Out of the three biggest counties, we're the
biggest subsidizer of money back into the state right now.

Speaker 1 (02:23:32):
Contrast that with Franklin.

Speaker 7 (02:23:34):
Let's say so, well, I mean you look at actually
Franklin County gets about their They actually make four hundred
and sixty million dollars a year, so they pay for
what they pay from what they pay, Yeah, and that
gain of and then Cleveland's somewhere in the middle. Cleveland's
still they lose more than they actually put in. But

(02:23:54):
now you're talking about another six hundred million dollars, so
we actually are are down more than what we're even
asking for in this stadium thing. But in my thing
is is like, look, you know, us funding a stadium
is a little crazy. I mean, we do own it,
like the county does own that. Like I own a
commercial building over in Covington, and I have to keep

(02:24:16):
that upgraded right for my tenants. So I get it
when it comes to that. I get why the Bengals
were asking for it, and I understand their position but
at the same time, it's like, if you're going to
fund a stadium and you're going to ask taxpayers to
pay tens of million dollars a year in bonds to
pay these bonds back once they issue them, and then
you put in a rule that says, wait a minute,

(02:24:36):
only counties with over a million residents. Any team in
that county, it can get it. But anybody under And
we're at what eight hundred and thirty thousand residents half
our cities, you know, a third of our city actually
is in two other states.

Speaker 1 (02:24:53):
Yeah, that's a valid point geographically obviously, Yes, River in
the state line right there.

Speaker 7 (02:24:58):
So yeah, this is why I want to succeed bron
Take Northern Kentucky, take southeastern to create our own state,
state of Cincinnati. Let's just create our own state, because
I mean, this kind of stuff comes up and this
ends up, you know, screwing us a lot of times.
But we're the biggest metro area in Ohio if you
included North Kentucky, right, which we're in in Ohio, but
it's in our metro area. We're the biggest economically, we

(02:25:20):
have the biggest GDP in the state as well, and Columbus.
You know, they they uh annexed a lot of their
townships and you know, we still got you know, del
High for example, we got Norwood, Indian Hill and things
like that. Well, Columbus went in and they you know,
they added all those together. So technically they're the biggest
city in Ohio. So when businesses are looking to relocate,

(02:25:43):
when they're looking to do stuff, they say, oh, Columbus
is the biggest city.

Speaker 1 (02:25:46):
Wrong.

Speaker 7 (02:25:47):
Cincinnati is the biggest city. It's the most cosmopolitan city,
it's the most historical city, it's the most geographically interesting city.
It's you know, it's it's it's the north and the south.

Speaker 1 (02:25:58):
Well, if you get you get the benefit of you know,
the the downtown urban environment. But because not all the
areas are annexed or they're not under the control, which
of the city of Cincinnati, which is yeah, good thing.
That's a draw right.

Speaker 7 (02:26:10):
Well, look at Franklin. I mean it's all you know,
just like here, one party rule exactly, and it's mostly progressive.
So what you're going to get up there and what
you're gonna get here is what you're going to go
up there. So Delhi doesn't vote like the rest of
the city. You know, it's it's it's more conservative. So
if it did get dragged in, well then all of
a sudden, it's gonna you know, have to deal with it.
Although it would help with voting when it comes to

(02:26:33):
the city, our guy, Corey Bowman, it would help him
out a whole lot. You know, bring Norwood in, that
would help Cory out a little bit.

Speaker 1 (02:26:39):
He may have nabbed some of the Hyde Park folks.

Speaker 7 (02:26:41):
Oh, I think he nabbed a whole lot of Hyde
Park folks.

Speaker 1 (02:26:43):
I'm hoping so. And I hope my hard Park friends
out there go and vote for Corey Bowman, just as
a slap in the face to ft have purvol and
the insult that they heap down upon you by ignoring
what you want to do with your own town. Corey
Bowman or Adam Keller, it's always a pleasure of having
you in the study. Man, get all meet me, all
riled up this morning, but that's what it's all about,

(02:27:03):
spreading the awareness and hopefully someone will finally make a
stand and just put their foot down. Take care of
my friend. We'll talk again real soon, folks. I hope
you can stick around. We got iHeartMedia aviation expert Jay
Ratliffe coming up, moving away from politics, talk aviation, stick.

Speaker 11 (02:27:18):
Around fifty five KRC the talk station at U line.

Speaker 1 (02:27:23):
They know for Jennie Weather it'll be a cloudy day,
but the scattered afternoon storm should develop around one pm.
They're saying today's high seventy eight, slight chance of storms overnight,
with a low fifty nine tomorrow mostly clouds. Scattered afternoon
storms are a possibility seventy two for the high forty
five overnight with a slight chancerrain and flying pig weekend

(02:27:45):
comfortable sixty three degrees. If you're a runner, I would
call that comfortable. Not a runner, but also a fifty
percent chances and showers seventy degrees. Right now, let's get
a traffic.

Speaker 9 (02:27:52):
Update from the UC UP Tramphics Center U see help
weight Ball Center off first Comprehensive OBCD care in advance
starts a OH expertise called five one three nine nine
two two sixty three. That's nine nine twenty two sixty three.
Crews continue to work with a wreck on the river
and state traffic backing up towards hills Side northbound seventy

(02:28:12):
five heaving out a Burllinger into the cuts southbound seventy
five an accident here. Union Center is on the right shoulder.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station Hey
thirty on a Thursday, I gotta sire relief. I always
look forward to this time because get to move away
from politics, at least for the lord for the most part.

(02:28:34):
Welcome back to the FW five Krssey Morning Show. I
heard media aviation expert Jay Rattliffe, my savior throw.

Speaker 17 (02:28:41):
You throw political curveballs my way frequently, especially if they
tie into aviation.

Speaker 1 (02:28:45):
So well, I know it's I never assumed that, but
I always get an uplifted feeling when I'm talking to you.
It's like a sire relief. I'm not talking about like, well,
apparently Indian Pakistan breaking out with World War three right now,
which is a heady conversation. We started the morning show
out this morning, which has been kind of weight on
my shoulders all day. So I just look forward to

(02:29:07):
this time because for me, it's a really nice segue
into Friday, and I always feel like a certain weight's
been lifted when I'm doing the Friday morning show. So anyway,
I appreciate your willingness to come on and talk with
my listeners every week for a few segments.

Speaker 17 (02:29:19):
Jay, It's my pleasure and it's one of the few
that I have through the week of all the stations
I'm on across the country. That's a relaxed, don't rush
conversation and you kind of help lead things. And some
of our friends around the country, you kind of have to,
you know, spoon feed them on some things as far
as what the topics and the direction we're.

Speaker 6 (02:29:40):
Going to go.

Speaker 17 (02:29:41):
Never have to do that with you, And you know
that's what makes it fun for me.

Speaker 1 (02:29:45):
Well, you're an engaging person to talk to.

Speaker 15 (02:29:47):
It.

Speaker 1 (02:29:47):
I have a natural sense of curiosity about things that
I don't have a you know, real profound connection with.
So let's start with the American Airlines. We've got a
passenger lawsuit over a groping incident. Jeez, yeah, this happens.

Speaker 17 (02:30:00):
It was it was well the number of I think
it was last year that the flight attendant was or
excuse me, a passenger was touched in appropriately by the
person she was sitting next to. She told him to stop,
stop stop. He did not. She didn't bring it up
to the flight attendant until they were deplaning, so he's gone,
and at that point in time, there wasn't anything they

(02:30:20):
could do. She was upset because she said, look, you
know who he is because he was sitting here and
you've got all the information on all of us, so
it's right there. Uh, but they just got to be
blew it off. So what happened was she found out
later that this same man had later it was March
of this year, was accused of the exact same thing,

(02:30:42):
and that she was saying, wait a minute, you know,
I told you what was going on. Then she found
out it happened a year before her situation.

Speaker 1 (02:30:50):
Oh so they had prior notice that that was her position.

Speaker 17 (02:30:54):
So she's suing the airline saying, look, you knew that
this was a a potential problem. Passenger never should have
been allowed on the airplane. I think it's like a
seventy five thousand dollars lawsuit or whatever it was, But
it was something that when you look at this passengers

(02:31:15):
on board flights, especially red eyes, everybody's got their ears
on something else. So those kinds of things and what
ends up taking place far too often is, you know,
when these types of situations happen fellow passengers are oblivious
to it because they're either sleeping or preoccupied in something
else that they're doing. And that's why passengers that have
inappropriate interactions with fellow passengers are always encouraged to notify

(02:31:39):
the flight attendant if they can. If not, you hope
somebody sitting nearby will do so for you, just so
that they can get involved and maybe, you know, move
someone somewhere to try to minimize the situation that's ongoing.

Speaker 1 (02:31:53):
Yeah, I guess the litigation attorney in me and my
brain is spinning along the line's of litigation, you know,
hold the airline response for for this, and they've got
to be unnoticed that the guy's this kind of guy
in order to prevent him from getting on the flight.
But in order to prevent the guy to getting on
the flight, they have to know that it actually happened,
that someone just didn't make it up for the purpose
of being a jerk or something. You know, they may
have had a bad, you know, run in with him

(02:32:14):
in the in the the baggage area or something like that,
and he's like, I'm gonna I'm gonna pile on this
jerk and accuse him of you know, inappropriately touching me.
You know, there's all kinds of potential possibilities out there,
So putting them in a position of liability for this
guy's alleged grope when she didn't bring it to her
their attention on the flight, I don't know. I don't
It's that's a tough I.

Speaker 17 (02:32:34):
Don't see goingwhere anyway, because I'm thinking if he was accused.

Speaker 1 (02:32:39):
That's not that's not exactly to me, just.

Speaker 17 (02:32:43):
A totally different thing. But yeah, it's I guess some
of some of your common sense is rubbing off on me,
because when I read that, that's exactly what I thought.

Speaker 1 (02:32:51):
Well, you're a man of common sense yourself. You don't
need to be a lawyer to figure that one out.

Speaker 17 (02:32:56):
But you know, I will revelation on that.

Speaker 12 (02:32:59):
But okay, well wait, I will.

Speaker 1 (02:33:00):
Point out although they do have a legal department, I'm
confident American Airlines they have in house lawyers that can
handle this. So they're already on salary. But if you
had to retain an attorney to respond to the complaint
and file for emotion to dismiss the fact that she's
only asking for seventy five grand, this is one of
those you know what it's cheaper to just settle it
right or at check. So that's maybe that's that's the

(02:33:23):
whole that's well. I know plain is lawyers, and I've
dealt with them a lot over my life, and trust me,
I have a feeling knowing the way we talked about
it and knowing that the likelihood of a judge or
jury finding them liable for this guy's behavior is slim.
He asks for a low asking the complaint, and then
you settle for somewhere in the middle from zero to

(02:33:43):
seventy five thousand dollars, and they calculate what their legal
fees would be at five hundred, six hundred seven hundred
dollars an hour, and you can do the math on that.
That's what they typically do. Don't go away more with
Jay Rattliff. It's eight thirty six if you have Kearsydney
Talk station fifty.

Speaker 8 (02:33:57):
Five KRC, neighbor Hole much.

Speaker 1 (02:34:04):
Channel nine weather forecast. Scattered afternoon storms they say should
develop around one pm the day highest seventy eight, A
slight chance of those storms over night with a little
fifty nine clouds tomorrow and some scattered afternoon storms are
possible seventy two for the high down to forty five
overnight with a slight chanceer ring flying kay Weekends. Saturday

(02:34:25):
is the kickoff day. Spotty showers about fifty percent chance
of those in the highest sixty three seventy Right now
traffic time.

Speaker 9 (02:34:33):
From the UCL Tramping Center you see Healthwaight Boss Center
offers comprehensive OBCNY Cairen advance, sergic O expertise caught five
one to three nine three nine two two sixty three.

Speaker 12 (02:34:43):
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three. Crews continue to.

Speaker 9 (02:34:46):
Work for the wreck on River and State that has
tran and fake banked up close to hillside. Northbound seventy
five continues to run an extra ten minutes out of
Burrowine Gore into town southbound, heaviest in and out of
Lachland in southbound seventy one just PLO observrale Red Pink,
John king ramon fifty five krs seen the talk station.

Speaker 11 (02:35:05):
Have you ever been in a cockpit before?

Speaker 5 (02:35:07):
Hey?

Speaker 1 (02:35:07):
Forty if you got KRCD talk station Jay Ratliffe, has
I heard me the aviation expert Jay Ratliff going through
some aviation related topics and having some engaging conversation Lufton's Airlines.
What's going on with Luftanza.

Speaker 17 (02:35:22):
Well, they had a flight from la to Munich and
they had to make a very quick, unexpected stop in
Boston because they had a passenger that had a tablet
that got stuck in a business class seat. Get it out.

Speaker 1 (02:35:37):
Wait a second, since I got there's a gap between
the seats. We all know about that, and so the
laptop falls in between the gap. Fine, get stuck. They
can't get it out and they making it. Why did
they have landing? Why did through their unschedule landing?

Speaker 17 (02:35:52):
Because it is lysium battery powered, uh Liftium batteries have,
as you and I put in discuss, tend overheat and
if they overheat and catch on fire, which has happened,
flight intendants have a fire suppression bagag material.

Speaker 1 (02:36:09):
That they can put it in.

Speaker 17 (02:36:10):
But if it's duck in the sea, you can't get
it out. Then you have to you know, land the
airplane to get it out. But right, we had just
just recently another flight, it was Hawaiian Airlines flight Holllolulu
to Tokyo this week. They had a declared emergency because
they had a cell phone or mobile device that got

(02:36:32):
lodged in a seat and they started to smell an
electrical type of aroma and they had to declare them. Now, look,
you're on a five and a half hour flight Hollolu
to Tokyo over the water, it gets stuck, you start
smelling that, and yeah, you declared an emergency. They landed
at their destination as quickly as they could, fire trucks standing.

Speaker 6 (02:36:51):
By just in case.

Speaker 17 (02:36:53):
But these liftium batteries continue to become an issue, an issue,
an issue. You can't ban them obviously from commercial flights,
but I don't know what it's going to take because
we've had situations where some of the power chargers have
overheated dramatically, right and there's there's been some that caught

(02:37:13):
airplanes to catch on fire and things of this nature.

Speaker 6 (02:37:16):
So it's.

Speaker 17 (02:37:18):
It's something going to have to happen before we take
some drastic steps.

Speaker 1 (02:37:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 17 (02:37:22):
You can't have people not fly with their mobile devices.
That simply is not going to happen. But for some
strange reason, these lithium batteries are the only thing that
we can do as far as from a charging standpoint,
as far as a power pack and it's creating some
real issues. I mean, we've there's been airport videos of

(02:37:42):
people walking through the airport with their phones and their
backpack that immediately catch on fire, and then the backpacks
on fire quickly. And when you're at an airport, that's
one thing, But if you're in an airplane thirty five
thousand feet that happens. I mean the flight attendants again,
one more thing they have to take care of is
to keep us safe by making sure that that onboard

(02:38:04):
fire is quickly extinguished and contained.

Speaker 1 (02:38:07):
Well, it seems to me two solutions coming to mind
very quickly. Have every seat built like in the you know,
the the section where the fold out tray is, with
a fire suppression bag. You can easily contain your fire,
your cell phone, your laptop if it starts, if it
catches on fire starts smoking, that gives the passenger an

(02:38:27):
immediate opportunity to stuff it away and prevent the fire
from spreading.

Speaker 17 (02:38:32):
Do you think cheap airlines well, I know, I know
are going to pay to put that in every sea pocket.
We would like to, because you know what they tell us, Brian,
safety is are number one priority. That's our number one. No,
it's not profits are, but that's why they would never
do something like that, because it would cost too much money.
It's well, so many recommendations from the National Transportation Safety

(02:38:53):
Board following a crash or a near crash or loss
of life, where the NTSB tails the FAA. Here's fifteen
different recommendations that'll make aviation safer, and the minute one
of those starts to cost too much money, the FAA says, well,
we're not gonna app you know, implement this recommendation, but

(02:39:13):
you know, we'll consider some of the others. Money dictates everything.
And that's why I want to throw up every time
I hear one of these airline people CEOs talking about
how safeties are number one priority. Well, it sounds really good,
but it's not what really happens.

Speaker 1 (02:39:29):
Well, maybe if it's not in every seat, maybe at
least one every five seats or something, you know, something
that's easily accessible. I don't know, and I think about
that laptop getting stuck between the seats. You know, they
make products out there, like for automobiles that will close
that gap. It's just a little thing, an insert you
put in there. Yep, you know, maybe like a velcrow
piece of fabric that closes up the gap where the

(02:39:51):
laptop might get stuck, so you don't have to land
the plane. You know, I don't know.

Speaker 17 (02:39:55):
You know, if we have a loss of life, all
these creative things are going to come to light and
you we'll see airlines that will you pull a hamstring
running to the podium to talk about how they're going
to solve the problem. Well, why did it take a
disaster before you did that?

Speaker 6 (02:40:09):
Right?

Speaker 17 (02:40:10):
It's like it's like the plane crash in the helicopter
Blackhawk in DC. We knew there was a problem with
that airspace forever. Nothing was ever done until there's a
loss of life, and then guess what changes are put
in play?

Speaker 1 (02:40:24):
Well speaking, yeah, well let's speaking of that. We were
at a break, so we we'll catch it. You'll catch
my listeners up on the most recent update on that,
because yeah, things have changed finally. Also, the deadline for
the real ID is getting ready to kick in. Are
you prepared more with Jay Ratliff after these brief.

Speaker 8 (02:40:40):
Words fifty five KRC what if?

Speaker 1 (02:40:43):
One more time for the Channel nine first Warning weather forecast.
Scattered afternoon storms developing around one pm today. Anahei have
seventy eight down to fifty nine tonight with a slight
sands of storms, seventy two to the high to Marrow
with mostly cloudy skies and some scattered afternoon storms at
least possible overnight, a slight chance of rain in a
low forty five in the weekend for the Flying Tike
kicks off on Saturday with fifty percent chance of some

(02:41:07):
spotty showers. And I have sixty three seventy degrees right
now in time for traffic.

Speaker 12 (02:41:12):
From the UCLP Tramphic Center.

Speaker 9 (02:41:13):
You see how weight Boss Center offers comprehensive obcdcare and
advanced surgical expertise. Call five one three nine three nine
two two sixty three. That's nine twenty two sixty three.
Cruise are just about ready to clear the accident on
river at State. I'm starting to see traffic move a
little bit better, but it's going to take a while
to get rid of the backup, which is pass Fairbanks

(02:41:35):
southbound seventy five continues slow in and out of Lockland
northbound seventy five heaviest from ear Langer Chuck Ingram on
fifty five KROO.

Speaker 12 (02:41:43):
See the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:41:45):
Hey forty nine thick about karocite. Talk station tech part
of the Dave Hatter plus Corey Bowman on the program tomorrow.
In the meantime, one more segment here with iHeartMedia Aviation.
Next work Jay Raleff. Jay, you mentioned the Blackhawk DC
plane crash, which seems to be something that should never
should have happened in the first place. Why in the
hell is a helicopter flying in a flight path of
airplanes and they had been warned about it too, and

(02:42:07):
yet they disregarded the air tower. So what's the solution
for this? What brilliance did they come up with that
they should have come up with a long time ago.

Speaker 17 (02:42:14):
Well, they've stopped the helicopter routes across the river, for
one thing, and that was something that I think should
have been in a long time ago.

Speaker 1 (02:42:23):
Amen.

Speaker 17 (02:42:23):
And the latest report that we had it kind of
focuses in on the communication between air traffic controllers and
that black Hawk helicopter, the last one being a request
for the black Hawk to alter their approach and that
didn't happen. And when it initially didn't happen, they're the

(02:42:48):
flight instructor that was conducting the recurrent training for the
woman that was the pilot in command repeated the instructions
to her, which she acknowledged, but there was no change
in the course of the flight. So this happened thirteen
seconds prior to impact, and we're looking at OK, why

(02:43:08):
after receiving that set of instructions and then having your
flight instructor repeat those to you, was there no change
implemented in the flight pass. So the thought is it
could have bottom obviously valuable time. Would it been enough,
We don't know, but we certainly wish we would have
had those thirteen seconds. They were still flying, I'm told

(02:43:28):
the night vision goggles which severely limits their peripheral vision,
so they may or may not have seen things at
that point in time. Some people are critical of the
air traffic controller for not being more vocal as or
as the urgency side of things. I'm not seeing that,
although I can understand the point. But Brian, the air

(02:43:51):
traffic control was constantly telling the Blackhawk to keep an
eye on the approaching regional jet. They were giving its location.
The the helicopter continued to indicate that they had the
regional jet on final in visual. So the idea that
air traffic control dropped the ball here, I didn't get

(02:44:11):
that because it seemed like they were very very uh
particular as far as constantly letting that black Hawk helicopter
and of that other traffic, and they must have just
been looking at something completely different when they acknowledge that
they had it insight.

Speaker 1 (02:44:24):
Yeah, and I saw that theory suggested shortly after the
incident occurred that there was another plane on final approach,
I guess behind the one that they ultimately ran into,
and they may have had their eyes on that one
and knew that they would be past that possibility or
that that uh that that that area by the time
that one landed, So lord.

Speaker 17 (02:44:42):
Knows, the reportals show that and the other thing will
be there. There's probably multiple causes here on this particular disaster.
That tends to be what happens. There's rarely just a
single cause. It's normally several. But you know the idea. Well,
the first thing, when we heard that the aircraft's collision
took place near three hundred feet, it was like, well

(02:45:04):
time out here that that that can't be because the
helicopters have that ceiling of two hundred feet and they'll
hire so you know, was there equipment malfunctioning?

Speaker 13 (02:45:13):
Uh?

Speaker 17 (02:45:14):
Why were they at an altitude they should not have
been at was you know, to me, one of the
biggest things. But it'll be about another eight months before
the NTSB rolls out their final report, and most, if
not all the questions we have should be answered through that, and.

Speaker 1 (02:45:29):
You know, well I changes will be made. Something that
we know right now is that why should they have
been allowed to fly that way in that area and
the first place. Anyhow. Uh, Finally, before we get to
the hug delays, the real idea I got kicks in
on Monday.

Speaker 6 (02:45:44):
Right, Let's see, it's the seventh, I believe, so it'll
be uh.

Speaker 1 (02:45:49):
I don't know, it would be Wednesday, Wednesday or Wednesday.
Excuse me?

Speaker 17 (02:45:52):
Yeah, I flipped the cat Yeah, in fact, it's May.
And I was going to say, real quick, I'm thrilled
because May means breeze lying out of Cincinnata, Providence, given
us that seasonal flight, and then we've got a legiance
going to Gulf Shores in Portland. Golf Shores is big ones.
So I'm thrilled that we flipped the calendar to May.
But yes, the real id act that has been in

(02:46:15):
the work since two thousand and five kicks off on Wednesday.
So passengers need to have the acceptable form of identification
to board a flight and to get into federal courthouses.
So you've got to have that ID. And if you've
not flown in a while, you can go to TSA
dot gov and look at all of the acceptable IDs

(02:46:36):
that you can have to fly as of the seventh
And again, this is something that's been in the works
for decades and it's finally coming to that point. Yet
the TSA tells us Brian there could be twenty to
twenty five percent of travelers this do not have the
real ID. Now, if that's the case, you talk about
fun come, oh lord, but my compliments to the government

(02:47:01):
for making this effected in May. May is one of
the slowest travel months of the year. So you're gonna
roll this bad boy out. Not bad so unlike Southwest,
who's going to start charging check bags at the end
of the month, at the beginning of the busy summer
travel season. That's going to be interesting is everybody tries
to carry stuff on board. The government again, I'll give them,

(02:47:23):
I'll get them props here, because you know, doing it
early in the month of May is going to give
us a chance to work through it. Now, the TSA
knows that you're going to have certain individuals that are
going to get there and not have what they need.
So there are provisions in place to try to work
with those people as much as possible and as time allows,
to try to help these individuals make their flight. So

(02:47:45):
getting to the airport is you talk about mandatory, big
time for anybody that doesn't have what they need. And look,
if I'm traveling with an acceptable form of identification, I'm
anticipating delays. So I'm certainly going to get there earlier
than normal because you don't know what's going to happen.

Speaker 1 (02:48:00):
Well, that's a good practice anyway. All right, we're out
of time, but real quick, any problems going on out
there today for U Hudlace, Oh sure.

Speaker 17 (02:48:07):
Chicago, don't go there. It's got tons of weather gonna
give us issues throughout the course of the day, a
lot of delayed and canceled flights. Other than that, from
a hub standpoint, that's pretty much a problem child of.

Speaker 1 (02:48:18):
Today until next Friday. My to your friend Jay raydle
if it's always a pleasure having on the program, I
hope you have a wonderful, wonderful week, My Friend eight
fifty six folks, George Brenneman, Keith Tennefeld, our health experts,
Rey Store Wellness in studio. Really wild information they provided today.
Adam Taylor in studio as well in the Bengals Stadium
thing and the Cleveland Brown Stu. It's a mess out there.

(02:48:39):
Plus Jay Rattler fifty five cars dot Com for the podcast.
Thank you, Joe Strecker, executive producer. I appreciate what you do.
Every day. Tomorrow Tech Friday plus Corey Bowman Vote for Corey.
Have a great day, folks. Glenbeck's coming right up.

Speaker 11 (02:48:51):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days.

Speaker 5 (02:48:53):
Every day we stand under the verge of the four
greatest years in American history.

Speaker 11 (02:48:58):
Fifty five the Talkstation.

Speaker 8 (02:49:00):
This report is sponsored by

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