Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
At thirty five k r C DE Talks.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Gave ship Friday.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
A vacation.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
That does not make Now you can apply that to
pretty much anything across the board there, Joe Jreker, thank
you very much for the SoundBite. Brian Thomas right here,
glad to be and uh bushing everyone a very happy
Friday Eve. Excuse me, trying to get my voice one
in the morning and don't test it out till the
mic comes on, so occasionally do run into problems along
those lines, So my sincere apologies for the cough anyway,
(00:54):
when you caught when your cough button is covered up
by fifteen articles, it's little difficult to reach it. My
excuse anyway. Coming up seven to five and power you,
Todd Zendser returns talking about connected communities like Agenda twenty
one or something. Connected communities. We're gonna get the details
from Todd. Tod'sville on the program many times talk about
issues like that. Brilliant man. He is Donald and Neil
(01:15):
Americans for Prosperity and he'll be joining the program in
seven thirty two. Well, talking about Americans for Prosperity. They
are celebrating twenty years and doing great work on behalf
of a variety of candidates, including Bertie Moreno. Fingers crossed
that says on the rundown Bertie Moreno's schedule for eighth
five this morning. Haven't talked to him since before the primary,
so looking forward to having him back on find out
(01:36):
how the campaign's going. And Shared Brown and how he's
different from Sharon Brown in so many different ways, and
Shared Brown of course presenting a different image of himself
in the advertising. He runs from the real Shared Brown
with a real Shared Brown. Please stand up, Please stand up.
Not in the ad you think he's some sort of
you know, moderate, low centrist, reasonable man kind of guy.
(01:58):
No the board ninety eight percent of the time voting
with the left wing of Biden administration, Biden Harris administration
or now Harris Biden administration. It's kind of a funny article.
I guess we could just call it the Harris administration. Yesterday,
(02:18):
Joe Biden was on the View. Does anybody watch the View?
Joe instructor do you know if anybody watches that? I
don't know either. I know Greg Guttfeld has a go
on at least the View generally or individuals on the view.
Every single monologue he does every day of the week.
(02:39):
I get a kick out of it because they replay
that as I'm coming to work in the morning at
three o'clock in the morning. Anyway, so he's on the view.
He seemed to have dumped everything in Kamala Harris's laps
as vice president. There wasn't a single thing that I did,
remember he was vice president in the Obama administration. By
(03:01):
way of context, As vice president, there wasn't a single
thing that I did that she couldn't do, and so
I was able to delegate her responsibility on everything from
foreign policy to domestic policy. Is that him suggesting that
it was on her watch and that she was perfectly
capable of implementing, following through, and doing things that she's
(03:24):
now promising she'll do if she gets elected. Why didn't
you do it for the past three and a half
plus years, people regularly ask out loud, So anyway, I
thought that was kind of funny. So what else has
happened today? Jay Ratliffe returns. He had a brief hiatus
since his father passed last week, and God bless Jay Ratliff.
Today we'll be talking with Jada thirty we always do.
(03:44):
On Thursday. Airlines preparing for yet another big storm, big
time storm, and that of course is making the headlines
all over. The hurricane that's cat for is what they're
expecting when it makes landfall. Two United Airlines passengers injured
when a plane made an evasive maneuver near another plane,
and some changes could be coming soon to Southwest Airlines.
(04:06):
And Jay, if you're listening a late entry, I saw
this headline over at the New York Post. Scientists want
every flight to take up to an hour longer because
they say slower speeds are better for the planet. Oh okay,
that's just what you want at an hour extra along
(04:27):
to your flight. So those are the topics of Jay
Ratliffe and turn to the hurricane. Yeah, it sounds terrible.
Like I said, they're expecting it to become a Category
four hurricane. And the weirdest, most difficult to get my
head around, because you know, Florida is right at sea level.
They said it could bring storm surges up to twenty feet.
(04:49):
You can menage a two story plus storm surge coming
at you when you're basically at sea level. Anyway that's
going to go inland, I'm sure basically the entire state
of Florida under some sort of tropical weather alert, storm
watches all the way up into Georgia and the Carolinas
Atlantis under a storm watch. National Hurricane Center said there
is a danger of life threatening storm surges along the
(05:12):
entire west coast of the Florida Peninsula. According to the
National Hurricane Center and its release is that a catastrophic
and deadly storm surch is likely along portions of Florida's
Big Bend coast, where inundation could reach its highest twenty
feet above ground level, along with destructive waves. There's also
a danger of life threatening storm surge along the remainder
of the west coast of the Florida Peninsula, so basically
(05:36):
the entire Florida Peninsula west side. They suggest Tampa Bay
could see five to eight feet storm surge or of
storm surge. DeSantis's exition executive order Tuesday actually declared the
state of emergency for sixty one of the state sixty
seven counties. Why not just make it the entire state anyway,
(05:57):
then it turns our direction, so it slows down when
it hits land. It's going to go northwest through Friday
and Saturday, bringing widespread heavy rain, damaging wind, possible tornadoes
to cities in the southeast. At least looking at my
(06:17):
weather forecast, a few storms are possible soaking rain on Friday,
isolated showers overnight, and mostly cloudy day and night with
a chance of showers after eight am on Saturday, So
maybe get some showers overnight tonight as well. So it
doesn't look nearly as impactful for our area as they
were suggesting it was going to be. I believe it
(06:39):
as recently as yesterday they thought it was going to
kind of hit us a little bit harder than that.
So there's that update.
Speaker 3 (06:48):
Again.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Apologies, and we have our ineffective Congress moving forward and
taking an easy way out. Both the House and Senate
fast the Continuing Resolution to fund the federal government through wait,
wait for it, late December House vote of three forty
(07:13):
one to eighty two to approve the measure under fast
tract procedures employed by Republican leaders to bypass disagreements within
the party. The measure required two thirds supermajority. Guess what,
they got it over to the Senate, who voted quickly thereafter,
seventy eight to eighteen. They say, everyone wants to get
home ahead of election day and the other fun fact
(07:35):
on this, and you know a little some of the
loll right after it. This is every single damn time,
and it really really really irks me to no end.
The next deadline, like I said, it pushed it off
till late December, specifically December twentieth, right in front of Christmas. Mmm,
so we got to hurry up. Oh, there's no way
we can get all this work done. We got to
(07:56):
get home for Christmas. Is to Christmas holidays. Let's do
another continuing resolution. Probably you can see the riding on
the wall. Segue to omnibus. Since nobody can get the
twelve independent spending bills passed, which is what they're supposed
to do, They've got a full year ahead of the
time to know that that's due. The House is pasted
five of twelve. Do you have any The Senate's done none.
(08:24):
It's their job, David done, Jack squat. You know, if
you or I performed at our jobs the way these guys,
these lollygaggers perform, we would be fired.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
If Joe, for example, he does the rundowns for the
fifty five KRC Morning show if you just didn't do
a rundown. So okay, I'll get you the rundown for
Thursday on Monday, like after that just doesn't cut it.
I mean, you know, you've got a job that's twelve
specific spending bills. You got a full year ahead of
(09:07):
time to know when they are due. And yet here
we find ourselves. Oh my god, election days looming. We
haven't gott an agreement in place. No, I'm not going
to vote for that now, I'm not going to vote
for that. Oh my god, the government's going to shut down.
We can't have that continuing resolution Segue to an omnibus bill,
which is basically rolls all twelve into one big fat
bill that no one reads and no one knows what's
in it, and of course doesn't include anything at all.
(09:29):
Along the lines of a cut douck with Senator ran
Paul yesterday about is what is it fivepenny plan? It
used to be but I don't know. Fifteen twenty years ago,
if you just cut one cent of every dollar spent
by the federal government, we could have a balanced budget
in no time. Now we're up to five cents. But
according to Senator Ran Paul, inder his calculations, A mere
(09:51):
five cents cut on every single dollar the federal government spends,
and they spend a lot, as you know, would get
us in a balanced situation within five I think that's
a worthy exercise. Let's give it a try in the
name of saving our country from our incompetent lords and
masters that we call senators and representatives and presidents. This
(10:17):
is so frustrating to me, extremely frustrating. I think you
get the point I'm making. Five fifteen fifty five KRC
the talk station. Feel free to call. This is something
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Westchester location is the place to be. Tyler's the legs
It off seventy five two streets east right on Kinglin
and you are there five one three six four four
twenty six twenty six. Please tell the Brian said, Hi,
five one three six four four twenty six twenty six.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
Now five KRCD talk station five point twenty on a Thursday,
A happy one team, but five KRC dot comedy can't
listen live. I mentioned talk. I'm with Senator Ram paul yesterday.
That's right there, of course, Judgejennena Paula Tan on the
history of free speech. FLP President Ken Kober regarding this
ins a public schools ignoring the realities of teen violence
and not lifting a finger to do anything about it
(12:12):
at the bus stops where teenagers are very unruly, apparently,
argue we need more traditional family homes where values are
taught and insisted upon. Over the phone. See what Pat's
got this morning. Pat, welcome to the program, and happy
Thursday to you.
Speaker 5 (12:28):
Same to you, Brian. To begin with, I'm praying every
Sunday the same cantherine in Sienna, and I'm praying for
you that everything comes out. Okay, Oh thank you.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
You're talking about my CT scan. Please are you referring
to my CT scan? Yes, oh, thank you very much.
I hope to get the results back today. So that's
very kind of you to be to be thinking on
me and the offering me some prayers. That's a very
beautiful and I really truly appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (13:00):
Those prayers get answered every time evil gets caught. The
reason I'm calling is I think I've mentioned.
Speaker 6 (13:08):
Before George Soros, who.
Speaker 5 (13:11):
I just found out was born in Hungary in nineteen thirty.
He is buying got radio stations. And I know for
a fact because my daughter got me a radio and
it was only FM, so I know the radios are
out there. So she sent that back and I got
my AM at them radio. But I am so worried about,
(13:37):
you know, if they take the AM off, and I
know there's something up there in Washington they're supposed to
vote on, but we have to have AM because that's
the other way. I listened to you in the morning,
so I'm praying that we keep our AM. But anyway, Brian,
you'd be very careful pray for the children, because boy
(13:59):
do we.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
Need for Yes, we do.
Speaker 5 (14:01):
So you have a super day, honey, and that goes
for Joe too.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
God bless you, and thank you again for all your prayers.
That really means a great deal to me. Very kind
of you. Five twenty two, three seven, four nine fifty
five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk pound
five fifty on eight and chie phones. Here's the development
talking last week with the instructor who gave the empower
use some inar class about USA Deadly Force and the
UH Ashley Babbitt came up and I said, that's a
(14:26):
great illustration of the use of deadly force. One was
totally inappropriate and unlawful, and that that police officer, the
Capitol police officer, should be arrested for it. Capitol Police
Lieutenant Michael Byrd is the one who shot her, even
though his life was not in peril and there was
no one really around him. Well, she's got a court
hearing date. Her family fought a wrongful death action against
(14:47):
a variety of people, of course, including the police lieutenant
Michael Byrd, uh and U S District Court for the
District of Columbia. Now they want to have a transfer
to a less politically charged jurisdiction. But in the meantime,
trial date July twentieth, twenty twenty six, the thirty million
dollars wrongful death suit. Now, as the details unfold here,
(15:09):
according to the complaint and as has been documented another
reporting on it, she traveled from San Diego to DC
to attend a Women for America first rally obviously January sixth,
and two individuals in the crowded hallway, they say it
(15:30):
was tightly packed struck otherwise dislodge the glass panels and
the lobby doors. Folks have seen the video know exactly
what I'm talking about. Lieutenant Byrd, United States Capital of
the police commander at the time, was the incident commander
on January sixth, shot her on site as she raised
(15:53):
herself into the opening of the right door through this
skinny little panel that had been removed the sidelight. Accord
to the reporting, Lieutenant Bird later confessed that he shot
her before seeing her hands, or assessing her intentions, or
even identifying her as a female. Not that that would
matter one way or another. I mean, a female can
(16:14):
be just as threatening and sometimes even more threatening than
a man.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
But she was not arms.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
Her hands were up in the air, they were empty,
and they were in plain view of Lieutenant Bird and
others who were in the lobby area. He was never charged,
He never was punished, He was never disciplined for murdering her.
He was not under fear, He was not under eminent
apprehension of grievous bodily harm or death. None of that
(16:41):
was present. She was busily trying to squeeze herself through
that little sidelight with her hands in the air. He
had time to assess it. It's also noted in the
the lawsuit that not one member of Congress is in
the lobby and it was being guarded by multiple armed
police pose officers. So you know the details and the
(17:03):
complaint go on. But then she does have a trial date.
I think it's a little too far off, but at
least maybe justice will be served. And I can't think
of a more open and shut case than that one.
When it comes to the use of deadly force and
the erroneous unlawful use of deadly force, it's negligent at
minimum five twenty five to fifty five k SE Detalk Station,
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Emory FCU dot org. Fifty five car the talk station.
Hey everybody, this is Jock.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
Five thirty.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
I'm very happy when team to go over to the
phones here. Oh, it's always an enjoyable experience to hear
from west side. Jim, what's side? Welcome back? My friend?
Are you there?
Speaker 3 (18:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (18:45):
Okay, you're here. Until I hit the button a little late.
You just you're you're That's okay, not not a problem.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
I'm a no big deal.
Speaker 6 (18:51):
Hey, we've got a couple of things this morning. That
DC Cops situation. I think it, you know as well
as I do. On training playing Monday morning quarterback. Same
thing happened here with that Timothy Thomas Deeel. He had
his finger on the trigger and accidentally went off, you know,
playing that Monday morning quarterback, of course, and his training
(19:14):
was not to put your finger on the trigger unless
you're a.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
Point of your life.
Speaker 6 (19:18):
You put it on the guard and then if something happened.
So they're going to try to cop out on this
thing and say that he was afraid for his life
or some kind of an excuse, which ain't gonna hold water.
But you watch him get out of this thing. I mean,
it's going to end up in a civil court, and
that's probably about it.
Speaker 2 (19:35):
That's what this case is. It's a thirty million dollar
civil wrongful death claim that the family is filing against him.
Speaker 3 (19:43):
Now, I see I didn't know that.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Well, thanks for your burden of proof is preponderance as
opposed to beyond a reasonable doubt in a civil case.
So you only need like fifty one percent as opposed
to basically ninety percent belief in the underlying allegations.
Speaker 6 (20:02):
Well, let's hope that he ends up paying something out
of this because it's it's terrible. But on a local scene,
I didn't even know we had a city council. We
got a city council resigned and I don't know who
the Democrats are going to replace them with, But I
didn't even know we had nine people of city council people.
Speaker 3 (20:18):
They haven't done a damn thing, And now this guy leaves.
Speaker 6 (20:22):
I like to have a list of what he's done,
and I like to have a list of what the
council's done.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
Actually, yeah, one normally relies on local news outlets to
follow the antics and shenanigans of elected officials on a
local level, just have a paucity of reporting from city hall.
Speaker 6 (20:37):
Yeah, I guess Sharon Coolidge will be right on top
of this thing and let us know why, oh well,
and he decides to get.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
Out of here, probably one of She's one of the
few local reporters that actually pays attention, at least from
time to time about what's going on in city hall.
I don't see it any place else, honestly.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
Yep, that's about it.
Speaker 6 (20:55):
I mean, that's that's She's on top of it ninety
percent of the time, and the other ten percent. She's
looking for it, so I give her kudos on that one.
But no, I just wanted to throw my two cents
in there on that ec cop because it just irritates
me that, you know, the gun just went off. No, no, no,
it's your training, pal. You're not supposed to have your
finger on that trigger.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
That's right, I mean, that's that's just standard practice if
you own a firearm. The only time you should have
your finger on the trigger is if you're planning on
squeezing off around.
Speaker 6 (21:26):
Yes, sir, But it's going to be good to hear
Todd Zenzer at seven o'clock. I'm looking forward to that.
It's always good to hear him.
Speaker 2 (21:33):
Connected communities, Jim, Connected communities.
Speaker 6 (21:36):
Yeah, unbelievable. I'm sure he went to that event last
night at the farm where mister Atherton was speaking. I
didn't make it, but I'm sure he went there. Todd.
Todd hits everything and he's everywhere.
Speaker 2 (21:51):
He really does, and he is a He's a smart guy.
There's no question about it.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
Yes, he is very smart.
Speaker 6 (21:57):
So anyway, Brian, good morning to you and Joe.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Thanks well, appreciate the call man you have all. I
look forward to it. He's referring to Anderson Pub and
Girl for the last listener lunch before the election. I
hope everybody can make It's gonna be a good time.
It's always a good time when Jim Keeper's there. Let's
see what Keith's got. Keith, thanks for calling the program
this morning.
Speaker 7 (22:14):
Hi.
Speaker 8 (22:14):
Can you hear me?
Speaker 3 (22:15):
Brian?
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Loud and clear?
Speaker 8 (22:17):
Okay, Now if I start laughing and giggling while I'm
talking to you, I can't help it because my goofy
little cat wants to tickle me while I'm trying to
talk to.
Speaker 3 (22:28):
Get.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
I get tales of cat ownership from my mom as
the you know, first for you into owning a cat.
He's had snickers for. I think that it's like a
couple of years, maybe by now, maybe a year and
a half. And I get the stories of cat ownership
all the time. They're hilarious.
Speaker 8 (22:43):
Well, I have a dog too, and believe they're not
their best friends.
Speaker 9 (22:46):
And that's great a dog.
Speaker 8 (22:48):
My dog actually adopted the cat when it was a
little kid aw and took it in and raced it
ever since.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
That's beautiful cat's very dog like. Keith.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
You didn't call talk about the cat on your mind today.
Speaker 8 (23:01):
Well, two things quickly about the mayorship in New York City.
Oh yeah, I'm quite surprised nobody on the East Coast,
which the radio stations I've been listening to, is talking
about the fact that either the prosecution or the defense
may ask for a change of venue in that case.
Because if I'm either or, I don't want that case
(23:24):
held in the southern district of New York City where
the guy being prosecuted as the mayor of the town.
For God's sake.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
Yeah, And for those not in the know, Mayor Adams
has been indicted. The indictment hasn't been unsealed yet. It's
supposed to happen today, But the grand jury has handed
down an indictment. It's just a specifics that we don't
know about.
Speaker 7 (23:43):
Yet, right.
Speaker 8 (23:45):
And another thing too, dependent on how serious the charges
are whatever it is. I'm not saying how serious it's
going to be or not be, but it's very very serious.
The judge might slap him with a no bond holder
and having held an a federal tail somewhere possibly, I mean,
depending on how serious the charges are.
Speaker 2 (24:05):
Yeah, maybe, But and there's a whole.
Speaker 8 (24:08):
Bunch of different rumors going around in New York City
about what it might be, and if it is any
of those things, he actually might get hit with a
no bond holder.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
Well, wouldn't that be interesting? A Democrat mayor and a
Democrat city with Democrat prosecutors and Democrat officials all asking
for him to be held. That would be highly unusual.
Now I expect that kind of a reaction to Oh,
I don't know, maybe Donald Trump being indicted criminally, but
the mayor of New York City, this is that. Keep
your popcorn out on that one. We'll find out whether
it's how serious the charges are. He's been all of
(24:41):
the people around him, swirling around him, have all had
their houses raided by the FBI. So I think this
is the Writing's been on the wall for this to
come down for some time now. So popcorn is out
five thirty six fifty five KR City talk station. Stacking
Stupid's out as well. We'll get to that in a
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Speaker 1 (26:38):
Fifty five KRC dot com for generation.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
Coming up at five forty two here fifty five kr
CD talk station stack o stupid. We go to Henderson, Nevado,
where the Henderson Police and Fire Department responded to one
thousand block a wellness place because of a shooting happened
around four am on Saturday. Nine to one one calls
indicated gun shots were heard. A guy was seen lying
on the ground. Detectors arrived and preliminarily determined that an
(27:10):
unknown man carrying a gun approached in a confrontational manner
a thirty three year old man and demanded his cell
phone and wallet. Eh, you never know who's pack enough
a concealed carry weapon these days. In this particular case,
the victim also had a gun and was faster on
the draw, apparently because the thirty three year old guy,
(27:31):
who was fearing for his life legitimately so fired multiple
rounds from his gun, hitting the unknown man, killing him.
They attempted life saving measures, but well, this guy died
of the scene. Thirty three year old man who fired
his gun stayed on the scene cooperated with the investigation,
according to officials, detectives considering the case of homicide, but
they added that the coroner's office will release the identity
(27:52):
of the guy who died, as well as the cause
and manner of death, which I think, based upon the porting,
we all know how he died, commented on the Henderson
Police Department's Facebook pace about the incident. Everybody's backing the
guy who was getting robbed, accorded to one person, people
should realize Nevada is both an open carry and can
killed the concealed carry state. Just like Texas and Montana.
(28:14):
You never know who might be packing that second amendment.
Good guy with a gun, one bad guy with a
gun zero. One other said, sounds like a good shot,
and finally one said one less booking.
Speaker 10 (28:29):
Now, who can argue with that?
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Mat Go to Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Man dead after a
dispute over a jukebox song. Things got Things got violent
at a Mexican restaurant Fort Lauderdale, early money, he courted
a witnesses. Argument started around one o'clock in the morning
thirty in the morning at h and Tahito's Mexicanos restaurant,
(28:55):
when one man insulted another over his song choice on
the jukebox. One witness said, I heard that there was
these two guys and then they got into an argument
because one of them played a song that the on
the jukebox and the other guy was kind of pissed off.
The guy that got insulted pulled his weapon and started
shooting at the other guy. Fight escalated quickly. According to
(29:21):
another friend who was inside the restaurant, the man who
insulted this song allegedly drew his weapon first, but the
other guy fired back. What the quote from the witness,
One of them played a song on the rock Cola
the machine, and the other guy was pissed off and said,
you're not a real Mexican if you play that blanking music.
(29:45):
You know, police dispatcher said, just advising that a male
got shot three times. The other guy was chasing him
shot after shot. It's just sad because this is a
good neighborhood and has said it never happens. According to
the victim's brother, he spent the morning looking for him
(30:05):
until he got a call from detectives that confirmed his
suspicions that his brother was dead. He said the argument
occurred inside the restaurant was about music coming from the jukebox.
They have security footage, by the way, as his tradition anymore. Uh,
you know, Joe, it really irks me as well. Who, what, when, where,
(30:27):
and why the why is the song? But we're left
without the specifics about what specific song it was. I
knew you were gonna do that, Straker, watch it, man,
You're gonna get shot. Forty fifty five Krcity Talk Station.
God bless God, bless pat for concern over my ct
(30:51):
scansfully awfully nice for like I said, it should be
getting my scan back. You know, things don't look good
on the scan. I'm back in the hands of OHC,
and that's okay. I just met with them the other day,
following up after I had doctor Patel MYHC lymphoma doctor
doctor in studio talking about lymphoma and Leukemia Awareness Month.
So lymphoma was on my short list of things to
(31:13):
pay attention to. So we talked with her, learned about
all the symptoms and I thought, you know what, out
of abundance of caution, I want to get in there.
And so ct scam was ordered. So I kept my
fingers crossed. But you see, good care, follow up, and
I know I'm in the best possible hands if if
it comes back, and I was told early on it
is certainly possible that it will. I was hoping to
make it to November, which will be four years. Maybe
(31:34):
I will. Anyway, I know I'm in great hands and
you will be too. If you get the bad news
you have cancer from your doctor, OHC is the place
to turn and thank you. I always thank Joni for
referring me to OHC. They've been at it for more
than thirty five years, focusing on your individual treatment, offering
the latest and leading edge treatments and clinical trials, surrounding
you with everything you need to focus on, and that's
(31:55):
what matters most beating cancer. So if you get bad
news like me, start with OHC to learn more or
get a second opinion. It's eight eight eight sixty four
ninety eight hundred eight eighty eight sixty four nine forty
eight hundred five them online. Just go to ohcare dot com.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
Fifty five KRC, the talk station. It's football time.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
For the nine first one forecast isolated showers a day,
highest seventy five overnight clouds, showers arrive, widespread rain enters
the area. Sixty seven for the low few storms are
possible along with soaking rain on Friday, the highest seventy
three isolated showers overnight sixty three and chances showers after
eight am on Saturday going up to seventy six. It's
sixty four right now. Traffic time from the UC Help
(32:40):
Traffic Center with U see health.
Speaker 11 (32:41):
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
and innovative treatments and give patients a chance for better
outcomes visit ucehealth dot com. Highway traffic that's doing fine
early on this Thursday morning, no recks to deal with.
I'm not seeing any major problems or delays into downtown.
There is a single car wreckon Paddock at the south
(33:01):
seventy five Ram Chuck Ingram Month fifty five k C
the talk station.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
Five fifty one IF at five kr CD talk station.
How are you with Todd zemzsons. You can be talking
Connected Community seven oh five. Donald and Neil celebrating twenty
years of Americans for Prosperity at seven thirty. Bernie Marina
in it at eight oh five, follow by Jay Rattler
at eight thirty moving back over to the stack is stupid.
We have an Arkansas couple who tried to sell their
(33:31):
two month old baby for a six pack of beer.
Speaker 1 (33:36):
Dear, what the hell?
Speaker 2 (33:39):
I don't know? They really need you to read more
than that anyway. Twenty one year old Darian Urban and
a twenty year old Shalene Ellers accused one count each
of the dangering the welfare of a miner and attempting
to accept consideration for relinquishment of a minor, a technical
way of saying selling your Baby Corner Event County Court
records obtained by long Crime the attempted the adoption for
(34:00):
Ooz as well as some money, apparently open knowledge among
the folks involved and several others. September twenty first person
used the phone in the manager's opposite Beaver Lake Hideaway
campground to call it. Benton County Sheriff's Office report that
the parents tried to give up the baby for a
six pack of beer and then wanted one thousand dollars
for the baby, corded to the affidavit of a probable
(34:21):
cause filed in the case. City a little bit east
of Oklahoma border, some two or miles in the northwest
of Little Rock, Arkansas. According to the document, I, Darien
Urban and Charlene Ellers are signing our rights over to
(34:44):
Cody Nathaniel Martin our baby boy for one thousand dollars.
On nine twenty one, twenty four. Document reads disclaimer after
signing this, there will be no changing y'all two's minds
and to never contact again. They had their lawyer draw
that one up. I think Joe. Multiple witnesses corroborated this
pseudo adopt adoption process. Accord to the deputy. In the affidavit,
(35:06):
he also obtained a cellular phone video of Urban and
Ellers signing the contract with a man who would have
bought their baby. The impetus of the attempted sale was
beer itself. Eller allegedly approached the other couple's camper asked
them for beer, as he regularly does the cording to
the Affidavid. When the couple declined, Mom left, but the
man named Ricky Crawford offered beer in exchange for keeping
(35:28):
the baby overnight. Crawford, who investigators described as exceedingly intoxicated
during his interview, allegedly said he was concerned about the
baby's welfare and wanted to get him out of Erbin
and Eller's hands overnight, which they agreed to alf David reads.
He asked if he could have the baby overnight and
provided Urban and L's with several cans of beer in exchange.
Urban and Ellers agreed that give the baby, along with
(35:49):
the diaper bag to Crawford, and then brought the baby
to to Martin and another camper at the campground. Ellers
and Urban then came to the same camper and spoke
with Martin and Crawford before signing the less Martin told
law enforcement he was the person who drew up the contract.
No money actually changed hands, but he planned to bring
the couple thousand dollars check on September twenty third Court
(36:12):
to the detective. Based on the totality of the investigation,
is believed both Bururban and Eller created a substantial risk
of death or serious physical injury by abandoning their minor child,
initially with an obviously intoxicated mail and ultimately with someone
they did not know. Courd of the ABIDATA, they reported
(36:33):
Crawford had come to the camper and requested to take
the baby for the night. They stated they agreed and
gave the baby Crawford. They stated they didn't discussed it
and went to the camper where the baby was and
spoke to Martin. So they'd offered a surround of the
baby to Martin exchange for one thousand dollars in cash.
They said Martin created an agreement that they videotaped to
ensure it was legal and if they planned to legalize it.
(36:53):
On the following Monday, they both stated that they left
on the understanding that the baby was given to Martin
in exchange for one thousand dollars to be collected owner
the campground call one of the transaction called nine one one.
According to the shriff, saw his baby boy allegedly showed
signs of neglect, shocking no one. Both urban and lers
(37:14):
ordered held on fifty thousand dollars bail. Do what the
hell and we'll just go ahead and give me the
biggest douche of the universe award on top of that.
Five five fifty five k r SE Detalk Station plenty
coming up at the six o'clock hours, some interesting variety
of topics to talk about, or you can set the stage,
give me a call and tell me what you want
(37:35):
to talk about. Either way you go stick around, be
right back.
Speaker 3 (37:38):
Come aa.
Speaker 12 (37:40):
Fight Fight.
Speaker 1 (37:42):
This is where you get the very latest twenty twenty
four fifty five krc DE talk station. What's the best
place to reach new customers for your business wherever they are?
Speaker 2 (37:53):
And that's six to fifty five kr SE Detalk Station
Brian Thomas swishing you all a very happy Friday Eve
and inviting you to stick around. One hour from now.
We got an hour to talk and they're going to
go take CJ's phone call in a second. Here everybody's
welcome to call five one three, seven, four nine fifty
five hundred eight hundred two three talk with Fast Forward
one hour from now. Todd Zen's are doing a power use.
Seven are connected communities. That's what it's all about, the
(38:15):
left wing agenda, connected community. Thought of it a neo
celebrating twenty years in Americans or of Americans for prosperity.
He returns to the show at seven thirty Fast Forward
two hours eighth five with Bernie Moreno. We got to
get Bernie elected and get rid of Shared Brown, so
we'll talk with him at eight oh five fingers crossed,
and it being Thursday, typical Thursday, it'll be eight thirty.
I heard need the aviation expert Jay Ratliffe, Big time storm.
(38:39):
Of course, we're all talking about the hurricane barreling down
on Florida. Should be a cat for by landfall storm
surges up to twenty feet. I still can't get over that.
The image of that is mind boggling. Two United Airlines
passengers injured when plane made an evasive maneuver. Some changes
coming to Southwest Airlines. And of course we always end
with Jay on Hubbdal is going to be a decent
(39:01):
day to travel. Going back to the first topic with
him going over to the phones, Le's see what CJ's
got this morning. Happy Thursday, CJ. Thanks for calling in, Oh,
thank you for taking my call.
Speaker 4 (39:11):
And before I get to what I was going to
call about two three weeks ago, I called and told
you I felt like Bertie Moreno is getting some momentum
and those poles either have him down one one.
Speaker 3 (39:22):
Point too up two to three.
Speaker 4 (39:24):
And I still think that momentum is very strong for
Moreno and Brown. And if he keeps keeps pushing the throttle,
I suspect that Moreno's gonna win this race, but he's
got to keep the.
Speaker 13 (39:37):
Foot on the throttle.
Speaker 2 (39:38):
I agree with you on that. I hope you're right.
Speaker 3 (39:42):
I have.
Speaker 2 (39:42):
I like Bertie Moreno. I think he's a welcome alternative
to the very left wing shared Brown. And come on,
Ohio is a red state now, right, and we were
not a swing state. I mean, they're already chalking it
up as a Trump win by all the pollsters, so
why wouldn't the down ballot candidates, And even though that's
not that far down, you go from voting for Donald
Trump immediately to a consideration between Bernie Marino and Shared Brown.
(40:04):
I would like to think people would just have fault
and immediately at Bernie and then move on to the
lower races. But that's just me anyhow. Gets that's sorry, CJ.
Go ahead with your point.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
With yesterday's indictment of Eric Adams, I don't think that's
a coincidence that that's a week or two after P
Diddy I some of these people, Yeah, because P Diddy
was a major funder of Eric Adams in that campaign.
And I know that the indictment was about Turkey and
(40:36):
it didn't really have much to do with that, but
it kind of I don't know if that's a coincidence
because there was a closeness and Eric Adams came from
being basically a cop to the mayor, and I think
that there's some stuff there. And P Diddy was huge
in the Democrat Party. Maybe he was a first fundraiser
(40:58):
for Kamala Harris. He did a lot of stuff with
the Clinton family. And when you start having friends like Weinstein,
P Diddy, and Epstein, me, if you're some of those
people who are on all three of those friends list,
I got a question who you are?
Speaker 3 (41:15):
And Eric Avas is right there with that.
Speaker 2 (41:18):
You think, so okay, But I mean we don't know
what the indictments that. I mean, they haven't been unsealed yet,
so we're kind of scratching our head over what exactly
they think they have on Mayor Adams. I know all
of his you know, close ties around him have been
have had their houses raided, and the FBI has, you know,
searched a whole bunch of them. Back in February, Winny
(41:38):
greco Is, one of his top aides, raided her house
and got another. A couple of people also had been raided.
So I think Eric Adams saw the writing on the
wall and he probably knows exactly what's in the indictment.
But I interesting thought connecting it to P Diddy. There's
a lot of people that been to P Diddy parties.
Apparently they were the parties to attend. I guess, so
(42:01):
a lot of people's social media accounts being deleted as
a consequence of their connection with him too. But remember
he is on suicide Watch, and last time someone was
on suicide Watch Epstein, we all know what happened to him.
Are are there any Vegas odds out there on PDD
he's surviving through trial. Somebody's got to have odds on that.
(42:25):
And considering the multitude of celebrities that attended his parties
and partied with them, and by all accounts, the videotape
that he has of a lot of people's antics at
those parties perhaps kept in reserve for future use to
the extent PD he'd ever need to call it a favor.
I imagine a lot of people are sweating bullets. We
still haven't gotten the Epstein stuff yet, have we. I
(42:49):
guess if you're powerful and connected, you don't have to
worry about stuff like that anyway, recruit. I saw this
the other day, and I talked about it the other day.
The idea that the big power players and artificial intelligence
are going to be using nuclear power, and how come
it is they're allowed to have nuclear power and use
nuclear power and nuclear power will be considered when data
(43:12):
centered growth and use is under scrutiny. It's like, wait
a second. On one side, they've been shoving electric vehicles
and electric little everything down our throats now for a
long time. You know you're smart thermostat that can adjust
your air conditioning like they're doing it like they did
in Texas automatically turning your air conditioning off. Well, if
you're electric, that's what happens. Your stove is electric, your
(43:34):
furnace is electric. Everything's electric, and that's the direction they go.
Your car is electric. Shut the grid down, you can't
power it up. But what of artificial intelligence? Because I've
been saying we need nuclear power for years and years.
There's no reason it should take as long as it
takes to build a nuclear plant. We have these modular reactors,
which is going to come up in the context here
in a moment. They're one size fits all. You don't
(43:55):
have to individually design them, which is caused. This is
one of the reasons why those things take forever to build.
You have to the planning stages, then the environmental litigation
and the arguments over nuclear power plant design, et cetera.
You know, you got to basically a rubber stamp modular plant. Boomp,
there it is. We built one there, and then boomp,
there it is, we built another one over there. Identical
(44:16):
in every way, shape and form except location. So they're
talking about re firing back up three Mile Island. One
of the two reactors. They're not the one that melted
down back in the seventies, but the other one which
has been mothballed I think since like twenty nineteen because
artificial intelligence, and they have a direct line to the
(44:36):
artificial intelligence data centers. I can't remember it's Meta or
Google or which one was hooking up to the three
Mile Island plant. It was Microsoft, Constellation Energy. Microsoft turn
the nuclear power plant on because why well, Microsoft needs
the power. So you got to be a Microsoft or
(44:57):
a Meta to to qualify to use nuclear power. We're
out out here in the in the great vast wilderness,
the unwashed masses with no political ties and no political connections,
demanding a reliable energy source because they're taking the sole
reliable energy sources away from us, well not soul, and
(45:19):
forcing us to use windmills and uh and of course
solar panels and hooking them up to big batteries. You know,
Duke just asks for a rate increase, right one of
the reasons. One of the reasons was so they could
buy grid scale batteries, so when new wind blows, the
batteries absorb the electricity and hold it in storage for
(45:39):
when the wind's not blowing. Grid scale batteries described as
hundreds of times the size of EED batteries. That becomes
important here in a moment as I continue my rant
on this. But these big players are also considering having
their own modular nuclear her plants. And we had Energy
(46:06):
Secretary Jennifer Granholme speaking with Who was she talking with anyway,
she was on CNBC on Tuesday morning. She's asked about
how data centers would be powered in the future. David
Faber asked, At the same time, we've been trying to
obviously replace typical energy sources withle with renewables, and we
now have this incredible potential uptick in the need for
(46:26):
power because of data centers and the growth of generative AI.
How do you see a plan out, he asked. I mean,
we talk a lot about nuclear power. We were talking
about three Mile Hole and coming back online or one
of the reactors, and any number of other nuclear sites
being recommissioned, so to speak. How's it going to mix out?
Given our power needs could be twenty percent higher than
right now in a handful of years. She had this
(46:51):
to say, Oh, the estimates are fifteen percent higher within
ten years as a result of both AI as well
as all the new manufacturing activity and electrifie, the transportation sector.
We are going to need more power. I'm telling you
we are adding that power. We are adding record amounts
of clean power. In addition, the hyper scalers for these
big data centers all have commitments to clean energy too,
(47:15):
and they don't want to see themselves located in a
community where they're demand for power causes everybody's rates to
go up. They're committed, she said, telling us to bringing
that power with them, which is why they why the
need for nuclear small nuclear modular reactors, co locating data
(47:35):
centers with small reactors or partnerships.
Speaker 14 (47:38):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (47:39):
Then she went on to site the relationship with Constellation
and Microsoft with the three Mile Island deal. She said,
we got a ton of nuclear sites in this country
that have been permitted for additional reactors that could be
powering data centers as well. We're working with those. So
that suggests to me they're at least considering nuclear power,
perhaps beyond the ass of AI centers which are going
(48:02):
to get nuclear power before you and I get it.
And you know, we start doing these modulars, you can
kiss that multi bazillion billion, gazillion dollar price tag away.
They won't cost as much to build. They will be,
of course, producers of an abundance of electricity, satisfying our
needs and using up a very small footprint. We also
(48:26):
have our own nuclear materials here in the United States.
We can manufacture these ourselves. I doubt we'd have to
rely on the Chinese Communist Party and it's lithium reserves
and it's all of its rare earth mineral reserves and
its slave labor to provide us with all the things
needed for batteries. We got development. More on that battery
component here in a minute. I lsill have a couple
(48:46):
of callers online, but it is six seventeen and it's
time for me to mention affordable medical imaging. Talking about
my scan the other day, I went to affordable medical imaging,
putting my recommendations to you and applying them to me.
It's like, wait a minute, I recommend affordable all the time,
so I'm going to go there and the big difference
you can see why and my CT scan at affordable
imaging with contrasts six hundred dollars not four or five
(49:09):
thousand dollars that a hospital imaging department would cost. You
look around, you they keep the overhead really low. At
Affordable Imaging Services, it's the same equipment as in that
big giant hospital room with the machines that go bing
and all that kind of stuff. Same equipment, same professional
type people operating it. You get a board certified radiologist
report with every scan included in the low price CT
(49:32):
scan of the contrast six hundred bucks without a contrast
four to fifty go to the hospital. Again, we're talking
literally thousands of dollars, much of which will probably come
out of your pocket. Go ahead, call them up, ask
them after insurance payments are made, how much the image
is going to cost me? What am I going to
have to pay? Then you'll realize, Yeah, I think I'll
get an echo cardigram for four hundred and ninety five bucks.
(49:53):
Over it affordable, I'll get an MRI for four hundred
and ninety five bucks online. Learn all about it. It's
Affordable Medimaging dot com. Affordable Medimaging dot com. You have
a choice when it comes to your medical care. Calm up,
make an employment five one three seven five three eight thousand.
That's seven five, three eight.
Speaker 1 (50:08):
Thousand, fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (50:12):
Time for the weather. We have a uh cloudy day
today is stated showers highest seventy five showers arrive. Overnight
they say widespread rain, low sixty seven, few storms along
with soaking rain. Tomorrow seventy three for the high, sixty
three overnight with more isolated showers and on Saturday a
chance of showers after eight am. And I have seventy
six sixty three degrees right now with you about krcitytalk
(50:33):
station traffic time, Chuck from the U.
Speaker 12 (50:36):
SEE Health Tramphing Center.
Speaker 11 (50:37):
If you see health, the future of care is happening
now through clinical trials and innovative treatments that give pay
cents a chance for better outcomes.
Speaker 12 (50:45):
Visit you seehealth dot com. Hod ways for doing just fine.
Speaker 11 (50:48):
I'm not seeing any major problems to deal with so
far this morning, including northbound four seventy one. You're under
five minutes from two seventy five into town inbound seventy
four looks great, past my Tana, Chuck Ingram on fifty
five k the talk station.
Speaker 2 (51:06):
You have KRC talk station. Happy Thursday. Go to FOLS
to start with Steve. Steve Wens, thanks for calling this morning.
Welcome to the.
Speaker 3 (51:13):
Program, Yes, sir.
Speaker 15 (51:15):
Three quick comments. First of all, it's a shame when
my Senator Ram Paul is on your show and he
has to clarify which assassination attempt he's talking about, because
there's more than one. That's pretty sad, isn't it.
Speaker 16 (51:29):
It is?
Speaker 3 (51:29):
Indeed.
Speaker 15 (51:30):
Secondly, I mean, and I'm going to end it, the
third one's kind of a tongue in cheek one. But secondly,
with Sean Combs Epstein, the the you know he was
blackmailing people. I mean, he was a multi millionaire based
on Dirk he had on people.
Speaker 2 (51:47):
That seems to be the case.
Speaker 15 (51:48):
Yeah, Combs, I think has all this information on people too,
you know, And we know with Epstein it was Bill Gates.
And you know there's a lot of powerful people that
that you know, can't keep it in their pants, so
they have they are able to be blackmailed. So you
wonder what's gonna happen to him? And you wonder why
(52:10):
with Combe, why are they arresting him?
Speaker 3 (52:13):
Now?
Speaker 15 (52:13):
I mean that this stuff's not new. This is this
was well known for years that he had these you
know that he did all this stuff. Well, something something's
going on.
Speaker 2 (52:22):
Maybe it was liberal favoritism that kept him out of
trouble until now. And then when women started coming out
and accusing him of rape and of child molestation, well
it was, uh, they just couldn't keep it undercover anymore,
so they decided to take it seriously and indict him.
Speaker 15 (52:36):
Well it plays out, yeah, the last one, which I
just kind of tongue in cheek. I am jealous of
you for getting to uh be with Morgan Ortegas on Saturday.
And maybe she'll she I mean, she's she's hot, she's smart,
she's conservative, well spoken. Wouldn't it be nice if she
brought her friend Katie Pavlich with her and you got
(53:00):
to sit in between those two.
Speaker 2 (53:02):
Oh yeah, a nice one, like to be the meat
and that sandwich right there.
Speaker 15 (53:07):
Well, I would want you to keep looking down at
your ring finger and seeing that wedding band on their.
Speaker 2 (53:13):
Well, I actually I don't wear one. No, I haven't.
I haven't for years and years and years. Not that
my relationship is unstable. I am happily, happily married with
no intention of breaking up ever with my wife. I'm
married out of my element. I got no reason to. Yeah,
but my wife knows that I have a roving eye,
and I do appreciate a beautiful woman when I happen
to be in the room with her. In fact, my
(53:34):
wife and I will walk into a room, this has
happened many times over the years, and she'll quickly finds
to find a person she knows the type of woman
that I like, and she is. You thinks she's really attractive,
don't you know. I look up and like, yeah, you
saw her before I did.
Speaker 15 (53:49):
Well, I got time for this. But I've done this
one for my wife because when we'd be having dinner
somewhere and you know, there's a pretty girl behind her
odd look, and she'd always looked back and she'd see
and you know, I'm like that whatever, and so I
will occasionally just look and there's nobody there, and I'm
like looking past or like there's somebody there, and she'll
turn and look and there's nobody there. And I've never
(54:10):
said anything to her about it, but I think it's
hilarious because it's just I'm just saying, it's you've got
to entertain yourself in life.
Speaker 2 (54:17):
I have fun with that one, absolutely, absolutely. So listen,
I'm a guy. I look, you know it always, you know,
I think Missy some sort of concern over an unstable
relationship or your your insecurity, because if you're yelling or
are angry with your man for looking at another woman,
I'm sorry. This is how we work. There's no denying
(54:40):
that it is going on, whether or not you catch
it or not. I'm just open and obvious about it
because my wife and I are in love and we
enjoy each other's company. So it's a okay, Mississippi James.
I'm sorry for rambling. I gotta pause, but I'll be
happy to take your call right after my strong words
of praise for the wonderful real estate agent that the
(55:02):
Schabri Group Colorwilliams, seven Hills. Peter Schabrie is a terrific guy. God,
it is just awesome team of the top tier real
estate agents. They truly provide value to you and your
experience is either at buying a home or in selling
a home. Their mission is to give you a five
star experience. And I assure you that will happen. The
(55:22):
instant off for program the love It or Leaded program,
the cash the Keys program, programs somebody else is offering
in programs they'd like to cash the keys put you
way ahead of the competition if you're buying a house. Yeah,
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Speaker 1 (55:54):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 3 (55:57):
Turn out your radio.
Speaker 1 (55:58):
Here's a Sean Morning minute.
Speaker 14 (56:02):
I happen to be partners with the largest radio company
in the country, which is iHeartMedia, and then the second
one would be the company that Mark Levin is a
part of, and the third one, which is called Odyssey. Well,
apparently the FCC has moved with unprecedented speed to approve
Soros's capture of the third largest radio company in the country.
(56:24):
I wonder how many conservative talk show hosts that will
be left standing at the end of the day on
their talk stations.
Speaker 2 (56:30):
The answer is probably zero.
Speaker 14 (56:32):
Now's the next move to go after other radio stations
and silence talk radio completely. Would that be so would
that be in the land of conspiracy theorist Rachel Maddow.
I don't know, but certainly got to think about it.
Why did he have a sudden interest in this out
of nowhere?
Speaker 13 (56:48):
Check out the Sean Hannity radio show later today right here.
Speaker 17 (56:56):
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The free iHeartRadio app has over one hundred commercial free
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Speaker 2 (58:01):
Then cloudy day. I started showers in high seventy five.
Showers kick in tonight in earnest, widespread rain sixty seven
for low and a few storms tomorrow along with what
they're calling soaking rain, which is what we need. Seventy
three tomorrow's high down to sixty three overy night with smalling,
isolated showers, and they say there's a chance of showers
(58:22):
after eight am on Saturday. Saturday's high seventy six sixty
five right now, time for traffic.
Speaker 18 (58:33):
Or not.
Speaker 2 (58:36):
It's becoming kind of a common occurrence. Is Chuck Ingram
disappeared to advance of Judge of Polatano. It's highlighted Judges
week is hearing Chuck Ingram's ramblings and see here you go.
I know my life wife is listening. I just assume it.
I got text from my wife on my last comments,
I love you even though you are a looky loo.
And my reply, of course is that's one of the
(58:58):
many reasons why I love you see play nicely together,
Mississippi James, thanks for calling this morning, and a happy
Thursday to you, sir.
Speaker 3 (59:08):
Hello doctor Brian.
Speaker 9 (59:10):
Now I was I was calling and respond to your next.
Speaker 3 (59:13):
Tutor last called.
Speaker 9 (59:15):
But as I was waiting in your last call, them
chimed in and both of them was talking about P
did it yeah, in which I don't condone anything that
he does. And he's talking about talking about uh friends
of P did it rich wealthy friends.
Speaker 1 (59:33):
Literally one of them is Todd Trump failed.
Speaker 3 (59:36):
To mention Trumpet in that circle.
Speaker 2 (59:38):
No, I've seen pictures of them together.
Speaker 3 (59:40):
Got oversight both of them.
Speaker 2 (59:42):
Now I will be the first person to tell you
and say out loud, because you know, Mississippi James, I've
gotten my picture taken. Over the years, I've been on
radio with listener lunches and all the other activities. I've
done political events. I've been to tea party events, I've
been to the tax Day rallies, thousands and thousands of
thousands of people I've met over the years. Many times
(01:00:03):
people have asked to have a picture taken with me.
I'm like, okay, you know it's your reputation and stake
here jokingly, but any one of those people could turn
out to be some absolute horrific pervert criminal. It doesn't
mean anything. Just because you got a picture with someone
who turns out to be an indicted and then ultimately
convicted criminal or wrongdoer doesn't mean you're engaged in the activity.
(01:00:24):
I'm not going to indict based upon a photograph of
any of the thousands of people who've gotten a photograph
with P Diddy until maybe an indictment gets handed down
and they are implicated in criminal activity. So, yeah, Trump
had pictures with P Diddy as well, and so did
a whole bunch of other people politically and a political
and otherwise. You're right. I'm with you all day long
(01:00:44):
on that, James. Absolutely, I don't hold any one of
them accountable for P Diddy's actions, unless, of course, when
the video comes out and we can actually see who's involved. Okay, Yeah,
Trump has pictures with P Diddy, has pictures of himself
with Trump. Absolutely on the record, it's been all over
the internet. Appreciate you bringing that up. Absolutely, don't look.
(01:01:08):
Don't overlook that, folks, it's important. Uh, let us see here,
got local stories to talk about. Oh, pay Corps.
Speaker 3 (01:01:16):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:01:16):
There was another article about the one point twenty five
billion dollars proposal to renovate pay Corps Stadium FKA Paul
Brown Stadium, which is what I still like to call
it mess their construction. Who provided the estimates, Scott Wartman
of the Inquire reporting, Uh. The largest expense in the
one point two five billion stadium renovation. I find those
(01:01:38):
words together so hard to utter that we are actually
considering a one point two five billion dollar upgrade. Could
build a damn stadium for that much money. Yeah, but
it won't be up the NFL standards. A blow it
out here, you know what. I'm sorry, I'm getting fed up.
The biggest chunk the practice fields, indoor training facility, and
(01:02:01):
team offices, using up three hundred and thirty six million,
eight hundred and forty six and fifty dollars anticipated. That's
before cost overruns three hundred thirty six million dollars. So
they get a practice field and they get new team offices.
The largest chunk of the entire expenditure right there for
(01:02:22):
stuff that has nothing to do with the stadium itself.
Oh but if we put the stadium offices over and
a new field by the new field. Then that'll open
up more room inside pay corps for something you and
I are never going to enjoy. Suites, more suites, the
(01:02:42):
improvements around the stadium, relocation of Marring Way, for example,
I think they wrote that moving Marring Way thirty million dollars.
You got to move a road two hundred eighty seven
million dollars for improvements around the state public clauses, parks,
parking lots, north end zones, scoreboard upgrade, along with new
(01:03:07):
suites and party decks coming in. JESHI of a two
hundred million dollars that could go on. Adam Taylor for
County Commissioner in these trying times, I would call the
timing of this ask a little poorly planned. Let's see,
(01:03:34):
I have time for one more local story. A million
dollar bonds set for a man accused of raping a
twelve year old Cornahammon County court documents. Fred Jordan forty
three will just go ahead and give an award Joe
as facing two counts of rape stemming from an incident
happened in December. Last January third since the Children's Hospital
Medical Center told the Personal Crime Squad they treated a
twelve year old with concerns about sexual abuse. Detectives continued
(01:03:56):
their efforts a coordinated rather efforts with Lucas County Children
Services in the Toledo Police Department. Law enforcement said they're
able to match the victims DNA with the suspect, Jordan,
already held in the Hamilton County Justice Center facing charges
of drug trafficking as well as now two counts a rate.
Since I please still investigating the incident. If you have
any information, please contact the SINCINNT Police Department's Major Offenders
(01:04:19):
Unit three five to two thirty five forty two, three
five to two thirty five forty two, six thirty six
fifty five K See talk station MIC's on the line.
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Speaker 1 (01:05:34):
Fifty five KRC Scott from mcnaque.
Speaker 2 (01:05:41):
Time to the nine first warning weather forecasts Fiday with
isolated showers Today is seventy five, some rains showing up
over night showers and widespread rains. What's on the forecast
sixty seven for the log got a few storms with
soaking rain tomorrow and I have seventy three isolated showers
over Friday night, down to sixty three comes Saturday. They
say rain will show up after eight am and it'll
be a mostly cloudy day. Seventy six for the high
(01:06:03):
on Saturday, sixty five. Right now, time for traffic.
Speaker 1 (01:06:12):
What the hell is going on?
Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
Well, I don't know anything about the system. Call an
engineer over to the phone. Five one, three, seven four
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
dog pound five fifty on eight and t phones an apologies.
It's not Joe's fault that the traffic's not working. Something happening,
and it's been going. Actually it's happening more regularly. Let
us turn to the phones and talk to Mike. Mike
(01:06:37):
thinks for calling the show this morning.
Speaker 8 (01:06:39):
Hey, Brian, real.
Speaker 12 (01:06:40):
Quick about the Bengals stadium upgrade. I'm sure it'd be
nice to be able to get a list of there once.
Speaker 15 (01:06:47):
And take a red mark or to it.
Speaker 12 (01:06:50):
Say no, you don't need that, No, you don't need that,
you know, like.
Speaker 10 (01:06:52):
I'm sure there are three hundred and fifty million dollars offices.
Speaker 3 (01:06:56):
They're gonna want marble.
Speaker 2 (01:06:57):
Floors and oh, you know, you know, it's so true.
I mean, honestly, the you know, I know, they're all
well multi millionaires and they're all paid real well, and
YadA YadA ya, they've got high follutin demands and everything.
But honestly, you know, practice field, hell, they could play
at a local high school stadium and it would do
(01:07:17):
the same damn thing. It's a square of turf right
appropriately sized andasure I know I anyway, And you know what,
a high school locker room would serve them adequately. All
they need is a place to hang their street clothes
and a place for their uniform. And no, no, we've
got to have this opulent, disco tech like locker room.
(01:07:38):
So why I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:07:44):
Right now?
Speaker 2 (01:07:44):
No it doesn't, Now, No it doesn't.
Speaker 3 (01:07:49):
Is that it? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:07:50):
Apparently it was. I'm sorry. I just get bent out
of shape over the idea that taxpayers spend allow for
their labor to be used for the almost exclusive I know,
you get entertainment from it, at least football fans get
entertainment from it, but at least in terms of profit
(01:08:12):
and money for a private family or a private entity,
we go in the whole and have to pay debt
service on an originally for almost five hundred million dollars stadium,
and I grant you it's twenty five years old. We're
still dealing with the tax on that now, a one
point twenty five billion dollar increase. What is your return
(01:08:37):
on investment on that? How many times has it used
a year? I mean there are prohibitions on it being
a multi use facility. It's the exclusive use fiefdom of
the Brown family in the Cincinnati Bengals. Now, I enjoy
watching a Bengals game. I enjoy watching a football game generally,
(01:08:59):
but this is to me preposterous, absolutely preposterous. Let's see
what d Dash has always got some brilliant points, Todash,
thanks for calling the Morning Show. Good to hear from
you again.
Speaker 7 (01:09:13):
Good morning, Brian. I've got an update for you on
the ongoing investigation the doctor Corcy and doctor Pakenn has
been doing.
Speaker 2 (01:09:21):
Okay, real quick, just my listeners know they're the ones
that are looking into the coding right in the voting system. Correct, okay,
because there are obviously there are more than one issue
or series of issues in terms of voter integrity. Because
I had the guys on earlier in the week talking
about the the the registration to vote by illegal immigrants.
So this is a different component of election integrity. So
(01:09:44):
with that in mind, go ahead to nash Okay.
Speaker 7 (01:09:47):
Yeah, back in twenty twenty one, they begin to find
these anomalies and do some research. SOT our secretary state
was would you on an interview a couple of weeks ago,
and he said he had not seen any evidence. Well,
he must not have been given that evidence or he
(01:10:09):
just totally told the White lie. Because doctor Corcy and
doctor Buquett and his technical staff met with the staff
of the Secretary in Columbus and August twenty second and
gave them evidence. He's posted some of that on his
website now and I'll send that link to you this
(01:10:31):
morning so people can read it. The problem with the
evidence is everybody wants to see the evidence, but don't
take the time to go through it because it's very detailed.
But the other problem I found out was I tried
to send that information myself to the Secretary yesterday and
I found out what a primitive email system they have.
(01:10:52):
You cannot upload any documents and you only have five
hundred character.
Speaker 2 (01:11:01):
That's sad. Well, it's the guys from earlier in the week.
We're talking about the standards that are set in so
far as the computer systems concerned, are two thousand and
five standards. Yeah, two thousand and five computer centers. You
don't think we have just moved light years forward in
terms of the risks and changes and realities of computing
(01:11:23):
generally speaking since two thousand and five. Yeah, So it
doesn't surprise me that we have an antiquated communication system
with the Secretary of State's office or really any other
office in Ohio.
Speaker 7 (01:11:34):
And I'll give you my perception after going through in detail.
Do you remember the Volkswagen scenario two years back when
they were hiding the actual data on the Digel vehicles
and it finally got caught. Yes, do you remember, Well,
that's exactly what's happening here, that they have a hidden
(01:11:55):
computer systems doing stuff and they don't want public to know.
And really, what what I realized is happening is this
is a really good example of a surrogate mother giving
a birth to a child and not knowing who the
father is because there is a very powerful entity who
(01:12:17):
who had planted these in every state, it's just not
in Ohio, and they're controlling the elections already they've already
spend out to how the election is going to end,
and how many goods they need, how many uh illegal
what they call overseas ballots they want because they're not
(01:12:38):
verified for signatures, and so on and so forth. Such
a big gamage that going on. And were doctor Corcy
and the kids been trying to get Ohio to do
with the first state to come aboard and admit that
they did not know about this and they want to
stop it and call in some independent forensic computer scientists
(01:13:00):
and engineers and have it corrected. They don't have the
staff and knowledge.
Speaker 2 (01:13:05):
No, no, no, they don't. Yeah, there's no question in
my mind that they lack the know how to deal
with these very complex coding related issues. Any guys like
Dave Hatter with coding experience and the ability to ferret
out and understand if something's been tampered with or something
can be manipulated or otherwise is built into the system
that will allow manipulation, appreciate your call to Ash And
(01:13:28):
as far as Secretary of the Rose is concerned. Quite
often I think the Corsi and others like the guys
I had on early in the pro early in the
week will meet with his staff as opposed to him directly,
which allows him to move away from direct confrontation like
I didn't see anything. In other words, personally, even though
members of his staff may have. I know it's not
(01:13:48):
necessarily a fair dodge, but that's kind of the way
I've come away. I've taken with six forty eight fifty
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online it's USA Insallation dot net fifty five krc Hey.
Speaker 12 (01:14:57):
Football fans, the season is finally here. Hi, I'm Mitch
Lion's former NFL.
Speaker 2 (01:15:01):
FI Channeline says isolated showers today at the high seventy
five overnight low sixty seven. They say showers will arrive
and widespread rain will enter the area, which is good
new storms with soaking rain on Friday during the day
seventy three for the high overnight low of sixty three
with more isolated showers and a chance of showers showing
up after eight am on Saturday seventy six.
Speaker 1 (01:15:24):
Then it is sixty five right now, cy for traffic.
Speaker 11 (01:15:30):
From the u see how Triumphic Center with u SEE Health.
The future of care is happening now through clinical trials
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Visit ucehealth dot com. Here come the break lights. Northbound
fourth seventy one into the barrels. They had a couple
of extra minutes between Grand and Downtown better on northbound
seventy five through Saint Bernard up to the lateral where
(01:15:52):
there was a broken down Chuck Ingram on fifty five
KRC the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
I think about KRCD talk station order on which theyver
received Joe Strecker looks like Nicks first, then, doesn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:16:10):
Nick.
Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Welcome to the show, and Happy Thursday to you, Hi.
Speaker 16 (01:16:14):
Brian, Happy Thursday to you too. As too well know,
I'm the author of a book called Our God, You
Have a Treedom, and I've been on your show.
Speaker 2 (01:16:22):
To talk about it before, Yes, sir.
Speaker 16 (01:16:23):
And it's a history of us freedom and how we
got into the crisis we're in right now and what
we need to do to secure our freedom today. And
the main thing that I talked about right now is
what we need is we need to have honesty elections
and free speech, which really means that we need to
eliminate election fraud and he eliminate censorship. And I was
(01:16:47):
really glad that who you have on Park Pakita and
Marcel Storage on Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (01:16:54):
To talk about that.
Speaker 16 (01:16:55):
One of the things that they talked about was the
fact that we have a second cotarry the statement Frank
Rose who tries to make Ohiolan's believe that we have
honest elections, which we do not, and we don't have
honesty elections, and he's not doing enough to do any
the right things about it. One of the things that
he could do is to make people vote on professional
(01:17:19):
ballots until they prove that they're the real honest elections,
unless they until they prove that they're legitimate voters.
Speaker 2 (01:17:29):
Well, there's a multitude of legislative solutions that can deal
with all of the problems that have thus far been identified.
They've already been drafted, written, and they're laying on a
bunch of elected officials' desks. Get someone in Columbus to
advance them and vote for them. I mean, there's always
so much Secretary of State Laurose can do. There are
things he can and has the legal ability to do,
as the Gentleman pointed out a couple of days ago
(01:17:50):
here on the program, But there are other things that
require legislative fixes. And I'm telling you that I don't
think there's a more dysfunctional government in the States as Columbus.
It's all Republicans, yet they can't get managed to get
crap done right.
Speaker 3 (01:18:04):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:18:05):
That's why I said it's problem.
Speaker 16 (01:18:07):
We have people that are Republicans and what they are
has established Republicans. They're not people that are trying to
do the right thing the way Trump is. There are
people that are just partly established none.
Speaker 2 (01:18:17):
I want to stay party, But I see that does
not answer the question why does an establishment Republican run
away from something that is so obviously problematic and so
easy to fix. That doesn't mean you're I mean, but
any I don't care. If you're a hardcore Democrat, you
should want to have election integrity.
Speaker 3 (01:18:35):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:18:36):
I know the Republicans all believe the Democrats are the
ones that are in for the big steel. But whatever
that street can run two ways. It shouldn't be a
question of whose ox is being gored. Look, here's a
problem that you could drive a semi tractor trailer through.
You've got legislation, it's already been drafted. Maybe you need to,
you know, change another phrase or add another word or
two with some other clause. Just do your damn job.
(01:18:56):
Fix the problem. It's not that difficult, and it doesn't
no matter where in the political spectrum you are. If
you can cheat, not that people are. That's where we
can to go down that rabbit hole. Oh, show me
where people will cheat? All right, Well we found three
of well it's only three. It's just a small percent.
Fix the ability if you can cheat based upon some
(01:19:18):
problem that's been identified, or maybe you have a couple
of people who've already exploited it. Two is enough. One
is enough. The hole can be plugged. It's a simple solution.
Plug the damn hole. And don't tell me you don't
have enough money to do it either. God, thank you.
Six fifty six fifty five KRC detalk station. Sorry, Jay
set me off on that one. We've got Todd Zinzer
(01:19:40):
coming up off top of the our news Connected Communities.
He's doing the power you summonar on that. We're gonna
get the details on it. After the news, We've got
Donovan and Neil celebrating twenty years of Americans for Prosperity
eight oh five with Bertie Morino and then Jay Ratliffs
stick ground Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:19:54):
It's what motivates your vote, the biggest unifier for the Democrats.
Fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 19 (01:20:02):
This it's seven oh six here at about Kercity Talks
Station right.
Speaker 2 (01:20:20):
Ain't even a happy one till you. Brian Thomas always
happy to talk to Todd Zenzer and we're gonna be
doing that. You also gonna be hearing him tonight if
you can log into empower Youoamerica dot org from the
comfort of your own home or show up a two
twenty five North On Boulevard. We spoke earlier in the
week already with on early Cincinnati history, the topic of
Jeff Cease's discussion tonight that's at seven o'clock, but also
(01:20:42):
on the plate for the Empower Youth Seminar, Todd Zenzer.
He is a brilliant guy. Retired Inspector General of the
US Department of Commerce and spent thirty one years conducting
audits and investigation of federal officials, programs and operations. So
he's got some really special skills and talents in terms
of legislation and think and issues that affect the city
and the county generally. And today or tonight as well
(01:21:04):
as right now, he's going to give us a little
information about the Connected Community Cincinnati Connected Communities plan. Todd,
welcome back to the Morning show, my friend. Always good
having you on the show.
Speaker 3 (01:21:14):
Good morning, Brian.
Speaker 7 (01:21:15):
How are you.
Speaker 2 (01:21:16):
I'm doing fine, doing fine. Good CINCINNTI Connected Communities, the
City Council. Where are we on this before we get
to details, because some of my listeners are going like,
what Cincinnati Connected Community is all about? Did they vote
on it yet? Is it a foregone conclusion? Is it
done for the city of Cincinnati or is there still
more chatter and talk about it.
Speaker 18 (01:21:35):
Well, there's still chattering talk about it, but yeah, Back
in June, the City Council enacted an ordinance that rezoned
the significant part of the city as part of this
plan to increase density in the city. So what they
did is they've identified a number of corridors transit corridors
(01:21:58):
in the city, seven of them, and along those corridors,
they've identified fifty neighborhood business districts and so they've eliminated
single family housing zones either a quarter mile or a
half mile around those neighborhood business districts. So if you
live within a quarter mile or a half mile of
(01:22:20):
these corridors and business districts, and you used to have
single family zoning. Now it's middle housing. So, for example,
if you have if you're in a single family home
and a neighborhood that was zoned single family, and you're
near one of these business districts, you have a vacant
lot next door. Under this new ordinance, a developer can
(01:22:44):
come in build an apartment building up to a four
unit or larger, sometimes right next door. They've eliminated the
minimum parking requirement, so whoever moves into those apartments park
on the street. And it's for really this uh, this
takeover of single family homes.
Speaker 3 (01:23:06):
In the city.
Speaker 18 (01:23:07):
And they're they're certainly chatter on our part trying to
challenge this, and we've we've got some actions going on.
Speaker 3 (01:23:17):
UH. And then what.
Speaker 18 (01:23:20):
UH pass ordinance. There were three members of city Council
who voted against it, including the Vice mayor. And what
she has done is she's basically acknowledged that there are
problems with this ordinance, and now she has a big
task force engaging the community and a number of different
(01:23:40):
subcommittees that she's formed, and it's really taken on the
form of the type of community engagement that should have
been done with connected communities in the first place. So
so we'll see if anything happens with that. But there
is still a lot going on.
Speaker 2 (01:23:58):
Yes, okay, now let me just paint of worst case
scenario type a situation here. Now, you know, look over
to New York and yes, the mayor is under indictment
there under and we don't know if it has anything
to do with the illegal immigrant situation. We're gonna find
out today. But hotels, really beautiful four star hotels that
were once profitable, enter COVID nineteen. They're empty, enter an
(01:24:20):
influx of tens of thousands of new illegal immigrants, and
a city willing to pay the full room rate to
the hotel owner to house illegal immigrants on the taxpayer dollars.
Of course, the owner of the hotel's like, fine, I'm
getting one hundred percent of the room rental rate. I'm happy,
I'm making I have profit now where I had none before.
Is it possible that for that scenario to unfold, any
(01:24:42):
new let's say, six unit dwelling in an otherwise single
family residential neighborhood, they build it, and then all we've
got an illegal immigrant problem. Let's just pay the owners
of that building the house illegal immigrants. He gets his
profit or she gets our profit, and we found a
place for them to stay.
Speaker 3 (01:25:00):
Well, that's the thing, Brian.
Speaker 18 (01:25:01):
Under this ordinance again, in these areas, it's kind of
like the wild West. You really don't know what's going
to happen. Who's going to come in, who's going to build, what,
what type of tenants these rental units are going to have.
Speaker 16 (01:25:12):
It.
Speaker 18 (01:25:14):
It's really a lot of uncertainty on the part of
the citizens that have purchased these homes or have that
own these properties, and that's one of the big problems
with it. They've experimented citywide, painted the whole city with
a broadbrush rather than going neighborhood by neighborhood, and we
just don't really know what's going to happen.
Speaker 2 (01:25:35):
Well, that's something you brought up previously on this issue
that some communities wanted to adopt this, but the city
is divided up into multiple different communities and some wanted
to reject it. The city is just imposing this on
everyone without their saying it, and that of course can
rub people the wrong way, most notably in a situation
where these hypotheticals come up and we don't have any
(01:25:57):
answers to how it would ultimately play out. I think
I'd be a little perturbed with my elected officials many
answers the question Todd z Inser on why they won't
have more open discussion on this. They don't want to
face these questions.
Speaker 18 (01:26:10):
No, they don't want to face these questions. And the
way it looks, Brian, is that more and more as
we look into this, there is definitely a straight line
between the National Democrat Party and what's going on here
and the whole issue of Agenda twenty thirty that the
(01:26:30):
UN put out, and people don't really have time to
look into all of these things. But you've got this
Agenda twenty thirty that the UN has put out, You've
got the Great Reset by the World Economic Forum, and
within those different global plans they talk about sustainable cities
(01:26:55):
and communities, and this is the type of things that
are moded or provided for in connected communities. It has
an element of the.
Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
Green New Deal in there.
Speaker 18 (01:27:08):
They have the whole idea of equity and all of
these things that are promulgated in these UN and World
Economic Forum programs or agendas, and you know it's right here.
Speaker 3 (01:27:21):
It's right here in Cincinnati. This is the way it happens.
Speaker 2 (01:27:25):
This connected communities concept has been rolled out in other
areas in the country.
Speaker 18 (01:27:31):
Oh, absolutely, this is going on all over the country.
What we've done is we've traced it back to a
group called the Urban Land Institute, which one of these
global nonprofits that goes in and influences local communities on
various issues, including housing.
Speaker 3 (01:27:50):
And they.
Speaker 18 (01:27:53):
Came in with a technical advisory panel back in twenty
twenty one, maybe even earlier than that, and in June
of twenty one, they issued a report to the city
and if you look at this, and it had to
deal with developmental transportation corridors. If you look at that report,
it's recked. The things that it recommends in that report
(01:28:16):
you will find in connected communities. It's like a blueprint
for connected communities. But yet they want to tell the
citizens of Cincinnati that this is all bottoms up. We
went to the community and asked, you know, for their
input and things like that. That was all a charade.
They had this plan, you know, hatched in June of
(01:28:38):
twenty twenty one, and then they just brought it forward,
including rejecting the density ordinance that Liz Keating put forward
that they voted down in twenty twenty two to make
room for this new plan.
Speaker 2 (01:28:51):
Well, well, constituents be damned, I guess is what this
boils down to. And I'm going to do whatever the
hell they want. And now enrolling the out in other cities,
has it had any effect? I mean, did it bring
about the intended result, which is a higher concentration and
higher density population.
Speaker 18 (01:29:10):
No, this is, like I said, this is going on
over all over the country, and the city that they
hold up as a model is Minneapolis. In Minneapolis, this
is I don't know, probably four or five years ago,
they eliminated all single family housing across the city. And yes,
(01:29:31):
they're housing availability has increased, but when you look at
how that's happened, it's increased because they've had a substantial
increase in twenty unit developments, apartment buildings with twenty units,
not the four unit issue, not the four unit apartment
(01:29:52):
buildings that Connected Communities is talking about. And that's the
only way, and it's the only city that has any
result like that. And you can find cities like Chicago,
for example, where it is. They've tried it for ten years.
It has very limited benefits, so it's it's unproven, and
(01:30:15):
we kept trying to say that to the city council
but obviously fell on deaf ears.
Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Well, you don't fall on deaf ears. Todd Zen's are
you going to be speaking tonight? Empower you America dot org?
Are you going to speak after Jeff or are you
going to be speaking in front of Jeff? What time
is your appointed slot?
Speaker 3 (01:30:32):
I think I'm the opening act at seven.
Speaker 2 (01:30:34):
Seven pm, So log in and from the comfort of
your own home or head on up to two twenty
five North and Boulevard if it's convenient for you to
do so and see it live. Jeff sees the historian,
calmness and author who's going to talk about the city
of Cincinnati and it's history, and then of course, beginning
with Todd Zenser breaking down CINCINNTI connected communities. Todd, I
cannot thank you for your tireless enough for your tireless
(01:30:55):
efforts on this one and spreading the information to people
who otherwise wouldn't even know about it, because well, our
elected officials don't want them to know about it.
Speaker 3 (01:31:04):
That's right.
Speaker 18 (01:31:05):
That's right, and it's part of this one party government
here we have here in Cincinnati.
Speaker 2 (01:31:10):
We have an opportunity to reject that in a couple
of weeks here, folks, November is election day, Thanks Todd.
We'll look forward to the presentation tonight. Put it down
your calendar, folks, empower Youamerica dot org. We'll talk against Todd.
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Speaker 1 (01:32:54):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (01:32:59):
If you read, here's your nine first one to weather forecast.
Get some rain coming our way. Isolated showers today with
the highest seventy five widespread rain they say overnight maybe
some I don't know about showers. Storms with widespread rain.
Sixty seven HU storms are possible tomorrow along with soaking rain,
windy conditions as well. Seventy three the high sixty three
overnight Friday with isolated showers and got a chance of
(01:33:21):
showers after eight am on Saturday with the I seventy
six sixty four degrees. Time for traffic update.
Speaker 11 (01:33:27):
Probably you see traffic center with you see health. The
future of carey is happening now through plenty come grounds
and innovative treatments that give patients a chance for better outcomes.
Visit u sehealth dot com. Southbound seventy five continues to
build through Lockland. That's over a five minute delay. Now
say for northbound seventy five out of Erlanger into downtown.
Northbound four to seventy one is closer to a ten
(01:33:50):
minute delay into the barrels and across the bridge. Chuck
ingram On fifty five krc the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:34:00):
Seven twenty two at fifty five KRCD Talk Station, Donald
and Neil is going to join the program in the
next segment, celebrating twenty years at Americans for Prosperity. He
will always enjoy having Donald on the phone, and they're
doing great work for Bernie Marina. Bernie's going to be
on the show. Fingers crossed at eight five after the
news and then followed by Jay Rattle with a number
(01:34:20):
of topics. Always enjoy my conversations with Jay, and I
hope you enjoy them as well. I had mentioned earlier,
and I wanted to get into the real quick the
idea that we are going to have an increase in
our Duke energy bill, most likely if they get it approved.
One of the reasons they want extra money for grid
scale batteries. That's because they need to store their green
energy somewhere. Because we know the wind doesn't always blow
(01:34:40):
and the sun doesn't always shine, and therefore those power
generating devices aren't working a lot, which leads you periods
of time where you're not generating any energy, unlike a
gas plant or a coal plant or a nuclear plant.
Grid scale batteries it's a great article if you can
get ahold of it. Wall Street General Steve Gorham wrote it.
(01:35:01):
He is an expert on the green things, author of
Green Breakdown Becoming Renewable Energy Failure, so you can tell
what kind of guy he is. But he highlights one
of the a very significant problem with the batteries used
in evs, among others, the fact that they catch on
fire and it takes forever to put them out, and
they belch out all kinds of toxic gases in these fires.
(01:35:24):
It was a fire in South Korea one of the
ones he pointed out. June twenty fourth, battery fire, trigger
and explosion killed twenty two workers. They say most of
the workers were killed by the toxic gases admitted by
the burning batteries. Over in Scotland, April a big the
Fenix Battery recycling plant. Forty firefighter personnel six different stations
(01:35:44):
responding to the blaze, which burned aft several days. They
told residents to remain indoors with their windows closed for
as long as two days after the fire started. June
twenty third, Glasgow, another fire broke out at the battery
recycling facility. There, explosions noise like gunshots, steel flying everywhere,
massive plume of black smoke. It took them four days
(01:36:07):
to put out. He cites the EV battery fires a
leading cause of fires in New York City, two hundred
and seventy fires last year, eighteen people killed. They often
store their bikes in the first floor store rooms. There
they self ignite and burn the buildings to the ground.
Tesla's semi truck August nineteenth crashed on I eighty in California.
Took fifty thousand gallons of water to extinguish the flames.
(01:36:31):
Highway closed fifteen hours. And they're pushing the clean Fleets regulation.
They passed it last year. All new semi trucks had
to be zero mission by twenty thirty six in California.
More of those, more wrecks, more fires, obviously fire parking
lot in the EV manufacturer Ribbon in late August, Normal, Illinois,
fifty vehicles destroyed. Same plant reportedly suffered three other battery
(01:36:55):
fires last year and in three months in twenty twenty
one and twenty two. On July twenty six, truck containing
several large lithium batteries ignited after a crash on I
fifteen Baker, California road shut down forty four hours with
motorists stranded in desert and the desert one hundred degree
plus heat. Then you get over and pivot over to
(01:37:17):
grid scale batteries viewed as the solution. He points out
to wind and solar intermittency. They store excess electricity when
the wind and solar output is high, release it when
the wind and solar output is low. Number of grid
battery fires is growing, and grid batteries are one hundred
times the size of EV batteries. This is our future, folks.
(01:37:42):
The more there are, and there aren't that many out
there in the grand scheme of things relative to the
internal combustion engine. Looking just at electric vehicle batteries, where
do you park your car? He points it out these
can catch fire at any given time while you're charging them,
while it is sitting without being touched, while you're behind
the wheel. Then you have the toxic fumes and the
(01:38:06):
well And I always thought we had a water shortage.
Are we supposed to be conserving precious water? Isn't that
one of the big green agenda things? Go ahead, dump
it out on an electric vehicle for the next three
or four days, seven twenty six to fifty five krsit
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Speaker 1 (01:39:40):
Nine fifty five KRC. The free i heeard radio app
has over the weather.
Speaker 2 (01:39:48):
Body data. Read today he isolated showers in highest seventy
five widespread rain they say overnight sixty seven for the
low few storms along with soaking rain during the day
Tomorrow with the highest seventy three down to sixty three.
Or night with isolated showers and a chance of showers
on Saturday after eight am. We'll see how at seventy
six on Saturday.
Speaker 1 (01:40:06):
It's sixty five. Right now, Time for traffic report.
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Speaker 11 (01:40:20):
Southbound seventy five AD an extra five in and out
of Lockman northbound seventy five. Just crossed over the five
minute delay mark out of Burlinger into downtown northbound fourth
seventy one. It's a ten minute delay in growing from
just after you come out of Southgate to the bridge.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:40:40):
It's seven thirty seven thirty one, fifty five KRCD Talk station.
Very happy Thursday tea and welcome back to the fifty
five kr S Morning show Man. We hear from regularly
from Americans for Prosperity Donovan and Eil Donovan. Welcome back
to the program.
Speaker 20 (01:40:53):
Hey Brian, happy to be here.
Speaker 2 (01:40:54):
Well in a celebratory moment, you must be Americans for
Prosperity has been around for twenty years.
Speaker 19 (01:41:01):
Can you believe it?
Speaker 13 (01:41:01):
It's been that long? No, those our twenty year anniversary.
Speaker 2 (01:41:05):
Well, congratulations on that. I know you're hopefully making some
really good progress. For Bernie Moreno, Bernie's going to be
on the fifty five Carsy Morning Show after the top
of the our news this morning, at least that he's
on the schedule anyway, looking forward to having him on
since he hasn't been on the program since the primaries.
Speaker 3 (01:41:21):
Well, that's great. Happy.
Speaker 13 (01:41:22):
Yeah, I mean, and that's part of what our record is, right,
is helping elevate good policy and good policy champions. But
at the end of the day, it's about putting a
megaphone of the voices of Ohiolands and in this case,
Americans right across the country through these twenty years, giving
them an opportunity to have their voices be heard on
the issues that mappen the most. And that's what we are,
(01:41:45):
that's what we're all about here as a crossroots organization,
is putting that megaphon of those folks voices.
Speaker 2 (01:41:49):
Well, and as you've been pointing out, like with afpaction
dot Com, which folks can get involved in the Marino
campaign or others, you not only give an opportunity for
folks to have their voice is heard, but you give
people the skills and knowledge to be the vehicle to
spread their voice by talking with voters who might not
yet have made up their mind on issues as important
(01:42:10):
as who's going to be the next Senator from the
state of Ohio.
Speaker 13 (01:42:14):
Yeah, that I mean, at the end of the day,
that's right, Brian, Because you know it's not a lot
of organizations operate in sort of a top down dynamic
right where they're driven by a figurehead who you know,
rallies support around them. And there are plenty of those organizations,
and many of them are really great with a really good,
really good mission, and we work with them very well.
(01:42:35):
Ours is a bottom up approach, though. It's about empowerment
and empowering individuals with the tools, resources and skills necessary
so that long after I'm you and I are gone, Brian,
this movement continues these ideas of conservative principles, libertarian principles,
limited government, freedom, the same stuff are Founding fathers envisioned
(01:42:56):
when they started this great country years ago. That's what
our organization is about. Empowering those folks. We do it
in a number of different ways.
Speaker 2 (01:43:05):
And you're still looking for folks to help out along
those lines.
Speaker 13 (01:43:09):
Well, there's no better time to help out than in
an election, you're, Brian. This is when we usually see
our numbers surge. We see more people join our movement
because they're seeing the advertising on TV, they're hearing the
advertising on the radio, or getting that call to action
by listening to programs like yours, Brian, And yeah, we're
looking for folks right on the AFP action side of
(01:43:30):
the operation and AP actions looking to get Bernie Moreno
over the finish line and win on election day. That
only happens if folks are out there knocking doors or
joining us to make phone calls, ultimately getting the vote out.
And that's We're less than two weeks away from early voting. No,
get out the vote starts now.
Speaker 2 (01:43:49):
Well, that was the most notable reason why I asked
if you were still looking for people. Of course I
knew the answer to the question, but a lot of
people think, well, early votings is two weeks away. I mean,
this is done. It's over with campaign. You know, people
have already made their minds up. This is an exercise
of utility. But actually it's not. Most notably given the
lies that are being perpetrated about Bernie Moreno and the
(01:44:09):
sham campaign that Shared Brown is on trying to paint
himself as some sort of you know, reasonable moderate, which
we all know he's not.
Speaker 3 (01:44:18):
No.
Speaker 20 (01:44:18):
Well, yeah, and.
Speaker 13 (01:44:19):
We're out there every day, that days a week talking
to voters and your listeners. You and I, Brian, we're
unique people.
Speaker 20 (01:44:27):
We're people who are dialed in and plugged into politics.
Speaker 3 (01:44:29):
We've made our minds up.
Speaker 13 (01:44:30):
We sort of know where we stand with the candidates,
but there are so many, so many voters and talking
about one point three million that we've identified that we
are taught we are targeting and talking to who have
not yet made up their minds or they're split ticket voters,
and part of what we need to do is connect
them to the importance of this election. Most recent poll
(01:44:52):
and just to illustrate this point here there was a
rest of use and poll at least yesterday, it's really good.
It shows burning up two points, which tracks with a
number of other polls that are out there. But there's
one alarming item in the cross tabs that we have
seen that only eighty seven percent of Republicans self identified
Republicans are planning to vote for Bernie right now. There
are seventeen percent of folks who identify as Republicans who
(01:45:15):
will likely not be voting for Kamala Harris on election day,
who haven't yet decided to pull the trigger for Bernie Moreno.
Speaker 3 (01:45:21):
Why is that.
Speaker 13 (01:45:22):
It's because he's an outsider candidate. But we have to
get the message to them and let them know that
the lies Shared Brown is putting out there are just
that they're lives and that Bernie Moreno is the conservative
choice for this election. We have to get the connected
to Bernie Moreno and his positive vision for our country
contrasted with Shared Brown's saled record for our state. So
(01:45:45):
those layers are out there and we're talking to him
to get im mobilized to action.
Speaker 2 (01:45:49):
And you have algorithms to identify that swath of people.
Speaker 3 (01:45:53):
Correct.
Speaker 2 (01:45:54):
I mean, it's an exercise of futility for a Democrat
to come knocking on my door, even though I will
point out Donovan I had a door knocker for our
local sheriff's race and Democrats. She was look and I
answered the door and she says, Jerry, that's my son's name.
I said, no, Well, is Jerry home is no, he's
(01:46:16):
registered to vote here? I said yeah, And she goes,
how about Lauren my daughter? Because she's still registered to
vote at home. She hasn't changed her address yet, and
I think she's got an absentee ballot either way, she's
got it covered, but she's not here. And she's like, okay, well,
and then she left. She knew the owner of the
home is not going to be interested in voting for
McGuffey or the other candidate she was campaigning for. Don't
(01:46:37):
even know who it was, but she knew. So that's
the kind of information that you're privy to the houses
where potential voters are that either haven't voted a lot,
don't have a long voting record, maybe have voted both
ways at different times. That's kind of the sweet spot.
You want to get folks who might be undecided, not
the lockstep hardcore long term Democrats or Republicans.
Speaker 13 (01:47:01):
Correct, yep, and that's what again. You go back to
AFP's twenty year history. Right over twenty years, you're able
to build up a good amount.
Speaker 20 (01:47:08):
Of data, a good amount of.
Speaker 13 (01:47:09):
Insight and understanding about voting, voting patterns, how different groups
within voting blocks may may turn out, or what there
the message, the effective message might be. All of that
comes together, and that's what we do. We're out there
and yes we're looking for those very specific voters to
(01:47:31):
bring that message, put that message in front of them.
Speaker 3 (01:47:34):
But it's not just on the doors.
Speaker 13 (01:47:35):
It's a layered strategy, and that layered strategy makes a
significant impact right sore. When you're talking to a voter
at the door, it's probably not the first time they've
heard our message or about our candidate Bertie Moreno. They've
probably received some mail hopefully at this point, or some
digital ads or something on their screen. And so what
(01:47:57):
that does is that allows the canvas or to have
that much more of an impactful conversation with the voter
at the door, and ultimately the goal being to persuade
or get that voter to commit to turn out to
vote when they otherwise may not. And so when you're
out there doing this with us, the work is incredibly impactful.
You can feel the movement happen as you're out there
(01:48:20):
for a couple hours on Saturday morning.
Speaker 2 (01:48:21):
Well, mind my listeners before we part company this morning,
Donald and Neil from Americans for Prosperity, how many doors you,
guys and CoV collectively with all the assistants from folks
like on my listening audience who've signed up to help,
how many doors have you knocked on in state of
Ohio so far?
Speaker 13 (01:48:35):
Well, we're somewhere over over half a million, pushing three
quarters of a million. Our goal is to hit a
million from Moreno by November fifth. And I think with
the growth in our grassroots team and the continued effort
we have.
Speaker 3 (01:48:48):
On this, We're going to get there.
Speaker 2 (01:48:49):
It's an amazing accomplishment. I appreciate everything that Americans for
Prosperity has done over its congratulations twenty years in operation.
Wish you all the best on the next twenty years.
You and I may be gone by then, Donovan, but
Americans for Prosperity will continue on behalf of the American
people fighting for those things that you and I hold dear.
Free a freedom, limited government, free markets, low taxation, all
(01:49:12):
the important stuff. Donovan. Congratulations again. Afpaction dot com. If
you are interested, if you got an hour, sign up,
if you've got a full week's worth of free time,
sign up. Any little bit counts, and there's also an
opportunity to make a donation to keep AFP going. Donovan,
thanks again for being on the program and for what
you're doing.
Speaker 3 (01:49:30):
As always, Brian click glad to be with you.
Speaker 2 (01:49:32):
Take care, brother, We'll talk again.
Speaker 16 (01:49:33):
I know it.
Speaker 2 (01:49:35):
Seven forty right now. If you have KCY talk station,
if you're going to talk and you can feel free
to call in. We've got some time before the top
of the our news follow by Yes, Bernie Moreno on
the rundown first, Odor Exit bodily functions, clothing, dead rotting animals,
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Speaker 1 (01:50:50):
Fifty five cart cloudy day.
Speaker 2 (01:50:56):
It'll be today with isolated showers on highest seventy five,
widespread rain showing up overnight low of sixty seven. Got
some storms along with soaking rain during the day. Tomorrow
with the highest seventy three overnight overcasts showers and sixty
three Saturday, they're calling for some rain after eight am
and a high of seventy six sixty five. Right now,
time for traffic update.
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Northbound seventy five at an extra fifteen minutes between Turfy
and Town. Southbound seventy five over a ten minute delay.
Now coming out of Evandale through Wakland inbound seventy four
is backing up above Montana at northbound fourth seventy One's
an extra ten minutes through the barrels to get across
the bridge. Chuck ingramon fifty five KR seat the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:51:56):
Seven forty seven at fifty five kr se Decox Station,
Fingers cross Burne Moreno at the top of the ron News,
Jay Ratliff at eight thirty the return of Jay Ratliffe
and again and keep your prayers going to Jay Ratler
for having lost his father last week, which is why
we didn't get to hear from him last Thursday. I
certainly missed that segment, but I surely understand the reasons
why he missed. So Welcome back Jay at a thirty
(01:52:18):
Meantime the other day, I believe was earlier, just earlier
this week, Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell expressing some
concerns he was speaking with a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing.
That hearing generally was centered around the Chinese Communist Party
(01:52:41):
and it's threatned the end of the Pacific region. But
he had some rather strong and concerning words to say. Frankly,
the Cold War pales in comparison to the multifaceted challenges
that China presents. It's not just the military challenges, it's
across the board, it's in the Global South, it's in technology.
We need to step up our games across the board.
(01:53:04):
Probably the most important thing that we're doing are going
to do to need in terms of national strategy in
the end of Pacific is to sustain bipartisanship, and I
do believe we're on the road to that right now.
I think there is a recognition that this is the
most significant challenge in our history. But speaking to the
tech component, because this is multifaceted, and we are literally
in the middle of a Cold war right now, and
it probably is worse than the Cold War because of
(01:53:26):
the threat that it opposes us. And as I pivot
over to this threat, yet another cyber attack brought to
you by the Chinese Communist Party, a hacking campaign. They're
calling it Salt Typhoon, described as the latest, certainly not
the last, of incuragions into the well US tech sector
(01:53:48):
generally speaking, linked to China. They have a massive army
of cyber spies. They are at work at this twenty
four hours a day, seven days a week. To Salt Typhoon,
this is linked to China. They have accessed and burrowed
into America's broadband networks and as the Sarah Kraus reporting
(01:54:14):
and Robert McMillan and Dustin Volts got to give credit
where credits due reporting in this China link. Hackers breach
US Internet providers in New Salt Typhoon cyber attack headline
found on the Wall Street Journal. This type of intrusion
bad actors aim to establish a foothold within the infrastructure
of cable and broadband providers, allowing them access to data
(01:54:36):
stored by these companies, or, alternatively, or both launch a
damaging cyber attack.
Speaker 3 (01:54:43):
They say.
Speaker 2 (01:54:43):
Investigators are exploring whether the intruders gained access to Cisco
which components are well, I guess literally everywhere, routing much
of the traffic on the Internet, which means any traffic
going through one of these Cisco products may be a
direct source of information to the Chinese Communist party. Books
and for Cisco said at this time there is no
indication that Chris Cisco routers are involved. At this time,
(01:55:08):
China apparently has made a practice of gaining access to
Internet service providers around the world, they report here, but
if hackers gained access to service providers core routers, it
will leave them in a powerful position to steal information
redirect Internet traffic, install malicious software, or pivot to new attacks.
That's an observation by Steven Adair, the founder of a
(01:55:30):
company called Vulcity cybersecurity firm that's investigated China back intrusions previously,
and as Glenn Corstell, the former General counsel at the
National Security previously stated, this would be alarming but not
really surprising expansion of their malicious use of cyber to
gain the upper hand over the United States. He noted
(01:55:51):
that China has for years relied on cyber theft to
steal industrial military secrets before then positioning itself inside our
critical infrastructure. We've reported on there. There's been reports on
this previously. Volt Typhoon was the other one. Federalist officials
disrupted that one, burying their nefarious software throughout all kinds
(01:56:14):
of critical infrastructure systems something I hope maybe we'll talk
with The Tech Friday's Dave Hatter about this. US security
officials alleged Beijing has tried, at times and times succeeded
in burrowing deep into our critical infrastructure networks, from water
treatment systems to airports, oil and gas pipelines. Biden administration
(01:56:39):
officials have issued public warnings recently that these actions by
the Chinese Communist Party could threaten our very lives, could
cause societal panic, disrupt our ability to mobilize support for
Taiwan in the event, Jijin Ping decides to go ahead
(01:56:59):
and pull the trigger on invading Taiwan, which everybody expects
me to do. At some point, officials who repeatedly said
what the private sector and government agencies know about Chinese
intrusions into critical infrastructure is likely the tip of the
iceberg because of how stealthy and sophisticated the hackers have
(01:57:20):
become and are and growing in strength and knowledge and ability.
This is a massive, massive concern, And wouldn't the timing
be amazing if it's the tip of the iceberg. If
salt typhoon and volt Typhoon, which have revealed they have
literally buried themselves inside critical infrastructure and networks, if those
(01:57:45):
are the tip of the iceberg, and we go into
this all important November election and someone over the Chinese
Communist Party just decided, Hey, let's play a joke on
the United States. Let's flip the switch. Can you envision
what might happen? I mean, hell, any given day of
the week, if you shut the electricity off, you're going
(01:58:07):
to have a massive problem on your hands. But an
election year, and we all know that there are countries
out in the world that have vested interest in one
candidate or another. We already have the Iranians previously suggesting
that they wanted to kill Donald Trump. There was a
video that was just recently removed from YouTube, although it's
(01:58:29):
been there since twenty twenty two. It's the Iran Supreme
Leader Ayatola Ali Kamani talking about killing Donald Trump. Video
animation depicting a plot to assassinate Trump at his Palm
Beach golf course huh huh, and valuing revenge against Donald
Trump for ordering the deadly US military strike against the
(01:58:50):
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Kuds Force and specifically the commander
Casim Solimani. They've been after Trump ever since.
Speaker 3 (01:58:58):
Then.
Speaker 2 (01:58:58):
Isn't it interesting that a two year old video depicts
an assassination of Donald Trump at his Palm Beach golf course.
I suggested that maybe the Ukrainians had something to do
with it. We got a nutcase that has got a
real throbbing feeling, if I may be so bold, for
Ukraine and the war, wants to go join the war.
(01:59:19):
He's not qualified to fight in the war. So he's
trying to, you know, gather up a whole bunch of
other individuals, and then he goes off and he tries
to shoot Donald Trump. Donald Trump, who has a softer
position relative to Russia as some of our Democrat elected officials,
and their desire and and and for whatever reason, I
don't know what their strategy is, but they want to
(01:59:41):
continue to find Ukraine so much so now that, oh great,
here's a fun fact. Vladimir Putin has relaxed his use
of nuclear force standards to broaden the justification for using
nuclear weapons for countries who, basically, like the United States,
(02:00:01):
help enemies of Russia attack Russia, which with this most
recent three hundred plus billion dollar package of arms or whatever,
we're going to be doing on a grander scale. So
they have a vested interest in wanting to continue with
this sort of the Biden Harris administration policies relative to Ukraine.
Donald Trump probably going to take a different turn. He's
(02:00:22):
promised to dissolve the conflict before he even gets sworn in.
How I don't know. It's one of the things I've
got a problem with what he says. That one he
hasn't elaborated on. But you know the resolution of that conflict,
if one can be done, is going to require giving
up something to Russia. They're not going to just walk
away from a couple of years plus of warfare and
(02:00:43):
tax dollars spent and lives lost to just simply accomplish nothing.
So you can bet your bottom dollar that the Ukrainians
want Kamala Harris to get elected, and probably the Russians
want Trump to get elected, not for reasons of collusion.
On seven fifty six, Bernie Moreino is supposed to come
on off top of the our news. I hope you
can stick around for that, and then Jay Ratliffe returns
(02:01:05):
at eight thirty. I'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (02:01:08):
It's what motivates your vote.
Speaker 10 (02:01:10):
The Democrat US now and they were the Racis back then.
Speaker 1 (02:01:14):
Fifty five KRS the talk Station, fifty five KRC.
Speaker 12 (02:01:20):
Height to four or.
Speaker 2 (02:01:21):
Fifty five KRC de Talk Station. A very happy Friday
eve you made even extra special. Welcome back to the
fifty five KRC Morning Show. Running for Senate against the
evil Shared Brown, Bernie Moreno. Great to have you back
on the Morning show, sir, thank you for having me,
Brian and uh, let us take a look most recently
the polls now have you ahead of Shared Brown. I
(02:01:42):
find this preposterous in a state of Ohio, which is
solid red, where Donald Trump is ahead in the polls
versus Kamala Harris by a significant amount. You know, it
just seems so logical and reasonable that Republicans who are
in favor of Trump would immediately move down to the
biggest race beyond that, the Senate race, and immediately select
you over Shared Brown, demonstrably liberal in spite of his ads.
(02:02:04):
You're out on the streets all the time, Bernie, You're
doing rallies, you're doing town halls, you're at events. What
is the one issue that seems to be the pivotal
issue between you and Shared Brown among voters who may
consider themselves undecided?
Speaker 3 (02:02:17):
Bernie Well.
Speaker 20 (02:02:20):
Sharon Brown voted against every single border security measure that
President Trump put forward. He said the border wall was racist,
the border wall is stupid. He actually said the situation
at the border was a right wing conspiracy theory. Now,
of course, running for reelection, by the way, after fifty
years of being an elected office, wasn't.
Speaker 3 (02:02:39):
Enough for mu want six more.
Speaker 20 (02:02:41):
He's all of a sudden pivoting and saying he cares
about border security. But the entirety of the state of
Ohio has been affected by what's going on in our border,
whether it's Springfield or Marietta, or the futannel.
Speaker 3 (02:02:51):
Crisis all over the state.
Speaker 20 (02:02:53):
This is a top priority, and they know Shard just
will not secure a border well, and.
Speaker 2 (02:02:58):
It's exacerbating and already existing. How housing crisis we have
here in America?
Speaker 20 (02:03:03):
Yeah, absolutely, Well, will you bring ten to twelve million people,
basically the entirety of the state of Ohio into this
country over three and a half years. And by the way,
most are non skilled workers who are dependent on our
social safety in that system, we're paying to house them.
Of course, Americans now don't have housing. You know, Tamala
Harris wants to build three million new homes. How about
(02:03:24):
we deport everybody who's in this country illegally and allow
those houses and rentals and apartments to be used for
American citizens.
Speaker 2 (02:03:32):
Yeah, exactly. I find it hard to believe I live
in the world that I'm living in right now, Bernie Marin. Now,
I feel like I woke up in a parallel universe
built by Salvador Dolly from time to time. But you know,
these are real problems, real challenges for Americans and the
impact all Americans, regardless of political stripe. That's an absolute
win for the Republican side of the ledger stemming the
flow of illegal immigrants. You've heard Donald Trump's tax policies.
(02:03:54):
He's planning on doing, engaging in a lot of tariffs.
He wants to extend the tax recuts that we previously
got an his administration in twenty seventeen, and even lower
corporate taxes done to fifteen percent if products are manufactured
here in the United States of America. What's your general
reaction to the Trump tax policy that is, we know
it right now and are you supportive of it?
Speaker 3 (02:04:15):
Well, it worked, that's the first thing you got to know. Obviously,
it led to with this is something the media ever
talked about, Brian.
Speaker 20 (02:04:21):
It led to record tax revenue because when you lower
taxes for companies, when you lower taxes for individuals, it
grows the private sector. You end up raising more money
for the federal government. The problem, the reason we have
a deficit isn't because we lower tax rates.
Speaker 3 (02:04:38):
Because like I said, we got more revenue.
Speaker 20 (02:04:39):
It's because the government's spending is completely out of control.
We'reuning a trillion dollars in debt every one hundred days.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harrison shared Bond's full support.
Speaker 3 (02:04:50):
Added ten trillion dollars.
Speaker 20 (02:04:52):
To our deficit just in the last three and a
half years. It's a number that's so stagg and he's
so unbelievable. But believe it or not, Brian, it would
have been worse if it were up to share a round,
because it was Kristen Cinema and Joe Mansion which tapped
down on the Green New.
Speaker 3 (02:05:07):
Deal scam that they wanted to pass in its entirety.
Speaker 2 (02:05:11):
The other pivotal issue. And I'm sorry, it befuddles me
that people inquire or ask federal candidates, like Senate candidates
running for a federal office like yourself, about the abortion issue.
The Supreme Court said unequivocally, this is not a power
reserve to the federal government. It is a state issue,
(02:05:31):
temph amendment kind of stuff, plain and simple. Donald Trump
set it over and over again. This is a state issue.
You guys decide yourself. I'm not going to have any
control over it. How does that discussion even enter into
the equation on a federal race anymore, Bernie Marino, Well,
because the.
Speaker 20 (02:05:46):
Media and the Democrats pretend that women are single issue voters.
Speaker 13 (02:05:50):
They're not.
Speaker 3 (02:05:51):
Women care about the border.
Speaker 20 (02:05:52):
They care about inflation, they care about safe communities, they
care about peace and stability around the world, just like
men do. But the Democrats and the media like the
gas light them, scare them, make them think that there's
some effort under way that's going to take away any
kind of rights.
Speaker 3 (02:06:06):
It's not going to happen. I think you're exactly right.
Our platform is very straightforward. This is mostly a state issue.
The state of Ohio voted and we're going to move on.
Speaker 20 (02:06:16):
But the Democrats only have that talking point because see,
if they're talking about this issue, they're not talking about
the border, they're not talking about generationally high prices, interest rates,
which are crushing working Americans, and the cases share around
two hundred thousand manufacturing jobs lost under his watch, the
fact that we have a war in the Middle East,
a war in Ukraine, a possible war in the Asia
(02:06:37):
Pacific region. This is all because of American weakness and
their policies. So they can't talk about that, so instead
they have to talk about issues to upset voters that.
Speaker 3 (02:06:48):
Get them to vote for them.
Speaker 2 (02:06:50):
Your proposal in so far as cutting expenses, I mean,
as the world grows more volatile, and as you pointed out,
we got wars breaking out and more wars anticipated, like
for example, just waiting around for China to finally decide
they're going to try to go after Taiwan. What our
reaction would be, I don't know. That obviously is an
executive level decision. But funding, You know, the American military
(02:07:11):
is getting depleted by all of these arms sails to
these various warring nations, such that many people in the
American military expressing significant concern that we wouldn't be able
to defend ourselves, let alone have to go off and
defend the Taiwanese or any other challenge that we're facing
in the world. We need to fund the military, but
that comes at a sizable expense in our budget. Where
are we going to find the room to cut what's
(02:07:32):
going to be cut? If you're elected, Senator, what would
you support in terms of cuts on the federal government level.
Speaker 20 (02:07:39):
Well, first and foremost, we have to end these wars
that have no path to victory. To continue to fund Ukraine,
where you have a million people that have either been
injured or killed, is insane.
Speaker 3 (02:07:51):
We have to bring peace there.
Speaker 20 (02:07:52):
So at number one, number two, we spent half a
trillion dollars on most last year last year on the
illegal immigrants country housing, on feeding them, giving them healthcare.
Speaker 3 (02:08:02):
That's insanity. We're going to make that go to zero.
Speaker 20 (02:08:05):
The Biden administration, this is a very little reported story,
admitted to half a trillion dollars of waste, fried and
abuse in all these programs. We're going to stop funding
this Green New Deal scam way I paid people to
buy electric vehicles and things like that.
Speaker 2 (02:08:21):
Well, you're a businessman. You understand how all of this works.
You understand the regulatory struggles and challenges. And I'm glad
you brought up this green stuff because nothing frustrates me
more than that something the American people do not want.
We have a grid and infrastructure that is already in
terrible shape, and they want to heap more on it.
Speaker 3 (02:08:38):
Now.
Speaker 2 (02:08:38):
Artificial intelligence is coming online, taking up even more energy.
They're talking about approving private nuclear plants for these various
AI facilities. We don't get nuclear But oh boy, they're
partners in big business. They're allowed to get their's what's
your where are you? On energy policy in the United States,
generally speaking relative to the Green Bertie Morina.
Speaker 20 (02:08:58):
I want my kids and my grandkids to grow up
in a country that never depends on any nation on
Earth for energy, because we make it right here in
America that we're in an energy dominant country.
Speaker 2 (02:09:07):
But let me tell you, Brian, something that your.
Speaker 3 (02:09:09):
Listeners may not know. And the Inflation Reduction Act, which
is basically a rebranded Green New Deal.
Speaker 20 (02:09:15):
They stripped three hundred billion dollars out of Medicare, three
hundred billion with a bee out of Medicare. They used
it to subsidize electric vehicle the money for electric vehicles,
So think about that. We took our seniors that are
choosing between rent food and prescription drugs and gave that
money to millionaires so they could lease electric vehicles. Then
(02:09:37):
it turns out the three hundred billion wasn't the right
number because most of these things are leased and not purchased,
and there's a loophole that you get the full incentive
no matter how much money you make or no matter
what electric vehicle you buy if you lease it, that's
become over a trillion dollars now.
Speaker 3 (02:09:54):
In electric vehicle subsidies.
Speaker 20 (02:09:56):
This is the kind of idiot policies, theotic policies that
are happening in Washington.
Speaker 3 (02:10:02):
DC that the mainstream media refuses to.
Speaker 20 (02:10:05):
Cover because they know if they cover it, honestly, the
voters would rebel.
Speaker 2 (02:10:10):
Now, one thing Donald Trump has promised not to do
is touch Social Security, and I believe Medicare as well.
I know it needs to be touched. There is not
a single human being on the planet. He's looked at
the breakdown on where we are and where we're headed
with Social Security. Most notably, we're not going to have
enough money to fund the promises made to people who
paid into this system their whole lives and are relying
upon it retirement. It is a train wreck just waiting
(02:10:32):
to happen in slow mow. Something needs to be done.
Do you embrace some sort of reform, maybe a changing
the eligibility requirements, something to reform Social Security?
Speaker 20 (02:10:41):
Anything, Bernie, Well, we keep robbing the Trust Fund and
we're giving Social Security to illegals. We're using Medicare money,
like I said, for electric vehicle subsidies. We're giving health
care to you legals. Kamala Harris is in favor of
sex change operations for you legal immigrants. I mean, you
can't have that level of lunacy in the White House. Again,
(02:11:03):
these are the stories that aren't covered. This is what
we're going to talk about over the next forty days, Brian,
because this is a clear choice between common sense and
absolutely lunatic policies. This is not Democrat Republican. This is
common sense versus lunacy.
Speaker 2 (02:11:18):
Love the words, Bernie Marina. Love the fact that you're
an outsider, that you have business experience. You know how
these regulations and these rules and the insanity from government
impacts business and bottom line. That's why you're a better
candidate from the demonstrably liberal based on his record shared
brown closing comments, Bernie Renine for we part coming today,
I will mention Berniemarino dot com for my listeners. I
(02:11:40):
know you could use some help on any level. Yard signs,
door knocking, maybe a cash contribution of some sort.
Speaker 20 (02:11:47):
Yeah, absolutely, they can do that all on Berniemriino dot com.
Speaker 3 (02:11:50):
But there's one more other big request on October eighth,
so less than two weeks away.
Speaker 20 (02:11:54):
You can vote early. Bank your vote. It'll save us
a fortune because we know that you voted once. You
do early after on October eighth or after, so we
don't have to chase you or knock on your door
or call you or text you, and then bring ten
people with you to the polling place over the next
four weeks. So vote eleven times, vote yourself, and then
bring ten people. We have to swamp the vote.
Speaker 2 (02:12:16):
Flann An undot to the Thomas House. Can't bring you ten,
but we're gonna bring a car load of Thomas's to
go down to the Board of Elections early and vote early.
Berniemarino dot com Bernie, I wish you all the best
of luck and anything we could do here in the
Morning show to secure your victory over leftist Shared Brown.
You've got it right here, sir.
Speaker 3 (02:12:34):
Well, thank you, Brian. I appreciate that.
Speaker 2 (02:12:35):
Looking forward to having you on the program again soon.
Keep up the great work. Eight fifteen fifty five KR
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Speaker 1 (02:14:34):
Five fifty five KRC the talk station. For more information
about contests on this station, go to fifty eight.
Speaker 2 (02:14:43):
Twenty one Here fifty five PAIRCD talk station. Looking so
forward to the next segment. Jay Ratliffe returns a couple
of fun topics talk about with Jay and a couple
of serious, serious ones typically the case without further ado,
let's head on over to the phones. If you'd like
to call, there is time five one three, seven, four
nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three. Jim,
thanks for calling this morning.
Speaker 12 (02:15:02):
Hi Brian, what is on your mind?
Speaker 3 (02:15:05):
Jim?
Speaker 10 (02:15:06):
Well? I was listening to Fox News on TV the
other day Monday, I.
Speaker 3 (02:15:12):
Believe it was, and.
Speaker 10 (02:15:15):
Kamala Harris was making one of her statements. I think
she was in Wisconsin or Minnesota, I'm not sure, but
she said verbatim that the Democratic Party stands for common sense.
(02:15:39):
I couldn't believe it, and Trump had just went over
that maybe four or five days ago in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 2 (02:15:48):
Well, it is indeed a funny statement. I guess people
have really lost a sense of what common sense actually is.
And every time I mentioned common sense on the program,
somebody invariably will say common sense is in common anymore.
And if the Democrat Party get away with what it's
doing and it flies with the American people, then maybe
that statement is true, that common sense is in common anymore.
Speaker 10 (02:16:09):
I haven't heard anybody mentioned this, and to me, that
was the most glorious statement.
Speaker 3 (02:16:15):
She had made.
Speaker 2 (02:16:17):
Wow, well that's a bold statement, Jim, give the words
sounds that have come out of her mouth. Everybody's got
an opinion. That's a subjective assessment. I'm just gonna point
that out, Jim. Jim's got his number one favorite comment.
I've got mine, Jim. Thanks to the call, my friends.
It's good to hear from you anyway. Yeah, speaking of Harris,
(02:16:39):
I try to remember where she was on MSNBC speaking
with Stephanie Ruhle, who is not exactly a thrower of
hardballs on tariffs. She speaking with Harris, who does oppose
Donald Trump's terror policy. He's pointed this out MSNBC Anchasy,
(02:16:59):
but tariffs aren't unique to President Trump. President Biden has
tariff's in place. He's actually looking to potentially implement more.
Where do you come out on that, is, is there
a good tariff a bad tariff? Well, Harris couldn't really
answer the question. So rather than answer the question on tariff's,
here's what she had to say. He referring to Donald Trump,
(02:17:20):
he's not serious about how he thinks about some of
these issues. And one must be serious and have a
plan and a real plan that's not just about some
talking point ending in an exclamation point at a political rally,
but actually putting the thought into what will be the
return on the investment, what the economic impact on? What's
(02:17:40):
the economic impact on everyday people? Close quote? Are you
one in this room is now dumber for having listened
to it?
Speaker 3 (02:17:51):
Amen?
Speaker 2 (02:17:52):
Joe Strecker, appreciate the SoundBite exclamation point you placed on that.
I can't understand anything that comes out of that woman's mouth.
She tries to do an effective job. Now, you listen
to an effective politician, well oiled politician, Republican or Democrat.
You ask them any question and they will they'll give
you something that will sound reasonable, plausible, and almost sound
(02:18:16):
like it's answering the question without really providing you a
whole lot of information. We're all used to that from politicians.
But she's not good at that. She wants to be,
and she'll come across this smiling and joyful and oh yeah,
and and the words that come out of her mouth
while sounding rhythmically you know, positive or rhythmically right, It
(02:18:39):
comes across as dare I say, even true. But when
you are looking at her words and hearing what they
amount to in terms of you know, the meaning you
come up with a total goose egg nothing literally zero,
it's empty space, which is what's going on in between
her ears from my stand point eight twenty five, coming
(02:19:01):
up to eight twenty six. Yes, I heart media aviation
expert jaylat Ratliffe returns next. I can't wait to have
Jay on the program this talking with them last week
Suzette Load's Camp, You're gonna love talking with her. And
the reason you do is mortgage. Is you want to
get a house, you need a mortgage. You call Susette
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(02:19:23):
And I said, cal Susette, she did. I think they
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And I'm so pleased my daughter was pleased. Because then
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(02:19:44):
no junk fees, no application fees, and you can't find
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rates have dropped a little bit, or buy your own home.
(02:20:04):
Suzette Low's Camp can be reached one of two ways.
Just go ahead and call her anytime or send an
email anytime. She's wonderful about getting right back with you.
So it starts with five one three three one three
fifty one seventy six three one three fifty one seventy six.
Email is Suzette dot Low's Camp, which is billed l
O S E KA MP Suzette dot Low's Camp at CCM.
Speaker 1 (02:20:24):
Dot com fifty five KRC four Happy to report.
Speaker 2 (02:20:28):
Channel nine is saying rain will be entering the area.
Will it impact flights? We're going to find out that
next But in the meantime, here's your forecast thoughty with
isolated showers in highest seventy five today over nine time
to sixty seven with widespread rain. We got a few
storms along with soaking rain tomorrow at high seventy three
overnight isolated showers a sixty three. Finally for Saturday, chance
(02:20:50):
to shower shows up after eight in the morning. It'll
go up to seventy six at sixty six degrees right
now in time for traffic.
Speaker 12 (02:20:58):
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Speaker 11 (02:21:09):
CRUSE continue to work with the accident Westboud two seventy
five and seventy one, but they're over on the shoulder,
so no delay to get by southbound seventy one. Delayed
times have dropped under the fifteen minute mark between two
seventy five and the lateral southbound seventy five continues slowed
through lockwack chuck Ingram on fifty five krs, the talk station.
Speaker 2 (02:21:31):
Hey thirty one and fifty five KRC Detok station ain't
very Happy Friday, EF, you made extra special because he's back.
I heart media aviation expert Jay Ratliff, Jay, welcome back,
my friend. Condolences on your loss. I hope you're struggling
through okay with the loss of your father. It's why
you weren't on last week. I missed talking with you,
but I certainly understood the reason for the absence.
Speaker 7 (02:21:52):
Yeah, it was, it was it was quick.
Speaker 21 (02:21:54):
As you know I've shared with you, he's it was
going through dementia, and he had for several years. And
you know, three weeks ago he's up walking around mobile,
he's talking conversational memory issues obviously, and then the last
three weeks things just progressed to the point that rapidly,
next thing you know, he's gone. And it happened last
(02:22:18):
Tuesday morning at five point fifty five. But my sister,
my mom, and I were all there, and you know,
for me, it was the first time i'd lost a
parent and it uncharted waters. But you know, as I've
told you, my dad taught me three main things. Love
of family, love of country, and love of baseball. I mean,
(02:22:39):
those were the three things with him that I'll always
take with me. But so many memories, and I'll never
say why did it happen? Because look, I had him
for sixty one years. He and Mam have been married
for sixty two and yeah, so the family's gone through
some adjustments, but a lot of prayers and we can
feel them.
Speaker 2 (02:22:56):
Yeah, I'm glad. I'm glad because I obviously let my
listening audience know so they can include you and their prayers.
Speaker 3 (02:23:01):
And I appreciate that very much.
Speaker 2 (02:23:03):
Happy to do it, my friend. I know what it's
like to lose a father and under the same or
comparable circumstances. Just that my dad's decay and decline went
over a period of much longer time in terms of
his deterioration. So anyway, moving old, when.
Speaker 21 (02:23:17):
You were there for me, and believe me forever, I'll
forever be appreciate it of that.
Speaker 3 (02:23:20):
Brother.
Speaker 2 (02:23:21):
Hey, friends, man, friends, what it's all about?
Speaker 3 (02:23:24):
All right?
Speaker 21 (02:23:25):
You dared me, You try you try me.
Speaker 3 (02:23:27):
If you need something, it's done, you go.
Speaker 2 (02:23:29):
That's a two way street, my friend. I always I
tend to throw you a curveball. And on the heels
of that discussion, let me let me before we get
into your list of topics, which are maybe a little
bit headier. Researchers at the University of Cambridge, Professor Rob Miller,
Cambridge's Whittle Laboratory, released a suggestion and for the purposes
of dealing with climate change, in an effort to get
(02:23:51):
the aviation industry to get the net zero carbon emissions
by twenty fifty, slow the planes down. He suggested, if
you slow the flight speeds down by fifteen percent, which
would add almost a full hour to every single flight,
you would save fuel. You would slash fuel burned by
(02:24:12):
five to seven percent. I don't think that's a good
return on investment. I just wanted to get your reaction
to slow.
Speaker 21 (02:24:18):
Well, it's a lot like if I drove slower to
Savannah than I do, we could save fuel. Yeah, but
I'm flying, so you know if obviously if you throttle
back a bit, you you can save a little bit
of money there. But you know, you look at I
think the airline industry, by most estimates, contributes like four
percent something along those lines of you know, of carbon emissions.
(02:24:39):
So but the thing is that their target and as
as such, they're always the people are always coming up
with these crazy things. And you know, the Amsterdam Airport
was talking about reducing the number of flights this year
to combat the climate change, and you had airlines being
told that you're going to have to monitor or start
monitoring your contrails so that you can we can help
(02:25:01):
determine what's going on. And there's no science behind that.
So how world are you supposed to monitor and report?
I mean, it's just lunacy, and you have all of
these individuals and I'm assuming well meaning, although I think
some it's money motivated that are coming out with all
of its garbage that it just you know, look, I
love the idea that we have sustainable aviation fuel. If
(02:25:23):
we can take you know, vegetable oil and other kinds
of things that we can reproduce easily and replace aviation
fuel with what's being used now, that's great. The problem
is you can't produce it cheaply enough for it to
be economically a benefit to the airline industry. So the
industry is not going to go that route unless they're
(02:25:44):
shoved in that direction by the governments of the world.
And if they do, I guarantee you the obvious thing
that's going to happen is it's going to cost more
for fuel and you know, ticket prices are going up
thirty forty fifty percent, and you know, some people say, well,
that would be worth it to saves a planet, and
I'm like, well, if we have some proven data that
we actually can you know, rely on, I'm okay there.
(02:26:05):
But I'm still the guy that remembers global cooling in
the nineteen seventies and acid rain and all these other
things that decade after decade after decade made me think
I'm never going to make it to forty years of age.
Speaker 3 (02:26:15):
I know.
Speaker 21 (02:26:16):
And now, yeah, now that's exactly what a lot of
these kids have. And but in their case, they have
social media that can reinforce the panic. And I think
that that's really creating some damage among our young people
that have absolutely no confidence at all that they're going
to be here at forty and fifty years of age
because people are telling them the planet's about.
Speaker 2 (02:26:34):
To, you know, cease to exist exactly. And don't forget
the other evil, nefarious component that not only is it
on social media, it's being taught in the schools as
for the curriculum now, so they are.
Speaker 21 (02:26:47):
The early age from an early age.
Speaker 3 (02:26:49):
Diculous.
Speaker 2 (02:26:50):
Anyway, We'll continue with iHeart mediaviation extp fort Jay Ratliffe
got some interesting topics to talk with him about from
his list twenty two to three on forty two between
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(02:27:13):
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(02:27:35):
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(02:27:57):
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Speaker 1 (02:28:07):
Dot com fifty five KRC do you have impeded?
Speaker 2 (02:28:12):
According to Channel nine rain come on our way. We've
got isolated showers at ay seventy five. Overnight showers arrived
with widespread rain. Low sixty seven seventy three the high
on Friday with a few storms along with soaking rain
overnight isolated showers sixty three Saturday is going to be
a chance of rain after eight am going up to
seventy six. It's sixty six now.
Speaker 11 (02:28:33):
Time for traffic from the UCL Traffic Center with U
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plenty colt trials and innovative treatments that give patients a
chance for better outcomes.
Speaker 12 (02:28:43):
Visit ucehealth dot com.
Speaker 11 (02:28:45):
Southbound seventy five continue slow in and out of Wackland
dropping close to a fifteen minute delay northbound seventy five
under and ten minute delay now out of Erlingger into
the cut, getting better through Saint Bernard towards town Stream
with just a bit of heavy chuck ingram on fifty
five KR.
Speaker 12 (02:29:02):
See the talk station.
Speaker 2 (02:29:05):
Ever hang around at Gymnasium, Hey forty one if you
have AIRCD talk station Brian Thomas with iheartbet the aviation
expert Jay rat Left. I've guess the airlines are preparing
for yet another big time storm. Can see it right
there on the radar map.
Speaker 3 (02:29:18):
Jay.
Speaker 2 (02:29:18):
I know we do hub delays last, but this kind
of overlap some.
Speaker 21 (02:29:21):
Doesn't it It is and that's the big issue obviously
for the day. And even though airlines are notorious and
famous for a lack of customer service. I mean, if
you get customer service, go buy a lottery ticket because
you're having a really good day. They do a good
job though, when it comes to taking care of us
during irregular operations when whether event happens, so what takes
(02:29:44):
place is they see the storm coming, They're going to
adjust their flight schedule because they want to do a
couple of things. They want to take care of us
and we accommodate us before we get to the airport,
and they also want to make sure that they don't
have any airplanes in it in a location that has
a h wind to them, because then you have the
possibility of damage through debris that might hit the aircraft
(02:30:06):
that would cause it to have an expensive process as
far as well a being out of service, but then
be of course costing of money in the process and
inconvenience seeing a lot of passengers. So they make sure
those airplanes are staged, are moved out of the affected area,
so like in Atlanta and other places, they'll have minimal
(02:30:26):
presence there. Once the storm goes through, they bring the
airplanes back in. The airport has to do a series
of inspections to make sure that the runways are good,
the fuel farms are good, no contaminations as far as
water or anything like that. There's a whole list of
things that we have to go through, and then once
everything checks out, it's restoring operation as quickly as possible.
And airlines are good about saying, look, we've issued a
(02:30:48):
weather waiver, so if you don't want to fly this
week going to or through Atlanta, you want to go
next week next month, that's fine, we'll change the reservation
absent of a change fee. So fortunately it's also September,
and we're talking about this a month ago. We're talking
about tons of headaches because every flight's full where you're
going to put people. September is a slower month, so
it's we've got a little bit more leeway here to
(02:31:09):
accommodate people that are impacted. The key is to obviously
make sure the airlines have a way of knowing how
to get ahold of you, so that if there's any
change your itinerary, you're aware of it.
Speaker 2 (02:31:18):
All right, Well, find out immediate conditions at the end
of the segment. In the meantime, apparently United Airlines passengers
were injured on a plane. Well, what they had to
do an evasive maneuver. What's this one Holopatchay?
Speaker 3 (02:31:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 21 (02:31:32):
We have a traffic collision avoidance system TEACAST that's on
every aircraft and it's considered kind of a last resort
type of thing where you have a situation where if
this TEACAST system looks and sees that you've got two
aircraft that are headed for the same location, the same airspace,
(02:31:53):
it will tell one airplane to descend, it will tell
the other one to pull up. And a lot of
times when we board airplane, we hear the crew testing
this system. You hear the pull up, pull up, that's
part of the t CAST system and they're just checking
it because it's part of their pre checklist. Well, we
had a flight going I believe Newark into San Francisco
(02:32:13):
and they're nearing the Oakland air Space out there in
San Francisco and all of a sudden, both crews are
alerted and one crew told to ascend the other two
DCEM and crews are taught to immediately respond. You don't go,
oh where's the plane? No, you do exactly what you're
told immediately because you're running out of time. Well, the
(02:32:34):
United flight responded as did the other one, and the
United flight it was a very forceful as they were
adhering to the instructions and they had two passengers that
were injured. Now, what I'm being told is the seat
belt side was on at the time, So I don't
know if somebody was up when they shouldn't have been,
or if their seat belt wasn't on that caused the injury.
So fortunately no one got seriously injured from what we're told,
(02:32:59):
and we're going to learn from this. They Federal Abation
Administration's going to look into this and figure out, Okay,
how did these two airplanes get as close as they did.
I don't have an exact measurement, so I'm not going
to throw anything out. But anytime that tea cast system
is activated, it's a critical moment. And you know, thankfully
Cruiser taught what to do when it activates.
Speaker 2 (02:33:18):
Well, it's it's said at a certain distance, what's the
what is the outer distance that that would activate?
Speaker 3 (02:33:24):
How?
Speaker 2 (02:33:25):
I mean, you know, a mile away, five hundred feet away?
When does it go off?
Speaker 3 (02:33:30):
Well, I don't.
Speaker 21 (02:33:31):
I don't recall the specifics as far as the actual
settings on the tea cast. I do know Brian, that
it came into being because we used to have a
series of clear air, good weather plane collisions where we
would have airplanes that were colliding with each other, and
we had one over the Grand Canyon a number of
decades ago that was horrific, and the thought was, we've
(02:33:53):
got to come up with some technology that can aid
us in the ability of making sure that these aircraft
don't encroach into each other's air because occasionally there are
times when air traffic controllers make mistakes.
Speaker 3 (02:34:03):
They're human.
Speaker 21 (02:34:04):
There's times when pilots make mistakes, because again, you can
never eliminate that human error from all of that, and sadly,
what takes place is that sometimes these mistakes happen. And
if this automation is in place, and it is on
every commercial aircraft, it's hopefully going to prevent us from
having an accident that could result in the loss of
(02:34:25):
hundreds of lives. And it has numerous times and is
great technology and I'm glad it's something that.
Speaker 2 (02:34:31):
We can count on amen to that. I guess we've
got some changes coming to Southwest Airlines. What are the
changes Atlanta?
Speaker 21 (02:34:38):
They're reducing their service there and they're not saying they're
laying anybody off, but they said earlier this week the
issue and apology employees, we've got some upcoming changes. It's
going to impact some of our employees. We're sorry for
what's going to happen, but it has to take place.
And what they're doing is pulling out some of the
service out of Atlanta, which they're really beefed up a
lot over the years, and it's going to mean, with
(02:35:01):
the reduction of service, as many as three hundred employees
or so that are going.
Speaker 3 (02:35:04):
To be impacted.
Speaker 21 (02:35:05):
Now, they're not saying that these people are going to
be laid off, but what they're saying is the pilots,
the flight attendant, mechanics, customer service people they are going
to be impacted, are going to have the ability to
go to another location if there's openings, and there should be.
And the thought is that if they're not making as
much money in that market. That is it's so difficult
(02:35:26):
to make a lot of profit when you're talking about
the Atlanta Airport, because it's dominated by a few main carriers,
and unfortunately, as we know in Cincinnati, when you have
a lack of real competition, it really jacks the fares up.
And I'm sure Southwest is saying, we can take this
aircraft and this crew to another market and we can
(02:35:47):
make a lot more profit. And a lot of times
I'll hear from people that will say, Jay, I don't
understand why this particular flight was canceled because every time
I flowed it was always full. Well full doesn't mean
they made money, because if they can only charge a
certain amount and the yield or profit for passengers minimal.
You might be making nine hundred dollars on a flight
or twelve hundred dollars total profit on a flight. And
(02:36:09):
if they can take that same aircraft, run it in
another market, have a seventy percent load factor and recognize
a profit with that of maybe three thousand dollars, it's like,
we're going to do that. And there were times airlines
were really reluctant to do this, but over the last
several years airlines are like, look, if we're not making
enough money here, we're going to take that airplane and
crew somewhere else because we need to do that to
(02:36:33):
in essence, you know, generate as much revenue for our
company as we can. And it's surprising to a lot
of people the profit some of these aircraft make on
these airplanes, because you know, some of these fares out
of Cincinnati when you check the Cincinnati website on the
deal section, some of these fares are one hundred and
fifty round trip, and that's not the whole plane. But
(02:36:55):
obviously there's a number of people on there, and airlines
can't make money a lot of money profit on those
kinds of affairs, which is why we should take advantage
of a marriage chance.
Speaker 2 (02:37:04):
We can amen to that, Jay Ratliff, And finally we
will end on hub delays. I guess Atlanta is not
a good place to be.
Speaker 21 (02:37:09):
Right now, Can I say mainly only everything east of
the Mississippi. I mean, that's pretty much what we're having
at this point in time. If you were to draw
a line from Atlanta, actually from the Panhandle of Florida
up through Atlanta, Charlotte's going to be impacted to a
certain degree, and we're going to have issues up in
the Philadelphia, New York and that's going to continue for
the next couple of days. So if you're flying west,
(02:37:31):
you may think, hey, I've got it made, But if
your plane is being routed through any of these particular
areas that are impacted by weather, you could see flight
cancelations or delays because of the fact that your plane's
coming through Atlanta or from another airport in Florida or
something that's been impacted. So a lot of patients over
the next few days.
Speaker 2 (02:37:48):
To be sure, Jay Ratlift, it is distinct pleasure to
have you back on the program. I always look forward
to this segment every week. It's a nice refreshing way
to end a Friday Eve, and today of course no
different than the norm. God bless you sir, and again
condolences on your loss and I appreciate your friendship and
best of health and love to both of you, and
you and your.
Speaker 21 (02:38:07):
Better half that means the words to me, Brian, Thank
you much.
Speaker 2 (02:38:10):
Take care, we'll talk eight fifty to fifty five kr
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