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February 11, 2025 • 160 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Five o five at fifty five k r C, the
talk station series Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Let's say what you want about the tenants of national socialism. Dude,
at least it's an ethos.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
It is an ethos, and I hope you're having a
decent Tuesday. If not, maybe it'll turn around between now
and the end of the day. Right time is here,
welcoming phone calls has always five one, three, seven, four nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two three talk
or time Fight fifty on AT and T phone so
over fifty five cars dot com. Always a recommendation, get
yourself the I Heart Media so you can stream all
the content all across the entire iHeartMedia network, and get

(00:56):
the podcasts uh man, you give the Sakara with their
book y'all five hired. Souther Bell's Guide to Restoring Federalism
and Draining the Swamp, which she wrote last year, is
released in October and sort of alerting everyone to all
the problems and issues in government that Doge is revealing

(01:16):
now little bits and pieces, a little bit here, a
little bit there. It all kind of kind of adds up.
You know, we've got hundreds of millions of dollars, and
you think about it in the grand scheme of things,
when you're talking about literally billions and billions of dollars
in waste. I'll take what you can reveal. But I
think that's a wonderful thing that DOGE is doing to

(01:37):
just showing us all the crap that our government funds
globally and we have no say about it. And in
the weird reality of Democrats standing up for all this reckless,
wasteful spending, I don't know that they're doing themselves as service.
I don't know if they've reflected on their defense of
this waste. I mean your regular I don't care Republican

(02:01):
or Democrats. Somebody's struggling to pay their energy bill and
their mortgage looks at this and has got to be
offended by it and taking money out of their paycheck.
It's like, wait a second, shouldn't I get in a
shouldn't get a better return on my investment with the
money you're taking away from my labor?

Speaker 2 (02:17):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (02:18):
I do that all the time, coming up with a
fifty five years see Morning Showing. Thanks always a Joe Streker,
executive producer for lining up the guests. The return U
Barona Morello. She's got her own podcast you can find it,
and she returns to the Morning Show at seven oh
five give her thoughts on the doge as well as
Trump's first month in office. Elon Musk apparently is following

(02:39):
her on X for whatever that's worth. How many how
many people does Elon Musk follow? Well, I know it's
Elon Joe. I have an X account. It's kind of door.

(03:01):
I find it, you know, a little hypocritical. If I
were to go out in social media as much of
a critic as I am on social media generally speaking, Basically,
you get out of me Facebook posting Happy Friday or
a picture of my dog or maybe my daughter's dog,
random musing from time to time. I just I find
there's just better use for my off hours than to

(03:24):
post pictures of my food or stir the pot of
political descent. I get enough of that four hours on
the radio every day, and I spent so much of
my time reading about all the issues and problems and
things that are going on in the world. It's like
the idea of going over to social media and furthering
that it just runs counter to my being. I know,

(03:46):
I'm on radio and I know I should probably do
more to promote the fifty five Caresy Morning Show. And
God love each and every one of you for tuning
in and listening to the program and maybe telling other
people to do so. I thoroughly appreciate that. But idea
of participating in the quagmire out there and so anyway,
that's the reason I don't and much of the chagran

(04:06):
of my employer, and maybe to my own disadvantage, I
don't know, but I'm so happy here. You know, I
have to observe this. I enjoy what I'm doing, I
enjoy where I am in life. I am having at
least in so far as my life happiness is concerned.
These are like the best years I have ever enjoyed
in my life. So much of my uncertainty has gone now.

(04:29):
I have a very happy marriage, and I love my kids.
We all get along. Grade I have no desire to
become like Rogan. You know, there's something to be gained
from anonymity, and that's one of the reasons I almost
didn't take this job. You know, I grew up with
my dad being very popular in the city of Cincinnati,

(04:50):
and thank God for everybody who listened to my dad.
You put me through school, and I thank each and
ever want of you for that. And I tell people
that all the time and they say, oh, I used
to listening to dad. I'm always like, thank you for
putting me through colleg But you know, growing up as
a kid, everywhere you went Jarry, Hey, Jared, Jared, Jerry,
you'd be the supermarker. Hey Jerry, how you doing. And

(05:10):
my dad loved it. I just kind of like, Okay,
you go places and you have no anonymity, and anonymity
is awesome. I've said it many times. You know, I
would never, in my entire life consider changing places with
a pick your favorite celebrity, someone who everybody knows. I mean,

(05:31):
can imagine that the Terrible tailor. I don't care about
Taylor Swift, but she couldn't go any place on the
planet without someone knowing or recognized or coming over asking
for an autograph. You know, maybe you're trying to enjoy
dinner and people are kind of it eh that that
just is an unsettling thing for me. So anyway, that's
one of the reasons I don't gravitate to social media.

(05:52):
I don't seek to have higher level of necessarily popularity,
although I love people tuning into the morning show. I'm
here hopefully fulfilling a mission by providing some measure of
information and spreading the word about what's going on in
the world and providing you with my at least little
el libertarian perspective on it. I believe in freedom and liberty.

(06:12):
I trust you with your life. I encourage people to
make proper and responsible life choices, and those choices should
remain in your hands, not in the hands of someone else.
It's just my personal philosophy. Anyway. Sorry to go off
on a terror on that, but Elon Musk is following
Briandon Morella odds that prompted that. Anyway, Senator Ran Paul,

(06:34):
the return of Senator Paul, We'll talk to Elon Musk,
We'll talk government waste, We'll talk to you as Zaid,
and we'll talk tariffs and annexing Gaza. Donald Trump making
some really peculiar comments about Gaza the other day when
you talk with Brett Bhaer get to that in the
moment Inside Scoop it is Tuesday. Would get bright Bart
News every Tuesday at eight o five. Today, Senior Editor
at Large Joe Pallock, California Democrats up to their old

(06:55):
tricks in defiance of trunk Trump allocating like fifty million
dollars to basically he's standing the way of anything that
Trump does while stepping aside and moving over to the
other side of the ledger begging Donald Trump for money
to rebuild I guess Los Angeles. I don't know how
you get Trump to warm up to the idea when
they're fighting him at every turn to shell out your

(07:18):
dollars again, going back to your tax dollars to rebuild
Los Angeles. Daniel Davis deep dive every Tuesday at a
thirty Zelenski cave it into Trump's offer, but apparently going
to exchange some rarer minerals in return for more weapons,
which means the war would rage on for longer. Harms

(07:40):
say not giving up any more hostages and Tulsa gaberd
close to confirmation that with Daniel Davis, he's a fan
of Tulsa Gabord and are I asked the expert today
the importance of clinical trials. We're gonna hear from OHC
and I love talking to OHD my cancer doctors today
Doctor jdev Metsu, who is a medical oncologists and hematologists.

(08:01):
They'll be discussing why clinical trials are a vital part
of treating cancer and how cancer research provides cancer patients
one of the most important aspects of care, which is hope.
And I am inspired by the work OHC does as
well as all the other cancer researchers out there. It
does provide me with hope that someday we'll have a
cure for cancer. It's one of the reasons why I'm

(08:23):
so pleased to be involved with the care starts.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Now.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
What a wonderful organization that is hamas spokesperson said yesterday
that they are going to delay the next plan release
of hostages, and what a lopsided thing is going on
so far they free twenty one hostages while Israel has
freed seven hundred and thirty Palestinian prisoners. Where's the balance
on that one? Anyway, they're statement. Over the past three weeks,
the resistance leadership has monitored the enemy's violations and failure

(08:48):
to fulfill its obligations under the agreement, including the delay
and allowing the return of the displaced in the Northern
Gaza strip, targeting them with direct shelling and gunfire. In
various areas across Gaza and denying relief supplies of all
all kinds to enter as agreed, while the resistance has
implemented all its obligations. So sayeth Abu obeed Off people
keeping tracking home. He's the spokesperson for Hamas's military wing. Therefore,

(09:13):
the release is Zionist prisoners next Saturday, February fifteenth will
be postponed until further notice, until the occupation commits and
provides compensation for the entitlements of the past weeks. Retroactively,
we affirm our commitment to the terms of the agreement
as long as the occupation remains committed to them. About that,

(09:35):
so far, five prisoner swaps have been carried out again
Israel got twenty one people back, and they gave out
seven hundred and thirty Palestinians. Next exchange Saturday was supposed
to be calls for three more Israel hostages, probably emaciated
and starved, in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, probably
in better shape than the prisoners being held by Hamas.

(09:59):
Israel defenseman Israel Katz said yesterday Hamas announcement to stop
the release of the hostages as a blatant violation of
the ceasefire agreement of the Hospice hostage released deal. I've
instructed the Israeli defense forces to maintain the highest level
of readiness for any possible scenario in Gaza into fortified
defense of israel communities. We will not allow a return

(10:19):
to the reality of October seventh. Trump, for his part,
said yesterday that the peace deal should be canceled. He said,
it's up to Israel one way or another, whatever they do.
Some says he's fine with it, but he was pretty
straightforward with his comments, saying all hell will break loose
if they're not all if they're not here, all hell
is going to break out. Trump said, cancel it and

(10:42):
all bets are off.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Now.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
As for his part on this Gaza thing, talking to
Brett Behar on Monday, he said in the interview the
Palestinians in Gaza would not have a right to return
under his plan for and his word ownership of Gaza,
which rans runs counter to some of the statements from others.

(11:09):
When initially initially made these comments last week, White House
Press Secretary Carolyn Levette and Secretary of State Marco Rubo
Marc Marco Rubio insisted that Trump only wanted Palestinians relocated
from Gaza temporarily and for an interim period to allow
for to b re remove them disposal of unexploded ordinances.

(11:32):
Speaking of the condition of the remaining hostages, Trump told
reporters yesterday he feared Tomas had released the hostages that
are in the best condition, and that many scheduled for
release are either gravely ill or probably dead. He said,
based on what I saw for the past couple of days,
are not going to be alive for long, which, if
you saw the hostages they released, maybe a very accurate statement. Anyway,

(11:56):
Less than a week after he suggested a planet for
the US to take over control of Gaza and turn
it into, in his words, the Riviera Riviera of the
Middle East, Trump and this Brett Baar interview said, quote, no,
they wouldn't when asked if Palestinians and gods would have
the right to return to the territory. So his press

(12:17):
secretary of Marco Rubiu, I are saying something completely contrary
to what Donald Trump is saying. We'll build safe communities
a little bit away from where they are, where all
this danger is. He said in the meantime, I would
own this, think of it as a real estate development
for the future. It would be a beautiful piece of land,

(12:38):
no big money spent. Meanwhile, for their part, the Arab nations,
which Donald Trump thinks that Palestinians are going to be
welcome in so are having a little bit of problem
with that. King Abdullah the second apparely is going to
be at the White House today. Egypt and Jordan have

(12:59):
privately raised security concerns about welcoming large numbers of Palestinian
refugees into their countries, even temporarily. When Trump was asked
I would convince Abdulla to take Palestinians, Trump told reporters,
I do think he'll take. I think the other I
think other countries will also. They have good hearts. Well,

(13:21):
he's planning on leveraging US AID, saying he also threatened
to potentially withhold billions of dollars in US assistance that
Jordan and Egypt if they don't go along with his plan. Yeah,
maybe sure, why not? Said Trump? If they don't, I
would conceivably withhold AID.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Apparently, he didn't even rule out deploying US troops to
help secure Gaza. Last week, Egypt yesterday reiterated its rejection
to the transfer of Palestinians from their territories in Gaza
to the occupied West Bank, warning that such proposals threat
the foundations of people in the Middle East. Egypt's Foreign
ministry said the establishment of an independent Palestinian state with

(14:07):
East Jerusalem as its capital, is the base for a comprehensive,
a just peace, rejecting any violation to the Palestinian's right
to self determination and independence. According to Egypt, Egypt holds
the right to return Palestinian refugees who are forced to
leave their homeland. So a lot of confusion over this,

(14:28):
and I'm equally confused if someone can explain to me
how it is we are going to own Gaza or
whether that's a good idea. I'm scratching my head over it.
And again, I know Trump, he tends to say things,
you know, really way out there, and I've always considered
it just as a mechanism to get people sitting down
and talking about ideas to solve the problem. Maybe that's

(14:49):
still what it is, But I don't get the whole
idea of, you know, forcing entire populations of people out
of what they call home. And sending them to countries
that don't want them. I don't know how that could
be accomplished. Five twenty fifty five KRC talk stations. Stick around.
I got plenty to talk about this morning, and to
welcome your phone calls, thoughts comments. Maybe you disagree with me,

(15:10):
and I welcome the discussion. I really do, so I'll
be all right back.

Speaker 4 (15:14):
This is fifty five KARC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
Here Todays nine first one to weather forecast. GOTTA winter
weather advisory starting at four am, so I guess we're
in it. Snow should mix with brain by early afternoon.
Further north Eaghost some areas in northern Kentucky could actually
see two to three inches of snow. They're saying thirty
three for the high today, overnight snow a lens slick
spots may remain twenty nine for the low. Got a
winter weather advisory entering at seven tomorrow morning with a

(15:43):
dry day high of forty one, overnight rain snow maybe
twenty eight for the low and apartly flatter day on Thursday,
ana high of thirty three. What are we looking at
right now? My temperature keeps disappearing. Hate when that happens
thirty three. There you have it about their CD talk station,

(16:07):
and again nibbling around the edges, the Doze Department is
finding tens and millions and millions of dollars, but sadly,
congressional budget dollars reported yesterday federal spending rose or ready
for this, fifteen percent in the first four months of
fiscal twenty twenty five. It rose three hundred and seventeen

(16:30):
billion dollars two point four to three trillion spent from
September through January. Ease louise, they say, discounting for some
timing shifts and outlays. From twenty four to twenty twenty

(16:52):
four to twenty twenty five, spending rows one hundred and
fifty seven billion, or seven percent. Wall Street Journal noting,
we doubt your family budget rose seven percent, and if
it did, you may need a loan. Sois security up
seven percent, Medicare up five percent, Medicate up nine percent
due to rising cost per enroll e. However, Trump not

(17:15):
dealing with those they've been taken off the reform lists
props of the Journal, which is like saying you want
to go on a diet except for the beer chips
and ice cream Sundays, Defense outlays up eight percent, which
is at least better than the thirteen percent increase in
payments on the national debt. This is out of control.

(17:38):
I mean, does can only do so much. And of
course it doesn't have the authority to really fix anything.
It can only lay out and show it to the
American people where the problems are. It's going to require
uh oh, congressional action. And given all the lawsuits over
being fired and areas of government being shut down and
the Democrats pulling their hair out over it, they're planning

(18:01):
on maybe shutting down all of government because well, the
Republicans are ruining things for them. Representative Van Hoyle, is,
a Democrat from Oregon, said yesterday on CNN Democratic lawmakers
will not vote to fund the government if Republicans are
advancing Trump's agenda, which, in his words, undermines the American people.

(18:28):
So screw everybody. Screw everybody. Now, I'm painfully aware of
the fact that even with the government shut down, they
just hold paychecks up. Nobody does any work at least
unless except the critically necessary employees. And you can laugh
all day long about who's critically necessary in government, but

(18:49):
you know when they ultimately get things resolved, and some
through some you know bill that makes all kinds of
concessions and continues this outlandish level of spending the inevitable.
It always happens, doesn't it. Maybe this will be a
different year, But I don't know. Those bloyees get all
their money back. But Democrats don't have a lot of

(19:11):
options in their playbook right now, five twenty six, fifty
five KRC Detalk station five one three seven four nine
fifty five two three talk Time five fifty on eight
and t phones. Local stories are coming up.

Speaker 5 (19:21):
Fifty five KR six.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Tener nine Weather. So we're in a winter weather advisory.
They say the light snow between now and seven am.
Today's high thirty three. Uh let us see here some
areas in another Kentucky they say two three inches, perhaps
less impactful to the north. Snow all end over night
down to twenty nine Tomorrow. The winter weather advisory is

(19:49):
officially over at seven am. It'll be a dry day,
high forty one, some rain in the evening, overnight snow
mix later low of twenty eight over one day night
Thursday at party, cloudy day and Ohio thirty three about
thirty right now. That's about KRCD Talk Station. Actually thirty
three five thirty at fifty five kr CD Talk Station.

(20:17):
If you call Joe at least say something. You hope
our thing you may I tell you what. On the
next break, I will call you Joe. Joe's a little concern.
Maybe we're having communication issues. You can call Joe and
then and test our system if you want. Five one, three, seven, four, nine,

(20:38):
fifty five, eight hundred eighty two three talk to you
that or someone just calling in just like not saying anything, Joe.
Maybe they like the sound of your voice. Fifty five
KOs Morning Show. I know you don't say it that nicely. Well,
I don't know where out of love Field, totally out

(20:58):
of love Field. Here, here's something you can maybe explain
to me, because Joe and I was kind of like
scratching our head over this, all right, Senator John Houstead, right,
formerly Lieutenant Governor Governor Mike Dwine needs to get a replacement.
He picked one. Former Hoiuse State University football coach Jim Tressel,

(21:20):
retired as president of Youngstown State University been twenty twenty three,
described as equally shocked by being selected to be the
Lieutenant governor. He's seventy two years old. I was surprised,
for sure, he said. I thought he was just coming
to watch a couple of grandkids play basketball. I guess
they met up at a basketball meet. Said, I remember

(21:43):
about twenty five years ago, I said to a group
in Columbus that I had my sight set on three
hundred and ten days later, and that was my singleness
of focus, referring to his pledge to defeat Michigan Wolverines. Said,
now I have a six hundred and ninety nine days
singleness of focus. I Dwine asked Trussell to sign up

(22:06):
for the for just under two years of public service,
and that's what he's agreed to do. Dwaines stead of
trustll he knows Ohio. He's a born leader. He's been
a leader wherever he's been. Now for him to become
Ohios and exeutenant governor, majority of the lawmakers in the
House and Senate must approve him for his part. At

(22:27):
least one Senator, President Rob McCauley praise Trussell for his
career dedicated to quote guiding our youth on both the
gridiron and as a coach, and in the classroom. As
a college president. Dressel served as Youngstown State's university's president
between twenty fourteen and twenty twenty thirty. Proved to that.
Prior to that, he worked as High of State University's

(22:47):
head football coach between two thousand and one and twenty eleven.
He resigned from that role amid an NC two A
investigation into improper benefits, including tattoos that his players received
during the twenty ten season. I have stayed vacated its
wins from that season as punishment, Lieutenant Governor, so scratching

(23:15):
my head on that. Here we go to Children's Hospital,
Tri State. Mother is looking for another hospital for her
daughter after Cincinnati Children's Hospital denied putting her on the
heart transparant list because she wasn't vaccinated for the flu
and COVID. Nineteen twelve year old her name Adeline from Batesville, Indiana.

(23:40):
She's got conditions called Ebstein's anomaly and Wolf Parkinson White
WPW syndrome, two heart conditions. Jennie Deal and her husband
adopted her from China as a four year old, knowing
she would need heart transplant surgery. Deals have done most
of Adeline's care through Cincinnati Children's Hospital. We're now having
to go elsewhere after the hospital decline to put her
on the tree aspent that list. They require patients to

(24:03):
have both the flu and COVID nineteen vaccines. The Deals
have not vaccinated any of their children because of what
they claim are their non denomination or religious values. Jane said,
I called child's advocate the CINCHINAI since my children, to
see if they could help us with religious exemptions. So forth.
He came back and said they are not going to
change their policy and this is what it is, and

(24:24):
we're more than welcome to find another hospital if we
didn't like it. Janine said, it's not right and we
don't believe in doing the vaccination part of it. Fox
nineteen reporting on this one, reached out to Sincinnty Children's
about it. Spokesperson provided the following statement and out quoted
at Since any children's clinical decisions are guided by science,

(24:45):
research and best practices, we tail our care patients to
We tail our care plans to each patient in collaboration
with their family to ensure the safest, most effective treatment.
I find that puzzling. By thirty five fifty five Kerr
site talk station and got stack. Oh stupid coming up.

(25:06):
Hope you can stick around for that or alternatively give
us a call here, be right back.

Speaker 4 (25:12):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
More wealth means more complex financial planning. Look a weather time.
We're in the middle of a winter weather advisories will
will be in effectful tomorrow at seven a m. That
expects some snow more to the south. They say maybe
two three inches of snow some areas of northern Kentucky.
Less in the northern areas. Thirty three of the high
today down at twenty nine overnight dry tomorrow forty one.

(25:39):
Got some rain Wednesday night. They're saying twenty eight for
the overnight. Love and a partly cloudy day on Thursday
with a high of thirty three. Right now it is
thirty three if it's five ker sweet talk station.

Speaker 6 (25:51):
Traffic from the UCL Traffic Center. For more than two
hundred years, the experts at UC Health have been giving
heart patients and chance and better outcomes. That's boundless care.
You can trust. Expect more at u s health dot com.
Highway traffic not banned so far this morning. No major
weather is used to deal with inside the two seventy
five loop. The further south you go both on seventy

(26:14):
five and then on seventy one out of Walton, you
do start to hit some snow. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five K see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
Five forty if you have KOs the talk station confirmation. Yes,
the phones are screwed up. Just Trecker's facial expressions reveal
a significant level of frustration because most notably, we have
guests beginning at seven oh five, and they're going to
be on the telephone. If we can't talk to them
through the telephone, I am categorically screwed. Let you know,

(26:52):
as soon as we maybe resolve the problem, it's because
here you got to you gotta call Chicago to have
any problem fixed ahead and try to figure out how
that works. It's a perpetual problem for us, and there's
no one in Chicago right now. They're an hour behind us,

(27:14):
exacerbating and already frustrating problems. So my apologies to the
listening audience. We had quite a few people that tried
to get in. My apologies to you. If you think
you're that Joe is being rude. No, the phone lines
are having a bit of a problem.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
Right now.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
I will let you know as soon as we resolve them,
and hopefully that will be sooner rather than later. Meaning
I'm left to my own devices for the balance of
the program. Unsettling it is for me as well. Over
to the stack is stupid. We have a New York
woman who's arrested after her six year old daughter found
unconscious in the bathtub and later died. According to prosecutors,

(27:51):
the mom was baptizing her daughter. Twenty six year old
Karla Espinal pleaded not guilty in court, remanded without bail
after being charged by New York City police with felony
assault and reckless endangerment of a child. February seventh. First
responded answer to the call to the Brooklyn home of Espinhaal,
where she live with a girl's father and their children.
When authorities arrived, they found the little girl unresponsive with

(28:14):
blood clots in her eyes, taken to a hospital and
pronounced dead Geez. According to the reporting by New York Times,
girl's father, who was not notified by name, text to
the manager in the afternoon February seventh, about four pm,
but an hour after his daughter was pronounced dead. In Spanish,
she wrote I'm going crazy. I'm here until God gives

(28:34):
a miracle. I don't know what to do. I'm not
quite sure what that's supposed to mean anyway. New York
Posts in the courtroom when Espaniel was arranged arranged on
charges against her, to which she pleaded not guilty. During
that apperiod, prosecutor stated that Espinel told police, quote, I
was baptizing my daughter close quote. She was put on
suicide watch while in custody. Was ordered to undergo a

(28:57):
psychiatric evaluation, which makes all the sense in the world
to me. Sources reportedly told The New York Post that
it was likely the girl was submerged for about are
you ready twenty minutes while struggling. Pointed evidence of the
blood clots in her eyes that were visible at the scene.
The exact cause of death not provided, but an autopsy

(29:19):
as planned. She may face additional charges based when the
autopsy findings come back. God a mighty you know some
of these things are disturbing. Body camera footage from a
horse riding police officer shows her giving chase to a

(29:42):
man fleeing on foot. Turns out the horses are better
running than humans are. Theory's in Duvalu County, Florida, said
the man, Jordan Evan Wilson, twenty five, gave up after
he became too tired and laid down on the ground
after the chase. Please claimed that he was involved in
a drug deal and connected to a woman, although the

(30:04):
specifics are unclear due to the significantly redacted arrest Affidavid
police did take note that someone threw an object that
officers failed to find in a McDonald's parking lot that
Wilson had crossed through. A record show that instead of
a drug case, Wilson pleaded no contest to resisting an
officer without violence to his person, sentenced the two days
in jail with the same amount of time serving credit.

(30:27):
On footage, the man identified as Wilson began from the
Jacksonville Sheriff's office outright running across traffic. Get that bad man.
According to the point of view if police officers said
in the footage, she called out the flea man, you
better stop. You're gonna get hit.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
Bro.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
You're not gonna be able to outrun us on this horse.
She yelled, you better stop. Wilson stopped and then took
a seat by the tree. All right, What a morning,
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so learn about your options a QC Kinetics. Again, the
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it's five one three eighty four seven zero zero one

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nine five one three eight four seven zero zero one
nine once more five one three eight four seven zero
zero one nine.

Speaker 7 (32:25):
Fifty five KRC is your New Year's resolution. Here it
is your nine first warning weather forecast.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
Winter weather advisory is ineffect until seven o'clock tomorrow morning.
So we had some snow today, more to the south
than the north Sumarias of northern Kentucky. Maybe two to
three inches is what they're saying. Thirty three will be
or high today twenty nine overnight, watch out for slick spots.
They recommend dry day tomorrow at least the start of
the day high forty one, afternoon rain at some point,

(32:59):
maybe a snow tomorrow as we enter the evening period
of twenty eight for the overnight low and I high
thirty three on Thursday with partly clotty skies thirty four
degrees right now at the five K City Talk station.
Time for traffic update from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 6 (33:12):
For more than two hundred years, the experts that you
see health have been giving heart pay since a chance
at better outcomes. That's boundless care you can trust. Expect
more at u sehealth dot com. Highway traffic not bad
to deal with at all so far this morning. No
weather issuesed inside the two seventy five loop. The further
south you go, the more you get into wet roads

(33:33):
from snow that's falling. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR
see THEE talk station.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
Five fifty and I'm very happy Tuesday to you finger Scross.
Get the phone situation resolves so we can kick our
guests in being with Biron Morello at seven oh five
and Senator Ran Paul really looking forward to talking with
him inside scoop with Bright Bart News day to five
and the Daniel Davis Deep Dive at eight thirty. Fortunately,
the OHC folks usually come in the studio, so the

(34:01):
funds aren't fixed by then. We'll at least get to
talk about the importance of clinical trials with the docs
from OHC at eight forty ish. Back over to the
stack of stupid. Here we go, and we're in Florida
for this one, which makes perfect sense given the content
of the article. Credit to the Smoking Gun. They always

(34:23):
write things in a very funny and artful way, beginning
with with Valentine's Day approaching? Is there anything more romantic
than having sex with your partner in broad daylight in
front of a Wendy's as motorists pass by in a
busy highway? Please say dimitrio. Wilson, who's fifty three, along
with twenty nine year old Tomorrio Morale, were caught in

(34:44):
the act Saturday afternoon in Claarwater, Florida. Officer Parker Moody
spotted Wilson and Merrill laying on the ground quote behind
the bus stop in view of the busy highway in
the arrest report close quote bus stop is in front
of a way Dy's restaurant and adjacent to US Highway nineteen. Wilson,

(35:07):
unencumbered by pants, was on her right side with her
buttocks facing her partner. Again language from the arrest report,
Merrill's pants were pulled down. He was described in a
turgid state while repetitively engaging with Wilson, No imagination needed

(35:30):
on that one couple was busted at charge with performing
an unnatural and lassidious act. Well, I suppose natural or
unnatural is in the eye of the beholder right, both
of whom described as having lengthy rap sheets. They remained
locked up in lieu of a one hundred and fifty
dollars and five hundred dollars bond, respectively. Both have pleaded

(35:53):
not guilty to the misdemeanor charge. WOW licensed massage therapist
is now locked up on a one hundred thousand dollars
bond for forcibly performing a sex act on one of
his male clients. According to Florida investigators who arrested the
monsieur for felony sexual battery as detailed in the court records,

(36:17):
incident occurred at Botanic at Day Spa in Clearwater, Florida.
Hector Pisadas, forty five, performed massages and skincare treatments at
the facility. Sadus moved to voluntary to relinquish his massage
therapist license, first granted in twenty sixteen. According to the
Florida Department of Health records, victim told police that quote
towards the end of the session. While lying on his back,

(36:40):
Posadas touched his yes penis. Client believed this to be
odd and assumed it was a mistake. However, Basadas allegedly
reached under the victim's underwear, grabbed it again, and placed it.
Can I say this out loud, Joe, No, I'll just

(37:07):
let your imagination run with that when the victim called,
according to the police, jumped from the table, ended the
massage session, and left the business to call the police.
Sexual assault forensic exam they did one revealed that the
victim had foreign DNA there in his general areas, as
well as inside his underwear. The arrest affidavit does not

(37:33):
identify a contributor to those DNA samples. During questioning, Pisadas
denied that the incident took place, subsequently retained legal counsel
and declined to speak further with detectives. He's born in Venezuela.
Resides in a large Largo condominium he bought in twenty
twenty two. Married in twenty sixteen to an eighteen year

(37:54):
old man. I'm sorry to a man eighteen years his senior,
but they got divorced in twenty twenty one. According to
his LinkedIn page. Padattas has successfully balanced client needs while
delivering exceptional service. He said, my dedication to quality has
led to an increase in client retention, showcasing my commitment

(38:15):
to client satisfaction. Man, we live in a crazy, crazy world.
And a judge rled in favor of a school district
that prevented a mom in Florida from volunteering at her
kids elementary school after it was found that she has

(38:37):
an OnlyFans page. Victoria Trace sud Orange County Public School
District for a million dollars after they banned her from
volunteering at the sand Lake Elementary School in Orlando, where
her five year old and ten year old sons attend.
She said someone send an anonymous email to the principle voicing
their concerns after they found out she was on OnlyFans.

(38:58):
If I'm not hurting anybody, I'm not affecting anybody's day,
then somebody's choice to do something that's fully legal. Said.
The principal shared the email with their boss, including images
of her adult content. She claims the district violated right
to free speech and also alleged sexual cyber harassment because
they shared pictures from her OnlyFans account. After a lengthy

(39:18):
legal battle, judge ruled late last month that she does
not have a right to volunteer, and pointed out that
she did not appeal the decision with the school district itself. Also,
the judge said the volunteered program policy does not include
any language that confers any right or benefit upon an
individual to participate in the program, to remain in the program,
or to appeal or remove. Furthermore, the judge pointed out

(39:39):
the obvious district didn't violate her privacy right by sharing
her photos because their only fan page or public record.
Five fifty six fifty five krs the talk station. More
to talk about in the six o'clock hour. Please, Dear God,
pray the phone start working. Please, I'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (40:00):
Them's first one hundred days, every day, every day, promises made, promises.

Speaker 1 (40:04):
Kevin fifty five krz the talk station, look losing weight?

Speaker 8 (40:09):
Isn't just about this?

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Approaching six oh six Here at fifty five kr C
the talk Station by Thomas wishing her We're in a
very happy Tuesday. Off to a rocky start, but appears
that we've gotten the phone lines fixed again. If you
want to call Field three, five, one three, seven four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talk
Don five fifteen on eight T and T phones. Big
sy relief for me because here I am staring at
a big lineup of guests beginning at seven oh five

(40:33):
and worrying that they wouldn't be able to call in.
So you can call in, and then we will be
calling talking to assuming that she's there. Brianna Morello at
seven oh five will get her our thoughts on Doge
and the fact that Elon Musk is following her on
X which apparently means something big. Senator and Paul returns
to the program at seven forty to talk about Elon Musk,
government wastes, US eight and tariffs, as well as annexing Gaza,

(40:56):
which that whole thing still has me completely puzzled, given
Donald Trump's com versus the comments of his press secretary
and the Secretary of State. Anyway, the inside scoop it
is Tuesday. We do that every Tuesday, eight to five.
The return of Joe Paullock's senior editor at large for Breitbart.
California Dems trying to stand in Donald Trump's way while
at the same time asking Donald Trump for a lot

(41:16):
of money to bail them out. Deep Dive with Daniel Davis,
retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis on things involving war Zelensky
apparently conceding to Trump's offer. I guess he's going to
swap rare earth minerals and some of the valuable goods
that Ukraine has in return for more aid, which just
suggests to me the war is going to continue to
go on. I don't know. We'll see what Daniel has

(41:37):
to say about that, along with Hamas saying screw you, guys,
We're not going to give up any more hostages. They
claim that Israel's violated the terms of the agreement, and
many are concerned, including Trump's expressions that he believes that
the remaining hostages and if you've seen the last three
they turned over, they look absolutely terrible. Some people are

(42:01):
drawing parallels to individuals that were in Nazi concentration camps
in terms of how they look from a medical standpoint. Anyway,
we'll see what happens that Trump says full on, go
ahead and really just unleash the hounds of hell on
Hamas Israel. If you choose to do that, he's leaving
it up to Israel to decide which direction they're going
to go, as well as we'll talk with Daniel about

(42:23):
Tulsea Gabbert, who's now closer to confirmation. And finally we
get a good one of the great doctors from OHC
to talk to you about the importance of clinical trials
five three, seven, four, nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred
eighty two to three talk. And I'll stand on the
shoulder of giants, and I just really appreciate some of
the editorial writing over the journal. You know that you've
heard me before, and today Gerard Baker, Democrats stand up
for the bureaucrats against DOJE subheadline Whose idea was it

(42:48):
to have Chuck Schumer lead a protests outside the Treasury?
Brilliance Brilliance express from Gerard Baker today. You couldn't invent
a scene and that better explains our current politics than
the one last week outside the Treasure in Washington. Some
genius in the Democratic Party evidently thought it a good
idea to put some of the party's most prominent faces,
most notably Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, in front of

(43:10):
cameras to protests Elon Musk efforts to get inside the
books of the federal government in his presidentially mandated campaign
to root out inefficiency. Picture it the Democrats, one time
tribunes of the people, fiercely defending government employees from the taxpayers,
the party of the oppressed, putting it all on the
line to protect federal bureaucrats from the people they're supposed

(43:33):
to serve. There's a tableau for the ages, one example
of the many strange battle lines the Democratic Party has
chosen to defend these past few years. Illegal migrants over citizens,
teachers' unions over parents and children, criminals over victims, men
turned women over girls, and good luck with that, Democrats,

(43:54):
you might want to fire your bolsters. Choosing to die
on the hill of the right of the permanent govern
officials to spend money without hindrance from the president's delegates
is an especially odd decision. I Gerard Baker, I'm trying
to picture the voter who is currently sitting at home
rooting for the employees of the US Agency for International

(44:16):
Development or the Internal Revenue Service, Amen brother. Expecting to
make the government efficient is a tall order for anyone,
even an abrasive tech billionaire. But like all the best
entrepreneurial activities, it maybe outcomes other than the principal objective
that end up the best justification for mister Musk's endeavors.
So far, at least, the Department of Government Efficiency looks

(44:40):
like something of a misnumber its early days, but it
seems less doge and more DOGA Department of Government accountability,
since that acronym doesn't really work, perhaps would be called
making America government accountable. And you could even save a
few one hundred thousand dollars by repurposing some red hats.

(45:03):
The savings were promised don't add up too much so far,
as I mentioned in the last hour of the amount
of government spending up fifteen percent in the last quarter. Crazy.
It's all very satisfying denying government employees the insight to
be had from a Politico pro subscription and a parenthetical
on that, it was determined that we were propping up

(45:24):
the website Politico with our tax dollars, by government dollars,
paying for subscriptions at Politico millions of dollars worth, or
depriving the people of Columbia the opportunity to have their
awareness of a transgender representation raised through opera. But in
a total federal budget of six point seventy five trillion dollars,

(45:47):
these add up to small ball, even some of the
apparently big money scandals having turned out to be all
that scandalous. Be honest, who among us didn't get a
little shiver of excitement up the leg when we learned
that the dough Jennicks had identified and then snipped off
the supply of fifty million dollars worth of taxpayer funded
cause and condoms to Gaza, adding to the inconveniences the

(46:09):
Hamasniks have had to endure these past sixteen months. But
it turned out that no such funding had been approved,
and that the prophylactics might actually have been for another Gaza,
which is a province in Mozambique and it benefits from
US support for AIDS prevention. It's early and it's still
possible to mister Musk and his band of teenage budget

(46:31):
slashes will hit paydirt somewhere. Inde, please Dear God, eight
hundred billion dollar defense program or one point eight trillion
dollar health in Human services budget. But even if they
ultimately fall a few trillion short, in the pursuit of savings,
that will eliminate our vast budget deficit. The work there

(46:51):
doing represents a vital contribution to the reform of government.
Or about those teenagers. Funny how the is so outraged
about kids barely out of college marching into buildings along
Constitution Avenue to investigate the misuse of government budgets. They
cheered as hordes of little malicts straight out of Ivy
League schools took over tech companies, media organizations, and the

(47:15):
entire marketing departments of Corporate America in the past decade
to subject the rest of us to the iron rule
of Wolke ideology. Whether or not it succeeds in dramatically
reducing the size of government, the paramount virtue of this
exercise is the exposure of the hegemony in our system
of a political class that sees itself as immune from

(47:39):
popular accountability. Government is supposed to exist for the people,
but the Doge process has laid bare what we have
long suspected that at scale, it exists first and foremost
to further the interest of the permanent bureaucracy and their
like minded friends who dominate almost all our major institutions.

(48:03):
That's why Democrats are so upset about the exercise. It's
the most serious challenge to the control their people have
long exercised, irrespective of election results and the popular will,
whether in the ideologically driven distribution of foreign aid or
the convergence of education policies with the interest of public

(48:25):
sector unions. To much of the government has been unresponsive
either to actual results or the public will. The accountability
Doge can bring needs to be emulated in other areas
of public life where these interests have long dominated. Immune
from responsibility, radicalized higher education, failing city governments, intellectually corrupt

(48:50):
media and entertainment companies. Even Elon Musk can't do all that,
but the rest of us can start. Gerard Baker excellent points,
excellent opinion. That's why I think this exercise is a
wonderful one, and I'm not really confident that they are
going to cut that much out. Ultimately, it's going to
require congressional action, and overwhelmingly there's not enough Republicans in

(49:14):
office that can deal with the sixty vote majority necessary
in the Senate to pass any legislation that might bring
about some financial accountability. But the more you and I learn,
the more you and I find this out. The more
you and I, regardless of your political stripe, learn about
the fraud, waste and abuse and government, the more likely
something like that might happen, the more likely we might
revolt and ultimately just put our collective foot down and

(49:38):
say no to this nonsense. We're broke, folks. We're paying
more interest on our national debt and even goes to
that fat military budget, which you know is also filled
with fraud, waste, and abuse. It's insanity. Our credit card
debt keeps running up, in the interest rate keeps going higher,
and no one in Washington wants to stop it. Well,

(50:01):
at least half of Washington doesn't want to stop it.
And I'll be quick to point out that. You know,
I bet there's a whole lot of Republicans kind of
shaking in their boots over the idea of having to
cut because they too benefit from this fraud, waste and abuse.
You know, Democrats aren't the only ones that go in
with nothing making one hundred and eighty thousand dollars a
year to come out the other side someday down the
road multi millionaires. How in God's name does that happen?

(50:28):
It's a question that more of us need to ask
ourselves and be less forgiving when it happens. Some of
us are so willing to turn a blind eye because
a member of our respective party, it gets away with it,
and we're like, okay, it's okay, that's our guy's doing it.
It's like I felt the entire time I lived in Chicago,
lone voice in the wilderness, one of the few conservatives
in the entire city, and the left, the Democrats would

(50:51):
laugh at the corruption. Why it was their corruption. They
were in charge and they didn't care. And take a
look at the state of Illinois. You want to see
a train wreck in front of you, right there, right there,
because they allowed it to happen for so long, because well,
it was their guys control. On the show, I'd you
like to be on an Illinois I'd you like to

(51:12):
be an Illinois pensioner six sixteen fifty five K's Detoxation. Mike,
you'll be first of the callers this morning successfully got through.
Thank you, Mike for proving that the phones are working.
Foreign Exchange, you'd be glad you're taking your car to
Foreign Exchange for a variety of reasons. Better than the
dealer across the board. I've had dealership experiences, and while

(51:33):
they all haven't been pain full, they just aren't the
same as Foreign Exchange, where they really really it's a welcoming,
friendly environment. They're like family. At Foreign Exchange, they've asd
the certified master technicians that will fix your car. They
do have data access to your technical information. And I
don't care what kind of imported or traditionally imported car
you've got. I've seen some real exotic cars there, and
I've also seen well the old Honda CRV. Now my

(51:56):
son's responsibility, but they kept that thing running in top
order for a long long time, pushing one hundred and
sixty thousand miles. But regardless of what kind you got,
you get at to Foreign Exchange, you get a full
warranty on parts and service, and you will not pay
as much as you pay for the dealership. So there
is a way to save money these days. That's right
there at Foreign Exchange. Tell Austin and the crew at
the Westchester location. Brian said, hi, when you pull in

(52:17):
and when you call them to schedule the apployment sixty
four four twenty six twenty six five one three six
four four twenty six twenty six Tyler's the Legs at
Off seventy five. Go east two streets right on Kinglin
and you are there. Online Foreign XFORIMLLETTERAX dot.

Speaker 5 (52:30):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 9 (52:33):
Get ready for our twenty's employment professionals help you hire
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Speaker 1 (52:51):
Channel nine says we're in the middle of the winter
weather advisory began four o'clock this morning to last up
tomorrow morning at seven. Snow more in Kentucky as you
moved north last they say, northern Kentucky might see two
to three inches of snow. We'll see a high thirty
three overnight low at twenty nine tomorrow, dry day to
start forty one. Sometime later in the day rain will
show up and it could be a snow mix overnight

(53:13):
low of twenty eight with high thirty three on Thursday
and partly blotty skies thirty three. Right now in time
for a traffic.

Speaker 6 (53:18):
Update from the UCLP Traffic Center. For more than two
hundred years, the experts of U see health have been
giving hard patients and chance i'd better outcomes.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
That's boundless care that you can trust.

Speaker 6 (53:29):
Expect more at you see how dot Com Highway traffic
still doing okay this morning. Some wet roads to deal
with now on seventy five at the seventy one split
and Walton, but no trouble because of the soow moving
into the area. You're doing okay on two seventy five,
Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (53:52):
Six twenty two I fIF you have fkerra Ce talk
station five on three seven, four, nine fifty five eight
hundred tight two three FI fifty on AT and T
phones over to the phones, go. Thanks for calling this morning, Mike.
I appreciate you holding over the break. Welcome to the program,
Mike Bryan. Yes, a, you don't do that to me.

Speaker 10 (54:12):
Man.

Speaker 1 (54:14):
I told Streckord the five o'clock hour the phones weren't working.
This is made your anxiety attack in here.

Speaker 3 (54:21):
Oh that was a good here. Hey listen, oh boy,
uh talk to an old timer here. I'm getting close
to the end of the rainbow. You got something, Brian
that money can't buy, and believe me, it's it's it's
it's priceless. You have and you deserve this. You have

(54:43):
peace of mind.

Speaker 8 (54:44):
You do a great job, my friend.

Speaker 1 (54:46):
Thank you, well, thank you, Mike. That's very kind of you.
This is maybe off the comments I'm made the five
o'clock hour. I actually do a peace of mind. And
it's a beautiful thing because, let me tell you, and
I know what it's like to not have it. I mean, yeah,
I didn't get peace of mind, you like, until after
quite a few decades of existence. You just get to

(55:07):
the point in your life where you just kind of
sit back and you think, you know, what, do I
really need anything else? Am I comfortable? Am I happy
my relationship? Am I happy with my family? Do I
need more stuff and things? It's really no. And one
of the biggest sins in life. And if I could
eradicate and purge humanity of what I believe to be

(55:31):
its biggest problem, it will be the idea of covetousness.
You get angry when someone you don't have what someone
else has. How can they have that?

Speaker 11 (55:44):
You mean?

Speaker 1 (55:45):
And I freed myself with that a long long time ago,
and my life has been so much better for it.
I'm happy when my friends have done better than me.
I'm happy for them, and I hope they're happy with
whatever it is they've accomplished. I just hope they're not
up to the eyeballs in debt. But you know, fine,
you have a bigger house. Good for you. I don't
want a bigger house. Hey, you drive a better car,

(56:07):
you know. I'm happy with the car I've got. You know,
it's just yet to put that aside. And as soon
as you can put it aside, you get this weight
lifted off of you, and you go through life is
so much more content. I really do believe that's just
sort of the root of all problems in the world.
Is really the vehicle behind Marxism, for example, from each

(56:32):
according's ability to each according to his need. You know,
that's just the ultimate. It's a religion of a political
religion built on the idea that no one should have
more than anybody else, and it's fuels so much anger
and resentment and so much division. So I appreciate that, Mike,

(56:54):
I really do. And you know, a lot of credit
goes to my wife, no question about it. So I
always say, smart men, Mary, smart, I'll kick my coverage
on that one. Six twenty five fifty five K City
talk station Local Stories. Alternatively, more phone calls, got lots
of stuff coming up to talk about this morning. And
then of course Brianna Morello at seven five. She's got

(57:15):
a great podcast. Apparently Elon Musk likes it too. Colin
Electric call Edrew Collin when you need something done in
terms of electric projects around your home, you're in the
best possible hands with Colin Andrew Collins. Got the greatest
team of electricians. They're very, very customer focused, take great
care of you. They're all licensed electricians. They'll do great
electric work for you. They've always done it for me,

(57:38):
So get in touch with them for anything you got,
like that outlet you need installed, maybe get a whole
house generator. You want that baby wired up? They did
that one for me. I was really impressed by that project.
A whole lot more involved than I thought it was,
but it works. Great media room. They can wire those up.
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(57:58):
with the Better Business Bureau ten year wiring warranty on
everything they do for you. Plus that great customer service,
you're working with a terrific team. Thanks Andrew Cullin for
not only taking care of me, but for taking care
of my listeners and doing so so well locally owned up.
Andrew Cullin's been around since nineteen ninety nine. To learn more,
schedule deployment online culin which is c U L E

(58:19):
N Cullenelectriccincinnati dot com. And give the team a call.
A shout out from me when you give them a
call online on the phone five one three two two
seven four one one two five one three two two
seven four one one two fifty.

Speaker 12 (58:32):
Five car the talk station waking up on the right side.

Speaker 8 (58:39):
This is the Sean Hannity Morning Minute.

Speaker 12 (58:42):
American people want these illegal immigrants out. American people want
this city safe and secure. The American people want inflation
dealt with. American people don't want hundreds of billions of
dollars being spent on woke Green New Deal, DEI brand, genderism, LGBTQ,

(59:03):
you know, plus programs. You know in every foreign country
on the on the planet Earth. They don't want any
part of it. But this is this is where they're
saying the great constitutional crisis is. And I'm looking at
the Democrats this weekend, and I'm like, Okay, keep going,
don't stop, don't just just keep suing away, just keep

(59:24):
doing what you're doing.

Speaker 8 (59:25):
From coast to coast, from c to shining Seas. It's
a Sean Hannity show.

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Speaker 1 (01:00:40):
Jenner I for weather forecasts. We're in the middle of
weather weather advisory. It's until seven o'clock tomorrow morning, and
my friends in northern Kentucky probably will see more snow
than folks in the north. They expect maybe two to
three inches some areas. Anyway, you know, it's a weather forecasts.
You hang your head on it. If you choose today's
I thirty three overnight low at twenty nine tomorrow the

(01:01:01):
advisory ends at seven am. You high a forty one tomorrow,
rain kicks in sometime in the afternoon and evening low
of twenty eight overnight, and then a partly fotty day
on Thursday with a high of thirty three, which is
what it is right now, thirty three. Time for traffic
chuck from the UCLF Traffic Center.

Speaker 6 (01:01:17):
For more than two hundred years, the experts at you
See Health have been giving heart patients a chance at
better outcomes. That's boundless care. You can trust, expect more
at ucehelp dot com. Highway traffic continues so look pretty
good this morning. No major weather is used to deal
with inside the two seventy five loop. You have to
go southbound seventy five towards Lexington before you start to

(01:01:39):
get into some wet roads near Georgetown.

Speaker 1 (01:01:42):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR. See the talk station
six thirty here fifty five krsee talkstation fifty five KERR.
See dot com for your podcast here. What Christopher Smithaman
had to say the other day. I love talking to
Christopher smith Ament. Brilliant guy he is. Let's go to
the phones. I love talking to New Hampshire Gary as well.
Welcome back New Hampshire. Very good to hear from this morning.

Speaker 14 (01:02:02):
How are you doing, Brian Hey, I want to give
you a taste of what's going on up here in
New Hampshire. No career died for love. I work with
a lot of liberals and you know, to each his own,
God bless them. But if you remember, New Hampshire swung
for Kamala, and we're the only state in the Union

(01:02:25):
that swung for Kamala without voter ID required. If that's
going to tell you anything, you know. And I really
get a kick out of talking to people. I'm not
going to debate them angrily or that's all waste energy
for me, it is, but I absolutely do love to
find out what they think. And the vast majority, and

(01:02:48):
I'm talking like engineers and you know, mostly the people
who've been to college down here in southern New Hampshire,
most of them they just don't believe. They really really
don't believe in the pars that the government is spending
money like like as that's been reported. They just they're

(01:03:11):
calling it all lies. They really believe that, Ryan, they
really do. I think they're in denial.

Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:03:20):
And there's a lot of people who are on the
lower scale of pay and they're like, I could care less,
there's nothing I could do about it. Just get rid
of Trump. And they really believe that, you know, they
don't care what the government spends or how it spends,
as long as they get what they want out of
it and the rest is in materials.

Speaker 1 (01:03:43):
But you see, and that is the most shortsighted, stupid
view of life that there can be. And I'm meant
I've said this a million times. You know, their programs,
their stuff, they're things that they're getting from government are
equally in jeopardy is anything else. If we don't stop
this bigot and this seemingly unlimited flow of money which
is all fake. The fiat currency is getting watered down

(01:04:05):
by the moment because the printing press is running, and
at some point we're gonna have Venezuelan or been Zimbabwean
or Viymar Republic style inflation. The dollar is going to
be valueless. Your four to one case savings are going
to be valueless, and everyone is going to be horrifically miserable.
Maybe that's what they want. They're miserable with their lives.
They hate everything. They're angry, they're covetous, they're greedy, they're envious.

(01:04:28):
I don't know what makes them so much. I always
think of Greta Thunberg and that look she's got in
her face, that hateful, angry glare. That to me sort
of sums up the attitude that they have all the time.
And you know, there's stuff's in jeopardy too. They want
to deny it, they want to keep their head in
the sand. Then fine, let's continue and just fiddle like
Nero while the whole place burns the ground.

Speaker 14 (01:04:51):
Yeah, I will tell you I wholeheartedly agree with you that.
Right now we haven't got into it, but both sides
are doing the suspending. Oh yeah, they are absolutely, absolutely,
and I absolutely agree if Congress doesn't get off their
dumb and do this according to law. Most of it,

(01:05:14):
saw him is. But most of it it's not gonna matter.

Speaker 1 (01:05:18):
Yep, you know, and you know, you may see iin
RAN's Atlas shrug. Come to fruition. You know, those that
are producing and those that are generating the income that
keep the government running. Maybe they just say, all right,
screw it, I'm done. I quit. I appreciate it. Gary,
hang in there, brother, hanging there, And I like your
attitude when you're talking to those folks. Reminds me of
one of my favorite quotes from Milan candera brilliant writer.

(01:05:41):
Hate traps us by binding us too tightly to our adversary.
It's a really profound point I think he made with
that cribbage. Mike, Welcome to the Morning Show. Always great
hearing from me, my submarine or friend.

Speaker 15 (01:05:55):
Goring, Sir, you know, technology can be challenging at times,
but something tells me when your dad was on the air,
I don't think he had the call of Chicago to
get his.

Speaker 1 (01:06:03):
Phonef But no he didn't. He didn't have a commuter,
was no computer, he didn't have to reboot an entire system.
I mean it. It's been a chaotic morning, Mike, I
gotta tell you, but I'm so pleased that the phones
are back up and running. So nothing frightens me more
than to come into the morning show when either the

(01:06:24):
phones aren't working, or conversely, when I come in and
there's no one on the rundown for me to talk to,
and that rarely happens because Joe Strecker is great at
what he does. But leaving me to my own devices
is not my favorite state of mind.

Speaker 15 (01:06:37):
Absolutely, I'm glad you and Joe can rest easy now
from now the nine o'clock there you go. As one
who commutes along with thousands of others downtown via the
Big Mac Bridge.

Speaker 14 (01:06:49):
I want to get it be a huge job.

Speaker 15 (01:06:51):
Well done to the construction workers, design engineers, the metal
fabricators and the concrete pours because they exemplified what we
should have do across this country and I think what
Doge is identifying is identify a problem. Government should allocate
the funding and then get the hell out of the way,
you know, to get done a month early. I sure

(01:07:13):
hope that there was an incentive clause in that contract,
because every one of them, men and women earned it.

Speaker 1 (01:07:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:07:18):
And I can't help but think in the twenty years
since I've retired and came back home to my beloved Cincinnati,
you know how many Bangladesh transgender story hours could have
funded a Western Hills Viaduct or a brent S Bench Bridge.

Speaker 16 (01:07:31):
You know.

Speaker 15 (01:07:31):
So keep doing what you're doing, and that is once
again a shining example that I can drive across every
day now that this is how government and the civilian
sector should cooperate.

Speaker 16 (01:07:41):
With each other.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Yeah. I could not believe that that was done ahead
of time? And when has when have you ever heard that?
I mean recently if ever?

Speaker 14 (01:07:50):
So.

Speaker 1 (01:07:50):
Yeah, props everybody, Props everybody who got the job done. Well,
oil machine that and thank you for the idiots who
burned the place down, proving that the conspiracy theoryrists who
said that there's no way the fire could have melted
girders in the twin towers. Yeah, they could he John,
Hang on, brother, I will take your call right out

(01:08:12):
of the gate if you don't mind holding a minute
or two here. I want to recommend something strongly, and
that's a way to save massive amounts of money. And
of course, maybe you know what I'm gonna mention. Affordable
imaging services scan, CT scans, MRIs, ultrasounds, echo, cardigrams, lung screenings.
They all are just a fortune at a hospital imaging department.

(01:08:32):
Thousands and thousands of dollars and multiple bills. You get
a bill for the image, you get a bill for
a separate bill for the radiologist report, a separate bill
for just walking in and breathing the air. Thousands and
I mean a CT scan five thousand dollars. Is it
worth it?

Speaker 11 (01:08:48):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:08:48):
I mean, when you can get a CT scan with
a contrast for six hundred dollars of affordable imaging services,
why would you even consider going to the hospital and
paying five grand or maybe even more. It's low overhead.
I don't want you to think there's gonna be any
bells and whistles when you show up there, but there
will be the same equipment hospitals use. They're trained professionals
they've been doing this for decades. You get your image,

(01:09:09):
you get your your your your board certified radiologists report
included in this ultimately unbelievably low price, and you both
get your doctor and you get this radiologist report within
forty eight hours. I've been there, I've done that. I've
got another one's scheduled, my CT scan for my cancers
coming up in April. I got my fingers crossed. Last one.
You know, wasn't the good news I was hoping for,

(01:09:30):
But you know what, you got to do it. And
everybody's got to get one of these scans. And welcome
to a new calendar year and a new set of
out of pocket responsibility. Don't empty your bank account. Call
Affordable Imaging Services at five one three seven five three
eight thousand, five one three seven five three eight thousand
to learn more about the pricing and the information. Just
go to Affordable Medimaging dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:09:52):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
Channel nine. First one to weather forecast. We're in the
middle of the winter weather advisory. The lens Tomorrow morning
seven am north of Kentucky may see two three inches
of snow at least in some areas less impactful in
the north. Today's high thirty three over night low of
twenty nine tomorrow forty one for the high range. Showing
up later in the day could be a snow mix
twenty eighth for the low overnight. Then on Thursday we'll

(01:10:21):
see a high thirty three with partly cloudy skies thirty
three right now, Chuck Ingram traffic time from the UCUT
Tramphingk Center.

Speaker 6 (01:10:28):
For more than two hundred years, the experts, so you
see health have been giving hard patients and chance and
better outcomes. That's boundless care. You can trust. Expect more
at you sehealth dot Com. Somewhat roads to deal with
this morning thanks to snow starting to fall, most of
that in northern Kentucky. But I'm not seeing any accidents
or slow traffic because of the snow.

Speaker 1 (01:10:51):
Northbound four seventy.

Speaker 6 (01:10:52):
One good Grand so Is southbound seventy five at Glendale, Milford.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR see leave talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
Sixty bout Karsiti talk station and gonna go to the phones.
F I won three seven fifty eight hundred eighty two
three talk and John was kind enough to hold over
the break. John walking on the show. Good to hear
from me today, Good morning.

Speaker 11 (01:11:13):
I wanted to just concur with you about Chicago. I'd
lived there for eight years. No, I mean, this is
no joke.

Speaker 14 (01:11:22):
No, I know you can laugh.

Speaker 11 (01:11:24):
You get it because I did.

Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
I see. That's why I'm laughing. Anybody you know, because
you lived there. I was there for eight years as well, So.

Speaker 11 (01:11:33):
It was so when I moved there, I got two
years a daily mayor daily and it was manageable. Yeah,
even though he was corrupt, he knew how to.

Speaker 2 (01:11:44):
Throw the little guy a bone.

Speaker 11 (01:11:46):
And when I say that, like with parking, like with fines,
like just letting people breathe a little bit. After that
came rom and Manuel, yep, and you've never And that's
when I started. I said, Man, we are in the
city is just going. So you know, I'm playing music
there and everything, and I'm kind of just going against

(01:12:07):
the machine, if you will, on a course like it.
You know, I'm the odd guy. I'm the weird guy.
But not at all. The parking. I got a ticket, well, actually,
my girlfriend at the time, this is how bad it was,
got a ticket for one hundred and forty eight dollars
because her tire was a half inch out from the

(01:12:27):
curve too far.

Speaker 1 (01:12:29):
That sounds like Chicago.

Speaker 11 (01:12:31):
You want to live in a socialist corporate environment, that's
what you get, and it never ends. And I want
to end short and quick. Fucking Indian friends said, and
I want you to take part these words when Lance,
when you come out, when you come out of out
of your doing Chicago, when you come out you're doing

(01:12:51):
in Chicago. You nothing but a targetive revenue, nothing but
a targative revenue. That's all you are, my friend, a
targative revenue.

Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:13:00):
That I want everybody who thinks living in a socialist
environment it's going to benefit them, because you're right, it's
all about what you've got in your heart. It's not
about like how much you got, It's all about I'm
glad when I my friend his company's got a million
dollar company built from the ground up. I'm not yellous

(01:13:21):
of him.

Speaker 14 (01:13:21):
I'm happy.

Speaker 1 (01:13:22):
Happy. That's the way you need to approach it. Be
happy for those who are doing really, really well, because
nine times out of ten, they're the ones that are
keeping folks like you and me employed, and God love
them for it. And you know, I bet let me
let me ask you this, John, you moved back to
the Cincinnati area after Chicago in eight years.

Speaker 11 (01:13:42):
Yeah, But then I moved back there and I saw Cincinnati.
You know, I'm not going to go into it. I've
been in a million times, and I'm like, I'm not
getting angry anymore. I moved in there only to watch
John Cranley, and I mean just destroying that city from
the inside out with He destroyed it with the whole

(01:14:03):
sanctuary city thing. I went down there in protests. I
was one of the highest paid musicians in Cincinnati. But
when I stood up for what is right, I lost
all my jobs. I lost all my I lost gigs.
You know, I was a racist. I was the biggest.
He's this, don't hire him, he's that, don't hire him,

(01:14:24):
all pack of lize, all nonsense. But I stick to
my guns. And now I live in beautiful sunny Florida.
I'm gonna be seventy seventy three degrees today.

Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
I go ahead, rub it, John, Now I just listen.
I only asked you that. And here's a quick point
because I've made it before and I think it's important. Yes,
the city of Cincinnati, you know, proper does have a
lot of problems. I will grant you that. But this area,
this greater Cincinnati area, is such a glorious place, and
you don't really appreciate it if you haven't lived in

(01:15:00):
a place like Chicago. I grew up here. I love
the city. But my first big legal job was at
a big firm in Chicago. I was happy to do it.
I thought Chicago was a cool place. I went there
when I was in college, and I thought it was
neat big city. You know, I enjoying that excitement in
that life. And you know, then when the kids come
along and you don't have any family base there and
you decide you want to move back, and you do,

(01:15:21):
You're like, oh my god, this is such a wonderful place.
By comparison, it's easier to get around, it's so much
less expensive. It's you know, I took less money to
come back here, and my standard of living increased dramatically
compared to Chicago. Because they nickel and die need a
death up there. Property taxes, taxes on this, sales taxes,

(01:15:43):
income tax everything is outrageous. Plus you can't go anywhere
without planning on driving an hour each way to get there.
Traffic's bad, people live in far away, diverse regions and
you're like, oh god, we somebody's having a party from
the law firm. We're gonna have to drive an hour
and a half have to get to their place. It's
just this place. You got to appreciate it, folks. Don't

(01:16:04):
overlook what you got, don't I mean just don't. Just
and if you don't appreciate it, go ahead, move to
Chicago for a few years, and you will run run
back to this region. Appreciate the call six forty seventify
five KSTE talk station. Get in touch with John Ruman
and the team at Covers Sincy. They have a beautiful, beautiful,
well oiled machine there that is going to get you

(01:16:24):
better medical insurance coverage for less money. They do it
all the time. This is for individuals with no insurance.
It's for individuals. You think you're paying too much for
your employment coverage. Check out cover sincey. They'll take a
deep dive look at your particular situation. This is a
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your family needs, does your family need insurance as well?

(01:16:45):
What area, what stage in life are you? There are
different packages of insurance. They put together because they work
with hundreds of insurance or companies, thousands of different insurance
policies which can get you dollar one coverage, which can
keep you out of those massive hospital bills, all while
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That's why I say it doesn't cost you anything. Just

(01:17:06):
initiate a conversation with them. One of two ways. The
look at what you've got, and they're working for you.
They do not sell your information anyone. It's all confidential,
and they'll blow your mind. Talk to my friend Jeff.
He got his whole company insured and they are saving
heap loads of money. They all have smiles on their faces,
and his bottom line at his business improved by tens
of thousands of dollars. Yes, that can be you five

(01:17:29):
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you can fill out on the website. Fill it out completely.
It'll just expedite the process. Coversincy dot com.

Speaker 8 (01:17:41):
Fifty five KRC dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
The cold weather is here, so you and your heating
system will be John nine says, today we are in
the middle of our weather weather advisory, which ends tomorrow
morning seven am. Maybe get some snow in northern Kentucky.
They say some areas could see two to three inches
of snow, less likely as you move Nora. Thirty three
today is high end of twenty nine overnight, Tomorrow dry
with a higher forty one until later in the day.

(01:18:05):
They say that could be a rain as well as
a snow rain mix twenty eighth to low overnight, and
on Thursday thirty three for the high with a partly
cloudy sky. It's thirty three right now, time for traffic
or not, So I'm gonna go check on Chuck. It's

(01:18:29):
not funny, it's sort of the timing is rather peculiar
and interesting. Just Jrecker and I last week, we're talking
about ozembic and these weight loss drugs and these well
former diabetes drugs which are I guess off label use
for obesity, and I said something to the effect of,
you know, it's like the COVID nineteen vaccine. We're gonna
all find out that a couple of years down the

(01:18:51):
road of massive side effects is going to be all
kinds of things that are revealed because so many more
people are taking them and I sure hope that isn't happening,
but oh low and behold daily reporting on this one,
experts are concerned the weight loss drug like ozempic, are
now reportedly leaving users blind. They said several studies that

(01:19:12):
link the shots the condition that cause inflammation and block
blood flow to the eye, causing severe and sometimes permanent
vision loss. Researchers detailed nine new reports of US patients
who went blind after taking some agluetide or tur zeppetide.
Those are the active ingredients in azempic and Manjarno, respectively.

(01:19:33):
One woman ejected one dose of the drug for her diabetes,
woke up the next morning blind in her left eye,
prompted her to stop taking the medication for two months
before her diabetes forced her to go back on, and
two weeks after restarting, she lost the vision in her
right eye as well. Another woman taking some a glue
type for a year woke up one morning with a
what is described as painless shadow over her left eye.

(01:19:55):
Testing showed blood vessels and her retina become damaged, leading
to blindness. One suffered bleeding in his left eye after
taking to his zeppetide for a year, told doctors. The
doctors said they keep taking the drug due to lack
of evidence linking that condition to the weight loss shots.
Experts said while the exact cause is not quite clear,
drugs like ozempic, rapidly lowering blood sugar levels could damage

(01:20:18):
blood vessels in the eye, leading to vision loss. Researchers
wrote in the Journal of American Medicine Optalmology last month
that it's not a clear exactly what could be causing
the side effects. Been suggested that the weight loss drugs
caused sudden dropping his blood sugar because people stop eating
junk food, potentially temporarily damaging the blood vessels, which is

(01:20:40):
kind of a peculiar outcome. When you stop eating this food,
it can leave you blind. Anyway, last year, American Academy
of Optimology issue to press release urging patients who have
experienced vision loss while taking semaglutide to stop taking it
and contact the doctor. Academy, however, did not recommend against
taking the drugs altogether. Now I know one doctor who

(01:21:00):
actually was taking this particular drug, ozempic, and he monitored
his kidney function and found out that he had a
significant kidney reaction and not a good one as a
consequence of taking it. So he used to I tell
all my patients, if they're going to be taking these drugs,
had to regularly get their kidney levels checked because of
this problem that maybe isn't widely talked about anyway. Just

(01:21:24):
thought it passed that along. So keep your eyes peeled.
But I'm bomp possible problems, you know. Look, I wrote
fenfen on the outside of the article. Remember that was
all the rage, the combination of fentermine and some other
drug off label use for weight loss, and everybody was
on it and everybody's losing weight. And then oh oh,
by the way, it causes severe heart damage. So don't

(01:21:46):
do that anymore. Six fifty five do you have Karstee
Talks Station seven and five with Brian Morella her podcast.
We'll talk Doge and Trump's first month in office. Senator
Ran Paul coming up at seven forty. I hope you
can stick around.

Speaker 8 (01:21:58):
Covering Trump's first one hundred days.

Speaker 11 (01:22:01):
Every day we stand on the verge of the four
greatest years in American history.

Speaker 8 (01:22:05):
Fifty five TRC the Talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:22:08):
This report is sponsored by Wendy's Breckon seven oh five,
the fifty five krc DE Talk station, and a very

(01:22:29):
very happy Tuesday to you, Senator Ran Paul coming up
at seven forty. In the meantime, I'm always pleased and
welcome back to the fifty five KRSE Morning Show, Brionna Morello,
host of The Brionna Morello Show, podcaster finer on X
at Brionna Morello and congratulations and welcome back, Brian. I
understand Elon Musk is a fan of you on X
as well.

Speaker 17 (01:22:50):
It's been a good day.

Speaker 18 (01:22:51):
It's been a good day. It's a fan of great reporting.
So I'm excited to have him now.

Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
I guess, I guess. So that's a that's a wonderful
addition to the many followers you already have. And of
course you do a wonderful job, and I'll encourage my
listeners to find you and listen to what you have
to say and see what you have to post on X.
And in the meantime, you got to get your reaction.
Donald Trump didn't hit the ground running, He hit the
ground sprinting. This has been just an absolutely amazing phenomenon

(01:23:16):
what he's been able to accomplish. And while I am
no fan of the executive, you know, the the the
Imperial presidency. He is getting a lot done by way
of executive orders and lo and behold, look what Elon
Musk is doing with that DOGE Department. He doesn't have
any power to shut anything down, but he can sure
point out to the American taxpayer how poorly their money
is spent and how mismanaged government is.

Speaker 11 (01:23:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 18 (01:23:39):
Yeah, it's very really impressive to sit back and watch.
I mean, you know, I don't understand why the American
people have been auditing our government sooner. A lot of
this stuff has been publicly available. That's the part that
is driving me crazy. I'm like, oh, we've been screaming
about this for a very long time. I mean, yeah,
there's sons that's outrageous. But you know, I think just

(01:24:01):
the funding these these groups, these these causes, these programs
isn't going far enough. A lot of these a lot
of these causes organizations have been stealing money from the
American people. There's no way that you know, when they
send you, they tell you they're sending fifty million dollars
worth of protection to Gaza, and it's not actual protection.

(01:24:22):
It's other things, but it's not actually going to the
clubs they're saving and going through. This is definitely set.
And I think the reason why, you know, we all
sit here and go that's crazy, is they spend that
much money. They're not spending that much money. There's people
who are lying their pockets with.

Speaker 19 (01:24:34):
All of this.

Speaker 18 (01:24:35):
They belong in prison. They all belong in prison. You know,
we have Pam Boondi, who's obviously just stepping into the role,
and she has a lot that she has to go through.
But we need to go through who had their hands
on the money, because I don't think it's as simple
as just thinking that this is an outrageous way to
spend our cash. I think there's probably other reasons behind it.
You know, my time in New York, we saw all

(01:24:55):
the time, You're Democrats ran every branch in New York State,
and so they they I had no problems doing these
paid to play schemes and aligning their pockets to make
sure that their family members were in on these deals
as well. And so if we're going to go out
there and we're gonna sit here and say that this
is where all the money's been going and be outraged
by it, let's take it a step further. Let's put
the people in prison so that they never do it again.

(01:25:18):
I think that's important. I think that's critical because you know,
in President Trump leaves the White House, whoever takes over
after him or the person after after him, we need
to make sure that they know that this can't go
back to its old ways and that people will go
to prison when in real administration stets in the power
and really cares.

Speaker 11 (01:25:34):
About the cause.

Speaker 1 (01:25:35):
Yeah. I mean, it's funny you brought up New York
because I was. We were talking earlier about my time
I spent in Chicago. Moving back to Cincinnati from Chicago
was the best thing I think I ever did, beyond
a couple of things like marrying my wife. But it
just it's outrage. The corruption is embraced because it's their corruption.
You know, Democrats control the entire city. And when Democrats

(01:25:55):
are caught with their corruption, people like they got to
sort of laugh at it and say, well, that's okay,
because it's our guys that are engaged in the corruption,
not the other side. It's it's it's insanity. But going
back to the government funding, it seems to me that
you know, there's all these non governmental organizations out there
five to one three c's and each of the employees
they are making hundreds of thousands of dollars a year,
So that takes a lot of money on to whatever

(01:26:16):
so called worthy cause it's going to. But there's no
I mean, the accounting's difficulty even assessed. You don't they
don't know where USAID money is going to start with.
How many senators have gone on record, I didn't know
it was going to that program. I had no idea that,
So they don't know where it's going. But then again,
the money trail goes beyond that. It's like, okay, it
went to the program funding a gay opera in Ireland,

(01:26:38):
how was that money actually spend? There aren't enough human
beings on the planet to follow the trillions of dollars
a flow out of Washington.

Speaker 17 (01:26:47):
Yeah, yeah, And I think that's that's the key point too.
I mean it's like you've got to follow money, and
you got rom Hall coming up, and I think that
he's been incredible on all of this. I think a
lot of important people need to get their their heads
into this. Iris.

Speaker 18 (01:27:01):
I think that's how we pulled back a lot of
the waste. So I'm excited to see what happens you know,
yesterday Elon Leus released the fact that there was fifty
nine million dollars that was paid out just the previous
week through FEMA to the hotels who were housing illegal aliens. Yeah,
and everyone was outraged by it. It's been going on forever,
you know. I broke that report and I told everyone, hey, guys,

(01:27:23):
FEMA's taking our money and instead of using on Americans,
they're using to get on illegal aliens. And everyone thought
it was a great report, but I like, it's right
on their website. And then FEMA came out and called
it a rumor after it gained a lot of theme.
But I literally just sifted through their press releases, and
their press releases were flaunting the hundreds of millions of
dollars that they were spending on these illegal aliens. You

(01:27:46):
weren't working in our country in the first place, and
so I thought it was insane that we were sitting
here going, oh wow, it's been going on forever. FEMA
then received an extra hundred million dollars from Congress after
all of this came down. So instead of sitting here
and saying to hey, you got to buckle down your books,
We're going to go through it and see where it's
not even going. They just keep cutting the checks. The
Congress is their fault too, and it's going continue to

(01:28:08):
be their fault because there's only like sodd numbers in
the Congress right now in the House who really do
you hold their feet to the fire, and the rest
of them all comply. Mike Johnson has been horrific for Republicans.
I get the President Trumpet now in the White House,
so he's going to get better. But he's been an
absolute power on key issues since taking the gavel, and
I don't think it's to stop anytime soon.

Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
No, it's not. Excuse me, and I got a big
kick out if you haven't read at Gerard Baker's column today,
Democrats stand up for the bureaucrats against Doge. Comical observations
by Gerard Baker. Democrats are out protesting the removal or
shutting down to various agencies. And it's beyond belief when

(01:28:49):
you demonstrate when Doge elon Musk, anybody comes out and
points out the fraud, waste and abuse that's going on,
and American taxpayers are equally insulted. Across party lines. Democrats
are trying to prevent any of the stopping this, this, this,
this money going out protesting it. They're trying to defend
the absolute indefensible on the heels of their open borders

(01:29:09):
and illegal igual alien preference over citizens, teacher unions over
parents and children, criminals over victims, men turned women over girls.
A couple of things that the gard pointed out. It's
they had I think they have. Actually they can't step
outside their own bubble and listen to what they're saying,
which is indefensible.

Speaker 18 (01:29:30):
Yeah, yeah, Well, I think this highlights the Keep Act.
And we've got we've got Democrats defending all of this,
and I think that's going to make up a lot
of Americans. But let's really wake them up. You know,
under Joe Biden, Democrats had no problem pushing to expand
the i RS. They wanted to audit you.

Speaker 19 (01:29:46):
All at home.

Speaker 18 (01:29:47):
They had no problem doing that. They expanded it through
eighty seven thousand i RS agents. What happened while they
ended up lying to the American people to say that
it was they were only to go after people that
more than four hundred thousand dollars a year. We know
that was a lot.

Speaker 20 (01:30:01):
Bus They had no problem with it. What they do
have a problem with is what our government starts to
audit its own allies. It's Democrat allies. Now all of
a sudden they're up in armed and now all of
a sudden they're really.

Speaker 18 (01:30:12):
Upset about all of this. You know, I'm sitting here
watching as they're going after and they're saying, you know,
they're employees, were an employee tour freed right now that
everything's just moving so fast. No, this is what should
have happened a long time ago. Somebody just wrote the
outline and now executing this perfectly. USAID has been horrific,

(01:30:32):
not just for the United States but all across the world.
You know, I sat with Mike Ben back in September
of last year and he outlined how USAID and the
State Department were the ones behind the censorship campaign that
was going on with Rumble Rumble obviously a free speech platform.
They were censored on in Brazil and their their website

(01:30:53):
wasn't allowed to go up, and you know, Ben called it.
Ben said, you know, this is all happening because the
USAID and what happened well after USA's is defunded, magically
now rumbled back up in Brazil. So we have to
accept the fact that our government used our money to
censor speech in other countries. And you know, it's not

(01:31:15):
a single country complaining about USA being shut down, that
a single foreign country that's held you that the cause
was never to help anyone. The cause was to expand
and it was like a little arm of the CIA.

Speaker 8 (01:31:26):
Yeah, that's the question that they were.

Speaker 18 (01:31:27):
Using it for.

Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Yeah, I was just going to ask you about the CIA,
because you know, no one knows how much money the
CIA gets, but they use USAID as a mechanism to
influence the hearts and minds of people in other countries
through these various programs, And when it comes down to
influencing them, is spreading the LGBTQ plus message in countries
that don't embrace that. That to me is not an
efficient use of the taxpayer dollars beyond them.

Speaker 18 (01:31:51):
Yeah, yeah, Well, they brought a couple of million dollars
worth I think it was twenty one million dollars worth
of Spame Street to Iraq.

Speaker 1 (01:31:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 18 (01:32:00):
Something tells me though, that they're going to get that
Pride episode. It's just it's so absurd. What do you
like sitting here and like go through it all. It's
so ubsturd but it's meant to any flounce these people.
I mean, did our money really twenty one million dollars
really good? And bringing them in the street to Iraq? Know,
I mean, translators don't cost that much money. This is
all about just being able to expand its reach all

(01:32:22):
across the world. And that's whether it's so outraged and
so upset about this, you know, and this is good
for America because our CIA needs to be wrangled in.
They have been absolutely corrupt. They have destroyed countries, they
have toppled governments just because they wanted to benefit themselves
and their power and their authority around the world, and

(01:32:42):
it needs to be called out. We've been screaming about
this for years now, but finally so many people are
going to wake up to realize that we actually don't
need to be doing all of this, and we should
be America first. There are so many Americans who are
struggling to get by, and they have been put on
the back burners for quite some time. You know, if
you're a hard working American, you should get tax cuts.

(01:33:02):
You shouldn't be sitting here in funding foreign countries with
your taxpayer dollars. You should be able to pocket that
money and help your family, be able to afford housing,
be able to afford that you want to do. If
you want to moutiucation, you should.

Speaker 2 (01:33:13):
Be able to do that.

Speaker 18 (01:33:14):
And so enough, that's enough with all this nonsense. I'm
excited that we're rolling it back. Everyone's freaking out right now,
which is a limited group, it's not many. Those are
the people who we should probably be auditing, cause I
bet you they've been stealing money from our government.

Speaker 1 (01:33:27):
Well, and that's what I was going to ask you about,
because something tells me. You know, when you have Congress
people that don't have really much to show by way
of accumulated assets going to Congress making one hundred and
sventy five thousand dollars a year, and magically, after ten, fifteen,
twenty years of service they walk out multimillionaires, one might
suspect that this crazy, impossible to trace money trail has

(01:33:47):
the cecuitest way of making it back into their own pockets.

Speaker 18 (01:33:52):
Yeah, yeah, well, you know, it's kind of funny. So
maybe it's been two years now. I did a re
court where I wanted to follow on Anti Pelosi and
how she was ending her money, and it's all publicly available,
and so I followed the moves that that Nancy Pelosi
was making and I tripled my money in some instances.

Speaker 17 (01:34:10):
I mean, she went and she bought a.

Speaker 18 (01:34:11):
Ship manufacturer husband did and everyone was so outraged about
it because there's be some chip deal going through Congress
and so, but it's all publicly available information. It's not
anything on our end. And I followed her and I
made a ton of money. These people were criminals. People
are criminals. And I joked, you know, I was like

(01:34:31):
joking with my my my parents. My parents are like, well,
why do you have deside our bags? And I'm like, no, mom,
I think Nicky Celosi got me these that this is
what it's all about. These people are criminals. And the
only way that they stopped doing all week inside their trading.
Now it's not getting much of the way. I see
there are some members of Congress that want to stop
the trading. But until Americans start following what they're doing

(01:34:53):
by the way black Rock gut that they followed Congress
and see what they're doing their money, then that's when
it's all ends. And so we've all I got to
figure out a way to end it. I think the
best way to end it is to follow the money
all at all, avenue follow what Nancy Pelosi is doing financially.

Speaker 17 (01:35:09):
She has she.

Speaker 18 (01:35:10):
Has built an incredible wealth. And it's not just her,
it's awful people like Goldman who have also created an
incredible portfolio for themselves. It's all publicly available, none of
it's illegal. And then once we all start making money
off it, then maybe they'll stop.

Speaker 1 (01:35:21):
Yeah maybe, man, don't don't forget to don't overlook Mitch McConnell. Yeah, Republican.
Republican Party's hands not exactly clean across the board either. Anyhow, Morello,
it's always a pleasure talking with you. I can't thank
you enough for being on the program and joining us
from time to time. You have a welcome spot here
in the fifty five KRC Morning Show, and I will
encourage my listeners to follow you do what Elon must did,

(01:35:44):
Brionn and Morello on X Brianna. Keep up the great
work and I'll look forward to having you back on
the Morning Show real soon.

Speaker 18 (01:35:51):
Thank you, looking forward to it.

Speaker 1 (01:35:52):
Thank you. Seven nineteen to fifty five Care seven Talk
Station Chimney Care Fireplace is Stove. Thank you to Chimneycare
Fireplaces Stove for taking great care my listeners, including Cribbage Mike,
who's I think it was great grandkids stuffed toys up
his chimney, which then basically caught fire, belching smoke out
into his living room the first time he used this
gas fireplace. Gas fireplaces also need service, so he said

(01:36:16):
he was raven about the customer service. And that does
not shock me at all because I know the owner
of Chimney Care Fireplace and stuff. He is a quality
human being, Jeff Keeper. He's been around since nineteen eighty eight.
Right now. To ensure you're safe and you're safe and
comfortable in your home, they got a winter special going on.
It's a wood burning fireplace sweep and evaluation and it's
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value for your safety and you can have peace of
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it out with a video camera first. You may have
water issues going on in there that you're not even
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lining because that's what happens when you have a chimney fire.
And trust me, you don't necessarily know you've got a
chimney fire going The Chriso catches fire, your chimney cracks

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and spoke up the chimney, but you don't know what's happening.
So that's why you need an inspection to keep yourself safe.
And please, as I always recommend when I mentioned in
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they provide very low price to keep you well alive.
To schedule the appointment, there's two ways to do it.
You can book an appointment online at Chimneycareco dot com

(01:37:22):
Chimneycare Co dot com tell them, Brian said, how many
call five one three two four eight ninety six hundred.
Five to one, three two four eight ninety six hundred.

Speaker 4 (01:37:29):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:37:34):
For live radio talk for the Channel nine first Warning one.
The forecast winter weather Advisory in effectual tomorrow at seven
o'clock in the morning. Today, you may see some snow
the further north you go, the less likely do they say?
Northern Kentucky might see two or three inches of snow
in some areas going up to thirty three today. Snow
ends every night down to twenty nine. Tomorrow. Dry start

(01:37:56):
today with a high forty one. Rain shows up sometime afternoon,
late evening, overnight low at twenty eight. And on Thursday
we're going to have a high thirty three with partly
cloudy skies. It is thirty three right now, and it
is time for a traffic update. Chuck England from the
UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 6 (01:38:10):
For more than two hundred years, the experts and you
see how I had been giving heart patients and chance
and better outcomes. That's boundless care. You can trust. Expect
more at U seehelp dot com. Highway traffic continues to
build southbound two seventy five.

Speaker 1 (01:38:24):
Approaching to Carrol Cropper Bridge.

Speaker 6 (01:38:26):
In southbound seventy five through Wachland. I'm not seeing any
major weather issues as of yet. There's a wreck on
McGregor at Highland Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRE see
the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:38:41):
Seven twenty four if you five krcity talk station Happy
Tuesday at local stories coming up. We got time to talk.
If you'd rather call, I'd love to hear from you.
Five one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
eight two to three talk and yes, Senator Rand Paul
will be on at seven forty plenty to talk about
with him, and real quick, I've just again another illustration
of how poorly your money is being spent. You know,

(01:39:04):
I just have to laugh. It's so sickening that it's
it's just it's like, did they make this up? Is
this a Babylon b article? Department of Health and Human Services?
They just canceled more than one hundred and eighty million
dollars in contracts just in the mere forty eight hours,
including are you ready? A one hundred and seventy thousand
dollars contract for a doctor Anthony Fauci Museum exhibit, one

(01:39:32):
hundred and sixty eight thousand dollars contract for Anthony Fauci
exhibit at the NIH Museum. Great, that's money well spent.
Stick around. We got local stories coming up, followed by
Senator Ran Paul. In the meantime, Peter Sharia Colorwilliams seven Hills. Peter,
if you're out there, God love you. He's just such

(01:39:52):
a great guy. He has as seemed to assemble the
best team of real estate agents that are out there.
He's just a brilliant guy, well oiled machine. They provide
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your dream home. So as a buyer with the Shabrin Group,
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of it five one three, seven zero eight three thousand.

Speaker 8 (01:40:52):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:40:53):
The talk station A Minute of Hope is brought to
you by the Linder Center of Hope Linder Center of
Hope dot org. Hi, I'm Thomas with doctor John Hawkins.
Doctor Hawks is an expert in psychiatry at the Lindener
Center of Hope. More information go to Lindener centerf Hoope
dot org or call five one three, five three six
Hope doctor Hawkins. What is bipolar disorder and how is

(01:41:14):
it diagnosed?

Speaker 10 (01:41:15):
Bipolar disorder is a mental health condition characterized by significant
changes in mood, energy, and activity levels, and it distinguishes
itself from a major depressive disorder in that folks will
present at the time of their interview with a mental
health professional or demonstrate a history of having hypomanic or

(01:41:35):
manic symptoms. The person will suffer from episodes of having
elevated or expansive or irritable mood in conjunction with increased energy,
decreased need to sleep, inflated self esteem, racing thoughts, pressured speech,
as well as impulsivity or engaging in risky behaviors.

Speaker 1 (01:41:54):
For more information on bipolar disorder, go to Lindener Center
of Hoope dot org or call five one three five
three six. Hope is your weekend. There's your weather forecast
and Channel nine Winter Weather Advisor currently in effect. It'll
learn tomorrow at seven. Snow should be around today if
you get it. They say in northern Kentucky maybe two

(01:42:15):
to three inches, but less less the further north you go.
So maybe how's that thirty three for the highaday down
to twenty nine overnight dry start to your day tomorrow
with the high forty one, Rain shows up sometime around one.
Maybe thereafter could be a snow rain mixed overnight low
of twenty eight and high thirty three on Thursday with
partly cloudy skies. It's thirty three o It's time for

(01:42:35):
traffic update.

Speaker 6 (01:42:37):
From the uce HOW Traffic Center. For more than two
hundred year, of the experts that you see help, I've
been giving heart patients a chance and better outcomes. That's
boundless care you can trust. Expect more at you see
health dot com. Highway traffic continues to build, but the
weather doesn't seem to be adding any extra time to
your commuteesathbound seventy one break lugs down above two seventy

(01:42:59):
five towards five south Bend. Seventy five continues to get
heavy or through black one and then bound seventy four
is back into Montana, chucking from on fifty five KRFC
deep talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:43:10):
It's seven thirty on a Tuesday, the return of Senator
Ran Paul. Got to the next segment meantime, before I
get the local stories. Phone calls are always welcome here
in the morning show five one three seven hundred two
three talk. I got Oki on the phone. Welcome to
the program. Thanks for calling in today.

Speaker 16 (01:43:27):
Well, thanks for all the work you do.

Speaker 14 (01:43:29):
I really appreciate and.

Speaker 16 (01:43:31):
Especially today your report on ozempic side effects being that
of blindness. I am on those impic. As a matter
of fact, my doctor wanted me to go to Montjiro,
but an insurance company wouldn't cover Montgero, even though it's
basically the same thing, because they considered that a weight
loss drug. But they would cover ozempic and I take

(01:43:52):
a shot every Sunday. Well, a few months ago I
had a stroke in my right eye. Oh, they came
out of nowhere, and they thought they thought it was
an unrelated different vascular issue. So I already had him
a point with my doctor in two weeks. I'm definitely
not taking any more ozimpic till I talk to him.

Speaker 14 (01:44:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:44:13):
Well, I had never heard of it before. It was
the articles in the Daily Mail. And I think if
you use your search engine to type in ozempic and blindness,
you'll probably come across the reporting on this because apparently
it was brought up in the Journal of American Medical
Medicine Ophthalmology last month. Now, they didn't trace it directly,
but they did bring it up, and they said it

(01:44:33):
could be a side effect. So the idea that it
could be is enough to scare the living hell out
of me. Oki, And I'm glad you're aware of it
now so you can have an informed conversation with your doctor.
It's that's scary, you know.

Speaker 14 (01:44:48):
This.

Speaker 1 (01:44:48):
The other thing I'm afraid that, you know, like two
years from now, after everybody's been on this for a while,
we're gonna find out maybe there are a lot more
side effects and problems and complications from it than anybody
really even knows about yet exactly. It's like nineteen vaccine. Oh,
by the way, all right, hang in there man and
best of health. Tioak, I hope your problem resolves. That's
that's that's scary. I mean, that's just jeh blindness. And Barbara,

(01:45:17):
if you're out there, missie Barbara, my blind friend Barbara
hasn't been able to go to listener to lunch and
quite some time. So if you're out there listening, I've
been thinking about you. Let us see here. Man expected
to recover. He was shot in a vehicle by somebody
in another vehicle on I two seventy five exit ramps,
bringing down police reporting on this at about eight pm.
Thanks to Fox nineteen covering it. It was Sunday drivers

(01:45:38):
shot on the exit ramp off westbound I two seventy
five to northbound seven forty seven, then still driving, called
nine to one one. According to officer Jason Davis. Man
City was shot in an ongoing and address nearby Ohio
seven forty seven. According to the Hamilton County dispatcher that point,
his vehicle had traveled on Ohio seven forty seven from
Springvale to Westchester Township, so Hamilton County Dispatcher's transferred the

(01:45:59):
called Westchester police and fire crews. Westchester Fire Department transport
of the man to Westchester Hospital. Springdale officer went there
to stay with him while detectives also responded to the
initial interview. So far, police haven't announced any arrests or
a motive in this shooting. Officer Davis confirmed the man
shot who shot works for a company that repossesses vehicles,
but he said the shooting was not related to his job.

(01:46:22):
Springdale detectives would release more details when I guess they
figure something out about it. That's scary. Butler County Sheriff's
Office Bomb Squad investigating two military projectiles that were dropped
off at the fire station. February tenth, Bomb Squad responded
to the Westchester fire Station seventy one and Cincinnati Dayton

(01:46:44):
Rode about a citizen that had dropped off a bag
with two military projectiles. Bomb Squad had both forty millimeters
projectiles for further assessment and disposal. One appears to be
from the United States, the other from France. Let's see
Jim Tressel. I don't know what Governor de Wyne is thinking,

(01:47:07):
and I don't have any against Jim Trestle. I don't
even know who he is. He's seventy two years old.
He was the president of Youngstown Youngstown State University, also
formerly Ohio State Buckeye football coach. He's been tapped to
take over Senator John Houston's lieutenant governor's seat. Teslall reportedly

(01:47:30):
said it was a surprise for sure. He said, I
thought he Governor de Wine was just coming to watch
a couple of grandkids play basketball, apparently engaged in a conversation.
The majority of lawmakers in House and Senates have to
approve him, though, but I just re record test texted
me this article. Guessday He's like, what the heck? I

(01:47:52):
don't know. He's a football coach and again Youngstown State
University president. A coach at Ohio State University football from
two thousand and one to twenty eleven, of course, won
national championship in twenty two or two thousand and two.
He apparently resigned from the role amid an NC two
A investigation to improper benefits, including tattoos that his players

(01:48:14):
received during the twenty ten season, and Ohio State had
to vacate its win from that season as punishment. So
read all about it seven thirty five and fifty five
k s the talk station stick Around. Senator Ran Paul
up next on elon Musk government, waste USA and tariffs,
as well as annexing Gaza. See if we can get

(01:48:35):
all that in with our conversation with the Senator. I
sure hope. So in the meantime, twenty two three Valentine's
Day coming up. They got a date night and that's
Friday twenty two three, Route forty two between Mason and Lebanon.
And I'm telling you it is a great date. I
know it from experience. Friday Date Night and it happens
every week. Two people shoot for an hour for twenty

(01:48:55):
one dollars a lane fee whole hour. Valentine's Day on Friday,
so it's even more perverct to do that. So don't
stress out about your plans. Head on over to twenty
two to three dot com and click on the Valentine's
Day link right on the home page. You'll even get
two Valentine's Day targets thrown in the mix. So do
something together, get in some range time. It's a fun,
fun time, and twenty two three is the best range around, cleanest, safest,

(01:49:18):
most wonderful people are the owners. They have great staff,
they have a gunsmith there, they have a huge selection
of firearms, everything you could possibly hope for in a
gun store and indoor range. Learn more online. It's twenty
two the number followed by the word three spelled out
twenty two to three dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:49:32):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station Utility Bill.

Speaker 1 (01:49:37):
Chaos quicklyan A nine weather forecast. We're in a winter
weather advisory till seven o'clock tomorrow morning. Get some snow today,
probably northern Kentucky. They're saying maybe two to three inches
less the further north to go thirty three the high
to day down to twenty nine overnight, dry start of
the day tomorrow forty one for the high, rain kicking
in in the afternoon, snow rain, mixed possible low of
twenty eight overnight and on Thursday's Godey high thirty three

(01:50:00):
with partley bodies guys thirty four. Right now, time for
traffic Chuck from the UC of Triumphics Center.

Speaker 6 (01:50:06):
For more than two hundred years, the experts that you
see health I've been giving heart patients chance at better outcomes.
That's boundless care. But you can trust expect more at
you see help dot com in Bend seventy four crawling
down the hill from North Bend to an accident. Now
after you've got passed Montana southbound seventy five slows through
Lackland southbound seventy one break lights field, zirdled down to

(01:50:29):
fight for Chucking Ramon fifty five KRC The talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:50:35):
Seven forty one fifty five KR City Talks Dation, Brian
Thomas always pleased to welcome with the fifty five KRC
Morning Show, Senator Rand Paul. Senator Paul, Welcome back, my friend.
It's always a pleasure to have you on the program.

Speaker 14 (01:50:46):
Good morning, Brian, thanks for.

Speaker 1 (01:50:47):
Having me and I guess you more than anyone. Are
so disappointed that the Anthony Fauci Museum exhibit has been
canceled thanks to the work of Doade.

Speaker 19 (01:50:55):
Can you imagine. And the thing is is this kind
of craziness has been going on for decade and nobody's
pointed it out. Every administration comes in and just doesn't
know where to look and doesn't look hard enough. I've
been pointing it out for a decade, but they've been
ignoring the fact that now we've got Elon Musk's help
and the loudest and biggest microphone in the world, and

(01:51:15):
so it's coming to light and people are rightfully outraged.

Speaker 1 (01:51:19):
And you know, the interesting thing about it, the most
one of the most interesting components of it is the
outrage expressed by the Democrats trying to defend the indefensible.

Speaker 19 (01:51:29):
This is where they're so out of touch. Somebody wrote
an article the other day saying Trump takes every eighty
twenty issue an issue where eighty percent of the public
is outraged and twenty percent is not, And the Democrats
are standing up for the twenty percent. On all of
these issues like should boys play in girls sports? Almost
nobody believes that. It's probably a ten percent issue, and
the Democrats are loudly supporting this. Should a thirteen year

(01:51:52):
old be able to make a decision to remove part
of their body parts against their parents' wishes, and the
Democrats are standing up for that as well. Should we
have an anti Anthony Fauci museum? They want to have
that too. They just their outrage is so misplaced because
the American people are frankly thinking most of this stuff

(01:52:13):
is ludicrous.

Speaker 1 (01:52:15):
They do, and then I guess it's illustrative of the
impossible reality of trying to follow each and every allocation
out to every non governmental organization that is a recipient
of this, regardless of how stupid the program is. I mean,
if fifty five thousand dollars for a climate change presentation
in you know, the for an LGBTQ journalist, now, did

(01:52:38):
anybody look in to see how the money was actually spent.
That's like the tail end of the receipt. The receipt's
bad enough, the allocation's bad enough, But didn't that go
to pads someone's fat five oh one to three c salary.

Speaker 19 (01:52:51):
Or went to a convention in Los Angles or something.
I mean, it's just it's just such an insult to
the hard working people of America. And this is going
to you know, this bridge is any kind of party affiliation.
If you are a working person in America, you are
outraised that your tax dollars are going to this. And
it's also why the uh, you know, extreme action of

(01:53:12):
closing down USID completely locking the.

Speaker 16 (01:53:15):
Door and pushing all the people out.

Speaker 19 (01:53:16):
Is necessary because they've been using this as their own
fiefdom for for decades to not spread diplomacy and not
spread American will to spread you know, you know, ideology
on sex and gender that really some in other countries,
particularly some conservative Muslim countries, aren't too interested in this.
It actually repels some of those countries. It really shouldn't

(01:53:38):
be part of diplomacy. I mean, spending three million dollars
on girl centric climate change education in Brazil, what kind
of person thought that that was a good use of
our money?

Speaker 1 (01:53:50):
And who thinks girls are more impacted by if climate
change even exists? Climate change anyhow.

Speaker 19 (01:53:55):
Well, it also is insulting to girls because what are
they going to do? Have barbies talking to each other
O the girls can only listen to barbies are involved.
I mean, it's very sexist, it's incredibly you know, unreasonable.
So yeah, but it just goes on and on. I mean,
we spend four point eight million on social media influencers

(01:54:16):
in Ukraine. You know, we sent a bunch of Ukrainian
fashion designers to the Paris Fashion Show. It just doesn't end.
And with every new outrage, though I think the people
are saying, I think we chose Wiley wisely, and the
whole thing does need to be disrupted. And ultimately, though
Congress have to do something. The President and Elon and

(01:54:39):
all that gang can temporarily stop stuff, but Eventually the
Congress has to stand up and say, we'll accept the
money back for the treasury through like what's called a
recision package. We'll quit spending it. And ultimately you just
have to spend less. You can't expect to that have
better people in government, you know, because there may be
people on the right there as bad as people on
the left. As far as where they want to spend
the money. You have to give the agencies less money.

(01:55:02):
This is what I've been saying forever. It's not a
matter of well, this is wasteful because a bad person
spent it. No, if you gave them a billion dollars
last year, you need to give them less than a
billion dollars this year. You need to give them eight
hundred million, twenty percent less, and then they need to
figure out, you know, what ends up going away is
the worst of the worst stuff. But you have to
give people less money. That almost never happens because the

(01:55:24):
big spenders in both parties, you know, are clamoring for
more of your money. I mean, look, the first package
the Republicans are putting forward right now is a three
hundred and twenty five billion dollars spending package. They're going
to spend it. They're going to increase spending by three
hundred and twenty five billion dollars in their first package.

Speaker 1 (01:55:41):
Well at one of the areas of government that I
hope that Elon Musk and his career unleashed on. And
I've been a critic of the size of the American
military budget, not the American military, but eight hundred and
thirty or forty billion dollars annually, biggest expenditure out of
government beyond payment of our interest on the national debt.
You know, Senator Paul, that there is a gob a

(01:56:02):
heaploat of fraud, waste and abuse in that that build
multi billion dollar spending package.

Speaker 19 (01:56:08):
Did you see the interview with John Stewart and that
ridiculous woman. I think she was a Pentagon apologist, and
she was saying, well, you know, the audit doesn't find
waste and fraud, and you know Stuart was wonding, He said, well,
if it can't be audited, does that implied that there's
waste in fraud? And she just didn't seem to get it.
She was so arrogant and didn't seem to get it.

(01:56:28):
And we still to this day have not had a
full audit of the Pentagon. So I've been for years
on board with the built audit the FED. But I've
also been on board with the bill to audit the Pentagon.
But instead of saying, well, maybe we should hold the
line on spending with the military so they can find
the waste and be forced to find the waste, the

(01:56:50):
you know, the Hawks up here are adding one hundred
and fifty billion dollars in new military spending, and that's
on top of a three percent increase. So you just
got a three percent increase, and now they're getting another
one hundred and fifty billion added to that. And the
Republicans that are for this are gleefully rubbing their hands together, saying,
we get to give it to military without giving it
to welfare at this time, because we don't have to

(01:57:10):
have the Democrats votes, but they need the Republican votes,
and I've told them, frankly, I'm not voting to increase
spending about three hundred billion dollars, particularly if it has
a fake cut. You know, if there's a fake pay for.
What they're talking about is a pay for is ending
Biden's forgiveness of student loans. The problem is is that
never went into effect, so it's not really a savings.

(01:57:33):
The course ruled it illegal, it never went into effect,
and Trump was going to cancel it. So how in
the world is that in actual savings? You know what
it is is it's money that you know we were
going to lose if Biden got his way, but it
never happened. And then they can say, well, that offsets
the three hundred billion dollars in new spending, and that's
why the debt keeps getting bigger and bigger. But you know,

(01:57:54):
the ten year estimate for interest is fourteen billion dollars
in interest over the next ten years. I mean fourteen trillion.
I'm not a billion fourteen trillion.

Speaker 1 (01:58:04):
So lost a few zeros there on that one, Senator.
It's easy to do when you're talking about this kind
of money. A billion dollars is nothing anymore one thousand
million dollars. They just spit it out like it's nothing. Anyhow.
You know, I have an idea, and I'm not quite
sure if it would work, but someone's got a ferret
this out. There has to be a number of people
assigned to the task of going through all of the

(01:58:27):
following the Money show and figure out where it is
and what happens. How about turning loose the eighty seven
thousand new IRASE agents and rather than having them audit
the American people, have them look inwardly and audit the
federal government.

Speaker 11 (01:58:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 19 (01:58:39):
I think that would be a good idea actually, because
they they've never been able to master it. And this
is kind of what Dosa's doing. And you have to
see who the Democrats are on this. The Democrats have Docks,
one of the young men. They've exposed his name and
his address, and they're trying to, you know, get public
outrage and perhaps even violence to stop this young man
from helping. But think of the genius as this young man.

(01:59:02):
He went to somewhere University of Nebraska, and they have
these scrolls that are a couple thousand years old. I
think they're from Israel and they were burned maybe when
the the Roman Siege of sixty eight ADS at two
thousand years old. They were burned, but they're intact and
if you take them, if you try to unroll them,
they fall apart.

Speaker 11 (01:59:21):
With an MRI.

Speaker 19 (01:59:22):
They took MRI of this, they still couldn't figure out
how to read them. He developed a program for automated
artificial intelligence, and he has discovered how to read these
scrolls that are rolled up and burned in two thousand
years old. And that's the kind of genius that is
actually now looking at our federal money to try to
find savings. And what do the Democrats do? They attack

(01:59:42):
his character and it's like, we should be happy that
America still is producing geniuses like this, and we should
be lauding the young man for coming in. I think
Elon said, most of them are not being paid any
kind of real way. They're mostly doing it for their country.

Speaker 1 (01:59:57):
It's a beautiful thing to behold. That is, these are
the critics that they criticize them because of their youth,
in spite of the fact that they are brilliant young people,
brilliant at computer science and understanding coding and artificial intelligence.
And yet they're the part of the advocates for sixteen
year olds getting the right to vote.

Speaker 19 (02:00:13):
Yeah, it's it's insane, but I think it's backfiring them
on them, because you know what they're doing is, you know,
Trump is pushing forward issues that eighty percent of the
public support him on, and the Democrats are clinging to
support for issues that have very small, loud, but very
small minorities.

Speaker 1 (02:00:31):
If you'll allow one moment additional time, Senator Paul I
just wanted to get your reaction on the Trump's tariffs,
most notably the most recent ones on aluminum and steel.

Speaker 19 (02:00:40):
Well, teriffs are taxes, and anytimes you put a tax
on something, you get less of it. So if you
tax trade, you'll get less trade. The trade allows the
average American consumer to save thousands of dollars a year.
So you know, over the years, as people began to
shop at Walmart, you know, it was sad, but the
mom and pop hardware store went away, but each individual
that shopp to Walmart was saving about one thousand dollars

(02:01:02):
a year. So what tariffs will do, if there's enough
of them, is everybody will spend you know, what we
have about a thousand dollars less rich. A good way
to look at this is you say, well, I want
to help the steel industry. So for every worker that
works in a steel industry, there are eighty workers who
work in a steel buying industry. So in our state
we have fence manufacturers that buy a lot of steel.

(02:01:24):
That will mean less income for those people and less
wages for those workers. We have automobile industry, they buy
a lot of steel. We have cement industry, concrete industry,
we build houses. All of those things will be more
expensive because of tariffs. Now, some people will benefit. If
you're one of the thousand workers at a steel plant
in some state, you will benefit by tariffs. But if

(02:01:46):
you add up what it does to the economy by
the time they respond, it ends up being a significant
reduction in income for everybody that we do a lot
of trade with. We do a lot of steel trade
with Canada. We do a lot of lumber trade. Young
people are having trouble buying houses. If you put it
twenty five percent tariff on steel in Canada and they

(02:02:09):
reciprocate or on their lumber, all houses are just going
to go up and be more expensive and harder for
young people to get.

Speaker 1 (02:02:15):
Senator and Paul, appreciate your words, Appreciate your opportunity to
talk with you. I'll look forward to have another conversation
and get back to work faireding out that fraudways, thenbus
a little thanks for having me. Take care, sir. Color
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Speaker 5 (02:02:56):
Fifty five krc your hands work.

Speaker 14 (02:02:59):
Stuff college students.

Speaker 8 (02:03:01):
People are talking about scanning.

Speaker 14 (02:03:03):
We are hammah, just turns my stomach.

Speaker 8 (02:03:06):
Fifty five krs.

Speaker 1 (02:03:07):
The talk station ATO six fifty five KRCD talk station
and a very happy Tuesday. It being Tuesday at eight
oh six, it is that time of week. Get the
inside Scoop with Bright Bart News b R E I
T B A RT dot com book market. You will
be glad you did because you get to read there
the stuff written by Senior Editor at Large Joel Pollock.

(02:03:28):
A return to Joel Pollock. Welcome back, Joel, love having
you on the show.

Speaker 2 (02:03:32):
Well, thank you, good morning to you.

Speaker 1 (02:03:34):
And Shenanigan's declaration for the state of California and the
leftists that run it. Feels so sorry for a lot
of Californians. But they voted what they get what they
voted for, and uh they reaction to Donald Trump and
hitting around sprinting he is fifty million dollars to fight
Donald Trump's agenda in the courtroom. Tell us all about this.

(02:03:55):
I read your article on it over at bright Bart. Joel.

Speaker 2 (02:03:59):
Well, let me just back it up for a second.
So it is true that California as a whole voted
for the mismanagement of Gavin Newsom and the Democrats. That
is true. But I'm going to defend my community here
and say that my community did not vote for wildfires
that destroy the entire town, for fire hydrants that don't

(02:04:22):
have water in them, for police that don't show up
to direct traffic, and an evacuation, for a mayor that
goes overseas when she knows there's an extreme weather event coming.
My part of the town voted for the mayor's opponent,
Rick Caruso, who is a real estate developer who managed

(02:04:42):
to defend his property using private firefighters. So there's some
political diversity in California.

Speaker 1 (02:04:50):
Pockets of sanity, Joel, pockets of sanity.

Speaker 2 (02:04:53):
Yeah, no, but I want to blame my neighbors.

Speaker 1 (02:04:55):
No, no, no, no, And I didn't. I know, it's
paint with a broad brush, Listen. I lived in Chicago
for eight years, man, and it's difficult to be a
conservative there. But you know what, the rest of the
state is more conservative and they feel ill served because
of the massive population. The city of Chicago's corrupt as
it is, but I get it. But on that note, Joel,
while we're there, do the folks that invited this type

(02:05:17):
of mismanagement and have they woken up after the realities
were unfolded the mismanagement, the you know, the misspent money,
the water that isn't flowing, and in the reaction to
the wildfires. Do you think that's going to have an
impact longer term?

Speaker 2 (02:05:32):
Well, it's really just too early and too close to
me personally to speculate about politics. I'll just tell you
what's going on. So, the residents of Pacific Policades are
really waging a valiant fight to rebuild the community after
the wildfires of January and without the intervention of the

(02:05:54):
Trump administration, it would not be happening because the city
and state governments don't know how to build anything, and
they are throwing up all kinds of roadblocks that only
the residents working with the Trump administration have been able
to overcome. And you know, in the beginning, they didn't
want to let people go to their property even to

(02:06:16):
start sifting through the rubble or start clearing it out.
When Trump was here on January twenty fourth, he told
the mayor that residents needed to be let in right away.

Speaker 11 (02:06:25):
So that happened.

Speaker 2 (02:06:27):
Then they can't sort out the system of permits that
would allow the Army Corps of Engineers to start clearing
the debris, or that would let people hire private contractors
to clear the debree from their own sites. That's also
something that Trump administration has had to intervene to do.
And we're still getting the run around from La County.

(02:06:49):
I remember, we have Los Angeles City and Los Angeles County,
two lairs of government, both dysfunctional in their own special way,
and we are having to figure out how to make
them work finally for the benefit of the residents who
want to rebuild. And if they don't work, you're just
going to have empty lots on the most beautiful real

(02:07:09):
estate in the world, really, because this little portion of
Los Angeles is built on a hillside that overlooks the
Pacific Ocean that is at the base of the Santa
Monica Mountains. It's really spectacular and it's an incredible community,
wonderful people. But we've had to band together and help
each other out to figure out how to circumvent the
red tape and how to deal with politicians who are

(02:07:32):
functioning as big city politicians do in Democrat jurisdiction. The
latest scandal is that they hired this consulting firm supposedly
to rebuild the city. They did it behind closed doors.
No one knows what the firm's supposed to do, No
one knows how much they're supposed to earn from this.
And they're from Evanston, Illinois, which is my old stomping ground, which,

(02:07:53):
to ask me, doesn't really know how to manage very
much either. No, these consultants are going to come in
and tell us what to do with our town after
they basically mismanaged Evanston. You know, Evanston didn't even have
a city manager for several years. It's spent one hundred
thousand dollars just on looking for a city manager because
they couldn't find one, and they had one for a while,
but she was too pro police for the Black Lives

(02:08:15):
Matter crowd, so they rejected her. I mean, that's Evanston Illinois,
and what they're going to send us someone and knows
something about rebuilding. They also got tied up in this
corruption scandal during Hurricane Sandy because two of their consultants
were discovered to have defrauded New York City using reimbursements
for housing and for travel expenses. They pleaded guilty. So

(02:08:37):
we were bringing this group in to rebuild LA. It's just nuts.
And I think that we are applying a level of
scrutiny here to these elected officials in California that they've
never actually seen before, because you're right in a sense
that the electorate generally takes what they're given here in
California because they say the right things about social issues.

(02:08:58):
They have the left wing posicians and they fight those
nasty Republicans and the bad Orange Man, but it turns
out the bad Orange Man cares more about the residents
than Democrats do. So I do think people are having
a change of heart. But really we're not focused on
the next election right now. Right now, we're just focused
on clearing the debris and getting the houses going again.

Speaker 1 (02:09:16):
Well and apparently not landscaping recording. The article I read
about Gavin Newsom, he's prohibiting people from planting a vegetation
within five feet of their homes.

Speaker 2 (02:09:27):
Yeah, this is crazy. So clearly Newsen doesn't understand what
caused the fire and how the fire is spread. But
they're gonna blame climate change. They're going to blame vegetation
near people's homes. You know, my house did very well.
We've got lots of plants around our house. My house
did not burn even though it was in the center
of the fire. Oh yeah, that's because some of the

(02:09:48):
vegetation actually kept the fire off the house. So there
are some species evidently that are fire resistant fightus. Trees,
for example, they're very thirsty, they drink a lot of water.
They kind of destroyed my vegetable garden, but they're very
fire resistant for that reason because they store so much
water in their trunks and branches and leaves and so forth,

(02:10:08):
and so telling us what to plant, that's what the
state has decided it needs to do. There's no reevaluation
of overall water policy, overall forestry, emergency services, a crazy
insurance policy that has resulted in insurance companies leaving the
state and dropping consumers. So they're not focused on anything
that really matters. They're just going to try to regulate

(02:10:30):
their way out of the pr crisis that is created
for them.

Speaker 1 (02:10:33):
Well, do you anticipate the rumors were flying in the
during the raging part of the fire's jowl that somehow
this was I don't want to say intentional. There's conspiracy
theorist out there all over, but look, there's all kinds
of dry vegetation, sparks happened, and wildfire's raised. It's been
happening in California for a long time. Hew Bad Religion
wrote a song about it. So you have all this

(02:10:54):
awareness of the potential for fires. But like what happened
in Lehina with those homes that or now they can't
rebuild them the way they originally built, and they're planning
on remaking that entire city into something it wasn't before.
Conveniently they've burned all to the ground. Do you anticipate
these rules and regulations having an impact on maybe the
size of homes and whether or not they can be

(02:11:16):
equipped with, oh, I don't know, gas lines or something.
I mean, is this going to be the fifteen minute
city remaking Joel.

Speaker 2 (02:11:25):
That's what people are afraid of. People are worried about
that kind of intervention. I don't see that happening just yet.
But I do think that they're going to try to
put a stamp, put a kind of liberal or climate
change stamp on whatever the rebuilding is, and they're not
really going to address the fundamental issues, which are the

(02:11:46):
poor design of the water system, the poor design of
some of the roads. For example, there's one part of
town that only has one road in, one road out
for thousands of residents. They're not going to change that.
They're not going to change the Santa Monica Mountain Conservancy
and how they deal with brush and brush clearance and
fire breaks. They need to the residents want them to.

(02:12:08):
So maybe it'll happen if residents continue to be as
active as we've been. But left to their own devices,
the local officials would simply remake California in their image,
and that's the problem. Their policies have led to this disaster.

Speaker 1 (02:12:24):
Well, and the frustrating part for me, just being an
outside observer, that there was a lot of money, literally millions,
if not billions of dollars allocated for clearance projects to
get rid of the brush, to do forest maintenance, responsible
foreigns maintenance, and anytime they try to engage in one
of those projects, environmental groups would pop up and sue
them to stop it in its tracks.

Speaker 2 (02:12:46):
Yeah, there have been huge problems with that. In fact,
fire Credits have told me that they are frustrated with
the fact that environmental groups won't let people clear brush
in certain areas. That would reduce the risks, not eliminated,
but reduce the risk of wildfires to structures and reduce
the risk of the out of control blazes that we've

(02:13:06):
seen where one structure goes up and then there are
embers that fly and hit the next structure. So we
have a problem in California where because of the beautiful
weather and the beautiful natural resources, the coastline, the mountains
and what have you, people get the idea that we
can make life perfect here by creating a utopia. So

(02:13:26):
that's what we plan for. So Gavin Newsom wants to
get rid of all the gas powered cars and have
an electric vehicle future. By twenty thirty five, you can
only buy electric vehicles. But he doesn't think about the
worst case scenario. And actually, the EPA is in my
town right now clearing out electric vehicles because it turns
out that the lithium ion batteries are pretty hazardous and

(02:13:47):
a fire. So it's just a misorientation. The purpose of government,
the first and fundamental purpose, is to protect the lives
and property of the people. So you've got to deal
with that before you deal with whatever pie in the
sky utopia you want to create. Because frankly, we're human
beings and only God can create perfect things. We create

(02:14:08):
imperfect things. And so when we create our imperfect things,
we need to create systems that deal with failure, not
systems that are guaranteed to succeed, because we can't guarantee
anything excellent.

Speaker 1 (02:14:18):
Observation Joe Pollock from Breitbart, do you how do you expect?
And I know many people were kind of caught with
their pants down because they didn't have insurance, They couldn't
afford insurance. Perhaps maybe the insurers left the state because
of the you know, the the outrageous risk analysis there
actually said you know, we shouldn't be here because of
the fire risk. Do you anticipate an exodus of a

(02:14:40):
lot of people. They just going to give up. I
can't rebuild. It's going to take too long. I have
I have to get out of here.

Speaker 2 (02:14:48):
I think a few people will say that, but I
think most people are committed to rebuilding because Specific Palisades
wasn't is such a special place. It really was a
small town in.

Speaker 11 (02:14:58):
La where everybody knew everybody.

Speaker 2 (02:15:00):
Where kids played baseball incessantly in the public park, and
where people went to church on Sunday and the farmers market,
and it's just an idyllic place. People really loved it.
It was a down to earth community. You know. The
New York Times has really defamed us. They've said, oh,
you know, it's a bunch of rich people. Most people
in the town, although they are rich on paper because

(02:15:22):
of the value of the property, they didn't start out rich.
And many of the homeowners, especially the elderly homeowners, bought
right after the Second World War when most of the
housing stock was just two bedroom bungalows. So this is
a town of ordinary people, some extraordinary people, but it's
really just a great American town. And people want to

(02:15:43):
preserve that. So I think most people are going to
try to do that if they can, if the government
doesn't get me away.

Speaker 1 (02:15:49):
Ford Park Company. Joe Pollock, Obviously, this is a This
is so personal to you because you live there in
the heart of where all this happened. It had to
have impacted you psychologically or impacted your life, like the
death of a loved one kind of thing, or like
living through the horrors of World War two. If you were,
you know, in London being bombed, I mean, what how

(02:16:10):
do you cope with that?

Speaker 2 (02:16:11):
Joel? We just move forward. I mean, we're Americans. If
you drive around the town right now, you'll see American flags.
A lot of the destroyed property is a giant's American flag.
I mean it must be like fifty feet by one
hundred feet or something hanging from one of the homes
on the hillside overlooking Sunset Boulevard. You can't drive into

(02:16:31):
town from the east without seeing it. So we're Americans, rebuilt.
We don't give up. But California, sureius trying to make
us do that. But we're not going to give up.

Speaker 1 (02:16:43):
Joel Paul Lock, you've senior at at large Breitbart Bookmarket
Breitbart dot Com. God bless you, Joel. I wish you
all the best of luck in the world helping to
rebuild your community, and I appreciate your optimism in the
face of all this tragedy and all these seemingly insurmountable hurdles.
I wish you all the luck in the world, my friend.

Speaker 2 (02:17:01):
Thank you, sir.

Speaker 1 (02:17:02):
I'll look forward to having me back on the fifty
five Carssee Morning Show real soon. Keep it up, say
nineteen eight twenty to fifty five cars Detalk station Daniel
Davis deep dive bottom of the hours. Zelensky caving to
Trump's offer, Hamas said, no, it's over. We're not going
to give up any more. Hostages and Tulsea Gabbard close
to confirmation. He's a fan. We'll talk to him next.
Don't go away.

Speaker 5 (02:17:21):
Fifty five KARC.

Speaker 1 (02:17:28):
Here, it is your Channel nine first warning weather forecast.
We are in a winter advisory start now and then
last until seven o'clock tomorrow morning. Yes, there's snow today,
but mostly northern Kentucky may be seeing two to three
inches in some areas, but less impactful snow the further
north you go. High A thirty three today down to
twenty nine overnight. Watch out for the slick spots. Did

(02:17:48):
your I start to today? Tomorrow we'll see a high
a forty one, rain rolling in in the afternoon, maybe
a rain snow mix overnight low twenty eight, and then
Thursday is going to be partly cloudy skies with a
high of thirty three. Right now, it is the thirty
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Speaker 1 (02:18:12):
That's boundless care.

Speaker 6 (02:18:13):
You can trust, expect more at you see health dot com.

Speaker 1 (02:18:16):
Sethbound seventy five.

Speaker 6 (02:18:18):
A new accident near Shepherd has the right lane block
that adds to the heavy traffic through Walkland down to
the lateral northbound seventy five slows between Buttermilk and Kyle's
and Mitchell in Town Street. Chuck Ingramont fifty five krc
DE talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:18:35):
A twenty three year fifty five KRCD talk station. Dania
Davis dep Dive coming up next. Got quite a few
topics to talk about with Daniel, and then we're going
to learn about clinical trials going on OHC. Doctor jaidev
Met who's going to join us. He is a medical
oncologist and hematologist with m cancer doctors at OHC. Brilliant folks,
they are so clinical trials apparently the place to be.

(02:18:56):
We're going to hear some I'm sure exciting and positive
news on breakthroughs and cancer research. One more thing we're
talking about I fraudways and abuse today all day. Berano
Morella was on earlier talking about a Senator Paul of
course pivoting over to the outrageous situation in California with
Joel Pollock. But one of the other things they came

(02:19:18):
across the folks over a doge Department of Veteran Affairs
alone just canceled one hundred and seventy eight thousand dollars
in subscriptions to Politico Pro. If you're familiar with political
it's an online left winging leaning rag news dump site,
and they really really are a left wing But according

(02:19:39):
to the information reporting by Fox News, the cancelation comes
after Trump's administration revealed that the federal government collectively paid
over eight million dollars to Politico in subscription fees in
recent years, So keep your popcorn out. The plug has
now been pulled, and I suspect someday I'm gonna go

(02:20:00):
to politico dot com and click on it and I'm
gonna get a four oh four. One can only hope. Boy,
they spend their money in every kind of way you
can think of, in many ways you can't even imagine
or come up with. Eight twenty five. Right now, stick around.
Daniel Davis is up next.

Speaker 5 (02:20:15):
Fifty five krc A.

Speaker 1 (02:20:18):
Twenty eight to fifty five KRCD talk station. Happy Tuesday.
It's that time of the week where we get to
do a deep dive. It's the Daniel Davis Deep Dive.
Search for it. You'll find podcasts and the retired lieutenant
colonel loves talking about Ukraine and this in Russia. Welcome back, Daniel,
my dear friend. Good to see you. Good Tuesday morning.

Speaker 11 (02:20:37):
Till you.

Speaker 1 (02:20:37):
How are you, Brian. I'm doing well. I'm doing really well.
Now I help me make sense of this. Donald Trump
says we need to stop you and we want the
war to end. I mean, he says it over and
over again. He wants to stop the war. I get
that I hope the war gets ended. I don't want
to see loss of human life anymore, and I sure
as hell don't want to see billions and billions of
additional dollars flowing into Ukraine. And you and I have

(02:20:58):
talked many times about the the virtual, if not genuine,
impossibility of Ukraine prevailing over Russia, and Russia keeps making
more and more inroads. That's established. So Trump told reporters
last week, I'd like to see that war. And we're
looking to do a deal with Ukraine where they're going
to secure what we're giving them with their rare earth

(02:21:19):
and other things, meaning the minerals. And they have a
very large mineral supply in Ukraine from what I understand,
so they have something to bargain with. But that sounds
like in return for US giving them more weaponry, they're
at least gonna pay for it with with minerals. Is
that doesn't sound like an end of the war. That
sounds like an extension of it.

Speaker 21 (02:21:36):
Well, let's it's it's really unspecific what the administration intends
with the deal, A deal to do what that's what's
literally not been speculating, either by Zelensky or by Trump team,
because on the one hand, it seems to me and
trying to read between the lines, that Trump is saying
that we're gonna help you guys achieve an end of

(02:21:57):
the war. I won't say peace, but certainly an the
war on terms that maybe you can like as long
as I get something out of it. I don't see
him even implying Trump I'm talking about that he would
continue to support the war to get minerals, that there
would be some kind of a military victory for him.
So that's the way I think, and I think that
that's the most plausible, even for Zelensky, if he can

(02:22:20):
hang on to anything. I think the hope is that
Trump will negotiates some kind of an end of war
termination deal that is at least tolerable to the key
of side. But Brian, I don't think that there's a
deal like that to be had. So I think that everybody,
from Zelensky to Trump and everybody else who's trying to
get this kind of a deal is going to be
surprised how it turns out.

Speaker 1 (02:22:40):
If that is what they're thinking. Well, I would imagine,
you know, we rebuilt Germany and we've been trading partners
with him since World War Two that after this war
is concluded. However, it gets concluded, and I think you
and I agree that it's going to require some major
concessions of land to the Russians, but that we would
be a trading partner with what's left to Ukraine, we'd

(02:23:00):
be happy to buy their minerals.

Speaker 21 (02:23:03):
Well, certainly, I think that's what he's trying to bank on.
But the problem is if the deal doesn't also include
the Russian side of this, and if they're not also
in agreement with how it turns out, that's where the
big disappointments are going to come in at the moment.
The majority of where these theoretical minerals actually are or
potential because some of them are literally married buried miles

(02:23:27):
under the ground. So it's not like they can just
go to the bank and make a you know, a
withdrawal of these minerals, and it takes a lot of
a lot of lead time, and I mean it'd be
multiple years before you could actually mine enough of this stuff,
reprocess it, et cetera. And a majority that's under areas
already controlled by the Russians, and the way things are
going there even more that's going to be done. So

(02:23:48):
if you want to make a deal because you want
to get something for the United States afterwards or whatever.
If you'r Zelensky you want to make a deal, you
also have to be able to look at the other
half of that equation. Will the Russians agree to that deal?
Because right now they're in a position of power to
they can come closer to dictating terms than anybody in
the West or in Kiev.

Speaker 1 (02:24:08):
All right, fair enough, it's not going to get over today.
We know that Daniel Davis pivoting over Hamas's I guess
through with the deal. They claimed Israel violated the terms
and conditions of the ceasefire. What has been troubling me
is they freed twenty one hostages, and they're not in
very good shape, as we saw the other day. They
have obviously been starved and mistreated. But the Israelis have

(02:24:30):
given up seven hundred and thirty Palestinians. They were supposed
to give several hundred more this weekend in return for
three more of the hostages that Hamas is holding. And
I think some are speculating, I believe Donald Trump himself
wondering whether the many of those hostage are even still
alive given the poor condition of the ones they released.

Speaker 21 (02:24:49):
Well, look, there's been a strange way for these hostages
to come out. You may recall that when I think
the first batch of four women hostages were released, they
were actually in very good help. So it seems that
there is the Palestinians for or the Hummas rather for
whatever their own motives are. Feed some and treat some
well and some not. It seems like the men were

(02:25:09):
not treated well and the women were. There's some reports
that the Palestinians were saying, hey, you know you've been
starving us. You've been keeping the food for our people,
so we're gonna do the same thing to your hostage
as something like that.

Speaker 13 (02:25:22):
But it's it's really hard for me to see.

Speaker 21 (02:25:24):
How the Humas side benefits from slowing this down and
changing three for as you said, they could get hundreds
more in return, So I don't know what their play
is here. But it's again you talk about leverage and
who's got it. They don't seem to have a lot
of leverage and not much to gain that I'm seeing,
So it's a bit of a head scratcher for me.

Speaker 1 (02:25:43):
I guess they're they're really inviting Isra to launch military
action again.

Speaker 21 (02:25:48):
I mean, that's I mean, you know, and there's already
a lot of talk about that, that's what's coming anyway.
And Trump is not been very shy about talking about,
you know, that he's gonna help Israel. And there was
a huge i think like nearly seven billion dollar new
aid package talking about going out the door. So it
wouldn't seem that Hamas would have some motivation to help
that along to their demise. So maybe there's something else

(02:26:10):
going on here. I can't see, because what we can
see just doesn't really make a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 (02:26:15):
Well, and something else doesn't make a whole lot of
sense to me. Trump's talking about owning Gaza, and he
speaks about it in pretty stark terms. But what I
wanted to pivot over to it is a nightmarish landscape
in Gaza. All the images we get out of it,
it's just it just seems uninhabitable. It does.

Speaker 21 (02:26:35):
And I think that that's one thing that the West
needs to get a deeper understanding of, and especially Trump
and his negotiating team that to the Palestinian people, even
that landscape, that hellish landscape, that Trump accurately describes is
their identity. And you know, Trump was saying, look, I mean,
I'll see this stuff, how would anybody want to live there?

(02:26:56):
We want to give them a nice place somewhere else
in Jordan, Egypt, elsewhere to go to. But it's not
about where you you know, the kind of living you
want to have.

Speaker 1 (02:27:04):
It's about where their ancestral homeland is.

Speaker 21 (02:27:06):
So if people think that they will willingly go somewhere
for a better land, I think they're going to be
disappointed because they don't want to go anywhere else. They
just want their land, and right now they're apparently willing
to die for it. So we need to be sure
we understand how serious they are about not wanting to leave. Well,
and I think the Egyptians and Georganians are full on
record saying they don't want the Palestinians even for a

(02:27:28):
short period of time.

Speaker 1 (02:27:30):
Yeah, they're not.

Speaker 21 (02:27:30):
And because people don't understand also that And I was
looking at some rewarts literally just a few minutes before
we came on air that Jordan has taken in somewhere
close to three million Palestinians over the years already, and
another nearly one million Syrian refugees from that civil war,
and so they are bursting at the seams. They simply
can't take anymore, certainly not in any large numbers. So

(02:27:53):
if Trump's thinking he's going to pressure them, which I
think he said to Brett Behar on that Super Bowl review,
I don't think that they're going to be a to
And apparently King Jordan, King of Jordan, is going to
talk to Trump, I think as early as tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (02:28:05):
Yeah, I do believe he's He's in town for a
meeting here in Washington, d C. If I read that correctly, Abdullah, Yeah, yeah,
all right, And finally looks like Tulsea Gabbard's gonna get it,
gonna gonna gonna get the approval. And I know you
feel pretty good about that one. I do.

Speaker 11 (02:28:22):
I do.

Speaker 21 (02:28:23):
Yeah, she's uh heading to I think that the Senate
had what they call kloachure yesterday that basically paved the
final way the final vote will be I think like
just a couple of hours from now, and by all
estimations are she's going to pass through that uh and
then be sworn in as the Director of National Intelligence tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (02:28:42):
Well, that'll put a smile on your pace based on
all the comments you've made on the morning.

Speaker 21 (02:28:45):
Show, and it should do you know what, It should
put a smile on everybody's face in America because, as
I say, I think that's the best pick that Trump
made of any of his senior advisor positions the government
because of her her capabilities to do the job.

Speaker 1 (02:28:59):
I think it's gonna be a big win for Trump
and the US. Every Tuesday in the fifty five Carsee
Morning Show, The Daniel Davis Deep Die with the retired
Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. You can find the podcast at
fifty five car se dot com. Until next week, my friend,
have a wonderful week. God bless you, shit, God bless you, sir.
A thirty seven E thirty eight to fifty five KR
City Talks Station and coming up on Ask the Expert,

(02:29:20):
we get one of the great doctors from OHC today
it's doctor Jay jedev Metu who is a medical on
colleges and hematologist to talk about clinical trials and hopefully
give us some great news about some new treatment protocols
and some positive information in the fight for cancer because
cancer sucks. Eight thirty eight to fifty five KRC Detalk Station.

Speaker 4 (02:29:40):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station a u Lin.

Speaker 1 (02:29:45):
They know going the extra mile to one more time
for the nine first one to Weatherfole casts. Today we're
in the middle of the snow advisory Tillmorrow Tomorrow morning
at seven am, and the snow probably in northern Kentucky
for the most part, may see two or three inches
in some areas less as you move north. Today's high
thirty three, over night low of twenty nine. Tomorrow we'll
see high forty one. It'll be dry to start the day,

(02:30:06):
but later in the afternoon evening they'd say some showers
could show up. Media snow rain mix over night low
on Tomorrow night twenty eight and thirty three is going
to be the high on Thursday, with partly fidy skies
closing out of thirty four degrees. Time for final traffic.
Chuck Ingram from the UCLT Tramphing Center.

Speaker 6 (02:30:22):
For more than two hundred years, the experts at UC
Health I've been giving heart patients and chance for better outcomes.
That's boundless care. You can trust expect more at uc
heelp dot com. Cruise continue to work with an accident
westbound seventy four. It's A two seventy five at the
coal rings split well left side's block, so you have
to go all the way over to the right shoulder
in order to get by southbound seventy five slows through.

(02:30:46):
Walkman Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC. The talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:30:53):
A forty four I fifty five krcdcalk station. Happy Tuesday,
Great day to be tuned in, Perfect time to be
tuned in. You probably have been impacted by cancer some way,
shape or form, and I think everybody knows somebody who's
having to deal with cancer, and my listeners all know
that I'm dealing with lymphoma. And my doctors are OHC
so happy to be in their hands and provide a

(02:31:13):
wonderful care and treatment for me over the years, and
I feel well. I'm always uplifted and positive to talk
to the doctors from OHC because they're always giving me
good news about new treatment protocols and exciting things that
are happening, and most notably in the area of clinical trials,
and they're really big. They're doing clinical trials all the
time at OHC. To learn more or get a second opinion,

(02:31:34):
their phone numbers is eight eight eight six four ninety
eight hundred. You find them online at ohcare dot com.
And I'm pleased to have in studio doctor Jaidev Metu
to talk about the clinical trials. Doctor Metu is a
medical oncologist and hematologist. Good to have you in the studio.

Speaker 13 (02:31:47):
Doctor, good morning, Thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (02:31:49):
Got exciting news for my listening audience today. I bet
clinical trials that's the way it's now. I always like
to establish that when you're in a clinical trial, and
I've heard this before, so I don't think I'm going
to say something that's not right here. You're not like
a lab rat. You know, this isn't just some brand
new out of the gate. You know we're going to
use you as a to experiment on kind of thing.

Speaker 14 (02:32:10):
Right.

Speaker 13 (02:32:11):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 11 (02:32:12):
So.

Speaker 13 (02:32:12):
For the most part, when people participate in clinical trials,
people are randomized to either the standard of care, and
most clinical trials the goal for that is to improve
on the standard of care. So a lot of times
you have people who are going to get what would
be recommended by the NCCN or National Comprehensive Cancer Network

(02:32:34):
and on the clinical trial ARM is typically an investigational
agent which is hoping to improve on that.

Speaker 1 (02:32:42):
Okay, So the treatment I got retucin. Sitting there, I
get a drip bag and that's what I got. A
clinical trial would be retucin, which is the standard of
care for the lomphoma, plus another drug.

Speaker 13 (02:32:58):
Typically yes, or or sometimes a completely new drug altogether.
Oh really, which would be compared against retuxin, for example,
to try and improve or better retuccin.

Speaker 1 (02:33:10):
Okay, fair enough, that makes sense. So the benefits of
being in a clinical trial specifically.

Speaker 13 (02:33:16):
So plenty of benefits, Like we just mentioned, receiving cutting
edge care often not available anywhere else. Typically when you're
on a trial, there's a very stringent schedule, so you
get extra labs imaging, and that could put you at
peace of mind. And at the end of the day,

(02:33:37):
the whole goal is to advance research and help someone
else down the line. So participating in a clinical trial
is the way medicine will advance and hopefully help someone.

Speaker 1 (02:33:48):
Help and save the world, one clinical trial at a time.
How does the OEHC handle cancer research for their cancer patients?

Speaker 13 (02:33:54):
So any person who walks through the door and has
a cancer diagnosis is to screened for clinical trials. We
educate our patients on the availability of their trials, whether
they'd be eligible or not, and what are the benefits
and risks associated with that. And that's how we talk

(02:34:16):
to them about the trials and see if they qualify
for them.

Speaker 1 (02:34:20):
Qualify, and then a form of informed consent by giving
them all the information they have the option of like Okay, yes,
that sounds like a good idea for me, or no,
I want to go with just the plan on standard
of care treatment, absolutely great. Now what are the This
is where we get the good part. What are the
newest trials that people need to know about that are
going on? There? These cutting edge treatments.

Speaker 13 (02:34:41):
So just a few examples, we have the Flamingo breast
cancer vaccine.

Speaker 1 (02:34:45):
Trial Flamingo, Yes, after the bird. Correct, how did he
get that name?

Speaker 13 (02:34:50):
You should ask the trial. We have what's called an
Alpha three trial or to check for minimal residual disease
and cancer results. We have multiple byte therapy trials and
carte cell trials. But what's important to note is OIGHTC
is associated with Satacanin Research Institute, so that by virtue

(02:35:14):
gives us access to actually hundreds of trials across the
network and based on the screening process we just talk,
we can actually start even a single patient on one
of those trials.

Speaker 2 (02:35:28):
If oh.

Speaker 1 (02:35:30):
Huh, then you're consolidating the data with other single individuals
out there around that are going the same protocol. Correct.

Speaker 13 (02:35:37):
So for the most part, these are multinational trials across
the globe, depends upon how advanced agent is and how
many patients they're looking to accrue, but it can be
all across America and sometimes all across the world where
they're trying to accrue patients for these trials.

Speaker 1 (02:35:54):
So that shared that's a really interesting component because it
seems like often medicine is a clue. You don't want
to share what the information is. You want to be
the only one in the block that has this specific
treatment because of course that benefits you from a profit standpoint,
But you're sharing all this collective data with everybody else. Absolutely, Yes,
that's a wonderful concept. Now, I got to go back

(02:36:14):
to this alpha alpha three MRD test check for residual
cancer cells. Is that sort of like after you've been
through treatment, you have you might have cancer still floating
around in your body.

Speaker 13 (02:36:26):
Correct, So basically we're looking for cancer DNA specifically, and
we've advanced in testing to be able to actually pick
that up.

Speaker 1 (02:36:37):
Okay, because that may lead to someone the cancer reoccurring possibly, Yes, okay,
all right, and I go back to what's the Flamingo
breast cancer vaccine tra How is this a different treatment
protocol and does it work for later stage breast cancer?

Speaker 13 (02:36:53):
So it's actually in patients who've already been treated for
breast cancer and doing well. And this is compared to
observation and from the data we have at least at
this time being patients on the trial are doing better,
but more to come.

Speaker 1 (02:37:09):
All right, And then cart that's sort of the designer
like they check your genetics and they create an agent
that targets your specific type of cancer in your body.
If I got that right. I've heard a lot about
these over the years, and sometimes I get the different
types of treatments.

Speaker 13 (02:37:28):
So briefly speaking, we actually harvest a patient's own tea celts.
Then those actually go to a lab they're modified to
target the cancer cells, and after that we reinfuse the
patient's own T cells to fight the cancer.

Speaker 1 (02:37:46):
Is that a long process to do that?

Speaker 13 (02:37:48):
It can be a few weeks. Yes, that's one of
the things that they're looking to improve on is the
time between harvesting and giving to patients the treatment.

Speaker 1 (02:37:58):
But you know, in the grand of things, weeks is
not that long if you're getting this tailored drug or
tailored treatment, and the results have been, from what I understand,
pretty astounding. Yes, well, that's good news right there. Why
does everybody care about clinical trials for cancer?

Speaker 13 (02:38:17):
Because of the prevalence of cancer, everyone will at some
point encounter it, whether it's themselves, their parents, their family members,
a friend, or maybe even a coworker. So it's important
that they know what their options are for treatment, and
one of those options includes clinical trials, and it should

(02:38:38):
be an automatic step to research what trials are available.
And also at OITC as well, that's just a part
of how we provide care to our patients.

Speaker 1 (02:38:48):
All right, Well, you obviously save lives at OHC, and
I think that has got to be a real inspiration
for you to come to work every day because I've
been in the treatment room for my bag and it
is a quite depressing environment, sir, and I always looked
around me and I thought, you know what, I think

(02:39:08):
I probably hit the lottery of cancers. Given that it's
lymphom I don't have to worry about metastisation. And I
look arouns across the room and I see some poor
woman there getting four different bags. You know, she's lost
her hair because of the irradiation treatment, and it's just
it's sad to see. I know you're doing great work there,
but boy, that's got to be a tough thing. Get
up and go to bed when you know you're dealing

(02:39:29):
with literally you're dealing with death. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:39:32):
Absolutely, it's not easy no matter how long you do it. It
never gets easy to give a patient like a terminal
diagnosis and things on those lines. But that's kind of
the whole goal of research, right, Eventually a goal is
to kind of beat.

Speaker 1 (02:39:49):
Cancer and put yourself out of business.

Speaker 13 (02:39:52):
Well, I wouldn't be unhappy about that.

Speaker 1 (02:39:54):
Yeah, I knew you're going to say that because you're smart,
you're obviously a brilliant doctor, and you'll find something else
to do if you cure cancer. So yeah, that's that's
okay with me. I think that's wonderful. Okay, Well, I'll
tell you what. It's been a fascinating conversation on clinical
Piles about trials with doctor jeddev Matt two, one of
the excellent doctors at OHC, and uh, do me a favor.

(02:40:16):
Tell doctor Patel that. Brian said, Hi. If you run
into Waterhouse, tell doctor Waterhouse. Brian said hi too. Those
are wonderful, wonderful folks. So if you need a second opinion,
if you've got cancer and you're concerned about the level
of care you're getting, maybe you want to want to
look into one of these clinical trials. OHC is doing
them all the time. It's eight eight eight six eight

(02:40:36):
hundred eight eight eight six four ninety eight hundred online
ohcare dot com.

Brian Thomas News

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