Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five o five and fifty five k r C the
talk station Happy Tuesdays.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
I'm the Dude Man.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
And I'm Brian Thomas. It's to the fifty five KRC
Morning Show and looking forward. Having bring mccount from the
Hudson's Too back in studio, can be talking about Iron's
nuclear aspirations among other things. Also his latest Charged Conversation podcast,
need to check that one out. Also the UN and
their energy failures. There's quite a few articles this morning
(00:51):
about the moving away from this whole climate change thing.
I know Donald Trump recently withdrew the waiver given to
the state of California to force everybody getting electric vehicles,
which is a pretty bad idea. Also saw an article
that they're actually they pollute more than an internal combustion
(01:12):
engine when you consider manufacturing all the way through final use.
But anyhow, I'll dig that one out if we need
it later. So that's Brigher mccounty in studio at seven
oh five, followed by the Daniel Davis Deep Dive at
eight thirty. Notice they didn't say anything about the Bright
Bart inside Soups scoops. Sadly they didn't get back with
Joe kind of bummed about that. I just enjoy talking
to the bright bart folks. So Daniel Davis, of course
(01:34):
we will get an update on rushing Ukraine. But yes,
added to the list, and I certainly expected to see
Iran in Israel on the list. Got lots of developments
on that to talk about this morning. Then we get
here from Rhino Shield. Todd from rhinos Shield, and I listened.
You know, I support the products that I represent, and
I've got the Rhino Shield from my daughter and her
fiances barn on the farm at They did a hell
(01:59):
of a nice job on that, considering the state the
barn was in before Rhino Shield showed up. No fault
of my daughter. They bought the place that way. Yeah,
and I don't know who it was. It's decided mustard
yellow was a good color for a barn. It's a
beautiful moss green now it blends into the scenery anyway. Well, sorry,
(02:20):
Rhino shield looks great. Ah, Okay, what's going on here?
You feel free to call you got something you want
to talk about? Five one three, seven, four nine fifty
eight hundred eight two three talk pound five fifty on
eighteen and T phones. I always remember never forget podcast
at five caresee dot com get your iHeartMedia up there
so you can listen wherever you happen to be to
all the iHeart content, and of course take a listen
(02:40):
to the Smith event every Monday with the former Vice
mayor of the City of Cincinnati. Israel's at it again.
I had more bombing yesterday, brand new waves strikes pounding
central Tehran, and a friend of mine right after it
was making the rounds on the news sentiment the video
of the anchor in Iran's state run television headquarters doing
(03:03):
the news only to have to evacuate when Israel blew
the place up. So at war is not fun. War
is not comical, but I gotta admit it made me
chuckle when I saw it happen. The debris flew all
over this live broadcast and she had to evacate the premises. Also,
(03:24):
Iran did fire another way of missiles into Israel and
they killed eight people, at least that's what's widely reported.
At least eight people were killed. So meanwhile, Trump's up
of the Group of Seven in summit in Canada, they
were trying to figure out ways to end this conflict.
Trump make it headlines early in the summit, warning Iran
(03:44):
that it must have submit to a deal but ending
its nuclear program period. End of story. Speaking with reporters,
Trump said, you know, Irani leaders would now like to talk,
but they should have done that before I had sixty days.
They had sixty days, and on the sixty first day,
I said, well, we don't have a deal without saying it.
(04:07):
Of course, that's the sixty first day was when Israel
started dropping bombs on Iran, launching its tack from both
within and without. He said, they have to make a deal,
and it's painful for both parties. But I'd say Iran
is not winning this war. And I suppose that's a
reasonable conclusion to reach by the President of United States
of America. Since Israel now dominates the Iranian airspace, they're
(04:30):
apparently free to fly in and out without any threat
from the Iranians. That's a pretty impressive improvement, right or
development right there. Trump also said, what a shame waste
of human life. Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran. Well that's
a pretty bold statement considering the size of the city
and the number of people that live there. He also
(04:51):
left a day early, said he had stuff to do
back here, obviously in connection with problems in the Middle East,
he said, because of what's going on in the Middle East.
That's why he left the G seven summit early. And
then here's a problem that I've got now, Pentagon said.
The USS Knimts aircraft carriers heading over the region should
(05:14):
be there by the end of the month. US is
not joined in the combat yet. There's a report from
the war zone. It's a military aviation outlet. At least
twenty eight powerful US Air Force tankers described as KC
one five R Strato tankers and KC forty six Pegasus
(05:35):
jets seen crossing the Atlantic Sunday night. Open source enthusiast
took to social media after all the tankers began popping
up on flight tracking software. It said, at its peak,
it appeared that at least twenty eight tankers were all
heading east.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
Now, they did point out.
Speaker 3 (05:54):
There is a multinational exercise going on in Norway that's
about to kick off. I guess wargames are going to
be played. They suggest though that it wouldn't require anything
like this level of relocation of refueling assets. These, I
guess are airplanes that you know, refuel jet fighters who
can only have a limited capacity of fuel.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
You need to refuel in the air.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
They also say on the other these these are precisely
the assets that would be needed if the United States
were going to change its support of Israel's Operation Rising Lion,
or if there are urgent concerns the conflict is about
to widen significantly. Now join that comment with a comment
from Donald Trump that you know, everybody in Tehran needs
to get out. That's a bit of a concern, isn't it.
(06:40):
And I saw a Facebook post by Congressman Thomas Massey
about we do not need to be, nor should we be,
joining this conflict. It would require congressional action, which is
a point that I agree with. Can you talk about
No King's rallies? You know, I find I kind of
(07:01):
thought that those rallies were rather preposterous. I'm not quite
sure what they were predicated on, what other people were
out there protesting, but clearly it was it was directed
at Donald Trump. But you know, presidents don't have unilatteral
authority to get US involved in war. Tim Kin to
West Virginia, and he's done this before, introduced legislation yesterday
(07:24):
to prevent Trump from using military force against iron without
Congress's authorization. Well, is that really even necessary? I mean,
this is something Congressman Asking and I have talked about before,
as well as my conversations with Judge the Polotana the constitution.
Since who has the power to declare war? And there
(07:47):
is no such thing in the consultation as a use
of military force or an authorization for use of military force,
it's not a declaration of war. It's something slightly less
than him. But it does give the president huge leeway.
How many years are we in Vietnam? No declaration of war? Korea?
Speaker 1 (08:09):
I mean, I could go on now.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
It during Trump's first term that Tim Cane of Virginia
introduced a similar resolution to reign in the ability to wage.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
War against Iran.
Speaker 3 (08:21):
It passed both the Senate and House and got some
Republican support as well. However, not enough votes to survive
the president's veto, which is kind of odd. You know,
the Constitution says who declares war? They introduced a resolution
basically saying what the Constitution already says, and then the
(08:43):
president can veto it, meaning we're back where well I
would argue, we're back to what the Constitution says, we
all know how fast and loose are elected officials and
presidents plural both sides play with the Constitution. Kayes said
his latest war Powers resolution underscores that the US Constitution
(09:04):
gives Congress, not the President of the sole power to
declare war and requires that any hostility with Iran be
explicitly authorized by a declaration of war or specific authorization
for the use of military force. Again not quite a declaration,
but still gets us involved in war, which I personally
have a problem with. In a statement, he said, it's
(09:24):
not in our national security interest to get into a
war with Iran unless that war is absolutely necessary to defend.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
The United States.
Speaker 3 (09:35):
I'm concerned the recent escalation of hostilities between Israel and
IRANQA quickly pull the United States into another endless conflict,
and there are politicians out there saying we should join
in the fight.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
Now.
Speaker 3 (09:53):
Apparently these war powers resolutions authorizations of use of military force.
This Senate has required to consider it on the matter. Yeah,
there is an order to things, and there's an obligation
and a need. You know, it's crazy just when you
(10:17):
look at Congress generally speaking, how little they're able to accomplish,
and how overwhelmed with Trump arrangement syndrome that they have gotten,
such that there is I mean, very few Democrats and
Republicans will vote on the same thing. It could be
any topic, but if one side raises it as a
good idea, the other side is immediately going to be
against it and say no, regardless of how good of
(10:38):
the idea might be. And you know that there is
no way you could get a declaration of war approved
by Congress. I wonder where the political divide would follow
on that one. Anyway, Ron, apparently signaling that it does
(11:00):
want to end hostilities hmmm, sent messages to Israel and
the United States via Arab intermediaries. I wouldn't call it
a plea, but they're interested in resuming talks over the
nuclear program hmm. Mids of Israeli's air campaign. Tehran has
(11:21):
told Arab officials it would be open to returning to
the negotiation table as long as the United States doesn't
join the attack. Everybody's got their line in the sand
on this, don't they. Irod apparently also passed the message
to Israel, saying that it is in the interest of
both sides that keep the violence contained well. Of course,
(11:43):
Iron might say that considering they seem to be on
the losing side of the this this this conflict. If
I may be so bold, Israel's already destroyed I guess
one third of their their their missile launching capabilities, busy,
busy bombing and continuing to bomb the nuclear facilities Iran.
(12:05):
Apparently Israel is interested in acquiring our mother of all bombs,
the bunker busting bombs, and it kind of shocks me
they don't have those already. Question will we provide them
with the military hardware if they request it while staying
out of the conflict directly. I mean, we sell missiles
and we give away missiles in hardware all the time.
(12:28):
See Ukraine and the billions and billions of dollars in
military aid we provided them. Yet we're not in that conflict, unless,
of course, you look at the boots on the ground
that are operating more sophisticated weapons systems in Ukraine. And yes,
that requires US service people to do it, folks with
security clearances. So I guess we kind of are in
(12:51):
that conflict. That's something I've talked about with Daniel Davis previously.
It's a crazy world. We live in You got your
opinions and thoughts on this?
Speaker 1 (12:58):
What do you think?
Speaker 3 (12:58):
Feel free to give me a call three seven hundred
and eighty two to three talk to five fifty on
eight and t phones.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Be right back.
Speaker 4 (13:06):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station, our hyard rack.
Speaker 5 (13:17):
Here.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
He is your channel nine first one and one four cast. Today.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
We got scattered showers and storms. We have serious lightning
and storms out there when I was driving in this morning. Anyway,
scattered showers and storms later today, best chance after two
pm downpours and uh well rain seventy nine for the
high today. Overnight low sixty eight with chance of storms
fading after sunset. More scattered showers than storms tomorrow and
(13:43):
best chances between noon and sunset. Very humid day eighty
five considered a few more like ninety one with humidity
factored in. Sixty nine overnight low with showers continuing and
scattered thunderstorms predicted for Thursday as well, with.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
A high of eighty one.
Speaker 3 (13:58):
Seventy two degrees. Right now, fifty five karriseee the talk station.
That's five twenty two at fifty five k SEV talks station.
After this this vance, Luthor Bolter, Guy, the murderer, the
(14:18):
killer of politicians, got everybody all wigged out. Apparently Congressman
Landsman Greg Lansman was on the list, or at least
mentioned in the notes they found in this guy's possession.
Just Trekker editorial comments last month in an op ed
he was afraid to be shot by Magas supporters. Now
(14:40):
he has to be afraid of his own party. They
do seem to be the party of violence, don't they.
I mean, you take out January sixth, if you want
to call that a violin insurrection, I don't. I'd always
refer to it as a drunken fraternity party gotten out
of hand. But whatever, that's where your gin FDFBI statistics
(15:03):
came from. You break those down, you look at the
number of right wing incidents or incidents of violence instigated
by members on the conservative side of the Ledger. They
include every single human being who showed up in the
Capitol building, increasing the numbers might I don't say exponentially,
but that's where the vast majority of those numbers and
statistics came from. But everywhere you look around you I'm
(15:26):
i antifave violent, absolutely leftist, absolutely admittedly so same the
way the Black Lives Matter, the anti police demonstrations, the
No Kings rallies, the Los Angeles riots, I mean, these
aren't exactly conservative. Might of individuals taking to the streets
and burning things down and attacking ice agents. And oddly enough,
(15:50):
there's a new Rasmussen pull out. I know polls between
eighth and June and the June twelfth, Rasmussen surveyed seventeen
hundred and seventy two likely voters, Trump enjoying an overall
fifty three percent job approval rating, including fifty four percent
approval from Black voters and fifty three percent support from
(16:11):
Hispanic voters. How did hell that happen? John Nolty over
Breitbart kind of opined on that Democratic Party points out,
has become the party of white, wealthy elites, primarily emotionally
unstable and neurotic white women who can easily be convinced
(16:35):
to believe anything but God. Democrat parties embrace crazy on immigration, crime,
gay and trans issues, and now their coalition is fracturing
to the benefit of the Republican Party, especially Trump. Better Still,
he points out, here's the point that I actually wanted
to get to Democrats are trapped.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
They have to appease.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
Their extremist loans or face a complete political collapse. Hum
the left has lost the people, so violence is all
they've got left. Maybe something to that anyway, we also
been nor The Carolina State Democrat got a lot of
(17:16):
heat on social media for the posts that she posted
speaking of us during the pot of Violence. State Representative
Julie van Heffen posted an image on her ex social
media account. Had to deactivate the entire account following the
public outcry. Posts showed a woman holding up a sign
(17:36):
that read quote in these difficult times, some cuts may
be necessary, along with the image of a guillotine opposite
side of the sign two human head props, one of
which appear to bear the likeness of President Donald Trump,
the other head a Nazi swastika written on his forehead.
(17:57):
She addressed the controversy after moving her entire account.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
Yesterday.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
I posted on a video on social media containing crowds
of photos from the New King's protest in Raleigh. One
are the images of a process or holding a sign
was inappropriate and I later edited the video to remove
the photo.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Well, bully, let.
Speaker 3 (18:14):
Me be clear, I condemned political violence in all forms.
My focus remains on bringing people together and fighting for
the values that met her to North Carolinians. Like so many,
I was horrified by the violence in Minnesota. There is
no place for that kind of extremism in our democracy.
No out of the target, no maut of the party.
Speaker 2 (18:33):
Whatever.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
Thank you, Liam. Exactly what I was thinking of. Reminds
me of Connie Pillach pulling out her social media posts
encouraging everyone to show with the New King's Rally and
attacking Donald Trump, Who's inciting violence in this country? Five
twenty six, iify five k CIT detalk station. Local stories
coming up, alternatively phone called. You know, I prefer the
(18:54):
phone calls, but I'm happy to do the local stories.
Hang around me right back.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
Fifty five KRC. This edition of the Channel nine. I
got scattered showers and storms. Best chance after.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
Two pm seventy nine for the high today. Overnight lowis
sixty eight, mostly clotty and muggy. Storm chances they say
they go away after sunset. Anyhow, Scattered showers and storms
tomorrow as well, noon and after very humid day they're
calling for as well.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
Eighty five for a high overnight LOTT.
Speaker 3 (19:26):
Sixty nine with showers and storms and a scattered shower
of thunderstormy day on Thursday as well with a hive
of eighty one seventy two degrees. Right now for the
five KARROSEG Talk Station five thirty five hundred and eighty
two three Talk PIP five fifty on AT and T phones.
There's your phone numbers and oh look there's Tom.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Tom. Welcome to the morning. She always good to hear
from you.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
Yeah, good morning. On my way to work again, paying
attention to this, Uh sof you're talking about this morning
about fighting the violence and and the riots and selves
and all that and what what can be done about it.
I've heard multiple different people throw this out there and
it seems seems logical, but it's it's getting people to
(20:13):
actually do it. And it's understandable. WI some somebody at
some point has to, within their legal rights, has to
take one of these people out, these rioters. If if
you've got somebody standing in front of you, you're a
law enforcement officer, and they're throwing something at you that
could very easily be considered a deadly object, you have
(20:35):
every right to put that person down. And I know
that's rough, that that that's harsh. I understand that, but
you know, again, they're threatening your life. They're throwing chunks
of concrete at you, or a Molotov cocktail or whatever.
And you know, I've also heard it suggested that you know,
getting you know, who is somebody on here says somethingbout
(20:57):
rubber bullets something. But you have to ask the individual,
the l law enforcement officer to do that. And that's tough.
That's a very tough thing to do, especially in LA
in California, where more than likely you'll be prosecuted if
you do take someone out. Yeah, that's a that's a
(21:18):
very tough decision to have to make, and that I
don't I don't waste that on anybody.
Speaker 3 (21:22):
Well, and only you got to remember, Tom, that only
in the absolute cleanness of circumstances where there is absolutely
no question whatsoever that the officer or an individual's life
is in peril, grievous bodily harm or eminent apprehension of
bodily harm or death where lethal forces justified. Otherwise you
play right into their hands. You gotta remember, Tom, that's
(21:45):
exactly what they want. They want, George Floyd.
Speaker 5 (21:49):
That's agree. That's that's why I'm saying, you're asking somebody
to do something that is basically just opening up a
whole other can of worms.
Speaker 3 (21:56):
Yeah, but the predicate for your the predicate for your
comment was somebody, something needs to take one of these
guys out.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
That's what they want.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
I understand that, but well, that's a rather complicating factor
in your argument. I would say it's an overriety.
Speaker 5 (22:11):
Absolutely, I woheartly agree that's I'm having this discussion and
I agree with you. But it's what it's what has
to be done for these for the rest of these
guys to go away. A second, I might get shot,
I'm there's something bad might happen to me, because right
now there's very very little fear of retribution for what
(22:32):
they're doing. That's why they're so cavalier about their their
behavior and and and balling things up and lighting cars
on fire and and looting and all that stuff. What's
gonna stop them, Well, and that something has to. Somebody
has to stop them, and the leadership out there in
California is absolutely unwilling to do it. It's part of
the problem.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
Well, they're the one that decriminalized everything. They decriminalized everything.
This has been brewing for years and years. I mean,
they didn't don't prosecute shoplifters in a Usky lawbreakers. They
allow homeless people to live on the streets and pollute
and defecate everywhere. There is absolutely no law enforcement. This,
of course, you know, builds over time to the point
(23:11):
where you know, you got this this well and now
it's pivoted over to this ice and customs officials. But
you know, you saw it during ANTIFOD, nobody prosecuted anybody.
You saw it during Black Lives Matter riles, nobody, Ryot's
nobody prosecuted anyway.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
These were all.
Speaker 3 (23:25):
Left wing cities and left wing causes that were fomenting
and causing the violence, and no one got any was
held accountable. You know, January sixth comes along and oh
my god, people enter the Capitol building and literally they
spent years rounding up every single human being who merely
(23:45):
walked into the building. If there was that kind of
law enforcement resources dedicated to the lawlessness on the streets
and antifil, Black Lives Matter and this crap, I think
that would go a long way to stopping it from happening.
Speaker 1 (23:59):
You don't have to shoot and body.
Speaker 5 (24:00):
I agree, but you're not You're obviously not going to
get that because of these liberals. Uh, they want to
keep going on with that and rep Y people don't
vote Democrat.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
There you go, Tom, I know you get around to it,
and a great point to make. Five thirty five, fifty
five kr se the talks today, sh I do have
a stack of stupid but you know I always welcome
phone calls. I will be right back after these brief words.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
Carol.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
Here's your weather forecast tenner nine cents and a bump,
bump bomb Scattered showers and storms the afternoon. I know
there was rain poured now when I was coming in
as well.
Speaker 3 (24:45):
So from rain today seventy nine it's gonna be our
high overnight low sixty eight floodwatch in face, which expires
at ten pm this evening.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
More scattered showers than storms.
Speaker 3 (24:57):
Tomorrow afternoon they should kick in very humid day as well.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
Eighty five for the high.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
It's going to be showers and storms continuing overnight, sixty
nine for the low and looks guys, scattered thunderstorms.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Are predicted for Thursday as well. Thursday's high eighty one
seventy two degrees right now forty five per city talk
station signed for our first traffic report.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
Well do you see how traffic center right now?
Speaker 6 (25:19):
Over one hundred thousand people are waiting and hoping for
an organ transplant.
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To save their life.
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Sign up to be an organ donor or explore living
donation at you see how dot com slash transplant. Highway
traffic doing okay now had a rack northbound seventy five
above seventy four blocking the left lane. They cleared it
just a few minutes ago. Wet roads to deal with
for your Tuesday morning Chuck ingraman fifty five kre see
the talk station.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Five thirty nine on a Tuesday and happy one to you.
Stack is stupid? Go to Florida as a tradition. They meant.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
We got a man facing charges after allegedly urinating over
ten thousand dollars worth of food at a Sam's Club.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
Why are you doing that?
Speaker 1 (26:13):
No idea. I don't think we're ever going to find out.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
Seventy year old Patrick Francis Mitchell arrested earlier in June
charge with criminal mischief resulting in one thousand dollars in
damage I'm trying to have him to ever reconcile that
with He claimed that it was ten thousand dollars worth
of food. I guess you only damaged one thousand dollars
worth of the total of ten that was there anyway
disorderly conduct, cording to Lake County Public records, incident reportedly
occurred at nine nine am Court and a half and
(26:41):
eighty five by the State of Florida in the Fifth
Judicial Circuit Court. Mitchell observed urinating in an aisle of
the store. Female customer captured pictures, of course she did,
of the alleged incident on her cell phone and showed
them to store employees. Mitchell allegedly walked up to two
pallets faced the shelf, placed both hands in front of
him below the belt line, stood there for several seconds,
(27:01):
and what appeared to be behavior consistent with urination accord
of legal documents explaining the store video that also captured the.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Incident what heppened.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
Then walked around the snack section, sat in the patio
furniture for ten minutes before paying for his items and leaving.
Store managers confirmed urine was indeed found on two pallets
containing one hundred and eighty eight cans of Vienna sausage,
phrasing three hundred and forty five cans of spam. And
(27:32):
then here we go again, trying to reconcile these figures,
resulting in the loss of ten thousand, five hundred and
eighty four dollars and eighty four cents in goods. He
pleaded not guilty to both charges in a court appearance
June tenth. Back in court June thirtieth. The thing about
(27:53):
Vienna sausage and spam. He didn't like processed meats, I
guess phrasing fan of RFK Junior's efforts to get a
healthier We go to West Valley City, Utah, where a
sixteen year old boy shot five people in a confrontation
between two groups at a carnival in Salt Lake City suburb,
(28:13):
killing three of them What the hell, including an eight
month old infant. Police working at West Fest and Centennial
Park saw the two groups beginning to argue on Sunday
night one hundred meters one hundred yards rather from a
police mobile command post. According to the police department, post
(28:38):
they approached to. As they approached to break up the altercation,
a sixteen year old male from one of the group
pulled out a gun and fired. One officer fired back,
didn't hit anybody, shoot, struck and killed Hassan Lagundi, who
is eighteen.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
In one of the groups.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
The Gundi appeared to have been an intended target, according
to police, because the infant boy, whose identity wasn't released,
also through Arena, forty one years old to West Jordan
Utah also killed. Both died in the hospital arena, not
the infant's mother, though she was roughly in the same
line of fire. Two other teens, a seventeen year old
(29:16):
girl and a fifteen year old boy, had non life
threatening wounds in the arm. Not clear if they were
connected to the groups involved. Their identities were not released
as well. A pregnant woman was hurt while trying to
get over a fence to get away. Sixteen year old
quickly taken it to custod He booked in the Juvenile
Detention Center charge with three counts of homicide. Name has
not been released because he is a juvenile. Police maybe
(29:39):
they'll trime as an adult. Police interviewing witnesses and officers
to find out more about what happened, including whether the
confrontation was gang related. Two officers directly involved in the
confrontation were being investigated by Salt Lake City Police Department
protocol teams because one of them had to fire a gun.
As a result, they were not immediately interviewed. Carnival, a
(30:00):
celebration of the establishment of the West Valley City and
its cultural diversity, was in the process of winding down
after drawing as many as ten thousand people. Between one
thousand and two thousand people were still present when the
shooting occurred. They say it was unrelated to the shooting
that happened at the No Kings protests the day before
(30:22):
it happened.
Speaker 5 (30:24):
What.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
I don't know why they stuck that in there, jos
I just asked that very question out loud.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
You beat me to the pond, and we can all
learn a lesson from that. Can't wait?
Speaker 3 (30:40):
Let's see, ah, here we goes a short one before
we take a break. M twenty five year old man
accused of trying to kill his dad happened to Miami, Florida.
Police officers responded to the Adrian Garcia arrested rather Adrian
Garcia early Sunday morning. Police said Garcia shot his dad
on Saturday night court, a neighbors at least two gunshots
(31:01):
heard at the home where Garcia lives with his parents.
Local news there responded officers were initially met with people
who were telling them conflicting information, but detectives were able
to sort out what they believe actually happened, leading to
his arrest. Correctional deputies booked him on Father's Day morning
in the Turner Guildford Night Correction Center. Bason fell in
(31:23):
a charge of attempted murder the deadly weapon. Neighbors said
the victim's wife has remained at the side at his
side at Jackson Memorial Hospitals Trauma Center after the shooting.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
The motive remains unclear. Happy Father's Day.
Speaker 7 (31:36):
Perio is the biggest douche of the universe, in all
the galaxies, there's no bigger douche than you.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
You've reached the top, the pinnacle of douche.
Speaker 7 (31:49):
Do good going, dou Your dreams have come true.
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yourself a huge favor. It does not obligate you to
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don't have to pay for anything. You just get in
touch with the folks that covered sence you to find
out they and can save you. Like they have so
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medical insurance companies out there and the thousands of policies,
and they know about all these policies and can look
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family members, the children's age, whether you need spousal coverage,
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it's amazing. My neighbors have gotten touch with them, saving
him more than five hundred dollars a month. Tommy and Nancy,
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if you're out there, I know you're happy. My friend
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business insured and they are all extremely happy compared to
what they had before, and also improve his bottom line
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That's a great benefit right there. Five one three eight
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Also online coversincy dot com is a form you can
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fill out to get the process started.
Speaker 8 (33:48):
Coversincy dot com fifty five krc our clients oftentimes Channa nine.
Speaker 3 (33:57):
First warning weather forecast showers out there this morning and
we got scottered showers of stores later today as well.
Down four is expected seventy nine for the high bloodwash
ends at ten pm this evening.
Speaker 1 (34:09):
We've got a low of sixty eight every night with.
Speaker 3 (34:12):
Storm chances tomorrow more scattered showers and storms between noon
and sunset.
Speaker 1 (34:19):
Is the best opportunity for those really you.
Speaker 3 (34:21):
Midday, they're saying eighty five for a high overnight low
of sixty nine with showers and storms and scattered thunderstorms
predicted for Thursday as well, with a high of eighty
one seventy two.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
Right now, it's out for traffic.
Speaker 6 (34:31):
From the UCL Traffic Center. Right now, over one hundred
thousand people are waiting and hoping for an organ transplant
to save their life. Sign up to be an organ
donor and explore living donation at uce how dot com
slash transplant Highway traffic. That's not bad at all given
the conditions wet roads to deal with for your Tuesday
morning Northtown seventy five and northbound fourth seventy one, folk,
(34:54):
do we no cake.
Speaker 2 (34:55):
Coming across the bridges?
Speaker 6 (34:57):
Chuck ingramon fifty five KR seat He talks.
Speaker 3 (35:03):
It's five fifty one to fifty five car CD talk station.
Try to have a happy Tuesday. Stick around all morning,
going to have Brighim account from the Hudson Institute in CDEO,
the man behind the Charged Conversation podcast all about energy.
We'll talk about Iran's nuclear aspirations and the United Nation
and their energy failures.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
Just one of many failures from the United Nations.
Speaker 3 (35:26):
What a pointless entity anyhow, back over to the stack
of stupid got a married couple in Tennessee arrested over
the weekend for allegedly shooting a woman in the back
of a head at a restaurant after they got kicked
out of the restaurant for acting irate.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
Why are you doing that?
Speaker 3 (35:41):
Jose Montoya, who's twenty seven, along with his wife, Judith Ramirez,
who's twenty six, both taken to custody, charged with one
count each of attempted first degree murder, employing a firearm
in the commission of a felony, and vandalism between ten
grand and sixty thousand dollars probable cause, Affidavid says. After
midnight June fifteenth, officers of the Memphis Police Department responded
(36:03):
reports of an aggravated assault at the Tequila Town Bar.
When they got their first responder spoke with a mail
who had been working security at the time of the
alleged incident. Security guard said he was working late Saturday
evening when the bar's owner told him Montoya was acting
irate inside the establishment. Security guard approached Montoya told need
(36:24):
to calm down. Montoya allegedly became aggressive toward the guard,
who then escorted him outside of the establishment with his wife, Julia.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Affi David's states.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
During the escort, Montoya said, y'all done left up now.
Judith apparently opened the door of the car. Montoya retreated
a firearm from the vehicle. Security guard advised the observed
Jose go into the vehicle, grabbed the firearm and began
firing shots at him. Security guard returned fire in self defense.
During the shooting, Montoya reloaded his firearm multiple times and
(36:58):
continued shooting at the security guard. Both Ramirez m Montoya
fled the scene without rendering aid to the victim. Stafford
the bar also informed police the female patron had been
shot in the back of the head during the confrontation,
taking the local hospital and critical condition. Police did not
immediately respond to an inquiry regarding the victim's current condition.
(37:19):
In addition to the victim that was injured multiple cars
in the areas struck by bullets fired by Montolia. They
located the couple after spotting their car in the driveway
of a residence three thousand block of jose Bit Lane.
Please search vehicle recover multiple spent bullet casings in a
pickup truck at the same address. Police said they recovered
a black and green handgun believed to have been the
(37:41):
one used in the shooting both of them inside the
home and taken it to custody. Currently held in the
Shelby County Jail without bond, scheduled to appear in a hearing.
Speaker 1 (37:50):
I guess this morning.
Speaker 3 (37:52):
Just he reloaded his firearm multiple times, and I feel
terribly that one woman got hit, struck by the bullet,
apparently survived. He did not hit his intended target, the
security guard. Yeah, that's one of the benefits. You know,
a lot of people never ever ever go to the range,
and so that's a good thing for you and me
(38:14):
because they're unlikely to hit their target at least less likely.
If that guy was proficient at the use of a firearm,
I think that situation would have turned out much worse,
most notably for the security guard. He's clay County, Florida.
Thirty four year old Orange park Man is going to
share the award this morning. Joe accused of traveling to
meet a miner for sex, now facing multiple felony charges.
(38:37):
Thirty four year old Joshua Dice, former teacher at Cavalry
Christian Academy, arrested Wednesday last week outside of a gym,
facing charges of using a computer to solicit a child
for unlawful sexual contact, unlawful use of a two way
communication device, and traveling to meet a minor for sex.
Events leading up to his arrest and what he told
investigator during an interview apparently redacted from the arrest report.
(39:02):
M Pastor Ken Pledger at the Christian Academy, he said
in the statement of the schools and Ford about his arrest,
and he was immediately terminated from his physician and roll
at Cavalry Baptist Church, saying they were fully cooperating with
law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (39:18):
Teez notes, no, yeah, yeah, you are.
Speaker 3 (39:27):
It's five fifty five almost five fifty six, fifty five
care CITYTALX station. Plenty to talk about in the six
o'clock hour. I invite your phone calls. Feel free to
call me. This something you want to talk about I'll
be back after the news.
Speaker 9 (39:37):
Another update coming up, the day's top stories at the
top of the hour.
Speaker 3 (39:42):
Important issues that are facing this country.
Speaker 9 (39:44):
On fifty five krs the talk station get an Eco
upcare see talk station Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (39:50):
I hope you're having a good one anyway.
Speaker 3 (39:53):
Fast forward an hour in studio the return to Bring
Him account from the hudsondents too be talking about Iran's
nuclear aspirations which seem to be evaporating before our very
eyes given the developments with Israel's bombing campaign, un and
their energy failures, among all the failures of the United Nations.
Interjecting my comments and the latest Charged Conversations podcast, He's
(40:14):
check that out. Bring Him does a great job with
the Charge Conversation podcast.
Speaker 1 (40:18):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (40:18):
Sadly no bright part today. Didn't get back with Joe
and I'm kind of disturbed by that. But we'll get
the Daniel Davis Steve Divey and he will be talking
a better on in Israel as well as the updates
on what's going on between Russia and Ukraine, and are asked.
The expert from Rhino Shield joins the program at the
end to talk about that great product one that I
certainly support, having got the Rhino shield for my daughter's barn.
(40:44):
Just have to interject that proof that I do support
my sponsors, and I'm glad when you do as well.
Promise I won't steer you wrong. Five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty eight hundred and eight two to three Taco
Tome five fifty on AT and T phones love to
hear from if you get something you want to talk about,
and you know, just throwing it out locks as they
brought it up in the last hour. Since we're moving
more and more aircraft and the USAS and Nimits aircraft
(41:07):
carrier heading over to the Middle East, We've got all
of these refueling aircraft that are going over to the
Middle East. I am just asking out loud because I
know the Constitution requires a declaration of war or at
minimum an authorization for use of military force, which I
argue is insufficient. Trump does not have the authority to
(41:28):
order the military into this situation, regardless of how you
feel about it. And I don't want to be embroiled
in another conflict. And Donald Trump typically is the kind
of guy that wants to stay the hell away from war,
but kind of disturbing when you look at him leaving
the G seven summit early, unless, of course, it's because
(41:49):
the Iranians want to talk about maybe negotiating some sort
of peace, and that's what they have. They have issued
sort of an outreach signaling if they want to end
the hostilities and resume the talks of the nuclear programs,
Israel is not interested in negotiating peace until Iran's nuclear
program has been completely dismantled. Iran wants to do some
(42:12):
sort of nuclear program and it's not willing to give
up on its aspirations, and some somewhere in between, you know,
there's this argument that they want to create you know,
nuclear power plants, not nuclear weapons, which I think is
a laughable concept. But Trump also telling everybody in Tehran
to get the hell out of the territory. So when
(42:33):
you line up all this all these things, it's like
when when when Donald Trump ordered all of the embassy
officials to get the hell out of the Middle East
earlier in the week before Israel launched its bombing campaign
on Iran.
Speaker 1 (42:44):
There's a red flag.
Speaker 3 (42:45):
So we got some you know, sort of indicators that
something big is going to happen. Israel's US ambassadors, remember
the Beeper operation. Israel's ambassador to the US, Yeah, Shiel
leader close enough, Sorry Yashiel, if I'm getting your name
pronounced wrong, said, there's gonna be some surprises given the
(43:07):
conflict that's going on, that will make Israel's explosions of
pagers and walkie talkies used by members that has Balla
and Lebanon in Syria last year look simple. He said,
we pulled off a number of surprises. When the dust settles,
you're going to see some surprises on Thursday night and
Friday that will make the Beeper operation almost seem simple.
Speaker 1 (43:30):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (43:32):
I thought it was rather interesting enough that they were
able to smuggle all those drones in there to do
close range strikes within the country of Iran.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
Oh, they also killed another one.
Speaker 3 (43:43):
In Iran's top military commanders, so the Irans that military
command is collapsing. IDF said it killed Iran's wartime chief
of staff, who was up until the moment ago, the
government's top military commander, Ali Shadmani for the keeping tracking home.
The closest figure to the Iran supremely Supreme leader killed
(44:04):
yesterday actually this morning, Tuesday, when the IDF struck a
staffed command center at the heart of Tehran. HMM commander
of the Emergency Command of the Iranian Armed Forces, according
to the IDF, which said at the start of the operation,
he was appointed to command the Iranian Armed Forces after
(44:24):
his predecessor Ali Rashid was elimited in the opening strike
of Operation Rising Lion. That was the bomb that killed
a whole bunch of their top officials. So they're running
out of top people, experienced people, people who respond and
coordinated all the Iranian activities concluding the terrorist operations. So
(44:46):
Israel's making some great progress. I mean, regardless of how
you feel about Israel, I'm just really impressed with the
inroads they've been able to make. I mean, think about it.
Israel dominates the Irani in airspace. Now that's saying something.
(45:07):
But in the final analysis, are we going to be
brought into this? Does anybody might listen to the audience
want to get involved in this? I suppose arming Israel
is one thing, but actually putting boots on the ground
and getting to run in that conflict. China has run
to the aid of Iran. So you're looking at this
(45:29):
World War three scenario unfolding Russia's kind of taking a
standback approach. They've agreed to accept all of the Iranian
nuclear material, which, since it's already a nuclear power with
I don't know how many nuclear weapons they have, we
already know what they have in terms of their nuclear arsenal.
I guess they could just add to it, but they've
at least become willing to take this stuff to the
(45:51):
extent Iran does this mantle its nuclear program, not as
quite as a hardline stance as China is making in
support of the Iranians. So I personally would like to
take a stand away, stand back approach on this one.
My point only so anyhow, you may feel free to
disagree and call up and let me have a word
(46:13):
or two.
Speaker 1 (46:13):
If you do. I'm going to let us see here.
Speaker 3 (46:18):
To Tom's point earlier in the program, pivoting away from that,
going to the situation, and you know, Tom said, you
know these protests, if someone needs to shoot one of them,
and I know he maybe a bit of an overstatement,
And my point has always been that's exactly what they want.
They want another George Floyd, Now, you are obviously allowed
to use deadly force against someone if you are met
(46:40):
with deadly force? Was it reasonable for you under the
circumstances to use deadly force? And that is reasonable when
you have a reasonable expectation that you yourself are going
to die or you're going to be hit with grievous
bodily harm. Now, police officers, we know the microscope is
on them for them to actually use deadly for they
better damn well be in a position where it's fully
(47:03):
and absolutely, without any question justifiable, or you end up
with riots and protesters in the streets. My point was
though to Tom, you know, they're looking for another George Floyd.
They're looking for someone else that can characterize as a
victim of this state so they can riot and protest
in the streets. And we've seen all these riots in
(47:24):
protests before and not a finger lifted by law enforcement
to arrest the protesters for acts of violence, property destruction,
throwing frozen bottles of water at police fireworks. Where were
all the arrests and roundups for that. All you need
to do is enforce the law and fewer people will
do it. Wait a minute, I'm going to be held accountable.
(47:44):
But see those are all leftist protesters in the streets
and when you're in a blue city and you support
these leftist activities and what they want to accomplish, defunding
the police being one of them, you don't engage your
law enforcement, tell them to stand down. We had illustrate
after illustration after illustration of this, and then we have
(48:07):
this Omar Padillo Bastida now facing federal assault charges for
spitting on an ICE agent. Well, they're trying to arrest
them for illegally returning into the United States. Now we
can hold this guy as an example, and if more
and more of these stories made rounds, maybe fewer and
fewer people would be well. Spitting on law enforcement or
throwing chunks of concrete at him is a past robbery conviction,
(48:31):
previously arrested on murder and assault charges.
Speaker 1 (48:35):
They got him for spitting.
Speaker 3 (48:38):
Department of Homeland Security Assistant in Tricia McLaughlin in a statement,
despite the Los Angeles riots, ICE law enforcement officers arrested
Omar Padilla Bastida, the criminal illegal alien has been convicted
a robbery and his arrest for murder and assault. This
type of criminal illegal alien that rioters are fighting to protect.
(48:59):
How much longer will go to a newsman a Mayorkarenbeth
continue to prioritize these criminal illegal immigrants over their own citizens.
Secretary Nome has a message to the LA riters. You
will not stop us or slow us down. ICE will
continue to enforce law and arrest criminal illegal aliens. Ah,
there's that law enforcement element. He can face eight years
(49:24):
behind bars if convicted of assault. Department of Justice allege
as he first insulted an ICE officer from his balcony
before then coming down and spitting on the agent through
a gate, saying before that, no, get out of here.
Speaker 1 (49:44):
I know my rights.
Speaker 3 (49:45):
I'm calling my lawyer, after which ICE forced entry into
his home and arrested him.
Speaker 1 (49:52):
He was hiding in there. He said, okay, you got me.
Speaker 5 (49:58):
So.
Speaker 3 (49:59):
Fox News called up Karen Bass's office. Bass's office referred
them to a press statement that she issued last week
saying these aren't the criminals the administration is allegedly targeting.
These are mothers and fathers, restaurant workers, seamstresses, home care workers,
every day angelinos trying to make a living. We've heard
stories of unmarked federal agents park near the LAUSD School graduations.
(50:23):
A US citizen nine months pregnant who was hospitalized after
being detained by federal agents and apparel business in downtown
La raided, where many Korean and Latino workers worked long
hours to support their families. See that's the spin and
an narrative that they want to paint on this What
about this guy? What about Omar poludo Bastida, which is
(50:48):
exactly what the focus of the Trump administration isn't finding
trying to find the criminal element out there in the
world that most people want out of their neighborhoods, the
depressed communities, and you have criminal elements in it, and
think about gang members. I don't care what side of
the political ledger on do you want gang members in
(51:09):
your community or do you want an administration that is
going to round up these evil, violent, criminal gang members
pedaling drugs, pedaling children for sex out of your neighborhood
The leftist paints of this broad brush. Oh no, it's
a bunch of pregnant women who are merely trying to
put food on the table of their families. I think
(51:32):
most American people are woken up to the reality that's
just not the case. Gavin Newson posts on Action in
response to Trump saying something his plan is clear, meaning
Trump's insight, violence and chaos in blue states have an
excuse to militarize our cities, demonize his opponents, keep breaking
(51:53):
the law, and consolidate power. It's illegal, and we will
not let it stand. Who's breaking the law, Gavin, The
protesters in your streets who are throwing chunks of concrete
which could literally kill someone, Those convicted of crimes that
(52:13):
are in an among illegal immigrant population, they've broken the law. Ice,
say what you want and disagree with what the law is.
ICE is enforcing our immigration laws. So to the extent
you do something to stand in the way from it,
and you tell people to fight against Ice, you're the
one who's breaking the law. You're the one who's inciting
(52:35):
the violence by preventing law enforcement from doing its damn job.
Six nineteen fifty five KC Detalk station. Moving over to
something peaceful, Moving over to something serene, which we could
all use a does so these days, I'm refern Togatid
having a Catholic cemetery and they're inviting everyone to come
and enjoy the opportunity to quietly reflect and contemplate engage
(52:58):
in some prayer. In their useful landscaping landscape surrounding, which
is a great opportunity to do that. It's serene there,
and of course remembering your loved ones. That's obviously something
you can do at a cemetery. But it's more than
just a bury of place. It is a sanctuary place
to set apart for prayer, hearing and honoring the legacy
of every life. So refract and pray and enjoy the
(53:21):
beauty of God's creation at Gate of Heaven Cemetery. Gate
Offheaven dot org is where you can learn all about it.
Speaker 8 (53:26):
Gateof Heaven dot org fifty five krc our Hyarder.
Speaker 1 (53:35):
Here's your Channel nine first oneing weather forecast.
Speaker 3 (53:38):
Muggy and cloudy and scattered showers and storms showing up
probably after two pm, they said, although I know it
was there any when I came in this morning, and
a lot of lightning too. Today's I is seventy nine
out of sixty eight overnight, with more rain scottered showers
and storms Tomorrow as well, they say, right after noontime,
a very humid day.
Speaker 1 (53:59):
It'll be a eighty five overnight lowis.
Speaker 3 (54:01):
Sixty nine with more showers and storms and scattered thunderstorms
predicted on Thursday as well. I have eighty one seventy
two degrees right now, Time for a traffic update.
Speaker 2 (54:11):
From the uc UP Traffic Center.
Speaker 6 (54:13):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life.
Speaker 2 (54:18):
Sign up to be an.
Speaker 6 (54:18):
Organ donor or explore living donation at you see how
dot com slash transplant. Highway traffic doing okay. Some spots
starting to dry out from the showers that passed through earlier.
SAPPEND two seventy five starting to slow a bit approaching
the Carroll Cropper Bridge. A Belova lawrence program Chuck Ingram
on fifty five krsity the talk station.
Speaker 3 (54:42):
To Shai six twenty four to fifty five KRCD talk
Station five seven nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight
two three Talk found five fifty on EIGHTT and T
phone's care to call, You know, get further to the
deterrence thing you have, of course, deterns from law enforcement
just enforced the law. You know, if you spin on
a police officer, you're gonna get arrested for assault and
prosecuted fine. You throw a rock at a police officer,
(55:05):
you're gonna get arrested. You try to you assault or
go after another human being, you're gonna get arrested. And
if you go out and walk around in the middle
of the streets and endeavor to block traffic, you know,
one of the things is that access of deterrence is
you may very well get run over. And there's been
a whole bunch of videos posted lately of these idiots
(55:27):
getting out in front of not just ice vehicles, but
trying to block regular traffic and.
Speaker 1 (55:33):
Getting run over.
Speaker 3 (55:38):
Doesn't that seem to be open and obvious threat to
you if you're dumb enough to walk out in the
middle of the street in front of a moving automobile,
And doesn't it seem justified for the person driving the
automobile to day very well may be facing a risk
to their own safety and security when they're vehicle is
surrounded by a mob of angry folks. You know that
(56:00):
may be not justifiable to use deadly force, but you
know a big automobile is and can be considered deadly force. Now,
I know you might worry about some left wing prosecutor
prosecutor for it, but I don't know if this becomes
the trend, And I'm just watching a video right now
of ice agents. A bunch of people running out in
front of big vans filled with ice agents and yes,
(56:20):
getting run over. There's a video of it. Looked like
a four door Sedan, a Honda or something like that.
Some random guys driving down the street in this very
large and angry woman jumps in front of it as
if she's gonna stop it with her bare hands. He
just kept going and drove right over. A lot of
(56:42):
gleeful comments on that one, too, so word gets out,
don't do that. Local story is coming up, including budget
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Com fifty five KRC from coast to coast, from c
to Shining Sea.
Speaker 5 (58:02):
It's a Sean Hannity show.
Speaker 10 (58:04):
Right now as we speak, the Israelis own the skies
of Iran, which gives the world a window of opportunity. Now,
I don't want I don't want to be I don't
want to be flipping about this a nonchalant. You know,
there's always a risk involved in military action, but there's
also sometimes a risk of military inaction, especially at the
(58:26):
right time, and this regime, unfortunately, was able to build
up a lot of a lot of ballistic missile power
and advanced in a nuclear program under Joe Biden. And
and they've been fomenting terror in the entire region. There's
not one country in the region that wants the Iranians
to have nuclear weapons.
Speaker 1 (58:47):
Waking up on the right side. This is the Sean
Hannity Morning Minute.
Speaker 10 (58:56):
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company pure Talk.
Speaker 3 (59:57):
Lots of rain, scottishowers is to day downpours seventy nine
for the high chances storms ends late tonight. Got a
mostly thoughty muggy overnight sixty eight low, Tomorrow a high
of eighty five, very humid.
Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
They're saying more scattered showers and storms as well.
Speaker 3 (01:00:17):
More scout showers and storms overnight with a sixty nine
low eighty one. The high on Thursday also scattered thunderstorms
predicted seventy one. Right now, it's get a traffic upseea
from the UCUP traffic Center.
Speaker 6 (01:00:29):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life. Sign
up to be an organ donor or explore Living donation,
and you see how dot COM's slaves transplant highways not
bad at all to deal with. At the moment, most
are drying out from the rain that passed through overnight.
Northbound fourth seventy one, you're under five minutes to seventy
(01:00:51):
five into town southbound seventy five. Good at Union Center,
Ingram on fifty five KRZ, the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
At six thirty one fifty five Kercity Talk Station. Happy Tuesday,
we'll have Mister Charge conversation podcast. Brigg McGowan on off
the top of the our news will be in studio
talk about a variety of issues.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
And somebody else. We bring a studio from time to time.
Speaker 3 (01:01:14):
Todd Zinzer, our citizen watchdog, former Inspector General. He's got
a new podcasts Now Joe Strecker produced podcasts. You want
to do a podcast, have it produced by Joe Strecker anyway,
Todd ur Joe always posted and this one. City budgets
aren't just about numbers. They are arenas where power and
transparency clash, especially when sidewalks are on the line. With
the clock taking towards the June thirtieth deadline, we're breaking
(01:01:36):
down the complex labyrinth of Cincinnati's budgeting process, highlighting the
slippery slippery slope of leverage support and the arbitrary adjustments
by the mayor and city council, adjustments that are ripe
for corruption without clear criteria or conflict of interest safeguards
(01:01:56):
described as diving into the murky waters of city politics
where the absence of accountability raises more than just eyebrows
with that, So check that out again, citizen watchdog.
Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
He's a brilliant, brilliant man Todd sensor Is.
Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
City Council voted eight to one to allocate an additional
one million dollars to deal with the city's aging vehicle fleet,
bringing the total eleven point six million dollars. I'll give
credit to Andrew Rowan over at the WCPO reporting there
is a forty two point five million backlog in standard
vehicle replacements that includes es central equipment like snowplows, police cruisers,
(01:02:34):
and fire trucks. Last month, city Fleet Services manager told
council members that while two hundred and forty two vehicles
meet criteria for priority replacement, only half are currently in
the process of being replaced, leaving a deficit of seventeen
point six million dollars. City Council not exactly rising to
(01:02:54):
the challenge, so they're throwing another one million aud of
much of the chagrin of Vice Mayor jam Michelle mcclib
Kearny will get to their comments in a moment We've
got ten point six million for base fleet improvements, a
quarter of a million dollars for a swat truck, one
hundred thousand dollars for something called storm water fleet, three
quarters a million for fire department fleet repairs. Here's one
(01:03:16):
eight hundred thousand dollars for EV charging equipment, one and
a half million dollars in fleet technology upgrades, and four
million dollars to improve the fleet garage. Which seems odd anyway.
(01:03:38):
City's draft budget originally only had ten points six million
dollars for fleet replacement, nearly one million dollar cut from
last year's budget. Jeff Grammerting, chair of the Budget Finance Committee,
proposed this motion to increase by a million. Every million
dollars helps. He said, we've got unsafe conditions right now
as far as our fire trucks and public service vehicles,
so this is important. However, Vice Mayor Ja Michelle Kearney
(01:04:02):
argued that the additional one million dollars should be spent elsewhere. Quote,
given that the one million dollars allocated is not enough
to purchase even one fire truck, we move that the
one million dollars for fleet is reallocated where it can
have real impact, real impact on what another statement for council.
(01:04:32):
Another million dollars will not even buy one fire truck.
It's really a drop in the bucket for fleet, but
it can have a real impact with organizations that really
need this money, which is one of the reasons I
mentioned Todd Zenzer Citizen Watchdog podcast, because that's exactly the
kind of stuff he's talking about, all these nngos out
there that suck off the taxpayer dollars from the City
(01:04:56):
of Cincinnati, much in the same way like USAID funds
all these crazy organizations with federal tax dollars. She said,
one million is not going to do anything, So let's
make let's have real impact and support our priorities without
identifying exactly what least priorities are. So I took a
look at the reporting on this, get a load to
(01:05:16):
some of the other line items. One hundred thousand dollars
for artworks in the category of arts, thirty thousand dollars
for learning through art, and in category of economic development
catalytic neighborhood futures. There's a million dollars going to whatever
the hell that is. One hundred and seventy five thousand
(01:05:36):
dollars of is something called city Tech. One hundred and fifty
thousand dollars for something called city Fuse, one hundred thousand
dollars for a downtown neighborhood plan. Here's one hundred thousand
dollars for a film commission. Million dollars for Quick Strike
Acquisition fund, quarter of a million dollars for sports commission,
(01:06:03):
one hundred and fifty for Cardinal Land Conservancy. Keeps CINCINNTI
beautiful gets one hundred and fifty grand. They're given the
metro pass for city employees fifty grand for that, so
the city employees can ride mesro at a substantial discount.
Ohio Justice and Policy Center getting one hundred grand. Act
(01:06:25):
for Cincy. This is something related to public safety, allegedly
one hundred grand. Boots on the Ground, an organization getting
one hundred and fifty two thousand change. So you know,
you got all these random organizations getting taxpayer dollars meanwhile,
And aren't those all drops in the bucket?
Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
Vice Mayor?
Speaker 3 (01:06:47):
You got to have all that money and you put
it toward fleet repair, which we need, and it is
obviously way behind much in the way road repair has
been left and ignored for years and years and years
priorities sixty seven to fifty five kr se Detok station
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Speaker 4 (01:08:00):
This is fifty five KARC an iHeartRadio Station six forty.
Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
One, fifty five KRC the talk station. It's the plague
update theme song. It's actually a locally related plague update
as well. Little Anthrax Cottonamash Megamon Joe over at Local
(01:08:36):
twelve dot com or reporting on this one. And it
happened to this guy four years ago. But it's a
worthy exercise in going through what this guy went through
because poison hemlock is out there, reportedly in all counties
in the state of Ohio. I'm sure in Indiana and
Kentucky as well. Wherever poison hemlock grows, you want to
stay the hell away from it. Remember Ron Wilson talking
(01:08:57):
about this in the past.
Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
A guy named.
Speaker 3 (01:09:05):
He's from Madera, last name Leblonde. Anyway, four years ago
cutting honeysuckle with a chainsaw his backyard inhaled poison hemlock.
His quote was saying, I was just trying to clear
the backyard so we could see it and enjoy it.
You know, normal everyday thing, no big deal, you would think.
Then bam, your whole life changes, described as being placed
(01:09:28):
in a medically induced coma. Had had spent one hundred
and nine days in the hospital, eighty of which on
a ventilator requiring a feeding tube, led to severe respiratory
distress as well as heart complications. He said, you know
you're getting oxygen, you're gasping for breath. And then it
was in the hospital, my lungs failed, my heart went racing,
and I sprung attendant in my mitra valve. According to
(01:09:53):
his wife, she said, they told me he was either
going to die. If he didn't die, he was going
to need a lung transport, and if that didn't happen,
he's going to spend the rest of his life on
oxygen and probably on a walker. That didn't happen. They
got really lucky. Doctors referred to him as a walking miracle.
Medical director since he's drugging Poison Information Center a guy
(01:10:15):
named doctor Shan Yin, So you know it's very dangerous.
It's very poisonous. You don't need very much. Something like
six is leaves, maybe enough to even kill an adult.
Over the High Department of Natural Resources. They have a
warning on the website urging residents to exercise caution and
avoid contact with the plant. It's present again in all
eighty eight Ohio County's poison him luck, identifiable by its
(01:10:38):
white flowers and purple markings on the stem. He has
still has lingering healthy use issues as LeBlanc guy weakness
and need for heart surgeries. It's oh God, I'm hoping
to get back to work called an involuntary retirement. But
(01:10:58):
it has given him a new perspective on life. So
it's just the little things that you take for granted
that are just wonderful. So Lesson learned here be able
to identify poison hemlock and stay the hell away from it.
Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
Jeez, Louise.
Speaker 1 (01:11:14):
I was not aware of how dangerous that was, even
though Ron Wilson has told us that in the past. Hey,
how coming up a little more talking about got some time?
If there's a topic you want to talk about, we'll
get another segment left in the hour, and then we'll
get to bring him account in studio about Iran's nuclear
aspirations rapidly evaporating before our very eyes. Six forty five.
Speaker 3 (01:11:34):
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Installation dot Net fifty five car the talk station Caroline Bregan,
Uh here is you're channel nine first one and one
four cast showers and ORMs scattered about. This is the
(01:13:02):
best chance of that occurs after two pm today, seventy
nine are high. Overnight lowis sixty eight, muggy as well,
got more scattered showers than storms. Tomorrow, best chance after noontime,
very humid day will be with a high of eighty five.
Showers and storms continue, overnight low of sixty nine and
(01:13:23):
on Thursday more scattered showers and thunderstorms are predicted. I
have eighty one seventy two degrees right now. Let's get
a traffic update from Chuck.
Speaker 6 (01:13:29):
Ingram from the UCF Traffic Center. Right now, over one
hundred thousand people are waiting and hoping for an organ
transplant to save their life. Sign up to be an
organ donor or explorer living donation at uce health dot com.
Slash transplant Sathbnd two seventy five continues to build between
the Lawrence Purd ramp and the construction on the bridge.
(01:13:50):
Had a couple of extra minutes there. Elsewhere, traffic's still
in pretty good shape southbound seventy five. No DeLay's handsome
yet through Wachlan Chuck Ingram on fifty five krcal station.
Speaker 1 (01:14:02):
Fish I SIK fifty to fifty five KRC, the talk station.
Speaker 7 (01:14:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:14:09):
One of the things we learned from Doge the problem
the government efficiency is how much money that we you
and I paying for federal tax dollars that are used
to fund bat crap crazy projects around the world. Among
the back crap crazy projects, a lot of very very
very political organizations. You know, I like to view the
(01:14:31):
use of taxpayer dollars much in the same way I
like the government not being a theocracy. You know, no
establishment of religion. If you if you have government funding
religious organizations, you know, people lawsuits get filed.
Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:14:42):
We've been talking about this for years and years and years,
with the exception of religious organizations who are helping illegal immigrants.
I might point out, you know, nobody, nobody screams and
protests about that. But it's not done for proselytizing. It's
done to you know, pay for illegal immigrants, to you know,
for sheltering and food and clothing like that. So that
makes it okay. But why would we fund any organization
(01:15:05):
that is engaged in political activity? And I don't care
what side of the political ledger they're advocating. Why would
we be funding politics out there? Why would messaging be
supported by your money? Is this a priority of government
that spends two trillion dollars more than they take in
(01:15:26):
every year? And if Douglas dug ourselves into a debtthole
that now requires a trillion dollars annually for debt service
alone and growing. And I say that in the context
of this article, I found a sentiment order Leader Chuck
Schumer is now asking to fund this left wing organization
with your taxpayer dollars. Six hundred thousand dollars is his
(01:15:48):
request for The Chinese American Planning Council describes a New
York City based nonprofit. This part of congressionally directed spending program.
His office released the documents which which contain this spending request,
which apparently members of Congress submit each year for causes
(01:16:08):
reflecting their federal funding priorities, their federal funding priorities.
Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:16:15):
Meanwhile, while he requests money for the CPC organization, Republicans
in the House Homeland and Security Committee are investigating this
very organization into the potential use of federal runs but
by NGOs that facilitate illegal immigration. Representatives Mark Green and
josh A Breech from Tennessee and Oklahoma, respectively. They launched
the investigation in April after an undercover video showed this
(01:16:39):
CPC organization chief policy officer, a woman named Carolyn Cohen,
advising illegal immigrant activists on how to evade US customs
enforcement agents, telling attendees at this training session about hardening
their physical space, identifying a list of individuals authorized to
respond if ice comes to the door, training everybody who's
(01:16:59):
going to be involved. Video released by the Oversight Project,
this Cohen woman advised restaurant workers to use an electronic
alert system to inform the employees of the presence of
La Marac migra or immigration agents. Now she is allowed
to advocate for that, she is allowed to explain to
people what their legal rights are and what they can
(01:17:21):
and cannot do by way of free speech and communication.
Among themselves, but why are we paying for it?
Speaker 1 (01:17:32):
So far?
Speaker 3 (01:17:33):
Since twenty twenty two, they got one point four million
dollars to congressionally directed spending, that's according to federal spending records.
In addition to our taxpayer dollar money going to this
one organization, and it's just one among many out there.
Apparently this organization has links to the Chinese Communist Party.
(01:17:53):
They've gotten donations from them as well, because China loves
creating division in our country. Senator Alex Badia remember that
guy who was detained after he broke into Homeland Security
Secretary Christy Nums office. He asked for two million dollars
last month for the Coalition for Human Immigration Rights of
(01:18:16):
Los Angeles. That group has called to abolish ICE, a
lead organizer in the anti ICE protest that devolved into
riots in Los Angeles. Senator Josh Hollylaun's an investigation into
CURLA and its funding of the violent protests, which of
course denied. Also seeking money for this organization. Senator Adam Schiff,
(01:18:41):
Democrat California. He wants five hundred thousand dollars to go
to this organization. That's according to his congressionally directed spending disclosures.
So you know, how about this, I propose a bill,
pass a law that says the United States taxpayer will
not have any of its money spent on political activism
(01:19:06):
of any type. You want to go out in the
world and ask the George Soroses of the world for
a handout, go ahead. You're allowed to do that, but
don't ask for money from me or any other American taxpayer.
I've had it up to my eyeballs with this nonsense.
It's like, you know, we're working to undermine our own
best interests. Our elected officials are using the dollars, and
(01:19:29):
I would argue that they are not representing our interests,
They're representing something that undermines our interest That's my political position.
Now they would argue that, no, I'm the one that's wrong. Okay, Well,
are any American taxpayer dollars being used to fund like
little l libertarian organizations, organizations seeking to reduce the size
and scope of the federal government. Hmm, probably not. I've
(01:19:55):
never seen any reporting on it anyway. Six fifty five.
Uh Brigha McCowan in studio from the Charge Conversation podcast
as well as from the Hudson Institute we're talking about
Neron's nuclear aspirations and the epic failure of the United Nations,
among other topics.
Speaker 1 (01:20:11):
Hope he can stick around.
Speaker 9 (01:20:13):
Stay on top of the day's biggest stories at the
top of.
Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
The ise that's so important.
Speaker 9 (01:20:18):
Another update coming up on fifty five krc the Talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:20:37):
The sh I have seven h six here at fifty
five KRCD Talk Station every Appy Tuesday came made extra
special in studio from the Hudson Institute Miami University or
University or Miami University as well. Bring him acown and
he's here to talk about energy policy, among other things.
Head on over to Hudson dot organ and check out
what they do. They talk about defense, international relations, economics, energy, technology,
(01:20:58):
culture and the law. Help them policymakers make better decisions.
Good to see you, Break, I'm always a pleasure to
have you in studio. Thanks Brian also responsible for the
Charged Conversation podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:21:09):
You should check that out.
Speaker 3 (01:21:10):
Or we talked about energy policy, which we're going to
be talking about here in the studio.
Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
What's the most recent episode focused on.
Speaker 11 (01:21:15):
Yeah, the most recent episode is Iran's Enrichment Peaceful Use
or weapons path to War.
Speaker 3 (01:21:22):
All they talk about enrichment, and there's weapon grade enrichment
of uranium. They use these centrifuges, and this is beyond
it's like the peace of God. For me, I don't
understand how it's done, but fundamentally, the centrifuge are used
to enrich the uranium to the point where it can
be used as a nuclear weapon. But in terms of
what's used in your modern day nuclear reactor compared to
(01:21:46):
weapons grade, what percentages are we talking about? What's the
difference here? Are they really close to each other? Are
they miles apart in terms of enrichment?
Speaker 11 (01:21:55):
Well, Brian, you know what you are asking the magical question,
because I think once we talk about this, it's going
to be pretty crystal clear to anybody listening that Iran
is not pursuing a peaceful path to civilian nuclear power.
Speaker 3 (01:22:08):
And that's all we ever hear, Oh no, no, all
we do is want to have it for our own
power generation. But what's what's the reality, what's behind the
veneer of that argument?
Speaker 11 (01:22:19):
Well, when we take uranium two thirty five and just
look at it, it's zero point seven of one percent enriched,
which isn't enough. That's laying around on the ground in
its natural stake. It's in its natural stake. So uh,
it needs to be enriched to three to five percent
for civilian nuclear use.
Speaker 1 (01:22:37):
Three five percent. That doesn't sound like very much at all. No,
it's not.
Speaker 11 (01:22:41):
And it's relatively safe and stable, and that's enough to
sustain a chain reaction of generating heat continuously. And that's
what we need to boil water to turn turbines to
make electricity.
Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
Pretty simple, simple as that. It is. All right, Well,
what's where's Iran? Right now?
Speaker 3 (01:22:59):
Up until a mon a moment ago in Israel blew
the crap out. Well, to the extent they did that
much damage, Let's assume for the sake of discussion, they
did able to They were able to hit the centrifuges
which are buried underground.
Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
But where were they And what we talk about in
terms of enrichmond.
Speaker 11 (01:23:13):
Well, what they promised to not go beyond was three
point seventy five percent. That was under the Obama deal. Right,
we'll give you gazillions of dollars and you promised not
to nucas deal. So today they said it's sixty percent.
Speaker 3 (01:23:26):
Oh, what other use can sixty percent enrich uranium be?
Speaker 11 (01:23:33):
Put to well, I suppose you could take the four
hundred kilograms and I'm gonna have to do a quick conversion.
But I think they're like nine hundred pounds, so I'll
have to check that out. I always think a kilogram
is two pounds two pounds, all right, So eight hundred
pounds of this stuff, and I guess you could dilute
it and have enough power to fuel I don't know,
(01:23:55):
thirty fifty nuclear power plants for the next five hundred
years or or catch me on this. The technical leap
is to enrich it up past fifty percent. Once you
get to sixty, an actual bomb only needs eighty. That's
a very quick Within a few days, you could go
(01:24:15):
from sixty to eighty. So my guess is, and I'm
going way out on a limb here, is that they're
trying to make bombs.
Speaker 3 (01:24:23):
Gee, it doesn't seem like it's going on on a
limb too much. The bring I know. And then you
combine that with their ballistic missiles.
Speaker 11 (01:24:29):
They've gotten really good at rockets, right, Yeah, they've gotten
really good at rockets.
Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
And you put a payload on there, and.
Speaker 11 (01:24:34):
Look even if you can't even when we say, well,
look making a detonation device to go nuclear is not
so easy. Well, fine, you just load all this material
on a bunch of missiles, dirty bomb, and you do
dirty bombs all over Israel. And that's what Israel was saying,
was they forecast that Iran had about two thousand ballistic
missiles and within a couple of years they'd be to six, eight,
(01:24:57):
ten thousand. You're not going to stop that many. So
they crossed the rubicon and said enough's enough. If nobody
else is going to put an end to this, we will.
Speaker 1 (01:25:05):
Well, and Trump gave him that you know, sort of window.
Speaker 3 (01:25:07):
He didn't call it a red line, but he said,
you know, we need to negotiate a deal within sixty days.
Speaker 1 (01:25:12):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:25:12):
I think with hindsight we can say there was some
measure of coordination with what Israel was going to do
and that sixty day window, and maybe Trump said, listen, Benjamin,
just hold off. I know you're going to get ready
to strike them, and there's nothing I can do to
stop you from doing that, but let me just do
this sixty day window, because if we can really get
them to sit down and take this discussion seriously, maybe
(01:25:34):
we can avoid an all out conflict. Well, sixty days
came and went. Day sixty one, Israel's bombing the hell
out of the run.
Speaker 1 (01:25:41):
Yeah. I think that's absolutely right.
Speaker 11 (01:25:42):
And you know, to be fair, I think you know,
Trump meant what he said, let's try to get a deal.
But I think if you look back at the Iranians
and what they've learned from subsequent previews, I'm sorry for
previous administrations.
Speaker 1 (01:25:56):
Nothing.
Speaker 11 (01:25:57):
Yeah, and from Western Europe is there's no result, no consequences,
no consequences, just want to talk. It's like if we
have a son or daughter at home, I'm a threatening,
repeating parent with no consequences. You know, they get more time,
they continue down the path, and they even get money
for doing this.
Speaker 1 (01:26:16):
It's a great gig.
Speaker 3 (01:26:17):
Yeah, it is. And that's another nefarious element to all this.
But going back to your comment, I just I latched
onto it. Going from sixty percent to the eighty percent.
You need to make an all out nuclear weapon you
sit on it takes a couple of days to do that.
Speaker 11 (01:26:32):
Yeah, if you have the right enrichment, because it's once
you get to a certain point and you have that
much material, it's pretty easy to condense down. Uh, you know,
imagine this is not quite the correct analogy, but uh,
you know, you have a bunch of salt and salt water,
you boil off the water, you're left with one hundred
(01:26:52):
percent salt. Same kind of deal, and and you know,
and you know a perfect mom would be around ninety percent.
Speaker 3 (01:27:00):
Works well, which makes me want to go back to
the dirty bomb concept. I would think sixty percent enriched
uranium in a bomb would create a pretty horrific scenario
if it got dispersed in the air, in the atmosphere.
Speaker 1 (01:27:15):
Yeah, it really would.
Speaker 11 (01:27:16):
Whether it's air dispersed or a surface detonation, You're going
to contaminate large swaths of land property. You will kill people,
maybe not all at once, but through radiation poisoning, and
you'll make large areas of land uninhabitable for many, many years.
Speaker 3 (01:27:34):
I suppose one reluctance Iran would have to doing that
is and I don't know. I guess, logistically speaking, if
you got sixty percent and it doesn't take that much
more time to get it to eighty percent, why haven't
they already done that? Or maybe they have, I mean,
we don't have people inside the building. I guess looking
at it and testing the level of enrichment going on
in there. Do we maybe the Israeli defense forces too,
(01:27:56):
given the amazing military accomplishment of getting all those drones
in there for close end drone strikes.
Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
But do we even really know?
Speaker 11 (01:28:08):
I think we know that it's at least at sixty percent.
The Israelis are reporting that they have at least one
crude bomb already made, which begs the question that maybe
they were already up to eighty to ninety percent. But
you know, the Israelis are very good. They are very
good at their intelligence. And we're also relying on the
United Nations, the IA, and.
Speaker 3 (01:28:30):
Now we're going to get to that part of the
conversation a little bittier too. But yeah, Mossad is well
known for its amazing intelligence coups.
Speaker 11 (01:28:40):
They really are. And you know, all this stuff is
well planned out in advance. It's not by happenstance.
Speaker 1 (01:28:46):
No.
Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
And that's going back to them getting all of the
drone capabilities and the strike capabilities inside the interior of Iran,
which when the start of this conflict they unleashed, that
was years of preparation, presumably.
Speaker 11 (01:28:59):
Absolutely, and the Iron Dome David Slang, the American Patriot
and Thad missile batteries were all designed to make Iran
think twice, which is why Iran was going to overwhelm
the systems. And as we've seen this week, some of
those missiles have gotten through. And whereas Israel has targeted
the military industrial complex and the energy complex, is Iran
(01:29:23):
has been targeting Israeli cities.
Speaker 1 (01:29:26):
Now is that because? Is that by intent?
Speaker 3 (01:29:28):
Or going back to the capabilities of Iranian missiles and
their accuracy used to be, You know you had scuds, right,
and those are basically bottle rockets. You know, you just
launched them where they fell wherever they fell, kind of
like what Hesballa was doing with its rockets. But did
they intentionally target civilians in Tel Aviv and elsewhere or
were those just missiles that didn't hit some sort of
(01:29:49):
military target.
Speaker 1 (01:29:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 11 (01:29:50):
I think most experts agree that their missile systems and
their telemetry data has gotten very good and that you
know they are targeting specific cities. And to your point,
back during deserts dorm yeah, I remember the scuds. You
never knew where they were going to go. No, but no,
this is a different ballgame now.
Speaker 3 (01:30:10):
Sadly, sadly and you know, I conscioust that nobody wants
to see death of any type. Civilian death is it's
a sad consequence of war. But not a lot of
Israelis have died. I think there was eight overnight in
the most recent Iranian missile strike. And you know, I
think of a big missile coming in and blowing up
(01:30:32):
in a heavily concentrated area of the population, you kind
of expect something larger than.
Speaker 2 (01:30:38):
That, you do.
Speaker 11 (01:30:38):
The Israelis, like the Ukrainians, have a very good early
warning system. It's on your phone. They have heavily fortified
bunkers underground I see, so you know they get.
Speaker 1 (01:30:49):
The heads up.
Speaker 11 (01:30:50):
But a ballistic missile, you've got fourteen minutes from takeoff
to landing. I mean, it flies at the edge of space.
It's not like a drone or you have eight hours
to you know, have a cup of tea and think
about it.
Speaker 3 (01:31:00):
We'll continue with Briga mcgowand from the Hudson Institute on
these and a lot of other topics we've got for
this hour.
Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
Radio. I hope you can stick around. It's seven sixteen
right now.
Speaker 3 (01:31:08):
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Speaker 4 (01:32:26):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 3 (01:32:32):
Too for our Channel nine Wether forecasts scattered showers and
storms today, best chance begins after two pm.
Speaker 1 (01:32:37):
We did have some rain this morning. I'm aware of
seventy nine for the high today, sixty nine overnight.
Speaker 3 (01:32:43):
It's gonna be scattered showers and storms. Tomorrow also a
very humid day. Thus chance rain begins at noon. Eighty five.
Tomorrow is hi sixty nine overnight with more showers and
storms and scattered thunderstorms are predicted for Thursday with the
high of eighty one seventy two degree.
Speaker 1 (01:33:00):
Right now, let's get a traffic update.
Speaker 2 (01:33:02):
From the UC Health Traffic Center.
Speaker 6 (01:33:03):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life. Sign
up to be an organ donor or explore living donation
at UCHealth dot com slash transplant. Traffic is moving again
on westbound two seventy five, approaching an accident at Coal Ring.
The right two lanes are blocked off, but at one
(01:33:25):
point all traffic must stop after Hamilton Avenue because of
that wreck. Now you have two lanes available to get
by Kingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:33:37):
Seven twenty one here if you have KRCD talk station.
Find him online at Hudson dot org. Hudson ins to
bring him account in the studio, mister energy policy expert.
He is moving away from Iran in the war that's
going on. Obviously, they're not trying to build civilian nuclear
technology with that level of enrichment. That's a fun fact
we all learn today. But in terms of domestic energy,
(01:34:00):
we can talk a little bit about preaps later. But
I'd love that Trump removed California's waiver to allow them
to dictate electric vehicles to the rest of the country.
So freedom of choice in terms of how we want
to drive around. I love that concept. But we were
talking off the air about pipelines. You just recently were
in Alaska and they're planning on trying to build an
(01:34:26):
LGA export yes, pipeline.
Speaker 11 (01:34:29):
Yeah, So Alaska has a tremendous amount of natural gas
that's on tap because there's no way to get it
out of the state. In fact, there's really no way
to get it even off of the North Slope, and
it's it's a shame. It's position geographically means that Alaska
is already halfway to Asia. So for years the planners
have talked about another pipeline like the one I used
(01:34:51):
to run, except instead of oil, it's going to be
natural gas, and we'll take that natural gas to the coast,
can press it into LNG right, and then transport it
to Asia, where it makes a lot of sense. So,
unlike previous administrations which had banned any such talk, President
Trump had three cabinet secretaries EPA Administrator Lee Zelden, Secretary
(01:35:17):
of Energy Chris Wright, and Secretary of the Interior Doug
burgham up in Alaska to say we're here to clear anything.
What do you need? How can the federal government help?
This is your state, it's not Alaskas, it's not Washington
d C. State, it's not Massachusetts state, it's Alaska, Governor Dunlevy.
Speaker 1 (01:35:38):
What do you want to do?
Speaker 3 (01:35:40):
So let's say that again. Well, okay, we're going to
build a pipeline. The problem with anything like the XL
pipeline it's one environmental activist lawsuit after another. I mean,
unless you get rid of the legal vehicle to run
into courts to have these things stop, you're going to
have delay period in the story. Regardless of the outcome
of lawsuit, it's going to take years of work its
(01:36:02):
way through. And oddly enough, even though they ultimately get approval,
all the lawsuits have been fought and won by the
pipeline builders. As we saw the XL pipeline, magically, another
lawsuit or challenge or impediment pops up and ends up
in the way again. Brigham, what do we do about
that or how do we stop that?
Speaker 11 (01:36:17):
Well, look, it's it's organized lawfare right clearly, these NGOs
and people. Climate is a religion to certain people, and
they are hell bent that we cannot. Can I say
that on the air, Yes you can. Okay, sorry about that.
Not to allow us to use fossil fuels. Period, it's
become a religion. And the fact is right, our energy
(01:36:39):
mix will change, but we have to use fossil fuels.
Speaker 1 (01:36:41):
And you're right, it's.
Speaker 11 (01:36:42):
Not really about Oh, you didn't study this, or you
forgot to consult with this group of people.
Speaker 1 (01:36:51):
It's all. It's all bs.
Speaker 11 (01:36:53):
They want it is stop these projects and make it
so untenable. Nobody wants to risk their cash one of
these things.
Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
And that works presumably. I mean, I guess I kind
of speculate and sort of ponder my navel about how
many projects just never even got close to off the
ground because of that very challenge.
Speaker 11 (01:37:13):
Yeah, there have been a lot of them. You know,
we used to be a nation of builders. We built things.
Now it's turned into we can't. But some recent decisions
by the Supreme Court on what NIPA means, what you
have to do, have been helpful. Everybody throws NEPA around.
I hear it all the time in DC. Oh, it's
a bedrock environmental lagune. No, it's not clean water Act,
(01:37:34):
Clean Air Act. Fine, it's a procedural rule, like the
rules of civil procedure, how you have to do something.
And just because you have a paperwork or administrative error
doesn't mean you throw the entire thing out. And we
can study things to death, right, Keystone Hotel was studied
longer than it took us to win World War Two,
and yet we didn't study it enough well.
Speaker 3 (01:37:55):
And going back to the project you work on, which
was the Alaska Pipeline dial one, and I remember the
commercials from getting workers to go up to Alaska, Alaska.
We're working in Alaska, and they showed pictures of the
pipeline being built. You can point it out through me
off air. It only took three years to build a
whole damn thing.
Speaker 11 (01:38:13):
Yeah, eight hundred miles in the Arctic, across hundreds of creeks, rivers, streams,
mountains minus forty degrees.
Speaker 3 (01:38:22):
Yeah, bear hostile environment, maybe, And yet it only took
three years a build eight hundred miles withor the pipeline
and it's been totally safe for almost fifty years. Yeprel
it's no, it's not crazy. It's illustrative of what can
be done if you don't stand in the way of progress.
Speaker 1 (01:38:39):
We're gonna continue, Briga mc gown.
Speaker 3 (01:38:40):
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Speaker 1 (01:39:39):
Fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:39:41):
Open up on wont offule Kass. Showers of storms today.
The best chance begins at two pm today. UH seventy
nine is going to be the high. Overnight, we got clouds,
muggy conditions drop to sixty eight. Tomorrow's high eighty five.
It'll be very humid, they're saying. Plus more scattered showers
and storms, especially after noon, and then showers and storms
(01:40:01):
overnight sixty nine for the low fall.
Speaker 1 (01:40:04):
Bye.
Speaker 3 (01:40:04):
Yes, scattered showers and storms on Thursday with a high
of eighty one seventy two. Now, let's get to traffic update.
Speaker 2 (01:40:10):
From the u See Health Traffic Center.
Speaker 6 (01:40:12):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life. Sign
up to be an organ donor or explore living donation
at uc health dot com. Slash transplant westbound two seventy
five A slow go after Hamilton Avenue to an accident
at col Rain the right two lanes are blocked off
because of that wreck. Traffic slowing down eastbound through that
(01:40:36):
same area thanks to the accident. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:40:43):
Seven thirty here fifty five KERCD talk Station, Happy Tuesday.
Briantone's a Briga McCallan from the Hudson Instuit. Check out
his podcast Charge Conversation. He's an energy expert, you know,
further to energy and further this, you know climate religion
in it is you got to think a leap of
faith to think at our exhalation is killing the planet.
And then you know, a volcano blows up and a
belch is more carbon into the atmosphere than all of
(01:41:05):
the removal that we have engaged over the past twenty years.
I mean, it's just a reality, and we're fighting an
impossible battle. And no, it's notably since we all breathe
the same air, being in the same globe. China doesn't
give a crap about the environment. They talk a little
bit of talk about global warming or climate change, but
keep building coal plant after coal plant. Why because it's
in their best interest. And I believe thoroughly in my
(01:41:27):
heart of hearts that China is one of the one
perpetuating this global myth that you and I are responsible
for changing the climate. Why because everything related to achieving
zero emissions is made by the Nam Chinese Communist Party.
I mean, you can't deny that. And you know, and
I move over from that too, looking at like what
Ukraine was able to accomplish. I know they're losing that war,
(01:41:49):
but the idea that they were able to smuggle drones
into Russia and have them ready to launch, and Russia
had no idea that Israel was able to move all
kinds of weapons systems into the heart of Iran and
launch them without the Iranians knowing about it. We are
literally allowing that. Every single day in our country, the
kill switches on all the solar panels and all the
(01:42:11):
electric equipment, relying on that it was built using Chinese
manufactured components. You had mentioned off air, the shipping and
the cranes, everything that operates in our ports was built
by the Chinese.
Speaker 11 (01:42:24):
Yeah, yeah, that's very true. And you know this is
not by accident. They're very methodical. They've thought through this
very carefully, kind of like.
Speaker 3 (01:42:33):
The Massad in Israel, thinking very carefully in advance about
launching an attack on Iran.
Speaker 11 (01:42:37):
Maybe yeah, well, hey how about that. And let's not
forget I'm waiting for this too. I'm waiting for people
to put two and two together. You talked about Ukraine
getting drones into Russia. Yep, the Mussad getting drones into Iran.
Why do you think the Chinese are buying up farm land.
Speaker 1 (01:42:54):
Next to us?
Speaker 3 (01:42:55):
They made that parallel in the Morning Show in the past.
You're right, exactly. I'm sure they have big you know,
barns and warehouses and things where you can stalk away.
Speaker 1 (01:43:04):
You know. You hell, you can.
Speaker 3 (01:43:05):
Order a drone on Amazon, have that thing rigged up
with an explosive device. They can get their hands on
C four You know, absolutely. It's not that it's not
beyond the room. It almost seems like it's just a
matter of like when when is it going to happen?
You know, when the lights go off, Brigham, when big
power shut down happens, that's the day you know that
(01:43:25):
Taiwan's getting invaded or we are.
Speaker 11 (01:43:28):
Well and you know the good news is Admiral Paparo,
who is the Indo pay Coom commander responsible for everything
from Pearl harbor to Asia F eighteen pilot naval aviator.
Speaker 1 (01:43:42):
He's a pretty smart guy and he's on it, on
it in what sense.
Speaker 11 (01:43:48):
He's changing our strategies up. He is building airfields so
that we can start dispersing forces to keep the Chinese guessing.
He's increasing our materials, missiles, fuel stock, deterrence. Deterrence is
back in fashion because it works. Well, yeah, it's worked
in terms of keeping nuclear war a day for well
(01:44:09):
since World War Two. And we'll be reversing our decision
to relocate the Marines out of Okinawa to Guam.
Speaker 1 (01:44:15):
Not going to do that anymore. They're going to stay there. Well, welcome,
welcome by the Japanese population.
Speaker 11 (01:44:22):
It is actually it's welcome by They've had a change
in governments and they realize that China is a significant
threat as they as the Chinese continue to push outward
from China into what we call the first island chain
to the second island chain.
Speaker 1 (01:44:37):
Well, they've been doing that for years in the South
China Sea. How they've been building their own islands they
have for peaceful purposes. Oh yeah, right, yeah, nothing like
an airstrip that's designed obviously for massive sized military aircraft. No, no, no, no,
this is just for seven thirty sevens or something.
Speaker 11 (01:44:55):
Well, and they've militarized them, and so I think the
United States again was nai even taking you know, Brian,
I don't know. We're in Midwestern as we take people
at face value. If you tell me something, I'm gonna
believe it. But you can't do that with people that
don't share the same values, or the same legal system,
(01:45:15):
or the same ethos that Americans do.
Speaker 1 (01:45:19):
We're a little naive. We are very naive.
Speaker 3 (01:45:22):
We train and educate their people, We allow them access
to our technology. I mean, in a world with the
Internet alone, you can easily steal something. You know, the
days of having to do a drop in the park,
you know when the Soviet Union was around. I mean
those days are over. You don't have to go copy
documents and papers. I'm saying something that's so obvious, but
you know that's going on every day right here in Cincinnati.
(01:45:45):
We've had a Chinese national arrested trying to leave the
country with aircraft engine secrets from one of our local manufacturers.
Speaker 1 (01:45:53):
Geez more, we bring them down.
Speaker 3 (01:45:56):
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Speaker 4 (01:47:02):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station, Wit.
Speaker 1 (01:47:09):
Shatony on the forecasts.
Speaker 2 (01:47:10):
That's a rain.
Speaker 3 (01:47:11):
Yeah, we'll start with today, scattered showers of stores. Best
chance begins after two pm today, seventy nine for the
high sixty eight overnight. We're gonna have more scattered showers
of stores tomorrow. Best chance begins at noon and very
humid day as well. They're saying eighty five for the
high overnight. Showers of stores will continue to drop to
sixty nine and high had eighty one on Thursday with
more scattered showers and thunderstorms seventy two degrees.
Speaker 1 (01:47:35):
Right now, it's tigh for traffic.
Speaker 2 (01:47:37):
From you see how tramping is centered.
Speaker 6 (01:47:39):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life.
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Speaker 2 (01:47:51):
What's abound?
Speaker 6 (01:47:52):
Two seventy five A slow go after Hamilton Avenue to
an accident at Cold Rain. The right two lanes are
blocked off because of that wreck. Traffic slowing down eastbound
through that same area thanks to the accident.
Speaker 2 (01:48:06):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC, the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:48:11):
Fifty five KR City Talkstation, Hudson dot orgs where you
find Briga mcallon on the Hudson Institute. And in the
studio right here is where you find Today we're talking
energy policy brought more broadly speaking, Charged Conversations is his podcast.
Strongly recommend that you take take a listen to that one.
Find out where you find your podcast pivoting over the EU.
(01:48:32):
I mean, I always like the energy policy. It's like
a cautionary tale, you know. And in California is another
cautionary tale. They spend outrageous amounts, they shut they over
regulate refining facilities of the port where they just leave.
It's like anybody else if you if you have the
means to leave, you leave. And the population of California
(01:48:53):
is only maintaining some you know, connection with balance because
of the illegal immigrant popular coming in there. There's lots
of statistics on that one. For all the Americans that
lead with their money and go elsewhere where the taxes
are lower and the energy prices aren't so high, it's
just replaced by illegal immigrants. So whether or not that
actually stands true, but they have regulated themselves into a
(01:49:17):
painful situation. And if you look at the European Union,
it's a great illustration of what's going to happen if
you pursue blindly wind and solar as your sole mechanism
of energy generation. It does not work on a regular,
reliable basis.
Speaker 11 (01:49:33):
It doesn't, you know. And that's one of the things
we talk about in the United States. For a number
of years, we went from the builders, the doers, make
it happen, to oh, my gosh, we have to start
regulating stuff. We have to start taxing stuff, because people
that don't understand innovation, people that don't understand business or
the economy, it scares them. And for many, many years,
(01:49:58):
the EU a special with the growth in Brussels and
taking nationalism away from the individuals. Studies has all about
control and regulations are controls. So the European Union has
long positions itself as a global regulatory superpower. But what
they don't get is the more you regulate, the more
you kill innovation, the more you kill business prosperity. Nobody
(01:50:22):
has jobs, there's no money. See Germany, yes a powerhouse,
one of the economic powerhouses. Of the world, and they
have you gotten to the point where electricity is what
four times the price of what we regularly pay here
or more. Yeah, it has really taken a turn for
the worse. Now with the recent elections there, the Greens
(01:50:43):
have been kicked out. They were pulling at eight percent,
and so there's been a realization that, yeah, you know what,
maybe we need some more electricity. But the damage has
been done. The de industrialization of Germany has occurred. You
can't build things in Germany any longer, it's too expensive.
Speaker 3 (01:51:03):
Well, and they've all gone ev I mean, they're basically
the substitute for California, and now the California's waiver has
been taken away and they can no longer dominate the
direction of what we choose to do by way of transportation.
And I know hybrids are a big thing, but how
California didn't want hybrids either. They wanted zero internal combustion engines.
(01:51:23):
So but the European Union is still going in that direction.
I mean, Porscha is not even going to make internal
combustion engines anymore among other manufacturers, and that's like, that
just seems crazy to me. It's what their country or
company was built on what they're known for.
Speaker 11 (01:51:36):
Yeah, it is crazy. And again, if we're not careful,
China will take that away from everybody because.
Speaker 3 (01:51:44):
They do it with slave labor. They do everything cheaper
and quite often. From my understanding, their evs actually are
pretty amazing things. They are pretty good, you know.
Speaker 11 (01:51:53):
But it's not a fair comparison, right because everything from
China is government subsidized. There is no such thing as
the pre market, free market economy or a private company.
And I was thinking about this during the earlier wouldn't
you rather build things in the West, in Germany, in
the United States, where we actually do have an e PA,
(01:52:14):
we do actually have uh osha, we do actually have
laws and regulations that make sure it's going to be
produced safely, cleanly and efficiently well.
Speaker 3 (01:52:24):
And that's the backcroping thing about the European Union because
when the lights go off because the wind ain't blowing in,
the sun ain't shine, and uh they're getting their their
natural gas powered plants and getting that from from Russia,
Russia who also does not have environmental regulations and rules,
and it's it's it's it's not as clean a fuel
to burn as what we have here.
Speaker 1 (01:52:45):
Not at all.
Speaker 11 (01:52:46):
But you know, Brian, what's really troubling to me is
this this notion of bureaucrats and technocrats that you can
regulate everything to death. And uh, you know they started
this out with their privacy laws and as a GDPR
if you do business in Europe, you know what the
GDPR is. They're now pursuing it with AI. Guess what,
they're not gonna have AI. And now they're positioning themselves
(01:53:08):
as leaders on climate regulation, meaning if you import anything
to Europe, you're gonna have to tell them your carbon score.
Speaker 3 (01:53:18):
See that's again going back to the California having an
impact on the rest of the United States. If you
want to do business in the European Union, they're going
to have some measure control over you. So yeah, as
far as I'm concerned, don't do business with them. Then
you know, I'm sorry, we're not going to abide.
Speaker 11 (01:53:33):
Well, it may be hard to get stuff there, but
it's called the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and it's also
a terriff.
Speaker 3 (01:53:40):
Let's be honest, sounds like it to me one more
with Briger mcallwan. It's some forty six to fifty five
krcity talk station and an opportunity for you to say
thousands and thousands of dollars, because let's face it, at
some point in our life, everybody's gonna need one or
more of the following. I go cardiograms, MRI, C, D scan, ultrasounds. Uh,
just got one myself last week, and ultrasound. Of course
i'd see T scan rather, And of course I went
(01:54:00):
to Affordable Imaging services so I didn't have to pay
thirty or five thousand.
Speaker 1 (01:54:04):
Dollars at the hospital to get it done.
Speaker 3 (01:54:07):
No, a CT scan at Affordable Imaging four hundred and
fifty bucks without a contrast six hundred with the contrast
an amazing, amazing amount of savings there. Each one of
the scans comes with the board certified radiologists support that
you and your doc will both get within forty eight hours.
Don't pay thirty five hundred dollars for that echo cardiogram
and have to stand around for about three weeks to
a month to get in. Affordable Imaging Services will do
(01:54:28):
that echo cardiogram for five hundred bucks without an enhancement
eight hundred.
Speaker 1 (01:54:32):
With and to get you right in.
Speaker 3 (01:54:34):
Very low overhead, but same kind of equipment hospitals are
using so save heaps of money. Customer service there is
very nice. There's are very very nice people at Affordable
Imaging five one three seven five three eight thousand, five
one three seven five three eight thousand. Check them out
online Affordable Medimaging dot com fifty five KRC the talk station,
(01:54:58):
here's your Chenne nine.
Speaker 1 (01:54:59):
Weather four cast.
Speaker 3 (01:55:02):
A lot of rain today, scattered showers and storms on
and off, the best chances of those showing up after
two pm, although we did have them this morning. Seventy
nine for the high opening Loo sixty eight. It'll be
a high of eighty five and very humid tomorrow, with
scattered showers and storms mostly kicking in afternoon. Showers and
stores will continue overnight sixty nine for a low and
again yes, scattered showers and storms on Thursday, with a
(01:55:23):
high of eighty one seventy two.
Speaker 1 (01:55:25):
Right now, it's going to traffic update Chuck from the.
Speaker 2 (01:55:28):
UCUT Tramfit Center.
Speaker 6 (01:55:29):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life. Sign
up to be an organ donor or explore living donation
at u S health dot com slash transplant cruse continue
to work with the request spend two seventy five at
coal ring, but there is no longer a delay to
get by eastbound seventy four.
Speaker 2 (01:55:48):
A couple of problems.
Speaker 6 (01:55:49):
There's a broken down left shoulder before you get the
seventy five and then the wrecked on the right shoulder
southbound seventy five Ram Chuck Ingram Month fifty five KR
see the talk Stay.
Speaker 1 (01:56:02):
Seven fifty here for the top karros de talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:56:04):
Brian Thomas was bringing mcaalan from the Hudson ins to
solving all the energy problems in the world, engaging in
the thought process, involving common sense, logic and reason and
pointing out the failures of all this green stuff, pivoting
back to the state of California and going back to
the refinery closures. I mean the refineries just like we've
had it up to our eyeballs. We're done and we
(01:56:25):
can't afford to operate in the state. You've taken away
our profit margins and also suing us, suing us for
our climate change, our responsibility for climate change, which to
me is the dumbest, dumbest thing. This isn't like the
refineries were sitting on a bunch of inside information that
their product was causing the temperature fluctuation in the world.
(01:56:49):
They've been at this extraction of oil since what the
eighteen hundreds, I mean, prior to that, it was whale
oil to keep your lamp slit. And then someone figured
out kerosene, and then someone figured out gasoline, and you know,
and and cities were built on the use of these things.
Now there was an interim period of coll too, but
I mean the world lives on it. Plastics are made
(01:57:10):
with it. If you pulled the plug on all things
petroleum right now, the world would come to a screeching halt.
Speaker 11 (01:57:17):
The world would come to a screeching halt. And before that,
we deforested every tree at Ohio practically right, people still
used dung. Yes, they burned dong for for heat and
for cooking.
Speaker 1 (01:57:30):
You know.
Speaker 11 (01:57:30):
I went to the FC Cincinnati Stadium or the TQL Stadium,
I guess as I should call it, to watch UH
a German match between the Germans and UH the New Zealanders.
Great match. By the way, FC Munchin just destroyed and
Byron it was ten to nothing, I think. But there
(01:57:52):
was there was a there was a guy standing in
the concourse with a sign. There were there were a
couple of position I said, FIFA, uh Climate Awareness And
I watched this. I actually took a video. I sat
there for a couple of minutes. Not a single person.
They were like just throngs of people going back and forth.
I think the guy was like, oh, okay, here's our
you know PC. Afterthought, nobody approached them, nobody talked to them.
(01:58:15):
And I'm looking up at his plastic sign, going, guys,
really and he's got a plastic vestiva And it's just ludicrous.
And look, we all want to be good stewards of
the environment. We're not saying that right, but we're saying
we have to live. And if we went back to
pre industrial revolution, you know, times weren't so good, the
(01:58:36):
good old days, they weren't so great.
Speaker 1 (01:58:38):
No, they weren't.
Speaker 3 (01:58:39):
And then what will we go back to Lindsey Woolsey
handmade shirts and I guess clogs.
Speaker 1 (01:58:48):
Oh, I do, like wo wouldn't shoot? That'd be great,
wouldn't teeth too? Wooden teeth? Exactly? Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:58:53):
But you're right on the California refinery closures, they're witnessing
a wave of refinery closures for the reasons that you stated,
They still, you know, use gasoline to the point where
Gavin Newsom, the governor, is now pleading with Phillip sixty
six and Valero not to close two refineries because it's
twenty percent of fuel and gas prices are going to
(01:59:17):
be at least another buck.
Speaker 1 (01:59:19):
And they're already like four fifty on average out there,
aren't they. I'll bet you they're five something today, so
you'd be looking at six plus bucks a gallon, yeah,
for regular stuff. Yeah, well, you know at some point
that the citizenry is just going to explode.
Speaker 11 (01:59:33):
Well, I think you know, there's a if you live
in the city and don't have a car, and we
probably both.
Speaker 1 (01:59:38):
Know exactly what the global warming folks want, but you know, for.
Speaker 11 (01:59:42):
The rest of us that have to drive to work,
that have to drive to multiple jobs, that can't afford
to live in the city, so you're commuting in and
you better not take the subway, you might get lit up. Literally,
you drive. It's the only way to get to work.
Speaker 3 (01:59:58):
Yeah, complicated it is, but again it's something that they
have done to themselves. Everything out there is so much
more expensive to do, and I mean, look, what happened
with COVID Once people realize that they were given a
green light to work from home. I mean, it's one
of the gifts that COVID nineteen gave us. Wait a minute,
(02:00:20):
you mean I don't have to commute anymore. My wife's
been enjoying that since it all came to pass. She
had a forty five minute commute, and now she's been
in her office basement, you know, for the last several years.
Absolutely loves it. We don't have to spend nearly as
much on gasoline. She doesn't have a laundry bill, or
rather a dry cleaning bill anymore. You know, feel sorry
(02:00:40):
for the dry cleaners who went out of business as
a consequence of that, But you know, we live, thrive
and survive, roll with the punches, and then when people
find out they can leave and still work at the
same office, they leave. And then, in California's case, the
entire state. There's better places to live out in the world.
It has been a fun and broad ranging topic of conversation.
(02:01:01):
Bring Him Account from the Hudson Institute, Folks Get Charged Conversations.
The podcast search for It You'd be Glad you did.
Always interesting and informative bring them. I look forward to
having you back in. I know you've got some trips
and meetings scheduled. We'll get an update.
Speaker 1 (02:01:15):
From you when you come back. I'm looking forward to it. Brian,
thank you. I am too.
Speaker 3 (02:01:18):
Seven fifty five coming up in seven fifty six. Sadly
no bright Bird inside scoop today and I not quite
sure what happened to them today. Daniel Davis deep Die,
we'll be talking about Russia, Ukraine, and of course you're
on an Israel that'll take place at eight thirty. But
in the meantime consider calling in. Got a little while
to talk after the news at the top of the hour.
Speaker 1 (02:01:36):
Every day we discover something.
Speaker 9 (02:01:37):
New and important the day's top stories on fifty five
krs the talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:01:44):
Just how debilitated it was. Joe Biden. They were telling
us that.
Speaker 2 (02:01:48):
He was great.
Speaker 9 (02:01:49):
Clay Travis and Buck Sexton today at noon on fifty
five krs the talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:01:58):
Eight o five. You're a fifty five kr se detalk station.
Speaker 3 (02:02:01):
At the other decent Tuesday bottom of the Arra Daniel
Davis deep Die retired to Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis giving
us an analysis of the situation in Russia, Ukraine, as
well as today Iran and Israel. Obviously I knew we
would be talking about it at some point. Of course,
Iran continues to be bombed by Israel, also launching some
of its own missiles into Israel. I guess Tel Aviva
(02:02:22):
had lost eight citizens there in one of the missile attacks,
so but a lot greater damage happening in Iran. When
an amazing development when Iranian loses control of its own airspace,
which is a pretty significant accomplishment for the Israelis. So
they're at they're free to fly around and bomb whatever
the hell they want. Killed another one of the top
(02:02:43):
military folks just yesterday and also blew up the television station.
I don't know if you've seen the video of that.
I did get a chuckle out of that, and I'm
not laughing at the loss of human life that's going on.
Speaker 1 (02:02:54):
I hate wars.
Speaker 3 (02:02:55):
And but when you hear Brigha McGowan talking about it,
when you only need to have three percent or four
percent something in rich uranium in order to run a
nuclear plant to generate power, and they're at sixty percent,
which is only a couple of days away from eighty
percent for a nuclear weapon. You know, Dan well that
they're not doing this for civilian power generating purposes, you know,
(02:03:18):
and at some point you know it is or with
its intelligence capabilities. I'm sure they knew how close Iran
was when you think about they were able to launch
this military operation from deep within Iran. Obviously they got
some help with Iranian citizens there, but if they were
able to do that and accomplish all of that, I'm
pretty sure they've got intelligence on the inside and maybe
(02:03:41):
these nuclear facilities and realize, listen, we are one day
away from our own annihilation. These people are crazy and
it's brig and pointed out. Even if you don't have
an active nuclear warhead with a triggering device, it doesn't
take much and make a dirty bomb. You got a missile,
it's fairly accurate these days. You blow it up inside
a civilian popular you kill a lot of people and
(02:04:02):
contaminate a lot of property. And then with hindsight, we
can look at the coordination. And I'd like to think
that there was some serious coordination there. Right as I said, speculated,
My guess is that Trump and net and Yah who
exchanged notes, Netanya who says, listen, we have intelligence, but
says Iran is like a second away from a bomb.
Speaker 1 (02:04:24):
Uh, we need to go in. We're done waiting.
Speaker 3 (02:04:27):
These negotiations have spun around and spun the wheels and
gotten absolutely nowhere. Now for what since since Barack Obama
gave it a go, We're gonna take the bull by
the horns. And Trump says, all right, I now, let
me give me sixty days. And it may have been
some backtandle commissioner communications with Iran. You guys better listen
and sit down. You better, you better come to the
(02:04:49):
negotiation table in good faith. You got sixty days. And
then on day sixty one, Israel launches the attack which
had been play and way way in advance. So I
just try to, you know, line the stars up here
and connect the dots, and they seem pretty easy to connect.
(02:05:14):
And then we're all waiting around for Thursday night. This
I just think this statement from Israel's ambassador to the
US A difficult time pronouncing his name Isshiel leader l
i E or l e i t e r lighter
later lighter. So when the dust settles, you're going to
(02:05:34):
see some surprises on Thursday night and Friday that will
make the beeper operation almost seem simple. Of course, the
beeper operation was the Hesbalah terror group. They blew up
the pagers and the communication devices. It was pretty amazing
that they were able to install those explosive devices in
the walkie talkies that were being carried around by the
(02:05:57):
terrorist organized or the terrorist organization. So again, well oiled machine.
But what's gonna happen on Thursday night and Friday night?
If if that was a simple operation, how could they
outdo themselves? And what they accomplished when they launched the
attack against Iran from within Iran? So chalking a bunch
(02:06:24):
up in the wind category for Israel. And I'm going
back to something I started the program with, and I
absolutely profoundly believe that Donald Trump does not have the
ability to bring us into a war. And it seems
to me we're going in that direction with all the
military heart we're sending over the USS knimics on its way.
Apparently some twenty eight Air Force fueling tanker planes have
(02:06:45):
already flown and were on their way at least as
a reporting yesterday. And selling equipment and giving a military equipment,
that's one thing, but troops on the ground and getting
engaged in a military conflict is a completely different thing.
(02:07:06):
And why he has to do this when we have
a constitution which is pretty damn easy to read. Democratic
senator introduced legislation yesterday to revent Donald Trump from using
military force against Iran, of course, without congressional authorization. Virginia's
Tim Kane behind this. He'd done this before during Trump's
(02:07:26):
first turn. He introduced similar legislation with regard to Trump's
waging war against Iran, which did pass both the Senate
and House along with Republican support, but not enough votes
to survive Trump's veto, which, if you're a constitutional purist
(02:07:46):
like i am, doesn't it seem strange Congress has to
declare war. There isn't a such thing as the authorization
of use of military force in the in the Constitution.
They created that one, but that also has to have
Senate approval, and we don't have that yet, so Kine
(02:08:08):
said in the State, and is not our national security
interest to get a war with Iran unless that war
is absolutely necessary to defend the United States. I'm deeply
concerned that the recent escalation of hostilities between Israel and
Iran could quickly pull the United States into another endless conflict. Yep,
how long were we in Afghanistan, which served as a
(02:08:30):
predicate for the endless so called war on tear that
we engage in for what almost two decades nine to eleven.
I think that was where the authorization for use of
military force showed up and they hung their hat on
all kinds of military conflicts that weren't even loosely connected
to that original authorization for use of military force.
Speaker 1 (02:08:52):
So anyway, I.
Speaker 3 (02:08:54):
Know you can say I'm a no Kings guy and
I have the imperial presidency is something that I've talked
out against. I don't think Donald Trump is breaking the
law regularly, but this is something I profoundly believe in
the limits of the presidency in so far as waging war.
I do believe Israel's on the right side. I do
believe Israel facing an existential threat, not the United States.
(02:09:20):
That's the difference. I think that's that's It's Caine's point,
Tim Kaine's point. Yeah, if they start coming after us,
and sure we can go after them, and you can
draw a nine to eleven parallel. Look are these terrorists
attacked us and blew up our own soil. It was
a threat to the United States of America killing thousands
of our people. We need to do something about it militarily.
That's a different argument than what we got right now.
(02:09:42):
Right now we're outside spectators watching Israel kick the crap
out of Iran. I'm looking forward to what Daniel Davis
has to say. Maybe he'll disagree with me on that one,
but that's what it looks like to me so far.
Uh five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two three talk pound five fifty
on AT and T phones. Maybe got something else to
(02:10:03):
say about it, or something different. You can feel free
to give me a call. I mean, I would enjoy
hearing from you. But coming up, we're gonna be talking
a little bit. I got some inside new stuff from
the Senate, of course, the Mega bill, and the Senate
finally came out with its changes to the House's version
that had previously passed. I don't know that they're going
(02:10:23):
to be geting to be able to get it to
Trump's desk by July fourth, which is the I would argue,
perhaps arbitrary date that they wanted to get it there.
The House may have a hissy fed or at least
a handful of members in the House, those coming from
salt states. Yes, the Democrats in the high tax states,
they wanted their AsSalt increase. That's one of the things
(02:10:44):
that's not in the Senate version of the bill. Hope
you can stick around. We'll talk a little bit about
that coming up.
Speaker 8 (02:10:49):
Next fifty five krc OWER Heard Or Radio nineteen fifty
five KRCU de Talk Station Daniel Davis Deep Dive up next.
Speaker 3 (02:10:58):
In the meantime, the Senate did release its detailed major
revisions to the houses Big tax building, the big beautiful bill,
and some positive things from my perspective, although not enough
from my perspective, and I don't think it's enough to
get Congress and Massy to join in and say yes
on the bill. He was on the program not that
long ago illustrating the several different things he wanted out
(02:11:19):
of the Senate in order to bring him around to
a yes vote. So, plus, they're going to be facing
some additional challenges from the Democrats from blue states because
the Senate's version keeps the salt tax at ten thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (02:11:32):
So what do we got going on here?
Speaker 3 (02:11:35):
Keeps the bulk of the twenty seventeen tax cuts in place,
which is the primary reason behind this big beautiful bill
eliminating taxes on tips, overtime pay, and Social Security benefits.
The little changes on that one get to the details
in a moment on that. So, starting with salt tax,
the House went up to forty thousand dollars in order
(02:11:55):
to appease the high democrat Blue States Republican in order
to get them on board. But there are no center
Republicans from those states. Ergo, it's back down to ten
thousand dollars. That is currently in effect.
Speaker 1 (02:12:11):
Now.
Speaker 3 (02:12:11):
Whether they can win over the Blue state Republicans in
this version or they have to hammer it out behind
the scenes remains to be seen. What's going to happen
on that. But I'm glad to see that they kept
it at ten grand. There's no need to reward the
Blue states and their high taxes. That just means you
and I are subsidizing those states and their high taxes.
I just can't abide that House bill would deny some
(02:12:36):
tax credits to the green energy projects. Now, you recall
the Inflation Reduction Act, which was not the big Green
New Deal bill. The House bill would deny some tax
credit to projects that don't start construction within sixty days
or begin operations by the end of twenty twenty eight. Sadly,
(02:13:01):
the Senate plan gives those projects more time. And this
is where you might get a definite noe from Congressroom Massy,
because we is on the program. He said, you know,
the one thing the Senate can do is just end
those things right away, speed up the end of the
tax credits, deny them earlier. Well, this one kicks it
down the road. So, for example, wind and solar projects
could begin construction in twenty twenty six or twenty twenty
(02:13:25):
seven and still qualify for the tax credits. Other still
called green projects geothermal, nuclear, hydropower, and energy could get
tax credits if they begin construction as late as twenty
thirty five. Now, I like the idea that nuclear is
in there, and I encourage the development of these small
nuclear reactors. But then again, that's maybe going to get
(02:13:46):
a no vote out of Thomas Massey. Medicaid Senate tax
effectively caps the so called provider taxes at three point
five percent for states that have expanded Medicaid under the
Affordable Care Act, down from the current six percent. The
House version froze all provider tax credits at the current
six percent. So there's one change, and I would argue
(02:14:10):
for the better. CENTIPIL also reduces certain existing state supplemental
payments to hospitals. The House version just limited future payments,
and that's got people pulling their hair out, saying, oh
my god, rural hospitals are going to shut.
Speaker 1 (02:14:23):
Down or something of that. You know, there's always arguments
against it.
Speaker 3 (02:14:26):
Now, the centpill also does impose the work requirements for
Medicaid under the for able bodied Medicaid recipients. So if
you're able to work, you got to go out and
work twenty hours a week. The House bill says no,
that does not include adults able body that have dependent children. Now,
the one change in the Senate version is if you
(02:14:47):
have children older than fourteen, you are subject to the
work requirement of twenty hours a week. I guess they
figure if the kids are over the age of fourteen,
they probably not spending a whole lot of time with
the anyway, university endowments. I know this raised the ire
of a whole lot of people, even some conservatives, saying,
you know, you got Hillsdale College out there. It's not
just all liberal, left wing universities. And if you tax
(02:15:09):
their endowments twenty one percent, which is where the House
bill was top rate. Anyway, the Senate has a narrow
The Senate has a narrow version of that, setting the
top tax rate at eight percent. Currently the rate is
one point four percent. So I'll let you argue among
yourselves whether those endowments and then you know it's like
(02:15:30):
Harvard's got what fifty one billion dollars they're sitting on
taxed only at one point four percent.
Speaker 1 (02:15:37):
Let's see some changes.
Speaker 3 (02:15:38):
The charitableduction Cenate bill includes a larger charitable deduction for
people who don't itemize. So if you don't itemize your taxes,
you can claim up to one thousand dollars an individual
or two thousand dollars for married couples, seniors, and tips.
In overtime, the Senate altered back some of the President's priorities.
It would increase the propose four thousand per person deduction
(02:16:02):
for senior citizens to six thousand dollars. That's the version
Trump's promised to eliminate an income tax on Social Security
and so ins far as the no tax on tips.
The deduction will be limited to twenty five thousand dollars
per person, as opposed to the uncapped version of the
House bill. I don't know how many people are out
there making more than twenty five thousand dollars annually on tips.
(02:16:24):
Maybe they're a lot, I don't know, but at least
the Senate vision has a caps as a cap. Now
the no tax on overtime provision limited under the Senate
bill to twelve five hundred dollars twenty five thousand for
married couples, as opposed to the House's uncapped version, and
as expected, and again something Congressman Thomas Massey and Senator
(02:16:48):
Ran Paul probably reject a five trillion dollar increase to
the debt limit.
Speaker 1 (02:16:54):
The House bill was four trillion. So the good, the bad,
and the ugly now comes the fight.
Speaker 3 (02:17:03):
A twenty five Right now at five KRC the talk
station Daniel Davis Deep Dive up next fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (02:17:10):
It's Champion Windows Anniversaries Tiver the channel on weather.
Speaker 3 (02:17:15):
We have scattered showers of storms. Best chances begin after
two PM. Today's high seventy nine out of sixty eight
overnight instead of be very muggy tomorrow. Scattered showers of
storms begin around noon, a very humid day as well.
I have eighty five showers and storms overnight as well.
Sixty nine for low. We got scattered showers predicted on
(02:17:35):
Thursday and Thursday's high eighty one seventy two degrees. Right now,
it's time for a traffic update from the UCL Traffic Center.
Speaker 6 (02:17:43):
Right now, over one hundred thousand people are waiting and
hoping for an organ transplant to save their life. Sign
up to be an organ donor or explore a living
donation at u see health dot com slaves Transplant Sethen
seventy time continues to slow through blacklandon northbound Buttermilk into
the Cut northbound four seventy one from Memorial and southbound
(02:18:03):
seventy one. You're often on the breaks through blue Ash
and Kenwood heavy again exiting to Third Street. Chuck King
Ramont fifty five krs. The talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:18:13):
Hey twenty nine and a Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (02:18:15):
I always look forward to this moment in time because
it gets a deep dive with Daniel Davis. It's time
for the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Retired Lieutenant Colonel giving
us all kinds of thoughts and insights on well things military,
and we have a new conflict to talk about this week.
Let's stop and put aside Ukraine and Russia for a moment,
and let's talk about the details unfolding in the war
(02:18:35):
with Israel and Iran. Now, I mean be Hindsight's twenty twenty.
As I've pointed out in the program, the last couple
of days, Donald Trump pulls our military person out out
of the region in advance of well the sixty first day.
In his sixty today deadline he gave to Iran about
negotiating a deal on their military or on their nuclear program.
(02:18:56):
I guess maybe perhaps he had a conversation and at
some point with Benjamin Netanyahu early on. I suspect Netanyahu
had good intelligence that Iran might be up to something
no good in a very short period of time, and
it was time to stop the wheel spinning and take
some action. Trump maybe suggested him, well, at least give
me a sixty day window of opportunity before all hell
(02:19:16):
breaks lose to see if we can negotiate.
Speaker 1 (02:19:19):
Obviously, that did not work.
Speaker 3 (02:19:22):
Day sixty one Israel unleashes and an amazing thing to behold,
much like the Ukraine's getting inside the interior of Russia
and hiding those drones in spite of the being Russian territory. Obviously,
Israel had a profound presence within the interior of Iran
was able to launch some very short term or rather
a short distance military strikes from within the interior. That's
(02:19:45):
an amazing coup right there. And then now they apparently
dominate the entire Iranian airspace and can fly free will
and hit any target they want with pretty much great success.
Long winded start, Daniel Davis, Welcome back, man. What's your
take on this and what's your reaction all this?
Speaker 12 (02:20:03):
Yeah, really there's two separate things at play here that
we need to address because they're very different and potential
where we're going next. And one is just the the
operational art that you just mentioned there and from a
military tactical perspective, and this has been pretty impressive again
because it was very highly effective. They were able to
(02:20:25):
infiltrate apparently a pretty decent number of massad agents and
other infiltrators and perhaps even some insider folks the Iranians
who had been helping, et cetera. Just like the the
Ukraine side had some help from the Russian people who
turned and the other situation there, and so then now
then they were able to take care of that on
the ground. At the same time they were coming in
(02:20:46):
with strategic assets and operational and you know, an aircraft
and all that, and it just absolutely devastated the initial
Iranian defense. Allegedly one or two at thirty fives were
shot down. We still don't have confirmation of that, but
even at that, that's out of two hundred aircraft that
flew the first night. That is a remarkable number to
(02:21:06):
have been shot down, if it was. If not, obviously
it's even.
Speaker 1 (02:21:09):
More than that.
Speaker 12 (02:21:10):
So in terms of how they started out, that's great.
But there's another half of this coin, because we also
see playing out graphically that the Iron Dome system and
the multi layered Israeli air defense system is not anywhere
near as good as what people thought it was.
Speaker 2 (02:21:27):
We knew it wasn't.
Speaker 12 (02:21:28):
We've had on our show many times an expert that
pointed this out in twenty twenty four. He very accurately
predicted what Iran could do if it wanted to, and
how it signaled in the past. When we gave the
Iron Dome credit for knocking down everything. But it turns
out it only got some of the smaller stuff in
the slower moving drones, but the missiles got through. And
now that we see, while Israel has virtual air supremacy
(02:21:51):
in Iran, Iran has virtual missile supremacy in Israel. There's
very little that they can shoot down of those ballistic missiles,
especially some of the more sophisticated ones that they have.
So right now you have both sides literally every night
for five straightns, hummeling the other side there and causing
tremendous damage, worst that we've ever seen in Israel in
(02:22:11):
their existence. None of the wars have ever hit their
cities the way this one is so far, and it's
anybody's guests where it's going next. But with Trump leaving
the G seven and coming back to convening just this morning,
just hours from now, this now Security Council meeting, it's
kind of ominous what could be coming next?
Speaker 3 (02:22:27):
Yeah, and you know, I've been railing against this all morning.
It's not the first time I've railed against it. The
president is not allowed to declare war on his own.
It takes congressional action, at least the Court of the Constitution.
I've got a copy of Daniel. There has to be
at least an authorization for use of military force which
the Senate has to approve. That hasn't been done yet.
So I got the USS and them it's apparently heading
on over to the Middle East. We've got all these
(02:22:48):
refueling airplane heading on over to the Middle East. So
obviously the American military presence has been there and is
now growing. So you know, is there going to be
some sort of congressional act this. I mean, I think
it would be on the pale people screaming about the
imperial presidency for Trump to just unilaterally join in the fray.
Speaker 12 (02:23:10):
Right, Yeah, there's there's there's no question that there's lots
of moving pieces here. In addition, there have been by
many reports, up to thirty area or refueling jets leave
from the United States and moved into the region. That's
on top of everything else. You mentioned the B two
bombers that have been at Diego Garcia for quite a
long time.
Speaker 1 (02:23:26):
And then now on top of this and.
Speaker 12 (02:23:28):
Trump making some pretty boisterous and and uh, you know
the derogatory claims in on Air Force One last night
about what may be coming, et cetera.
Speaker 1 (02:23:37):
I have huge problems with that.
Speaker 12 (02:23:40):
I don't think it's a good idea to do anyway,
because we should not get involved with this war.
Speaker 1 (02:23:44):
This is something between Israel and Iran. If they want
to do that, that's that's up to them.
Speaker 12 (02:23:50):
But I'm even more concerned with the lack of concern
about any almost anyone in the United States about the
very issue you just mentioned here.
Speaker 1 (02:23:58):
We do not want to sit you to.
Speaker 12 (02:24:00):
Where we literally give carte blanche to whoever's in the
White House amen that they can have, because then you
basically are a monarch, which is what we tried to
prevent with the forming of the Constitution in the first place.
And there's a couple of I think the Thomas Massey
and I think there's one Senator Tim Kaine, I believe
that are talking about that, but no one else. Is
nobody in the Democratic Party leadership, the Republican Party leadership.
(02:24:23):
They have basically just handed it over to the commander
in chief. And that is a dangerous place to be.
Speaker 3 (02:24:29):
Is it's not a question whose ox is being gored,
is a question of whether or not they had the
legal authority to do it in the first place. And
you and I are eyed eye on that. And I
read Congress from Massey's statement on the air this morning.
I read Tim Kaine statement on the air. Tim Kaine's
gone down this road before, back when Trump was originally president.
It passed his resolution, which either that in and of
itself is comable. Did he need to pass a piece
(02:24:50):
of legislation to confirm what's already there, which is the
Congress as the colt. But it did go through and
it got vetoed by the president. Something's fallowed apart here
on that one. And you know, I don't have a
problem with Donald Trump the man. I like most of
all of his policies. But this is something that's really
quite concerning to me. And I'm glad that you agree
(02:25:12):
with me and see eyed eye with me on that one, sir.
Speaker 12 (02:25:15):
Now, it's just a simple rendering of the Constitution that
we're supposed to all follow. Now, it's not hard to
see i'd eye with you on that.
Speaker 3 (02:25:22):
They all held a hand up and swore an oath
of office that included upholding the constitution.
Speaker 1 (02:25:28):
Craziness.
Speaker 3 (02:25:28):
But then, you know, there's a lot of elected to
people running around going we need to get in this
we need to get in this, all right, Well, if
you want to get into it, then you know, go
ahead and declare war and make it efficion.
Speaker 5 (02:25:36):
You know.
Speaker 12 (02:25:36):
One of the things, Brian, it's supposed to be hard
to get into wars. Yeah, it was designed that way
on purpose.
Speaker 1 (02:25:42):
So that it's not easy. And we're seeing if this
goes sideways.
Speaker 12 (02:25:47):
And my big beef tactically is that if we join
offensively in this, then we put targets on the backs
of our troops all the least over and that same
issue I just showed you, we're the that system. The
patriots that iron don't can't stop these missiles. There's even
less protection for many of our smaller outposts in the
(02:26:08):
Middle East. We would be absolutely powerless to stop this,
and there would be a lot of American casualties, which
we don't have to have any, but that's almost certain
to come if we launched this war.
Speaker 3 (02:26:18):
Well, that was something that Thomas Massey put up in
a graphic along with his rejection or the idea that
we should under this conflict. The range of the Iranian
missiles and it encompass a very large range which includes
all these operations you're talking about where American military personnel
are really big problem for US over there now insofar
as providing them with weaponry. I mean, we provide countries
(02:26:40):
all over the world with weaponry. If Israel wants the
bunker busting bombs and we provide them to them, that's
not US getting involved with boots on the grounds. Hell,
they bought F thirty five from US. I don't really
recognize the distinction between them, could we? And I don't
know if you have any information on the depth at
which these centrifugeas happened to be within the mountain, But
(02:27:01):
if they had those types of technology, there's bunker busting
type bombs, could they reach them or do enough damage
that will put the centrifugias out of operation.
Speaker 12 (02:27:10):
Yeah, that's that's the one key category that Israel doesn't
have to the four dah plants that seems to be
the central piece in this whole issue, because it is
buried by some accounts half a kilometer under the ground,
and the Israelis, with all their assets, don't have anything
(02:27:31):
big enough to carry these big bumper bunker buster bombs.
So they don't have the number one, but they don't
have the carriers either. That is the B two bomber,
that's why we have those in the region. And these
thirty thousand pound bombs just spectacular destruction of ability. But
it's not clear at all that they have the ability
to penetrate that deep, so it may not even work.
But unless the US personally flies, that's something we can't
(02:27:53):
give to Israel, right, they don't have the ability to
use it. So and I know that benjamina Ett Yahoo
wants desperately to have that in there. But again, the
minute that you allow that and then we've offensively, then
now then you're almost certainly signed the death warrants for
American soldiers that otherwise.
Speaker 1 (02:28:08):
Won't die well.
Speaker 3 (02:28:09):
And that would be akin then to what we got
going on Ukraine, which is operating the sophisticated missiles that
need American personnel with security clearance to offer to use,
so you know, effectively boots on the ground in the
form of operation operating equipment that Ukraine has physically president
in its country right And.
Speaker 12 (02:28:32):
So far we have done that there and putin although
he rattled his saber a little bit, has not taken
any action. He's chosen not to because he doesn't want
to start a war with the US. The difference in
this situation here is that that could be fatal for
the Iranian regime, so they would have no reason to
constrain themselves, whereas Russia does because they don't want to
get into a war against the nuclear power if they
(02:28:54):
can avoid it. But in this situation, if it's like
your regime is about to be destroyed, then they would
use it, or they would likely.
Speaker 3 (02:29:02):
Use it well real quick. For the part coming today,
Daniel Davis, I just could go on for hours with you.
Today I had an energy expert on. We were talking
about the Irani nuclear program. They've been riched up to
sixty percent. You only need effectively three or four percent
in Richmond to run a domestic energy generating operation. But
even if they don't have a triggering mechanism, they built
(02:29:24):
a bomb, you need to be able to blow it
up for a real thermon nuclear bomb. They could easily
make a dirty bomb. They just pack it full of
the sixty percent enriched uranium and just blow it up
inside Tel Aviv or some other Israeli occupied Do you
see Iran reaching that level of desperation under the current circumstance.
Speaker 12 (02:29:42):
If Benjaminett and Yah who makes good on his what
he's saying right now. We will go after we may
go after Ayatoto Comania if they start literally going after
the top like they did against Hassan Isrela with Hezbola.
Because I think that Israel said, well, we did it
before and it worked out. They actually went to ground.
That nearly ended the threat right there, and they may
(02:30:04):
be some thoughts that let's do the same thing to
Ayatola Komane. That's what the Yahu said yesterday. That would
end the war, wouldn't expand it. I think that is
a bad reading of the situation because there are a
bunch of other senior misuals. You haven't killed, you know,
even a small, well a small percentage, but there are
still a bunch of of the senior clerics around, and
(02:30:24):
there would be somebody else to pick up the table.
Speaker 1 (02:30:27):
And it's very unlikely to me that they would do
what Hasbola did.
Speaker 12 (02:30:30):
I think they would do the opposite, and then they
would start just throwing in the kitchen sink and everything else.
Speaker 1 (02:30:35):
They would have no reason to withhold it.
Speaker 3 (02:30:37):
Scary situation if we go down that road. Daniel Davis
deep Die find his podcasts online and enjoy what he
has to say throughout the week. I always look forward
to this, Daniel. It's been a wonderful conversation.
Speaker 1 (02:30:48):
He's a pleasure.
Speaker 3 (02:30:48):
My pleasure too, my friend. Talk to you on Tuesday
next See you next time. A forty two to fifty
five car See the talk station took away.
Speaker 4 (02:30:54):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (02:30:58):
Bill cunning it.
Speaker 3 (02:31:01):
One more time in the Channel nine. First morning with
our foregass scattered showers and storms. They say the best
chance begins around two pm. Throughout the evening seventy nine
for days high sixty eight overnight, it'll be very monkey
Tomorrow scattered showers and storms with the best chance starting
at noon and a very humid day as well. Eighty
(02:31:21):
five for the high sixty nine overnight low with showers
and storms continuing. And then we get storms on Thursday
as well, with a high of eighty one degrees for
Right now seventy three in time for a traffic update,
Chuck Ingram.
Speaker 6 (02:31:33):
From the UCLP Traanfics Center. Right now, over one hundred
thousand people are waiting and hoping for an organ transplant
to save their life. Sign up to be an organ
donor or explore Living donation. You see how dot com
slash transplant cruiser's working with an accident soathbound seventy one
on the ramp to third Street. So it's a slow
go from above ready into downtown southbound seventy five break
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lights through walk on northbound heaviest putter mill, Kyle's chuck
Ingram on fifty five k You are a seat the
talk station.
Speaker 3 (02:32:06):
Best approaching eight forty eight at fifty five k s
de talk station supposed to have the ass the expert
on from Rhino Shield. Apparently uh Joe Judge Check aunt
able to reach him. That's a shame. So you know,
I believe in what I hawk and I regularly recommend
getting Rhino Shield, and I got it from my daughter
and eric fiance. Their barn looked well, quite frankly, it
(02:32:26):
looked terrible. I don't know who decided to paint it
mustard yellow long long, long time ago, but it was
flaking and it was chipping and it was peeling, and
it looked terrible when you pull down their driveway. And
so I'm like, wait a second, I do commercials for
Rhino Shield. Boy, that thing looks awesome now they chose
a very very nice natural looking moss kind of greens,
(02:32:47):
a dark green, and you can you don't even see
the barn anymore like when you when you approach it,
you're so used to this ice sore sticking out there. Anyway,
at twenty five year guarantee, and so I am happy
that they have that and they don't have to worry
about that. Young people on a budget anyhow, feel free
to call for something we want to talk about. I
(02:33:08):
got an update here and I was talking about the
Senate changes to the big beautiful bill, and I'd say
most of them I have no problem with. And here's
something And thank you to my friend Andy for alerting
me to this, because I hadn't seen it reported. But
the Gun Owners of America issued a press release on it,
celebrating the massive legislative victory as the Senate Finance Commencial
(02:33:29):
Commission officially advanced language to fully repeal the excise taxes
imposed under the National Firearms Act. And of Gun Owners
of America was really really behind this one, as well
as grassroots pressure from my fellow firearm owners. It's such
a stupid thing anyway. Now includes a full repeal the
(02:33:53):
two hundred dollars NFA tax on suppressors that was in
the House bill, but the Senate version's gone bigger. Now
it's short barreled rifles, short barreled shotguns, and any other weapons.
Anything that was a real impediment to acquiring a suppressor
because you had to go through you know, the two
hundred dollars tax, the background check and all that kind
(02:34:14):
of thing. Now I know you're still gonna have to
go through a background bound check, but at least you
don't have to get excise taxed by the federal government.
So expands the House pass repeal the suppressor tax and
represents one of the most significant answers for gun rights
in decades, as the firearms the goa gun owners of America.
Speaker 1 (02:34:36):
Now.
Speaker 3 (02:34:36):
The bill next heads for what they call the bird
Bath review, where non budgetary provisions can be stripped out
of this because it is reconciliation, so it has to
solely relate to budgetary issue. But they point out because
this NFA operates primarily as a tax mechanism, and there
is Supreme Court precedent for the argument the Gunners of
America are making, they provision should survive. Gunners of America
(02:35:02):
identified several minor drafting issues actively now working with lawmakers
to ensure that they are corrected before final passage, because
you know, if you can avoid a problem that would
end up in litigation, you want to do that early.
Speaker 1 (02:35:14):
See the nump up.
Speaker 3 (02:35:19):
Eric Pratt, senior vice president of the CoA, said, the
House open the door now that the Senate is charging
through it. The American people have been forced to pay
hundreds of dollars in submit to federal gun registration just
owned firearms that are protected by the Second Amendment.
Speaker 1 (02:35:32):
That ends.
Speaker 3 (02:35:32):
Now there's a monumental step toward the dismantling of the
ATS unconstitutional enforcement regime, and the Senate must finish the job.
I've been waiting for someone to challenge the NFA and
the short barrel rules because I think even in the
Civil War or the Revolutionary War, you had short barrel
rifles or short barreled weapons, and that these were subject
(02:35:56):
to attacks and a registration.
Speaker 1 (02:36:00):
I mean, why.
Speaker 3 (02:36:03):
We already went through the whole pistol brace argument back
and forth, and of course no pistol brace firearms are
not considered short bailed rifles under the National Firearms Act.
But if you just got rid of the whole concept
of a short barrowed rifle being somehow, in some way,
shape or form different than something over the eighteen inch
length that's mandated by the NFA, then we're in a
(02:36:25):
better place. And that's exactly what apparently the Senateville does
goas Director of Federal Affairs Adian Johnson, the Senate Financial
Lee's moved to fully repeal the unconstitutional and archaic National
Firearms Act on short bailed firearms and suppressors is the
direct result of relentless pressure from the goas grassroots and
our lobbying efforts on Capitol Hill. Government has no right
(02:36:46):
to a tax and register accessories like suppressors or firearms
with short barrels. This is a generational win for the
Second Amendment community. So I would agree, get out to
twenty two three after they fully pass this thing and
get yourself some shortbol rifles and suppressors. They do sell
(02:37:09):
them now, But you know you got to go through
the whole headach and hassle, plus this whole registration thing.
I mean, what right does the government have to force
you to register? And why would they want you to
register them. They're not saying you can't have them. They're
just charging you two hundred dollars extra own one and
(02:37:29):
then marking you down on a list this person has
a suppressor. I think a lot of people are under this,
you know, Hollywood asque mindset that there's going to be
a bunch of assassins out there with suppressed bulletin. It's
going to go peop, peop and not make any more
noise in that. Now, you know, if you ever go
to a firearms range, go ahead and stand next to
somebody that's got a suppress rifle. It is suppressed, it
(02:37:51):
does not make it silent. A lot of people want
them just for hearing protection. So I don't know if
they make one for a forty five to seventy.
Speaker 1 (02:38:03):
But.
Speaker 3 (02:38:05):
That's a really really really loud rifle, and forty five
to seventy look like with us the press are hanging
out at the end of it. Anyway, Tomorrow on the
fifty five care Same Morning Show, we get the pleasure
of company of Jack Atherden and the unbelievable brilliance.
Speaker 1 (02:38:25):
Of Jack Adviden.
Speaker 3 (02:38:26):
I just his commentary is fantastic and thanks to the
listeners who tune in regularly. That's that's definitely like appointment
listening the same as Judge Enna Paula Tana who joined
the program tomorrow. I wish you'd get Congress from Massey
on to get his reaction to the Senate changes in
the Big Beautiful Bill, because again, reading what I read,
I don't think that's going to put him over the edge.
So and thanks also to Jack and Ainsley Atherden for
(02:38:49):
having us over for dinner the other night. We had
a really great time hanging out with him. So I
hope you have a wonderful day, folks. Joe Strecker, as always,
thank you for what you do for the program, line
up the guests, which included Brigham Account in the studio
for the full hour. And now we know exactly because
I did not know specifically how enriched uranium has to
(02:39:09):
be in order to run a civilian nuclear plant. The
answer around three percent, which of course runs right over
the Iranians argument that oh no, no, we've just been
doing this for civilian energy purposes, not yere at sixty
percent already, and frightening fun fact from brigham account, that's
(02:39:30):
like a couple of days away from getting it up
to the eighty percent you need for your nuclear warhead.
A lot of other energy discussions with Brigham, so check
out the podcast fifty five care sea dot com. Of
course the Daniel Davis Deep Dive Conversation fifty five care
sea dot com. You can also get your iHeartMedia app.
Oh and if you want to do a podcast, get
in touch with Juztrecker. He is mister podcast producer in
(02:39:51):
addition to being the fifty five Carsee morning show producer.
Hope you have a wonderful day again and O'll go way.
Glenn Beck's coming to write up a.
Speaker 9 (02:39:58):
Full rundown and the biggest ten line ames just minutes
away at the top of the hour.
Speaker 8 (02:40:02):
I'm giving you a fact now the Americans should though
Speaker 1 (02:40:04):
Fifty five KRZ the talk station this report