Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five. I think you've got k r C
the talk station. Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
Now go away or I'll punt you a second time.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
That's great, Jo, because I was thinking of that exact
same thing. We were talking about, insulting, taunting, or challenging
another under circumstances in which that conduct is likely to
provoke a violent response. Yes, the criminal case records were
released yesterday. Of course, there was no basis to withhold
the records relating to the charge against the alect Tchervinsky guy.
(01:02):
We know his name, Alex Chruvinski. Aedie, how I'll get
to that in a moment. Happy Tuesday, Brian Thomas right here,
Glad to be lead US Adjudge trek Ory belongs in
the executive production booth. Glad to see cones for cure
on the rundown. It's seven oh five. Keith Estrich from
the Cure Starts Now. He and his wife lost their beautiful,
beautiful daughter coming up on I think twenty years ago,
(01:22):
pediatric brain cancer. Of course, that was the beginning of
the Cure Starts Now. And they have done wonderful, wonderful
things in terms of advancements in research relating to pediatric
brain cancer. And one of the ways we can all
help out is eat Elena's Blueberry Pie ice cream. Stuff
is so good anyway, Cones for the Cure comes around
(01:42):
annually and it's going on right now. So Keith's gonna
join the program at seven oh five talk about how
you can eat ice cream and saw and cure cancer.
What a great thing, guilt free consumption of graters Elena's
Blueberry Pie ice cream. Keith, if you're out there, you're awake,
coming into the studio, bring me some ice cream. Adam Gulla,
(02:06):
he's the president of Accuracy in Media, and they call
the assistant athletic director of Princeton City Schools on video,
apparently coaching prospective parents on how to get around state
laws that ban men from competing in women's sports, as
well as banning men using women's bathroom facilities. It was
(02:30):
kind of a setup from the reading of the article
on that it's kind of like the O'Keefe deal, where
you pretend to be somebody and you sort of catch
someone off. They think off camera when you're on hidden
camera just actually saying the truth. That's exactly what happened
in this particular case. Adam's going to join the program
at seven thirty to talk about that. Eighth five, it
is Tuesday. We get the inside scoop at bright Bart
(02:51):
News every Tuesday. Eight o five. The return today of
Senior editor at large Joel Pollock. What is going on
in Israel and Gaza? Good question. I saw that Israel
has issued an evacuation order for all of Gaza City.
They apparently control like seventy five percent of it. They've
issioned evacuation order for everyone, telling the population to get
(03:15):
the hell out. It's got this dicey, crazy situation going
on there anyway, and the Israeli population not real happy
about it. When you do the polling of the Israeli population,
they're not real hip to the idea about well being
in Gaza. But the idea is that we don't fight
in Gaza as long as we get our hostages back.
(03:35):
And I'm one of the people that's really skeptical about
whether the hostages are still alive. It's been a long
time since those hostages were captured. So anyway, we'll see
what Joel has to say about that at eight oh five,
and then we got the Daniel Davis Deep Dive with the
latest on Russia Ukraine of course five one three seven
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two three
(03:56):
Tako with pound five fifty hundred eight and t phone. Finally,
the records regarding the criminal case against the victim victim
Marci's Law Alex Dravinsky, finally released yesterday, after multiple lawsuits
and stupid delays based upon nothing citing Marcy's Law. The
(04:16):
city had previously refused to release any records at all.
Why his name is Alex Dravinsky. He's got a lawyer,
he's issued a statement, he's led not guilty to the charges.
Look there, he is right there. Marcy's Law is designed
to protect victims of crime. So you don't release their
name to the public, it doesn't apply. Of course, the
city capitulated on that point, Kurt Hartman on the program
(04:39):
yesterday giving us a breakdown on that one, since he
was well behind the lawsuit moving to get these records released.
So the city withdrew its request to seal the records yesterday.
Interestingly enough, the city attorney was not at the hearing,
(05:01):
not there to support an unsupportable position. I suppose anyway,
as you well know, forty five year old Chravinsky charged
several weeks after what the Cincinni Police Chief three so
that TIGI said was a violent attack. He was seriously
hurt in the in the attack, pleated not guilty, said
it was only defending himself through his attorney. The criminal
(05:24):
complaint finally released yesterday, said he quote did recklessly cause
her alarm to another by taunting another under circumstances in
which that conduct is likely to provoke a violent response
contrary to added violation of section twenty nine to seventeen
point one one of the High Revised Code and misdemeanor
in the fourth degree humh. The complaint also said Travinsky
(05:48):
persisted in the disorderly conduct Are you ready, folks, after
reasonable warning or request to stop? That's a notable Uh,
thank you, Liam. Liam understands that is required in the law.
Look I have it in front of me. Twenty nine
(06:10):
seventeen point one one disorderly conduct. No person shall recklessly
cause inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm to another by doing any
of the following. Since they mentioned taunting specifically, that would
be sub section three insulting, taunting, or challenging another under
circumstances in which that conduct is likely to provoke a
violent response. All right, in misdemeanor fourth degree? Right, isn't
(06:31):
that what he was charged with? Yes, so we go
to twenty nine seventeen eleven Subsection E three. Disorderly conduct
is a misdemeanor of the fourth degree if any of
the following applies, And according to the reporting, it said
(06:56):
that this guy, Alex Trevinsky persisted in the disorderly conduct
after reasonable warning or request to stop. That was right
there in the statute, fourth degree misdemeanor if the following applies,
the offender persists in disorderly conduct after reasonable warning or
request to desist. Hey, you seen the video, Joe. How
(07:24):
many cops were there telling him to stop?
Speaker 4 (07:27):
Like?
Speaker 3 (07:28):
Right? Zero? None? When did the cops show up after
the beatdown was over? There was no one there to
issue a desist. There was no one there to warn
him to stop his taunting or behavior that was perceived
to be well likely to provoke a violent response. It's
not there. You can't prove an element of the crime.
(07:54):
An element of the crime, a key element is completely absent.
How do he go into court and argue that, right,
you can't just probably by the city attorney was not
the hearing yesterday. Sorry, unsupportable claim. Well that was Marsh's
law anyway, But the records now reveal that the actual
(08:17):
reason why, and early on we all found this out
the police did not want to issue a citation. The
Hemilon County Prosecutor's office that the citation was not warranted.
It was the city solicitor who forced the police to
issue the citation under circumstances where a key element of
the crime was not present. Sounds to me like a
(08:38):
motion to dismiss. And I don't know directed verdict. I
didn't practice criminal law, but if I was a civil case,
I motioned to dismiss. Failed to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted an element is not there.
So I just I don't understand the backcrap in sanity
the City of Cincinnati on this one. It doesn't make
(08:59):
any sense for particularly since they're under the microscope regarding violence.
Generally speaking, a mayor have to have PERMOL doing everything
you can to distance himself from the violence that's going
on in the City of Cincinnati, trying to convince everyone
that it just doesn't exist. This brings more bad press
to the city of Cincinnati. Why would you go after
(09:21):
this guy? I think it highlights and illustrates what we
all have sort of believed and concluded, which I'm reluctant
to do without all the information. But now we've got
the information. Yeah, this was they charged the white guy.
Why because all the people who beat the white guy
up were black people. So you got to have some balance.
There has to be like a h it's like equity. Right,
(09:44):
here's an illustration of equity in connection with charging people criminally.
So you've got five a black guy, six black guys,
seven people of color, and there's no white guy implicated
in the crime. In fact, the white guy's the one
that got the crap beat out of him. But he
slapped someone else. Is that slap criminal under Ohio law?
(10:10):
According to a high Revised Code twenty nine seventeen point
one one disorderly conduct, which he was charged with. No,
it's not five three seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two three talk oh und five fifty.
If you have an AT and T phone, love to
hear from you've got a comment. I enjoy the exchange.
It's five to fifteen right now, be right back.
Speaker 5 (10:32):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station our twenty.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
Time for your channel nine first warning. Weathering forecasts today
mostly sunny skyes h have seventy nine over nine clear
sky is fifty three, mostly sunny tomorrow with a high
of eighty three clear of A nine fifty seven and
sunny on Thursday as well. I have eighty four fifty
one Right now fifty five ker CD talk station five
eighteen coming up a five minuteen Your mother was a hunster,
(11:00):
Father Smith hunting and he could taunt a second and
third time. Please not there to tell him the shut up.
No crime has been committed five on three seven hundred
and eight two three Taco Ton five fifty on eighteen
and t phones. I always remember, never forget fifty five
Casey dot com. Here what Kurt Hartman had to say
(11:21):
about the Brawl Court record yesterday Monday. Monday was Brian
James and of course the Smither event. Christopher Smithman on
media narratives and justice generally speaking. Always enjoy him and
Christopher on the program on Monday. Vote smith Aman in November,
my friends in the city of Cincinnati, let us see
if you have cares dot com, do forget your i
(11:42):
heeart media app while you're there, can load that up
on your smartphone. You can listen to all the iHeartMedia
content wherever you happen to be. And good morning to
my wife who's streaming it right now. If well, today's
like every other day normally. See yesterday's Supreme Court uh
loosen the restrictions on immigration raids in Los Angeles to
previously put some restrictions in place, finding the federal authorities
(12:04):
were using illegal racial profiling tactics, so can't do that.
So this is an unsigned order, so no explanation from
the Supreme Court. But they granted an emergency request by
the Trump administration to remove these limits while the litigation continues,
So no explanation from the majority. However, just as Kavanaugh
(12:24):
in a concurrence explained his view, he said it was,
in his words, common sense and also consistent with court
precedent for federal officers to condruct immigration checks in LA
where violations were most likely, such as where day laborers
(12:47):
gather looking for work. Most likely this is police work.
We got three hundred and fifty million people in the
United States, who is most likely an illegal immigrant. M
is it Brian Thomas pasty white guy living in Simms Township.
Probably not. Law enforcement officers use powers of deductive reasoning,
(13:09):
and they shift or they sift through the entire population
looking for those who fit a particular profile. It's not
racial profiling. It's profiling of folks who are more likely
to be illegal immigrants. Hmmm. Kevin has said if the
person is a US citizen. This is so logical. If
(13:30):
a person is a US citizen or otherwise lawfully in
the United States, that individual will be free to go
after the brief encounter. You guys standing in home depot
parking lot waiting for a truck to come by and
hire you for a temporary labor job. You are you
(13:50):
a citizen in the United States of America. Yes, here's
my identification. Okay, by going with your day. Hey, here's
a truck to pick you up. Of course, liberal justice
descented Sarnia Sodoma art writing, we should not have to
live in a country where the government can seize anyone
who looks Latino, speaks Spanish, and appears to work a
(14:11):
low wage job. Well, they're not seizing you, They're making
an inquiry. About your legal status in the country see
Justice Kavanaugh. Individual will be free to go after the
brief encounter. If they are a citizen or lawfully here
in the United States, they're going to be seized anyway,
(14:35):
plain us. In this particular case, immigration rights organizations Latino
individuals who said they were stopped because of their appearance
during federal patrols. They said they were stopped because of
their appearance. Might those federal patrols have had independent information
(14:56):
about the legal status of that particular individual. I don't know.
Maybe how do they know why a patrol stopped them?
Mind readers, perhaps anyway. Back in July, federal judge in
Los Angeles issued in order temporarily blocking the agents from
detaining anyone in the area. Are you ready solely because
(15:21):
they look Latina, speak Spanish or working certain times of jobs? Solely? Again,
I'm going back to the idea that maybe they have
independent information that these people are beyond just beyond looking
like Latino folks, that maybe they know that they are
here illegally or have some other indication. Oh, I don't know,
like an MS thirteen gang tattoo on their neck as
a red flag. That would be evidence slinking that individual
(15:44):
at least perceived to be as a member of a gang.
Look MS thirteen tattoo. We hear law enforcement based upon
our knowledge experience with criminal elements in the MS thirteen gang,
recognize that the vast majority of MS thirteen gang members
have tattoos saying that they're members of MS thirteen. So
that person looks like they're a gang member, maybe we
(16:05):
should ask them about their status in this country, legal
or otherwise. Right, That's what law enforcement officers do. Anyhow,
you'll Solicitor John Sauer sat in his papers submitted to
(16:26):
the court that it makes sense for federal agents to
consider these types of factors, given them any unauthorized immigrants
do speak Spanish and workers' day laborers and jobs such
as landscaping or construction, saying quote, no one thinks that
speaking Spanish or working in construction always creates reasonable suspicion,
nor does anyone suggest that those are only factors federal
(16:46):
agents ever consider. But in many situations, such factors alone
or in combination can heighten the likelihood that someone is
unlawfully president of the United States. Again, it's police work,
(17:08):
police work. Go about your business, do your police work.
And if you are in fact a US citizen or
otherwise lawfully in the United States, recognize that you too
will be free to go after your brief encounter with
law enforcement. Five twenty five fifty five kr cedtalk station
(17:29):
Local stories coming up or maybe we'll hear from Tom.
I don't know, be right back, fifty five the talks station.
I'm did Jennen I says this about the weather. Got
a mostly sunny day to day highest seventy nine clear
skies tonight down to fifty three eighty three or a
high tomorrow with sunny skies fifty seven overnight clear and
(17:52):
it's sunny day on Thursday with a high of eighty
four fifty one degrees Right now fifty five kr CD
talk station five P five k SEE talk station five
three seven hundred two three talk about five fifty on
AT and T phones. Yeah, all points. Bulletin issued for
a pasty white guy five foot ten, about one hundred
and seventy five pounds. You're not going to be looking
(18:14):
for a six foot four black guy, if that's what
the APB says, Right Tom, Tom, Welcome to the morning.
Speaker 6 (18:24):
Showy tasty white guy. I was talking to Joe maybe
the maybe the show could get renamed to the Pasty
White Guy Morning Show. That's me, Yeah, pasty white guys
like like west Side exactly.
Speaker 7 (18:39):
We'll just get some nicknames, Joe.
Speaker 3 (18:41):
That's me right on following doctors orders, I remain pasty
because my doctor, my dermatologist, has instructed me, in no
uncertain term, stay the hell out of the sunlight. Brian
Thomas unless you got heavy sunscreen on.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
Pasty white guy. I'm guessing you've been called worse all right.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Oh of course I've called myself worse than that time.
Speaker 8 (19:04):
Right.
Speaker 6 (19:05):
Well, if you if you can't talk bad about yourself,
you shouldn't be able to talk bad about anybody else.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
I'm just being accurate in my own description. I see
the guy I look out of the mirror every morning.
I look up and I say, pasty white guy, what
are you gonna do?
Speaker 6 (19:17):
You don't you don't think you're just profiling yourself?
Speaker 3 (19:19):
Yeah, well I'm left with that, aren't we.
Speaker 7 (19:23):
All?
Speaker 6 (19:25):
Well that's true. Hey, you know you said I don't
understand the backcrap insanity of Cincinnatian and really it just
boils down to the fact that they're Democrats. Brian uh
The liberal mindset. Is makes absolutely no sense for them
to come up with the craft that they come up
with and flore it out of their mouth. The stuff
that they do, it's it makes it doesn't make sense.
(19:48):
It is backcraf insane. And the more we talk about
it and point it out and expose it that hopefully
the more people will realize, hey, this is this is
not good.
Speaker 7 (19:57):
We can't go along with this. And you know, they
may like, you know, the sound.
Speaker 6 (20:01):
Of this or that or the other on the Democrats side,
but you take the whole package and and all that
stuff together.
Speaker 7 (20:08):
It's it's not good.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
It's it's bad for the country, bad for the city,
the county. To state everything, I'm not gonna work out
well for anybody. So you've got to let police do
their job. Of course, you're looking for Latino people, and
you know when you're looking for illegal immigrants when you're
what an hour from the border, duh. I mean, it's
(20:31):
just common sense. And Democrats don't like to use common
sense because common sense exposes them for being absolutely stupid.
Don't vote Democrat, have a great time run.
Speaker 3 (20:42):
I appreciate it. Ah, it wouldn't be a regular day
without that warning. And message from Tom. Let's move over
to see what Jay's got this morning. Hey Jay, welcome
back man. Good to hear from you this morning.
Speaker 9 (20:55):
Hey, good morning, Brian.
Speaker 10 (20:57):
To follow up two quick points.
Speaker 9 (20:59):
First one to follow up with brother Tom is that
you know, it's amazing with these one hundred percent objective
Supreme Court justices. It's amazing how accurately we can predict
how they're going to vote, which seems to be.
Speaker 10 (21:13):
The opposite of objective.
Speaker 3 (21:14):
It doesn't.
Speaker 10 (21:15):
It almost like the.
Speaker 9 (21:16):
Whole idea of put a black robe on somebody and
you know, will anoint them as superhuman objective judges just
doesn't really seem to work out for this country like
the original design people or people put a black robe
on them. You got Republicans, You've got Democrats. That's point
(21:36):
number one. Point number two is yesterday I called in
and talked about the snap benefits and how ridiculous it
is what I'll call the Republican victory when each of
the fifty states during a mega administration, they come to
the federal government with your hat in your hand and
ask for a waiver so that you don't have to
pay for the taxpayers don't have to pay for sugary
(21:58):
drinks and snacks and candy and cookies and all the
rest of the garbage there. I also looked up cafe
standards and because I kept hearing that they're done and
they're behind us, and I thought, man, that would be
a boost of the economy. If imagine if automakers could
make whatever the customers really wanted and bring back the
vas and everything else. Well, that's not going to happen.
(22:20):
And the reason is the language in the cafe standards
hasn't changed at all, other than the fine has been
reduced to zero dollars. So it's almost like we're keeping
the house in order, keep all the language right.
Speaker 11 (22:34):
Work.
Speaker 9 (22:34):
It's been for fifty years, since nineteen seventy five during
the Carter administration, so that when the Democrats get back
in power, there's really we don't want to make them
do too much hard work. They can just go in
there and change those zeros for a really big number. Well,
or automakers go ahead.
Speaker 3 (22:51):
Well, as you say, there in lies the problem with
executive orders. Next administration, new executive order, just scratch out
the old one, put a new one in place, and
it's in an hour. There it's a parallel that can
be drawn there. You're right, didn't repeal that.
Speaker 9 (23:03):
I think it was part of the big I think
it was a big, beautiful bill had that in there,
so I think it was actually a legislation.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
But I said it's a parallel, it's not the same thing.
But by reducing the FIND to zero but not removing
the underlying Cafe standard concept, you're exactly right, it leaves
wide open for the future administration to raise the FIND
or otherwise put it back in place.
Speaker 9 (23:25):
Yeah, it's it's crazy when you think about it. Why
is our side not pulling it out by the roots,
pulling the earth behind it? And while we have a
chance here to do once in twenty years to get
rid of the damn thing.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Let me just speculate underscore the words speculate, because I'm
not sure on this. It may have been prohibited under
the reconciliation rules that requires very specific guidelines on what
you can and cannot do, So it could have been
outside the scope of the reconciliation rules, so they couldn't
withdraw that particular component, but they could reduce the fine
(23:57):
financial component down to zero. So that maybe the answer
to that, although I don't know I would have preferred
the complete repeal.
Speaker 9 (24:05):
Which if if you're right, then I'm not going to
doubt that you are. But let's just say that you're right.
That means we don't have enough Republican horsepower. We didn't
have enough, even though we've got a supermajority, we didn't
have enough juice enough Republicans to pull out the Jimmy
Carter Cafe standards that the Republicans didn't have the backbone
to go all the way.
Speaker 3 (24:23):
Sixty votes in the Senate. Again, sixty votes in the
Senate if you're going to go with legislation, we don't.
We certainly do not have anywhere near that number. So yeah,
your face with that insurmountable challenge right there in the Senate.
That's why reconciliation did not require that sort of extra
majority vote in the Senate to get through with just
a fifty percent plus one vote. So yeah, luck, I see,
(24:47):
I knew you would have.
Speaker 10 (24:48):
I knew you would have the answer.
Speaker 9 (24:49):
Man, whatever you do, what we've got to do. So
the solution is we've got to get more Republican senators obviously,
So whatever you.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Do, Democrat, right, good to hear from you, brother Fred
you're next.
Speaker 12 (25:05):
Man.
Speaker 3 (25:05):
I'm gonna have to take a break though, but I'm
more than happy to take your call and I'm looking
forward to it. We come back from this brief break.
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Speaker 5 (26:01):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
You know have it you, Channa and I first one
one the four KASS sunny day to day with the
highest seventy nine overnight clear sky is fifty three, sunny
in eighty three, tomorrow clear over night fifty seven, and
sunny on Thursday as well to high eighty four fifty one.
Speaker 13 (26:18):
Right now, time for the first traffic report from you
See Health Traffic Center. Addiction is a treatable medical disorder
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Services can help call five one three five ee five.
Speaker 7 (26:30):
Nine seven two two.
Speaker 13 (26:32):
Highway traffic and pretty good shape to start off your
Tuesday morning, no accidents to deal with, and overnight work
crew is pretty much wrapped up and done, including eastbound
seventy four approaching Montana. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC
the talk station, It's.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Five forty on Tuesday. The happy one to you tomorrow listener.
Lunch gonna be the Anderson Pub and Girl, hope to
see you there by eleven thirty ish. Go free to
show a little bit earlier, a little bit later. H
just enjoy the fellowship and the fun Anderson Pub and girls,
great restaurant and really wonderful people. We've been going there
for years and years. It's gonna be nice to get back.
And without further ado, let's go to the phones. Fred's
on the line. Fred, thanks so much for holding over
(27:12):
the break. They're good to hear from you.
Speaker 10 (27:14):
Oh Man, good morning to you. Hey once again to move.
I try to think of something to dislike you about,
not to listen to you on the radio. The more
you threw things to help me, And I'm like, Ben,
this guy just getting on my nerves. He just he
just getting nerves. I complained about spectrum and on the
radio station and they reached out to him to said
(27:34):
you know that, and I appreciate that.
Speaker 3 (27:37):
I thought that was pretty cool. Yeahs every time, Like,
for example, if I talked about the veterans issues, if
one single veteran maybe signs up for his benefits or
otherwise taps into some service out there because I got
to mention it one person. That to me is a
huge victory. Fred, that you got them to call you
up and reach out to you because you complained on
the morning show. I'm going to score that as a
(27:58):
huge victory. That's wonderful. Fred. We did some good for
you on the morning show.
Speaker 10 (28:02):
But I need something to dislike you, not to listen
to you no more?
Speaker 3 (28:06):
Why do you dislike me? What?
Speaker 10 (28:11):
So this quit helping me so much?
Speaker 3 (28:13):
Man?
Speaker 10 (28:13):
I told you like my doctor now. But anyway, the
one reasons I called you for is for you know,
the police stopping uh and you were talking about the
pasty white and and the black. But it's I don't
think it's more or less to some officers to overstep
their boundary and and and it's it's not all. It's
(28:34):
just and I believe that there should be two police
officers in the car. They should be policing each other
pretty much. And you're tight into each other that you know,
everybody have a different way of conducting theirselves. I'm gonna
say for it's Caucasian black, we have a different way
of speaking. Sometimes we're not threatening. It's just the way
sometimes some people speak exactly and and they take it
(28:56):
as a way of being mean. And and like I said,
I'm I'm a a person. They were looking for a
five foot nine blackmail one hundred and sixty five pounds.
I'm six foot four, I'm about two seventy five. They
pull up to my car and the first thing they
say was get out your car get on the ground.
Wait a minute, you're looking four five to nine. I
(29:16):
guess no whe in the world is me. But they
was being too overactive, and I understood that. I believe
in the police, and I want the police to police
our neighborhood. You know, I want the police to come
down my street more. But anyway, like I said, I
just want to say that this morning, and thanks again
and quit helping me.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
Fred I love you man, You're a good guy. I listen,
you know. I like the debate. I like to engage
in the exchange. And of course, people with different ideas
you're welcome to call the morning show. I like everybody else.
I'm just looking for answers and I'm just trying to
be logical and reasonable. But anything, I don't view things
through a racial lens or a particular lens, you know me.
I'm all about just freedom and liberty. I'm a little
(29:54):
a libertarian guy. I don't want to mess with your world.
I want to live in a safe world. But also
recognized policing involves, you know, deductive logic and reasoning as well.
If you're looking for the five to ten guy to
one hundred and seventy five you don't pick up Fred
who's six 'y four and two seventy five. He doesn't
fit the description. Isn't that common sense anyhow? Let's go
(30:20):
to stacker. Stupid Texas woman accused of helping her friend
dispose of a flight attendant's body after a butt dial
voicemailt allegedly captured them plotting the cover up. Joni Thomas,
she's sixty two, now charged with tampering with evidence in
the suspended a suspected murder of a forty seven year
(30:41):
old named Rana Nofall Slory, who's described as an Envoy
Air flight attendant last seen alive in March. This Thomas
woman believed he assisted the suspected killer, Dennis William Day,
who allegedly admitted to investigators of strangling to the flight attendant,
and then she's accused of helping with the disposal of
(31:02):
the body. Investigators claim sixty six year old Day called
Thomas after murdering Slurry the kitchen of his home after
an argument and had come over to pick her up.
Come over in her pickup truck. The pair then allegedly
transported the body to a different city named Bowie about
seventy miles away, dumped the corpse off a bridge. During
(31:22):
the murder investigation, detectives discover what they believe was a
butt dialed voicemail on Thomas's phone, capturing her and Day
straining to move a heavy object. Mal voice heard on
the recording sage, hey, help me make sure the lid's on.
I got you messed up in this, among other statements.
(31:44):
Thomas initially denied knowing anything about the murder when questioned
by investigators, and assisted Day had not driven or used
her truck. However, she changed her story later, telling investigators
a Day had used her truck and that she was
in fact with him, and that he had stopped at
the bridge to use the bathroom. She also claimed that
(32:04):
she was asleep for a part of the drive. Bestkut
has found the both Day and Thomas left their phones
behind at his home before driving to Bowie, had calculated
effort to stage a false alibi. Thomas arrested in late August,
taken to the Arrren County jail. Since been released on
bind leaved to about time that she's believed to have
been killed. The flight attendant, recovering from minor surgery, been
(32:25):
out of work for a month on air. Coworkers reported
her missing after they became concerned when she failed to
show up for work. Police quickly zeroed in on Day
as a suspect after the flight attendant's coworker told investigators
they had become roommates for about a year. But dial
five forty five fifty five k CD talk station. More
(32:47):
stupid coming up. USA installation definitely not stupid, the farthest
thing from stupid, the ultimate no brainer. Been pushing this
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Check them out online. Go to USA Insulation dot Net.
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Fifty five KRC dot com is your retirement plan.
Speaker 3 (33:50):
Chenna nine on a fourcast Sonny and seventy nine a day,
fifty three overnight clear Sky Sonny and eighty three tomorrow
clear over a night, fifty seven Sonny on Thursday, as
well as I have eighty four fifty one right now.
Traffic times from you.
Speaker 13 (34:02):
See how tramping center addiction is a treatable medical disorder
that affects both brain and behavior. You see health addiction
services can help cap five one three, five, eight, five
nine seven two to two. Highway tramping can pretty good
shape northbound seventy five, though just a bit heavy above
the lateral. From this time of the morning, I'm gonna
check and see if there's a problem.
Speaker 7 (34:21):
Before town inbound seventy four.
Speaker 13 (34:23):
Work crew's done shot Ingramman fifty five kr SE The
talk station.
Speaker 3 (34:30):
Five fifty eight fifty five kr seed eat talks as
feel free to call do a stack stupid in front
of me, but I prefer phone calls. Gonna jump over
the phones here five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty
five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk or
pound five fifty on EH and T phones cribbage Mike,
my submarine or friend. I guess I'm not seeing you
tomorrow for our cribbage game. You can't make it the
listener lunch.
Speaker 14 (34:51):
Uh no, sir, and uh it will be Uh.
Speaker 3 (34:54):
I will be on the honor flight tomorrow. Well, you
certainly got your priorities correct on that one. Mike.
Speaker 14 (35:04):
Hey, first off, I appreciate the affirmation yesterday you were
discussing the safety of nuclear power and always thinking of you.
The majority of my career working, eating, and sleeping very
close to a nuclear reactor and it's associated systems that
I have to date two very healthy forty year old children,
and I just turned sixty nine recently. And as you
(35:26):
mentioned yesterday, I do not glow in the dark.
Speaker 3 (35:29):
Yeah. Like I said, every time I think about nuclear power,
my embrace of it is the solution for the world's problems.
I think about you being in a submarine right next
to one for years and years, and we've been using
nuclear power in our military ship since the fifties, right Mike.
Speaker 14 (35:45):
Nineteen fifty four USS Nautilus underway on nuclear power.
Speaker 3 (35:49):
Yes, sir, how about nine one years seventy one years
has been working out fine for our men and women
in the military. But no, we can't have one because
well I don't know three Mile Island or something.
Speaker 14 (36:00):
Well, I did hear Secretary Duffy looking at We try
to want to beat once again the space race, about
beating China and Russia with a nuclear reactor on the moon,
But you know, how about southern Ohio or thank you
North Carolina first.
Speaker 3 (36:12):
Thank you? And no I'm not interested in exploring Mars
either anyway, the moon, the moon can get its own
nuclear reactor, but we can't have one right here.
Speaker 14 (36:24):
Yeah, So tomorrow, with being on the flight, things might
get a little hectic. So if I don't get a chance,
I'll make every opportunity to call and give you update
what's going on. But for everybody, if you do have
time tomorrow, either at the morning send off ceremony at
about five thirty am, if maybe on your way to
work or but definitely at tomorrow evening at eight thirty pm,
(36:45):
we all have eighty eight veterans, eighty five Vietnam veterans,
three Korean War veterans and their guardians come home. It'll
be a shot of patriotism and essusually being on the
eve of September eleventh.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
Yeah, bring your young people to CVG tomorrow or are
even eight thirty. You'll be able to find the crowd.
Just follow the crowd and you're going to be in
for a hell of a hell of a good time.
And I thank you from the bottom of my heart
for your service to our country and for your ongoing
participation in and support of the Honor Flight outstanding organization.
You're a good man, Mike. I'll miss seeing you tomorrow,
(37:19):
but I certainly understand your prioritization. Enjoy it and safe
travels ah. Let us see here over the stack of
stupid speaking of space and building a nuclear power plant
on the moon. Right. Eighty year old Japanese woman lost
in a scam sixty seven hundred dollars. The person posing
(37:39):
as an astronaut, stuck in space and in need of
money to buy oxygen, do what the hell eighty year
old reportedly met the scammer in social media back in July.
He claimed to be a male astronaut on a mission
in outer space. The woman believed him. After earning her trust,
the scammer told her that he was in space on
(38:02):
a spaceship right now, was under attack and in need
of oxygen. She was instructed to send money to a
bank account so the astronaut could buy more oxygen and
survive the ordeal. Actually, this is really pathetic, said She
(38:22):
was instructed a depositive money using prepaid systems at five
different stores between July and August, and she only told
her family about it when she started realizing that something
was a bit amiss. After discussing with a family, she
reported the case of the police. Told that this was
a common type of online romance scam and that she
wasn't going to get her money back. Virtually impossible, they
(38:43):
told her, so they took the case public in an
effort to warm the rest of the people in the world.
How vulnerable you could be if a person you meet
in social media ever demanded cash from you, Please be
suspicious of the possibility of a scam and reported to
the police that from the official statement from the police.
Apparently it's not the first year. I know, I know,
(39:03):
biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies. There's
no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top, the
pinnacle of douche. Dum good going, doue. Your dreams have
come true. Yeah, she's an eighty year old woman. Anyway,
(39:27):
don't ever send anybody money if you don't know them.
I feel so sorry for this one. Five fifty five
fifty five kre se detalk station stick around. We got
plenty to talk about six o'clock hour. I prefer talking
to you, so feel free to get me a call.
Remember seven o five we got Keith desterd from gear
starts now. Eat Elena's Blueberry Pie ice cream. It cones
for the cure of time. So guilt free eating of
(39:50):
an amazing ice cream product. Adam Gallack, president of the
Accuracy and Media on a local Princeton City School athletic
director coaching parents had a around the ban on transgenders
getting into the bathroom and locker rooms participating in sports
Right Bart News and Daniel Davis Deep Dive also coming
up in the eight o'clock hour. I hope you can
stick around and be right back Today's top stories at
(40:14):
the top of the hour.
Speaker 9 (40:15):
You just got to know what's happening in your world.
Speaker 1 (40:18):
Fifty five krc the talk stations two till five to
fifty five KRCD Talk Station And.
Speaker 3 (40:25):
Hope you're having a wonderful Cheopstad stick around all morning
if you can. Coming up in an hour, keep deserts.
I think he's going to be in studio if he is.
Bring Elena's Blueberry Pie ice cream. It is Cones for
the cure time eat ice cream and cure cancer. I
just love Greater's Blueberry Pie ice cream that Elena is
after their daughter who they lost to pediatric brain cancer,
(40:46):
which was the beginning of the cure starts now and
they've been at this for coming up I think around
twenty years, and they have put together a ton of
money to go toward research in pediatric brain cancer, and
they've made some wonderful, wonderful steps. Longer lifespans now for
folks who really had a death sentence and eu pediatric
brain cancer usually four or five six months kind of
(41:08):
lifespan after diagnosis. Well, they've extended that a lot from
the work that they've been doing and their ultimate goal
the home run cure. In other words, all the research
they're doing related to pediatric brain cancer may very well
lead to a cancer cure. Generally speaking, eat ice cream
and cure cancer. Will do that. Coming up in an hour,
follow by Adam Glad He's the president of Accuracy and Media.
(41:31):
Kind of like the undercover work anyway, they caught the
assistant athletic director at Princeton High School coaching prospective parents
on how to get around Ohio law that bans men
from competing in female sports as well as men using
women's bathrooms. The whole transgender workaround is what they caught
(41:53):
him doing. Adam's going to explain about that at seven thirty,
followed by the Inside Scoop Bright Bart News, the return
of Senior Editor at Large Joel Pollock, What's going on
in Israel, Visa Vigaza, and then, of course it's Tuesday.
The Daniel Davis Deep Dive Retired with Colonel Daniel Davis
will give us an update of the latest going on
with Russia and Ukraine. There's your lineup this morning. Five one, three, seven, four, nine,
(42:15):
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three,
Talk Time five fifty on AT and T phones. Yes
the criminal case records release yesterday started out the morning
show at the five o'clock hour pointing this out. The
element of the crime is not there, which is probably
why the police and the prosecutor's office didn't want to
issue a citation to Alex Travinsky. Nonetheless, a citation was
(42:36):
issued because the city solicitor forced the police department to
issue the citation. Talk to Kurt Hartman yesterday. Lawyer Hartman,
who's involved in litigation involving this particular topic. He has
no idea under what authority the city solicitor had to
force the police department to do something that well, I
would argue their job prohibited them from doing. If you're
a police officer, you're charged and have fun understanding of
(42:58):
what the law is in the state of all Ohio.
If you're going to issue a citation, the element of
the crime must be there. If they're not there, then
you have no basis or predicate to issue a citation.
Right that makes sense to you, doesn't it? What do
we find out criminal complaint? Says Alex Trevinsky, who is
(43:20):
not in need of Marcy's Law in spite of what
the City of Cincinnati was arguing. Criminal complaint says he
quote did recklessly cause harm to another by taunting another
under circumstances in which that conduct is likely to provoke
a violent response, contrary to and in violation of Section
(43:41):
twenty nine to seventeen eleven of the Ohio Revised Code,
a misdemeanor in the fourth degree. The criminal complaint also
says that Alex Travinsky persist, this is quote persisted in
the disorderly conduct after reasonable warning or request to stop.
Now what's missing here, Well, if you look at the
(44:03):
section the twenty nine to seventeen eleven, so it's taunting.
That's sub section three. No person shall recklessly cause inconvenience, annoyance,
or alarm to another by doing any of the following.
And since they cited taunting and quoted the language of
the set of the statute insulting, taunting, or challenging in
other under circumstances in which that conduct is likely to
provoke a violent response. But what was he charged with?
(44:28):
Right fourth degree misdemeanor? Now that disorderly conduct, which I
just explained the definition of in this circumstance is basically taunting.
Disorderly conduct is a misdemeanor of the fourth degree if
any of the following applies. They did mention specifically in
the charge, the disregarding or the persistent disorderly conduct after
(44:50):
reasonable warning or request to stop. What does it say
right here, it's a misdemeanor of the fourth degree if
the following applies. The offender persists in disorderly conduct after
reasonable war a request to desist. So his charge quotes
the language of the statute. Anybody's seen the video right
who warned him and told him repeatedly to stop doing
it whatever he was doing. The slap lasted a moment
(45:12):
in time. There was no ongoing conduct. This orderly conduct,
even if there were police in the area, was over
and done with, because once he issued the slap, he
got the living crap beat out of him. The world
came unglued. All the other defendants who've been named and
charged with crimes for beating the crap out of this
guy started beating the crap out of him. There was
(45:35):
no time for anybody to issue a reasonable warning or
request to desist the crime. The element isn't there no,
So if you want to know why the police refused
to charge him, and they did refuse. In fact, they
refused under threat of losing their job. That's what ken
Cober was on the program talking about. They refused to
(45:55):
issue the citation even if they would be demoted to
lose their jobs. Ken Cober pointed that out he chief
then refused the order, refuse to order the detectives to
do it. Police Chief Fiji refused to order the detectives
to issue the citation. Apparently, Police Chief Fiji also knew
the elements of the crime were not present, so therefore
(46:16):
no citation was justified. So the city solicitor shows up,
resulting in Captain Adam Henny issuing a citation. H So
(46:39):
there you have it, and that may give rise to
a claim by Alex Stravinsky that his civil rights have
been violated because he's been charged with the crime missing
elements of the crime. How about that. Keep your popcorn out, folks,
keep your popcorn out. As Donald Trump to play sending
(47:00):
troops into Chicago, Operation Midway Blitz is what they're calling it.
DHS is launching Operation Midway Blitz in honor of Katie Abraham,
who was killed in Illinois by a criminal illegal alien
who should never have been in our country. That a
statement from Assistant Secretarya Tricia McLaughlin. This operation will target
the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens in Chicago.
(47:23):
What does that sound like? Sounds like federal law enforcement agents.
I specifically, it's going to be going to Chicago for
the purpose of what enforcing federal law. Will they be
arresting people for state crimes? Will they be arresting people
for misdemeanors. No, they're not taking over the Chicago Police
Department's role. They are not there for the purpose of
enforcing Illinois law. They are going to be there for
the purpose of enforcing federal law, which of course the
(47:44):
state of Illinois. The local police department doesn't want to
have any involvement with fine. They don't want to do it.
They don't have to do it. It's their prerogative. Now,
the citizens might very well want criminal illegal aliens off
the streets. But we'll let Donald Trump either get credit
for sending the Feds into enforced federal law or suffer
the consequences of sending the troops into enforced federal law.
(48:06):
Either way, he's got to do it, and it seems
logical and reasonable to me to believe that this will
ultimately innure to Donald Trump's benefits, because we all want
safe neighborhoods. And if you've got murderers and rapists and
people who shouldn't be in this country committing those heinous crimes,
you have the opportunity to kick them out. You are
within your lawful right to kick them out. They have
(48:28):
entered the country illegally. Kick them out, make the neighborhood safer.
Then that's not like a good idea if you're living
in that neighborhood anyway. But I bring that up because
apparently we have a real problem with gang activity, massive
nationwide crackdown focusing on, in this particular case, the Sinaloa cartel.
(48:48):
What happened over the past week six hundred arrests, one
hundred and seventy one suspects arrested in New England. This
is a week long operation DEA announced yesterday. From August
twenty fifth to the twenty ninth, agents arrested six hundred
and seventeen people with ties to the Sinaloa cartel. This
(49:09):
happened across twenty three field divisions in the United States.
They are everywhere. These gangs are everywhere. What do they find,
in addition to the illegal alien gang members being in
the country four hundred and eighty kilograms of fentanyl? Normally
the reporting reports how many people can be killed with
that amount. We'll just go with a lot. That's like
(49:33):
nine hundred pounds twenty two hundred kilograms of methn fhetamine,
sixty FAMA, sixty five hundred kilograms of cocaine, sixteen and
a half kilograms of heroin, seven hundred and fourteen thousand
counterfeit pills, and four hundred and twenty firearms, plus eleven
million dollars in cash. Wow, DEA ad man Terrence Cole.
(49:55):
The results demonstrate the full way to DEA's commitment to
what pet acting the American people. Evil Donald Trump and
his evil Ice agents and his evil Dea getting all
these drugs off the street, arresting all these gang members.
(50:16):
Why to protect the American people? How can you look
at that and look at the results of this and
be upset about it? I mean seriously upset. You don't
want this activity occurring. This is the nature of law enforcement.
(50:38):
They're going after bad people. They're doing it to protect
the American people improve the quality of our lives by
getting these horrific people off of our streets and doing
so lawfully. Six sixteen fifty five k C the talk station.
I do not understand the Democrat's position on this. I
really don't, and honestly, I don't really believe they support
(51:01):
what's coming out of their mouth. You live it in pain.
A lot of people do arthritis kind of pain. You've
been going to the doctor maybe for years. Steroid injections
kind of become the norm, and you know, those don't
cure anything. It's so they cover it up. It's like
an aspirin with a headache, and aspirm wears off, the
headache comes back, you know, the steroids wear off. Your
arthritis pain comes back, whether it's in the knee to
(51:21):
hit at the back, wherever it happens to be, and
you're living your life or working around that pain. Yeah,
well you don't have to do that. If you're talking
to your doctor about surgery and you would rather not
go unto the knife, and you're tired of the steroid injections,
and you the pain medications don't cover up. How about
using your own bodies natural healing properties to help restore
and cure the problem. Now, I don't know if you
(51:43):
see kinetics is right for you. That's what the medical
professionals can talk to you about. But you may be
a good candidate. And to let you find out by
kicking them up on a free consultation, why not sit
out and talk with them. These are natural, regenitive from
your own bodies, cellular level treatments placed right where that
pain is, which helps cure your body cure itself. So
no drugs, no long term recovery, just smarter natural way
(52:04):
to get your freedom back. So take them up on
the free consultation colls QC Kinetics at five one three
eight four seven zero zero nineteen five one three eight
four seven zero zero nineteen All more time five one
three eight four seven zero zero nineteen fifty five KRC
the talks station our Channel nine. First Warning Weather forecast
(52:24):
sunny day to day highest seventy nine, overnight low fifty three,
clear skies. Another sunny day tomorrow with the high of
eighty three, another clear night that drop to fifty seven,
and sunny on Thursday as well, going up to eighty
four degrees. Fifty degrees right now, let's get a traffic
update from the uc.
Speaker 7 (52:39):
UP Triumphy Center.
Speaker 13 (52:40):
Addiction it's a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior. You see health addiction services can help. Call
five one three, five eighty five ninety seven two to two.
Highway traffic continues to look pretty good. Actually, all traffic
continues to look pretty good this morning. Northbound four seventy one,
you're under five stopbound seventy five. There's some in the
roadway near Union Center. Police are over on the right shoulder.
(53:04):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five and KRS the talk station.
Speaker 3 (53:10):
It is six twenty one I fifty five KRCD talks today.
You know I love hearing from you the five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eighty two to
three talk five fifty on AT and T pund Let's
go to the Phones's got Steve on the line. Steve,
thanks so much for calling this morning. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 15 (53:24):
Thanks, Brian.
Speaker 10 (53:24):
How you doing this morning?
Speaker 3 (53:25):
Doing pretty good? Pretty good? Hope you can say the same.
Speaker 16 (53:28):
Awesome I got I got a lawyer question for you,
So maybe you can dust off your lawyer hat and
put an on point.
Speaker 3 (53:34):
Big Maybe from getting rusty, man, it's been a long time.
Go ahead, I'll do my best.
Speaker 11 (53:40):
Well.
Speaker 16 (53:40):
I see a lot of these social justice warriors talking
about how being in the country illegally is not a crime,
and then they also say, well, they're not getting their
due process. But if they're simply being deported, they're not
necessarily being charged with the crime. Where is the need
for due process?
Speaker 3 (54:02):
Well, I suppose a simple legal declaration that they do
not have the legal authority to be in our country.
They may have an argument around that. I don't know. Oh,
no I've got a you know, an H one B visa,
or no I'm authorized to be here for some reason
that maybe is unstated on the record, I don't know.
But a determination of unlawful status, you know, no right
(54:24):
to be here, entering the country without permission. If there's
due process in connection with that loan element, then they
get it, and then they get thrown out of the country.
I suppose.
Speaker 16 (54:35):
Yeah, I just thought that you didn't get due process
unless you were actually charged with the crime. Uh, well
that's a screaming they're not being charged with the crime.
Speaker 3 (54:44):
Yeah, Well, they can say it's right that. Well, they
can say that all they want, I mean right right, yeah, correct, exactly.
That's kind of my point. No, there's there's a lawful
status in the country and there is an unlawful status
in the country. Say it's not criminal, the question of
legality still exists. Now, according to the laws on the books,
(55:07):
you have no lawful right to be here, So we
can't throw you in jail for that, but we can
throw you out period. Right, that's what I thought. Yeah, okay,
I think that's the way it stands. I am not
an immigration lawyer. I never practiced immigration law back in
the days when I used to be able to practice law.
But I'm trying. Thanks, Steve, have a great one, man,
(55:28):
Let's see what Angus has got. Aga is Welcome to
the Morning Show. In a Happy Tuesday to you.
Speaker 17 (55:33):
Hi, Brian, Brian, I'm trying to follow this situation from
fourth and elm. Yeah, and help me out here. At
the five o'clock hour, you were talking about the elements
of the crime. Yep, for the elements for the sorely conduct,
and they're not there. The police don't have the elements,
(55:55):
but a captain signed.
Speaker 11 (55:59):
For the charge.
Speaker 17 (56:01):
And I've heard Ken Kober on the program say the
captain sell on the sword for his officers or something
because they didn't want to sign. But the first responsibility
of the police is to.
Speaker 11 (56:16):
Us, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (56:17):
Yes, I would make that argument too, angus. There in
lines the challenge the police. The officers on the scene
didn't issue a citation because they knew that there was
no that the elements weren't there. They did no lawful
basis to charge him. So I would argue with this
under the circumstances, given that they claim in the charging
documents that he had been warned to stop engaging this
(56:39):
behavior that certainly was not there if you look at
the video. I think we can all agree on that
he probably has a valid lawsuit to sue the City
of Cincinnati, Alex Stravinsky does for violating his civil rights.
They charge him for a crime that, well, the elements
aren't there.
Speaker 17 (56:53):
Yeah, okay, But am I the only one that's a
little concerned than a police officer and a captain I
think is fairly experienced is signing a charge against a
citizen when he lacks the elements of the crime.
Speaker 3 (57:10):
Well, in his defense, he's been ordered by the city
solicitor to do it. Now and again I asked Kurt Hartman,
the lawyer yesterday who's involved in a litigation on this,
about that. He can't even answer the question. By what
authority the city solicitor can force the police department to
do something that they don't believe they are in a
lawful position to do. So it's all going to get
worked out. I agree with you, though it's under the circumstances,
(57:32):
the charge should not have been issued. That's been the
argument along, and that probably is why they were trying
to keep these records away from you and me, because
anybody who reads section twenty nine to seventeen point one
point one disorderly conduct can see that that's not what happened.
It's crazy, okay.
Speaker 17 (57:47):
And the Solicitor's office, at least as far as I
and again, I haven't followed it every hour of the day,
but they've already denied ordering the police to sign this
charge correct.
Speaker 3 (58:00):
That I have not read or heard.
Speaker 7 (58:03):
Okay, okay, And I don't.
Speaker 3 (58:04):
Buy into that because I under the circumstances, and after
talking with Ken Kober about this, I get it very
clearly that the city solicitor directed the police department to
issue the citation. The officers on the scene wouldn't do it.
Under fear of losing their job. They still wouldn't do it,
so the captain agreed to heed what the solicitor wanted
and issue the citation.
Speaker 17 (58:27):
Well, I hope when this is all over with and
hopefully I'm still alive for it, I hope we examined
the process of issuing this that was used to issue
this citation. Granted for just I think it was an
M four D C but I hope we look at
this and do a deep dive into that, because that
(58:49):
concerns me that a solicitor's office, a government employee, can
order a police officer to sign a charge when there
he lacks the elements of the cron YEP.
Speaker 3 (59:02):
I agree with you completely, keep your popcorn out, and
I have every faith you'll still be around once this
thing is resolved, in spite of the fact that you
recognize the wheels of justice been very, very slowly. Take care, man.
I appreciate the call. Five one, three, seven, four, nine
fifty five, eight hundred and eighty two to three talk.
Feel free to chime in. Got local stories coming up
in little phone calls. But first, Chimney Care Fireplace and stove.
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two four eight ninety six hundred fifty five KRC That truth.
Jenna nine Wether forecasts beautiful day today, sunny skies seventy
(01:00:30):
nine will be the high. It's going to be clear
over night fifty three low eighty three or a high
tomorrow with sunny sky's clearing fifty seven overnight and a
sunny Thursday with a high of eighty four fifty degrees.
Right now, let's get a traffic update.
Speaker 7 (01:00:42):
From the uc UP Triumphing Center.
Speaker 13 (01:00:44):
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior.
Speaker 7 (01:00:49):
You see how the addiction.
Speaker 13 (01:00:50):
Services can help called five one three up, five eight
five ninety seven two to two. Highway traffic building just
a bit, but still no major time to lays to
deal with. Free Tuesday morning SAPBND seventy five starting to
get a bit heavier out of lock when saying for
SAPBN two seventy five approaching the Kale Cropper Chuck Ingram
on fifty five KR see the talk.
Speaker 3 (01:01:11):
Station fifty five KERC the talk station A very happy
Tuesday to you. Let me go to the phones real
quick here, but first before I get to Bobby's on
the line, and you can feel free to join in
the fund uh sketchy details on this but we're all
worried about property tax relief. Of course, the idea of
repealing property taxes in the state of Ohio is going
to be on the ballot presumably next year, and working
(01:01:32):
out the mess that'll come from suspending and eliminating property
taxes just had to challenge that. I really can't get
my head around. But apparently the working group that dwined
formed in spite of the fact that there were working
groups for a year in advance of the budget that
was passed. Remember he struck the three provisions that would
have dealt or which would have handed some property tax relief. Anyway,
(01:01:55):
his current property tax group is floating an idea, and
I'm kind of getting one of get your reaction on this,
to freeze taxes for certain seniors. Again a detail I
don't know, but for at least some seniors would be
eligible to have the property tax frozen, but then the
untaid property tax incurred during that senior's life would be
(01:02:16):
tacked under the home as a lean to be collected
when the house is sold or after death. Is that
a sufficient solution for the seniors out there? It seems
to be a step in the right direction. I think
some people are offended by the idea that the taxes
still exists. But if the seniors moved on and doesn't
have to incur the bills during their life, I guess
(01:02:37):
it seems like a better option for them than forcing
them to pay the taxes or getting kicked out of
their house. Anyway, I see what Bobby's got this morning. Bobby,
thanks for calling it a happy Tuesday to you.
Speaker 8 (01:02:46):
Happy Tuesday, my brother. How's everything going today?
Speaker 3 (01:02:49):
Good for a Tuesday, Bobby, It's about all I can say.
I hope you're doing well.
Speaker 4 (01:02:54):
Well.
Speaker 6 (01:02:54):
We got the governor coming in today and.
Speaker 8 (01:02:56):
Some special attorneys, and we still got our federal officials here.
And the word of the day is one word conspiracy. Yeah,
when they go ahead and start getting the email and
the text messages that they've already started leaving, then that's
going to get real fun. Because it didn't come just
from the solicitor.
Speaker 7 (01:03:16):
He had to get direction.
Speaker 8 (01:03:18):
There's only two people to give.
Speaker 3 (01:03:20):
Him directions, share long enough to have purvall.
Speaker 8 (01:03:22):
Maybe it's two people that's above him and give him direction. Now,
when the emails and things come out, it's like I
said in the metaphor, I hope they like cream, corn
and macaroni and cheese.
Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
And don't pick up anything that's dropped in the shower.
Speaker 8 (01:03:44):
Yeah, stim turkey dogs are good on Thursdays.
Speaker 3 (01:03:48):
You crack me up, Bobby, You do the same. Here's
a sad reality. Uh, longest standing store in the city,
from Taste to Belgium is now closed. Over the Rhye
Bistro eleven thirty five Vine Street shut down permanently this
(01:04:09):
past Sunday after fourteen years of breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Founder of Taste of Belgium, in a statement, closing Over
the Rhyme Bestro is heartbreaking. This is our very first
full service restaurant has been part of the OTR neighborhood
for the fourteen years. It holds a special place in
our history in Cincinnati's history. Is a gathering place that
contributed past tense to the energy and revitalization of Over
(01:04:30):
the Rhine. The past couple of years, apparently the company
has closed several of their locations. Thanks Fox nineteen reporting
citing declining sales, rising food and labor costs. Huh, Over
the Rhine out yet another neighborhood, another restaurant. Joe, do
you have any belief that this hasn't anything to do
with crime. That's maybe six thirty five fifty five krs.
(01:04:54):
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with it. Ridoshield, Cincinnati dot Com. Here's the phone over.
We just want to calm up. Get that free inspection
in quote five one three eight five fives seventy four.
I'm sorry, five ways, Bryan, start all over eighty five
fives the area code seven four four sixty six oh
five eighty five five seven four four sixty six oh five.
Speaker 5 (01:06:24):
This is fifty five krc AN iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 3 (01:06:28):
Iheart's yup.
Speaker 11 (01:06:32):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:06:32):
Here is your Channel nine first warning weather forecast. Beautiful
day today with sunny sky's in a highest seventy nine
to night. It's going to be clear fifty three below.
Another sunny day tomorrow with a high coming in about
eighty three. Clear over night fifty seven and eighty four.
The high on Thursday, another sunny day fifty degrees. Right now,
it's on for traffic.
Speaker 7 (01:06:51):
From the UCL Traumphink Center.
Speaker 13 (01:06:53):
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior. You see health addiction services can help called
five one, three, five eighty five, nine seven two. Highway
traffic continues to build, especially southbound two seventy five between
the Lawrence Burn Ramp and the work on the Carroll
Cropper Bridge. Elsewhere not all that bad, including northbound seventy
(01:07:15):
five at the lateral Chuck Ingram and fifty five krose
Leed talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:07:23):
Coming up on six forty one and fifty five Karris
De talk station. Are very happy teesday jam all right,
since now the charging documents against Alex Trevinsky and recognize
now that the elements of the crime aren't there. What
else has happened in downtown CINCINNTI relating to crime? Well,
yesterday five point four to two million dollars the motion
(01:07:43):
passed by the Cincinni Budget and Finance Committee five point
four two million dollars total. Jeff Camerondy announced the along
with Mika Owens, were the primary sponsors of the motion,
which did pass a couple of dissenting votes, but it
did pass. What are you gonna get in downtown under
the category Policing, they've allocated one point six three million dollars.
(01:08:07):
The categories include public visibility over time for Cincinnati Police
coming into one point two million dollars, Pivot specialized Training.
Can't answer the question thirty thousand dollars for that police
recruiting efforts. I'm thinking that's like marketing one hundred grand
and a police bond and sentencing project. I'll leave it
to you to decide what that is. Two hundred and
(01:08:28):
fifty thousand dollars plus fifty thousand dollars allocated for towing
under the heading Community Outreach total allocation at one point
five to six million, three CDC Expanded Ambassador Program Ambassador Program.
I don't know what that is. Eight hundred and eighty
thousand dollars for that though, three CDC Outreach workers and FUSUS.
(01:08:53):
FUSUS is my understanding. It's the camera registry, so if
you've got ring, doorbell cameras or cameras on your house
or dwelling, you can have those up into the city
system so they can use your monitoring to assist law enforcement.
That's my understanding. Effuses anyway, they're going to get one
hundred grand for that youth outreach workers don't know what
they'll be doing. I'm sure at some non governmental organization
with its hand in the cookie jar two hundred grand
(01:09:16):
and Curfew Center at Lighthouse one hundred and ninety five
grand plus Curfew Center at Seven Hills one hundred and
eighty five grand, since they allegedly are now going to
be enforcing curfew, I guess those two entities are going
to need some money to take in the wayward youth
that get picked up by the police, if you believe
that's going to happen anyway. One point two million for
street lighting and cameras, three hundred and sixty grand for
(01:09:37):
license plate readers cameras in the West, and the least
expansion of those one hundred and fifty grand Finley Market
safety improvements use your imagination one hundred and eighty thousand
dollars drones CGIC slash pivot drones no idea forty thousand
(01:09:58):
dollars and drone spansion a separate wine item coming in
at one hundred thousand dollars plus one hundred grand for
mobile safety camera trailers. Motion Past sixty three has got
to be voted on in Cincinnati Council today, presumably that'll pass.
I know Governor of Wine has offered some assistance. Initially,
(01:10:20):
the City of Cincinnati reluctant to take them up on that,
But when you're dealing with a lawless environment and your citizens,
your constituents are a little upset and angry about crime
going on, you'd take what you can get. GhIE, we
need more law enforcement officers, so maybe that recruiting effort
one hundred thousand dollars allocation will help them successfully land
(01:10:42):
some lateral hires. We can't get them quickly enough here
in the City of Cincinnati. Five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three
talk down five fifty on AT and T phones. Don't forget.
We're eating ice cream after the top of the our
news cones for the cure. Keith Destrich, We're going to
raise some money for pediatric brain cancer research and guilt
(01:11:02):
free consume ice cream. That'll be after the top of
the iron is cannot wait to get press accuracy and media,
or rather the President from accuracy and media, Adam gullan
on He'll be on at seven thirty Shenanigans declaration over
Princeton City Schools with the athletic director helping what appeared
to be from the athletic director's perspective, parents trying to
get around state laws that ban men from participating women's
(01:11:25):
sports and banned men from being in women's restrooms. Why
would they encourage and offer support for a workaround on
that one? That'll be interesting, Adam Galette seven thirty for
that six forty five fifty five kresit deve talk station.
Feel free to chime in, And I want to mention
my good friends at Plumb Tight Plumbing where it's always
(01:11:45):
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dot com fifty five KRC and bad is our us.
Speaker 12 (01:12:39):
We believe Homeage one.
Speaker 3 (01:12:42):
Channel nine first one to one avorecast beautiful day today.
It was with sunny sky's in high a seventy nine clear
tonight down to fifty three. Another sunny day tomorrow eighty
three for the high another clear night fifty seven and
a sunny Thursday as well with a high of eighty
four right now forty nine degrees.
Speaker 13 (01:12:56):
Let's get trap it from the UCL traumphis and our
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior. You see health addiction services can help called
five one, three, five, eight, five nine seven two. Highway
traffic continues to build, especially southbound two seventy five between
the Lawrence Burg ramp and the work on the Carroll
(01:13:18):
Cropper Bridge elsewhere. Not all that bad including northbound seventy
five at the lateral Chuck Ingram on fifty five kresee
the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:13:29):
Six fifty if if I karsite talk station eating ice cream,
Cure Cancer at the top of the art and is
a Keith Deathritchen studio from the Cure starts. Now, Uh,
what else is going on? Of course the inside scoop
of bright part news coming to ATO five. Senior editor
Joe Paul Aks gonna be talking about Israel and guys
that we retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis at E thirty
talking about the latest in Russia. That meantime, this is
(01:13:52):
so disturbing and yeah, the conspiracy theorist to me wants
to think this is actually a concerted effort to well
dumb down our children. If you can't read and you
can't perform mathematics, you are setting yourself up for a
life of dependence on some government service. And our schools
are failing our children. Saw this in the Journal this morning.
(01:14:15):
Results release yesterday Tuesday, I guess yesterday today whatever by
the US Education Department, twelfth grader average math scores coming
in at the worst since the current test began in
two thousand and five, below any point since they started
this assessment back in nineteen ninety two. Lowest ever share
(01:14:38):
of twelfth graders who were proficient down two points between
twenty nineteen and twenty twenty four two. Are you ready
thirty five percent proficiency in reading? And only twenty two
percent of our twelfth graders are proficient in math? Apparently,
(01:15:03):
I also reported drops in the proportion of students who
were able to reach at least a basic level of performance,
which is one tier below proficiency. This is insane. Students
now learning less than several years ago. Cord to Leslie Moulden,
executive director of the board that oversees the test, students
(01:15:24):
are taking their next steps in life with fewer skills
and less knowledge and core academics than their predecessors a
decade ago. This is happening at a time when rapid
advancements in technology and society demand more of future workers
and citizens, not less.
Speaker 11 (01:15:38):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:15:40):
Apparently, some students struggling to getting further behind rather wider
gap now between the top and the bottom tier of students.
Girls scorers, on average drop faster than the boys. Scores
also fell on the newly released eighth grade Science test
results similar when the exam was first given in two
(01:16:01):
thousand and nine. US studies have found schools that were
closed in for in person instruction. Yes, remember that the lockdown.
Those that closed longer during the pandemic tended to experience
larger learning declines. Well, that shocks absolutely no one. Since then,
schools have been beset with challenges including high absence rates,
(01:16:22):
student misbehavior, teacher turnover, and distraction from right the screens.
Now apparently we're all alone because Wall Street Journal reports
that other countries also are seeing failing or following achievement levels.
Academic dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education, we
should be thinking of possible explanations that transcend national boundaries.
(01:16:45):
Social media, perhaps, smartphones perhaps, But this guy, the Harvard guy,
Martin West, said, there is no smoking gun. And of
course we are taking steps to get rid of screens
and schools, which is a great development. Why should your
kid be staring at a screen? Whither in s's supposed
to be learning reading and writing and arithmetic? And what
(01:17:05):
if they do a separate assessment for the woke ideology?
Ninety percent of students quota is proficient in woke ideology Yeah,
there's a real standard we need to judge. That's so
all important. Screw the things that matter in the real world.
We need to indoctrinate our children. That's where we should
be spending valuable education dollars in time in the classroom.
(01:17:26):
Woke ideology. Hate your country, that's right, number one. The
United States sucks, So we need to get that through
your little heads. And by the way, Johnny is now
a woman. So Johnny's going to be in the women's
bathroom and it's cool. You just got to accept that.
Because Johnny thinks he's a girl, that we all need
to say Johnny's actually a girl. Yeah, I know, don't
(01:17:51):
believe your own eyes. It's okay. Just ignore the fact
that Johnny. What's dangling between Johnny's ladies when you're in
the bathroom, Just ignore that it's not really there. That's
a girl you're looking at. You get an egg. Congratulations.
Let's cure cancer and eat ice cream. I love doing that.
Keith Esterton Studio, after the top of the Air news
(01:18:12):
Elena is blueberry pie ice cream. Get your local grader's outlet,
eat ice cream and cure cancer, totally guilt free. Another reminder,
real quick here. Want to point out to speaking of
eating things, and you can't eat guilt free at listener
lunch because you're enjoying the fellowship and the fun at
Listener Lunch. It's tomorrow Anderson Pub and Grill. I'm looking
forward to being back at Anderson Pub and Grill. And
hello to those folks. Always treat us really well. The
(01:18:33):
beer is ice cold and tasty, and the burgers are great,
and the fellowship is second to none at Listener lunch.
So put that down on your calendar tomorrow. I hope
to be able to see you there right now. Six
fifty five stick around ice cream coming up next Today's
top stories at the top of the hour. When I'm informed,
I feel smarter. Shoot you five krz the talkstation this report, dude,
(01:19:09):
it's seven six here fifty five cars de Talk station. Yes,
you can eat ice cream guilt free. Welcome to the
fifty five Carrioce Morning Show. Actually, welcome back Keith Destrid
from The Cure starts now. Keith and his beautiful wife
Brooke lost their their very young daughter I guess eight
nineteen years nineteen years ago or nineteenth year now pediatric
(01:19:32):
brain cancer. And just when you started this pediatric brain
cancer diagnosis. What four or five months to live? Is
that really what the title timeframe was? They told us
five months. They said there's nothing we can do, and
the word was go home and make memories. And that's
that's scary.
Speaker 7 (01:19:53):
You know.
Speaker 12 (01:19:53):
The doctors told us this was the cancer they were
scared of the most, but at the same time, they
told us that this is the cancer that we've believe
we can learn the most from, and this is the
cancer that may cure us all. And that really seemed like,
you know, hard news to hear promising news in one stroke,
but you know, certainly when it's your daughter, it's scary
as heck.
Speaker 3 (01:20:13):
Well, And what I've learned from you, and God bless
you for letting me be a part of this. I
don't know how I got adopted by the Cure Starts
now or I glombed on us.
Speaker 12 (01:20:23):
Started this when I was driving back. We had just
gotten this flavor of ice cream and I was driving
back from I think Creators. I just met with him
about it, and you were on air talking about Elena's
blueberry pie, and I was driving back and going, how
do I get the word out about this? And suddenly
I turned on the radio and there you were eating
(01:20:43):
ice cream talking about it. So I think that was
you started this.
Speaker 3 (01:20:47):
Listen. I love the affility with your organization and we
were just talking about off air. You are global. I
mean when I said nineteen years ago, when when this
concept of pediatric brain cancer in the you and just
summarizing my recollection of how this unfolded. It is such
an aggressive cancer and once you get diagnosed, the lifespan
(01:21:09):
is so short that researchers didn't even research it. You know,
It's almost like it wasn't worthwhile because the time window,
the timeframe you had to do any research was so narrow.
Speaker 12 (01:21:19):
That and there wasn't any money in it. It was
considered to be a tenure killer. And so even though
these doctors would come out of school and be excited
about it and want to focus on these cancers because
they believed they were these home run strategies, they were
told go do something else. And so that was the
thing that we noticed in fighting alongside our daughter in
(01:21:39):
this battle, was is that every doctor yearned to focus
on this, but they weren't really given permission. And so
that's what we do with this charity. Is is to
try to get permission to chase down those cancers that
we can learn the most from rather than fighting those
that affect the greatest number of people. Which you know,
granted that helps because you're helping a lot of people,
(01:22:00):
but at the end of the day, you're not going
to cure it unless you focus.
Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
On the ones you can learn the most from, right
And that's that whole home run cure concept, because you're
just not focused on curing pediatric brain cancer. This is
the you hope, is the key to cureing all the
cancers out exactly.
Speaker 12 (01:22:15):
And and and still today we are the only charity
in the world the focus is on these home run cancers.
We are you know that that pursuit for it, and
it has just caught on beyond what I ever thought.
I mean, I never thought I'd be doing anything like this.
You know, we had I had a couple of small
businesses in Cincinnati. I liked not traveling, I liked not
(01:22:37):
you know, doing this. But you know, after our daughter
passed away and seeing that there was nobody out there
doing this, that's when Brooke and I, my wife, said Okay,
I guess we got to do it. And today yeah,
we have fifty seven locations now, uh and globally yeah,
and I hate travel, I really hate you.
Speaker 3 (01:22:55):
You have you have a big operation in Canada. I
know you were just recently there. Yes, ye hand is
now coming online well.
Speaker 12 (01:23:03):
And they're reaching out to us and saying, how do
we do this, how do we bring research here? How
do we focus on this home run strategy? And so
they're reaching out to us and saying, you know, we
want to be part of this mission. And it's just
it's it's it's wonderful and it's scary all at the
same time.
Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
I am certain. But the idea that you have been successful,
and this is the biggest challenge I think you faced now,
the idea of permission to do work on this. You
know they need that. Really to me sounds like study money.
Like you have granted permission because you've accumulated all these
donations from people eating the line as boodberry pie ice
(01:23:39):
cream or coming to the gala or otherwise donating to
the charity. Welcome to permission. I'm sitting on millions of dollars.
I've got money for a research grant. There's your permission.
Speaker 12 (01:23:48):
Well, and we saw also researchers that were you had
very established careers. Sometimes the best doctors at a hospital
that would call us up and said, you know, and
like you know, a lot of the will up and say,
I read the book about your daughter, because that went
out and her story became a best selling book and
went to all kinds of languages. But these doctors with
established careers would read it and would call us up
(01:24:10):
and say, I want to change my career trajectory. I
want to change my path, holy ca, and can you
come up to my hospital and talk them into letting
me focus on this type of cancer? And when you
hear that, you realize this is real.
Speaker 3 (01:24:24):
That's amazing.
Speaker 12 (01:24:24):
This isn't a pie in the sky. And you know
when we would come here, you know, even you know,
eighteen years ago, sixteen years ago, I mean, we've been
talking for a very long time. I would always talk
about hope. I would talk about this idea that eventually
we were going to find this, you know, these these things,
and you know, we're not talking about hope anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:24:42):
That's cool.
Speaker 12 (01:24:43):
You know, we're talking about the reality of some really
significant advances that we've been able to make that are
impacting everything about cancer. You know, this small little organization
based in Cincinnati started over you know, a six year
year old girl is revolutionizing how we fight cancer everywhere.
Speaker 3 (01:25:04):
And that's neat an applaud to you and your beautiful
wife and your efforts because you have done something that
I guarantee you no one was thought, no one thought
was even possible. You get doctors from around the globe
to sit down basically, you can, you know, metaphorically inner
room together, let's share their work.
Speaker 12 (01:25:22):
Well, and that was what our meeting was in Canada
was it was you know, I call it an anti meeting.
I encourage them to interrupt each other. I encourage them
to mingle with people that they're uncomfortable with. You know,
so I do a lot of things there that are
a little different. And you know, they hated it for
the first year, but what we notice now is they don't.
(01:25:43):
They never pass up that ticket anymore. And matter of fact,
now the biggest problem we have is it sells out
six months a year in advance to the point that
we have to close it down because it just gets
too big. And yeah, and so now that's why we
got a fundraise. That's what you know, this is about
is because we don't have enough money to do everything
(01:26:03):
that we need to do. We've we've created such this
this passion around this cure that ultimately we got to
raise a lot more money right to be able to
chase this down. And so that's you know, that's why
we do Gallas. That's why we do you know, partner
with Graters and everything else.
Speaker 3 (01:26:22):
And God love Greaters, who has been there from the outset.
Oh yeah, I can't say enough about great The family
is wonderful. They are a Cincinnati institution and there is
no way in hell anybody can make an ice cream
that's better than theirs. Oh period, full stop.
Speaker 12 (01:26:36):
Well I didn't know anybody else made ice cream that's good,
but no, they they they you know, they were the
first ones on board. We asked them to take a
leap of faith on it, and they jumped in with
both feet. And today you know, their their staff, their teams,
Oh my goodness, they just they love this campaign. I
was watching last night, you know video that one of
(01:26:57):
their team members was filming talking about this cure and
had written a poem about it. You know, that's that's
really neat when people adopt the causes their own and
it becomes it becomes their charity. And that's really where
we're out at this point.
Speaker 3 (01:27:12):
Well, and the donations are coming in and we will
get to the details of the cones for the Cure,
and we come back from a brief break. But I
was glad to to hear from you this morning. I
asked for the the totals you got from the gala,
the most recent gala that I've been involved with every
I just love that event. It is so neat folks
Cure starts now, Gala. You better put it on your
(01:27:32):
calendar because it is a great event. You brought in
more than three quarters of a million dollars. One night's
one night.
Speaker 12 (01:27:39):
Yeah, it's and and and it's not you know, this
isn't just money that we've saved up from sponsors throughout
the year. This is stuff that we actually do that night,
which is which is a little bit different than most.
But it's yeah, you're you're the MC of it, and
it is just yeah, yeah, yeah, you won a lot
of things last year with it.
Speaker 3 (01:28:00):
Oh well, you know what an extra couple of drinks
will do when you're trying to try to keep control
of your wallet. Yeah, looking forward to the Bourbon experience
in a month or two, and we enjoyed your donation,
which was your lake house. We had a fantastic time there.
So my money was well spent because I know it's
going to cure cancer. So the cure starts. Now comes
(01:28:20):
for the cure, we're gonna get the details on that.
Get into your local Grad's ice cream store and enjoy
some Lenia's Blueberry pipe ice cream, guilt free, knowing that
you're donating to cure cancer. We'll get to that with
Keith Deathree. Hold on moment. The mentioned share Fact. You're
looking for a financial partner that puts you first share facts.
Credit Union merged with Emory, so we're now dealing with
share Facts and it's still a better way to bank.
(01:28:42):
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You own a slice and the shareffax offers everything from
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mobile banking you always have your money right there at
(01:29:02):
your fingertips. So join the thousands of members who trust
share Facts, helping them save more, borrows smarter, and plan
for the future. Membership open to anybody in the greater
Cincinnati area, so visit sharefacts dot org for all the
details at share facts dot org. Federally insured by NCUA.
Speaker 5 (01:29:17):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station OUR twenty.
Speaker 3 (01:29:25):
Here's your channel Night first one to want to morecast
today at util day sny Sky's highest seventy nine overnight
low of fifty three with clear Sky Sonny and eighty
three tomorrow, clear over night fifty seven and sunny on
Thursday as well to high eighty four forty nine now
traffic time.
Speaker 7 (01:29:38):
From the uc Uptramphing Center.
Speaker 13 (01:29:40):
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior. You see health addiction services can help. Call
five one three five eighty five, nine seventy two to
two northbound fourth seventy one is now backing up close
to Grand on southbound seventy five. It's slow in and
out of lock fund northbound seventy five. Break flights button
milk Kai and again pants to the lateral chot Kingram
(01:30:03):
on fifty five KRC.
Speaker 7 (01:30:04):
The Talk Station.
Speaker 3 (01:30:08):
Fifty five KRC DE talk station. Let's cure cancer by
eating ice cream, Keith testerers. When the cure starts now
an outstanding organization, they will find the home run cure.
We're all going to be cured to cancer at some
point thanks to the work of Keith Tester jiin his
Beautiful Wife Brook, their loss becomes the world's gain. So
eat Atlana's Blueberry Pie ice cream and you will help
(01:30:28):
with the cause. Got to get into a Greater's location, Keith,
what are the details on this one?
Speaker 11 (01:30:33):
You?
Speaker 12 (01:30:33):
If you have the Greater's Rewards app, you probably already
know it because what they do is is they have
a cube on that they send around through the Rewards app.
And matter of fact, if you sign up, I think
you get a free cone and then you also get
a scoop of a line of blueberry pie. But you
go in, you show a QR code, they give you
a free ice cream cone. And yes, they'll ask you
if you want to donate to cancer research. And it's
(01:30:55):
honestly that simple. And if you make donations of you know,
five dollars, they give you another cupon for a free
sugar cone or a buy one get one cone. So
it's kind of like it's a wash. Oh yeah, you're
paying for it easily in that if not double.
Speaker 3 (01:31:09):
And all money's going to go to the to the.
Speaker 12 (01:31:12):
Directly to us, and then ten dollars you end up
getting four cupons, which you know, more cones Sundays pints.
Speaker 3 (01:31:20):
More than ten dollars in value from Greater exactly.
Speaker 12 (01:31:23):
And you know that's that's the whole thing. I mean,
I know people give just because they care about the cause.
I mean, I went to Greaters last night.
Speaker 7 (01:31:31):
It was packed.
Speaker 12 (01:31:32):
Oh that's great, and just people coming out and saying,
I want to Lena's ice cream. They didn't even know
about blueberries, you know, they had no idea what the
flavor was. And you hear that and you just go,
they're here for the cause. That's really cool. That's really cool.
Speaker 3 (01:31:45):
Again, you know, turn back that clock when you started this,
the idea that you would be global, you probably would
have liked like deer in the headlights. I'm not up
for that challenge. I don't want to travel. I Keith, I.
Speaker 12 (01:31:55):
Would run from it, as I would have. But yeah,
I mean, my daughter daughter still bosses me around all
the day.
Speaker 3 (01:32:00):
From beyond and good for her. Her presence is felt
every single day in the great work that you're doing,
you know, And that's an inspirational thing. You know. I've
talked to folks many times over the years that if
I'm going to do something, I'm usually gonna be writing
a check. I'm not the guy that organizes stuff. I
wouldn't know where to begin, but I'll try to help
(01:32:23):
you out. There are a lot of people in the
world that are more like me than like you. But
if one person steps up to do something. I remember
Spiker was his name. He did a he started a
marathon to help with the Honor Flight, and it was
just one guy with an idea. But then again from
all around him, people started, I'll help, I'll volunteer, I'll
(01:32:43):
write a check. But you need that leader out there
who's willing to step up and be the person to
do the organizing. So it is inspirational.
Speaker 12 (01:32:51):
Well, and in our situation, you know, when we started this,
we didn't intend on starting it. It actually started out
my daughter was diagnosed. There was no and there was
real no social network. There was no Instagram, Facebook, none
of that exists, that's true. And you know, there was
a thing called blogs which I didn't understand. And we
were writing messages between my wife and I who were
(01:33:12):
in different cities while we were taking care of treating
Elena and the other one was at home with our
other daughter and trying to run the businesses, and we
just would write these messages between each other on a blog.
And one night, instead of writing about messages or things
about Elena, I sat down and wrote about how we
were curing cancer wrong. I wrote about these conversations I
(01:33:35):
had with our doctor where he said that this was
a tenure killer. He always wanted to focus on her.
No one let him do it. And I wrote about
how we were caring cancer wrong. And the last words
of that journal were the words the cure starts now.
It wasn't a cause. I didn't ask anybody to do anything.
I didn't want to do anything. I didn't even know
anybody was reading it. And what happened was that blog
(01:33:58):
went around the world real quick, and that was by
just word of mouth. There was no posting, there was
no Twitter, none that existed. But people said, you got
to see this, and we'll give an odd to divine intervention,
and they started sending checks to it, and my wife
called me up. And actually the word she said to
me was what did you do? And I said, what
(01:34:20):
do you mean? What'd you do? She goes, I have
a pile of checks that people have mailed to our business,
to the cure starts. Now, please tell me you did
not start another business. And I said, I don't even
know what that is because I don't remember it. And
it wasn't until two or three days later that I
looked at it and I went, oh, no, they wrote
it because of the last words of this journal.
Speaker 3 (01:34:42):
And I finally figured it out. To start a five
one three, no, we.
Speaker 12 (01:34:45):
Said, I said, I said, I don't want to start
a five oh one c three. Just set up a
DBA at a bank and we'll just give it to
a hospital if they'll focus on this type of you know, cancer.
And because we're not qualified to do this, we don't
know what we're doing, and and so and so that's
what we did. And we kept fighting alongside our daughter
for months afterwards, and then after she passed, we tried
(01:35:07):
to find somebody to do that. In each of the hospitals.
It was like buying a park bench or buying a brick,
or hey, we'll throw it into this stuff we're already doing.
Nobody was creating the news stuff. And so that's when
Brooke and I looked at each other and said, do
we have any business doing this? And do we think
that we can actually impact it and cure cancer? Because
(01:35:27):
if you can't cure cancer.
Speaker 3 (01:35:29):
What's the point. Don't do it right?
Speaker 12 (01:35:30):
And you got to do it totally differently because apparently
we haven't been real good at it for the last
eighty years. So it's you know, that's that's where this
starts from. As this starts from, honestly, just the last
words of a very honest journal that I didn't know
anybody was reading.
Speaker 3 (01:35:47):
Man, as long as you and I've known each other,
I never heard that story before. And I can't thank
you enough for passing along and sharing with my listeners. So, folks,
it's simpler to get the Greater's app Get into a
Greater's ice cream store, asked for Lane's lilueberry pie ice cream.
It's a free scoop, but I know you will most
assuredly donate some money to the cure starts now when
you get that ice cream, enjoy it. You'll love it,
(01:36:08):
and I'll tell you it's so good. That yes, Brian Thomas,
who's pretty much eliminated literally all sugar from my diet
since October of last year. I'm eating some right now.
That's how good this stuff is. I can't say no
to it.
Speaker 12 (01:36:20):
Well, I asked you if you wanted NYE, and you
just looked at me with a stumbfounded look like are yours?
Speaker 3 (01:36:25):
I want some, but I'm not supposed to. So yeah,
I'm gonna get a massive sugar rush. I hope I
crash after the show's over this morning. Keith Ester, it's
God bless you and your wife for all the work
that you've done, and I'll encourage my listeners to join
in in the fight. The cure starts now. You can
easily find them online. The Cure starts now. Just type
that in you'll find it Greater's ice Cream waters dot com.
Then you'll have a link to the cone.
Speaker 12 (01:36:45):
And go to Conesfothecure dot org and that's where you
can also sign up and you can even get the
cupe on right there, real simple.
Speaker 3 (01:36:52):
Cones for the Cure dot org. I'll ask Joe Drucker
to put that link on my block page, which you
five cares he dot com Keith, thank you so much.
Matcha stick around, folks save women's sports. Got a high
school apparently violating transgender laws. And we're gonna be hearing
from the president of Accuracy and Media Nests Adam Gullet.
My next guest, don't go away. First quick word for
(01:37:13):
my friends that cover. Since he getting toward that open
rollment time, maybe getting toward Medicare. Uh I can't encourage
you strongly enough to get in touch with Cover since
he and have them take a look at your medical
insurance coverage Cover, since he works for you, they're you're broker.
There's hundreds of medical insurance companies out there, literally thousands
of policies. Trust me, the folks that cover, since you
(01:37:34):
know the best possible package of policies to put together
for you to get you that dollar one coverage, to
get you the catastrophic coverage, you get you the medical
coverage without holes in the bucket, which is what John
Roman to cover. Since he likes to call that plan
that you are looking at, So have them look and
it's free. They'll take They'll do a deep dive on
what you've got. They'll find a better path for you
if one exists. If you get ready to go on medicare.
(01:37:55):
There are a whole lot of problems and pitfalls you
might face doing that, So assault with them. We'll be
happy to talk with you about it. Reach out to
them one of two ways. As a form online you
can fill out at their website cover since dot com
any state in the Union. If you're listening to me,
it's not just Greater Cincinnati area cover Sincy dot com.
Or call them up at five one three. Uh hold on,
(01:38:17):
where is that number?
Speaker 11 (01:38:19):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (01:38:19):
There, it is five one three eight hundred two two
five five. That's five to one three eight hundred Call
fifty five KRC. I'm Shannon. I says mostly sunny day
to day with the highest seventy nine Claire skys, over
night with the drop to fifty three eighty three with
Sunday skies, Tomorrow overnight low fifty seven Claire skies, and
(01:38:41):
sunny Thursday with the high of eighty four forty nine degrees.
Right now traffic time.
Speaker 7 (01:38:48):
From you see Trumphate Center.
Speaker 13 (01:38:49):
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior. You see health addiction services can help. Call
five one three five eight five ninety seven two two
sapbound seventy five Slow Cincinnati, Dayton, New Unigon Center, then
through Wachman. Just beginning to see Breakwy sapbound seventy one,
approaching Feiffer. There's a report of an accident on seward
(01:39:11):
at Port Union. Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc DE
Talk Station.
Speaker 3 (01:39:20):
Seven thirty fifty five KRC DE Talk Station, A very
happy Tuesday to you. Tuesdays. Today we get the inside
scoop at bright Bart News. Coming up at eight oh
five today Joel Pollock, Senior Editor at Large, can be
talking about Israel and Gaza. And then one hour from
now the Daniel Davis Deep Dive, the retired lieutenant colonel
is going to be talking about the latest in Russia
and Ukraine. Without further Ado, let me welcome to the
(01:39:41):
fifty five KRC Morning Show from the Accuracy and Media Organization.
He's the president. Adam Gullett. Welcome to the program. Adam
dohy am. I pronouncing the last name right, Gullet, Hey Gillett, Gillett. Okay,
I'd like to get it right. I don't embarrass myself
or you, Adam Gallett and your your organization Accuracy and media.
Is that kind of like a I don't. This is
(01:40:03):
not an insult, but it's meant to sort of draw
a parallel for my listener's edification. Is it kind of
like Project Veritas?
Speaker 11 (01:40:10):
I spent three years since the vice president of Project
Veritas and many of our staffs in Project Paritas, so
in some way slightly similar?
Speaker 7 (01:40:17):
You got it?
Speaker 3 (01:40:18):
I guess I got that one right, Adam. All right,
so what you did? Apparently now in its state of Ohio,
we have a band transgender girls cannot participate in girl sports.
So if you're a guy and you're claiming you're a girl,
I'm sorry, sucks with you, but you can't participate in
girl sports. That's not fair. You also can't use the
locker room, so if you're a biological mail, you can't
go in the locker room. So sayth state law. Priston
(01:40:39):
City Schools maybe not so much interested in doing that.
You learned when you interviewed. I guess when you sat
down with the assistant athletic director. Give my listeners the
backstory on this atom.
Speaker 11 (01:40:51):
Well, you know, the real danger is if you've got
a child in traditional K through twelve education in Ohio,
I would pull them out today. We have said to
our investigation throughout the state of Ohio, and this isn't
the first issue we've done this with, but most recently,
as you said, we tried to see if they were
going to follow the law which prohibits them from putting
biological boys into girls sports, into the girl's locker room.
(01:41:14):
And what we found consistently and as you said, we
released videos from two districts, now Princeton and Reading Schools,
and in both instances, the administrators were more than happy
to coach our perspective parents on how to break the
law and get our son into girls sports and into
the girls' locker room.
Speaker 3 (01:41:35):
Oh my word, So you posed as prospective parents to
enroll your child in Princeton City schools? Is that the
sort of the setup that's correct? Okay?
Speaker 11 (01:41:47):
That is it? And you know, we make it seem
we're crazy, you know, lack you radical like them, and
we don't really care about the law as much as
we care about our agenda. And these folks were more
than happy to explain to us roopholes in the law
ways to get around it. Like you've got an updated
birth certificate, Well, just show the updated one, don't mention
the other one. Don't bring it up to anybody else.
(01:42:07):
I dare them to bring it up, and so forth,
more than happy to put the existing girls in danger.
And what's truly wild is our prospective parent, our investigator
goes on to say thing to these people, to see
how radical they are. We say, you know, well, I've
got a trans daughter. I want her to compete in
girls sports. She's a serious athlete. We even say she
(01:42:27):
is such a serious athlete that she may have injured
one of the girls previously. That's how serious an athlete
she is.
Speaker 4 (01:42:33):
Wow.
Speaker 11 (01:42:34):
You would think that an administrator would say, well, you know,
I've got a duty to care for the safety of
the girls who've lived in this district for some time.
You know, I'm sorry, I'm afraid I can't help you.
But you know, these radicals, it's really sad, but they
put their urgent it before the safety of children at.
Speaker 3 (01:42:50):
I guess I'm confused. I understand the legal violation that
they're now struggling with because I understand you've also discussed
this with the Toney Denerald David Yo. The least he's on.
I want to find out which direction Day is going
to go, but practically speaking, ignoring the unlawful conduct that
they seem to be engaged in, how in the hell
can you work around the ban on biological men being
(01:43:15):
in a women's locker room or conversely, a biological man
actually participating in women's sports. I mean you can. I
just don't understand practically speaking, how you could get away
with it, regardless of what they actually instructed you to do.
So what is the work around that they told you?
Speaker 11 (01:43:31):
Well, the most common one, but that's the only one.
The most common one is just get an updated birth
certificate before you move. Some states allow you to update
your birth certificates, others do not. Put no problem. If
you update it before coming to Ohio, then you're set. Well,
we were told in Texas when we did these similar investigations.
In Texas, administrator said, well, listen, you're going to ask
(01:43:52):
you for the birth certificate, just don't provide it. Our
policy is to start educating first, which I appreciate. And
they said they'll keep acting it, just keep not sharing
it with them, and then eventually Bill Stoff asking for it.
After all, the illegals don't have the birth certificate anyway.
And we also focus on educating them. And again I
appreciate their primary focus being on educating children.
Speaker 18 (01:44:14):
I like where their head is that and where their
head is that in that regard, But to put the
safety of girls in their district, the privacy of girls
in their district, to prioritize.
Speaker 11 (01:44:24):
That beneath their own radical ideology is sick.
Speaker 3 (01:44:29):
I agree with you completely. Adam didn't call me looking
for an argument on this topic unbelievable. I mean, the
idea that you, Adam, I just have to observe that
you and I are having this discussion, that your organization
had to get involved in it, that we had to
pass the law which says men can't go into women's
locker room. I just can't realize. I just can't fathom
(01:44:50):
what point in time I woke up on an unstable
orbit planet circuling Remulac and not on the planet Earth.
Dave or Adam paused from minute because I want to
find out what's going to happen next again at HIGHWA.
Attorney General David Yost is involved. Will there be lawsuits
over this? Will there be some liability more with the
President of Accuracy and Media Adam Gleett. Pause right now,
(01:45:13):
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Speaker 5 (01:46:13):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station Steven.
Speaker 3 (01:46:19):
Here is your Channel nine first warning weather forecast sunny
skies to day with the highest seventy nine clear over night,
fifty three sunny tomorrow eighty three clear over night fifty seven.
Oh yeah, sunny on Thursday as well the high eighty
four forty nine now traffic hime.
Speaker 7 (01:46:33):
From the UC Traumphic Center.
Speaker 13 (01:46:34):
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects both brain
and behavior.
Speaker 7 (01:46:39):
You see health.
Speaker 13 (01:46:40):
Addiction services can help called five one, three, five, eighty five,
nine seven two two sapbound seventy five slow Cincinnati Dayton,
New Union Center, then through Wachlan just beginning to see
break by sapbound seventy one approaching Peiffer. There's a report
of an accident on seward at Port Union schuck Ingbramont
fifty five KR seed the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:47:04):
Nine fifty five car see the talk station just Jacker
well timed sound bumper music here Brian Thomas with the
President from Accuracy and Media like Project Veritas, only knewer
Adam Glad he is a president and has gotten the
officials over at Princeton High school, as well as writing
high school offering advice to what they proceed to be
(01:47:27):
perspective parents on how to get around the anti transgender
laws we have here in the state of Ohio. In
other words, men can't participate on women's sports and biological
man can't go into women's restrooms for a variety of reasons.
But the assistant athletic directors you pointed out suggested the
child perhaps discreetly change in the locker room. Just don't
let anybody know your transgender. There's a workaround, Adam, I
(01:47:51):
saw that the attorney generals chimed in on this. Are
they facing some sort of liability by any chance these
schools for sort of working around Ohio.
Speaker 11 (01:47:59):
Walk potential will see because obviously these are prospective students,
not real students. You are investigators, not real parents, at
least in Ohio. But it is a warning to parents
in that district. You know, they just came out with
the National Assessment of Education Progress again, Oh my gosh,
that's still students still are behind where they were during COVID.
(01:48:21):
What are we even doing If these kids aren't going
to learn, if they're not going to be safe, why
would anyone send their child to traditional K through twelve schools.
Ohio has an incredible school choice program. You're of education
savans accounts, where the money follows the child. Take your
kid out of traditional schools, put them in a charter school,
(01:48:42):
put them in a private school, do a learning pod,
home school, whatever's the best opportunity for you. But get
them the heck out of traditional education. You're very lucky
in a state where it's relatively easy.
Speaker 4 (01:48:53):
To do that.
Speaker 3 (01:48:54):
I saw those assessments scores this morning's Wall Street Journal.
That is absolutely heartbreak making thirty five percent proficiency in
reading and twenty two percent in math. There's your public
education for you right there. That's alarming statistic there, Yeah,
I mean, and on top of that, you got men
in the women's bathrooms and men competing against women in sports,
which is inherently unfair. You make a great point on that,
(01:49:17):
and I can't encourage people strongly enough to get out
of public schools as well. You know the finale that
the challenge is a bit of financial one for some folks,
Adam and I appreciate that on some level, but Lord Almighty,
tighten the belt a little bit to keep your children
out of these terrible environments. What's the school's defense on this?
Have they provided any written defense to their conduct and
offering these workarounds? Adam, such a great question.
Speaker 11 (01:49:40):
They wrote a strongly worded letter after the fact where
they were really angry about us using deceptive tactics. No
anger toward third administrators who wants to use deceptive tactics
and endangered girls in the district? Anger towards us. I
wonder if they get pull over by a coup who
hid behind the billboard, did they say, well, the officer,
this ticket's going to be thrown in court. You used
(01:50:01):
a deceptive tactic for getting me for speeding and doing
ninety five and a sixty five. My gosh, using deceptive
tactics isn't an excuse for breaking or circumventing the law.
In other districts in Texas, where we expose this sort
of thing, people got fired, the attorney general got involved,
sued districts, investigated districts. Here in Ohio, the districts doubled
(01:50:24):
down on their radicalism. They say nothing to see here,
and they get mad at us instead.
Speaker 3 (01:50:31):
Well, I wonder if that's because Governor Dwine wasn't behind
this legislation when it was first passed. He vetoed the
bill barring transgender girls from participating in women's sports, but
of course the legislative branch overruled the veto. So maybe
it's the Dwine administration issuing a directive to the Attorney
General to go easy on these schools.
Speaker 11 (01:50:53):
You know it could be, and it's for that reason.
We set up a little site called saveohiostudents dot com.
You can send one message that goes directly to these
local school districts, to the Attorney General, to the Governor's
office and demand they get involved to protect students. As
you and I said, if you've got a child in
K through twelve schools, you should absolutely pull them out
(01:51:14):
of those schools tomorrow. But not every parent will, and
these schools are fundamentally broken. We need to stop pretending
that these schools exist to educate children by any objective measure.
You and I were just saying, by any objective measure,
they fail in that task. Well, then what if they
exist to do? What are they good at? What do
they do consistently? Well, every two weeks without failed employees
(01:51:37):
get paid every paycheck without failed A portion is taken
out and given to the unions, and every two years
without fail, a lot of that money ninety eight ninety
nine percent of it goes directly to far left candidates
with a fortune taken out for the fact k unions.
This isn't an institution that exists to educate children keep
them safe. It's an institution that exists to take our
(01:51:59):
tax dollars and funnel it to far less candidates. In fact,
at unions, that's the only thing to do well. Do
some kids get educated along the way by noble teachers.
Of course, that does happen, but that's merely a rare
byproduct of a broken system.
Speaker 3 (01:52:15):
Well stated, Adam, I can't thank you enough for what
you're doing at Accuracy and Media. What's your website? Because
my producers already put the video that you were referring
to and was the subject matter of this Princeton High
School thing on my blog page fifty five KC dot com.
My listeners can head on over and see exactly what
was said in the exchange. But Accuracy and Media the
website for you, so my listeners can follow you much
(01:52:37):
in the same way they probably are looking at a
project Veritas stuff.
Speaker 11 (01:52:41):
Am dot org AIM dot org and we're releasing part
three in this investigation this afternoon.
Speaker 3 (01:52:47):
A timings everything. Adam a im m as in media AIM.
That's the website. I tell you, Adam, thanks for coming
on the program. Thanks for what you're doing. And I
hope my listeners heed your vice. Get them out of
public schools. The best thing you can do for their future.
Take care of my friend. I hope we talk again soon. Yeah,
I hope we talk again soon. I know you got
(01:53:07):
another project cooking in the background there at them. Have
a wonderful week, my friends, seven forty five. Right now,
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eight four seven zero zero nineteen five one three eight
(01:54:12):
four seven zero zero nineteen. That's five one three eight
four seven zero zero nineteen fifty five KRC two thousand,
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(01:54:32):
sunny tomorrow with the high of eighty three. It's got
to be clear ofver night with a low of fifty seven.
And it was sunny Thursday with a high of eighty
four forty eight Right now traffic time.
Speaker 7 (01:54:42):
From the UCL Tramphic Center.
Speaker 13 (01:54:43):
Addiction is a treatable medical disorder that affects page, brain
and behavior. Do you see health Addiction services can help?
Call five one, three, five eight, five ninety seven to
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backing up pass grand in Ben seventy four break lights
(01:55:06):
from North Bend. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC Deep
Talk Station.
Speaker 3 (01:55:13):
Seven fifty to fifty five krsd Talks Dation Happy Tuesday
inside scoopid Bright Bardon News Senior Editor at Large Joe
Pollock returns after the top of the our news to
talk about Israel and guys. That will also hear from
retire Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis with the Daniel Davis Deep
Dive at eight thirty. Of course, the latest in Russia
and Ukraine. We've been dwelling on that one quite a
bit and for obvious reasons, UH feel free to call
(01:55:34):
if you have something you want to interject here five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
talk again over fifty five KRC dot com. Check out
the video Adam and the accuracy and media folks put together.
That's that's that's really frightening. I mean, these are laws
on the books, and your educators are actively working to
undermine the law in the state of Ohio, and your
(01:55:56):
young people are at risk as a consequence of it.
So take a look at it. In local story something
that started out with this Morning and Development yesterday. We
had Kurt Hartman on the program yesterday and Kurt one
of the lawyers involved in the litigation over getting the
criminal records relating to Alex Trevinsky. Yes, he has a name,
he has been identified, he has got a lawyer. No, Marcy's
law never did apply. Why did the city file a
(01:56:18):
motion to seal the records based on Marcy's law when
Alex Trevinsky's out of the news with a lawyer talking
about the beatdown. Go ahead and ask yourself that question
all day long. Ask the ask the city solicitor how
in the hell it is that she forced the police
department to issue a citation, where as we now know,
the elements of the crime are not there, which is
(01:56:39):
why the cops didn't issue a citation in the first place,
which is why the Helon County prosecutor didn't issue a
citation either didn't direct one and said there's no there there.
Alex Trevinski, what was he charged with? Hmm, fourth degree
misdemeanor pursuing the section twenty nine to seventeen point one one,
which is the Disorderly Conduct Ohio Revised Code. The accord
(01:57:02):
to the press release from yesterday's release of records, Note
that the city attorney was not at the hearing. The
hearing where the city withdrew its request to steal the
records yesterday morning. Criminal complaint said he quote did recklessly
cause harm to another by taunting another under circumstances in
(01:57:24):
which that conduct is likely to provoke a violent response,
contrary to and in violation of Section twenty nine to
seventeen point one to one of the Higher Revised Code,
a misdemeanor in the fourth degree. Close quote. Now, if
you look at what the Disorderly Conduct section mentions, there
are a number of things that you can do that
(01:57:45):
qualify you as as committing disorderly conduct. So it starts out,
no person saw recklessly caused inconvenience, annoyance, or alarmed to
another by doing any of the following. And there are
five different things that you can do which would constitute
elements of the crime, one of which, again going back
(01:58:06):
to the complaint that was released, number three, insulting, taunting,
or challenging another under circumstances in which that conduct is
likely to provoke a violent response. Now, if that were
the end of it, you may be able to have
a charge under disorderly conduct. But no, he's been charged
with a fourth degree misdemeanor. So fast forward under that
same OHI Revised Code section. Whoever violates this section is
(01:58:28):
guilty of disorderly conduct. Disorderly conduct is a misdemeanor of
the fourth degree if any of the following applies, that's
what he's been charged with. Right, And according to the
documents released, the criminal complaint said that Alex Trevinsky quote
(01:58:51):
persisted in the disorderly conduct after reasonable warning or request
to stop close quote that's right there in the High
Revised Code in order to qualify for a fourth degree misdemeanor.
You must, among other things, persist in disorderly conduct after
reasonable warning or request to desist. Have you seen the video, right,
(01:59:14):
Alex Stravinsky issued one singular slap immediately followed by a
pile of people beating the crap out of him. Now,
if there were persons there, like law enforcement, that had
the opportunity to issue a reasonable warning and request to desist,
well they weren't, and they didn't, so that elements disappeared.
But there was no persistent disorderly conduct following a request
(01:59:38):
to stop it. It lasted a moment in time. One single,
very light slap on the cheek was the only thing
he did. It was not, in any way, shape or
form persistent. What was persistent was the crowd of people
beating the living crap out of him before and after
the little slap occurred. This is why the police officers
didn't issue a citation. They had no legal predicate to
(02:00:01):
do it. Elements of the crime we're missing and remain missing. Sorry,
city sucks to be you. You wonder your pound of
flesh not in this case, You're not going to get it.
Question question, Alex Stravinsky, when are you going to find
your civil rights violation against the police for issuing a
citation for a crime that you didn't commit. Drew Pappis,
Welcome to the Morning Show and a Happy Tuesday to you. Hey, Brian,
(02:00:22):
Happy Tuesday to you.
Speaker 7 (02:00:24):
Listen.
Speaker 15 (02:00:25):
First of all, I have many calling you tomorrow because
Honor Flight takes off tomorrow headed to DC for our
first ball flight, one of two. But I just so
so everybody if you could clear your calendars tomorrow evening.
The welcome home ceremony is amazing and you can find
(02:00:45):
all the information at Honor Flight tri state dot org.
But I called because that that last segment with the
guy from Aim Accuracy and Media was just absolutely amazing
and eye opening, and I think it illustrates one point
that needs to be mentioned here since its election time.
(02:01:08):
School boards have never been more important because they set
policy for the district. I mean, they run the district,
and you know, for better for worse. Not to make
this a purely partisan issue, because it sadly has become
so local parties are endorsing in school and supporting.
Speaker 3 (02:01:26):
School board candidates.
Speaker 15 (02:01:27):
So these are questions you need to ask the candidates
that are running for office about these issues. And I
can virtually guarantee you that it will break down on
party lines, that the Democrats will pooh pooh this and
say it's not a big deal, and yet you have
it on film that it is a big deal.
Speaker 3 (02:01:50):
Is it is.
Speaker 15 (02:01:51):
Being ignored by these bureaucrats running these districts. I used
to call them edge you cracked. We We sadly had
one elected here, you know, a few elections ago to
our local school board. But she's now gone, uh still
teaching a Xavier. But at the end of the day,
(02:02:12):
this is why your local school board races are so
fundamentally important and why you should pay attention to what
parties and what groups are endorsing said candidates. So you
need to open your eyes and you need to you
need to get you know, get this is not this
is not a national issue.
Speaker 7 (02:02:31):
This is not.
Speaker 15 (02:02:32):
Somewhere some you know, some somewhere else that it's happening.
This is in your backyard.
Speaker 11 (02:02:37):
You should, you should.
Speaker 15 (02:02:39):
You have a chance to protect your children by electing
those school board members that stand with your values against
this garbage.
Speaker 3 (02:02:50):
Drew pappas well stated, thanks very much. I hope you
have a fantastic day, brother, and thanks Democrats. Cares of
the Dogs Days Inside Scoop A bright Partney is coming
up next.
Speaker 19 (02:03:01):
Today's top headlines coming up at the top of the hour.
Speaker 3 (02:03:05):
Something always happens when you leave fifty five KRC the
talk station this Rea.
Speaker 7 (02:03:11):
This is for your information.
Speaker 3 (02:03:13):
Everything we do.
Speaker 9 (02:03:14):
The latest information on is FYI guys in the Russian
su Arabson trade.
Speaker 3 (02:03:19):
Fifty five KRC the talkstation ATO six right now if
you bove KRCD talk station, Tuesday's always made extra special
at this time because it's time for the Inside Scoop
with bright bart News. An important site to bookmark, as
I always start the segment out b R E I
T B A r T dot com. Do it, You'll
(02:03:40):
be glad you did read it. Every day I do
in preparation for the Morning Show because I love reading
what Senior editor at Large Joel Pollock has to write about. Joel,
Welcome back to the Morning Show. It's always great having
you on.
Speaker 20 (02:03:52):
Good Morning from a sunny Washington DC. Although ninety degrees
for a Bengals home opener sounds pretty hot.
Speaker 4 (02:03:58):
About how cold it's going to get back to.
Speaker 3 (02:04:00):
Good point something good point, Joel, And as long as
we play against teams like the Cleveland Browns were guaranteed victory.
Eddiehow Joel, Yeah.
Speaker 20 (02:04:10):
We thought we were guaranteed victory going into the fourth
quarter last night at Chicago, and look what happened there.
Speaker 3 (02:04:16):
Look what happened. There's always roomed for disappointment in the
game of football, Joe Paul Locke. I saw the morning environment.
It is, most assuredly is we're here to talk about
what's going on in the situation with Israel and Gaza.
It's a very complicated mess. I know you're going to
break it down for us, but I saw the morning news.
Israel has issued an evacuation order for all of Gaza City.
(02:04:37):
It's expanding its offensive. I guess they have seventy five
percent control of Gaza City. They want everybody else out,
and according to the reporting, there are hundreds of thousands
of Palestinians kind of sheltering in the area. I don't
know where they're going to go. This has been an
ongoing complication. Egypt doesn't want them, nobody seems to want them.
But evacuating Gaza seems to be the solution. Can that
even be accomplished, Joel? Where are we on this? Well?
Speaker 20 (02:05:03):
It can be accomplished if people listen and they move
south to humanitarian areas that the Israeli military.
Speaker 4 (02:05:10):
Has set up in southern Gaza.
Speaker 20 (02:05:12):
Israel does this to avoid civilian casualties and to enable
them to go after the Hamas terrorists and the Hamas infrastructure,
including the buildings and the tunnels.
Speaker 4 (02:05:21):
You don't want to be around there when that happens.
Speaker 20 (02:05:23):
So they've created these humanitarian corridors where people can move
south safely. And some people are saying they're not going
to leave. There's nothing you can do about that. There
are people who don't want to leave during hurricanes and
forest fires and all kinds of things, so okay, people
want to take the risk. There is a pattern where
(02:05:43):
Hamas uses civilians as human shields, and of course, even
with the best of intentions, sometimes civilians do get hurt
in these conflicts. To Israel tries not to target them,
but sometimes people do get hurt. I think that Israel's
doing what it has to do. It's we're out of options.
Hamas is not willing to make a deal on the
(02:06:05):
hostages to end the war. Israel has said that it
accepts the compromise that Donald Trump has put forward and Hamas.
Speaker 4 (02:06:13):
Has rejected it, So what are they supposed to do?
Speaker 20 (02:06:17):
The only thing they can do is to press ahead
with their military plans to get rid of the remaining
Hamas strongholds and to get rid of Hamas. This debate
becomes very different once the war is over and Hamas
is out of the way, and Hamas has decided we're
not going to come to.
Speaker 4 (02:06:33):
A deal, and Israel has decided, okay, well we're.
Speaker 20 (02:06:35):
Open to a deal, but now we're going to negotiate
with troops and not with diplomats.
Speaker 3 (02:06:41):
Well, let let me ask you this, because Trump posts
on two social media just yesterday. I think it was
over on Sunday. Everyone wants the hostages home. Everyone wants
this war to end. The Israelis have accepted my terms.
It's time for Hamas to accept as well. I've worn
amas about the consequences not accepting. This is my last morning.
There will be not there will not be another one. Okay,
can you outline from my listeners and mean, what the
(02:07:02):
terms are that Trump outlined that Israel agreed to that
Amasa doesn't accept, and then after that, what is next?
This line in the sand that he appears to have
articulated in this true social media. I mean, what's next
for Hamas? Is it what you just pointed to, Israel's
going to unleash your world of military hurt on them,
or is there something else going to go on?
Speaker 20 (02:07:24):
So Israel's demands are that Hamas release all of the
hostages and that Hamas disarmed, drop its weapons, and leave
the government in Gaza. Hamas has said, we will let
the hostages go, but we're not dropping our weapons, and
we're not going to leave.
Speaker 4 (02:07:42):
Government in Gaza.
Speaker 20 (02:07:43):
Will be part of a committee that governs Gaza, meaning essentially,
as almost they're the ones of the weapons, they're going.
Speaker 4 (02:07:48):
To still govern Gaza. Right, that's the sticking point.
Speaker 20 (02:07:51):
And what Trump suggested was, how about this, You release
the hostages first, and then Israel will.
Speaker 4 (02:07:58):
Pull out of Gaza and we'll just call it a day.
Speaker 20 (02:08:02):
And Hamas said, no, we're not releasing the hostages first
because we have no guarantee that Israel won't keep fighting
once the hostages are released. Trump said, I'll guarantee they
don't fight, and Hamas says, we don't trust you, and
that's where it is.
Speaker 3 (02:08:15):
Huh, Well, I ass a straightforward question. I am a
bit suspicious that the hostages are even still alive anymore.
Is it possible that they are dead? And Hamasta just
doesn't want to negotiate on this because they have nothing
to deliver on by way of returning hostages. Unless they're
a body bag.
Speaker 4 (02:08:35):
That's possible.
Speaker 20 (02:08:36):
Although I think that twenty of the forty eight are
presumed to be alive, maybe somewhat fewer than twenty, but
Hamas keeps releasing videos of these living hostages in various
states of injury and malnutrition starvation.
Speaker 4 (02:08:53):
I think one of the reasons Hamas doesn't want to let.
Speaker 20 (02:08:55):
Them go is because people will see just how badly
Hamas has treated them in the same way that some
of the hostages when they were released, looked like concentration camp. Sure,
he's President Trump observed, So Hamas is playing games, and look,
they're trying to stay in power. They believe that if
they can say we survived, then they win the war.
Speaker 4 (02:09:17):
It doesn't matter what happens to Gaza and the Injurim.
Speaker 20 (02:09:20):
So the Israelis are saying, okay, well we'll just flatten
Gaza city and we're going to get rid of you
guys in your tunnels.
Speaker 4 (02:09:26):
And then you can call it a day. If you
don't want to.
Speaker 20 (02:09:29):
Come to a deal. That's what's going to happen. And Trump,
to his great credit, is backing Israel up on that.
He's saying, look, I've given a proposal, the Israelis are agreed.
I've leaned on the Israelis to agree, because it's not
necessarily a proposal of the Israelis want.
Speaker 4 (02:09:42):
I've leaned on Israel, I've delivered them. They agree. Now
Hamas has to agree.
Speaker 20 (02:09:47):
And if you don't agree, I'm gonna let Israel do
what they want to do, which is just to get.
Speaker 3 (02:09:50):
Rid of you well and say what you want. I mean,
you know, I do believe Trump has the leverage to
force the Israelis to withdraw troops if that's the compromise
that was agreed upon. But they're an independent country. They're
free to do whatever the hell they want. And when
you have a Palestinian gunmen mowing down speaking of civilian casualties,
mowing down six people, innocent people, and attack at a
(02:10:10):
Jerusalem bus stop, you know, there didn't seem be a
whole lot of incentive for the Jewish people to give
up on this whole concept.
Speaker 20 (02:10:17):
Yeah, well, I'll say this, I think that Israel will
do almost anything that Trump wants because the Israelis feel
indebted to the Trump administration for taking out the Iranian
nuclear sites, which was the achievement of a generation. And
I feel or I think that Israelis feel that they
(02:10:37):
owe Trump. And so if Trump says to them, I
know you don't like this compromise, but you're going to.
Speaker 4 (02:10:41):
Have to accept it. I know you don't want to withdraw.
Speaker 20 (02:10:43):
I know you don't want to give up all these
Palestinian terrorists that you've arrested over the years. There are
a lot of conditions that Trump can impose on Israel
that the Israelis would have to shrug and say, you
know what he would here for us, We're accounted, We're
going to do what he says. I think that's how
American power works, and that's how good allies respond.
Speaker 4 (02:11:03):
Yeah, but the problem here is we're not even in that.
Speaker 20 (02:11:06):
Conversation because Hamas is not even willing to do the basics.
They want to stay in power, they want to stay
in control. They want to live to fight another day.
And the Trump administration and the Israeli government of Benjaminison
Yagu are on the same page where they say there's
not going to be another fight another day.
Speaker 4 (02:11:22):
This is it.
Speaker 3 (02:11:24):
Well, I guess I'm struggling on this because amid all
of this and get the negotiations and how things are
going the global community generally speaking, there's this sort of
wave of what appears to be a growing chorus of
anti Semitism around this globe. But it doesn't seem as
though the Hamas terrorists are being held accountable for their
(02:11:47):
evil actions. I mean, do we not remember October seventh
to talk about this again? Civilian casualties. They have no
concern for human life. If it's Jewish life, it isn't
life to them, and they're happy to go ahead and
eliminate it when they have the possibility to do that.
But how is it that they can get such what
appears to be widespread support that Israel is the evil
actor in this when they're merely trying to protect themselves
(02:12:10):
and sort of hold the people that murdered their own,
innocent people, including elderly women and children. I mean, I
don't understand the backlash against Israel on this, Joel, I
really don't.
Speaker 20 (02:12:21):
If you want to understand, you don't have to go
back to October seventh, you can go back to nine
to eleven, and remember, after nine to eleven, there were
all these people, including some in the West, who said, well,
we have to understand the root causes that made them
do this.
Speaker 4 (02:12:34):
I mean, we.
Speaker 20 (02:12:35):
Realize it's horrible, destroying the Twin Towers, attacking the Pentagon,
three thousand Americans dead, many people from other countries dead
as well.
Speaker 4 (02:12:44):
It's horrible, but we have to understand why they would
do this.
Speaker 20 (02:12:46):
There has to be a reason why, and they're justified
in doing it, or at least we can defend them.
So there's a double standard. You would never accept anybody
behaving like that. But because there's a double standard, and
because frankly, the world expects less of Palestinians than it
does of Israelis, there is no pressure being put on Hamas.
(02:13:09):
The world has bought the idea that there's something legitimate
about their struggle and that they can operate outside of.
Speaker 4 (02:13:15):
A moral code. And because the world accepts that, that's
why they keep doing it. That's why terrorism continues to
pay off.
Speaker 20 (02:13:22):
But yes, if they were applying a common standard to
both sides, then they'd be pressuring Hamas hamas is holding
hostages and platement, violation of international laws, allowing the Red
Cross to visit. And yes, some of it is anti Semitism,
and some of it is just the kind of anti
Western sentiment that motivates this kind of double standard in
every situation.
Speaker 3 (02:13:41):
Yeah, yeah, there is certainly that. But you make a
really good point which seems to be blurred constantly. The
amass terrors. They have captured and are holding civilians. These
aren't military combatants that are being held in a military
conflict like a traditional war sense when you get prisoners
of war. These are civilians, innocent civilians, no connection with
(02:14:03):
the conflict. They're being held.
Speaker 20 (02:14:05):
Because you are hold on some of them are civilians,
some of them some of them are soldiers. But even
holding soldiers like that is against the laws of armed conflict.
You can't just hold hostages. There are conventions around prisoners of.
Speaker 4 (02:14:18):
War, and there especially the Red Cross visits are crucial.
Speaker 20 (02:14:22):
International law requires that if you have prisoners of war,
legitimate prisoners of war, you have to treat them a
certain way.
Speaker 4 (02:14:29):
You have to guarantee them visits by the Red Cross.
There's a whole series of rules that that has to follow.
Speaker 20 (02:14:34):
We take prisoners of war in combat all the time,
but there's a set of rules governing how you hold
those prisoners. And of course Hamas has no intention of
honoring those. They've never let the Red Cross in to
see soldiers or civilians in two years.
Speaker 3 (02:14:50):
Yeah, terrorists don't typically follow rules, Joel, I think we
can all agree now we're not signatories to some damn
international convention. Damn it right right amid all this, this
is another great illustration of the futility and stupidity of
the United Nations. What a worthless organization. You would think.
This is exactly the type of challenge they might be
up to in terms of acting as a mediator. Are
(02:15:10):
there otherwise trying to resolve it? I mean nothing, zero zip, Well.
Speaker 4 (02:15:15):
Worse than zero.
Speaker 20 (02:15:16):
You've got the un special repperteur on the Palestinians hanging
out with Greta Tunberg on her sailboat.
Speaker 4 (02:15:24):
In Tunisia and putting up videos. You know, this un.
Speaker 20 (02:15:27):
Representative put up a video last night claiming that an
Israeli drone had struck one of the boats in Greta Tunberg's.
Speaker 8 (02:15:34):
I saw that.
Speaker 20 (02:15:35):
Yeah, It's like, first of all, how do you fly
a drone from Israel to Tunisia. I mean, it's not
impossible to do, but why would you do it? Secondly,
the video turned out to be totally bogus. There was
some kind of internal explosion or electrical fire or something.
So the UN isn't just quiet, the UN is actually
pro Hamas.
Speaker 3 (02:15:57):
That's crazy right there. I did see that article this morning,
and I almost read it because I thought there was
high comedy in the idea of a drone strike in
Greta Thunberg's flotilla in Tunisia.
Speaker 4 (02:16:08):
Yeah, exactly. I mean, you know what Greta Tonberg is
really afraid of as a haircut? I mean, that's it.
Speaker 3 (02:16:14):
Oh, I know, I want to post her child for
the most angry person that ever existed. Do you think
she has ever had an enjoyable moment in time in
the last fifteen years of her life? God?
Speaker 11 (02:16:24):
It.
Speaker 4 (02:16:24):
So it's a great point. It's a great point.
Speaker 20 (02:16:26):
You know, the people on the far left spend so
much time being miserable and angry. They do, and they
allow themselves these moments of joy in their rebellion and
their riot and.
Speaker 4 (02:16:36):
Their insurrection, but that's it.
Speaker 20 (02:16:37):
They don't actually allow themselves to enjoy ordinary life the
way human beings are wont to do in other circumstances.
Speaker 3 (02:16:44):
Such a true statement. Senior Editor at Large at Breitbart,
Breitbart dot Com, book Market read what Joel Pollock and
the rest of the crew at Breitbart have to write
about every single day. It's outstanding stuff. You're doing great work.
I'll look forward to another segment with you very soon,
Joel Pollock, and we do this every Tuesday to five
Inside Scoop with Breitbart News. Joel, Hello and best of
health and love you and the crew at Breitbart.
Speaker 4 (02:17:05):
We'll talk again, all right, talk to you soon.
Speaker 3 (02:17:08):
Take care brother. Eight eight twenty fifty five k Cdtalk
Station Daniel Davis Deep dive what's going on in rushing
in Ukraine? Daniel Davis on that topic at the bottom
of the hour. And of course you need to get
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(02:18:11):
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Speaker 3 (02:18:54):
Twenty nine on a Tuesday. You know what time it
is is time for a Daniel Davis deep dive every Tuesday.
At this moment in time, we get to retire Lieutenant
Colonel to give us his analysis, and again we're going
back to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Another week,
another conversation and no resolution. Daniel Davis, welcome back, my friends.
Always great having you on the show. Yeah, I bet
(02:19:15):
it's not as great as me being here. I look
forward to this every week. You're good man, Daniel. I
appreciate these kind words and a lot of activity over
the weekend. Apparently the largest strike by Russia on Ukraine
since this thing started. Are we in at three and
a half years at this point? Oh man? Time flies anyway,
eight hundred drones and thirteen missiles fired in Ukraine, most
(02:19:37):
of which I guess five hundred reportedly shot down, of course,
meaning three hundred of the drones got in and a
handful of the missiles got shot. It looks like nine
of the missiles made it through and we're not intercepted.
I guess my first question is, certainly this is not
a movement toward resolution. This is an this is increased pressure. Again,
(02:19:58):
it's the largest strike yet. But I guess I'm kind
of wondering, you know, just from a military and a
strategic standpoint, Daniel, is there any rhyme or reason to
what Russia is targeting with these? Because they hit residential neighborhoods.
Sometimes they comparently hit one of the Ukraine cabinet ministry building,
But that sounds like maybe a legitimate target. But I mean,
(02:20:18):
is this sort of like willy nilly launching things and
just irking and and pissing off Ukrainians and making the
populace angry or what's the story from a military perspective, Daniel, Yeah,
it doesn't appear that way.
Speaker 19 (02:20:30):
What you got to understand that what the Ukraine side does,
and to an extent, you can understand this all of
these anti aircraft missiles and interceptor missiles that are fired up.
Speaker 3 (02:20:40):
If they miss, they're gonna come down.
Speaker 19 (02:20:43):
And it's been very often throughout this entire war that
much of the damage inside residential areas is because either
of an interception that success succeeded, and sometimes it'll hit
like the rocket motor of an incoming missile will knock
it off course and then of course it just falls
wherever it falls, or the interceptor missile itself misses and
then we'll land on a residential building. And when much
(02:21:05):
of the infrastructure that Ukraine has is intentionally placed inside
residential areas to make it harder for Russia to do
so that they get accused of this stuff internationally, Russia
has apparently calculated that they don't really care about what
the international is going to say anymore. So if there's
military infrastructure inside residential areas, they're just going to go
(02:21:25):
after it. And it could also be that they're attacking
some civilian territories impossible, I don't know. There was another
one overnight that had twenty one retirees killed in an
outlying village, and it's hard to see how that was
a military target.
Speaker 3 (02:21:40):
I don't know.
Speaker 19 (02:21:40):
But what we do know is that Russia is saying, listen,
we're in this to win it, and we're not backing
down any from that. We've made a path open for
a negotiated settlement, which is basically capitulation. They say, you
can either take that, or, as Putin expressly said in
Beijing last week, we'll keep going until we went it
on the battlefield.
Speaker 3 (02:21:58):
That's the stark reality well and on our side of
the equation, since, at least, thank god, thus far, we're
not planning on putting boots on the ground. I know
is Zelunsky's asking for more Patriot interceptor missiles, which are
extraordinarily expensive and finite in quantity and tend to be
used up rather quickly. That is not going to stop
the Russian offensive. I don't think there's any possible way,
(02:22:20):
noting the manufacturing hurdle you have to even get them
over there. But what is left Trump keeps threatening Russia
with like additional sanctions or something. I keep asking out loud,
when are our options going to run out? And is
there really anything left in our arsenal to throw at
Russia that's going to get them to come to the table.
(02:22:41):
Or otherwise soften their position on a negotiation. The options
have run out, not are running out, but have run out.
We simply don't have them because of all these seventeen
rounds of previous sanctions that we've done since February twenty
twenty two, there's nothing left and Russia has made themselves
essentially sanctions proof. Now there are some things that we
(02:23:03):
can still do which could cause some pain to Russia,
but not enough to cause any kind of change in policies.
And that's one of the things I emphasized so emphatically
here is that these seventeen rounds of sanctions have never
succeeded a single time in compelling Russian compliance on any topic.
Somebody's irrational to the highest degree to think that anything
(02:23:25):
next would have a success where the other eighteen or
seventeen have already failed. And now then the one area
where we have put something on is on India. So
there's a fifty percent tear up on India alone, and
that's what the only thing they are talking is separate
is reflective tariffs on those that do business with Russia,
thinking somehow that would cause it, But there's no chance.
(02:23:47):
In fact, India today I saw in the news actually
says they vowed. Now not only are they not going
to stop buying Russian to ole like we wanted, they're
going to increase by somewhere between fifteen and fifty percent
in the coming number of months. So that's also backfired,
and that of course helps Russia out as well. So
we are faced with this stark situation.
Speaker 19 (02:24:10):
We either accede to math that Ukraine can never no
matter how many missiles they get, they can't overwhelm the
number of incoming Russian missiles, which are increasing, and that
the menpower on the front, by Sirsky's own admission yesterday,
is a threefold advantage for Russia. You cannot even hold
on with those numbers. So we either give into the
(02:24:31):
acknowledged reality, or we keep with this pretending that we
have something to do and just watch Ukraine get ground
to dust.
Speaker 3 (02:24:37):
That's where we are. Brian, is that stark? Wow? And no,
you can't look back and say, well, three hundred that
movie shows that, you know, a few number of men
can fight off a massive army. That is not reality
in this current situation.
Speaker 19 (02:24:50):
And even in the movie though, those three hundred ended
up losing, So that's not a good model either fair
and fair enough, I forget think it's a very important
element of that.
Speaker 3 (02:24:57):
Well, so the real concerning thing for me, moving aside
from justice conflict, we've in essence driven the Prime Minister
of any Emodi into the arms of the Russians. I mean,
they were a valuable trading partner and we you know,
they got a billion people. That's a lot of business
we can do and they're you know, we should be
I'm alarmed by that growing relationship between Jiji and Ping
(02:25:20):
Vladimir Putin in India, Yeah, and.
Speaker 19 (02:25:24):
Absolutely, I mean India has intentionally wanted to have a
kind of a hands off attitude both the West and
the East because they wanted to kind of straddle it.
They said, we want to do business with everybody, we
don't want to join one block against another. And they
successfully did that. But now we're shoving them over into
that block. And then now then you're adding and you
just saw it in Beijing last week where they had
(02:25:46):
their World War two victory celebration. You also added Kim
Jong unt that on the stage. You had the president
of Iran that was there, and in addition to a
whole bunch of others, but you had all of them
happy together. That's not good for us, and that's what
our policies are producing. You should be worried about that. Yeah,
it is a huge concern of mine. Well, and then
what of the European Union on this? And we've had
(02:26:07):
multiple conversations over the hell coming up in years now,
Daniel Davis. But the European Union being in a sense
of our state of denial, they keep saying, no, no,
we need to fight, we need like whatever. Now France's
economies collapsed and their government has collapsed. I don't know
where the European Union is at this moment in time
relative to the conflict, but they still seem to be
emasculated and incapable of doing anything anyway. And you've got
(02:26:29):
the matters compounded by French as of France's economy going
into the toilet, right, and then you can you can
also add Germany into that same calculations, and you know,
and then you have Robert Fiso and Victor Orbon on
the other end saying, hey, we just want this war
to get over with so we can get back to
doing business and stop costing ourselves to the inexpensive gas
(02:26:50):
from Russia et cetera, in the quantities that are needed.
So you have fracturing all over the European Union. But
the bottom line is that whichever ones are hanging on to,
let's keep doing something or in absolutely you said it
best denial. There is no path militarily, diplomatically or economically
where they can avoid defeat. And the longer we ignore that,
(02:27:12):
the longer we harm our own interests, not just those
of the Ukrainian people, who are enabled to fight a
war that can only be lost. That is, it's a
real problem and something we're gonna have to face, probably
sooner rather than later, or Ukraine will simply lose the
war and then we'll be in a much worse situation.
Speaker 3 (02:27:30):
Yeah, And honestly, from my perspective of my position right now,
looking at where we are, they're just on a path
to lose the war. As long as Russia is not
willing to capitulate on anything, that's it. They're going to
continue to do these massive strikes like they did over
the weekend. They've obviously got the resources and the manpower
to do it. They've got no incentive stop. I don't know,
(02:27:52):
Daniel Davis, I.
Speaker 19 (02:27:53):
Hear you you want to finish that sentence with something
that's iligent. I can't find one either. It's just why
would they go down a path that can only fail?
It's a edge scratcher.
Speaker 3 (02:28:04):
It truly is. Nobody wants to submit defeat, but clearly
they're on the path to defeat. And that's just practical
plane in your face reality. Brought to you by, of course,
Daniel Davis, retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. Look for the
Deep Dive where you get your podcasts and follow him
and always tune in on Tuesdays at eight thirty for
another well interesting discussion. Even if we can't resolve the
problems of the world, Daniel, we try. We do. Love you, brother,
(02:28:28):
Thank you great week man. Thirty nine fifty five talk
station Stick around me right back.
Speaker 5 (02:28:33):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 3 (02:28:38):
Life is better with less finance. You have cancer, you
want a second opinion, or you recently diagnosed with cancer.
You need to search for a great cancer doctor. Look
no further than OHC the Cancer Specialist eight eight eight
six four ninety eight hundred online ohcare dot com. Welcome back.
It's been about a year to the fifty five KRC
Morning Show instudio or doctor Akash mccerjee who is a
blood cancer specialist. It is blood cancer Awareness month. We've
(02:29:01):
got one of those. Doctor, good to have.
Speaker 11 (02:29:03):
You back in.
Speaker 2 (02:29:03):
Thank you so much Brian for having me over and.
Speaker 3 (02:29:06):
Of course near and dear to my heart. Lymphoma one
of the blood cancers. You're a specialist. And by way
of background, doctor mccergee is a hematologist, medical oncologist, bone
marrow transplant specialist and cellular therapy expert. Areas of interest
cart cell therapy, we've talked about that before, Leukemia, lymphoma,
a plastic andemia. Clinical research. They've always got clinical trials
(02:29:27):
going on an HC. Let's start with what's the difference
between lymphoma, which is what I've got, and leukemia, both
blood cancers.
Speaker 21 (02:29:36):
That's a great question, Brian. I mean lymphoma. We can
start off by talking about that. I mean, it's the
eighth most common cancer in United States and every year
roughly there are eighty thousand to ninety thousand new cases.
And lymphoma is essentially a cancer of your lymphatic system,
the immune system, and you have lymphocytes, which are a
(02:29:59):
type of white blood cell and their function is to
get rid of any type of foreign pathogens bacteria, virus, fungus.
But because of certain genomic mutation, abnormal chromosomal translocation, those
lymphocytes they start to divide in an abnormal, uncontrolled, excessive fashion,
and they start to cause lymphnot soiling, painless lymphnot soiling.
(02:30:22):
It can involve your liver spleen, can cause enlargement of
the liver spleen, and then it can even infiltrate the
bone marrow, causing low counts. So the most common type
of lymphoma which we see here in US is your
non Hotchkin lymphoma, and that's about eighty ninety percent of
the total lymphoma cases. And then you have hot skin lymphoma,
(02:30:45):
which is about ten percent of those. And in non
Hatchkin lymphoma you have the diffuse large piece cell lymphoma
polyculo lymphoma.
Speaker 2 (02:30:53):
Then you have leukemia on the other.
Speaker 21 (02:30:55):
Hand, which is an entirely distinct entity, that cancer of
your involving the blood and the bone marrow, and you
have white blood cells. It could be mature or it
could be the precursor of white blood cells such as
the blast cells or the stem cells, and they start
(02:31:16):
to divide out of control and they encroach your entire
bone marrow, leaving no room for healthier cells to grow
sotastasizing right, correct, Yeah, And essentially what happened is since
your normal hematopoietic stem cells or bloody stem cells, since
they are not dividing and maturing the way they should be,
(02:31:38):
and your marrow is getting infiltrated with all these bad cells,
the lukamic cells, your counter start to drop low. So
if your white count, if it gets too high or
too low, keep in mind those are just dysfunctional white
blood cells, then your patient is more susceptible to recurrent
infections of fever. If your red blood cell count or
(02:31:59):
the hemoglobe drops too low, you are just out of
breath and exhausted, feeling fatigue all the time.
Speaker 2 (02:32:06):
And then the other.
Speaker 21 (02:32:07):
Cells which get affected is the platelet and if they
drop too low, then you are at increased RISCO bleeding.
So a lot of time your UH leukemia patient will
present like that. Now in US, in the adult population,
we primarily see AML acute mallard leukemia, which is an
aggressive blood cancer. In pediatric population, we primarily see all
(02:32:31):
and then and that's more of an immature white blood
cell cancer and on the mature white blood cell group CLL,
the chronic lymphostic leukemia is the one which is more common.
Speaker 7 (02:32:44):
But over the.
Speaker 21 (02:32:45):
Last I will say two decades, the treatment landscape has
evolved dramatically and your cure rate and survival rates have
pretty much doubled. With you know, back in the old
we used to rely on chemotherapy, and chemotherapy still has
a pretty important role. But with the advent of immunotherapy,
(02:33:09):
you have the BYTE therapy, the by specific T cell engager,
the targeted therapy, and the CARTI and cellular therapy, and
in certain group of patients the use of a stem
cell transplant or a bone matter transplant your and better
supportive care. Your survivorship has gone up, and you know,
the field is only looking more and more promising with
(02:33:32):
all these new drugs coming up.
Speaker 3 (02:33:34):
I love that now. Is is like, for example, CARTI
I always like to think of them as sort of
bespoke treatments. You know, you're tailoring them to the specific patient.
It's not an off the shelf, fill a prescription kind
of thing. Yet I am I still accurate on my
general understanding of that.
Speaker 2 (02:33:49):
Oh yeah, right.
Speaker 21 (02:33:50):
So essentially, with CARTI, you are trying to harness the
patient immune cell, and a lot of time, you know,
disease like leukemia lymphoma happen because a patient is immune, compromised,
or for whatever reason. They're immune cells, primarily the T cells.
They are not able to identify and recognize the cancer cell,
(02:34:13):
and they cannot kill those cells, so they are able
to grow unchecked. But if you can harness the patient
lymphocyte or the immune cell, genetically engineer them, target them
with their receptor which identifies the protein expressed on the
cancer cell.
Speaker 4 (02:34:33):
You can.
Speaker 2 (02:34:36):
You know, infuse those cells back and kill the leukemia.
Speaker 3 (02:34:39):
After the cancer.
Speaker 2 (02:34:42):
Correct.
Speaker 21 (02:34:42):
Yeah, you're basically arming them with a better gun so
that they can kill the leukemia and phoma and put
patient back into aromation.
Speaker 3 (02:34:50):
Fair enough, uh, doctor mccriteey. I stumbled upon my cancer inadvertently.
It was some other completely unrelated medical condition I had,
which results to me getting a CT scan which confirmed
that no, there was nothing wrong with me. However, the
CT scan revealed that my lymph nodes had grown, and
that's when I started seeing you are the cancer doctors
(02:35:10):
at OHC. So that's my little path there. I didn't
know that. For example, I was experiencing night sweats at
the time. I never connected that with anything medically, never
even thought about it. It says, this is weird, I
started getting night sweats. But what are the symptoms people
should be looking for when it comes to blood cancers?
Are there parallel symptoms with lymphoma and leukemia? So what
(02:35:32):
are they? What should we be looking for?
Speaker 2 (02:35:33):
Excellent question, Brian.
Speaker 21 (02:35:34):
I think what people don't recognize is with leukemia lymphoma,
I mean it's very common to have been less swelling
of the lymph node, and along with it you can
also have b symptoms. And what that entail is you
can start to have recurrent fever, you can start to
(02:35:56):
have drenching night sweats, and you know a lot of
I'm patient, they dismissed them O the weather. It might
be too hot, or I just have way too many covers,
or my hormones are off, or sometimes you start to
have unintentional weight loss. That means without modifying your diet
or without working out, you just start losing weight.
Speaker 3 (02:36:18):
Ye I never got lucky that way. I always joke
about that how come I never got the weight loss
as a symptom. I got cancer, damn it. I would
like to have the weight loss with it.
Speaker 21 (02:36:27):
A lot of patients tell about the same thing, but hey,
you don't want to lose weight by having can But
you know, so those are some of the common symptoms.
Besides that, patients can have progressive fatigue. They feel like
they're just drained out at the end of the day.
They can have unusual bone pin shortness of breath with exertion.
(02:36:52):
They can have abnormal excessive bleeding, like when they're brushing
their teeth. They can be bleeding from their gums skin.
So yeah, I mean, if at any point you are
concerned that something just doesn't feel right, they should approach
their primary care and just a quest for a general
blood count.
Speaker 2 (02:37:11):
Just take complete blood count and.
Speaker 21 (02:37:13):
A lot of time that's able to capture bulk of
your blood cancers. And just a simple lymph or examination
which only takes like two minutes to do and checking
for a largest clean and liver can assure the physician
that you know you are either okay or be into
some kind of trouble.
Speaker 3 (02:37:33):
I suggest I suppose this suggests that's a good reason
for everyone to have at least have an annual physical
because they'll do blood work. Oh yeah, absolutely, Okay, wonderful
advice on that one. Now, risk factors. Let me guess
smoking is on the list. It's always on the list
for every cancer, right, yeah, saying.
Speaker 21 (02:37:50):
Alcohol, you can always put them at the risk for
pretty much bulk of the cancer just being overweighted. You know,
when you are OBEs that has been shown to be
associated with you know, excessive sugar calorie intake that can
mess with your gut microbiome. When you eat a low
(02:38:10):
fiber diet a lot of processed food, it can alter
your gut microbiome. And these days we are having a
ton of data that how gut is biosis. That means
you have essentially gotten rid of the good bacteria and
the gut and it's just overpopulated with bad bacteria. And
that can somehow affect your immune functionality, which entire increase
(02:38:34):
your risk of developing lymphoma or leukemia, or if someone
has autoimmune disease or they are on immune suppressive medication.
And sometimes you know, there are certain leukemia lymphoma which
we see more commonly in older age now obviously you know,
that's something which no one can avoid. But just in general,
having a more plant rich or plant paged diet with
(02:39:00):
a lot of fiber, making sure including a lot of
like your healthy gut microbiome based diet, and staying hydrated,
working out for at least thirty to sixty minutes every day.
Just those are some of the things which we can
do on our end.
Speaker 3 (02:39:19):
Get the sugar out of here.
Speaker 21 (02:39:20):
Oh yeah, absolutely, you want to get rid of the
sugar or have a avoid simple crops or processed crops
out of your diet.
Speaker 3 (02:39:29):
Doctor, I know you guys always have clinical trials going on.
It's one of the things OHG is known for. How
about clinical trials with regard to the blood cancers we're
talking about this morning.
Speaker 21 (02:39:37):
Oh yeah, So at OC we have more than ten
different clinical trial just for these two types of cancers
leukemia lymphoma, and then we have a whole bunch of
clinical trials for other blood cancer like multiple maloma MDS
and where we essentially try new medication along with the
(02:39:58):
standard of care treatment. And there are some clinical trials
which are first in human trial. WeSC was the first
place in Greater Cincinnati area to offer CARTI the crimerycantegen
receptor de cell therapy for relapse or fractored lymphoma. So
we are always at the forefront with a clinical trial
(02:40:21):
as well as celluver therapy or immunotherapy, and our clinical
trials are crucial to our fighting these blood cancers and
providing our patient with better outcomes and longer romation.
Speaker 3 (02:40:34):
Doctor Kosh mccarjee one of the outstanding doctors at OHC.
To reach OHC, either initially because you've just found out
about it or to get a second opinion, the number
is eight eight eight six hundred eighty eight six eight
hundred again online at ohcare dot com. Very positive information
as always from the folks at OHC. Doctor, It's been
a pleasure talking with you. I'm excited about the developments
(02:40:56):
and the specifically the lymphoma area. Selfish me, but at
least I know I'm in fantastic hands with the care
I'm getting at OHC, and I know my listeners will
be as well. Keep up the great work, doctor,