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January 7, 2025 • 155 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
After birday. That's great. Joe's tracker, executive produced to the
fifty five KRC Morning Show. I throw me off guard,

(00:24):
throw me off on my get me back on my heels.
You never know what's sound by Joe's gonna play And
of course that's Joe Biden singing Happy birthday too, haven't been?
Is that what the kid's name is?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Did you pronounce it correctly? Wow? We're down to days,
just days, of course. It's it's just the reminder of
the lies that have perpetuated nowt for for the last

(01:00):
four years. Is it any wonder that Canada is going
through political changes as well? Changes? Who is Pierre Pouliev?
He sounds a hell of a lot like Donald Trump.
Since Canadian Prime Minister Justice Justin Trudeau like quit yesterday.

(01:23):
Why because he's not popular? He is a leftist wing nut.
Had a conversation yesterday with one of the listeners about this.
You know, don't lose heart. The left tried their magic
on us now for a long time. I mean they

(01:45):
try to convince you a guy could be a girl
and a girl could be a guy. They tried to
convince you the decriminalizing and not the crime, not locking
people up, not being tough on justice. That kind of
thing was all good. It was the right thing to do, because,
oh my god, poor Johnny, and I mentioned this in
the context yesterday had a bad upbringing or whatever, So

(02:06):
we shouldn't be punishing him shoving this woke ideology down
our throat. DEI, which is, you know, is going the
way of the DODO too. I guess McDonald's now has
rolled back its woke DEI policies as well, at least
says the headline on Fox News. More and more companies
just turning their back on that nonsensical thing that merit

(02:28):
does not matter. The world is smarter than those elite
man I'd love to be able to curse on the
Morning show that elite collective of I would argue, they're

(02:48):
the ones that are brainwashed. They're either nefarious or stupid,
or a combination of both. We are smarter than that.
There is such a thing as common sense. We rejected
it and we took up. Yes, Donald Trump is the
next president of the United States of America. He will
be president again. Why is he the best possible person

(03:10):
for the job now? But he's not Kamala Harris, another
member of the woke elite. Well, I would say she's
in the useful idiot category. She's not smart enough to

(03:31):
be nefarious, but she's stupid enough to go along with
the messaging and this ideology open borders. All of this
was rejected soundly with the United States election. And look
what happened yesterday Canadians. Justice Street is gone. Justin Jow's

(03:53):
announced me yesterday he's stepping down as the Liberal Party leader.
Whoever will face him will be dealing with. Get a
load of this guy. Official opposition leader Pierre polliev I
had a look up to pronunciation folks pi l e

(04:16):
vre since I didn't take French in my education anyway,
it's Poliev. Its Conservative party reportedly has nearly three times
of support of committed voters forty seven percent compared to
eighteen percent for the Liberals. He's forty five, born in Calgary,

(04:36):
been in the House of Commons since two thousand and four.
Became the leader of Canadian Conservatives in twenty twenty two.
The party has continued to grow in popularity as the
Liberal Party in Canada has been tanking. And his messaging
is it sounds like Donald Trump. Bring home the Canadian Dream,

(05:04):
a theme of the Conservative Party, Polief, calling the Liberals
governing with an extremely radical ideology, which he described as
basically authoritarian socialism. Yep, call it fascism if you want.
That's pretty much the reality of what it is. Polliev quote,

(05:28):
people are sick and tired of grandiosity, horrendous utopian wokeism,
egotistical personalities on top rather than common people. I often
feel that way. I think he summed it up quite
nicely with that. One Canadian Conservative leader has been pushing

(05:57):
back on the whole idea of Donald Trump adopted Canada
is the fifty first state, which I certainly understand, and
you know, I don't really take that seriously. I mean,
Donald Trump wants to acquire Great Greenland and make Canada
the fifty first state. I think that's Donald Trump just

(06:17):
pull in a chain of the media. But whatever it
does generate responses. PAULI have said an interview with Canadian
broadcasters CTV, I have the strength and the smarts the
stand up for this country. My message to incoming President
Trump is that first and foremost, Canada will never be
the fifty first state of the United States. In the interview,

(06:45):
PAULI have acknowledged that Trump, and this is an interesting thing,
who has proposed eight to twenty five percent terrifund against
Canadian exports. One of the reasons that Justin Trudeau step down.
He's facing backlash from the incoming administration. Pointed out Trump

(07:10):
negotiates very aggressively and he likes to win. But as
Prime minister, he said he would seek, in his words,
a great deal that will make both countries safer, richer,
and stronger. He said he would accelerate approvals to build
oil refineries, liquefied natural gas plans and oh my god,

(07:33):
nuclear facilities, and increase the electricity surplus with the United States. Oh,
he's an all of the above kind of guy. I
like that. Oh, maybe that's one of the reasons Donald
Trump got elected. He claims that Canada sells its oil

(07:54):
and gas in the United States at an enormous discount.
He characterized that as a ripoff in which Canada is
ripping itself off. Self interested, interested in protecting Canada, interested
in protecting the nation, not getting ripped off. Well, maybe
he can use that as an argument to while oppost
Trump's tariffs proposed tariffs anyway, obviously they're not in play yet.

(08:20):
He said he would also embark on quote the biggest
crackdown on crime in Canadian history, and that habitual offenders
would not get out of jail anymore. Well, doesn't that
sound remarkably trumpst And of course I'm sure it's supported
widely given his popularity by the Canadian people. Maybe Canada

(08:42):
is fed up with woke as well, which is the
reason I'm pointing out these points. Trudeau just stepped down.
He is a failed experiment. That well, the leader of
a failed experiment which is going on in this country
as well. All these woes have gone and just turned regular, good,

(09:03):
decent American cities into toilets, and the people have had it.
Anybody with money has already left California, for example. Look
at what they've done to San Francisco and Los Angeles,
these leftist leaders and their woke policies and woke ideology.

(09:24):
It's a failed experiment. And it's not just here. It's
not just apparently looking at it in Canada. And you know,
assuming this guy has has the jobs to secure the job,
but look at Europe as well. The whole European Union
opened its borders to the entire world, and this citizen

(09:45):
re has had it up to its eyeballs. Unchecked, unregulated immigration,
which has literally destroyed the culture of the vast majority
of every European Union countries. I mean, Italy has a
culture and a history. You may think it's insane or

(10:05):
stupid or racist. I don't know, But in my efforts
to get my I guess the well rounded degree that
is required in order to get a degree in college,
I did take some Italian history classes, actually very fascinating.

(10:27):
But it's their culture, it's their heritage, it's their history.
And when you bring in multitudes, thousands and hundreds of
thousands of people that do not share your history, don't
respect it, and have no connection with it, you water
it down. And that's one of the arguments about these

(10:47):
h one B visa things. You know, are we really
short on engineers in this country? I find that a
little hard to believe. And how is it to bringing
in Indian I guess the vast majority of these engineers
that they're trying to bring into these visa programs are
of Indian background. Not that I have anything against the

(11:07):
Indian population, but they have no cultural connection with the
United States. Do they none whatsoever? And are you telling
me that there are no homegrown engineers that can fill
these roles? Oh my god, but they cost so much more. Well, okay,
welcome to America. Yeah, it's a little bit more difficult
to do business here in America, and it costs a

(11:29):
little bit more to live here, because well, we've got
a massive regulatory scheme and ge budget problem that is
really consuming a vast majority of the tax dollars that
have been collected. And we could go on and on
and on about the problems of America faces. And maybe
that has some connection with the amount of money that
somebody has to be paid in order to be an
engineer in a company in America. There's a guy over

(11:50):
in India that's living in filth abject squalor perhaps, or
maybe he's in one of the better neighborhoods in India.
I don't know. I just know that they're apparently willing
to work for a hell a lot less money in
America than people who are trying to be engineers in America.
But they don't bring with them and they don't embrace
our culture. So you're effectively watering down our culture as Americans.

(12:13):
And there's someone out listening audience right now saying, well,
we don't have any culture here in America. Well, whatever,
freedom and liberty is our culture unique to the world
in the rights and liberties we enjoy in America compared
to every other country. And someone who comes here from
an oppressive, oppressive, authoritarian regime that does not have any

(12:34):
connection with these God given things that we embrace in
America is not going to perceive them as God given
things that we embrace, willing to maybe turn them over
to some authoritarian dictator type person. I don't know. But

(12:56):
this whole concept that I'm looking at in can and
this populism that has been embraced much in the same
way that Trump ran in a populist campaign, an America
First campaign, a protect America. There's nothing wrong about that. Oh,
the left they call it xenophobia because you want to

(13:16):
protect your own best interests. The fool is the one
who's not looking out for his or her own best interest.
We're supposed to protect the citizen here first and foremost.
Just interesting reality, it's a global phenomenon, folks, the rejection

(13:39):
of woke leftism, and now it's not xenophobic to say it,
and there's nothing wrong with wanting to protect your cultural interests.
And as far as I'm concerned, American cultural interest embrace

(14:00):
all people of all types. It's kind of the reality
of America. Freedom, liberty, free speech, the right to defend yourself.
Look at the Bill of Rights for God's sake, coming
up in five twenty fifty five. K see the talk station, Joe.
If you open the phone lines, I'll invite people to
give us a call here five one, three, seven, four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two three

(14:23):
talk go pound five fifty on your AT and T phone.
I'll be back in just a minute. Time for the
nine first morning to go on the forecast out the
Chamnel nine. Let us see here, mostly cloudy day to
day with a few evening flurries. Possible high of twenty
six overnight down to six degrees. Yeah, that hasn't changed.

(14:45):
I was kind of hoping that the number would go
up a little bit, but now it's the same as yesterday.
Florida's is still possible overnight tomorrow, partly cloudy sky is
down to our high of twenty three, down to three
Wednesday night, partly Claudi and on Thursday, I mostly cloudy
day with a high twenty six overnight little eight cheese
right now, it's uh, where's my temperature? Eight fifteen degrees

(15:08):
five KERCD talk station? My elusive temperature five one fifty
five eight hundred two three top found five fifty on
at and T found. Oh yeah, as far as so
far as this, uh polyef guy. Also on immigration, I
was kind of alluding to that because I knew what

(15:29):
he had said about it having read the article. So
to take the required steps to renegotiate the Safe Third
Country Agreement with the United States to close the gaps
relating to illegal entries in Canada. Oh, they also agree
to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Very trumpest.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
M.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
It's all around us, folks. We're smarter than those nefarious,
slash stupid folks perceive us to be. And can I
just ask out loud without going into a whole lot
of detail about it. He's got like five minutes left
in office. President Biden, after four almost of four full

(16:20):
years in office, issued an executive action banning new drilling
and further oil and natural gas development on more than
six hundred and twenty five million acres of US coastal
and offshore waters. My decision reflects what coastal communities, businesses,

(16:43):
and peachgoers have known for a long time that jelling
off these coasts could cause irreversible damage to places we
hold dear and is unnecessary to meet our nation's energy needs.
See I paused on that unnecessary because I really don't
truly believe that anyway, it is not worth the risk.
As the climate crisis continues to threaten communities across the country,

(17:08):
and we are transitioning to a clean energy economy, now
is the time to protect the East Coasts for our
children and grandchildren. Well, my only observation on this, beyond
the multitude of thoughts that are streaming through my head
four years if this was so important and imperative to

(17:31):
the future of our beaches and our communities and to
stop climate change and whatever the hell else he believes
or has been told to believe, why did he wait
till the last minute of his administration to do it?
And since he did mention that this is unnecessary to
me st meet our nation's energy needs, can I ask

(17:51):
you a question out loud, just sort of rhetorically speaking,
why was it necessary to tap into the strategic petroleum
oil reserves in order to try to reduce the rice
of gasoline. If we've got oil and gasoline all over
the place and we don't need any additional resources to
meet our own domestic needs, then why tap into something

(18:12):
that was supposed to be kept in the back just
in case like war breaks out or something. The strategic
petroleum oil reserve. Hmm, isn't that interesting. So it's okay
when you're in a presidential race or when election is

(18:33):
coming up to burn fossil fuels and even tap into
the ones that we are keeping just in case war
breaks out or some other global conflict that's going to
interfere with the supply of our oil needs. It's okay
to do it when politics is involved. There is no
global warming in politics, folks, Apparently that's the take. But

(18:57):
insofar as meeting future demands, and get the memo that
artificial intelligence data centers use a lot of energy, and
those are becoming more and more of a thing, so
much so that you know, the likes of Alphabet at
All are planning on having their own nuclear power plans
to power them. Not that I'm against nuclear power, I

(19:20):
love it. I embrace it. I think it's a great thing.
It may solve our long term energy needs. They're necessary now,
but our regulatory establishment prevents them from being efficiently and
quickly built. There's something to FERI ues behind that component
as well. Anyhow, Sorry, just on a bit of a

(19:41):
tear this morning, five twenty seven. Feel free to call though,
I mean, you can take me someplace else if you want.
I'm wide open. Twenty seven fifty five cares of these dogs.
Days would be right back.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
The days of relaxing in the drawing room by the
radio set are long gone.

Speaker 4 (19:56):
These days we're taking it to go.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
The iHeartRadio powered by fifty five KRC dot com our
new and improved Ihearty.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
Here's your channel nine. First morning weather forecast. Got a
cloudy dayner hands today. Few florries are possible to be
a higher twenty six down to six degrees Tonight. Florries
also possible. Partly cloudy tomorrow with ie on twenty three
overnight a little of three and then on Thursday high
twenty six overnight a little of eight. Cloudy skies about

(20:33):
fifteen degrees. Right now, it's five PIERCD talk station five
point thirty Come up a five thirty one to fifty
five piercdtalk station, A very Happy Tuesday two five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three
talk pound FI fifty on AT and T phones. Let's
start with the phones. Bill's on the line. Hey, Bill,
thanks for calling this morning. Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 5 (20:51):
Hey, good morning there, Brian.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Good to hear from you.

Speaker 5 (20:55):
I got two points.

Speaker 4 (20:56):
One I want.

Speaker 5 (20:58):
It's on the fossil fuel problem here, okay, Will, is
all of them calling about their global warming. I bet
they're keeping warm right now, aren't they.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
Yes, it's it's a wonderful thing. Heat, heat coming from
some sort of energy generating thing. And it ain't a
solar panel in the middle of a blizzard or a
snowstorm like we've been having, or overcast skies.

Speaker 6 (21:25):
It's something about my other point, Yeah, my other point,
be real quick.

Speaker 5 (21:30):
Now I heard this, and now we got these two
drag queens on submarine ships and the Navy, and we're
paying them five thousand dollars. Tell Joe to look into that.
I heard it is true.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
Wait a minute, okay, all right. Putting aside that transvestites
are are on submarines, which, given that there are are
transvest nights in the United States military, one may presume
as a spring point or a springboard that, yes, they're
on submarines as well. Cribbage, MIC's out there, he's he
spent time in a submarine. He can back that up.

(22:12):
What's with the pay part, what's what's this fire.

Speaker 5 (22:15):
For getting paid? Our government money is paying them, taxpayers money,
is saying them extra.

Speaker 3 (22:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (22:24):
Yeah, they're getting paid taxpayer money five thousand dollars to
have these drag queens.

Speaker 6 (22:30):
On these submarines.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
Oh oh oh, you're saying they've been invited to entertain
the submarine crew. Yes, and we're okay, all right, See
that's okay. That's where the breakdown and communication came from.
I thought you were just talking about, you know, there
are transvestites and they may be serving in the military.
They get paid for that because they're serving our country
in the military. I thought you were suggesting they get

(22:53):
like for being a transvestite, they get extra pay. You're
saying that they've invited, like, you know, some sort of
comedy act to come into the submarine.

Speaker 5 (23:03):
They got a manager that they got a manature that
manages all of this, okay, and they get a five
thousand dollars to put on shows and submarine gap and water?

Speaker 1 (23:13):
All right? Well, who asked?

Speaker 4 (23:15):
Who asked me?

Speaker 6 (23:16):
That?

Speaker 1 (23:19):
Man? Bill, Joe and I have a problem with management here.
We all have problem with management. Everybody does. I would
say that is a problem with management. If you're a
submarine crew member, is that something you really want? Is
there like a did they circulate a petition like we're
gonna have some entertainment come in on the sub How

(23:40):
many raise your hands? How many people want transvest men
or women or whatever to come in and perform for us?
All right, I'm gonna have you have to have Joe
look into that. It's a comical. Side note Bill, whether
or not it's actually true, Joe Strekker internet research guru
will figure it out one way or another. Appreciate the
call and the high comedy that that provided me. Also
so high comedy on the top of my local stories.

(24:02):
This is hilarious. I even asked Jose Jerker, I said,
what was your motivation for printing this out? It's a
picture of the Cincinnati street car aka the Connector. I
guess that's what it called. It's like I still refer
to Paykort Stadium as Paul Brown Stadium because I do
not abide. But whatever, they were touting the fact that

(24:25):
they kept the track clean so the connector continue could
continue it's standard headways every twelve to fifteen minutes and
in their words, to provide a safe, warm option to
get from OTR to the CBD and back. Word has it.

(24:45):
I think if you spent any time driving around yesterday
within the city of Cincinnati, rather large chunk of real
estate when you look at it geographically speaking, that they
dedicated resources to keeping the track clean for the Cincinni
Connector when there's literally no one around to ride it.

(25:05):
The photograph is a completely empty street and there's some
city employee who apparently had stood out in the middle
of the road to take a video of the streetcar
going by because the track was cleared with no one
on it. Yes, we live in a world that's not

(25:27):
stupid people. Somebody fixed fred Street. Why you're at it?
Would you read please repave Sunset after the last twenty
years of it being well a literal nightmare for any
automobile owner. No, no, no, we're busy keeping the street
car clean and the tracks clean. It is five thirty

(25:47):
five stack and stupid. I think we started, didn't we
five three seven hundred eight two three talk found Fay
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(26:32):
percent of their utility bills. So it's just I haven't
heard anybody complain about USA's premium phone. Again. My wife
and I bought her from my daughter and Eric, her fiance,
which I love saying for the housewarming gift. Because housewarming
gift got it. Ah. Look I worked out really well
considering it's wintertime now, but you get the benefit of

(26:54):
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(27:16):
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Speaker 7 (27:30):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
The New Year means new health goals, not just for
your boy.

Speaker 4 (27:37):
Shannon.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
I first one wether four ks Today it's going to
be cloudy day. Few evening florries are possible to hire
twenty six down to six overnight florries continue. I have
twenty three tomorrow with partly cloudy sky is down to
three signal degrees overnight, and then a twenty six degree
high on Thursday, mostly cloud down to eight overnight seventeen

(27:58):
degrees right now if you've ut PARC DE talk station.
Time for first traffic.

Speaker 4 (28:02):
From the UC Health Traffic Center.

Speaker 8 (28:03):
UC Health Weight Boss Center offers comprehensive obcity care and
advanced surgical expertise called five one three, nine three, nine
two sixty three. That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three.
Highway traffic in pretty good shape this morning. Overnight cruise
did a great job of getting more lanes clear. In fact,
in most cases highway lanes aren't clear. Northbound seventy five

(28:27):
doing fine through the cut, Chuck Ingram. I'm fifty five
krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
By forty one fifty five RCD talk station. A very
happy Tuesday. TA road conditions much better than yesterday. I
can test to that, although I didn't get on the expressway,
came back down Montgomery Road, but smooth sailing, no issues.
Be careful regardless because you know, of course overpasses could
be really icy. Just warning you so I feel better

(28:54):
in case something happens. Let's go to the phone with you.
What Mark Scott were we get the stack and stupid Mark?
Welcome to the program and happy two morning, Brian.

Speaker 6 (29:03):
Yesterday morning, I called in when I was on my
way in and get up on Coleraine Avenue between two
seventy five and across county and it's basically one lane
in each direction and that's normally four lanes and then
turn lanes. Yeah, and there's metro buses running up and
down the road, hardly being able to go because they're spinning. Now,

(29:26):
mind you, all the bus stops are covered in snow
and where they plowed and where they hadn't plowed, and
five thirty in the morning, five forty five in the morning,
and there's metro buses running all over the place. And
did they really have anybody outstanding the bus stop at
five o'clock in the morning when there's been ten inches

(29:49):
of snow? I mean, if they don't keep up on
clearing all their bus stops for their riders, the street
car is going to take their their ridership, I think.
So you're going to add that to this back of stupid.
But on a serious note, yesterday morning, I can't tell
you how many people that I've had to negotiate my
way around because they were going extremely slow for the conditions,

(30:13):
you know, they and again everybody has different I understand
comfortability driving in this But I go around to one
car on Coleraine Avenue going up the hill there past
rumpy and they're going extremely slow. They have their flashes on.
I work my way around them in an uncleared lane
and they have one headlight. And it's like again, if

(30:37):
your car, if you don't have the right tires or
this two wheel drive, or you don't have your headlights functioning,
it makes it hard to navigate when it's snowing like crazy.
And I worked for a local construction company and on
the twentieth we had a worker get hit by a
car that was flagging in one of our work zones.

(30:59):
And the reason was was because the guy's windshield was
completely falled over. He could not see out put her
in the hospital. Luckily, she's gonna be okay. She's got
a road to recovery. But and the top and off.
He was supposed he wasn't illegal, but he was from Africa.

(31:19):
He had a driver's license and insurance supposedly, but he
had people in his car and they could not see
out of the car and put her on the hood
of the car moving about fifteen mile an hour.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
Yeah, in the law we refer to that as gross negligence. Yeah,
you don't do that.

Speaker 6 (31:38):
I am with two felonies, vehicular assault and reckless operation
because when we got our guys took pictures.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Of his car right away.

Speaker 6 (31:51):
But my point is is also we have work zones
that are set up all over the city, and I'm
in charge of safety for our company, and I cannot
tell you that. I could name different parts of town,
it doesn't matter. It could be Sharonville, it could be Montana.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Go ahead.

Speaker 6 (32:10):
The amount of people that speed through our little construction
zones and well, including school buses and metro buses.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
Well, I I in the interest of time, Mark, let
me just point out you're making some various stude observations.
People need to drive better. They need to be take
better care of the conditions which their car is operate,
and they need to take care of their cars. Make
sure the headlights are operational, make sure they can see
out the damn windows. But also, we live in a
world where everyone drives like an idiot anymore? Gone it

(32:43):
since COVID nineteen when the police stop pulling people over
for speeding, and ever since then people drive like blank
and maniacs. I mean, you know, I love to drive.
I love the chess game of driving. You know, more
idiots on the road gives me something to more paid
or closer attention to. I'm dodging, I'm ducking, I'm diving,

(33:03):
I'm dipping, I'm dodging. The five d's a dodgeball. You
know why, because there's idiots on the road. Sadly we
have to deal with them. Don't beat one of those people,
especially neighborhoods, Lord Almighty s being through a neighborhood, kids around.
I mean, how look at it this way. How are

(33:27):
you gonna feel if some four year old kid in
a neighborhood where the speed limits twenty twenty five miles
an hour walks out in front of your car because
it's his neighborhood, or he's playing, or he's chasing after
his ball, and you're the guy going sixty five miles
an hour. You're gonna be able to live with yourself.

(33:47):
Five forty six fifty five kres of the talk station
cover Sincy. I'm just reading Jeff's email, Jeff my friend
over mark On, and good morning the guys over mark On.
It's assuming you made it into work. He called John
Roman to cover since he talk about insurance medical insurance
for his team. And I'm telling you, I got more
emails praising John and the crew ad cover since you
from Jeff Jeff, thank you so much for supporting the

(34:10):
sponsors of my program. I mean, he's just like so happy.
He's saying his bottom line in his company has improved
dramatically and the employees got better medical coverage for less money.
The whole thing is a better operation. Now, John and
his team will take great care of you. You know,
the best thing you can do is just give him
a call. There's no obligation whether you're an individual or

(34:33):
you're a small group like John and the team or Jeff. Rather, Jeff,
I hope you don't mind me using you as the
illustration of my support for cover Sincy and John Rohlman
and his group. But I'm glad you took my advice,
and I'm glad you're so happy. And you know, and
if you call up cover sincey to talk about medical insurance,

(34:55):
you know, maybe the best advice that they could give
you after they look at your individuals situation is no,
you're in a great You're you're as good as you
can get. And in fact, that's what John told my
wife and me when we asked them about our medical
current insurance. But if you don't like to pay nine
thousand plus dollars out of pocket before your insurance kicks in,

(35:16):
call John ask the team. Is there anything better out
there in the world. John is your broker. It doesn't
cost you anything to initiate the conversation. It doesn't cost
you anything to work with him. He'll find the best
possible coverage for you for the best bottom line, and
you will save tremendous amounts of money. And you'll even
get dollar one coverage for a lot of services. And

(35:36):
you think that's impossible. That's why I say put them
the task worth It doesn't cost anything to find out.
He can save the heat loads of money. It's five
to one three eight hundred Call five one three eight
hundred two two five five to learn more or initiate
the conversation. Just fill out the form online. Doesn't hurt
cover since he with the y or and I coversincey

(35:58):
dot com KRC. Here's your Channel nine first tenty one
forecast Today high at twenty six with a few evening
florries possible. Got a chance with Florri's overnight as well,
dropping out of six degrees jamars Hi twenty three partly
cloudy down to three overnight and a mostly cloudy Thursday
going up to twenty six with an overnight little eight

(36:20):
fifteen right now for five ker City Talk Station traffic
time from.

Speaker 4 (36:24):
The US GUT Traffic Center.

Speaker 8 (36:25):
You see how waite Ball Center offers comprehensible BCD care
and in vaned surgical expertise called five one three nine
three nine two two sixty three.

Speaker 4 (36:33):
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three.

Speaker 8 (36:36):
Highways are doing much better this morning, with quite a
few leans cleared out now to get into downtown or
out for that matter. Southbound seventy five doing fine through Lachland.
Seen for southbound seventy one through blue Ash and Kenwood.

Speaker 4 (36:52):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC Detalk Station.

Speaker 1 (36:57):
Five two fifty five krcitytalks station Casey dot com for
your iHeartMedia app, as well as the Christopher Smitheman Smith
event from yesterday Stack of Stupid We start in Florida
as his tradition, please say. James Newlan, sixty one years
old and his thirty three year old boyfriend repaired last

(37:25):
Friday of the Newlan's bedroom. Quote to have relations, meaning
they were sexually intimate. Close quote. I do believe that
is in the police report, which accorded police, because you
know the police are involved. As a stack of stupid story,
younger man said Newland told him he liked it rough,
also in quotes, so he smacked Newland's butt quote hard

(37:50):
enough to leave a handprint. Close quote. After Newland told
the victim to stop and that he was hurt, the
man apologized, but put his underwear his underwear back on
and returned to the living room of their home. When
Newlan subsequently appeared in the living room, he allegedly grabbed
a revolver from a side table and pointed the gun

(38:11):
to the victims, saying, you want to try me, you
want to blank with me? You know the word victim
to part of the residence. Newlan. Cops claim fired one
shot into his front porch pavement. During the questioning, Newlan
reportedly admitted to the shooting, but claimed that he would
never hurt anybody and was only trying to scare away

(38:33):
the boyfriend, who he also accused of striking him with
a gas can. Nowlan, who smelled of alcohol, and had
had slurred speech, gave consent to search his home. Cops
found approximately nine firearms and ammunition. Piker two other guns

(38:57):
removed from Newlan's car. As cops pointed out, they found
a bottle of lotion located on the left side of
the bed in James's bedroom. Can I ask out loud
why that would be? In the police report, Newland arrested
in charge of the aggravated assault with the deadly weapon,
a felony to misdemeanor gun counts. He's released from County

(39:19):
jail after posting a twenty five thousand dollars bond plus
no contact with the victim. Let us see here. After
pulling over her motorists, his vehicle almost struck the curb
multiple times. A Florida was still in Florida, Florida police

(39:40):
officer walked up to the driver's side door and immediately
detected the presence of alcohol. When the officer asked Ronnie
White fifty three quote if everything was okay? Close quote.
White's female passenger jumped in to offer an explanation for
her companion's erratic one o'clock in the morning operation of
their truck. Diane d Ash forty eight. I apologize the police,

(40:01):
claiming the close curb encounter maybe my fault, explaining that
it's my birthday and I was rubbing all over him,
trying trying to get him excited. Also in quotes how
hard is it? Not reported in the article, Joe Dash
said the duel was retreating from a restaurant and Stuart

(40:24):
when they celebrated her December twenty sixth birthday. White asked
by the Saint Lucis County Sheriff's off his deputy if
other than rubbing all over you, is everything else okay
with you? He replied yes and reportedly agreed to a
series of field sobriety tests. White performed poorly on those
tests as this tradition, according to the deputy, who felt

(40:47):
White was impaired and unable to operate the vehicles safely.
White declined to take breath test, arrested for driving under
the influence and booked into the county jail. Freed from
custody after a five hundred dollars a bond was posted
on the misdemeanor case. Uh He'll be back in court
in February twentieth five, fifty six fifty five care City

(41:10):
Talk stays I love the stack is stupid. Anyhow, we'll
deal with the headier realities of the world and coming
up at the fifty five jars the Morning Show. Awesome
day to be tuned in one hour in studio, Congressman
brad Wentstrip got the inside scoop with Bright Barton News.
Today it's London Beer Chief Oliver Lane. We're talking about infrastructure, sabotage.
UK's Nigel Farage not a fan of Elon Musk. And

(41:34):
the new Canadian Prime Minister, which I've already talked about
this morning. That Daniel Davis deep dive. Coming up at
eight thirty we'll talk about foreign policy under Biden. I'll
be right back after the top of the ur news.

Speaker 4 (41:45):
On new year and a new president. The countdown.

Speaker 6 (41:49):
I'm super sight.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
Of begins here that can't Waititty five care see.

Speaker 4 (41:53):
The talk station.

Speaker 1 (41:55):
Since two thousand and eight, Lender Center of Hope has
served as a lifeline yet six oh five coming up
at six or six if you have care ced talk station.
Brian Thomas wishing everyone and am very happy Tuesday. Stick
around one hour from now in studio. Always enjoy my
time with Congressman brad Winstrip and I'm going to enjoy
my hour with Congressman Brands Winstrip, and you were invited

(42:15):
to enjoy and sit in on the conversation. So stick
around seven o five and we'll be talking among other things.
But the COVID report, is he enjoying civilian life yet
as well as maybe the future of Congressman Winstrip, what
he's going to be doing, but more fundamentally, what's going
on with government. Maybe we'll get some world affairs comments.

(42:36):
He's got the inside scoop on so much speaking of
inside scoop. Two hours from now we get the bright
Bart inside scoop. Today the London Bureau Chief Oliver Lane
returns at the fifty five Cassee morning. You should talk
about the infrastructure sabotage. United Kingdom's Nigel Nigel Farage, not
a big fan of Elon Musk. Elon Muster came out
swinging against the grooming operations that we've long heard about

(42:58):
that been going on for a long time. I'm in
the United Kingdom, I guess Nigral Frog denying the reality
of Elon Musk's observations. Anyway. Finally, also the new Canadian
Prime Minister who just seems to be right out of
the same chunk of cloth as Donald Trump. Of course,

(43:19):
you have justin resigning yesterday his Liberal party epic failure.
I'll double down what I said in the last hour.
It is a global phenomenon, these epic fail left wing
policies who've let everyone down, open borders, woke ideology, DEEI

(43:40):
the whole nine yards, all of it collectively, plus global
warming on top of it. How's that you enjoying that
global warming? Going down to three tomorrow night? Anyhow, we'll
get the inside scoop from Oliver Lane at eight o
five and then Daniel Davis deep dive. We do that
every Tuesday at eight thirty. The post Biden foreign policy.

(44:02):
What's that going to mean? And it sounds to me
like Pierre Poulyev likely the Conservative leader who is in
the the you know, the at least leading the pack
in terms of the likely next leader of Canada, just
right out of Trump's playbook. Wants to play nice with Trump,
with the exception of making Canada the fifty first state.

(44:24):
Beyond that, so I mentioned Biden issuing this ridiculous offshore
oil gas drilling ban last hour, and it is so
broad and so sweeping, and you know, I just have
to ask out loud, and I don't know that it's
necessarily been ruled on by any court to date. But
pursuing to the nineteen fifty three Outer Continental Shelf Lens

(44:48):
Act as a piece of legislation obviously enacted into law,
and using that as a shield, Joe Biden, with his
executive wave of pen, decided that, well, we're going to
take basically the entire coasts of the United States collectively
six hundred and twenty five million acres off the table.

(45:11):
Why climate change or something, But the observation cannot be understated.
Global energy demand is growing, Global oil demand is growing.
It is a necessary component to living our lives, and

(45:32):
he's taking it off the shelf. Now, can Joe Biden
actually prevent future presidents with his own wave of a
pen prevent a future executive Oh, I'm thinking like Donald
Trump from waving his executive pen and saying it's back open.

(45:57):
This is sort of course, going to be hashed out
courcu is. Donald Trump's already said he's going to unring
this bell, which I think he has every right to do. Now,
if Congress acted to specifically ban all drilling on all
of our coastal waters, and that got passed into law.
Then I suppose then we're stuck with that until the
future Congress wakes up and pulls its head out of

(46:19):
his finger and realize that was a dumb idea. But
the point of the nineteen fifty three Outer Continental Shelf
Lands Act Congress at the time, the goal was to
promote more domestic oil and gas development, but also preserving
a president's discretion over private leasing. Now, according to the

(46:43):
Wall Street General Reporting, and I'm not familiar, you know what,
this is the first time I've ever heard of the
nineteen fifty three Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act. Every president
since George H. W. Bush has used a law to
set aside federal waters for conservation. But you also are
allowed to remove those set asides, so you have the

(47:07):
power to give and take away. In fact, Donald Trump himself,
this reveal reveals the the nimby reality of oil drilling
in the coastal waters, not in my backyard. Donald Trump
took waters off the South and mid Atlantic coast because well,
Republican politicians in those states, including Florida Governor Ron De

(47:31):
Santis and Senator Rick Scott trying to get some political
cover because while their constituents didn't want any drilling going
on out there. So it's just a question of whose
ox is being gored, isn't it. But this is beyond that.
There's no one with an ounce of sanity that can

(47:54):
argue that this is somehow you know, well, first and foremost,
it's not going to do a damn thing to stop
the planet's climate from changing. You know, we open up
and we start doing business with Venezuela and other socialist
countries to well satisfy our ever growing demand for oil

(48:15):
and natural gas and the like. Well, you know, hamstering
ourselves and cutting our own throats and denying us the
opportunity to drill it ourselves. Meanwhile, China continues to belch
out more carbon dioxide than all the every country collectively.
There's nothing we can do to stop the amount of
carbon dioxide going into the air period. This is obviously

(48:39):
something designed to well buying Donald Trump, Donald Trump all
the above. You know, he'll embrace everything. You want to
build a windmill now yourself out, says Trump. You know what,
while you're building that windmill, I'm gonna put an oil
rig up. Why because we need it. Hopefully there'll be
nuclear power plants built into that equation. Well let's wait

(49:00):
and keep our fingers crossed on that. So others have
done it, and the flexibility is built into this where okay, yeah, yeah, okay,
I previously banned this for conservation reasons, but I'm unringing
that bell and I'm opening up now to more oil

(49:22):
expiration because well, there's a private company out there that
wants to tap an oil will put an oil rig
up and give us our much needed supply of petroleum.
And apparently, and again, according to the reporting, many of
these long ago drilled oil fields, which the left and
the nutcases that are well using Joe Biden as a

(49:47):
vehicle to get their message out and prevent Donald Trump
from doing something effective by way of the American people.
They're arguing that, no, we've got enough out there already.
There are enough rigs out there producing oil. We don't
need any more to ma stic production. But again, as
the journal points out, many of these long ago drilled
oil fields are getting tapped out. More areas will need

(50:07):
to be developed to support even current US production levels.
And sort of as an observation, the journalist points out
that mister Biden's climate whisperers. I love how they phrase
that no doubt understand this, which is why they press
for a permanent band. So that's what Donald, or that's

(50:28):
what Biden did. He effectively is in his executive orders
saying that no future president can unring the bell in
spite of the fact that that nineteen fifty three Outer
Continental Shelf LANSAC provides the president with the flexibility to
take away or giveth, which is why this is going

(50:49):
to end in court. And parenthetically, and I just sort
of alluded to it the other day, this passing reference.
After Christmas, Department of Energy finalized regulations that will force
some forty percent of new gas fired tankless water heaters

(51:14):
off of the market. So if you want a tankless
water heater, get one now, because apparently the vast majority
of them do not meet whatever the Energy Department decided
was the well appropriate level of carbon dioxide production. And
in fact I read that those who were maybe considering

(51:38):
tankless and if you want to save space, those things
are amazing. I had the small units. You flip your
hot water on in your bathroom and the water begins
to flow through the unit. The gas fires up, it
heats some piping that goes through that unit, and it's
a flash instant hot water kind of thing. You don't

(51:59):
have to have a giant tank in your basement or
wherever else that might go. And so for like apartment
dwellers in European Union, in European countries have been using
these for years and years, but this regulation is going
to force people to choose the tank type water heater
because of the standards they release, which actually produce more

(52:21):
carbon dioxide than these tankless ones. So it's batcrap insanity.
And the ones that are approved by the Department of Energy,
the ones that meet these ridiculous energy standards, cost a
whole lot more. I think there's only one company in
the United States that actually manufactures ones that meet the
Department of Energies standards. So I just this kind of

(52:50):
thing really bothers me a lot. We live in a
country where this happens, and everything we do anymore is
justified on this ocean. Going back to my carbon dioxide
output point that somehow we are going to magically remove
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Look at what the atmosphere
is made of, look at the percentage of carbon dioxide

(53:13):
that's in it. Go ahead and look at all of
the ice boring samples they've done up in the frozen
tundras of the North and South Pole. That will reflect
where the carbon dioxide levels were at any given point
over the millennia. It's been a lot higher over the years,
and we, of course it's been lower as well. But

(53:33):
ignoring what history has shown us or what the geologic
data shows us, the world continue to spend and continue
to live, thrive and survive, and what you and I
are doing here in the United States of America, it's
not happened in Iota's impact on how much carbon dioxide
is in the world, going back to China, going back

(53:55):
to the volcanic eruptions, wildfires, all these things over which
we have no control. And have you ever heard a
climate alarmist complain about war how much carbon dioxide is
the war between Russian and Ukraine put out, no, no,
we're not going to pay attention to that. I'm sorry,
I'm holding up arm shipments to Ukraine because well, the

(54:16):
carbon footprint. I may adopt that argument. Six Aten, if
you FI have KC detalk station, get in touch with
QC kinetics. If you got pain, the pain, hit pain,
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four seven zero zero one nine fifty five KRC New

(55:24):
Year New U Channel nine first onenty one The Fourcas
says today it's going to be higher twenty six degrees,
a few evening florries, and those flurries are still possible overnight.
Overnight love six degrees twenty three will be the high
tomorrow with partly cloudy skies down to three degrees overnight,
and on Thursday, mostly cloudy day as well as night.

(55:47):
I have twenty six during the day and an overnight
little of eight fifteen degrees. Right now, with about KERCB
talk station traffic time.

Speaker 8 (55:55):
From the UC out traffic Center, you see Health Weight
Loss Center offers comprehensive of BCD care and advanced sergical
expertise called five one three nine three nine twenty two
sixty three. That's nine three nine two two sixty three.
Crews continue to work with the wreck. Southbound seventy five
before you got the Tylersville right lanes are blocked off.
That traffic backing up past one twenty nine. Elsewhere traffic

(56:19):
doing okay. They cleared the wreck north pound seventy five
near the Richwood Ramp chuck Ingram on fifty five k R.

Speaker 4 (56:25):
See the talk station.

Speaker 1 (56:30):
Six twenty three fifty five car se DE talk station
Happy Tuesday looking forward to having congressm winstropin studio coming
up at seven point five uh five one three, seven
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
three talk go with pound five fifty on your AT
and T pun number fifty five. Kr SE dot com.
If you didn't get a chance to listen, for example,
to the Christopher smither vent yesterday, it's right there for

(56:51):
you if you have KRC dot com, where you can
also get your heart media app uh And meantime, you know,
I think I was thinking of Robert Byrd. I have
no idea why Joe Biden attempted to defend strom Thurman yesterday,
but it came out in one of his last speeches,
Senator strom Thurman. I guess he died at one hundred
years old. He was a big segregationist, you know, the

(57:13):
whole separate but equal kind of thing. We call that
racist these days. And I know Robert Byrd from West
Virginia was a member of the Klan, also a Democrat
Ku Klux Klan. Those who know their history realized the
Democrat Party was built on the clan support. All those
Southern states, all those Southern Democrats, clans men at least

(57:35):
supported by the KKK, so I don't know why I
even brought him up, and he did. Speaking of a
White House reception for new Democrat members of Congress, Biden
tried to redeem strom Thurman, but while at the same

(57:56):
time claiming he wasn't defending him. This is the strangest state.
I don't even know that it makes sense. Well, considering
it came out of Joe Biden's mouth, that is to
be expected. In my career, I've been asked to do
the eulogy of the most incredibly different people. Strom Thurman,
one hundred years old. On his deathbed, I get a
phone call from the hospital. From the hospital from outa

(58:18):
Walla Reed and his wife Nancy said, Joe, I'm here
with the doctors at the nurses station. Strom asked me
to ask you whether or not you do his eulogy,
which he accepted. See, that's your debatable point right there.
Do you do the eulogy of a noted racist, segregationist.

(58:39):
I personally take a pass on that one. He went on.
Strom Thurman decided that separate but equal was not right,
not that blacks and whites should be together. I see,
But if you do separate, equal, you had to spend
as much money on black schools as white schools. By

(59:03):
the time strom Thurmon left the United States Senate, he
had and I'm making the case for him. Are you
having a difficult time grasping exactly what in the hell
that's supposed to mean, because I am in his concluding
remarks on strom Thurman, but he had more African Americans
in his staff than any United States senator had more.

(59:26):
Now pause for a moment, contemplate on that. So you
have to spring from the proposition that strom Thurnon being
a noted segregationist and a presumed racist as a consequence
of that, he didn't want blacks mingling with whites now,
but he was happy to have black people working for him. Huh,

(59:49):
doing his bidding, surrounding himself with subservient individuals. Does that
make him a better person or can we look down
upon strom Thurman for having black staff serve him. I'm
just saying, there's a different way to spin it, depending
on your perception.

Speaker 4 (01:00:11):
And then.

Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
The Kooti Gras Joe Biden went on, strom Thurman had
an illegitimate child with a black woman, and he never
denied it, never stopped paying for his upbringing. There's a
lot of strange people, a lot of different people, And
I mean, well, I bet I can look at you
and I can find some strange things too close. Quote.

(01:00:35):
Oh so strom Thurman having sexual relations with a black
woman is strange. Hmm, draw your own conclusions. He didn't
mention Robert Byrd though, when he was talking about strom
Thurmann six twenty seventy five KC talkstation Congress and brad

(01:00:59):
Winstrip just came into the studio. So maybe we'll hit
the ground running early with him, Doug Away, Folks, we'll
be back after I mentioned John Ryan a prestige interiors.
You want your kitchen remodel? Do you want to remodel
right with a guy you're gonna love working with? That's John.
He just a sweet guy. He knows a lot about
kitchens because he's been remodeling kitchens. I think for like

(01:01:21):
thirty five years. They lost track how many years John's
been doing kitchens. He did ours, I can tell you
we love it. And again, a really easy guy to
work with. He takes care of everything from initial design
to final installation. He rides her it over the cruise,
make sure everything's flowing properly. So whether you just want
to replace warnut cabinets and countertops, or just gut the

(01:01:41):
whole thing and start from scratch like we did. John
Ryan is the man to call. It's Prestige Interiors. That's
his company. They are one of the same, A plus
with a BBB. You'll be happy with the work he does.
He can keep you within budget too. I know that's
difficult thing to do, but John will work with you
on that. Prestige one two three dot com where you
find them online Prestige one two three dot com. The

(01:02:02):
number five one three two four seven zero two two
nine five one three two four seven zero.

Speaker 7 (01:02:07):
Two two nine fifty five KRC waking up.

Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Here it is nine first one to wether wok cast today.
Twenty six would be the high. We got a chance
with florries later this evening. It's going to be cloudy.
Would be cloudy over night as well. Floy's possible down
to six degrees Wednesday. I have twenty three with partly
clotty skies overnight low three party cloudy and on Thursday,
mostly cloudy day and night. Twenty six for the high
during the day and eight degrees overnight sixteen degrees right now,

(01:02:36):
time for traffic.

Speaker 8 (01:02:38):
Probably you see how traffic center you see help mate.
Both center offers comprehensive obcity careen advanced starts. A co
expertise called five one three ninety three nine two two
sixty three.

Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
That's nine three nine twenty two sixty three.

Speaker 8 (01:02:50):
South Pound seventy five right lanes remain block Bob Tylersville
from an accident. Traffic backs above one twenty ninth right
lanes block South Pound seventy five on hoppole with a
brack and now eastbound for Washington Waite an accident before
the tunnel.

Speaker 4 (01:03:04):
Chuck King from up fifty five KR, see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:03:14):
It's six thirty two fifty about KRC the talk station. Hey,
let's turn an hour into an hour and a half.
Congress and brad Winstrup former, I guess I have to
say now he's listening to me on the program this
when he kept saying he was going to be in
the studio. So it's former, although you can still call
him congressman, just like you call a retired colonel colonel.
And we'll hear from Lieutenant colonel retired Daniel Davis at

(01:03:36):
eight thirty Congressman brad Winstrup, retired colonel colonel. Yeah, that's right.
Good to have you in the studio, my friend. Always
a real pleasure.

Speaker 3 (01:03:46):
I left early this morning, you know, thinking armageddon. But
we did clear some roads around here. Yes, it's funny.
One of the other congressmen is from Minnesota that I
talk with a lot and actually room with, and he
put out a pick, sure of the snow and he goes.
In Minnesota, we call this Monday, right.

Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
I know, it's great, and you know they have a
well owed machine for snow removal in areas where they
get regular snowfall. Mean, people were very critical of the
snow removal here in the greater Cincinnati area, and some
areas better than others. I know. Former Anderson Township trustee
Drew Pappus was touting how wonderful the roads were over yesterday.
But as soon as you hit the city limits, of course,

(01:04:28):
you drove into a foot tall wall of snow. That's
difference between administrations. I suppose you can draw your own
conclusions on that. But you know, we're not used to
this kind of snow and the snow I mean, as
I was observing yesterday coming in Montgomery Road had been
plowed at some point, but by the time I got
on a quarter to three in the morning, three or

(01:04:50):
four more inches of snow had fallen since they first plowed.
There's only so much you can do. There's so many
roads to cover. You've got a roll with it, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:04:57):
I shoveled the driveway and three times the next day,
like did I insulted, forget it.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
I saw it didn't work. I saw my neighbor putting
it down, and for I was really like, damn it.
I really wish I had bought myself one of those
five gallon drums of the and we shoveled the driveway,
my son and me, and then I got up and
Jerry had shoveled it before I got home from work yesterday,
and then he and I shoveled the driveway again with
you'd get the additional three or four inches that had fallen.

(01:05:26):
So three times over the course of basically twenty four hours,
the driveway had to be shoveled manually, I might add,
for those folks with snowblowers. And I looked over at
his driveway. That stuff didn't do anything, and my envy
immediately disappeared like, well, I guess I saved myself twenty
or twenty five bucks by not buying it. Anyway, we

(01:05:47):
are going to just as a little teased, let you know,
Congress from Winster, but I are going to be diving
on into, among other things, the COVID nineteen report as
well as the Democrats version of the COVID nineteen port
substantially different in terms of well their focus, as well
as the number of pages and level of detail. But

(01:06:11):
plague update. We are going to be talking about bird flu.
And I asked Congress from Winstrip, I had an article
on bird flu. I said, is this going to be
a problem? And a grave look crossed his face. So
there may be something to this bird flu thing. We'll
be talking about that as well, So don't go away.
It's going to be a fun conversation and the informative

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Speaker 7 (01:07:29):
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Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
It's forty fifty five KRC detalk station. A very very
happy Tuesday. Hope you can join the listener launch High
Green Brewery Brentwood Group of tomorrow will be there about
eleven thirty And yes, Congressman Wincher if you are invited,
if you can make it. But I understand I'm not
putting you on the spot. He is in studio, retired
now enjoying civilian life, I guess sort of kind of

(01:08:53):
maybe not trying to find a job. Okay, yeah, he's
he's unemployed anyhow, don't feel sorry. We're working on that.
We were talking about over the break before we get
to the COVID thing. You did express some measure of
concern that this sort of a growing problem with bird flu.

(01:09:16):
Millions of chickens have been slaughtered. It's obviously exists in
the wild bird population as well. There have been human
cases of folks that have contracted this bird flu. I
don't know that they've ever definitively determined that human to
human exposure is possible, but we can sort of see
the writing on the wall. Has it been you let

(01:09:38):
my listeners know.

Speaker 3 (01:09:39):
Well, the first I'm just reading right here, thirteen hours ago.
First US bird flu death is announced in Louisiana.

Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
And Brian that's death. But I'm talking about like human
to human. If I breathe on you like COVID, you're
gonna get it kind of thing. Yeah, that I don't Yeah,
I don't think it's been confirmed. I will tell you.
You know, as part of the Pandemic Subcommittee. Yeah, well
I went to Cambodia and Laos. We went to the
wet markets.

Speaker 3 (01:10:04):
I mean, and you got people dressed like their landing
on the moon, swabbing the birds orally rectily. Look, you know,
doing surveillance on for viruses. Really yeah, you know, it's
just too much a part of their culture. You're not
going to get rid of these things. I mean, you
don't have.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
You I'm surprised. I'm surprised. I mean, they have the
wet markets and that's part of their culture. They're not
going to go away. But I'm surprised they have the
the hazmat suit guys going around even inspecting the web areas.

Speaker 3 (01:10:30):
We're helping with that, the United States USA, I D
is helping with that, and they don't have Okay, yeah,
they don't have enough.

Speaker 1 (01:10:39):
Did that make it into the Festivus report from Senator
Rand Paul That might have Listen, man, we can disagree
on the propriety of US paying to do their work,
but go ahead. Well, the idea is one.

Speaker 3 (01:10:51):
It's a little bit of a diplomatic tool because obviously
they have huge Chinese influence in those countries. Uh, they
don't even talk about COVID when we went there, don't
even want to talk about it, and for a variety
of reasons. For maybe for the same reason the Biden
administration didn't really want to talk about it at least
the origins, right, But they're concerned. They're very grateful for

(01:11:15):
this help because we're training people to be able to
do this work on their own. But while we were there,
there was an eleven year old girl who died from
this a rural and so able to quarantine the area
pretty well.

Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
Let me say that, you mean the bird flow, yes, yes.

Speaker 3 (01:11:33):
And able to quarantine the area pretty well, but sadly,
you know, she passed away. But you obviously the first
thing you want to do is prevent any further spread
and so learning more about it. But it was interesting
because I happened to be talking to Robert Redfield yesterday,
who was Trump's CDC director, who was basically pushed aside

(01:11:53):
during COVID by FUCI. And we'll get into what the
future holds for what we should would be doing.

Speaker 1 (01:12:01):
He is, he's working on treatments.

Speaker 3 (01:12:04):
You know, you you talk about monoclonal antibodies, anti virals, those,
those are the types of things. Because what we learned
and what was relatively ignored, especially by the left, was
that the vaccine that we developed for COVID, I think
it saved a lot of lives, but I was in
favor of it for the people that were dying from COVID, yeah,

(01:12:25):
and and nots Yeah. Yeah, you knew who was dying
from it, and so that's that was the priority, but
not forcing it on everyone who doesn't didn't seem vulnerable
to death anyway. But besides that, we knew that you
could still get COVID with with this vaccine. And and
I think the as you're investing in vaccines, which doctor

(01:12:50):
Redfield said that the Biden administration is putting more into
vaccine production for av and flu or bird flu. Uh,
they're working, they're working on treatments, right, and so we
needed that more. And I said that early on, we
need to be focusing on treatments like anti virals and

(01:13:10):
monoclonal antibodies.

Speaker 1 (01:13:11):
Rather than just this type this type of a vaccine. Yeah,
the whole discussion of vaccines has really been turned on
its head because of the COVID nineteen mr N a
type of vaccine, correct it is? I mean, I know
there are conspiracy theories out there, there are legitimate studies
out there, There's all kinds of stuff, but it's you know,

(01:13:33):
you got RFK Junior now out there saying, you know,
Nick's no vaccines. And I've got listeners in my listening
audience that think, you know, getting a polio vaccine is
a bad idea. Now now I'm glad we had a
polio vaccine because I didn't end up in an iron lung.
You know, it worked. We've eradicated polio thanks to vaccines.
So you know, I'm not a no vaccine guy. But

(01:13:55):
these new mRNA type deals, and especially since it didn't help,
you just got done pointing out he didn't stop you
from getting it, it didn't stop you from spreading it.
It may have reduced, you know, the severity of the illness,
but in the final analysis, you get sticking something in
your body that it didn't go through clinical trials expedited.
The pharmaceutical company got an emergency use authorization, which frees

(01:14:18):
them from any liability associated with all of the multitude
of problems that have since surfaced. Because the entire planet
served as one giant testing event, right basically real quick
go ahead. Would the FDA have approved the COVID nineteen
vaccine knowing what we know now if they tried to

(01:14:41):
bring it to market, I'll make it even worse for you? Okay, good?

Speaker 3 (01:14:45):
There was political Well, we discovered there was political pressure
to move up the full FDA approval of the COVID
nineteen vaccine to where two people in the FDA left
resigned from the FDA overconcerned over concerns that this is
being sped up. And it was being sped up. And

(01:15:08):
if you notice, it was the military who just waited,
just waited because the Secretary Austin Secretary of Austin was
getting a lot. He wanted to put that mandate in
right away. And people said, well, it's not even been
fully FDA approved. So political pressure came in and moved
it up by months, and that's why people resigned from

(01:15:30):
the FDA.

Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
They did that. The next day he came out with
the mandate. All right, pause, because I know my listeners
are just screaming at the radios or their iHeartMedia software.
Why how did this become political? I'm gonna ask that question,
we get back and get the answer from Congress from
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Lender fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:17:02):
Here it is your channeline first one weather forecast. The
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That's nine three, nine twenty two sixty three.

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Traffic heavy.

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You're out of Lackland eastbound Fort Washington Waste still a
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ing ramon fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
Sixty two fift about here see the talk station. Brian
Thomas in studio, Congressman former tired Brad wentztrop All right,
the burning question you summarized it. You pointed out they
rushed the COVID nineteen vaccine. In fact, people quit the
FDA because of concerns over rushing it too and making

(01:18:17):
people take it too soon. We didn't test it enough.
We're worried about it. What might the consequences be? But
political forces came to bear and they advanced it and
pushed it out too soon. How did this become political?
And why would this such urgency to get this vaccine
out when they had no idea whether or not it was.

Speaker 3 (01:18:37):
Going to be harmful to humanity? Yeah, it's really bizarre
in that way, Brian, And you're exactly right. I mean,
emergency use was put out and it was restricted to
who should get the vaccine. I mean, I think Operation
work Speed was successful, but people weren't honest for what
had been created.

Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
You know, you'd hear the pier this is safe and effective.
You don't know that, you know, you know, out of
those words when the vaccine has not gone through proper
clinical trials.

Speaker 3 (01:19:05):
Wellario, it went through. It went through good clinical trials.
But what it proved was it's not one hundred percent
safe and effective. And that's what people heard, right, people heard,
you know, oh, this thing is safe and effective. I
went through this with the ranking member Democrat ranking member
who is a physician, and I said, you shouldn't say
that because people here one hundred percent and it's not

(01:19:26):
because we know from the trials, people still got COVID,
they were less likely to be hospitalized, they were less
likely to die. So let's use it for the most vulnerable.
We didn't go out and protect the most vulnerable all
of a sudden, it's like we're pushing this on everybody.
That didn't make any sense, and so emergency use was
one thing. But the Biden administration wanted to just get

(01:19:51):
it out there. They put pressure on the FDA to
speed it up, speed it up, fully approve it. Why
I don't know, because they wanted to push it out.
Like the Secretary of Defense General Austin, he was waiting,
just waiting, and the public pressure saying why you shouldn't
put it out as a mandate.

Speaker 1 (01:20:09):
He's the American military fighting force. He is pushing to
hurry up and inject all of our fighting force. And
what happens? I mean, think about it. If there was
something far more devastating associated with the COVID nineteen vaccine
that we only learned six, eight, ten months after the fact,
our entire fighting force could have been potentially wiped out.

(01:20:31):
Why because they wanted to rush and hurry up and
inoculate everyone. That doesn't make any sense to me. Well,
these look our fighting force are healthy. People are the
least likely to succumb and COVID. I mean for most people.
I had a terrible battle that we had it for
six weeks. I was miserable. It sucked. I wouldn't wish
it on my worst enemy. And I think it's because
I just got to know with my last cancer treatment

(01:20:52):
my immune system was knocked out. That's exactly right. I
was co morbid condition at the time. But most of
the children who got it was like getting a cold,
common cold. No one of the vast majority people who
got COVID died from it. Well, it was the very,
very sick, the coal morbid conditioned folks, So why rush

(01:21:13):
it out. It doesn't make sense to me. Now I'm
pushing it on children. And fortunately our pediatrician for my
kids said, I don't see where the benefits outweigh the risk.
And as I was talking to doctor Redfield just yesterday,
former CDC director, he said, there's a large number of
vaccine injuries out there and they haven't been processed and vetted.

(01:21:35):
You know, you don't have the cardio myopathy kind of
stuff from the.

Speaker 3 (01:21:39):
Other all variety of things, Brian, you know we saw.
I mean, there was a member of Congress and she
said that from her vaccines as a child, she got
Gianbray syndrome. You know, she most people it goes away,
but you know, she had that. She had those concerns,
but she did get vaccinated after talking to her doctor.

(01:22:01):
She had a choice. So she was probably vulnerable with
other medical conditions that the doctor said, I think you
should the benefits out weigh the risk. With our kids
and with our military, no one knew, No one knew
they they weren't they weren't vulnerable. I was told that
I needed a booster to go to Germany. I had
two doses of Pfizer, and I got COVID later. The

(01:22:25):
only reason I knew I got COVID is because I
couldn't smell garlic salt. And so when they told me
I needed a booster, I said, let's check my antibodies
and tea cells. Well on the Capitol Hill, they said, oh,
we don't, we can't do tea cells. I said, okay,
it's check my antibodies. A strong number was forty. My
number was eight hundred and twenty one. No doctor's gonna
and I survived. And I survived COVID right, didn't even

(01:22:47):
know I had.

Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
It well, And that's the other thing followed T cell
check for me, it was off the charts. I mean
it was like ten thousand or twelve thousand. I mean
I had more T cells that had fought off COVID
after I had a natch really occurring about of the
COVID nineteen experience. My body has a natural immunity, which
is duh, kind of the way God created us. Will

(01:23:10):
continue with Congressman once you will dive into the report.
He presided it with the investigation, and it is a
whopper of a report. Don't go away from a.

Speaker 4 (01:23:20):
Full rundown and the biggest headlines. There's minutes away at
the top of the hour.

Speaker 9 (01:23:24):
A critical message, but it's important.

Speaker 2 (01:23:26):
Fifty five krs the talk station Voices of Reason.

Speaker 1 (01:23:31):
So glad we have you heard daily, you know, the
only voice of reason on the radio.

Speaker 4 (01:23:35):
Fifty five KR the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
Seven five hey, five KRC talkstation. Well, we started early,
but early is better when you're talking about the origins
of COVID nineteen. With Congressman Brad Winsterrip now retired. He's
out looking for a job, So if you see him
hanging out the home depot, be sure him pick him up.
He needs the work anyhow, Congressman Winstrip, it's been a

(01:24:14):
pleasure having you in here. We've been talking about We
started with a little bird flu, which you said does
represent a bit of a problem. It could be a
concern for us as we move forward, of course, on
the heels of COVID nineteen, which is fresh in everyone's recollection.
You discussed specifically the rush to get that vaccine out

(01:24:35):
before it had been, in my opinion, adequately tested the
idea that the folks in the America's military were anxious
to hurriedly bring it out and inject our military forces
early that raises so many red flags for me. We
talked about the idea that you know, American military forces
and the age group that they're in along with children,

(01:24:58):
and the vast majority of humans was not really debilitated
by getting COVID nineteen. It was like going through the flu. Yes,
there're people who got bad cases of it, but this
rush to get it out it became politicized, and so
our conversation moved over to how did this become politicized?

(01:25:19):
The old idea of COVID nineteen and what started in nature?
It started the Wuhan Institute of Virology. It became verboten
topic online, it was removed from social media. If you
talked about this starting from the Wuhan Institute of Technology
and a virology and I don't understand why, what big

(01:25:41):
difference is there if we talk about it point we
were working with the Chinese. You want to call it
gain a function research or you want to call it
widget research. We're there, We're at the Institute of Virology,
American scientists. We are funding it with money. That is

(01:26:02):
a fact. Jack, How did that become a their boating
topic of conversation to even talk about it when everyone
sort of you know, figured out pretty quickly early on
that we have a physical presence there. This isn't like
some secret Chinese lab like the Iranians building nuclear weapons underground. Man,

(01:26:24):
we know they're over there, but we don't have guys
in there unless they're spies. We have a physical presence,
and we got money in our hands. Handing it over
to the Chinese government, said well that part is exactly right.
We were funding gain a function research in Wuhan, China,
and doctor Fauci can say, well, that isn't the right definition,

(01:26:46):
and this and that. That's wordsmithing.

Speaker 3 (01:26:48):
But everyone has a pretty good understanding of what was
taking place, especially your listeners. I would say, I'm pretty
educated as following it as best they could.

Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
You know.

Speaker 3 (01:27:01):
Let's let me let me go back a little bit,
just on a lot of things. I went to China
probably eight years ago before this type of stuff ever
blew up.

Speaker 1 (01:27:10):
I can't go there now. They don't really like me
these days. But you don't want to go there, you know,
I don't come back. Yeah, So, but you know, I said,
I talked to him.

Speaker 3 (01:27:17):
I said, look, there's a lot of things that we
can do in the health fields together. When I get
my journals, my surgical journals, right, you know there are
articles written by Chinese surgeons. You know this is non
controversial stuff, right, and you can take a look at this.
At the time, I argued, quit sending fentanyl to the
United States of America. Right, but you know, to you know,

(01:27:40):
fast forward, our State Department in two thousand and five
had said publicly that China was working on bioweapons. In
twenty fifteen, China, their Academy of Military Medical Science, wrote
a book talking about coronavirus viruses as bioweapons. There were

(01:28:02):
public comments by Chinese scientists over the years, some stating
they had concerns about coronaviruses being bioweapons, and others just
saying yeah, they could be sure. Right, so you see
them talking about it. We've admitted that they were working
on this. And where are they doing this in Wuhan, China. Yeah, okay,

(01:28:24):
you have the Wuhan Institute of Rology, which, once COVID
became a pandemic, was taken over by the military. You
had China covering things up from Vegan not letting the
who in President c telling President Trump telling that doctor
tedros At the who saying, hey, we've got this under control.

Speaker 1 (01:28:45):
It's under control.

Speaker 4 (01:28:46):
No, it was not.

Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
He restricted travel, He restricted travel within the country. President
Chi did yeah, but allowed it to go out internationally.

Speaker 1 (01:28:59):
You know.

Speaker 3 (01:28:59):
So all the red flags are there. So let's go
to what you were talking about about us doing research there.
So EcoHealth Alliance is the company, if you will, that
was doing the gain and function research in China. They
went to DARPA Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to try

(01:29:23):
and get the grant and they were turned down. As
we go back into their emails, and this is doctor
Peter Dazak of EcoHealth Alliance. So try to follow the
bouncing ball here a lot of players and working with
doctor Ralph Barrick in North Carolina who in twenty fifteen

(01:29:44):
wrote the article published the article with doctor Zenglischi and
China about how they have created Kaimera chimera. If you
look it up, it's the horseman, right. You've taken two
things and put them together made one. The idea was
you take parts of different viruses and put them together.

(01:30:05):
They showed that capability in twenty fifteen. So here's Peter
DAAAC of EcoHealth Alliance in emails with Ralph Barrack in
North Carolina and ZENGLISHI in China, saying we're going to
go to DHARPA. This is in our defense advanced research
for a grant to do this gain of function research.

(01:30:30):
He goes, we're going to tell them this is in
the emails. We're going to tell them that we're going
to do all this in North Carolina, but once we
get the money, we'll do this in China at a
BSL two lab. Okay, which is not as safe. There's
three and four they're safer. We'll do it at a

(01:30:50):
BSL two and save money. Ralph Berrick in North Carolina,
to his credit, says, I'm not doing that right. I'm
not doing that. This needs to be done at three
or four et cetera.

Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
Daazik. In the back of my hat, I'm thinking, no,
this does not need to be done. Stop doing this.
But I know if you're going to do it, though,
you got to have it in a high level lab,
not a leaky lab. Yes, so yeah, which we know
yes had leaks.

Speaker 3 (01:31:18):
So he goes to DARPA and says, no, we're gonna
spells it out. We want to do this in China,
DARPA says, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
Going back to the whole idea of bio weapons, it's
too risky because you're you're creating this chimera thing which
allows the manipulation of these viruses to maybe specifically target
certain select people like exactly Jews or white people, or
Northern Europeans or black people, or I mean our DNA

(01:31:51):
is broken down differently. I mean they're doing cancer research.
It's mind blowing tailor made to attack your specific cancer.
And if they can do that, they can tailor make
one of these these biologic weapons to kill a certain
segment of society while freeing everybody else.

Speaker 3 (01:32:08):
So DARPA under defense says, no, too risky. We're not
funding a grant like that. So now he goes over
to NIH National Institute's Health who runs that, Francis Collins,
and this would come through NIAI D who runs that,
Tony Falci, Tony Fauci. All right, So in twenty eleven,

(01:32:33):
Collins and Fauci had written articles saying, therefore, gain of
function research and why do they want to do that?
Their basic premise, if I can break it down for
the listeners, is that if we can create a virus
that may arrive from nature, that may arrive from nature

(01:32:54):
and have the cure for it, then there's nothing we
can't cure if it aris twenty twelve, In an interview
with Tony Fauci, someone I asked, after understanding more about
gain and function research, says, well, aren't you concerned that
it might get out of a lab and create a pandemic.
Doctor Fauci's response was, and I'm paraphrasing, well, I think

(01:33:18):
the benefits out weigh the risk. I think it's very
low risk it would get out of the lab, and
the benefits out weigh the risk. He's never contradicted that.
He's never gone back and said, well maybe I should
have thought differently about this. No woops moment, No no, no, no, no,
not allowed to go that and condemn yourself. But anyway,

(01:33:42):
so here we are, so the money goes out. What's
even worse, Brian, and this is what we discovered through
this report period, is how did this grant get out?
What's the process, Doctor Fauci tells us in this transcribed interview,
he said, well, you know, people propose these things, they
go to a committee here at an IAID advisory committee.

(01:34:06):
If you will, they review it, and boy, once they
approve it, I just sign it. At one point he said,
he said, we have billions of dollars of grants coming
through here. I can't know what they all are. So
who's responsible? So we said, but look, EcoHealth Alliance wasn't
complying with the grant. They were supposed to do periodic

(01:34:28):
reporting of what they were doing, and especially if they
created something that increased in pathogenicity in other words, became
more dangerous. That happened, and they didn't do it. They
were two years late with their report. All kinds of excuses.

Speaker 1 (01:34:43):
Well, in a world, in a government that is this
big and fishing out this much money and has no
idea where the money is coming from, or where it's
going or what it's being used for, that's how we
end up with shrimp on treadmill studies, and that's how
we end up with the Department of Defense. It can't
even pass an at eight times in a row. How
the hell is anyone expected eco Health Alliance the report

(01:35:09):
on its own oversight? Where is that? And is there
someone sitting around tapping their fingers, going, hey, eco Health
is alliance, but is behind It's supposed to be a
report to us by now, and that was that person
doesn't exist.

Speaker 3 (01:35:19):
That was my exact question to doctor Fauci. I said,
does a red flag go up when they're not adhering
to the tenants of the of the grant? And he said, oh,
that's over in compliance. I don't have anything to do
with that.

Speaker 1 (01:35:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:35:33):
And I said, well, how about who's got oversight over
a lab of the lab in an adversarial country that's
doing dangerous research. Who has oversight over that? And he said, oh,
I wouldn't even know how to do that. Let's continue
us to fix. Uh, we've got a lot of problems
on our hands. Seven to seventeen fifty five Carcy talks more.

(01:35:56):
We have retired Congress from drad Weinster. It's frightening stuff
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This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
The music we listen to all Jenna Night first one
of one four KS says today's going to be high
at twenty six. Few evening florries are possible overnight and
Floris as well. Low of six degrees floris hi twenty three,
partly cloudy skies, a low of three overnight and a
mostly cloudy Thursday. With that, I have twenty six overnight
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Nine two two sixty three. That's nine three nine two
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He's pound two seventy five, one after Hamilton on the left,
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Mitchell all clear, northbound seventy five above Shepherd Schuck Ingram
on fifty five KRC the talk.

Speaker 1 (01:38:22):
Station seventy two if you have Kircity talk station knee
deep in the COVID report, Congressman retired brad winstri Benz Studio,
and of course he's sitting in front of the how
many page five hundred.

Speaker 3 (01:38:35):
Five hundred and twenty pages report and seventeen pages or
recommendations for the future, which I hope the next Congress
takes up.

Speaker 1 (01:38:42):
Okay, because we got bird flu of fairness in the
face and that may or may not be you know,
need these recommendations. But we are learning a whole lot
in the aftermath of the lies that have been spread
on it's probably some more lies than COVID nineteen cases
out in the world. They rushed the vaccine, They denied
that this was a lab created phenomenon, and in fact,

(01:39:06):
there were people that did the research you mentioned off air.
The FBI, they looked into this extensively, and there were
many people who concluded this was at least potentially, if
not likely created in a lab. Now with given the
history of what you've explained to my listening audience and
me about working with and these chimeras and the creation

(01:39:28):
of things that make them more communicable for the purposes
of bioweapons. Scary, who came up with the whole idea
this came out of a wet market? And why given
the viability and the reality of all the prior reporting
and the admission that this work is being done and
has been done in the name of looking for bioweapons,

(01:39:51):
why the absolute outright denial and why the ignoring of
what the FBI concluded, which this this came out of
the one instudibrology.

Speaker 3 (01:40:00):
Yeah, and the confidence in that from the Intelligence Committee,
which I've served on for ten years, has increased with
things we find. So keep in mind that our report
as we put it out is unclassified. I hope that
there's other things that will be declassified in the next.

Speaker 1 (01:40:17):
Because you know they exist, you just can't talk about, correct.

Speaker 3 (01:40:21):
Yeah, I think that you know, more compelling and help
make the case that perfect came from the lab.

Speaker 1 (01:40:27):
Yeah, but let's talk about motive for a second, please.

Speaker 3 (01:40:30):
You know, so China has every motive to say this
came from nature.

Speaker 1 (01:40:35):
They don't want to They don't want to be responsible
for these millions and millions of deaths. Right.

Speaker 3 (01:40:41):
And you know, you know, first of all, no country
wants to say, hey, come visit China, spend your money here.
Guess what, We've got a virus that's killing people by
the millions. Right, So they they have all kinds of
motives to cover it up because they don't want to
talk about their buy a weapons program. They wouldn't want
to do that, and they don't want to be at
fault for any of this.

Speaker 10 (01:41:02):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:41:04):
Then you have in the United States. You know what's
the motive here, Well, we were funding gain of function
research in China and we have, you know, top level
government scientists who were in favor of this type of research,
and so it behooves them to say that it came

(01:41:25):
from nature. Now you can go further into what we
discovered in the report is those that came out and
wrote what's known as proximal origins, where a group of
international scientists who do gain a function research or invested
in this type of research, so they write an article
that says it came from nature. They were put together

(01:41:45):
and assembled by amongst others, doctor Fauci and doctor Collins,
and a gentleman named Jeremy Farrar, which I won't get
into his background, but they put this group together. When
we get their internal messages, whether it's slack messages or
their emails, they're saying that this thing looks engineered. They're

(01:42:07):
saying it looks engineered, and they.

Speaker 1 (01:42:10):
Behind the scenes are saying it looks engineers among themselves
are saying it looks engineered. Out loud though they're saying
it came from that we market, they say, we can't
rule out it's engineered. They're saying all these things, and
they said, Christian Anderson said in his internal messaging, said
my focus is to disprove the lab leak theory.

Speaker 3 (01:42:31):
They say, imagine what this will do to international harmony
if someone of credibility says that this came from the lab. Right,
these are the things they're saying. These are the things
that they were saying in their internal emails. So they
have a lot of motive to say that it came

(01:42:54):
from nature, So they write proximal origins. Doctor Fauci, probably
without the present or vice president even knowing, suddenly steps
up on the White House Lawn and says, I've got
this report just in and by the way, it wasn't
peer reviewed, and it was full of assumptions, and it
says this this came from nature, and you know, here's

(01:43:16):
how and a bunch of scientific gobbledy goop. But they
completely ignored the idea that it could have come from
the lab. And doctor Fauci said, this is definitive. These
are brilliant evolutionary virologists, et cetera, and so trying to
make it case closed. And that's only after doctor Collins

(01:43:37):
said to doctor Fauci in an email, can't you do
more to put down this lab leak? And the very
same day that he says this on the White House Lawn,
the author, doctor Christian Anderson, is saying in his emails,
we still can't rule out that this is engineered.

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Car the talk station I love it joined the millions
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Forecast. We have a high twenty six days, some evening
floorries dropping to six degrees over nine florides are still possible.
Tomorrow's high twenty three with clouds overnight cloudy and three
and on Thursday mostly cloudy day with a high twenty six.
Right now fourteen Time for traffic.

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Speaker 1 (01:46:20):
Seven two fifty five KRC the talk station mind blowing.
That's how I described this conversation with now retired Congressman
Brian Weinsterrip going over the report that was released, the
declassified report, and without giving me any specifics, I don't
get any extra information off air, at least regard with
regard to the the sensitive nature of the unreleased information.

(01:46:45):
Congressm and Winstrip is optimist or at least hopeful that
ultimately you and I will get the unreleased version of
this report, because everything we're learning this morning is absolutely
it's just it's frightening, quite frankly, do you believe on
any love, Congressman, after interviewing all these people and going
through this whole chain of events, that, given the bioweapons

(01:47:16):
research that's being done in China and this is a
component of it, that this virus may have been released intentionally,
recognizing as we must if you look at the statistics,
you know global population is seven plus billion people. A
lot of people got sick with coronavirus me included, but

(01:47:37):
a tiny like flu like percentage died from it. That
they would release it intentionally to see how quickly it spread,
to see what kind of you know, reaction the world had,
just to see, you know, if it sort of kind
of worked, you know what I'm saying. Yeah, No, I do.

Speaker 3 (01:47:55):
And and they're sick minded enough, remember they you know,
they from and demand abortion. They don't know, I know,
respect for human life. Adolph Hitler is a great example.

Speaker 1 (01:48:06):
He'll exterminate the entire population of people if you got
the there are evil, and there's evil in the world
and they're part of.

Speaker 3 (01:48:11):
It, if it can enhance his tools of power, right right, Yeah,
So no, I think I don't think that's the case.

Speaker 1 (01:48:19):
I do.

Speaker 3 (01:48:19):
I do think from everything I've seen that the lab
leak theory is most likely and it was an accidental leak,
and I'll just leave it at that.

Speaker 1 (01:48:31):
But I tend to go with that.

Speaker 3 (01:48:34):
But the wet market, for example, I think was the
first super spread spreader. There were cases before the wet market,
and you even had.

Speaker 1 (01:48:43):
Well, once it gets released from the lab, if it's
out in humanity and there's one person, maybe that worked
at the Institute of Virology that went over to the
wet market gets some dinner. That's where the heavy concentration
of people in closed quarters are right. Yeah, it's like,
could you like going to a concert and standing around
breathing on everybody? Yeah? No, exactly right.

Speaker 3 (01:49:05):
And you never found an animal that had U So
you know, you can go through all those animals, you'd
think you'd find it in one of them. And I'm
sure China would love it. Early on, I thought I
wouldn't be surprised if China injects some animals with COVID. Well,
the panglin, that's a whole nother story because it's the
receptor binding domain I'm going to start talking over. It's

(01:49:27):
a receptor binding domain of COVID nineteen that matches that
of a of a pangolin coronavirus. The backbone of COVID
nineteen matches largely that of certain bat viruses. But the key,
the key to make it more infectious was adding a

(01:49:48):
fure and cleavage site. Fure and cleavage site is kind
of like R two D two's arm right, when R
two D two can stick that arm at and get
into any system. Okay, the fur and cleavage site is
what the receptor binding melon. It sticks to your cell,
but if you're in cleavage site, penetrate yourself.

Speaker 1 (01:50:07):
Okay. So that's what made it infectious to hussy.

Speaker 3 (01:50:09):
Yes, made it much more infectious to humans, especially as
cells in our respiratory system. Okay, So that was the
Eco Health Alliance proposal they wanted to do. To do that, Hey,
let's put a cleavage site in there. Yes, like, hey,
what's this? You know it's it's Lord Almighty, it's really
dangerous and you know, look good intentions or not by anybody.

(01:50:35):
I think the fright should have been there, and I
will tell you today and people will agree with me.

Speaker 9 (01:50:42):
Gain a function.

Speaker 3 (01:50:42):
Research can be done through AI. You can take the
sequences the viruses that were getting from animals through surveillance
and through wastewater, et cetera, and take a look at them,
and AI can then put it supplant different receptor binding
domains or if you're in cleavage site and have a

(01:51:03):
good idea of predictability of whether this may emerge from
nature and how infectious it may be, we don't need
to be truly making the virus.

Speaker 1 (01:51:13):
Okay, you know what, and I like just one great
positive thumbs up for artificial intelligence. Along those lines. Stick around.
We're going to continue our discussion, Congressman Windstrip in studio.
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Speaker 7 (01:52:20):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 5 (01:52:24):
Men.

Speaker 1 (01:52:24):
The New Year's most Exciting day today is ISS Channel
nine high twenty six, overnight low six flurries possible this
evening and overnight tomorrows high twenty three, partly cloudie, overnight
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Hamilton won after and Witty traffic slows approaching boat Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KR scene the talk.

Speaker 1 (01:53:08):
Station set forty two fifty five Kcity Talk Station congressrom
Winstrom in studio talking COVID nineteen. The report is out,
the declassified version. We seem to have almost one hundred
percent definitively proven that it was the Wuhan. In pseudivirology,
gain of function research was being done, we were paying
for it. All. This is well documented in the emails

(01:53:29):
of exchange between the principles behind the scenes, even though
they denied it outright. The main reason I have come
away with, and this is kind of where I want
to boil it down, Congress from Winstrom, this is really
kind of all about money. If you find out or
if we the American people or the world finds out
there doing gain of function research, then the grants might stop.
If COVID nineteen would spread globally and did kill millions

(01:53:51):
of people, I will grant you been sick in hundreds
of millions of people, and it was created in a lab,
we might be inclined to say, you know what, stop that.
I'm sorry, no more grant money for you. Is this
is that? Can I boil it down to that sort
of minimalist conclusion, Well.

Speaker 3 (01:54:08):
It's it's not just grant money, you know What's what's
China's motive? They don't want to be blamed for this,
even if it came from nature, because they want people
to come and visit China, So it's their tourist industry, yes, sure,
and it's and it's it's hurt their economy, you know.
So then you get to our government. We've been funding
gain and function research. So you don't want to say

(01:54:29):
it came from from.

Speaker 1 (01:54:31):
No connection with it, from all ad we were there,
Oh my god, right right, so you want to back
away from it.

Speaker 3 (01:54:37):
You'd rather say it came from nature. The international scientists
that are doing this type of research, as well as
our funding of it as we speak, have have have
a motive because they get their money through grants and
so you know, look, we just found so many things, Brian,
through this whole process. You have doctor doctor Morin's who's

(01:54:57):
fuci's deputy, talking to doctor Dazik, who runs EcoHealth Alliance
who's doing the gain of function research in China. We
found in his emails his official email. He says, start
emailing me on my Gmail because these blankety blanks are
foiering me Freedom of Information Act where we can get
his official documents, and he said, and I'll delete anything

(01:55:22):
I don't want. In the New York Times I mean,
and then you dig further. I mean, every rock we
looked under, we found another rock to look under. And
it's just really disappointing that this is our government today
and our agencies need to be brought under control in
a big way.

Speaker 1 (01:55:37):
Well, and that is a tough row to ho. It's
certainly something worth trying at least, because right now there
is zero accountability. Very quickly here, if we go to
the break, we just identified in a sort of summary form,
various reasons why we were all collectively lied to and
the motivations behind it. How about corruption? You know, the

(01:56:00):
Biden administration has been paid handsomely millions of dollars by
the Chinese Communist Party, funneled through Hunter Biden for example.
I remember this. You know, this whole discussion reminds me
the fifty one, you know, CIA Operating Intelligence intelligence that
oh this has all the year marks of Russian inclusion.
We knew that was a lie, and they knew that
was a lie when they wrote it. This sounds a

(01:56:22):
lot like that. But in terms of one other motivation
not wanting to blame the Chinese regardless of our fingerprints
being on in connected with the research, is I mean
any thought that maybe certain members of Congress or the
president is corrupt and the Chinese had the goods on
them for example.

Speaker 3 (01:56:40):
Well, this is brad Winstrop talking now, Brian. I mean
just by looking at the things that we do know.
You know, Hunter Biden was getting money from people all
around the world, you know, through his using his father's
name and influence through that, and you know we got
information and how much for the big guy. Well who's
the big guy? You know, it's everyone can you know

(01:57:01):
know it's Joe Biden. Now he's gone and pardoned his
son for the last century. Perhaps I'm exaggerating there, but
you know, anything he's done, you know, but that doesn't
mean you still can't investigate, and you still can't get
him under oath for things. You just may not be
able to prosecute him for him, is what I understand.
But certainly there's they're they're compromised. They're compromised in so

(01:57:24):
many ways. The family is at least and so whether
it's the whole administration or an administration is protecting the
compromise president. You know, it's it's interesting that Joe Biden
met with President she not that long ago and there
was no reporting that they he even brought up COVID.
He didn't even say, like, you know how your people doing,

(01:57:45):
you know how you guys, you know, managing with COVID
and and the fallout of COVID. Still at this point
you don't you don't even talk about about COVID. So
you know, there's there's is the notion that the Biden
family is compromised and so let's just let' but let
this be water under the bridge. Those were Adam Shift's

(01:58:06):
words two years ago with their report two years ago
from the Intelligence Committee, was that well, let's just not
look for the origins of COVID. It's water under the bridge.
And it's like, come on, you know, this is not
this is not how it works in America. You know,
the American people, you know, are the government. They are

(01:58:28):
the owners of the government.

Speaker 1 (01:58:29):
They are and you know, those who do not study
the mistakes of the past are destined to repeat them,
which is why you look into this so it doesn't
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Speaker 4 (02:00:29):
Care see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:00:32):
Seven fifty one. If you have KIRCD talk station you
could talk for hours and hours with the tire congressman
Wednesday about this COVID report which just came out. UH
he's going to give you the details on it, because
you can read it for yourself. It's broken down, it's
got footnotes, it's got references. But real quickly, before we
get to that information, which I know you want to
pass along to the listeners in summary fashion, why the

(02:00:54):
reluctance to allow different treatment methodologies. We have a new virus,
it's exploded in the planet. It's COVID nineteen. I know
they came out with this emergency use authorization, you know,
a pharmaceutical which the pharmaceutical company was paid handsomely for.
But why not all these other options. I mean, we've
been using holistic medicine and other forms of medicine off

(02:01:17):
label use medicines forever, as long as they've been around.
We've been trying different things. But you mentioned using ivermectin
out loud or mentioned it on social media.

Speaker 4 (02:01:26):
Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (02:01:26):
It was as if you uttered the N word or something.
You were banned. You were dismissed as a crack and
a quack horse medicine. But as it turns out, it
actually worked.

Speaker 3 (02:01:40):
It worked for a lot of people, and there are
scientific paths to explain how this may have had some
benefit for people with both of those. And I can't
recite it offhand, but I looked it up. You know,
you could see that there was a potential there. Doctors
were doing no harm. These were FDA approved drugs, and yeah,

(02:02:03):
they were using it off label. Well, we did a
lot of things off label all the time, right. I
used nitro glycerine, you know, for the for the lower extremity.
Why to increase circulation, which is what nitroglycerin does for
the heart, So I'd use patches or people have diminish circulation,
and it's not approved for that, but I know, I

(02:02:24):
know scientifically it has an effect, yes, And no one
ever questioned me on it. And all of a sudden,
we're doing these things when people were desperate. And here's
the problem, Brian, And this is what really bothers me
as a physician, is you have these people. They may
be MD, but they haven't stood over a patient in years.

Speaker 1 (02:02:40):
Yeah. Off air, you mentioned Fauci specifically, and he tried
to suggest he had some connection with patient care. Zero,
he wasn't. He wasn't treating patients.

Speaker 3 (02:02:49):
You know, he's not a diagnosed diation and Rich McCormick,
freshman Member of Congress, who emergency physician, and he was
standing over patients trying to save their lives. And so,
you know, so if you have something that's not going
to do any harm but may bring people around and
help them, why would you not use that, especially when
you have nothing else exactly and you know, again do

(02:03:11):
no harm. But you know, and there's also we've got
laws on right to try. Patients can say no, you know,
but if the doctor explains to you. But you know what,
we were eliminating the doctor from the equation. Yeah, think
about that. The mandate totally takes the doctor out of
the equation.

Speaker 1 (02:03:27):
And the pharmacies too. They were told they were not
a lot of Fiel prescriptions for certain medications. Oh and
it was pharmacy.

Speaker 3 (02:03:33):
But I had doctors I've known and worked with for years,
primary care doctors mostly called me and said, you know,
I can't afford to lose my license right now, and
I'm getting these threatening calls. I still have a couple
more kids to get through college, and this is what's happening.

Speaker 10 (02:03:49):
You know.

Speaker 3 (02:03:49):
I called the governor because you know a lot of
these things are state controlled. Well, they are state controlled,
and we got to be careful that We're not in
Ohio not doing this to our providers.

Speaker 1 (02:04:00):
It's so bizarre.

Speaker 3 (02:04:02):
I can't, for the life of me understand where someone
would have the nerve to stand up and say, you
can't prescribe that off label, you know, and doctor Fauci,
you know, he compared it if you take the horse
dose of ivermectin. Yes, it's going to be a problem.
You take the horse dose of anything. It's there the

(02:04:25):
specific drug that's hurting you. It's the quantity. It's the quantity.
And if you prescribe a human dose that's safe and
can be effective, certainly for parasites, then you should be
able to prescribe it and hope for the best. And
many people claim, you know, the thing we're talking about
was convalescent plasma. You know, we people who got COVID

(02:04:46):
and recovered have antibodies like me. Yeah, and you know,
so you take the plasma, you spin down the antibodies
and you have.

Speaker 1 (02:04:54):
To have a blood type match like a traditional vaccine
in many respects.

Speaker 3 (02:04:58):
Yeah, well, or treatment or therapeutic right, So we were
given that to people. I remember somebody being written up
in the enquire said, oh my gosh, I thought I
was going to die, and then I got this. I
was better the next day. Granted it wasn't. The monoclonal
antibodies are better, but we didn't have them at the time.

Speaker 1 (02:05:18):
I understand, well, Congress wants it has been a distinct
pleasure having you in here. Disturbing and frightening and and
nefarious all. I just it's got all the intrigue of
some kind of crazy novel that's all been made up.

Speaker 3 (02:05:32):
But go ahead and give you a look. And our report,
you know, you can look it up online. Just go
to Majority Report Coronavirus Pandemic. It'll come out and it's
got all the categories. I mean, we looked at the
nursing home deal in New York and had Governor Cuomo in.
We looked at the effects of the bills that we passed.

(02:05:53):
This was you know, we uncovered a lot of nefarious behavior,
but you can break it down by category. Read the
part that's that you're interested in. We tried to make
it easy reading. Everything is documented. We have all the footnotes,
and even when we have parts of emails, we're not
cherry picking. You can find the entire chain of emails.

Speaker 1 (02:06:15):
As I would expect from someone like you. It's been
a real pleasure. You know, I have always told you
just because you're not in congressman anymore, doesn't mean you're
not welcome here to talk about things like this. I
know you'll keep your finger on the pulse that matters
in Washington. I know you're off the bigger and better
things in your world. And you know, God bless you
for being around all these years for me and my
listening audience. And again you have a welcome invitation here

(02:06:37):
in the fifty five Caresey Morning Show.

Speaker 3 (02:06:39):
My friend, It's been an honor and I can't thank
you enough. Because part of this job is to be
a messenger.

Speaker 1 (02:06:43):
You know you are.

Speaker 3 (02:06:44):
We put out our emails, you know, we embrace the media.
I was never afraid to go on CNN either, because
facts are stubborn things.

Speaker 1 (02:06:53):
They are. Indeed, seven fifty seven sting around, we got
the inside scoop of bright bart News. Gonna be talking
to Oliver Lane, the London bureau chief about the UK,
plus Daniel Davis, deep Dives Courn.

Speaker 2 (02:07:03):
It's a new year, new resolutions, new promises.

Speaker 4 (02:07:07):
This is a real world impact.

Speaker 2 (02:07:08):
On the same old from Washington. It's just another year
of keeping you informed. Fifty five KRC the talkstations.

Speaker 6 (02:07:16):
Voice the Dark Herd Daily exactly the things that need
to be said.

Speaker 2 (02:07:20):
Fifty five KRC the talkstation.

Speaker 1 (02:07:26):
Coming up an eight oh six here, fifty five PERCD
Talk Station. Bryan Thomas wishing you everyone a very happy Tuesday,
and welcome back the fifty five PARC Morning Show. It's
time for the inside scoop from Breitbart Bookmarket b R
E I T B A r T. Breitbart dot Com.
Welcome back Oliver Lane, the London bureau Chief Editor Tay.
We've got several topics to talk about. Oliver. Happy new
year to you, welcome back to the morning Show.

Speaker 10 (02:07:49):
Happy new yet you too, and thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (02:07:50):
Back to gate rather interesting article and I'll strongly encourage
my listeners again. Breitbart dot com look up the article
modern Life under Attack. Twenty twenty four should have been
the year the West woke up to infrastructure sabotage. Frightening
stuff you have in here. Of course you talk about
the Russian, you talk about the Chinese, but then we
also have the idea of radicalized individuals, no coordinated efforts. No,

(02:08:13):
you know, they don't belong to cells, they don't have
the Internet traffic and back and forth. They're attacking, you know,
various forms of infrastructure as well. I mean, we have
a multitude of bad actors out in the world, and
is there really anything we can do about it by
way of preparation or I mean, I guess I'm I'm
sort of puzzled at the solution to all of this.

Speaker 10 (02:08:37):
You summarized it very well, and that's sort of the
purpose of this article that I wrote.

Speaker 1 (02:08:40):
It was just as.

Speaker 10 (02:08:41):
Almost a counterpoints to the prevailing official narrative, which is
that we're coming under a great deal of attack in
terms of what they call hybrid warfare and the attack
on infrastructure, which are authored predominantly by Russia and Russian agents.
And I think when people talk about China, it's so
often more of the sort of cyber security side of

(02:09:02):
thing to these attacks, but when it comes to physical attacks,
the talk is about Russia, and I do not you know,
I would not challenge these are real issues. But what
I think has to be talked about as well, and
I think is I think it's.

Speaker 9 (02:09:17):
Possibly even downplayed.

Speaker 10 (02:09:19):
I think there is almost an attempt to cover up
here is the degree to which that radicalized individuals, as
you say, from the hard left, what they call in
France the ultra left, who, as far as we can tell,
because factor there's been so little research done on this,
and Western intelligence agencies, it seems to me, are actually
shy about talking about this. They're averse talking about leftwig

(02:09:42):
extremism at all. Who are launching these attacks?

Speaker 1 (02:09:46):
Now?

Speaker 10 (02:09:48):
I think the kind of the reason I decided to
do this article now this year is the attack on
French infrastructure the day of the Olympics. The you remember,
of course, we all remember the that insane Paris Olympics
opening ceremony. Well, it got a lot of headlines, but
what I was really thinking about that day was the

(02:10:08):
fact that Paris came under attack that morning. And it
did make global headlines, but not as much as I
think it really ought to have. But what happened was
at strategic points on railways going in and out of Paris,
in every direction coming in out of Paris. And this
was a coordinated attack by groups of people or a
group of people who knew who knew the system, they

(02:10:30):
knew where to strike, to do absolutely the minimal actual
possible work, to get the maximum possible in damage and.

Speaker 9 (02:10:37):
This is very simple.

Speaker 10 (02:10:39):
All you need to know is where the cables are.
The cables are government signaling. You need a pair of
bolt croppers and you can bring an entire rollway system
to its knees. And this is exactly what they did.
Hundreds of thousands of people were stranded. Because when it
comes to operating modern high speed rail, safety is so important.
And if there is no signaling, which is of course
all computer controlled, all the data for signaling is transmitted

(02:11:01):
by fiber optic cable. If there is no signaling, there
is no railway. What you have is hundreds of thousands
of tons of scrap steel that you can't run the
railway otherwise. And it's incredible. I think that actually we've
heard so little about this story since the French government
decided that it probably was the Ultra Left and then
they dropped the.

Speaker 1 (02:11:22):
Story like a hot stone.

Speaker 10 (02:11:23):
So what this ask call you that you're very kindly
sighted in mind at the beginning.

Speaker 4 (02:11:27):
Of this segment.

Speaker 10 (02:11:29):
What it does is actually look at all the other
stuff like that that's been going on this year, and
there is just so much of it, and it is
so little talked about it. I think it's going to
become a real problem.

Speaker 1 (02:11:39):
Well clearly, And you mentioned railways, and there's this obvious
there is this crazy push and here in America to
build railways, and this is the solution for modern transportation.
And I always look at it. You know, wait a second,
it seems to me to be the most easily to
the easy system of transportation to sabotage along the lines
of what you said. I mean, if you get four

(02:11:59):
guys with a couple of crowbars, I imagine you could
take out one rail. And if you can take out
one rail, you derail a modern engine and derail the
whole the entire railway system. Maybe not that simple, but
it's pretty damn simple. We've had attacks on power stations.
You get a couple of guys with with with modern

(02:12:20):
rifles and they start shooting at the transformers. It's easy
to disable the power grid in a certain area just
by launching an attack on one little thing like that. Honestly, sir,
I'm surprised it doesn't happen more often.

Speaker 10 (02:12:36):
Well, that's that's kind of the point. Actually, yeah, happens
more often them realize, but it's just not talked about
because there isn't with these kinds of attacks. There isn't
a sort of sexy Russian spies angle. It's actually a
bunch of crumby leftists, like hard leftists who hate the
modern world, who hate consumerism, and yeah, these are the
these are the growth, the growth guys, these are the people.

(02:12:58):
They think that we should be using lesser energy, people
should be confined in their immediate neighborhoods. It mass transit
is a problem.

Speaker 4 (02:13:05):
If you're like that Green Okay, so soon you mentioned, yeah,
go ahead, No, I have to.

Speaker 1 (02:13:12):
Say so, Oliver your because the obvious question that's, you know,
sort of screaming out here is what is the point?
I mean, if you go and you stand there and
you throw paint on a on a rem brand and
your point is because global warming and you say it
out loud, it may be stupid and pointless, but at
least you're saying out loud. I hate global warming and

(02:13:34):
I believe in it, and I'm trying to bring people's
attention to it. But just bringing transportation to a screeching
halt without any message associated with it. I mean, the
only thing I can conclude, as you have these have
to be left wing extremists because they're trying to bring
society to a halt.

Speaker 4 (02:13:52):
Absolutely right.

Speaker 10 (02:13:53):
The point is undermining confidence in.

Speaker 1 (02:13:56):
The modern world.

Speaker 10 (02:13:57):
If you get to a point where you think there's
no point make your trains, you can't guarantee it's going
to get you somewhere.

Speaker 4 (02:14:02):
That's the point.

Speaker 10 (02:14:04):
And in terms of you know, the stuff that we've
seen this year, there doesn't have to be a message
associated with it. And there's actually a whole spectrum on
this sort of thing you mentioned a moment ago. Yeah,
how easy it is actually to derail a train, and.

Speaker 4 (02:14:17):
These things do happen in the.

Speaker 10 (02:14:19):
Ukraine War, the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Ukrainian partisans are
like blowing up Russian supply trains all the time, and
this is a very easy thing to do if you
have you know, C four and you know all that
sort of thing. But that's like, that's very high on
the on the scale of violence, like you we're potentially
killing people by and that's you know, probably doesn't fit

(02:14:42):
very well into the playbook of these left wing extremists
because they don't want to get caught, they don't want
to go to prison, and because the the interference they're
doing the attacks, there's there's no violence involved whatsoever.

Speaker 9 (02:14:56):
It's very low level, so.

Speaker 10 (02:14:58):
There's there's very little for instances that I can tell
people actually ever being prosecuted this stuff, because no one's
being injured overwork. Police are forces just don't have time
to look into it. But this, this metastasizes this, This
rolls on like a great snowball falling down the cliff
because it grows and it grows because there's I think
a feeling of impunity there.

Speaker 1 (02:15:21):
And I guess I can certainly understand that on some
twisted level these people are political ideology is what it is.
And this is all very very low hanging fruit, right, Oliver.
It's low hanging, it's simple to accomplish. It's low tech
in terms of all you need are minimalist supplies to
bring about your intended result, and therefore it happens. Now.

(02:15:43):
The problem is if this becomes more broadly coordinated, and
I think, going back to your comment about the Chinese
Communist Party, I mean, we just had our own. You know,
intelligence officials point out that listen, anytime they want, the
Chinese could just come completely wipe out our electric grid.
That scares the living hell out of the Oliver. But

(02:16:04):
apparently they've got the resources, they have the embedded software.
They've been at this for years and years. They are
at a twenty four to seven with propecion or professional
Chinese Communist Party government organized hackers. They're doing this all
the time. But with these left wing radical individuals, I mean,
is there any possibility that these low hanging fruit choosing

(02:16:27):
organizations could somehow coordinate their efforts to bring about something
much larger in scale.

Speaker 10 (02:16:35):
So I think a key part of these ultra left
I say groups, because I don't think there are groups. Actually,
I think a key part of them, of these ultra
left individualists is they understand that the second you become
organized and you have groups, you have chat, yeah, that
gives evective intelligence agencies.

Speaker 1 (02:16:53):
To go after you.

Speaker 10 (02:16:54):
And if they are all self radicalized, and they are
all self directed and it's a you know, by a
billion pinpricks, I think that they they believe that is
the tactic that works best for them, because as soon
as you start having meetings, as soon as you start
having email chains, that's where that's where the observation comes.
And this is a real problem for the law abiding majority.

(02:17:15):
A great parallel to this is the Islamic state, which
has had unfortunately a very high level of success in
attacking European cities because they have had these lines of
communication from you know, what was the Islamic State in
Iraq and Syria publishing totally openly things as simple as

(02:17:35):
the ice has had a magazine I think it was
called Dibick or something like that, and rather than being
you know, lovely articles on fashion or the latest news,
it's packed cover to cover with how to conduct low
level terror attacks. And actually, as you brought up earlier,
I remember and ask them, I think going back to

(02:17:57):
twenty sixteen that was published in this magazine, which was
a quite a granular, detailed report on how to derail
a train. But this meme, for instance, of Islamists terrorists
in Europe driving cars through crowds, which now you know,
you know unfortunately so well in the US as well. This,

(02:18:18):
you know, this is to a very large extent, started
in this magazine. It was tried once, it was found
to work, and this Islamic State magazine put it in
the next edition, which was if you want to kill
the Infidel, borrow high power car and drive it through
a marketplace. But because there's no direct communication between Islamic
state leadership and anyone in any cell in Europe. It's

(02:18:39):
just anybody can you know, they shouldn't, but anybody can
download this stuff and read it. It's you know, it's
floating around on the internet. There's there's no communications chapter,
there's no two way talk for intelligence actors is to intercept.
So you have these what they call self radicalize loan
wolf attackers. When the attacks happen, the security services say,
oh they worlds and our radar. This person was not

(02:19:01):
known to us. And of course because all the people
who were known to you you've already arrested. It's the
ones who has self radicalized you can't lay your hands on.

Speaker 1 (02:19:09):
Well, I have to conclude Oliver Lane Bright Bart London
Bureau a Chief. This leaves us in a rather desperate position.
As long as there are people, you know, let's point
the far left wing terrorists or fundamentalist you know, Islamic terrorism.
But as long as there are people out there that
are hell bent on disrupting society, there really isn't anything

(02:19:32):
we can do about it.

Speaker 10 (02:19:36):
Yeah, that's a tough one because it's like the defining
characteristic infrastructure is it's very big and it's very distributed.
How do you give any sort of protection over realm
network that spans thousands of miles where a single attack
at any single point will bring the whole thing to
a to a stumbling halt. And you know, again, I

(02:19:58):
just have to emphasize this when I say I am
not talking about people planting explosives to railing trains. All
it takes is a Molotov cocktail in a control cabinet.
All it takes is a pair of bolt proppers and
indiscriminately cutting every cable in that trough that runs alongside
the railway. Doesn't matter which one you cut, it'll do something.
It could be out of there before anybody's what's happened.

(02:20:20):
It's a real weakness because we have a sophisticated, subtle
sophistication and subtle systems that keep our western modern world
ticking over. And that's brilliant because it gives us all
a very high standard the civic. The problem is is
that when we live among people who hate our way
of life for one reason or another. We've talked about
the ultra left, we talked about radicalisthemists. If they hate

(02:20:45):
our way of life, then actually these very delicate, sophisticated
systems provides a very effective vector for attack.

Speaker 1 (02:20:52):
Yes they do. And you know it's kind of funny.
I'm laughing because if we all decide that we need
to disconnect in order to prevent this, you know, disruption
in our very lives, we become more more of a
ludite type that would certainly fulfill their goals, which is
to be well, less connected, less consumptive, less energy. You know,
you get consuming, et cetera, et cetera. It's crazy, you know,

(02:21:14):
I tell you have given so much food for thought.
Oliver Lane again, please find the article Breitbart dot com
Modern Life under Attack. Twenty twenty four should have been
the year the West woke up to infrastructure sabotage. Oliver,
enjoy our conversation. I really appreciate you coming back on
in a best of or a happy New Year to
you and everyone in Breitbart, and I'll look forward to

(02:21:34):
talking with you again real soon.

Speaker 10 (02:21:37):
Always a pleasure to be on the Thanks again for
adviting me.

Speaker 1 (02:21:39):
My pleasure. It's a twenty right now, fifty five K
see the talk station. Okay, here you go, cover Sincy now.
I mentioned my friend Jeff from Markhn and he listened
to me and he said, all right, I got in
touch with Cover since e they're gonna come over and
give us the dog and pony show. And wow, he
went with Cover Sincy and his employees are so happy.
I got an email fromhim this morning. I was driving
to work. I heard your shout out out, don't mind

(02:22:01):
if you use us at all in in other words,
using him as an illustration of what you can do
Cover since he has been a smashing all in caps
success here as example, just went to Kroger to pick
up a couple of scripts for me a couple of
scripts for his wife zero dollars. Had to recheck to
make sure my other employees have had similar experiences. Should

(02:22:24):
have made the switch long ago. Just you know, he
always gives me an email talking about how great this
has worked out for him. He is responsible for the company,
He is responsible for the business bottom line. He has
now saved his company lots of money, and his employees
have better medical insurance coverage for less money. I mean,

(02:22:45):
that's it, That's all there is to it. Covers, since
he'd either working for you, you don't pay him a dime.
Just get in touch with them. They'll check out where
you are medically in terms of your place in life,
what you've got currently, whether you're a small group like
Jeff and the crew, or you just an individual looking
for better coverage. How about not paying nine thousand dollars
out of pocket before you get your medical coverage. They

(02:23:07):
work with hundreds of insurance companies, access to thousands of policies,
but they're working for you, and it costs you not
a red cent to get in touch with them, and
you initiate this process either call them or fill out
the form on the website to call them, it's five
one three eight hundred call five one three eight hundred
two two five five. You know, it's like no brainer. Man,

(02:23:31):
If the best thing can happen is he'say, No, you're great.
You got the best coverage you can possibly get. Probably
not gonna happen, though, they're gonna save your money. You
get better coverage online. There's a form you can fill
out on the website. It's Coversinc. Dot com. Fifty five
KRC the talk station. The weather's probably enough to drive
your fifty five KRCD talk station fifty five KRC dot
com for podcasts when you can't listen live hour and

(02:23:53):
a half with Congressman Brad Winsterp now retired, on the
whole COVID investigation. Scary scary stuff. Get it at fifty
five Kersey dot com. It's well worth to listen if
you didn't listen live, and of course my conversation right now.
First of the year, in a very happy new year,
it is time for the Daniel Davis Deep Dive with
retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. Great to see your face,

(02:24:14):
my friend, and a happy new year to you.

Speaker 9 (02:24:16):
I'll be twenty twenty five to you, Brian, been missing you, man.

Speaker 1 (02:24:19):
I know I listen, man, I read the news, and
every time I see a story, most notably about Ukraine Russia,
which we're gonna talk about it again today, it's like, God,
I wish I had Daniel around it. Just exchange ideas
about this, because you know you and I have been
back and forth on this, and let's start with the
article you afforded me to talk about as a springboard.
Ukraine is bringing war back to Russia, as Lensky says

(02:24:40):
after New Kursk offensive, and there was an observation in
here because you have pointed out time and time again
that you know, Ukraine can't beat Russia. They don't have
the equipment, they don't have the guys, they don't have
the hardware. What in the hell are they doing in Russia? Anyway?
And I see this line here the Institute for the
Study of War think tank report of the Ukraine intensified

(02:25:03):
its offensive operations in Kursk through Monday. Here's the point,
with Russian forces elsewhere in the region launching their own
fresh attacks on the Ukrainian salient. So you're not minding
your own backyard. You're busy going into Russia for reasons
unknown to me, while the Russians are making advances in Ukraine.

(02:25:26):
Does that make any sense from a strategic standpoint?

Speaker 11 (02:25:28):
Daniel, That didn't make any sense from any viewpoint. And
it's actually worse. I did an update literally just minutes
before joining you here right now to get the latest
tactical updates all in that situation, and it's gotten really ugly,
really fast. Because I knew already what was reported was

(02:25:48):
that roughly a company size element and that means maybe
twenty five total combat vehicles, tanks, are our personnel carriers, etc.
Everybody in the West was calling this a big offensive, Zelenski.
He was talking about it like it was an offensive.
This was a small tactical counter attack. Really, all is
what you can say that used to be in some circles,
is considered normal in any kind of a fight where

(02:26:10):
you have one side on the offense and on the defense,
but the defensive side will launch local counter attacks to
try to reposition the defense or to try to blunt
something that the offensive side is doing, etc. The Ukraine
hasn't been doing any of those anywhere for most of
the year of twenty twenty four, and they tried one
here at the last minute. But here's the problem. It

(02:26:31):
made a very small incursion. It was blunted almost immediately overnight.
Part of that what they had captured has already been lost.
And then because they had to take forces from one
part of the Curk Salients to the other part, Russia
immediately recognized it, launched a fresh attack of their own,
and last night had a huge swath in the northern
part of that to further knock them out of the

(02:26:53):
Curk saleent. So the net is a loss in Ukraine
in the Cursk, and as you pointed.

Speaker 9 (02:26:59):
Out, it's still continuing to be a loss in the.

Speaker 1 (02:27:02):
Eastern Front and in the meantime, in the fog of war.
I constantly mention that during our discussions, because honestly, I
don't know what to believe anymore. I never have known
what to believe. You hear an X number of people die,
this number of people died. This one says thirty eight
thousand Russian troopsmen killed or wounded fighting in the Western
Curse region. Seriously, I don't know that there doesn't since

(02:27:24):
a pro Ukraine article, I suppose it leans that way anyway,
I don't know how many of the Ukrainians have died
in that particular offensive either, But do you think there's
any legitimacy to that figure.

Speaker 11 (02:27:37):
It's really impossible to tell because you have the Russian size.
By the ways, claiming there's somewhere around can pardon me,
fifty to sixty thousand Ukrainians who have been killed since
Saugust when they first made this incursion, And there's no
way to independently verify either one of.

Speaker 9 (02:27:52):
Them, except that it makes.

Speaker 11 (02:27:55):
Sense to suggest that the side that is attacking into
the other is the attacker almost always has a higher
casually count when you're especially making any incursion, but then
for once after about the third week of the so
so from late August on it's been kind of a
skirmish back and forth, and the side that has the
most firepower is going to inflict the most casualties. And

(02:28:18):
so it's entirely possible that it's near equivalent between.

Speaker 9 (02:28:22):
The two sides, but that's just speculation. There's no way
to know what it is.

Speaker 11 (02:28:26):
The only thing we can say because it's conclusive, is
that we see that the territory is shrinking almost by
the day.

Speaker 1 (02:28:32):
Yeah, and that's one thing I have observed, which is
a reflection of sort of the reality that you've been
talking about since we've been discussing this conflict. Now. The
other thing I observe in correct me if I'm wrong,
there's so much of this information comes out. They used
again the re Ukrainian some of those longer range missiles

(02:28:53):
that we supplied them with, and my reading of the
information was that the Russians shot them down and talked
talked about this before. What's the point of giving them
these longer range missiles if they have the ability, the
demonstrably proven ability to shoot them out of the sky
before they land on anything, We're wasting money and resources

(02:29:15):
giving them a tool of war that isn't effective.

Speaker 11 (02:29:21):
Well, yeah, I mean that's one of the things that
I've been lamenting for quite some time now, because there
is a disconnect between the heart what Ukrainians want, what
Western leaders want, and then what is graphically evident on
the battlefield and what is possible And you have to
take the emotion out of it and do a cold

(02:29:42):
hearted calculation military power, What is the balance between the
two forces, what is the capabilities for offense and defense,
et cetera, And then you can say, all right, what
is possible here? Unfortunately, that calculation is never made in
the West. It certainly hasn't been for a long long time,
and they keep taking actions that they want to achieve
a certain outcome, oblivious to the fact that as is

(02:30:05):
going on right now in the Kerk Salient, the opposite
is is being manifest on the battlefield.

Speaker 9 (02:30:11):
And look, they're losing everywhere.

Speaker 11 (02:30:13):
You're talking about Trump coming in here now less than
three weeks and everybody's wanting him to have this great negotiation,
But right now his hand, when the day he assumes
power is going to be is weaker by the day
because of the unreality that's clouding the judgment of the
people who are calling the shots in the war.

Speaker 1 (02:30:30):
Well, and not only that, you have I won't call
it victories, but you have progress being made on the
Russian side. The longer this battle rages, the more territory
they seem to be taking over. So you know, I
can imagine Putin just saying, well, wait a second, why
would have want to negotiate you with over peace unless

(02:30:51):
you start giving me a giant chunk of Ukraine return
for it?

Speaker 4 (02:30:54):
You got it.

Speaker 9 (02:30:55):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 11 (02:30:56):
That's the dilemma that's going to face Trump when he
comes in that the his emissary for the Rush of
Ukraine war, General Kellogg, was supposed to have landed in
Kiev today to start setting the stage for that, but
he was changed his mind and was recalled.

Speaker 9 (02:31:10):
They didn't explain why, but I think.

Speaker 11 (02:31:12):
It's because they're reevaluating what's going on in the Trump team,
because they're saying, hang on right now, we can't We
might not even be able to get what I'm calling
the June fourteenth line that Putin laid out this summer,
where he said he's gonna have all of those four
old blasts, even the parts they don't currently control, or
they'll just keep fighting and take it by force. But

(02:31:32):
here's the problem, Brian, if we go down that path,
they won't stop at those.

Speaker 9 (02:31:36):
Four old blasts. So that is the real dilemma for Trump.

Speaker 11 (02:31:39):
Either negotiate away something that Ukraine hasn't lost yet but
stop there, or try to get a better deal and
end up losing even more.

Speaker 1 (02:31:49):
Wow. Well, let's pivot over to Zelenski. The name of
the article. It's by Kate Surkhan. Zelenski takes some putin
apologists US skeptics on three hour Lex Friedman podcast. I
guess we would follow the category of US skeptics this morning, Daniel.
I mean I would say that we're US realists. But anyway,

(02:32:10):
I like that. I like that a lot better because
we are realists. We were only pointing out facts here.
It's not that we want we don't want the Russians
to win and we want the Ukrainians to lose. This
is you're dealing with factual information. How does Zelensky respond
to this conversation that you and I are having. I mean,
when we point out you can have all the Atkam

(02:32:31):
missiles that you want, But if the Russians can shoot
down every damn one of them, how are you going
to use it to your advantage? And to what end
do you think this is gonna going to serve you?
How does he respond to that?

Speaker 11 (02:32:46):
Yeah, listen, I watched good portions of that three hour interview,
and it was very illuminating because it just shows that
Zelensky is his brain is just and I'm not saying
this is in any harsh way, only an observation.

Speaker 9 (02:33:01):
It is disconnected from the reality.

Speaker 11 (02:33:04):
And I think that the truth is starting to press
in on his psyche and he realizes there is no
good way out There is none, and instead of acknowledging
that in trying to make the best of an ugly situation,
he's still clinging to this fiction that there's a good
deal to be had out there.

Speaker 9 (02:33:20):
And several times in that interview.

Speaker 11 (02:33:22):
Lex tried to say, and he's very much pro Ukraine,
He's ford Zelenski. He tried several times to say, listen,
but if you're not even talking to the Russian side,
if you're not even giving them a reason to have
that negotiation that you're seeking and that outcome, He said
that Putin doesn't have to do it, and the guy
just wouldn't the Zelensky just wouldn't listen. He would just

(02:33:43):
run back to Oh, Putin is evil, he's vicious. You
can't talk to him, and he's like, it doesn't matter
whether you think it is. If you don't talk to him,
he'll defeat your country and he just can't get there, Okay.

Speaker 1 (02:33:54):
So it basically sounds to me like this boils down
to a politician who's been back into a corner, and
it's gonna be known by history as the guy who
lost a sizeable chunk of his country fighting a battle
against the Russians, along with an almost uncountable number of
human human lives.

Speaker 9 (02:34:12):
Or Brian, he'll be the guy that lost the war.

Speaker 11 (02:34:14):
If you don't negotiate an end now to that's not
good terms, then you're gonna.

Speaker 4 (02:34:19):
Lose the war.

Speaker 9 (02:34:20):
That is the horrible situation that they face.

Speaker 1 (02:34:22):
Right now, and that means losing Ukraine completely to Russia.

Speaker 11 (02:34:27):
It's gone far enough, yes, because Russia has the ability
and the capacity and definitely the will to do that.
But if Trump can come in and make a negotiation
short of that, that's still possible. So there is something hope,
but only if Zelensky is ready to start dealing with reality.

Speaker 1 (02:34:43):
Daniel Davis Deep Dive I enjoyed every Tuesday. I'm happy
for the new calendar year and another opportunity to talk
with mister retired Lieutenant Colonel Davis every Tuesday at eight
thirty my friend, again, a pleasure to see your face.
Just a wonderful conversation. It's engaging and quite often frightening.
But again, like you said, we're just talking fat.

Speaker 4 (02:35:02):
It's true.

Speaker 1 (02:35:03):
It's true. Yeah, God love you, Sirah. Look forward to
next Tuesday. Take care, see you next week. A forty
fifty five care c detalk stations stick around. We got
a little more talk about. Plus my friend Steve from
us anstilation for Ask the Expert. That'll be the tail
end of the program. I'll be right back.

Speaker 7 (02:35:18):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (02:35:22):
Steve Perrins coordinated

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