Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The mess is created. This is really a short time
in office. What happens next happens here, just begun. Fifty
five k r C, The Talk station five O five
(00:21):
A fifty five k r C the Talk Station.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Sippy Tuesday, still.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
A vacation.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
I'm the dude, man, I'm not Brian Thomas right here
host the fifty five Carsey Morning Show and wishing everyone
a very happy Tuesday.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Coming up in the fifty five Casey Morning Show. I
welcome phone calls me. There's something on your mind as
I stare over the mess that is this big beautiful bill,
this reconciliation bill that's supposed to cut government spending. It's
just Charlie foxtrot. It comes to mind. My military friends
know exactly what that means, and I'm restricted by the
(01:10):
FCC from being able to articulate that in plain words.
They're wrestling over at one point five trillion dollars in
spending cuts over the next ten years.
Speaker 5 (01:20):
We have just.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
I mean, the spending from government is insanity. Ron Johnson's
come out against the whole concept. He said there's not
enough cuts. He wants to move back to pre pandemic
spending levels that would result in a six point five
trillion dollar cut, and we can't do that. What do
we do before the pandemic hit? How do we all
survive without this massive infusion of inflation inducing cash into
(01:47):
the economy. I mean, I feel like we're on a
sinking ship and we just can't There's just nothing we
can do about it. It tried. The water's flowing in
gallons per minute and we're trying to bail it out
with a tea cup. I mean, we talk about existential
threats all the time. You know, Oh my god, China
is an existential threat. Oh my god, Russia is an
(02:08):
existential threat. Now we're killing ourselves. Try to cut medicaid
just requiring able bodied adults that don't have any children,
Mabel body working men, capable of working men. I should
argue that's a problem cutting them off without having them,
(02:29):
at least cutting them off unless they endeavor to obtain
employment or I think, in the case of one of
the proposals, provide twenty hours a week of community service,
whatever the hell that means, just one of a multitude
(02:50):
of programs that we fund that you and I are
going to work for every single day, and they spend
and they spend, and they spend, and we're on a
trajectory to have eighty seven some odd trillion dollars in
debt over the next decade. The alarm bell should be
(03:10):
going off, and the Democrats just refuse. On every level,
any suggestion of a spending cut is met with absolute
opposition by the Democrats. What do they think they're gonna
do when debt service because we owe an obligation of
those who are fool en off the loness money debt
service on it is going to consume most of the
(03:31):
federal budget and no time. That's the trajectory we're on,
and yet no cuts. They reject any suggestion of cuts.
Hard rain's gonna fall, folks. I mean, I hate to
wake up and you know, at five o'clock and start
(03:51):
talking about this kind of crap that you know I've said,
there's so many articles about what the process is revealing.
Oh my god, we're gonna cut this, we're gonna cut that,
and it all amounts to really nothing in the grand
scheme of things. Fine, planned Parenthood's going to be cut.
I know a lot of my listeners welcome the idea
of that, but it's paltry dollars in the grand scheme
of things. I mean, they need to be going at
(04:12):
the butt at the spending with a giant axe, and
they're just merely chipping away little teeny bits here, little
teen bits there. And I welcome any little cut that
can come from government spending. But you know, the headlines
get dominated by win. Parenthood's going to get cut when
you look at the reality. Ron Johnson op ed in
(04:33):
the Wall Street Journal that they did a beautiful job.
I mean, you know, talking about it. Maybe you get
to read a little bit later, but just giving a
sense of proportion to where we are in terms of
spending and how quickly we've gotten to where we are,
and what I go back to, what do we do
prior to twenty nineteen when COVID kicked in, Oh my god,
I mean, and we were already spending recklessly prior to that,
(04:56):
and then they the spending jump by six and a
half trillion dollars or something like that, and they're having
a difficult time just going back to pre pandemic spending levels.
We're not in a pandemic anymore. Businesses are open and
by all accounts thriving pretty well too. Sorry, I'm just
(05:17):
so disheartened. I got up and didn't know which direction
I wanted to go this morning. And I have like
fifteen articles about this reconciliation bill, and there are three
different committees and they're all putting their two cents in,
and each has different responsibilities, like cutting green programs, and
you know, Medicaid is one. And there are so many
(05:38):
Republicans opposing any of these cuts as well, which is
just heartbreaking to me. Why well, they're vulnerable Republicans. You know,
I realized we're going to have an election again, no kidding,
every two years. You know, we understand the process. You know,
sometimes you just got to fall on the sword, do
the right thing for the lasting benefit of the country.
(05:59):
And you know, see if the Democrats can achieve their
goals and going back to pandemic level spending, I don't
see that happening. If the Republicans can't join together in
unity for the purpose of saving us from ourselves and
cutting radically and dramatically this massive government spending, which is
good for everyone at the risk of losing their job.
(06:24):
They're only a handful of so called vulnerable Republicans out there.
And if the House were to switch and the Democrats
become the majority. They're still look at the Republicans with
the House majority, the Senate majority, and the presidency. They
can't even find their way. Do you think the Democrats
are going to be able to find their way? Do
you think they're going to work with lockstep uniformity. No,
(06:46):
they're going to be infighting as well. Anyway, I'm not
fearful of that. I'm fearful of a lost opportunity, which
we only have a small window here.
Speaker 5 (06:59):
Get it done.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Peel the man daid off by ripping it off, and
let's take our country back from ourselves, or it's all
going to end. And Claire, communications and Outreach officer for
Disabled American Veterans, is a boot camp this weekend and Dan,
we'll explain that too. Us Coming up at seven point thirty,
(07:21):
we'll get the inside scoop with Bright Barton News today,
the return of Deputy Politics Senator Bradley Jay. Why are
senators against Ed Martin for the Department of Justice post?
Daniel Davis deep dive, of course, the latest on Russia
and the Cincinnai Via joins the program at eight forty.
I always enjoy having the VA on and talking about
(07:41):
the benefits that they offer my veteran friends out there.
You heard top of the Aaron News and this is
bat crap insanity. I think this is merely designed to
create the perception that there's controversy when none exists. We
all know who Rodney Hiitton Junior is, at least locally
accused of killing Hamilton County Sheriff's Deputy Larry Henderson and
(08:03):
what appears to be an intentionable, intentional ramming of his
car into the Sheriff's deputy. Larry Henderson distraught over the
fact that the police shot his son, who was involved
in criminal activity at the time of the shooting and
was carrying a Block forty three forty caliber firearm with
an extended magazine. He's suing multiple city agencies claiming his
(08:31):
civil rights have been violated. Okay, multiple agencies, the City
of Cincinnati, the police Department, Hamilton County Justice Center, and
ten officers John Doe officers, because I guess they don't
know the names of the officers that just merely showed
up in court for his hearing. They say Rodney's fourth, sixth, eighth,
(08:52):
and fourteen Amendment rights were violated. So we go back
to the eighth ten year old Ryan Hinton getting shot
by the so far unnamed Sin Sint Police officer not
named because well out of fear for his life.
Speaker 5 (09:07):
I'm sure.
Speaker 2 (09:09):
Rodney Hinton Junior then crashed his car into former Hammond
County sheriff Deputy Larry Henderson, killing him. He was arrested,
facing multiple charges, including some that might carry the death
penalty if he's convicted. During his court of first court appearance, Right,
and you already saw the scene if you're paying attention
to local news, there were dozens of Sheriff's deputies there
in the courtroom showing support for their fellow deputy, Larry Henderson.
(09:37):
Don't recall that they uttered a syllable, but they were there. Also,
dozens of them showed up for his second hearing, the
bond hearing. Now, this lawsuit claims that the appearance from
the law enforcement agencies was a in the complaints. Were
a coordinated presence clearly intended to intimidate suppressed defense and
(10:02):
influence the judicial process. Oh, I guess they don't believe
that judges are capable of ignoring the presence of the
police officers and handing out justice. Intimidate who Antoinette Holly,
who filed the lawsuit on behalf of Hinton, is not
(10:22):
a licensed attorney. Mister Hinton Junior representing himself in the matter,
which I think speaks volumes to the merits of this lawsuit.
If I may underscore that Antoinette Holly said he was
walking out, and how the whole precinct seemed to be
in the courtroom. I don't even know what that sentence mean.
(10:45):
That was intimidation, like they had him shackled in handcuffs,
Like what did they think he was going to do?
Evaporate all the way described as a close friend to Hinton,
when you got him behind closed doors. We don't know
(11:07):
if he's eating. We don't know what's going on there
once they close those gates. We only know what we see.
Does that make any sense to anyone?
Speaker 5 (11:16):
Joe?
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Can you decipher what in the house he's talking about?
He has entitled the council, He is entitled the visitors.
If you're wondering what's going on inside the Hamilton County
lock up, just show up to visit him. You don't
have to storm the gate like our elected officials did
with the Ice headquarters. And detention facilities. Just show up,
(11:37):
then you'll know what's going on once they close those gates.
Lawsuit claims when Rodney Hinton Junior was arrested, he was
subjected to excessive force resulting invisible injuries. Now, apparently he
did have visible injuries to his head, but he was
involved in a crash, and according to the release, he
(12:01):
had been hospitalized after the crash in critical condition. We're
not quite sure which injuries were caused by the crash,
but yes, I do believe it's certainly possible that the
injuries that were revealed in the courtroom he did to
himself when he ran the deputy. Lawsuit also claims the
decision to deny him bond is a violation of the
(12:23):
Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution. In Ohio's pre
trial procedure, According to the lawsuit, at his arrangement, mister
Hinton appeared visibly beaten. He appeared that way, handcuffed and
dressed in jail attires, signaling to the court and public
that he was guilty despite having not been convicted. Well,
(12:45):
you know what signaled to the court and the public
that he was guilty. The fact that he ran his
car into a deputy, witnessed by multiple witnesses, arrested on
the scene, and of course taken to the hospital because
he injured himself ramming the police saw or the sheriff's deputy.
I know he is presumed innocent until proven guilty. I'm
(13:06):
not ignoring the realities of the criminal justice system. But
this isn't like something that we're trying to recreate because
there were no witnesses there. This isn't something that the
police went out and found him after he fled the scene,
and we have question marks over whether or not they
got the right guy. I mean, all those kind of
question marks don't really exist in this one, now, do they,
(13:29):
Which is one of the things I'm sure the judge decided,
ignoring the police officers and law enforcement in the room,
ignoring the fact of his attire, whether it was an
orange jumpsuit or he was there in a suit, that
they do have all of this evidence against them, and
that he would go off on a tear and attack
a random law enforcement officer who had nothing to do
(13:51):
with the death of his son. I think suggests that
he is a risk for the community at large, which
would result in him being denied bond, maybe a fight
risk too charge with one kind of aggravated murder. Then
the grand jury showed up and indicted him on a
second charge of aggravated murder and additional charges of murder
(14:14):
plus two counts of flonious assault. That's your grand jury
indictment right there. Oh, and there's another website raising money
for this guy. Five nineteen fifty five air see de
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Speaker 6 (15:49):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station, the Ford.
Speaker 7 (15:54):
Oval of.
Speaker 2 (15:59):
Tell nine other forecast to day, cloudy, healid afternoon storm's
likely highest seventy two overnight clouds, slight chanceer rain overnight
sixty for the low, mostly cloudy day, a mama scattered
afternoon storms in highest seventy six, overnight sixty two with
a slight chance of rain, and on Thursday, cloudy beginning
of the day, storms approaches, the cold front shows up
(16:22):
and passes eighty four for the high on Thursday. That's
a hot one sixty five right now, fifty five kerc
DE talk station. Yeah, good point, cribbage, Mike, this kind
of message from Mike, my submarine or friend. Judge Yas
took the extra measure for mister Hinton by placing him
(16:44):
in the Claremont County jail for his own safety, doing
him as service, he says, sounds like the strong arm
of the law to me. He he also noticed, you
take a look at the envelope with the law. It
looks like was written by a second grader. And I
presume that something you know that maybe not in purporle
(17:05):
crayon or something, Mike. But since she is not a
licensed attorney, mister Hinton is representing himself in this absurd lawsuit. Again,
I think it's designed to stir up controversy where none
exists and present the perception that there's been some abuse
of the judicial authority or legal process in order to
perhaps I don't know gin up money for the fundraising.
(17:29):
People will donate to anything. So he does have another
fundraiser out there trying to raise money online for his
legal defense. Of course, he's facing all these aggravated murder
among other charges. The family attempted to raise funds for
his legal defense and a Go Fundme campaign which was pulled.
It was removed well because it violated the Go fundme
(17:51):
the rules. They have rules on there. You can't raise
money for people who have been accused of criminal activity
or something along those lines. I'm paraphrasing. Hinton's sister, Kiyara
launched a new one on Give Send Go, which has
now raised forty thousand dollars or around forty thousand dollars,
(18:11):
which doubled the initial goal, which was twenty thousand dollars.
In the fundraising post, she approached the express condolence is
the Deputy Henderson's family and then went on to hold
her hand out and asked for money, saying, mental health
is a real thing. Please check on your people who
show signs of mental illness, I guess suggesting, which apparently
(18:34):
the defense attorneys may use an insanity plea in an
effort to defend him from the murder charges, they say.
According to reporting from Local twelve Thank You James Pilcher,
twelve hundred dollars have contributed to the campaign, some from overseas,
and he writes, while many contributors believe Hinton deserves a
(18:57):
robust legal defense, some have also called for continue violence
against police, and there you have it. There is a
certain subset of the environment out there, the subset of
the population that still believes all police are evil. And
if you kill a police officer like Rodney or mister
Hinton Junior did or allegedly did, then you are on
(19:17):
the good side of the ledger. You're doing the right
thing for the community in the world by killing a
police officer, a law enforcement officer. FOP president Ken Kober,
who's on this program regularly, it's disappointing that you have
a platform that allows somebody to raise money for someone
that's killed a cop, but it doesn't violate their policy.
Gofund Me took a different stance and took it down,
(19:39):
and that's something we certainly appreciate. Spokesman Forgives and Go
said that while the company is heartbroken over Henderson's death,
their policy does not automatically remove fundraisers based on charges
or allegation. They think everyone deserves a chance to get help,
no matter the circumstances. Of course, you can tap into
those out there that hate police and believe that this
(19:59):
was a well Rodney Hinton Junior's actions were laudable on
some twisted level five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty,
five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three talk
go with pound five fifty. If you have an at
and t found love to hear from you, maybe you
got some thoughts on ideas on that or something else
that's going on in the world. First, I want to
mention QC kinetics for my listeners are struggling with knee pain,
(20:21):
hip pain, back pain. Uh, even dealing with doctors for
a while, maybe one of them is suggested that you
go into the knife. There's a different way and it
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(21:25):
live your best life again. This consultation is free three
times five one three eight four seven zero zero one
nine five one three eight four seven zero zero one
nine number three five one three eight four seven zero
zero one nine fifty five KRC the talk station. Don't
get suckered into here. It is your Channel nine weather forecast,
(21:48):
thauty humid storms. This afternoon are likely. They're saying seventy
two for the high overnight lowess sixty with a slight
chance of rain. Cloudy tomorrow, scattered afternoon storms high seventy
six clouds, small chance rain overnight with a lull of
sixty two and hot Thursday catty beginning of the day.
Eighty four will be are high on Thursday. It's sixty
(22:09):
five right now. I think I have ker CD talk stations.
Someone send a search party out. Where's Tom five one
three seven eight hundred two three talk pound five fifty
on EHT and T funds. Tom doesn't own the segment.
Since he's not on the phone, you can feel free
to call maybe want to chime in on something I'd
love to hear from you. I do encourage listeners to
call in on topics that they are interested in speaking about.
Speaker 8 (22:32):
UH.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Since a city council is going to be voting tomorrow
on a thirty year property tax exemption for a developer
that's going to rehab CAREW Tower into a department into apartments, UH.
Yesterday the Budget and Finance Committee approved the agreement. They
believe The city leaders believe it will contribute to efforts
to revitalize downtown Cincinnati. According to Jeff Cameron in a statement,
(22:54):
it's sitting there vacant, without offices, without residential, without retail,
there will be a hole in the middle of downtown.
I can't argue with that one hundred and sixty one
point nine million dollars project. It comes with a substantial
tax incentive for the New York based developer, thirty year
tax exemption worth thirty seven million dollars now. According to
(23:16):
the report from wcpo's Jay Shacker, Thank you Jay. Our
city leaders believe the project will help meet the city's
housing goals and significantly increase the residential population in the
downtown area. Joe's editorial comment on the article, I guess
there won't be any low income housing here. Rents for
(23:38):
a one bedroom will start average rent will start at
nineteen hundred and fifty bucks during the tax free period
thirty year tax exemption. Notice how I emphasize the thirty
part because it's reported here. During the tax free period,
the developer is projected to contribute sixteen point seven million
dollars to the Cincinnati Public Schools, one million dollars to
(24:02):
the street car generate nine hundred and sixty two thousand
dollars in income tax. I don't know if you add
all that together, I don't think it comes anywhere near
the thirty seven million dollars that the thirty year tax
exemption is worth anyway. Two hundred and forty six one
bedroom units with an average rent of nineteen hundred and
fifty bucks, one hundred and nine two bedroom units average
(24:24):
rent twenty seven hundred dollars and twenty three bedroom units
average rent thirty three hundred dollars sound a little bit
pricey to you, Joe, shaking his head in disbelief. Does
that comport with a connected Communities development? Joe, I haven't
(24:46):
run you know across reference that with connected communities. We'll
just have to leave. The two are elected officials. Since
the man accused of shooting someone while a child was
with him in his car, forty one year old Michael
Chandler facing charges of flonious assault and dangering children and
weapons charges in Hamilton County. According to the criminal complaint,
police detective belief Chandler had a child in his car
(25:08):
with him on Saturday when he drove up to a
gas station to shoot a man. Once there, police believe
he shot the man at least twice, grazing the victim
and causing him to quote serious physical harm. That's in
the documents that could detectives haven't said why they think
Chandler did it or what relationship he has with a victim.
(25:28):
That's going to say Chandler isn't allowed to have a
gun because he was convicted of flonious assault in twenty
eighteen in jail on a fifty thousand dollars bond. I
guess he was it in front of Judge Silverstein. Joe
wasn't supposed to have but there's a law in the
books that says he's not allowed to have a gun.
(25:51):
There ought to be another law, I guess, and that'll
force people to comply with the law. I'm kind of
lost in the math on that one too. Five one three, seven,
four nine fifty five eight hundred eight two three tag
found five fifty on eight T and T phones. I
do have a stack of stupid to dive on into.
Prefer hearing from you, but it's entirely up to the
listening audience, and I definitely want to recommend Bud Herbert
(26:13):
Motors had a terrible experience at the box store. I
mentioned that many times before, but you know, you have
a terrible experience and you have a better experience, And
thank God for west Side, Jim Key, for Brian. Why
didn't you just get in touch with Bud Herbert Motors.
It's pretty much a direct statement from the phone call
I had with him after I was lamenting how terrible
my experience was at the box store. What a great
difference it was working with Bud Herbert. First off, you're
(26:34):
working with one of the fifth generation family Herbert family members.
They they're proud of the business. They're proud of what
they're I guess great great great grandfather started and they
continue the family tradition. Great customer service, very knowledgeable about
the superior products they sell, and they only carry the
finest law and equipment and big stuff too. Like to mention,
if you need a tractor for your farm, called Bud
(26:56):
Herbert Motors, John Deere, x mart Steel, Haunt of Power equipment.
So they've got all the great stuff and you will
get great customer service. They will deliver that maybe to
you as they did with me, and they service everything
they sell. I'm getting my lawnmower back today. They picked
it up last week. It'll be top running order with
new oil, change in the blade, sharpen and all that.
(27:17):
So I'm looking forward to getting it back, although that
just means I have to cut the grass when I'm
able to. But impressive knowledge, impressive customer service. It's time
for the Weather Channelian weather forecast. What's on a plate here?
We have a cloudy and humid dates today with afternoon
storms likely in highest seventy two, got clouds o every night,
(27:40):
slight chance of rain sixty for the low. Seventy six
are high Tomorrow with clouds and afternoon scattered storms, clouds
over night, slight chance of range sixty two for the low,
and a hot Thursday going up to eighty four degrees.
They say cloudy beginning. I don't know what that fourtends
for the balance of the day, but eighty four for
the high end. Let's see here, we'll be looking at
(28:02):
right now, sixty five degrees. It's five Krcity talk station
time for first traffic from the UCL Traffic Center. You see,
health has expert in traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries,
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Speaker 7 (28:16):
Learn more and you see Health dot com. Highways are
doing fine early on this Tuesday morning. Somewhat roads to
deal with, but right now I'm not seeing any problems
because of the rain. North Beouth seventy five doing just fine.
At Kyle's South seventy five under fifteen minutes Sharonville, the
town Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR.
Speaker 9 (28:36):
See the talk station.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
It's five forty it is Tuesday. Stating the obvious means
we're getting the inside scoop with Bright Bardon News and
the Daniel Davis Deep Dive in the eight o'clock hour.
Always enjoy talking to the folks and always interesting conversation,
not exactly uplifting with Daniel Davis on the situation with
Russian Ukraine three seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight
(29:02):
hundred and eighty two three Talk found Fact fifty on
AT and T phones. Remember fifty five CARC dot Comedy
can't listen live to Christopher Smithman on a Monday. Get
the smith event there on the podcast page. Also Monday
Monday with Brian James and a great seminar tonight for
my friends out there and the listening audience have been
following the perils of COVID nineteen vaccines. Doctor Robert Malone,
It's going to do a seminar on that tonight and
(29:23):
really eye opening conversation. Short is short, it was compared
to the length of the empower Youse seminar. It's a
log in only seminar. Register before seven pm this evening
and enjoy any eye opening realities what doctor Robert Malone
will revealed to you about the dangers of COVID nineteen
uh and known dangers too COVID nineteen vaccine. Boy, I'm
(29:46):
glad I didn't get it after read sh Man. Anyway
over to the stack of stube. I've got a Pennsylvania
man now going to be spending decades in prison for
stabbing and beating his grandmother to death before setting her
body on fire. Twenty nine year old George Cisco sends
the twenty nine and a half to sixty years in
(30:06):
prison after pleading guilty but mentally ill to third degree murder,
arson and terroristic threats regarding the April twenty twenty four
death of sixty seven year old Margie Finley. This Cord
of the Pennsylvania Pike County District Attorney's Office in a
press release Cruse showed up April twenty sixth last year
(30:26):
to a fire at Finley's home in Milford Township. Firefighters
battle to the blaze. They found Cisco covered in blood
in the front of the house. He didn't respond when
an assistant fire chief asked him if he needed help.
Defendant walked further into the home and threatened anyone who
tried to enter it, saying she was the devil and
I had to do it. Firefighters put out the fire
(30:50):
found Finley dead in the kitchen. According to prosecutor, Cisco
admitted to police he killed his grandmother and started the
fire in the house, saying the flea medication she was
putting on the cat was harmful. He slashed his grandmother's throat,
stabbed her before using a kitchen rag. This set her
(31:11):
on fire. He told reporters with the Pennsylvania State Police
that the Bible said, quote in order to kill the devil,
he must use the Holy Spirit and fire close quote. Well,
I guess the Holy Spirit suspiciously absent from his conduct
that day. Autopsy determined the cause of death was blunt
(31:33):
forced trauma and sharp injury. Psychological exam originally deemed Cisco,
who was diagnosed with schizophrenia incompetent to stan trial. A
second one, though, cleared him. You keep taking another stab
at it, You're gonna get it. Finley's son said his
mother loved Cisco before calling him a monster. His attorney
(31:53):
said his client lost his way when he stopped taking
his medication. Pike kennedysh attorney Ray talking in a statement,
there are no winners here. The loved ones of Margie
Finley deeply grieve their loss and that can never be
fully repaired. Uh yeah, Wow.
Speaker 5 (32:20):
All I could say was wow.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
A woman married for twelve years and mother two turned
to artificial intelligence chat vot, developed by open Ai, asked
it to interpret the coffee grounds in a photo of
her husband's cop tassiography. I guess is what this is
referred to when you try to read the coffee grounds
(32:43):
and determine the future or your fate based on coffee grounds.
Thank you, Joe. There's the bubbling bong of stupidity for
anyone who believes in that chat. GPT allegedly told her
that her husband based on the coffee grounds. Mind you,
her husband was having an affair with a younger woman
who was determined to tear the family apart. She didn't
(33:06):
question artificial intelligence interpretation of the coffee grounds immediately initiated
divorce proceedings. Idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots, article
report of the Greek City Times. Appearing on the Greek
morning show Toe Proino, the husband recovered the incident, saying
she's often into trendy things. He said, one day she
(33:27):
made us Greek coffee and thought it'll be fun to
take pictures of the cups and have chat GPT read
them resolved a corner of the chatbot. His cup revealed
a mysterious woman with the initial E that he was
supposedly fantasizing about and with whom he was destined to
begin a relationship, says his Wife's cup, on the other hand,
(33:51):
painted a much darker picture that he was already cheating
on her and the other woman wanted to destroy their home.
Husband said of the TV program, he laughed it off
as nonsense, but she took it seriously. She asked me
to leave, told our kids we were getting divorced, and
then I got a call from a lawyer. That's when
I realized that this wasn't just a phase. He refused
agree to the mutual separation, formerly served with divorce papers
(34:14):
three days later. Husband noted it wasn't the first time
his wife had fallen under the spell of supernatural guidance,
saying a few years ago she visited an astrologer and
took a whole year for her to accept that none
of it was real. His lawyer emphasized the claims made
by the AI chatbot have no legal standing, stressing that
the husband is innocent until proven otherwise. Well, actually, I
(34:40):
think she's probably doing him as service. If I was
married to a nutcase like that, i'd want to get
the hell out. Yeah, he definitely is dodging a bullet.
God knows what she'd be doing down the road.
Speaker 5 (34:50):
Joe.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
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Speaker 10 (35:49):
Fifty five KRC Time for your.
Speaker 2 (35:56):
UH Channel nine weather forecast. What have we got going on?
It's gonna be muggy day, A cloudy day, storms likely
in the afternoon with the highest seventy two overnight loss
sixty with a slight chance of rain. Clouds tomorrow with
scattered afternoon storms seventy six for the high overnight lois
sixty two with a slight chance of rain and a
hot Thursday, going up to eighty four degrees. They say,
(36:17):
a cloudy start to the day. I don't know what
that means for the rest of the day, but at
least we get clouds in the morning.
Speaker 7 (36:21):
Right now, sixty five degrees. Time for a traffic update
from the uc UP Traffic Center. You see health hands
expert traumacare focusing non prevention, treating injuries and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more, and you see how
dot Com Highways not fan at all for your Tuesday
morning commute. No recks to deal with and no overnight
work crews in your way. Southbound seventy one currently under
(36:44):
fifteen minutes between Blue Ash and downtown chuck Ingram on
fifty five KR Seed the talk station.
Speaker 2 (36:56):
Five fifty one fifty five KR Seed talk station returning
to the stacker. Stupid A man seen recording a young
mother who was breastfeeding her child on a bus.
Speaker 5 (37:12):
This is in Britain.
Speaker 2 (37:13):
Man caught filming the mother as she breastfed her baby
on the bus told horrified passengers who challenged him, f off,
I'm English, don't know what the hell that's both.
Speaker 5 (37:24):
To mean anyway.
Speaker 2 (37:25):
The woman homed Out Sully, twenty seven years old, traveling
to visit her friend. Right after she got on the bus,
a shock passenger shouted at her to say, hey, another
passenger is filming her and zooming in on her chest.
Hommed out to Healthcare Assystem, demanded to know why he
was filming. The man ignored her, according to Manchester Evening
News reporting on this. In response, she began to video
(37:47):
the man while other passengers stepped in to defend the
young mother, people with cell phone cameras. Footage shows the
man wearing a it says, a high vis vest. High
visibility vest. I guess that's like a conspiguity or something anyway.
Being confronted by the passengers, who were described as being
appalled before, he claims to have deleted the clip from
his phone. When one passenger demands to see proof, he replies,
(38:12):
f off, you're not touching my phone. Who do you
think you are? You're not the police. Second passenger then
suggests checking the gallery on the man's phone for proof
that he deleted the clip. The man replies, f off,
who do you think you are? I'm English and I
live here. What amadad originally from Nigeria, which seems to
(38:38):
be pointless in terms of the subject matter of the
stack of stupid article. Lives in Manchester said the man
was later confronted by the bus driver, who kicked him
off the bus. Took place while she was traveling on
a B Network bus from Manchester to Ashen. She reported
the incident to the police, said she'd been left feeling
horrible by it. Said a voice reached out to me
and at the back of the bus and told me
(38:59):
that the man was filming breastfeeding and he was zooming
in on my boobs. Asked the man if he was
recording me and to delete it in the video, but
he wasn't answering. That's when I picked up my phone
and started recording. When he was asked why you thought
it was okay to film a breastfeeding mother, he said
he has rights because he's English. How can you say
(39:19):
that you have rights to film a breastfeeding mother because
you're English. It's a legitimate retort to his claim. I
don't know what his being English has anything to do
with it. Anyway, you'll find him everywhere the East. Perverts
and an award to give out this morning. Ryan Jacob Duhon,
thirty four years older, Jefferson City, arrested in charge with
(39:39):
allegedly assaulting not only a Coal County deputy, but also
abusing a child. Happened over this past weekend, facing multiple
charges including abuse and assault. Coal County Sheriff's officer responded
to the fifty one hundred block West Business for a
report of child abuse May tenth in the afternoon. Deputy
showed up the scene located a seven year old child
who had a large bruise on his face and cut
(40:01):
inside the cheek. Witnesses accused Ryan Jacob Dillon, who's thirty four,
of playing with the juvenile when he made a statement
about disciplining the victim. This, according to court documents, he
then allegedly punched the child in the face with a
closed fist. Witnesses note of the Duhon was very intoxicated
when this incident occurred. Deputy's question regarding the allegation, to
(40:24):
which he stated incoherently, thank you. There was guidance that
needed given he did something about it. Close quote. Try
to make some sense out of that. Let me know
if it means anything probable cause. Stamens showed that after
being arrested and taken him to the Coal County jail.
He kicked the patrol car's doors open or door open,
and then also hit a deputy. Also reportedly kicked the
(40:45):
deputy's knee while outside the car and threatened to find
out where they live. Charge the first degree assault of
a special difference agree assault in child ease galaxies.
Speaker 5 (40:58):
There's no big adue. You're done.
Speaker 2 (41:00):
You you planning to talk about in six o'clock hour,
I'd love to hear from you if you got a comment.
Five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred eight two three talk. I'll be right back after
the news. News happens fast, stay up to date at
the top of the hour. Not gonna be complicated. It's
gonna go very fast.
Speaker 11 (41:18):
Fifty five krz the talk station, Aaron, I've got an idea.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
Is it a new six sixty fifty five kr CD
talk station?
Speaker 5 (41:26):
Happy to day two?
Speaker 2 (41:27):
Yeah, just stayble. American veterans Dan Claire joins US seventh
third talk about a DAB boot camp this weekend. Get
details at seven thirty Get the inside scoop a bright
Bart news the return at Deputy Politics that are Bradley
j Why are Senators against Ed Martin for the Department
of Justice? Post Daniel Davis Deep dive at eight thirty
latest on Russia and since Ava joins a program at
(41:47):
eight forty with some details from my veteran friends in
a listening audience, feel free to call if you got
a comment five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty, five hundred,
eight hundred eighty two three talk pound five fifty on
AT and T phones. Making the headlines. You know, the
this whole big beautiful bill that they keep referring to
it as one big beautiful bill to cut government spending
and cut back waste, throw out into use. It's just nonsense.
(42:11):
And I was on a bit of a tear the
outside of the program because you know, we Republicans have
the power and control through reconciliation to put something substantial
and meaningful through, and we're just focused on bright and
shiny objects that are important but nonetheless don't bring about
any really significant savings or cuts to the government spending.
(42:34):
So you got bill proposals come into the House Ways
and Means Committee, you got the Energy and Commerce Committee,
and you got the House Agricultural Committee, and you know
there are some changes to Medicaid requiring able bodied adults
to work, volunteer, or undergo training to be if you're
able body without young children or dependents, you got to
work at least eighty hours a month or perform the
(42:56):
same number of hours volunteering or undergoing training. Fine, they
have to verify eligibility twice per year rather than the
current one time a year. It would cut a five
percent increase in federal funding from Medicaid that was put
into place during COVID nineteen and why not because there
ain't no more COVID nineteen. And it would also prohibit
federal funding to states not ensuring the participants are US citizens.
(43:19):
Fine Good Sounds, Good, Right, Ways and Means and Energy
Commerce measures curb billions of dollars in federal funding policies
regarding fossil fuel and renewable energy. For example, the Energy
Committee slashes funding the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, repeals federal
funding to address air pollution, cuts funding with low emissions
electricity programs, repeals spending on dozens of other related programs,
(43:42):
including the Environmental and Climate Justice Block Grants. All Great
Ways and Means Committee measure cuts green energy products funded
by the Biden Air Inflation Reduction Act. Fine, here's where
the rower meets the road. CBO determine the changes to Medicaid,
energy and other parts of these bills would reduce the
deposite ready eight hundred and eighty billion dollars over ten years,
(44:06):
which is nothing. Pivoting over to Ron Johnson, say what
you want about Ron Johnson. He wrote an open letter
pointing out the problem with what they're proposing right now.
The one big, beautiful bill of Congress is working on
a certainly big with beauties in the ee the beholder,
he writes, Too often the reality of these budget debates
(44:27):
gets obscured in details like the ones I just mentioned.
Those will make the headlines like defunding Planned parenthood. Fine,
oh my god, headlines everywhere about that one. But the
reality is in it is a bit different when you
look at it on a broader scale, he said. Let
me attempt to clarify the current discussion by focusing on
(44:49):
the most important facts and numbers. In fiscal twenty nineteen,
federal outlays total four point four to five trillion, that's
twenty point six percent of gross domestic product. This year,
total outlays will be seven point zero three trillion, twenty
three point three percent of GDP. That's a fifty eight
(45:10):
percent increase over six years. CBO projects federal outlies outlays
will total are you ready eighty nine point three trillion
dollars across fiscal twenty twenty six to thirty five. Much
of the blame goes to pandemic spending, but lockdowns are
long over. There's nothing now to justify this abnormal level
(45:32):
of government spending. Pathetically, Congress is having a hard time
agreeing on a reduction of even one point five trillion
dollars over ten years, a one point six eight percent cut,
which he refers to as a little more than a
rounding error. So my guess is that much of that
miniscule decrease will be backloaded to the end of the
(45:53):
ten years for which Congress is now budgeting. Increase in
the probability of those savings will never be realized by
way of comparison, he said, other than during World War II,
the increase in spending we've experienced over the past six
years is unprecedented. After the war of Congress and Trump,
President Truman understood the importance of returning spending normal levels
nineteen forty one, total outlays thirteen eleven point seven percent
(46:18):
of gross domestic product, peaking at forty one percent of
GDP in nineteen forty five, a five hundred and seventy
seven percent increase. Of course, we were fighting World War two.
That's ten times as large as what we experienced with
the pandemic. Yet by nineteen forty eight, federal outlays were
back down to about eleven percent of GDP. They righted
(46:43):
the ship, says nineteen forty eight, government has steadily grown,
and spending as a percentage of GDP has more than doubled.
That level far exceeds the size and scope of government
the Founders envisioned. In nineteen thirty, prior to President Franklin
Roosevelt's New Deal, federal outlay were three point five percent
of GDP. State and local expenditures nine point one. The
(47:07):
foundational premise of America and the Tenth Amendment a limited
federal government with most governing occurring close to the governed
at the state and local level. That vision, a limited
federal government now unattainable, but returning to a reasonable pre
pandemic level of spending is doable. The economy is no
longer forcibly shut down. Congress should at least be able
(47:28):
to bring spending back to twenty nineteen share GDP, which
would be a total six point four to seven trillion
dollars over the next over the next fiscal year, eight
hundred and thirty eight billion below the CBO's current fiscal
twenty twenty six spending projection of seven point twenty nine
(47:50):
trillion dollars, returning federal outlays to twenty point six percent
of GDP, saving eight point four trillion dollars over ten years,
a lot better than the paltry goal of one point
five trillion, which they can barely agree on right now.
The Central the Congress deviate from the current path, he writes,
(48:11):
under every scenario now being considered, federal debt continues to
skyrocket from its current level of almost thirty seven trillion dollars.
CBO's current projection, adds, are you ready twenty two trillion
over the next ten years, resulting in total debt of
approximately fifty nine trillion by twenty thirty five, which is
(48:33):
literally right around the corner. That'd be one hundred and
thirty four percent of GDP, numbers that we've never seen
in the history of our country. That projection assumes an
automatic tax increase will occur when the twenty seventeen cuts expire,
which the Republicans are currently working on extending those permanently,
which means, in the projections of the CBO, less money
(48:55):
flowing into government. Now, I know that doesn't account for
additional economic activity by keeping the permanent tax cuts or
making the tax cuts permanent, but that's the dollar and
cents reality. No one can accurately predict the dynamic economic
effects of changes in tax law, tariffs, and the current
trade war. But by repealing the automatic tax increase, adding
(49:17):
one point five trillion in additional tax cuts, pumping around
three hundred and forty billion into additional border and defense spending,
and reducing other spending by almost at most one point
five trillion, the One Big Beautiful Bill will almost certainly
add to our deficits and debt. I doubt mister Trump's
(49:37):
voters expressed expect us to continue spending at Biden's levels,
which led to the inflation that they elected Republicans last
year to stop. I doubt too, that Trump voters will
be elated to see the gd GOP embrace democratic policies
and priorities, including Obamacare, which seems to have found new
life under the name Medicaid expansion, and I can't imagine
that they want Republicans to increase annual deficits. That's why
(50:00):
I can't support this bill as it's currently being discussed,
and doubt that it will pass the Senate. It's also
why I'm asking the President and congressional leaders to reconsider
the multi step strategy on budget reconciliation. By passing a
bill based on this Senate's original budget resolution, we can
fund border security and defense priorities and bank eight hundred
(50:21):
and fifty billion in real spending reductions. Step two, pass
the bill that extends a current tax law a tax
law to prevent the automatic twenty twenty six increase and
avoid default by including a smaller increase in the debt
ceiling that maintains the pressure and leverage to achieve further
spending reductions. With those goals, achieve Phase three, sufficient incentive
(50:43):
would remain to address President Trump's tax proposals focusing on
working men and women that have already expired business tax
provisions in his twenty seventeen tax law that also give
us time to simplify and rationalize the tax code and
go line by line through the entire federal budget to uncover, expose,
and eliminate the hundreds of billions of dollars a waste
for ad abuse that the Doge effort has shown exists.
(51:04):
If we don't, America has headed off a cliff. I
know it's a lot to absorb there, folks, but in
the final analysis, the point is one point five trillion
dollars in cuts over the next decade is getting us nowhere.
Why do we continue to spend at COVID nineteen level spending.
(51:25):
Why do the Democrats stand in the way of anything
reasonable by way of expectations, like that an able bodied
man in his thirties shouldn't be eligible for medicaid, He
should be out there getting a job, or at least
showing some effort to get a job. Cooking yourself up
in the biblical court of government when you're capable of
employment is absolutely I think I call it sinful. It's absurd.
(51:48):
It's obscene that you and I are working to pay
for that person to sit at home and literally not
lift a finger to do anything. But the mere mention
of that type of reform is logical and reasonable. It seems,
brings out the Democrats condemning the Medicaid health insurance changes.
Millions of people will lose their healthcare. That's right, millions
of people who shouldn't be getting healthcare through Medicaid because
(52:09):
they're capable of going out and gaining some gainful employment.
We've gone that crap insane in this country, and as
mister Johnson points out, we're heading off a cliff six
seventeen five care see the talk station. Feel free to
(52:30):
call five point three seven four nine fifty eight hundred
and eighty two to three talk pound five fifty on
eighteen and T phones.
Speaker 5 (52:36):
Not a bit agitated, don't I?
Speaker 2 (52:40):
So I have higher expectations for our elected officials than
I guess I should have. Maybe I need some quiet reflection,
which I could get at kate i Havn Cemetery, Montgomery.
The beauty maintained there is well, it's actually just epic,
beautiful rolling hills, mature trees. Get the winding pathways and roads.
Take a stroll, enjoy the beautiful well flowers coming up.
(53:03):
They got seasonal flowers. It's always beautifully maintained. Reflective water
features it's a tranquil atmosphere. It's perfect for peace, reflection,
maybe prayer. So why not head on over and enjoy
some comfort in the surroundings there at Gate of Heaven
Cemetery of Montgomery, ministering to the tri State for over
seventy seven years and open to everyone for their enjoyment,
(53:25):
honoring life on sacred ground. You can learn more online
check them out gateof Heeaven dot.
Speaker 10 (53:30):
Org fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (53:35):
Here is your.
Speaker 9 (53:35):
Tannel nine first one and wafolcast.
Speaker 2 (53:37):
Got a cloudy, humid day to day. Storms are likely
this afternoon in a highest seventy two Overblois sixty with
a slight chance rain. Cloudy sky Tomorrow was scattered afternoon
storms highest seventy six clouds every night, slight chance rain
sixty two for the low and on Thursday going all
the way up to eighty four degrees and we're carrying
with it some clouds sixty five degrees right now.
Speaker 7 (53:56):
Time for a traffic update. Chuck Ingram from the UCU
Tramphing Center. You see health Hans expert traumacare focusing on prevention,
treating injuries, and supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn
morit you see help dot com. High wait tramping continues
to look good this morning. No REX to deal with
right now. I'm not seeing any delays. Just beginning to
(54:18):
build a bit northbound seventy five into the cut. Chuck
Ingram on fifty five care and see the talk station.
Speaker 2 (54:27):
Called about six twenty two fifty five carcity talk station.
Always welcome phone call. It's got a few callers on
the line, which puts a smile on my face. We'll
start with what's sae Jim, Jim, Welcome back to the
fifty five Carcy Morning Sho.
Speaker 5 (54:38):
Always a pleasure hearing from you.
Speaker 12 (54:40):
Good morning, Brian Thomas. A little bit off topic of
what you were talking about, but it's about that sheriff
deputy continuing saga, I sent you a video and it
went through on a private message, so I'm hoping that
you got it.
Speaker 13 (54:55):
Joe got it.
Speaker 2 (54:55):
Yeah, the black Panthers, well.
Speaker 12 (54:58):
Yeah, and he's walking around in front of the woorhouse
with a crossbow.
Speaker 5 (55:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (55:03):
And in the video he talks about keeping the people
safe and how he feels intimidated and all this kind
of stuff kind of reminds me of that thing out
there by Lincoln Heights with those guys the Ku Klux
Klan or whatever they called theirselves. But this guy's walking
around with a crossbow. I mean, you're telling me that
that doesn't instigate and try to start trouble by walking
(55:26):
around dressed up in military garb.
Speaker 2 (55:28):
Well, I listen. I know that he has the right
to open carry in the state, and I guess I
can support that right. I am not a fan of
open carry for along the lines of the same things
you're pointing out. It is intimidating to a lot of people,
and I think that's what it's designed to do, to
intimidate people. But he does have a right to keep
(55:49):
him bare arms and he can wear whatever the hell
he wants. I think he looks foolish in his military guarb,
but he claims he's there to protect the protesters who
are protesting the prosecution of Ronnie Enton Junior for reasons
that go beyond my comprehension, because I don't know that
the guy's worthy of support. But that's my conclusion. You know,
the world's filled with opinions. Opinions are like sphincter's. We
(56:10):
all have one. It doesn't mean that it's necessarily appropriate,
but we do have a right to free speech. And
if people want to support Rodney Hinton Junior, the guy
who ran over the sheriff's deputy, who had literally nothing
at all to do with Rodney Hinton Junior's son being
shot by police, then they're entitled to protest.
Speaker 12 (56:28):
And now they have a federal lawsuit trying to protect
the civil rights of this gentleman who ran over the
officer out there, who was doing, like you just said,
absolutely nothing but trying to earn a couple extra bucks
for his family. Clyde Bennett, who is representing him, claims
that he has nothing to do with it, and he
doesn't it.
Speaker 2 (56:49):
It was filed by a woman who is not a
licensed attorney, making insane arguments about his various constitutional rights
being violated. It's a bunch of nonsense, and I think
call it is is designed to gin up controversy among
people who have no concept or understanding of what the
Constitution means, what these various amendments stand for, and the
idea that yeah, in an open gallery, uniformed shriff's deputies
(57:13):
are allowed to show up and appear at a hearing,
suggesting that somehow that intimidated the judge, like the judge
is incapable of ignoring law enforcement presence. Judge is there
to establish bond and determined bond based upon public safety
and the underlying controversy, flight risk and all those factors.
And of course they did the right thing by this
guy by putting him in the Claremont County lock up
(57:34):
rather than the Hamilton County lockup, where the fear of
him being attacked and abused by Hamilton County Sriff's deputies
was I suppose some legitimate concern. So he's being treated
okay from under the law just because you file a
suit litigation myth number forty seven, your claim must have merit.
(57:55):
Appreciate it, Jim, always pleasure hearing from you. I just
ignore that stuff, really, just I mean, that's the only
default I can come down to it. Because again, they
have the right to protest if they want, and he
does have the right to walk around foolishly with a crossbow,
which I think is the dumbest weapon to have if
you're in a self defense situation. How was going to
take you to put another bolt in? Just asking? I
(58:18):
always think of those zombie movies with the guy with
the crossbow, like you got nine thousand zombies coming after you.
How much damage can you do with a crossbow? Six
twenty five fifty five cares to you Talk station. Get
in touch with Suseette Lowscamp, New Hampshire, Gary, your next
goe to mind holding for a moment. I want to
mention Suzette Low's Camp because if you need assistance with
a mortgage, like you're buying a house, uh, you want
to get in touch with Suzette Low'scamp across Country mortgage.
(58:40):
She knows everything there is to know about the mortgage
profession because she's been dealing with mortgages for more than
thirty five years. She'll get right back with you. She's
quick and great in customer service, the best in customer service.
You'll love working with her. I know my daughter did
and turn that around in no time. Compared to the
experience my daughter and her fiance were having with the bank,
Susette got had done in no time. Couple days is
all it took, and they got the place that they
(59:02):
had their eye on. She is licensed in all fifty
states as well as Puerto Rico. My friends in Puerto
Rico called Suzette Losa camp. They maybe get a second
mortgage or reverse mortgage if you think that's the right
thing to do. Cash out options, lines of credit. It's
all available through Suzette Losa Camp and she's working for
you as your broker. Access to all kinds of mortgage
(59:25):
options out there, so it's going to be great rates
at a low cost, even in these troubled rate times.
To call her, it's five one three three one three
fifty one seventy six five one three three one three
fifty one seventy six. Shoot her an email. She'll get
right back that way too. Suzette dot lows Camp which
is called l O s e KA MP. Suzette dot
lows Camp at CCM dot com.
Speaker 10 (59:46):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (59:48):
Waking up on Jenline. What aforecast two day, A humid day.
It'll be cloudy, skys and storms in the afternoon are
likely seventy two for the high overnight lows six. He
was slight chanceer rain got scattered afternoon storms tomorrow, mostly
cloudy all day in high seventy six by chance raine
every night sixty two below and eighty four of the
(01:00:09):
high on Thursday, at least the cloudy start of the
day don't know what the rest of the day has
in store for it, but that's the weather forecast.
Speaker 7 (01:00:15):
Sixty five degrees right now. Time for a traffic update,
Chuck from the UCL Traffic Center. You See Health has
expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at you see health
dot com. Highway traffic not banned, and for your Tuesday
morning in Pound seventy four continues to move along problem free,
(01:00:38):
approaching seventy five west. Pound two seventy five looks good
to love one, So does these Pound two seventy five
pass written Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR see the
talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:00:50):
Six point thirty on a Tuesday, I'm gonna go over
to the phones. Remind of the phone number five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
three talk or hit pound five fifty if you have
an eighteen tifum Mike hang on because New Hampshire Grey
was kind of enough to hold over the break there.
Welcome back, Gary. Always good to hear from you.
Speaker 4 (01:01:06):
Hey, Good to hear from you, Brian. Hey, as far
as this nutcase with a crossbow. There's nothing like freedom
of speech, because by your fruits you shall know them.
Speaker 9 (01:01:19):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (01:01:21):
I agree. You know, it's like those crazy client people
on the bridge. I know people are up said about
it and they think the world's coming to an end.
But you know, there's where the idiots are. You can
see them. They're identifying themselves. They're saying things that are
stupid out loud. That's good for us. We know who
to sell to stay away from. And it generates discussion
about their belief systems, which of course always reveals how
(01:01:42):
backcrap and saying their belief systems are. So more speech
equals better for everyone. I agree with you absolutely.
Speaker 4 (01:01:50):
Hey, as far as this irresponsible you were cracked on,
it's about the irresponsibility of the way we're spending our mind.
And it goes full the Republicans as well.
Speaker 2 (01:02:03):
Yes it does.
Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
I really believe, I really believe that they want to
crash the system.
Speaker 13 (01:02:08):
YEP, it's going to crash.
Speaker 4 (01:02:10):
And once they crash, they believe that they're going to
be around to pick up the pieces and make it
in their own image. That's the only thing that makes sense.
That's exactly what they're doing. Yeah, and there's nothing else
you could say that. That's what they're trying. Whether it
works or not, nobody knows.
Speaker 2 (01:02:27):
Well, we're the global default currency. We are the most
reliable person around in terms of the the worth of
our currency. And in order to knock us off this
lofty perch that we've been standing on now for the
last one hundred and fifty or so years, the left
has to do something to stop us. And the global
(01:02:48):
warming climate change concept is doing everything it can to
undermine our our stability in terms of the energy grid
and our ability to produce and consume, which is all
evil from their perspective. That's not going to quite do it.
So what else do you do? You refuse to cut
a single dime from the federal government spending, getting us
to the point where the vast majority of the money
that's taken in by way of taxes it goes to
(01:03:09):
debt service, in other words, our credit card interest bill,
basically ultimately leading to people not trusting the American fiat
currency and no longer borrowing money from us or or
buying our bonds, and then the whole thing comes collapsing down.
That's just due to the inevitable conclusion. It's just it's
you know, can you imagine if we had a credit score?
Speaker 5 (01:03:33):
Are are?
Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
Are we a responsible borrower? Appreciated?
Speaker 5 (01:03:38):
Gary?
Speaker 2 (01:03:39):
I think you're onto something I really do, and it's sad. Mike,
welcome to the program. Thank you for holding there.
Speaker 5 (01:03:45):
Hi, Brian, real.
Speaker 14 (01:03:46):
Quick about that guy down. But as they protecting the
protesters of a crossbow, two questions. Is he walking around
that loaded or is it just hearing it?
Speaker 2 (01:03:57):
Yeah, it's cocked, it's got a bolt in it.
Speaker 5 (01:04:00):
That's not safe.
Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
Well, no, they have modern cross bow not on. Modern
crossbows have safeties. I walk around with every handgun I
own is loaded and ready to go. Like if you
know what a nineteen eleven style firearm is in third stage,
you got the hammer pulled back, but it's got a
safety on it, and you can carry it around safely
and you're ready to fire. Just look the safety down.
(01:04:22):
Unhis you're holding onto the grip.
Speaker 14 (01:04:23):
So and also they might never tried to fire across
to draw the cable back on that thing. Yeah a bolt.
Speaker 2 (01:04:34):
Oh, I know, That's why I was joking about it.
When you see the zombie movies, there's always some idiot
running around with a crossbow killing zombies, Like, wait a second, Okay,
you got one. What about the rest of them? What
are they gonna do? Are they gonna pause their attack
while you're pulling the bow back and locking and putting
another bolt in. Yeah, it's a tough process the exactly.
(01:05:00):
But it looks scary, which I think is probably the point. Anyhow,
feel free to call let's see here. It looks like
I'm out of time for local stories, which I guess
is okay under the circumstances. Do have something to bring
to everybody's attention. Amendment which has been approved here in
the state of Ohio to eliminate property taxes a constitutional amendments.
(01:05:24):
This is a ballot initiative. What would our elected officials
do if they can't take in our property tax dollars?
If we so choose to vote on something like that.
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Speaker 6 (01:06:45):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
Here's what's trending now on the new and improved Channel nine.
First warning, while the forecast today we're gonna have clouds.
It's going to be human today, they're saying, and we
have afternoon storms that are likely seventy few. Today is
high overnight lottis sixty with a slight chance of rain
seventy six to high tomorrow again with afternoon scattered storms
(01:07:10):
and clouds. Thoughty every night with a slight chance of rain.
Sixty two for the low and a warm Thursday, eighty
four for the high with clouds. It's sixty five degrees.
Right now, it is time for traffic update. Chuck from
the u SEE Health Traffic Center. You See Health has
expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation.
Speaker 9 (01:07:31):
Learn more ed you'd see health dot com.
Speaker 7 (01:07:33):
Highways continue to look pretty good this morning northbound seventy five.
All of a sudden, I am seeing a bit of
slow traffic between Buttermilk and Kyle, So I'm looking for
a problem near Dixie Highway. Chuck ingramon fifty five KRE
and see the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:07:51):
Six forty eight fifty five kr SD talk station number
fifty five KR see dot com and you can't listen
to live Christopher Smith and doing the Smith Event every
Monday seven twenty and these evenings. Empower you seven or Dave,
I'll get you called just our j Rather, I'll get
your call just a second. Remind folks tonight seven pm,
empower Youoamerica dot org. Get to log in only Joy
(01:08:11):
from the comforty grown home. I had doctor Robert Malone
on yesterday. He's gonna be talking about the dangers of
the COVID mRNA vaccines, you know, approve without clinical trials
and a sketchy approval process, and all of the dangers
that have been revealed after basically the entire globe went
through this clinical trial and all these bad things manifested themselves.
(01:08:33):
Of course, they got the Emergency Use authorization which freeze
the pharmaceutical companies from any liability connection with this mr
NA vaccine that they foisted upon the people. And remember
the edicts and mandates. You got fired if you didn't
get it. It's crazy, insane, and he's not willing to
discount the idea that population control might have been one
of the motivations. He said, I'm going to keep my
(01:08:53):
powder dry on that, but it's certainly a logical thing
for people to want to kind of assume, give the
damages that it does to fetuses in utero as well
as two women in connection with the reproductive function. So frightening,
frightening stuff. Doctor Robert Malone Tonight seven pm, log in
and register ahead of time. Empower Youoamerica dot org. Jay,
(01:09:15):
thank you for holding and welcome to the fifty five
Case Morning Show.
Speaker 13 (01:09:19):
Thank good morning, Brian.
Speaker 15 (01:09:21):
Thanks and real quick, we can't forget about Governor Dewines
Maximilian campaign where he was handing out college scholarship for
young people who didn't need the.
Speaker 3 (01:09:30):
Vaccine to go get vaccinated. But the reason I called
was the constitutional amendment, the Dave Yost, the petition that
Dave Yost as appro I have to.
Speaker 13 (01:09:42):
Look at this.
Speaker 15 (01:09:43):
I love the idea, but my question is why didn't
Dave Yost pick up a piece of paper that said,
hang on a second, seventy percent of our property tax
is school tax. And twenty years ago the Supreme Court
took a look at the Ohio Constitution said it's unconstitutional
to fund schools through property tax.
Speaker 13 (01:10:03):
So seventy percent of the.
Speaker 15 (01:10:05):
Problem goes away if we just would have upheld the
us of the Ohio Supreme Courts ruling on the Constitution.
Speaker 13 (01:10:12):
It already exists.
Speaker 2 (01:10:13):
Isn't that But isn't that revealing of the incompetence of
every elected official. It's gone to Columbus since that Supreme
Court ruling finding that our funding of the school systems
is unconstitutional and it's based on property tax, they haven't
come up with a solution. They've ignored.
Speaker 13 (01:10:31):
It just needed a.
Speaker 3 (01:10:31):
Little bit of time. Brian like a couple of decades
which Reich, which really turns into.
Speaker 15 (01:10:38):
They all put their hand on the Bible and swore
an oath. I believe, I know this happens at the
federal level. I assume at the state level, fame that
they're going to put their hand on the Bible and
uphold the Ohio Constitution.
Speaker 3 (01:10:50):
If so, as a Christian, I would take a look
at that and say, you put yourself.
Speaker 15 (01:10:55):
In grave danger of taking an oath putting your hand
on the Bible, and then we're just going to ignore
it when it's inconvenient.
Speaker 3 (01:11:04):
So I look at it through a skeptical lens to say,
as Hillary Clinton might say, what difference does it make
if we pass the constitutional amendment, because our elected leadership
has already shown that well, they're very adept at just
ignoring whenever things are on constitutional.
Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
No, but that would mean you wouldn't have to pay
your property tax bill if they sent one to you.
This constitutional amendment eliminates property taxes in the state of Ohio.
Real property taxes would be unconstitutional in the state, So
you don't have to pay the tax bill if they
send it to you anyway. So if they ignore, that's
that constitutional amendment, the will of the people. If the
(01:11:40):
people do vote in favor of it, they can't send
a property tax bill on and if they do, you
have a legal basis to not pay it citing the constitution.
Speaker 15 (01:11:50):
Can I scratch out the school tax part.
Speaker 5 (01:11:53):
Of it today?
Speaker 2 (01:11:54):
Is there would be no tax.
Speaker 3 (01:11:56):
Reduced it by seventy percent.
Speaker 2 (01:11:57):
Yes, there would be no tax on real property. That
tax bill is calculated based upon the value of your home.
So I make that argument, and that's see, that's where
that's where the real challenge comes in. See, this is
the will of the citizens. Perhaps if it's voted in,
if it's ultimately approved. The language of the title has
been approved, now it advances, and they're going to analyze
(01:12:18):
the substance of the actual text of the measure itself.
But I mean walk through what might happen. This is
a citizen based effort to abolish property tax, which I
suppose is a solution to following the Supreme Court of
Ohio's decision that the current funding structure is unconstitutional. So
(01:12:40):
maybe this is the people's answer to their two decades
long plus inaction on the subject matter. I don't know
how it ultimately works out. Well, I am too, because
you know, I think about my senior citizens friends out there.
The house is completely paid off, and the real estate
property tax bill goes through the roof and they can't
afford it, meaning they can't afford to stay in a
(01:13:00):
place that they own outright. So you never really own
your property then, which kind of throws the idea of
personal property and private property ownership on its head. You
really don't own it as long as you have to
pay an ever increasing tax bill on it. Yeah, but
the devil's in the detail. So if this were to pass,
then what do they do. I mean, really walk through it.
(01:13:23):
There's a lot of different taxes in there. How is
it that they can fund you know, the parks and
the bridges and the park systems, and I mean we
could go on look at the line item on your
tax bill and you realize how many things are funded
based on your property. Appreciate the call, Jack six forty
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offering a nice free service and they do this annually.
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Speaker 10 (01:14:29):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 16 (01:14:31):
Don't get suckered into the same old free phone game
by Channel.
Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Nine says the following about the Weather've got a cloudy
day to day. It's going to be a humid too.
Seventy two for the high with afternoon storms likely. Overnight
low is sixty with a slight chance rain. You got
clouds again tomorrow again with scattered afternoon storms in a
high have seventy six, sixty two overnight with slight chance
rain and a cloudy start of the day. On Thursday,
it's going all the way up to eighty four degrees
sixty five degrees right now. Time for a traffic update
(01:14:58):
from the uc Heth Tramphing Center.
Speaker 7 (01:15:00):
If you see how pans expert traumacare focusing on prevention,
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Speaker 9 (01:15:08):
Visit ucehealth dot com for more.
Speaker 7 (01:15:10):
Northbound seventy five break lights out of Errol Language towards Dixie.
I'm looking for a problem in between southbound two seventy
five break lads continue to build between the Lawrence Perg
ramp and the work on the bridge. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five krc A talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:15:28):
Six fifty. If you buy kre CD talk station Happy Tuesday,
you can go to the phones. Here's five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three taco
with pound five fifty if you have an AT and
T phone. Tom, Welcome to the morning show, Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 17 (01:15:42):
Good morning, Brian. You're the lawyer, so I give a
question for you.
Speaker 18 (01:15:47):
Since taxes has been illegal according to the Ohio Supreme
Court for the last foury or so years, would there
not be a case for a class action lawsuit against
the state of Ohio to recoup those losses.
Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
I don't understand the context. It's illegal. At least it's
unconstitutional to fund the school system using real estate taxes
the Court of the Supreme Court decision from twenty years ago.
I don't know what losses you're referring to. It's still unconstitutional.
Speaker 18 (01:16:19):
If I'm paying illegal tax according to the Supreme Court,
would I'm not being able to recruit those illegal taxes?
Speaker 2 (01:16:30):
No, not, to the best of my understanding. I'm trying
to struggle with the legal issue in the context in
which you're stating the question. Anytime someone starts us you're
the lawyer, and I always get worried because, hey, just
having a law degree does not mean you know everything
there is to know about the law. I'm on record, Okay,
So this is a complicated.
Speaker 18 (01:16:51):
I'm just saying, between the two of you know a
whole lot more about that stuff than I do.
Speaker 2 (01:16:55):
Well, it's very complicated, of course, and I don't I mean,
I guess I'm puzzled by the fact that the legislative
branch and the governor's office haven't done anything to comply
with the coequal branch of government, which is the Supreme Court,
which says that what the current funding structure is unconstitutional.
So that's just been ignored outright. I mean, I think
(01:17:17):
about it in the context of, you know, everybodys screaming
about Donald Trump ignoring the courts and doing what he wants.
I mean, here we are in the state of Ohio.
They've been doing that now for the last two decades.
So that's really the big issue in the room. But
in so far as whether we have any relief that
could be available in the courts for the taxpayers here
in Ohio. I am struggling to figure out how that
will be characterized or what the remedy might be. I
(01:17:39):
don't think you can unring the bell. The taxes have
been spent on schools, and of course they got to
be funded in some way. But it is unconstitutional the
way they're doing it. I guess you probably could run
into court and ask for an injunction. He's saying, the
Supreme Court has previously held that this funding mechanism is unconstitutional.
Ergo I refuse to pay the property taxes that are
related to the the funding of the local school district
(01:18:02):
because it's unconstitutional. Maybe you can get some legs that way.
It just surprises me after twenty years no one's gone
to court and done that. So maybe I just haven't
analyzed the merits of that or the complications surrounding it.
But the first time the question has ever been posed
to me, my friend. But this Citizens for Property Tax
(01:18:22):
Reform group is the ones that have circulated this petition
to amend the Constitution, and I, on some level, I
think it's kind of brilliant. So the Ohio Attorney General's
Office approved the wording of the amendment. They got petition
in the first day of May, so they had to
(01:18:42):
determine whether these submitted language fairly and truthfully summarizes the
constitutional amendment, and they did responses sent to the petitioners
dev Yos. Having carefully examined the submission, I conclude that
the title and summary are fair and truthful statements of
the proposed constitutional amendment. So next step in the process
is for the Ohio Ballot Board to certify the proposal.
(01:19:04):
And after that, the petitioners have to go out into
the state and gather signatures from registered voters voters equal
to at least ten percent of the vote's cast in
the most recent gubernatorial election. And they have to get
signatures from at least forty four of Ohio's eighty eight counties,
with each of those counties requiring at least five percent
(01:19:24):
of the vote's cast in the gubernatorial election. Now, I
don't think that represents much of a challenge. I am certain,
as I said here today, there are enough people willing
to want to abolish the property tax in each of
the counties to get sufficient number of signatures. So when
the petition comes rolling by you'll have an opportunity to sign.
But walking through the devils always in the details, right,
(01:19:46):
How would things look afterwards? Given that the various school
districts get most of their butt money from property taxes,
and if property taxes can no longer be collected in
the state of Ohio, I guess the reform group leaders
are suggressing that. Well, you know, we're not trying to
defund public public schools, but they want the state to
(01:20:07):
use an alternative method, going back to the Supreme Court decision.
It's sun cuts just the way they're currently doing it.
So maybe an income or sales tax. So I would expect,
and this is actually fair er if you abolish by
voting for this measure, assuming he gets on the ballot,
property taxes are abolished, a sales tax represents a fairer
(01:20:33):
way because everyone then has to shoulder the burden of
the public schools. You go to the store and buy something,
you are participating. You're getting some benefit from them. Even
those who don't have children get the benefit of some schooling,
but also roads, bridges, infrastructure. It's better than income tax,
which doesn't ever affect a lot of the people who
(01:20:53):
get goods and services from government. So a sales tax
is a legitimate sort of I would argue maybe a
better way to fund them, maybe a national sales tax
rather than an income tax. That's always an option six p.
Fifty five fifty five K see the talk station five
point three, seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred
and eighty two three talk just I'm just getting a
(01:21:16):
kick out of this initiative, I really am. I'm sure
it's causing some folks in elected capacity to sweat. Just
to Scooch more to talk about off Top of the
Air news, followed by Dan Claire, communications director Outreach officer
for the Disabled American Veterans about the DAV boot Camp
that's coming up this weekend.
Speaker 5 (01:21:33):
I hope you can stick around us.
Speaker 2 (01:21:36):
Happens fast, stay up to date. At the top of
the hour, you're moving very quickly. Fifty five KRC the
talk station. This report is sponsored by Rocket. It's seven
(01:22:01):
oh six IPIY by Parcy the Talk Station.
Speaker 5 (01:22:04):
I hope they were in seven of the DCS.
Speaker 2 (01:22:06):
Tuesday, We're gonna get the Disabled American Veterans talking about
the DAV boot Camp this week and do that. Bottom
of the Air and the meantimes go to the phones.
I got Andrew Pappis, former Anderson Township trustee, on the phone.
Welcome back, Todrue. It's always good to hear from you, Brian.
Speaker 8 (01:22:19):
I need you to refer to me as vice Admiral,
Lord humongous. Okay, I mean I was gonna go for general,
but that just seems so trite and overdone nowadays.
Speaker 5 (01:22:33):
Yeah, I just and you know, the title.
Speaker 8 (01:22:37):
Rear admiral has other connotations, so I didn't really want
to go down that road.
Speaker 2 (01:22:41):
Yeah, I wouldn't have, but you know, you threw it
out there.
Speaker 8 (01:22:45):
You could call me the Ayatola of Rock and Roller
if you'd like.
Speaker 2 (01:22:49):
Fair enough, all these titles came to you in a dream.
Speaker 8 (01:22:55):
Yes, well, you know, honestly, I feel like sadly, I
should say, I feel.
Speaker 5 (01:22:59):
Like we're living in a dream a little bit.
Speaker 8 (01:23:03):
Because it was it was a very somber weekend, especially
here in Anderson Township. We had the funeral procession come
through here, and I have to say I was very
impressed with the turnout here and Anderson. A lot of
people lining the streets holding flags. It was quite a
beautiful paying a showing for a police and our Faigen officer.
(01:23:25):
But and then I flick on, you know, flick on
the news. Reality comes back in Sunday kind of took
a little bit of a break, and I saw the
post from the Black Panthers were coming to town.
Speaker 5 (01:23:40):
Yeah, and outruns. You know, I'll put it to you
this way.
Speaker 8 (01:23:43):
I've had bigger events for.
Speaker 5 (01:23:46):
God knows what and no media shows up.
Speaker 8 (01:23:49):
You know, you alert the media we might be having this,
that or the other, and you know, you have maybe
fifty people there or whatever, and the news doesn't show
up because they deem it non newsworthy.
Speaker 5 (01:23:59):
But this group of I don't know how you want
to describe them, but this group of folks shows.
Speaker 8 (01:24:07):
Up in town and they had probably, I don't know,
look like fifteen twenty people there near the courthouse. And
there's the press giving them free press coverage, exactly what
they want. So they spread their message of hate and
division and.
Speaker 2 (01:24:20):
Give the appearance of strength. It gives them the appearance
of strength when they represent it just a very very
very tiny percent of the population who wants to protest
over the prosecution of what I think we can all
agree on as a murderer.
Speaker 8 (01:24:36):
Absolutely, and not only does it gives them legitimacy, but
the press doesn't see it, you know, the press teams
that pressed acides, you know. And I'm speaking specifically of
the Inquirer, which I'm not a big fan of the Inquirer,
as anyone that follows me might know. I have a
problem with the editor over there and a lot of
the people over there, because they're so fundamentally biased.
Speaker 5 (01:24:57):
I wouldn't subscribe to that rag if you paid for
it at.
Speaker 8 (01:25:01):
The end of the day after that, and you did
mention it you've been talking about this morning.
Speaker 5 (01:25:07):
I really appreciate the callers that have called in about it.
Speaker 8 (01:25:10):
But you know, there's an old saying just because you
have the right doesn't make it right. And I do
appreciate your comments from the legal perspective on the lawsuit
that was filed by I believe a non attorney from
out of the state.
Speaker 5 (01:25:30):
I believe she's from Atlanta. I'm not sure that is.
Speaker 2 (01:25:33):
From what I learned that is correct. Not in the state.
Speaker 8 (01:25:36):
Yes, So she just picks up, you know, picks up
the pen and files a lawsuit based on something she
saw on TV, making allegations that, you know, evidence of abuse,
when literally that the many news organizations were reporting the
prior day that this accused murderer and I'm using accused.
Speaker 5 (01:25:58):
In quotes here.
Speaker 8 (01:26:01):
Was was critical was you know, in the critical care
critical condition in the hospital from this crash, and was
initially reported that he passed away if you remember correctly,
So you know, any injuries that were apparent the next
day in the courtroom were clearly due to his.
Speaker 5 (01:26:19):
Uh and they were to his head. You know, he
didn't black eyes, are broken, nose per se from beatings.
Speaker 2 (01:26:23):
He just had elascerations to his head.
Speaker 8 (01:26:26):
And then she makes the the U because she must
be psychic.
Speaker 5 (01:26:30):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:26:31):
Was that miss Cleo that filed the laws? Well maybe
maybe Antoinette Holloway, the civilian, the non attorney who has
filed this, uh, this specious lawsuit. Maybe she did previously
in a prior life act as Miss Cleo and do
tee leaf reading.
Speaker 5 (01:26:49):
Maybe she called California psychics.
Speaker 8 (01:26:51):
And you know, I'm going I'm reaching back here, I'm
pulling a lot of memories out of my psyche here.
Speaker 5 (01:26:55):
But I mean, I gotta tell.
Speaker 8 (01:26:56):
You it it just yeah, I mean, you're correct, ignore
it and move past it. But you know, my fear
is this and then throw Clyde Bennett into it. I
do understand that he's facing some some allegations of what's
the legal term here, he was ethical violations I can't remember,
(01:27:19):
might be legal violations, but I know that that was
filed like earlier this month.
Speaker 5 (01:27:23):
That there's some allegations made against.
Speaker 8 (01:27:25):
Clyde Bennett that's being heard by this I believe the
Supreme Court of Ohio.
Speaker 5 (01:27:29):
I'm not positive on that, but I.
Speaker 2 (01:27:30):
Know the Supreme Court would rule on ethical ethical issues.
But ethical issues also can be criminally related. So if
he was abusing like misusing client funds or absconding with
with with client funds, and he could be charged with
a crime, but also would be subject to ethical challenges
(01:27:52):
in the Supreme Court, and he could lose his license
if something's been proven, or be suspended from the practice
of law. So that's the determination the Supreme Court made,
but that that is an independent thing from any criminal
allegations that might be dealt with by the prosecutor's office.
Speaker 8 (01:28:05):
Well, here's my problem, and and correct me if you
if you don't feel the same way. Maybe I'm off
base here, but here's my fear. First of all, this
this heinous act. I'll just I'm using words that you know,
I'm trying to use words that not you're not going
to dump me on. But the the this act is
this whole this whole thing is quickly spiraling into some
(01:28:29):
sort of circus atmosphere. Intentionally, yes, and and to be fair,
we can't let it because the you know, society, we
deserve better for something as serious as this incident.
Speaker 5 (01:28:45):
We deserve, but we cannot allow it to.
Speaker 8 (01:28:47):
To They want distraction, they want deflection, they want they
want confusion anarchy to rule the day, so that we
get distracted and we forget at the very core here
an innocent, very good man. I mean that far better
than I am or will be. To be fair, I
mean this man was a pillar in the community and
(01:29:10):
led by example, silently, led by example, was sadly murdered
by a vehicle, you know, replaced.
Speaker 5 (01:29:17):
The car with a gun. Would people then have less
uh less, you know, less.
Speaker 8 (01:29:24):
Ability to claim you know, uh, this isn't a serious
a car an incident.
Speaker 5 (01:29:29):
You know, I'm saying just because.
Speaker 8 (01:29:31):
It was a car doesn't make it any less less heinous.
And I'm just I just cannot believe that the news
is facilitating.
Speaker 13 (01:29:42):
And aiding the the.
Speaker 8 (01:29:43):
The spiraling into clown or to to circus atmosphere.
Speaker 5 (01:29:48):
That's my point.
Speaker 2 (01:29:49):
Well, and I consider that the media is is part
of the group that once the chaos and once the division,
and once this sort of idle devolution, if I can
use that or decivilizing effect that's going on. You know,
they're all leftists and they have perhaps in their reporting,
have an anti police mindset, and this fulfills their goals
(01:30:14):
to undermine public trust and law enforcement on some twisted level.
So and they benefit from the idea that if they
can can if they can stir this pot and get
people to you know, take to the streets and riot
in protest, they're going to have a whole lot more
fun stories to talk about because we all know it
gets the lead in the press.
Speaker 8 (01:30:32):
Yeah, and I just wish that My suggestion to people is,
and you correct me if I'm wrong here, but you know,
when you see these people protesting, ignore it. Just walk
past that, you know, and you and you hear about
these lawsuits.
Speaker 5 (01:30:47):
I mean, I could go out.
Speaker 8 (01:30:48):
Today and file a lawsuits exact any particular reason and
it's not going to get covered by the press. It's
not going to be put in the headlines because you know,
for all intents and purposes, we can agree on surface
at least that this is a frivolous and pointless and
case less lawsuit. Yeah, but the press runs with it
and puts the narrative out there, and then everyone's talking
(01:31:08):
about So I would just simply you concur that, you know,
the best course of action rather than you know, counter
protesting or gathering to watch these people is just ignore
them and let them fade into obscurity.
Speaker 2 (01:31:20):
Which they will do in a day or two, you know.
I mean, we had to deal with antifile for a while,
you know, occupying the streets and blah blah. Well they
went away, didn't they. I mean, it took a lot
longer than this one will. These are folks from out
of town. I imagine they've got other things to do
back home, like maybe families or perhaps employment, although I
guess I have to question that, but something else. And
(01:31:40):
they're not going to be staying around the city of
Cincinnati for months and weeks protesting Rodney Hinton Junior's prosecution.
So people get it out of their system. But I'm
with you, ignore it. I I plan on it. It's
not going to change it after my life.
Speaker 8 (01:31:54):
So what is what is your Since I'm now vice admiral,
what is your? What rank would you like me to
bestow up on you too? You have to think about
that one.
Speaker 5 (01:32:05):
What's our I mean? The other thing is who's gonna
what's our uniform gonna be? I mean that opens up, you.
Speaker 8 (01:32:10):
Know, I mean I thought I was done buying clothes,
and you know, I'm kind of comfortable in cargo shorts.
Speaker 2 (01:32:15):
Just gouda shirt and cargo shorts. There you have it,
and you can wear your ugs.
Speaker 9 (01:32:22):
They're not ugs.
Speaker 8 (01:32:23):
Give me a break, they are not you guys swear
to guy guys with your us.
Speaker 9 (01:32:30):
Okay, crocs, they're not crocs.
Speaker 2 (01:32:33):
Gez so much better sketchers.
Speaker 5 (01:32:38):
You're really cruising, Brian, I'll tell you right.
Speaker 2 (01:32:41):
I like the idea. How about the uniform will be
whatever the hell it is we decided to put on
that given day, we'll have our title.
Speaker 9 (01:32:47):
But I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 8 (01:32:49):
I need the I need the ray ban sunglasses and
the and the something militariesque style hat.
Speaker 5 (01:32:55):
Maybe maybe the French navy.
Speaker 9 (01:32:57):
Hat that comes to a point at both ends.
Speaker 5 (01:32:59):
I'm not sure. But we were we really need to
have a formal uniform. But you work on your.
Speaker 8 (01:33:04):
Title and I have to tell you, you know, vice
admiral's taken, so you gotta go something higher that I don't.
Speaker 19 (01:33:09):
Know what's higher than vice admiral. And then the whole
military jargon. Grand Pooba, the grand Pooba. There you got that,
Grand Pooba. I appreciate the love of it.
Speaker 2 (01:33:22):
Listen, man, in a day like today, when I'm feeling
down about the headlines and disappointed with the Republicans in
Congress because they can't find a penny that they won't cut,
you added a little levity to the program this morning, Drew,
which is always welcome here on the fifty five Caresee
Morning Show. It's one of the reasons why I appreciate you. Yeah,
your job is move on, move on to another task.
I'm here tomorrow as well, fifty five cares de Talk Station.
(01:33:47):
Grand Pooba Oter egsit won't get rid of the STENTI
of politics like to joke about that. But you know,
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(01:34:28):
and it works great on that. So go to odor
exit dot com spelled od o r xit. You'll figure
out easily which product you need to buy for the
odor that's bothering you.
Speaker 5 (01:34:37):
Order it online.
Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
They quickly deliver it to you a day maybe two,
but it'll be on your front porch or if you
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Multiple locations sell older exit products and it's easy to
find them by using the search engine at odor exit
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exit dot Com.
Speaker 6 (01:34:55):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 10 (01:34:58):
Andy, Andy, how does it get y?
Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
Channel nine says the following about the weather today, give
me a muggy day, humid, also cloudy with storms likely
This afternoon. Seventy two will be today's high. Overnight little
sixty with the opportunity for some additional rain. Overnight going
to be cloudy again. Tomorrow is scattered afternoon storms and
I high have seventy six, slight chance of rain over
night dropping to sixty two. And on Thursday we'll see
a high of up to eighty four degrees and at
(01:35:24):
least a cloudy start of the day. That's all I
have about the rest of the weather.
Speaker 7 (01:35:28):
Sixty five. Right now, it's time for a traffic updep
Chuck Ingram from the u SEE Health Traffic Center. You
See Health has expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries,
and supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation.
Speaker 9 (01:35:40):
Learn more you see health dot com.
Speaker 7 (01:35:42):
North pound seventy five and an extra five out of
Burrowmonger into downtown southbound seventy five getting heavier through Walkman
crews are working with an accident northbound seventy one and
two seventy five. But they're over on the right shoulder.
I'm not seeing a huge to lay out of blue ash.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRE and Sea Lead talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:36:04):
It's seven twenty two here at fifty five KRC the
talk station. Hope you're having a decent Tuesday. We're here
from the dav the disabled American veterans to want a
boot camp this weekend. Get the details from Dan Claire
in the next segment. Today's Tuesdays we get the inside
scoop of bright bart News every Tuesday day to a
five the return of Deputy Politics Editor Bradley jay answering
the question why are senators against Ed Martin for the
(01:36:27):
Department of Justice posts and then fast forward about an
hour from now, Daniel Davis Deep Dive Tuesday at eight
thirty with the retired lieutenant colonel on the latest going
on between Russia and Ukraine. Looks like Zelenski maybe wanting
to sit down at the table with Putin and Donald
Trump and negotiate peace. Seems like I've heard that story
before anyway, since Ava is going to join the program
(01:36:49):
at eight forty two, So my veteran friends out there
be around and listening at eight forty I've been lamenting
this proposed budget bill, and it's just so heartbreaking when
you hear about the Republicans can't even get to some
point of agreement over cutting government spending, struggling to cut
one point five trillion over ten years. And I read
(01:37:12):
the opinion pier or the open letter from Senator Ron
Johnson this morning appearing in the Wall Street Journal, and
he's a definite no on this because it does not
cut enough. What they're doing is just not really much,
said he he won't support it. So there's one right there,
and they can't afford to lose very many to get
anything passed. Meanwhile, while Republicans struggling to cut one point
(01:37:38):
five trillion spending, Ron Johnson's push for a return to
pre pandemic spending levels that would amount to a six
point five trillion dollar cut. And why wouldn't we return
to pre pandemic spending levels? I pointed out this morning,
just sort of asking out loud and asking for a friend.
What did we do prior to COVID? I understand business
(01:38:00):
and industry was locked down and people weren't going to work,
so they had to have some sort of mass infusion
from the federal government. We need to expand medicaid because
of well, COVID, but we're not in COVID anymore. Why
can't we go back to what we spent before? And
even that's too much. That's how we racked up thirty
seven trillion dollars in debt or at least thirty but Johnson,
(01:38:25):
speaking with Newsback, said he's not particularly optimistic about the
bill Republicans or their or even their ability to pass
it by July fourth, given the spending levels. Pointed out
the Congressional Budget Office latest projection for ten years of spending.
Are you ready eighty nine trillion dollars? So they're going
(01:38:48):
to reduce that eighty nine trillion projection from the CBO.
That's over ten years, folks, by an underwhelming one point
five trillion dollars, representing a one point seven percent cut,
which he referred to as a rounding error. Amen, it is.
I know a lot of Republicans up there in swing states.
You know, they're concerned about getting re elected, you know,
(01:39:09):
but you know, honestly, if they don't get reelected, but
they score a victory in the name of some measure,
of fiscal sanity to save us our country, literally save
our country. I think it's worth losing a seat. And
the idea that Democrats are going to have an overwhelming
victory so they get a two thirds majority in the House,
I think that is a slim to none possibility, which
(01:39:30):
means anything that they propose in the Democrat controlled version
of the next House ain't gonna get through. So quit
worrying about your phony, blowney job. Do something right by America,
make a tough choice, put your name on the line,
and let's move forward. Seven twenty six fifty five krc
DE talk station and get in touch with John Ryan.
John Ryan is Prestige Interiors. It's his company, and he
(01:39:53):
does kitchen remodeling. And he's been doing kitchen remodeling almost
exclusively for like thirty five years. He has done all
kinds of kitchens, big projects, small projects, everything in between.
You want to do a small one, like replace your
cabinets and countertops, call John got the whole thing and
start from scratch like we did with John.
Speaker 5 (01:40:10):
Call him up.
Speaker 2 (01:40:11):
He's there from initial design to final installation. Your true
partner in a kitchen modeling project, and he's seen it
all so you're gonna love some of the ideas he
has for your kitchen. When you're talking about you know
what you want and are hoping for from your new kitchen.
So get in touch with him. It's easy to do.
A plus the Better Business Bureau. It's Prestige one two
three dot com. Prestige one two three dot com. When
(01:40:33):
you call him up, please tell him Brian said, Hi
five one three two four seven zero two two nine
five one three two four seven zero.
Speaker 10 (01:40:39):
Two two nine fifty five KRC made for this mountain
exists to empower.
Speaker 2 (01:40:46):
Here's your Channel nine first Warning weather forecast. Gonna have
a cloudy, humid day today with storms likely this afternoon,
high seventy two, sixty degrees overnight with a chance of rain.
It's gonna be cloudy with scattered afternoon storms tomorrow with
a high seventy six over night sixty two in small
chance of rain, and a hot Thursday with a high
of eighty four and some clouds sixty five degrees. Right now,
(01:41:08):
let's get a traffic update from Chuck.
Speaker 7 (01:41:10):
Ingram from the UCUT Traffic Center. You see health hands
expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation.
Speaker 9 (01:41:20):
Learn more.
Speaker 7 (01:41:20):
You see howth dot com North found seventy one crews
continue to work with an accident above two seventy five.
They're on the right shoulder south pound seventy five. You
could add an extra five through Lachland and getting closer
to a ten minute delake northbound seventy five out of
Erlanger into downtown. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRZ the
talk Stationay.
Speaker 2 (01:41:47):
Seven thirty here fifty five krc the talk station, A
very happy Tuesday to you. You know me, I love
helping out the American veterans and uh well also enjoy
getting folks on that are helping out the area veterans.
And today we have Dan Claire from the DAV about
the Patriot Boot Camp. Dan, welcome back to the program.
It's good to hear from you today.
Speaker 20 (01:42:07):
Hey, good morning, Brian, thanks for having us back again.
Speaker 2 (01:42:09):
Always enjoy hearing from me, and I appreciate what you're
doing for the American Vetteran remind my listeners about what
you do at the DAV.
Speaker 20 (01:42:17):
Sure DAV is nationally headquartered right here in the try
say we're an Erlanger. We help veterans get their benefits,
we help them connect with jobs, and this week we're
going to be helping them become entrepreneurs.
Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
How do you go about doing that? I'm sorry, Dan,
I lack the entrepreneurial spirit. I've been at W two
employee my entire life, and I'm always in awe of
folks who are able to They're like, you know what,
I've got an idea, I'm going to start my own business,
and they actually get it accomplished. I have the most
utmost respect for those folks because I just I just
don't have it in me.
Speaker 17 (01:42:46):
You know, I do too.
Speaker 2 (01:42:47):
It takes a lot of guts.
Speaker 20 (01:42:49):
I mean, just by definition, if you're an entrepreneur, you're
doing something that is inherently risky. But these veterans are
up to it, you know. And what we're trying to
do is give them some of the building blocks. A
lot of these folks, during the prime years that they
would have been entrepreneurs, they were serving their country. So
we want to help them give them access to great instruction,
(01:43:09):
mentors and a network that's going to be there to
help them as they pursue their ventures.
Speaker 2 (01:43:14):
Okay, so what's going to take place at the event
and give us all the details on that.
Speaker 17 (01:43:20):
Sure will.
Speaker 20 (01:43:20):
We kick off on Wednesday morning, Tomorrow morning, bright and early.
We're going to start and we will actually have Robert
Irvine from Food Networks Restaurant Impossible speaking and he'll be
a mentor and participating in the event. We're really excited
about that. We're going to talk about marketing, pitching, legal,
We're going to have a big deployer legal shield presentation.
(01:43:44):
We're going to talk about funding and wellness. All tomorrow
the event keeps going, we're going to talk about government contracting,
mergers and acquisitions, and then we're going to do something
on Thursday that's really unique and that we really rely
on the community here in Northern Kentucky and Cincinnati on
and that's mentor matching. Every one of these veterans is
(01:44:04):
going to get matched up with with local business leaders
and some national business leaders who are traveling in. They're
donating their time, about four hours of their time to
meet with eight veterans and help them, you know, just
walk through what they're going through and maybe help some
of these veterans avoid some of the mistakes that those
CEOs that those legal folks have seen happen to other
(01:44:27):
people or happen to themselves over the years.
Speaker 2 (01:44:29):
Well, that's the value of having people that have been
down that road don't make the mistakes that they made.
They went through it and had to get themselves out
of the challenges, and so they have great ways of explaining, oh,
by the way, don't do this because this is going
to happen to you. That's valuable real life experience. Is
this taking place at a venue?
Speaker 20 (01:44:47):
Yeah, it's actually at DAVS National Headquarters here Hurling are
Opdulwick Drive. So we're hosting it here again and we'll
be back in October for another event. We got the space,
we got the facility, and we might as well use
it to make sure that we're taking can care these
veterans here.
Speaker 2 (01:45:01):
Oh amen to that. Now, I understand you've got a
bit of a shark tank competition going on.
Speaker 20 (01:45:06):
There absolutely ten thousand dollars in nondoluted capital to the winner.
We're going to out of our cohort. We're going to
have about eighty veterans participating, we expect, and the top
three will share in ten thousand dollars in nondoluted funding
to help their businesses, and it's nice to give them
a little bit of a boost. T Mobile sponsors that.
(01:45:29):
But it's also very nice for us because it teaches
the rest of the class through questions through seeing someone
else do it, kind of seeing someone put on the spot.
It helps them prepare for the pitches they're going to
have to make if they want to succeed in business.
Speaker 9 (01:45:43):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:45:45):
I mean, obviously this is recommended for veterans out there
who have a business model or an idea in mind,
or maybe someone who's already started off down that road
and maybe need some assistance with dealing with some of
the challenges that wants to learn from folks who've been
down the road with their current entrepreneurial endeavor. But what
about folks who are veterans who think, hmmm, maybe I
(01:46:06):
could be an entrepreneur. I just don't have anything in
mind right now. Would they benefit at all from being
at this event.
Speaker 20 (01:46:11):
Well, we're looking primarily for veterans who have taken some
serious steps towards their entrepreneurship, but we do offer other
resources and the community is there to help other folks
who are like in that seed stage where they just
have an idea. They're an ideation mode and we want
to help them out and we also connect them with
SBA and other resources, other people who are out there
(01:46:34):
helping them so that they can get to that point
where they're ready to take on something like dab Patriot
boot Camp.
Speaker 2 (01:46:41):
All right, so for all the details, it's Patriotbootcamp dot org.
Speaker 5 (01:46:45):
Have I got that right?
Speaker 20 (01:46:47):
Absolutely?
Speaker 2 (01:46:47):
Thank you, no problem. Well, they're going to want to
hearing something about like an event like this, with all
the resources that are going to be available, why not
take them up on it. It's there for your benefit,
my veteran friends and entrepreneurial veteran friends. Bootcamp dot org.
And again the kickoff time tomorrow tomorrow morning.
Speaker 20 (01:47:05):
We kick off at eight am.
Speaker 2 (01:47:07):
Eight am. That's a sleeping for veterans, right.
Speaker 20 (01:47:13):
Yeah, we call it boot camp at eight am is
a pretty late starting terms.
Speaker 2 (01:47:17):
In those terms, it is for the American veteran who's
used to the bugle. Yes, indeed, Well, I appreciate you
joining the program, and I thank you for the opportunity
to spread the information of my veteran friends out there.
Dan Claire Communications Outreach ofvis for for DAV The resources
are there for you my veteran friends, so take advantage
of them. Thanks for doing the program, Dan, it's a
(01:47:37):
great idea.
Speaker 20 (01:47:39):
Thanks your constant source of support for us, and we
really appreciate what you do for us.
Speaker 2 (01:47:42):
I am blessed to be in this position to be
able to spread the news, my friend, and happy to
do it. Thank you for your service for our country,
my friend. It's seven thirty six right now, folks, So
I hope you can stick around. Got more to talk about.
I will be taking phone calls too, if you'd like
to call. I'd love to hear from you. But first
I want to mention affordable medical imaging because I want
everybody to save thousands of dollars. Don't go to the
(01:48:03):
hospital and get your images echo cardigram CT scans, MRIs, ultrasounds.
They are a boatload of money at the hospital. They
got tons of overhead. But they also like the fat bank,
the profit that comes from the hospital imaging center. Because
most people don't know about affordable imaging services. Where that
echo cardiogram going to get you right in to do it,
no waytime. It's five hundred dollars without an enhancement, eight
(01:48:25):
hundred with that price comes with the Board certified radiologist
report where you would pay probably thirty five hundred dollars
if not more at the hospital, five hundred without an enhancement,
eight hundred with these prices never cease to amaze me.
I've doing commercials for affordable imaging services for a long
time now, and every time I see the stark contrast
between the two and the fact that I've been there.
(01:48:46):
I mean, I've gotten several CT scans from affordable imaging
services where it's four point fifty without a contrast six
hundred with a contrast, it could be five thousand dollars,
same kind of equipment. Medical professionals who've been doing this
for decades never had a prob with my doctor looking
at the at the image and the radiologists report, So
why pay more? You got a choice exercise at five
(01:49:06):
one three seven, five three eight thousand, five one three
seven five three eight thousand. It's low overhead, but it's
massive savings. Online you can learn more at Affordable medimaging
dot com.
Speaker 6 (01:49:17):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (01:49:20):
Station CHANNELINE on the forecast Colottie Human day to day
with afternoon storms likely seventy two Overnivo is sixty with
some rain, scattered afternoon storms. Tomorrow high at seventy six clouds.
It's light chancellraing over night sixty two and on Thursday
going up to eighty four degrees with some clouds. It's
sixty five degrees right now. It's time for a traffic
(01:49:41):
upeak problem.
Speaker 7 (01:49:42):
To you see how traffic center you See Health has
expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation.
Speaker 9 (01:49:51):
Learn more at uce health dot com.
Speaker 7 (01:49:54):
Cruise continue to work with an accident northbound seventy one
above two seventy five. They're on the right shoulder now
getting heavyer southbound seventy one past two seventy five towards
Pfeiffer inbound seventy four breakwights now two from above Montana
chuck Ingramont fifty five, Karascene detalk station.
Speaker 2 (01:50:13):
Seven forty one. If you give have KCV talk station.
At the risk of running along in this segment, which
I'm sure I'm gonna do, I've got to read this.
Victor David Hanson founded on American greatness and kind of
putting into context. And we were talking about earlier with
the monetary system here in the United States, and how
we're going to run off a cliff stepping back, he
makes some interesting, if not disturbing observations.
Speaker 5 (01:50:34):
It's worth a listen. Victor David has in right.
Speaker 2 (01:50:37):
Secure borders and stationary populations were considered the mark of
emerging civilizations by classical historians. In contrast to no badism
and constant strife over disputed territory. People who had a
clearly defined and protected borders ascended to statehood, maintained a
distinct culture, and achieved greater prosperity and security. In contrast,
what we suffered from twenty twenty one to twenty twenty
(01:50:59):
five was un press It was an intentional administration effort
to decivilize the nation by destroying its borders, as if
to return to the pre modern era, where there was
no clearly defined or secure borders, and nomadic peoples migrated
as they pleased Strangers. Still, illegal aliens were at times
given precedents over citizens as immigration laws were simply discarded
(01:51:21):
without IDs, Illegal aliens boarded US flights while the government
ordered citizens to obtain more secure real IDs. Some eighty
five hundred veterans soldiers were drummed out of the military
for refusing the experimental mRNA vaccinations. Yet ten millions simply
walked across the southern border into America without a care
from the Biden administration whether they were vaccinated, ill or
(01:51:43):
had criminal records. Any American citizen pulled over for speeding
with an invalid driver's license while trafficking eight illegal aliens
without identification would be jailed in charged with felony counts.
Not Abregio Garcia, the violent spousal abuse er MS thirteen
gang member and previously deported the illegal alien. He was
neither arrested or even cited by the officers who pulled
him over. One of the great hallmarks of Roman civilization
(01:52:06):
when subsequent Western civilization, was its ability to create large
cities by importing clean water, removing waste through sewers, and
collecting garbage from the street. Even the age before microbiology,
ancient pre modern city planners knew the connection between cleanliness
and epidemics and how to lessen the disease through sanitation.
But in the last two decades our major cities have
(01:52:26):
been decivilizing. Citizens are told not to flush non biotegreat
old plastics down the toilets, both to preserve the environment
and to ensure municipal septic symptoms worked properly. They're reminded
to pick up their pets excrement on sidewalks and in
parks for purposes of collective health. They are taught not
to urinate, spiter defecate in public areas. Is all that
for naught? After all, our mayors and city councils and
(01:52:49):
our biggest, most iconic cities simply destroyed centuries of such
health protocols and allowed tens of thousands of homeless people
with impunity to inject, urinate, deficate, and fornicate in or
on the store front streets, gutters, parks, and sidewalks. The stench,
floatsom and jetsam have utterly transform America's inner cities. Central Seattle,
Los Angeles, parts of San Francisco, Portland, Washington, d C.
(01:53:10):
Now resemble medieval London or Paris, as if a millennium
long knowledge of basic public health was simply ignored or mocked.
In truth, the centers of America's big cities or spaces
where public health protocols are no longer enforced, where all
the ancient and hard won rules of civilization no longer apply.
It would likely be safer to walk through Dickensian London
(01:53:31):
of eighteen fifty than to take a nocturnal ride on
the New York Subway. Another hallmark or Western civilization was
the creation of a judiciary that gives the state the
power to enforce laws, insure justice, and deter criminals by
swift punishment, unaffected by ideology, bias, bribes, and personal vendettas.
From the law codes of Justinian and the American Constitution.
(01:53:52):
Ascendent civilizations rose with a codified legal system apply to uniformly, disinterestedly,
and fairly. Not any longer. Ideology has turned the American
legal system into commissariat of sorts, in which relativism is
now the norm. Vandalize a tesla in a blue state
like the South of Old the laws will be lightly,
(01:54:13):
if even enforced, and applied selectively. No one seriously believes
that Alvin Bragg, Letitia, James jack Smith, and Fannie Willis
were interested in real crimes rather than concocting them to
destroy a presidential candidate and thus warp the political system.
In contemporary America, it was far more likely to suffer
a jail sentence for walking peaceably but unlawfully in the
(01:54:34):
capitol than for torching a federal courthouse, historic church, or
police precinct in the summer of twenty twenty. From the
ancient world of the medieval city to the modern era,
universities were catalyst for the advance of science, medicine, law
and politics, and the humanities. Their civilizing missions were predicated
on two unquestioned assumptions. One, Unlike Pryor's superstitions, inductive reason
(01:54:58):
would guide the intellectual income. Examining all evidence would lead
to general conclusions rather than cherry picking data to prove
predetermined dogmas. Today, DEI, the Green New Deal, and the
critical theories legal race, and monetary in the university start
with deductive reasoning and then warp the evidence to support
such faith based dogmas.
Speaker 5 (01:55:20):
If any of the.
Speaker 2 (01:55:21):
Current violent pro hamas and anti Semitic campus protests were
instead directing it reducing abortion, ensuring that biological men don't
compete in women's sports, or banning racial preferences, the protesters
would have long ago been arrested, expelled, or deported. Tribalism
was a pre modern obstacle to civilization. It remains so
in many parts of the Middle East, where it's routine
to hire, promote, retain a reward on the basis of
(01:55:43):
kinship and bloodlines. In America, we were supposed to have
a singular meritocracy. Civilization's effort to ensure that those with
the most experience and experience were charged with the most
important task and responsibilities to ensure the safety and welfare
of the majority. Race, religion, gender, and sexual orientation were
neither rewarded nor punished. Instead, we here too, return to
(01:56:06):
the pre modern tribalism of race quotas, regressing to pre
civilized ideas that we owe our allegiance first to those
who share superficial appearance rather than the body politic at large. Finally,
civilizations were often judged by their physical infrastructures, whether iconic
like the Parthenon, the panthonon, medieval cathedrals or modern towering skyscrapers,
(01:56:27):
or practical by the roads, aqueducts, government buildings, and water
and sewage systems. By that standard, too, we are decivilizing.
Future generations will be amazed that California is decaying. High
speed rails to nowhere tens of billions of dollars in
over a decade after the start of construction, there's still
not a single foot of track laid, but instead only
half finished massive concrete overpasses that now resemble half destroyed
(01:56:50):
Mycenean palace walls. The nearly one billion dollars half finished
five year old Obama Library resembles an oversized Stonehenge monolith.
In California, we do not just blow up dam, the
brilliant work of a now forgotten earlier generation. Instead, we
use public bond funds voted by the citizens to build
new dams and reservoirs to destroy them. The more California
(01:57:13):
requires lumber for new homes to fuel its thirty one
fuel for thirty one million vehicles, and energy for its
fifteen million homes, the more the governor and legislature decivilized
the state by shutting down timber companies, forcing oil refineries
to flee the state, and closing nuclear power plants and
fossil fuel generation. While witnessing replacement new age battery power
(01:57:34):
generation plants blow up into flames. When preventable fires consume
whole neighborhoods of Los Angeles, a paralytic government has no
clue how to rebuild the work of past generations. The
city government of Los Angeles proved uncannily efficient in ensuring
such conflagration, canceling preventative brush clearing. The mayor junketing to
(01:57:55):
Africa during a fire season, reservoirs left empty hydrants that
did not work but cannot rebuild, only destroy. In part,
our mediocre schools have not produced competent stewards to maintain
and expand the sophisticated infrastructure and ethos of a prior,
far more capable generation. In part, the sheer richness of
our influence inheritance lulled our lotus eater generations to consume
(01:58:19):
what they inherited rather than reinvest it, given that since
birth they have been insulated from the elemental and unchanging
human and natural challenges to civilization. And in part, nihilism
arose that despised the hard work of civilization and instead
romanticized the wild, clueless, that natural man without the bridles
(01:58:45):
of civilization is a very dangerous beast. And we so
often and lamentedly see today that's brilliant. It's depressing, but
it's reality. Take a cold, hard look at it, and
then look around you. You can apply a lot of what
he observed to some of the local stories going on
(01:59:05):
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talk station.
Speaker 2 (02:01:15):
UH seven fifty four I fifty five KERR see the
talk station head one listener. One of who wrote or
authored by the op ed that I just read it
was Victor David Hanson. I found it on zero Hedge,
but it was originally posted on American Greatness. I'll see
if I can't get Joe to add that to the
blog page fifty five KRC dot Com. I thought it
(02:01:36):
was so insightful and so revealing because he deals with
all of those areas that seemed to be just completely
crumbling in this otherwise seemingly yesterday's stable America that we
used to live in. And I'm just firmly convinced that
all of this obviously seems to be by design, you know,
the undermining of the idea of America being a great
(02:01:58):
country at every turn built into our education system. For example,
this hatred for America that comes about from these woke policies.
That's all Marxists. I mean, you know, it's easy to
point to the boogeyman Marxism, Marxism, but these are a
bunch of Marxists. They don't want our country to survive.
And the predicate for me wanted to read that was
(02:02:19):
the you know, Representative Johnson's op ed piece or open
letter in the Wall Street Journal talking about this ridiculous
exercise the Republicans are going through to shave one point
five trillion in spending when the CBO says in the
next ten years there're gonna be eighty nine trillion dollars
in the hole. And the Democrats are screaming about every
(02:02:43):
single effort the GOP has to cut anything they see.
The threat that is facing us with the erosion of
the value of the FIAD currency and the ultimate collapse
of the FIAD currency, our inability to pay our creditors
off down the road was debt service on that that
is going to be what one hundred and thirty five
percent of GDP or something crazy. You can't remember the figures.
(02:03:05):
I mean, you talk about existential threat, it's like we
are intentionally driving the train off the rails. We are
intentionally driving the car off the cliff, Thelma Louise time
all by design. I don't know how anybody can come
to any other conclusion but that seven fifty six, fifty
(02:03:25):
five KRC de Talk Station. What's the world going to
do without us?
Speaker 5 (02:03:29):
Right Bart?
Speaker 2 (02:03:29):
Inside Scoop? Why are senators against Ed Martin for the
Department of Justice posts? We're gonna hear about that from
Deputy Politics Enator Bradley Jay right after the news.
Speaker 11 (02:03:38):
Another update coming up. The day's top stories at the
top of the hour.
Speaker 10 (02:03:42):
Important issues that are facing this country.
Speaker 11 (02:03:44):
On fifty five KRC, the talk station computer turn us.
Speaker 2 (02:03:49):
Off, love listening all day fifty.
Speaker 11 (02:03:51):
Five KRC at work with the day stories while do
you work?
Speaker 2 (02:03:58):
Heto six. If you've got KRS, it's the talk station.
We're happy Tuesday to you. Always enjoy this time of
the week. On the fifty five Piercy Morning Show, we're
joined by bright Bart's at least one of the folks
from bright part. We call it the inside Scoop at
bright Bart News. As I always start out, book mark
the website b R E I T B A RT
dot com. You'd be glad you did excellent reporting. I
(02:04:18):
like my guest today, Deputy Politics Otter Bradley Jay, Welcome back, Bradley.
It's a pleasure having you back on the show.
Speaker 13 (02:04:24):
Brian is always great to be with you.
Speaker 2 (02:04:26):
Good morning, Thank you very much, and good morning to you, sir.
What okay? What is with Senator Tom Tillis and his
beef over President Trump's a previous nominee for US Attorney
General for the District of Columbia. I know Ed Martin,
but I know Ed's moved on and Trump moved on
over Tom Tillis's objection. He's in a different role. Now
(02:04:46):
we'll talk about that. But what was the problem at
the outset that he would raise objections to someone who
Donald Trump was singing glowing praises about Ed Martin.
Speaker 13 (02:04:57):
That's a million dollar question, and it's something that everyone
and Washington has been asking. If you take him at
his word, Tom Tillis is just very concerned about January
sixth and Ed's roll in asking that these people who
were involved were pardoned, a stance which is exactly in
(02:05:19):
line with President Donald Trump and what President Donald Trump did. Uh.
And that's that. That's all that this was about. Uh,
but that doesn't seem to be when you really drill
down what Tillis's objections are, and a lot of folks
have been trying to figure exactly what that is. Look,
Tillos has never been one who's a rah rah supporter
(02:05:42):
of President Trump's agenda. That's fine, we all know that.
But there's something fishy here. But the end result of
Tillis's blockade is that now Ed Martin is going to
have an even more powerful position in which to go
after government corruption. And when you're a swamp hunter like
(02:06:02):
Ed Martin, that's a great position for him to be in,
and it's very dangerous for any who might get in
his way, who want to exploit the taxpayers.
Speaker 2 (02:06:13):
And we will talk about that particular role because I
love the title for it, or love his titles, his
new titles. But Ed Martin, now before you know you're
reporting on it. For example, Bradley, I had no idea
that Ed Martin had any connection with January sixth. I
know Donald Trump has the power of the pardon, and
Donald Trump issued the pardons, that Ed Martin even had
(02:06:33):
a position relative to whether to pardon them or not.
What does that matter. I guarantee the vast majority of
the American population never could connect Ed Martin with the
J six pardons. You're exactly right.
Speaker 13 (02:06:45):
And that's the thing about is Ed doesn't hunt headlines.
Ed hunts swamp scalps. He wants to be the one
out there pursuing government corruption, corruption, ensuring we have an
accountable govern Uh. I mean, he's made his career off
fighting for conservative principles. And here's the thing, what did
(02:07:07):
he do. He helped organize to stop the Steel rally,
which we all know had nothing to do with any
anyone going into the Capitol. This took place a couple
miles away of the White House ellipse. And then in
his role as an attorney, he advocated for a lot
of these J six protesters who had been who had
(02:07:31):
been persecuted by the Biden administration to try to make
a point to try to taint Donald Trump, to keep
him from being president again, to keep him from from
replacing Joe Biden. That's what this is about. Until US
played into that, and when you add add it all up,
it doesn't make a lot of sense. Look, January sixth
happened four years and four months ago. Why would that
(02:07:54):
continue to animate someone so intensely in their role as
the United States Senator. It doesn't make a lot of sense.
I don't think there's any question that they're a handful
of other senators, squishy sentators out there who wouldn't have
been overjoyed about having to vote on the floor for
Ed Martin to take on the role of US Attorney
(02:08:15):
for DC. They probably would have had to hold their
nose and do so. Perhaps Tom Tillis was just their vehicle,
their useful tool to be able to prevent that to
come to the floor. But there's just so much going
on here, and you have to ask why would Tillis
block ed Martin for this, just for Trump to give
(02:08:39):
them an even more prominent, more powerful role. It's one
of those cases of be careful what you wish.
Speaker 2 (02:08:45):
For well and pivoting over that's the role that he's appointed. So, okay,
he's shot down for US Attorney for the District of
Columbia because of people like Senator Tom Tillis, Republican North
Carolina for reasons questionable or unknown. But now he's over
the Department of Justice as the new director of the
(02:09:05):
Weaponization Working Group. Associate Deputy Attorney General, and pardon attorney.
So those sound like pretty prominent roles, most notably the
first one director of the Weaponsation Working Group, because he's
going to go after the various lettered organizations who have
gone after the American people selectively.
Speaker 13 (02:09:24):
Absolutely, and it's a great role, and all of those
roles really fit together nicely. Part of getting to the
bottom of all of this weaponization, all of this criminality,
all this corruption is also making the victims of its whole,
So that part attorney role really fits in. And that's
I think says a lot about how President Trump sees
(02:09:47):
this role of being executed.
Speaker 2 (02:09:50):
But here's the deal.
Speaker 13 (02:09:51):
A lot of this corruption it goes obviously back to
the Biden administration and everything that was done and weaponizing
the government to go after President Trump his allies, a
lot of these Jay six prisoners, A lot of it
goes back even to a lot of mouth seasons from
these bureaucrafts during the Trump administration. You look at what
a lot of these intelligence officials had been doing. You
(02:10:13):
look at what doctor Fauci, who present by this has pardoned,
but there were many others in his orbit who we
believe are guilty of a criminal cover up. There A
lot of it goes back to the bid or receive
me to the Obama administration as well. So it's so
critical that President Trump is appointed Ed to be the
(02:10:36):
one person who is really running this working group on weaponization,
is ensuring that everyone's kind of rowing in the same direction.
These are fertile fields to fill, and Ed's got his
work cut out for him. But it's critical that we
have someone like that who is just so dead set
(02:10:56):
on getting the bottom of this, no matter what it costs,
no matter how many friends he loses, someone who just
really feels this in his bones that this is important.
I can't wait to see what they uncover, and not
just Ed, but everyone in the federal government working through
him and his team the Attorney General Bondi has put together.
(02:11:18):
It is going to be exciting. And a lot of
people in Washington are the deep State and Washington establishment,
I'll tell you they're shaken in their boot.
Speaker 2 (02:11:27):
I imagine they are. And they're probably trying to put
together a dossier on anything they can find on Martin
in order to discredit him, because they're so good at
doing that, Bradley, they are so good.
Speaker 13 (02:11:38):
It's critical the disappointment that Ed has. He can start immediately.
He doesn't have to go through the Senate confirmation process.
I mean Ed and anyone who knows and I mean
he's a roll up your sleeves and getting the work
kind of guy. And with his knowledge and his no
how and with the rest of the team that President
(02:11:58):
Trump has put the other many of them feel the
exact same way, so they're going to be able to
hit the ground running.
Speaker 2 (02:12:05):
Well, he's got enough targets to go after. I mean,
it's when you step back from it, and he rattled
off a whole bunch of them, you know, like athletes
being targeted, pro life being targeted. As you write in
your column or report in your column. The January sixth
folks just crucified for what they did, while leaving anybody
involved with destruction of property on a high level like
(02:12:26):
Antifa and Black Lives Matter completely unscathed.
Speaker 5 (02:12:30):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (02:12:30):
And the other thing was brought up the fifty one
intelligence officers who signed that absolute outright line in order
to impact the twenty twenty election to Biden's favor. I mean,
you know, the FBI had that laptop, for example, the
Hunter Biden laptop they had already verified it as authentic,
and yet they roll out these you know, intelligence officers
said all they had, all the harmarks of Russian interference.
(02:12:54):
They knew that was a lie when they signed on
to it. I'd like to see some heads roll. Do
you think they're going to be any prosecutions of this,
for example, Bradley.
Speaker 13 (02:13:03):
I would expect prosecutions. Ads made very clear that that's
certainly on the table. I'll add that that laptop, which
was first reported by my former colleague at Breitbard, m
Joe Morris. Look, the information is out there. We know
enough that there need to be prosecutions happen. We need
(02:13:25):
to start putting people in jail. They need to start
paying for their crimes. But here's the thing. All this
has just been prosecuted through the media for the most part.
What happens when you get the federal government behind it,
then we might really get some investigations going. We might
really start getting into the bottom of this. It might
(02:13:46):
be so much worse than what it appears to be
just from the outside, when it's very clear and obvious.
Anyone with half a brain that hasn't been corrupted by
Trump derangement syndrome. How serious this was, this effort to
take Trump, his allies and all of us who believe
(02:14:07):
in what he wants to do and had fought for
this America First agenda that wants to end this corruption
in the federal government that exists only to enrich itself. Look,
this is a target rich environment. And now for the
first time in his career, Ed Martin, who's the chief
(02:14:27):
hunter of Swamp Scouts, has all the errors in his
quiver to really get to work. And it is an
exciting time in the swamp for those of us who
are excited about his work.
Speaker 2 (02:14:38):
Yeah, well, we've got a few years to get something accomplished,
and I hope that something can be accomplished. This needs
to be exposed to the American people on a higher level.
As you know, the mainstream media supported all of this nonsense,
that this weaponization, and always reported in a very skewed
and biased manner to make it sound legitimate. What was
going on. I mean, we can go back a long time, Bradley,
(02:14:58):
I think of lowis learner weaponis of the irs to
go after conservative organizations. I mean, there was no accountability
for even that.
Speaker 13 (02:15:08):
There wasn't And here's the deal. This is just you
mentioned last Learner. She just happened to get caught.
Speaker 2 (02:15:15):
What else was.
Speaker 13 (02:15:16):
Going on back then? We just really don't know. And
when you look at this federal bureaucracy that is just
so dead set. I mean, it's nothing but liberals. I
wrote a story last night about the CBO, the Congressional
Budget Office, which is supposed to do read non partisan
(02:15:38):
entity that gives Congress non partisan advice on how best
to make the decisions. It's nothing but a hot bed
of liberal activists. Just in one of the departments, one
of the most important departments that advises Congress on the
budgetary impacts of Medicare and Medicaid and Obamacare markets and subsidies,
(02:16:02):
eighty four percent of that department was verifiable Democrats registered
as a Democrat, donated to Democrats votes in Democrat parties.
And that's just that we could determine how much worse
is it in that department, and more broadly, how much
worse is that in an institution is supposed to be
(02:16:25):
non partisan like the CBO, and in the federal government.
Further beyond that, And this is something that we need
to get to the bottom of, especially when there is
actual malfeasance that extends into criminality. This is a serious
problem that I'm not sure we fully understand, and so
(02:16:47):
Ed turn it loose, brother.
Speaker 2 (02:16:49):
Yeah, I'm thinking about we will destroy you from within?
Was it Nikita Krushev that I guess uttered those words?
And this seems to be exactly what's happening. These leftists
have infiltrated colleges for years, They've been traded K through
twelve education, They've obviously infiltrated all areas of government. It's
this is an extremely uphill battle we're fighting and only
doing it in the name of some accountability here. So
(02:17:10):
I hope Ed Martin does a great job at that.
It's just, you know, the examples of this just go
on and on. And I did read your piece this
morning about the CBO and was with a heavy weight
that I'm going through the Republican's limp wristed effort to
sort of find one point five trillion dollars in cuts
over ten years, when all those articles are, you know,
filled with figures from the CBO. So it's like, can
(02:17:31):
I even trust that figure when they calculate that we're
going to have eighty nine trillion dollars in debt in
the next ten years. So it's I don't know, really
really makes you concern and wonder about it. So perhaps
he is the man for the job, and we'll have
our popcorn out and I know breit Bart Bradley Jay
for example, direct Deputy Politics that will be reporting on
all this as he does such a wonderful job Bookmarket,
(02:17:52):
Breitbart dot com. Bradley, I appreciate what you're doing over there.
I read your stuff all the time, and I thank
you for coming on the morning show and sharing some
of your thoughts this morning.
Speaker 13 (02:18:02):
Always not pleasure. Ryan can't wait to join again.
Speaker 2 (02:18:04):
Looking forward to it, my friend, have a wonderful week.
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Speaker 2 (02:19:52):
Ay twenty three, fifty five KRCD talk station. Yeah, I
was trying to write down the list of all these
conspiracies and these not conspira pracies, these abuses of the
various lettered agencies. Immediately thought of the lowest learner going
back quite a few years. But then there was also
you can go back to the Obama administration ariic Holder's
Justice Department another abuse of power.
Speaker 5 (02:20:13):
May not remember.
Speaker 2 (02:20:13):
Operation was either Operation choke Point or choke Hold had
a name, and he used the Department of Justice to
go after legitimate businesses, licensed compliant, lawful businesses that they
that administration disagreed with. Think of firearms manufacturers or payday lenders.
Now say what you want about pay day lenders. They
are engaged in lawful commerce. They do provide a service
(02:20:37):
that apparently is in demand. Among certain segments of the population,
but because the Emboldment administration didn't like them, they would
threaten those businesses with regulatory and compliance audits, which people
out in the business world know if you have one
of those, it's going to be expensive going after banks
for doing business with those you know, disfavored entity. So
(02:21:01):
if you are a bank and the bomb administration didn't
like you providing the payday lender with a bank account
and banking or a firearms manufacturer, they have to use
a banking system like everybody else. But if you're doing it,
they would call you up and say, listen, we don't
like the fact that you're doing business with you know,
fill in the blank, say Smith and Wesson or something.
And if you don't stop doing business with them, if
(02:21:24):
you don't close their account, we are going to come
after you with a compliance audit.
Speaker 5 (02:21:29):
And do you know have any.
Speaker 2 (02:21:30):
Banking regulations there are? Do you know how expensive it
would be for that bank to go through that in
terms of the legal expenses and fees. And you have to,
you know, provide all the documents and information. You got
to open your doors because the government's here and they
regulate you. So rather than go through that headache and
hassle and defend yourself, and you know they're going to
find something. Some I will not be dotted, some T
(02:21:52):
will not be crossed, and you will be fine and penalized.
Why go through the headache. I'm just going to cancel
the account, and that's that's nefarious. So add that to
the list, the seemingly endless list of things for mister
Martin to go through and ferret out. And we could
go on for hours and hours with the way that
(02:22:12):
the administration and the deep state was weaponized against mostly
conservative Americans. A twenty five right now, if I have care,
see de Talk station, the Daniel Davis Deep Dive, or
get the latest on Russia Ukraine, which has been the
subject matter of late with the retired lieutenant colonel. That'll
be next. First, A good word for plumb type plumbing.
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Speaker 17 (02:23:40):
What Social Security accounts belonging to people listed over one
hundred and twenty years old.
Speaker 2 (02:23:45):
When something makes you say why eight.
Speaker 16 (02:23:48):
Million dollars for making mice transgender?
Speaker 2 (02:23:52):
When someone makes you say who.
Speaker 3 (02:23:54):
No one likes violence, but sometimes violence is necessary.
Speaker 2 (02:23:58):
When and where will you get the answers? Twenty four
to seven, Paul, this is just cruising right here.
Speaker 11 (02:24:04):
On fifty five krz the talk station man trouble in
the Bedmendal nine.
Speaker 2 (02:24:10):
It's going to be humid today. Afternoon storms are likely
high have seventy two down to sixty every night with
a chance of rain. Scattered afternoon storms tomorrow along with
clouds and high have seventy six. Got some clouds every
night with a slight chance of rain. Sixty two to
the low. And on Thursday go to you hot one.
That's cloudy start of the day, going all the way
up to eighty four sixty six. Now time for chuck
with traffic.
Speaker 9 (02:24:31):
From the UCAL Traffic Center.
Speaker 7 (02:24:32):
You see health has expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries,
and supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at
uce health dot com. Northbound seventy five continues slow out
of Erlanger into the cut between Mitchell and the wock
Wun split up to what was an accident at Glennondale, Milford.
All lanes are now open southbound seventy one. You're often
(02:24:55):
on the brakes from Fields urtled down to Red Bank,
Chucking Ramon fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 2 (02:25:02):
A thirty on a Tuesday here fifty five k see
the talk station. That means it is time for a
Daniel Davis Deeve Die. Welcome back to lieutenant retired Lieutenant
Colonel Daniel Davis to give us some warfare analysis.
Speaker 16 (02:25:15):
Welcome back, Daniel. Always a pleasure to see you and
have you on the program. And Jelotti to be here.
Brian can't you can't wait?
Speaker 2 (02:25:21):
Well, let's hit the ground running. Another update on the
latest with Russian and Ukraine. I did I read correctly
that Zelunsky now wants to have a sit down with
Vladimir Putin. I thought one of the contingencies for that
was the declaration of a ceasefire or something, which I
don't know that the Russians were necessarily interested in, considering
the advances they're making on the ground in Ukraine. But
(02:25:41):
is there is there progress in that direction?
Speaker 16 (02:25:45):
There is a lot of people talking past one another
and listening to no one. This is a complete disaster
right now that has almost no chance of anything happening
on Thursday. First of all, this started when you had
the the leaders of France, uk Germany and Poland went
to Kiev to meet with the Zelensky and they came
(02:26:06):
out there and they said, hey, we demand.
Speaker 2 (02:26:09):
A thirty day unconditional ceasefire.
Speaker 16 (02:26:11):
We were telling Putin you as an ultimatum, you will
do it by Monday.
Speaker 2 (02:26:17):
This is on Saturday.
Speaker 16 (02:26:18):
You will do it by Monday, or we will hit
you with a bunch of sanctions. In response, Putin didn't
answer the question, of course, he's not going to do
it unconditional thirty day seas far they've said so from
the beginning, they've never said anything besides that. And why
would this stronger power ever submit to a demand by
this weaker power. That's the first point. So Putin didn't
(02:26:39):
answer that. But then he did say, you know what
to tell you what, We're willing to have direct negotiations
between Russia and Ukraine, and we'll do it in Istanbul
on Thursday. So you wanted to decease far on Friday,
We'll offer direct talks on Thursday. No discussion about a ceasefire.
We're not interested in that. So then it turns out
that we say that the Zelenski try and said, okay,
(02:27:02):
I will one up you again. I will go to
Istanbul and I will meet you Vladimir Putin personally. You
better be there, you know, just this mocking kind of thing.
And there's no way that Putin is gonna just meet
with him in the NATO country istaan bull to try
and settle this stuff, because they are miles apart on
the fundamentals of an end of war negotiation. If you
(02:27:24):
can't even get to a thirty day ceasefire, the two
sides can agree on, why do you think on Thursday
you're gonna solve the war?
Speaker 2 (02:27:31):
Makes no sense at all? Well, it doesn't. But as
we have been typically going back to this posturing, you've
got to have something to back up your threats. You
have to have something that is worthy of exchange at
the negotiation table. And as you've been pointing out week
after week after week, the Russians keep making gains and
advances and more Ukrainian soldiers die, and they become weaker
(02:27:54):
and weaker and weaker in terms of their bargaining position
every single day that passes. Meaning I guess if Putin
would show up there and sit down across the table
from Zelensky, what would Zelensky have to say? Well, And
that's the point exactly.
Speaker 16 (02:28:10):
And I was scouring the headlines and stories before we
came on the air here today, and there's all this talking,
I mean, and it's all over the place, and all
the Western media, yeah, and the pundits and stuff, and
they're all saying, we'll see if Putin's actually serious about
this or not, or if it's just a ploy.
Speaker 2 (02:28:24):
And I'm like, it's there's no ploy.
Speaker 16 (02:28:26):
They're very open about here's our conditions, come and talk
about them, and if you don't, we'll simply keep fighting.
That's what we aren't listening to on our side. So
there's no way that Putin is going to meet with
him as a first step.
Speaker 2 (02:28:40):
I mean, this is what they have offered.
Speaker 16 (02:28:42):
And what is normal is that you have delegations at
the appropriate level.
Speaker 2 (02:28:45):
That's what Russia said.
Speaker 16 (02:28:47):
At the beginning on Thursday, at the appropriate level, we'll
meet directly. No one ever offered for Putin to meet
with So now they're trying to mock Putin and make
it look like he's hiding. Well, look that works in
Western media because they're not paying attention anyway. It does
nothing on the battlefield or a just reality. That's the problem, Brian.
It won't change reality even if we mock him all
(02:29:07):
week long.
Speaker 2 (02:29:08):
Well, going back to France, UK, Poland and Germany making
a stance on this and sort of making the same
type of demand threatened by sanctions, which I guess is
an arrow in their quiver, but doesn't Germany kind of
rely on Russia for its natural gas or to keep
their country somewhat in running order.
Speaker 16 (02:29:26):
Well, they have significantly reduced I'm not sure if they
brought it to zero, but it's significantly reduced with what
it used to be, and they've getten it from other
sources now.
Speaker 2 (02:29:34):
But that's the problem for Germany. The other sources are.
Speaker 16 (02:29:37):
Substantially higher in per unit cost, so that makes all
of their industrial output more expensive, and that's had a
dampening effect on their economy. I mean, I think that
they're probably in a recession right now. We'll wait till
the numbers come out here in a little bit, but
I think that probably it's been a real problem for them.
But I mean That just puzzles me. You got these guys,
(02:29:58):
these four guys there and you know, all luck in
the arms basically and say we're going to sangs you.
And I'm like, wait, that's what we said lead led
by Joe Biden and right when this war started about
here where you're going to cripple Russia and all this
kind of stuff. Well, now then bricks has expanded, They're
expanding economically in places beyond the West. So I'm like, look,
if we didn't cripple them, then what possible logic can
(02:30:20):
these four guys in the leading Western countries think you're
going to do to them?
Speaker 3 (02:30:25):
Now?
Speaker 2 (02:30:25):
It makes no sense to me at all. No, And
you know, from a global geopolitical standpoint, that did nothing
but drive them into the arms of China and cozy
up there and formalize and create a better working relationship
with Russia and China, which you know together rather for me, I.
Speaker 16 (02:30:41):
Mean just together, that's for good. So far you want
to double down on that, I don't get it, man.
Speaker 2 (02:30:46):
No, And you know, got to go back to the
what do there's a combined military force of France, UK,
Poland and Germany amount to in the Grand Scheme of things.
I mean, if you put all their soldiers on the
battlefield together, could they could they match the military might
of Russia? Should push come to shove, hopefully not not
even close.
Speaker 16 (02:31:02):
I think that cumulative total on paper would be somewhere
around seven hundred and fifty thousand, something like that. Russia
has one point five million, but none of those guys
are trained for modern warfare. Russia has three now into
the fourth year, a very painful experience learned in all
kinds of technological advances, none of which these guys have.
(02:31:24):
Nobody on our side knows anything about what it's like
to get shelled mercilessly, to be not even afraid to
look up into the sky because the drones fall in,
how to do counter drone operations, the electron we don't
know any of that, Brian. So the disparity, forget the
numbers on paper, which is about like this, The actual
capacity is probably more like this.
Speaker 2 (02:31:44):
That's the reality. That's harsh reality, but it is what
it is, which is suggests, as you've concluded before, and
I've reached the conclusion, they're going to have to make
some major land concessions in Ukraine to get this thing done.
With and that's of course the predicate for Russia's sitting
down at the table. We're keeping criming in, We're keeping
these areas that are Russian dominated and Russian populated, that's
(02:32:04):
where we're starting from.
Speaker 16 (02:32:06):
Or they're just going to keep fighting and they'll end
up at least on the Danepa River. That's my calculation,
because I just don't see how the battlefield math works
any differently. If you keep with this fiction that we're
going right now, instead of having an ugly deal where
you could keep most of that stuff from where those
four provinces are to the river, you're gonna end up
losing it all and the men that goes along with it.
It's the worst of all worlds from our perspective.
Speaker 2 (02:32:28):
I guess that minerals deal wouldn't be worth the paper
it's written on to come that if that happens, right, Daniel,
it would not Oh jeez hey, real quick before we
part coming today. And it's always interesting, maybe a little
bit depressing for a lot of folks, but reality Israelate reality,
and someone's got to point it out. India, Pakistan a
lot of people concerned about World War three breaking out,
and I know they were swapping shots against each other.
(02:32:49):
Kashmir has been an issue between the two countries for
a long long time. Trump was given some credit for
negotiating at least a ceasefire between those two countries. You
see ongoing a concern between those two countries. You think
they can hammer it out. Yeah, I think they can
hammer it out. I mean, this has been going on.
Speaker 16 (02:33:07):
The seeds go all the way back to nineteen forty two,
and then they really start spreading in nineteen forty seven,
and then it's just been kind of on again, off again.
There was a clash in twenty sixteen, there was a
clash in twenty nineteen, and then now this one too.
And I had John Meersheimer, you know, international theorist, relations theorist,
on our show earlier this week, and he pointed out,
he said, there are multiple rungs on the escalation ladder
(02:33:29):
before this gets into potential nuclear clash, because neither side
wants that. And so he predicted, and it's turned out
that way, that they'll sort this out because escalating and
going up beyond small hits is bad for both sides.
And he said he thinks you're going to work it out,
and he looks like that's what's happened.
Speaker 2 (02:33:46):
Well, and you'd hate to see World War three breakout
over a terrorist attack. I mean, you think about Archduke
Ferdinand getting killed leading to the World War. Things like
that can happen. But fortunately, I guess the leaders realize
that cooler heads must prevail when both sides have significant
numbers of nuclear weapons.
Speaker 16 (02:34:03):
Right yeah, and if they had one, I mean that's
and you would use it. That's that's that's one too many. Uh,
and they got both of them have a decent sized stockpile,
even even Pakistan. And that's the problem because you and
that's what India understands. Conventionally, India dwarfs Pakistan. Obviously you
can look at the the size and understand that, but
the nuclear threshold, I mean, they could just Pakistan could
(02:34:26):
devastate India.
Speaker 2 (02:34:27):
India knows that.
Speaker 16 (02:34:28):
So India will press its advantage as far as it can,
but they know that they push Pakistan too far. If
they go too many wrungs up that escalation ladder, then
the only thing they would leave Pakistan with is to
use their their equalizer, and they don't want to do that.
So so far, it looks like that even though there's
a lot of answers between the two sides, there's still
is the same thought.
Speaker 2 (02:34:48):
Well, that's somewhat uplifting news. War's bad news, but at
least they're not launching nukes at each other. Daniel Davis
Deep Dive. Search for it where you find your podcast,
and then tune in next Tuesday for another edition of
the program here in fifty five KR see the talk station. Daniel,
have a great weekend, my friend. Thanks much a pleasure
about franc Next Tuesday, look forward to it's eight forty
right now, fifty five KRC, The Talk Station. Foreign Exchange
(02:35:10):
get your car and foreign exchange, like I did just
the other day. Very expensive, well not compared to the dealer.
It was a big job with a spark plug change,
oil change, break, fluid change and all the filters and
everything you know that adds up, and you got to
do it to keep the car in proper working order.
I don't mind, but I looked at that bill and
I thought, you know what, I guarantee you this has
been at least one thousand dollars more if I taken
(02:35:31):
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Speaker 6 (02:36:30):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio.
Speaker 13 (02:36:33):
Station texting en rules you would reoccurring automated text messages.
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Good we Time for the weather.
Speaker 2 (02:36:37):
Ten of nine says two days it's gonna be a humid, humid, humid, cloudy,
and humid showers are likely this afternoon seventy two for
the high over night LOWI sixty with some range. Scattered
afternoon showers Tomorrow with the highest seventy six. Overnight lowis
sixty two with a slight chance of ring and a
hot Thursday going up to eighty four degrees along with
some cloud sixty seven. Right now, Time for final.
Speaker 9 (02:36:56):
Traffic from the UCLF Trampics Center.
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Learn more at uce health dot com.
Speaker 7 (02:37:09):
North Fend seventy five continues slow out of arrow, anger
into the cut, then slowed between Mitchell and an accident
at Shepherd. Left lane is wocked off southbound seventy five.
Break rights through walk on southbound seventy one have you
us just above to seventy five through Kenwood Chuck Ingram
on fifty five krc the talk station, Hey forty.
Speaker 2 (02:37:31):
Six, fifty five KRCD talk station, Happy Tuesday, helping out
the American veteran, which is done every single day, the
Cincinnatava which we're blessed to have here, got a great
VA and joining us to talk about VA benefits and
the five essential VA benefits of veterans youing to do about.
Welcome back Todd's Sledge. It's always a pleasure to have
me on my program.
Speaker 17 (02:37:51):
Yeah, Brian, good morning to you, and look forward to
talking about these five essential things that I always make
sure veterans know about.
Speaker 5 (02:37:58):
Her hear about.
Speaker 2 (02:37:59):
Well, let's dive on into them. Let's talk about number one.
But there are five, yep, all five.
Speaker 17 (02:38:05):
Well, the first one, obviously I'm going to talk about
is the healthcare benefits with you and I talk about
so much, and that is just you know, any unenrolled veteran,
our veteran who's not enrolled to give us a call
in our eligibility office and find out how do we
fit into your personal healthcare portfolio? Very simple to do,
and so you know, and we'll give out that number
(02:38:27):
for that eligibility piece. The second piece is any kind
of disability benefits, and we have some wonderful service officers
located throughout you know, the Tri state area, but I
encourage any veteran to contact their local County Veteran Service
Commission here in Ohio, particularly Hamilton County, Claremont County, Butler County,
Warren County as far as we stretch. So those are
(02:38:50):
those are two of the three, you know. The third
one is you know, it's the GI Bill and the
and the educational and vocational benefits that veterans you know,
are definitely entitle too, and they should check those things
out because those levels of service connection besides the monetary value,
they also provide long term benefits like long term care
(02:39:11):
and different educational benefits that veterans may not be aware
of it and could also lead to some styles of
benefits as well. So those there's three of the three
of the five on.
Speaker 2 (02:39:20):
The GI Bill that that program is available for something
beyond a regular four year college degree. You don't have
to consider going to a four year degree? Can can
you be used the GI bill for maybe vocational training
or associate's degree or something along those lines.
Speaker 17 (02:39:37):
Yeah, any any level of education or vocational training Brian
is available through the GI bill part and that's where
the County office is can steer you in that right direction.
Of course.
Speaker 2 (02:39:46):
Well that's great because there's a huge demand out there
for the trades and the idea that the GI bill
can help one of my veteran friends out there, you know,
I would think they would be particularly well suited for
the trades.
Speaker 13 (02:39:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (02:40:00):
Agree.
Speaker 17 (02:40:00):
And for an example of that, which I hope to
maybe bring on the next show next month, I have
a colleague that actually runs a vocational training program specifically
for veterans in the HVAC field.
Speaker 5 (02:40:14):
Oh great, And as we all know.
Speaker 17 (02:40:16):
We can't have enough of those technicians you know today
because they're kind of sparse. But yeah, there are scholarship
programs through that as well as the stuff with the
GI Bill to you know, to be able to do
that part of that.
Speaker 4 (02:40:27):
So, you know, just.
Speaker 17 (02:40:29):
Continuing forward on some of these other essential benefits as
the burial benefits as well that people you know may
not be aware of that they can line up you know,
ahead of time, just like any other private citizen can do.
And make sure that they're available to do that. And
then I also like to make sure people understand about
the VET center as well. The VET center is another
(02:40:50):
essential benefit that folks can take advantage of who maybe
don't lean on the VA, but you know, need some
family counseling or specific counseling related to their There are
combat missions and tours that they've done. So those are
the five essential things that I always try to make
sure veterans are at least educated about and don't leave
the boxes unchecked. What's happens a lot of times the
(02:41:12):
two the first two benefits are usually checked is the
healthcare and the disability benefits, but the other boxes go unchecked,
and they can be life changing if they're not taking.
Speaker 5 (02:41:22):
Taking advantage of.
Speaker 2 (02:41:24):
Yeah, no question about it, some terrific services there for
the American veteran. And when you talk about the medical care,
we always try to emphasize that we knew and I
talk the opportunities for veterans to get some really wonderful
medical care benefits at the VA that can work along
with their typical medical insurance premium or policy that they
maybe have from their employer, because quite often the veterans
(02:41:46):
are out there and employed, and they get good medical
coverage for the employer, they tend to overlook what's offered
at the VA. Now that medical policy you've got through
your employer, maybe that doesn't cover hearing, AIDS or other services,
maybe has limited benefits for perhaps some therapy sessions. And
you've got some terrific services there for the at the
VA that address needs that the veterans have, and that
(02:42:09):
may not be as good as what they're getting through
their employer or their insurance.
Speaker 17 (02:42:15):
Yeah, absolutely, Brian, And you know that's when I talk
about how does the VA healthcare system, which is a
benefit system we're not in We're not insurance based. We're
not like you're an HMO or a PPO. These are
benefits that help supplement different types of healthcare benefits that
you would be or somebody could be eligible for to
(02:42:35):
put into your health care portfolio, just like you do
any other kinds of resources. And you're right, some of
the more expensive high end medical treatments, you know, may
may either be free at the VA or minimum copays.
Because one of the things that we do, uh make
sure is if you have multiple appointments with us, we
(02:42:56):
try to couple those on one day so that you're
not I mean back at different times. And the advantage
of that is one of the advantages of that is
is that if you have multiple specialty appointments that have
a copey, you're only in if you're susceptible to a copey,
you're only going to pay one copey, whereas in the
private sector, if you bounce around offices, you may have
separate copays at each place.
Speaker 5 (02:43:18):
That's a great point.
Speaker 2 (02:43:19):
I don't recall you making that one before, but that's
those copays can really add up, todd Yes they.
Speaker 17 (02:43:26):
Can, Yes, they can absolutely well. And also our pharmaceutical
benefits that we have with the power of that, we
bind with our system and our specialty clinics as you mentioned,
you know, hearing aids, eyeglasses, mental health sessions, prosthetics. There's
a lot of different benefits that we can plug into
that you know, you don't have to use us full time.
(02:43:47):
That's the great advantage. And the other thing is we
also collect your insurance information, so if you do have
a copay, we build your insurance versus asking you for
a copey, So it works, it works on both.
Speaker 2 (02:43:58):
Ends excellent well. And you've obviously painted a great picture
on why it's important for veterans to enroll into the
A healthcare system. You say under the age of fifties,
seriously consider it, I guess for the reason do you
just spoke about.
Speaker 13 (02:44:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (02:44:12):
Absolutely.
Speaker 17 (02:44:13):
You know, in my long tenure of of being out
in the veteran community, you know, one of the things
I've always seen is that veterans don't really think about
the v A healthcare system or be involved in it
until later in life. I'll stay you know, early late
seventies and eighties, when when healthcare situations can really pile
up financially, and so you know, getting enrolled with US,
(02:44:36):
getting you know, getting your yourself established with us before the.
Speaker 5 (02:44:39):
Age of fifty.
Speaker 9 (02:44:41):
As I can attest, as I've.
Speaker 17 (02:44:42):
Gotten past fifty, I've spent more time at a medical
office than I ever have for just small things that
add up. And so we want you need to get
enrolled early. Do it so early so that when you
do need us, you're not in a private sector going
or your family asked and asking you, like what they
have her mom, you know you you served in the military.
Why aren't you using the VA. You have a seamless
(02:45:05):
transition with with your healthcare with US and and UH
and the medical records to go.
Speaker 5 (02:45:09):
Along with it. Amen to that.
Speaker 2 (02:45:11):
So get enrolled and as we do, we always part
company on how a veteran gets enrolled with the v
A healthcare system and to also remain actively enrolled.
Speaker 17 (02:45:21):
Yeah, so it's pretty simple for veterans that are not
enrolled in our system. We have a direct dial eligibility office.
The veterans can call and that number is five one
three four seven five six four nine nine. That's five
one three four seven five sixty four nine nine.
Speaker 5 (02:45:37):
To give them a call and.
Speaker 17 (02:45:38):
Ask some questions over the phone. They can help determine
if you're eligible for VA Healthcare, which you know, Brian,
I talked to you many many times that you're not
automatically enrolled in VA healthcare as a veteran.
Speaker 2 (02:45:49):
You have to enroll someday, so.
Speaker 17 (02:45:52):
You know exactly and uh, you know, come down afterwards
and you know, get get the paperwork all lined up.
I do encourage that a face if face interaction happens
with US versus doing it online in the bigger system.
And if someone out there has the power of attorney
for a veteran, they can also call that eligibility office
(02:46:12):
and work with our office to get that veteran squared away.
And then you know, if you're not really active in
your healthcare, you don't need it. We do require that
we see you at least every twelve to twenty four
months so that you remain active in our system, that
you're ever kicked out of the system. This helps us
keep updated on your preventive health stuff.
Speaker 2 (02:46:33):
That's good keeping the American veterans well healthy too, because
you've got to see a doctor, I would argue every year,
so that encourages that. Todd's legs. Thank you. We have
all the American Veterans for what you do at the CINCINNIVA.
I love having you on and spreading the news about this.
Keep up the great work and we'll talk again next month.
Speaker 17 (02:46:50):
Yeah. Absolutely, Brian always appreciates your support and your advocacy
for us.
Speaker 2 (02:46:54):
Happy to do it and be in the position to
do so. Take care of my friend. Have a wonderful week.
Eight fifty six. Dan Claire, Communication Director Outreach officer for
the UH Disabled American Veterans boot Camp this weekend for
you entrepreneur veterans. Get the info fifty five KRC dot com.
Listen to my conversation with Deputy Politics Edter Bradley J
from bright Bart News on why Ed Martin's getting an
(02:47:15):
earful from certain senators. Daniel Davis deep died with the
latest on Russia and Pakistan and India. It's all there
fifty five KRC dot com. Plus the op ed piece
I read which was really absolutely wonderful, the Decivilizing of
America by Victor David Hanson right there fifty five kr
SE dot com. Thank you, Joe Strecker. Folks have a
wonderful day. Don't go away. Glenn Beck's coming up. Stay
(02:47:35):
on top of the day's biggest stories at the top
of the our that's so important. Another update coming up
on fifty five KRC the talkstation.
Speaker 4 (02:47:45):
This rep