Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five O five, the fifty five k r C the talks.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Every Tuesday.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
I'm the dude man, I am Brian Thomas, not the
dude Joff JUCKERSCUTI producers in there and apparently more people
been shot, just like yesterday talking talking about the violence.
We talked with Chrismithing about that. I fee President of
can kover a problem with violence in the city, the
silence from the administration, And as we're getting ready to
(00:50):
launch a discussion about that, Joe sent me a breaking
story from yesterday morning before the show started. We had
another shooting in downtown CINCINNTY. Add that to the list
of the dozen or so that we were talking about anyway,
and this morning apparently two more. You think the may
wll say anything this time? Joe, Yeah, I have slim
(01:14):
just left town. Anyhow, what's coming up with a FIW
five Cariocsy Morning Show. It's a special edition. It's Tech
Tuesday with Day Have had Her Don't get Scammed on
Amazon Prime days. They also have a don't get scammed
by the scammers that are preying on the Texas flooding victims.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
To get to that in a minute.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
There are some really sick, twisted people who have a
special place in Hell reserve for them. Corey Bowman speaking
of someone who's going to talk about the violence in
the city, maryl candidate Corey Bowman returns the fifty five
Carricy Morning Show seven five and in advanced congratulations to
Corey and his beautiful wife. Baby Jordan is now living
(01:53):
in this world. She gave birches the other day, so
he has a new child. I think that makes it
four four Joe or five. I think it's four family man.
Cork Bowman is inside scoop with the bright Bart News
Today Texas Border reporter Randy Clark gonna be talking about
the Texas floods and the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. We
(02:15):
get the latest on Russian Ukraine. Apparently we're gonna be
sending more arms to Ukraine's on the headline this morning
on Wall Street Journal, Trump to resume sending weapons Ukraine.
The US will send additional defense of arms because Moscow
is hitting Kiev very hard, according to what the President
said on Again Off Again, And I'm gonna guess that
(02:38):
Daniel Davis will say it's an exercise of futility, because
if you've got nobody there in the Ukrainian military to
launch the weapons or use the weapons. They're gonna sit
idly by. I know that's a bit of an overstatement
considering yes, there are some forces in Ukraine still on
the ground, but man, they are just getting churned up.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
Latest on Iran and maybe a ward or two about
the Huthi's launching missiles at ships. Got two Greek ships
that have been hit so far by hoothy missiles coming
out of Yam and so some shipping attacks and obviously
that could spell some real problems for the shipping lanes
and lots and lots of traffic going through that particular area.
So there's your lineup today. I'd love to hear from
(03:16):
you if you've got a comment about something. Five one, three, seven,
nine fifty, five hundred, eight hundred and eight two three
Taco Time, five fifty on AT and T funds.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Yeah. Over to the scammers.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
Officials in Kerr County where the that just terrible, terrible
flood went through the other day said the family's impacted
by the recent flash floods claim more than one hundred lives,
dozens still missing, and now they're being targeted by telephone scammers.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
I think we have a big award to give out
for these.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
Folks, Joe, families of the victims, and a local hotline
center for reporting missing persons. Apparently they're being targeted, according
to the Kerrville City Manager, Dalton Rice, at a news conference,
saying that has make it more difficult to get a
firm number of people missing in the area because they're
receiving hundreds of scam calls. Right said victims' families are
(04:08):
being reached out to saying that they have their kids,
pay me money, describing it as heartbreaking. Of course, it
is so far well, at least as of the moving
target and the reporting, at least forty one people were
reportedly still missing after the rains and the flooding. Right said,
we're dealing with mental health issues where people are calling
(04:31):
saying they have visions. All these things we're dealing with
on a day to day basis and having to vet
this information. It becomes a very taxing on our people.
What you like, psychics and mystics calling up saying hey,
I know where this lost person is, right, Yeah, like
that's a real thing. Republican Attorney to General Ken Paxon
(04:55):
later issued a consumer alert for those impacted by the
floods for bad actors looking to take advantage based on
by perpetrating scams. These are no there are no words
for how wrong it is that morally bankrupt people are
trying to take advantage of Texans by using this tragedy
to scam them. Anyone engaging in these scams will face
(05:16):
the full force of law, and I will not rest
until they are brought to justice. I will continue to
work to defend those impacted by this tragedy and also
urge everyone to join me in praying for those affected
by this terrible natural disaster unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Periods.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
The biggest douche of the universe in all the galaxies,
there's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top,
the pinnacle of Deusdom. Good going, Deu, your dreams have
come true.
Speaker 3 (05:53):
Also warning the folks that impacted by the flooding, be
wary of contractors from outside the area. Not rush to
sign any contract to have your your home rebuilt or
whatever repaired. Asked for references and check with a better
business beer to make sure that they're working with a
trustworthy business. Very sound advice actually that sound advice all
(06:14):
the time, which is why I never, ever, ever, ever
work with some random door knocker coming to the front
door of my home asking, hey, can I check your roof?
Unt no thank you by Elsa said, if you want
to donate funds, be wary of who you're donating to.
There's a lot of unscrupulous people out there saying that
they're collecting funds to cover the for the victims of
(06:36):
the flooding, and they have no intention of getting into
the victims of the flood. Officials in Texas said donate
funds directly. The Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country
nonprofit website said it will direct funds to vetted organization
provide rescue, relief, and recovery efforts as well as flood assistance.
And I've always mentioned Matthew twenty five. Haven't been over
(06:58):
to M twenty five m dot org to see if
they're collecting funds, but I'm sure they are extremely trustworthy
and a place where you get a pretty much one
hundred percent of your dollar donated is going to go
to the flood victims. I just it is so disturbing
that people would do this, and it's also disturbing that
(07:21):
the members of the Democratic Party are blaming Donald Trump
somehow for the flood. How do you get from point
A to point B on that one you have this
like historic one hundred year flood, and yet Donald Trump's
to blame oh the word and know that he fired
all the weather forecasters. No, no, actually, there is no
(07:44):
impact on the weather forecasters. In fact, they were all prepared.
You can ask all of them. Even though it's critical
of the Donald Trump funding cuts to the National Weather Service,
that know that they had no impact on them, not
a one.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
They were all there.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
They were in place, doing their job, doubled down in
the various weather forecasting. They provided twelve hours advance notice
of the likelihood of floods. They provided four hours or
three hours advance notice of the emergency like flood warning,
it's coming, Get the hell out. The only problem is
people were sleeping and communications weren't very good. Apparently they
(08:25):
don't have a warning system and going off. In fact,
I think that I read somewhere where I was believed
that the mayor of the town was interviewed and they
talked back when he was in office six or so
years ago. They talked about an advanced warning system like
a siren system like we have that's tested every Wednesday
once a month, that the price of it was a
(08:46):
little too much for the citizens to take, and they
rejected building something like that. And something I said the
other day, how about the phenomenon of the boy who
cried Wolf. You know, there's only so much you're going
to listen to and finally say, yeah, well you know what,
I'm not gonna worry about it. Another warning, another emergency. Yeah, okay, Well,
the last ten times you said that, nothing happened, So
(09:10):
I'm going to disregard at this time. It's something that
Brian Stetler noted warnings fatigue is what he called it.
CNN analyst Brian Stettler placing some of the blame on
the media for constantly tossing weather emergency warnings in the public.
This is something my wife's even commented to me about.
(09:30):
Oh my god, they changed the colors of the maps.
You know, you talk about heat indexes. Oh this guy
that feels like one hundred and ninety seven degrees out there.
You know, the map's purple where it used to be red,
And you know, you get kind of callous to the
whole thing. After a while, Stetler side of reporting from
CNN his own team that warnings and this goes to
(09:53):
the Democrats who are saying Donald Trump's responsible for the flooding.
Warnings were sent out ahead of the flooding, but the
question was whether the warnings reached who they needed to reach.
They went on to say warning fatigue was being cited
by more experts as one of the causes of the disaster.
Quote when everything is labeled extreme weather, nothing seems extreme anymore.
(10:14):
Thank you taking a poke at the global warming climate
alarmists out there in the world. Oh they oh, We're
all gonna die in one hundred and fifty years. Even Politico,
the left leaning political website, pointed out warnings were sent
as early as twelve hours ahead of the flooding, noting
(10:34):
that they may not have been interpreted well enough by
local law enforcement to prevent death and destruction. Quote of
the crux of this disaster is a failure of the
last mile of communication. That from Tom Fayhee of National
Weather Service. The forecast went out, they communicated the forecast,
they disseminated the watches and the warnings. And the dilemma
(10:56):
we have is there was nobody listening at four o'clock
in the morning for these watches and warnings. The children
at camp and the counselors. I presume we're sleeping at
the time. I don't know there's something we learned from this.
(11:17):
I presume there is. But this notion and the Democrats
are getting nailed to the wall on social media for
those who have actually out loud blamed Trump or taken
delight with the death of these in many cases children,
but just human life lost. Generally speaking. They deserve it.
(11:41):
These maga folks deserve it. These climate change deniers deserve
to die.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
Just observe.
Speaker 3 (11:52):
That's painting with a rather broad brush, because you know,
maybe there were some Kamala Harris supporters among the mixed.
Maybe there's some global warming believers in the mix in there.
They're not with us anymore either. Five sixteen fifty five
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You know.
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Speaker 6 (13:29):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station our iHeartRadio Music.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Channel nine.
Speaker 3 (13:43):
First morning weather forecasts muggy again today, very very muggy.
They say, partly cloudy skies should be dry today as well.
I have eighty six partly cloudie every night, very humid,
low of seventy partly cloudy, very humid Tomorrow, scattered storms
and showers possible, eighty four for the high overnight low
(14:06):
of sixty nine with partly cloudy skies, and yes, again
muggy Thursday, cloudy, isolated storm chances remain in a high
of eighty seven seventy one degrees. Right now fifty five
KR City Talk Station five twenty one if the drive
car CD talk station.
Speaker 7 (14:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Some really outrageous comments going on in connection with this
whole flooding situation should help low people can stoop. Sadie Perkins,
Democrat appointed to the Houston Food Insecurity Board. Apparently a
Democrat mayor. The late Democrat Mayor Sylvester Turner appointed her
to the city board in twenty twenty three. Her term
expired in January. Complained on TikTok that the victims of
(14:50):
the flooding at Camp Mystic were receiving an undue amount
of attention because they are white. I think it's probably
because they were innocent eight year olds that had their
lives taken away from them in a moment's notice. But
(15:11):
she said, I know I'm probably gonna get canceled for this.
But Camp Mystic as a white only girls Christian camp.
They don't even have a token Asian. They don't have
a token black person. It's an all white only conservative
Christian camp. If you ain't white, you ain't right, You
ain't getting in, you ain't going period. Something tells me
that she's wrong on that, but you know, she had
to say it out loud. She went on, I think
(15:33):
that context needs to be said. If this were a
group of Hispanic girls out there, this would not be
getting the type of coverage that they're getting. No one
would give an F word, and all these white people,
the parents of these little girls, would be saying things
like they need to be deported, they should have been here,
shouldn't have been here in the first place. Well, okay,
(15:54):
you end up having to delete these kind of texts
out there in the world because the common sense folks
out here in America, people that actually see through the
lens of this racist nonsense, start you start drawing their ire.
Houston Democratic Maryor John Whitmer's office said in a statement
regarding her comments. Mayor John Whitmer will not reappoint her
and is taking immediate steps to remove her permanently from
(16:16):
the board. Houston Democrat Mayor disagreeing with his fellow Democrat
on her outrageous racist comments. Christina Probst, formerly with Bluefish
Pediatrics in Houston. I say formerly because she got in
trouble for what she had to say over the weekend
(16:37):
regarding the flood victims. May all visitors, children, non MAGA voters,
and pets be safe and dry. Kirk County MAGA voted
gut FEMA, they deny climate change. May they get what
they voted for. Bless their hearts. Her former employer, Bluefishats,
(17:00):
had issue with statement and clarifying that her remarks do
not reflect the values and standards of omission of Bluefish Pediatrics.
We want to be clear we do not support or
condone any statements that politicizes tragedy, diminishes human dignity, or
fails to clearly uphold compassion for every child in family,
regardless of background or beliefs. Later announcing on their website
(17:21):
that she had been canned from her job. President of
the Texas Medical Board also looking into it, guy named
Sherry if Zaffran, she may be in trouble on a
broader level and perhaps could lose her license to practice
medicine in the state of Texas, indicated that he has
been made aware for remarks and that any complaints we
may receive will be thoroughly investigated. What prompts people to
(17:45):
go out there and say things like this, he asked, rhetorically,
means is pure hatred for Donald Trump? Trump's arrangement syndromes
that bad? Yeah, apparently it is that bad. Twenty five
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That's seven five three eight thousand.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Fifty five KRC don't let the popsigles and money.
Speaker 3 (19:24):
Channa nine weather forecast, give me hot, humid, humid human humid.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
So we've got a cloudy, muggy day to day.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
Eighty six for the high, partly cloudy, humid, overnight seventy
for the low eighty four with yes humidity and partly
cloudy sky. Scattered showers and storms possible overnight partly cloudy,
muggy sixty nine and on Thursday, cloudy, isolated chance to
storms remains and high of eighty seven seventy one degrees.
(19:52):
Right now for clud KRECB talk station five twenty nine,
give five KRCD talk station. Remember fifty five care dot
comedy can't listen alive to the smith event mayor missing
in action. Basic conclusion on that, in the wake of
all the violence going on in the city Cincinnati, the
silence from the elected officials, council members, and the mayor deafening,
(20:14):
a sentiment echoed by FOP President Ken Cober, who preceded
Christopher Smithman yesterday talking about criming downtownsin SINNETI make sure
you get your iHeartMedia app by her over there so
you can listen to the audio and the podcast all
the media and content from iHeartMedia at fifty five caresee
dot com score to the phone see what Tom's got
this morning, Tom, thanks for calling, Welcome to the program.
Speaker 8 (20:35):
Good morning, And first of all, I have to say
that your executive producer is the best on the planet. Correct,
of course, absolutely he does. He does a fantastic job
and I guess on air talent would be lost without him.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
We can say that, right, amen, Brother, what prompted that.
Speaker 8 (20:55):
I loved you up a couple of softballs? Right? What
are you gonna say no to? That's like the wife's
coming up to you and said, is how does this
look on me?
Speaker 5 (21:08):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (21:08):
You look wonderful, man, Joe.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
Yeah. You know, as to the latter, that depends on
the nature of your relationship.
Speaker 8 (21:20):
That's true. That's true.
Speaker 3 (21:22):
If my wife did not look good in something, I
would say that, I go, I don't know that that
looks right? And I have said that before, and we
don't come to blows over something like that. You ask
my opinion, I'm going to give you my opinion. I'm honest,
I'm direct, I'm forthright, I say, what's on my mind?
Why would I lie?
Speaker 8 (21:38):
Right? Good for you you ask to the subject of
the we'll switch back to the topics. Does your uh
ask you your question about or the topic about mayor
act after your ball? Why would he have why would
he need to say anything? Everything seems like it's going
according to plane. So I think all the council members
(22:01):
or democrat. He's a Democrat. What's the problem?
Speaker 5 (22:03):
Right?
Speaker 8 (22:04):
Everything's fine? Right?
Speaker 1 (22:05):
The violence is planned.
Speaker 8 (22:08):
I don't know about plan, but it's it's a I
don't know, it's it's obviously not to bothersome For them,
they don't seem to give a crap enough to do
anything about it, so they it must be an outcome
that they were are least willing to accept.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
Yes, I agree with you, you say so.
Speaker 3 (22:25):
I agree with you on that when you go to
defund the police, you don't do anything to support them,
and you undermine their efforts, you are going to end
up with more crime. And yeah, that is a natural
logical result. We've seen it roll out in multiple cities
across this country over the past four or five years.
Amid the defund the police. Police are all a bunch
of racist Nazis. Yeah, it's happened in multiple cities and
(22:47):
states like California.
Speaker 8 (22:51):
Right, and the liberal bastion, right, I mean, everything's great
out there. Oh yeah, the incident and uh it blue
over the weekend, the red, White and Blue ash thing.
And how how a bunch of kids are running around
and causing all kinds of trouble. And and now they
they got to put up more gates, and they gotta
(23:11):
they got to put up more entry points so that
people can't get in with certain things. I mean, it's
it's idiots that ruin it for every everybody else. And
and obviously the Democrats don't aren't too bothered by it
because they're you know, they're not doing enough about it.
They're virtually nothing about it.
Speaker 5 (23:29):
You know.
Speaker 8 (23:29):
In fact, they're not only not doing anything about it,
they're they're going out of their way. Whenever anything happens
and goes wrong, they go out of their way to
try to protect the guilty party, the people that cause
the problems. Oh well, it's not their fault. It's because
you know, the Republicans are racist or Donald Trump this
or whatever. I mean, these people's reaction to this flood
(23:50):
is it's really all you need to know about these people.
They are so desperate to get rid of any kind
of that I really believe it boils down to accountability.
They don't want accountability. They want people and themselves to
be able to do whatever they want, whatever makes them
feel good. And any any way to curtail that is
(24:10):
must be wrong. It's got to be bad. And and well,
take an incident and that so many people die. I
mean they died because they were down in a river valley.
It's not because of Trump or because of any failure
of any weather things. They die because of the location
of where they were when this downfour happens.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
Yeah you knew that, Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 8 (24:30):
Something political is absolutely evil. It's it is so ridiculous
and and and it has to right now be at
the top of the lift of why people should look
at them and think, don't vote Democrats. Have a great day, Brian.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
You too, Tom.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
And you know, I think going after Trump over the
deaths of these these these well, it's it's adults and children.
I mean, it's easy to focus on the children because
they're so so innocent, and they're the ones that rely
on the guidance from adults like someone might argue that
while there are camp counselors there, they are adults that
are in charge. They should have been listening to the
(25:04):
weather forecast, since they had twelve hours advanced notice of
warnings of flooding. It is a known flooding area, since
this has happened before. But you focus on the children
because you know they don't have an awareness about something
like that. But more to the point that, you know,
kind of along the lines Thomas making if this is
what the Democrats have to criticize Trump over, that they're
(25:26):
going to like Trump for the death of these innocent children,
even though there was the weather forecasters were actually fully manned,
if I can be a sexist in my phrasing on that.
In fact, they had more meteorologists there in those particular
regional centers than they normally do because the flooding was predicted.
(25:49):
It pops the bubble of the narrative that somehow Donald
Trump's cuts had something to do with these people not
getting the message. I think, more to the point, it
was four o'clock in the morning, everybody was asleep, and
they didn't get the message. So you know, fingers are
going to be pointed. But if this is what they've got.
I mean Trump, say what you want about him. He
has achieved victory after victory after victory along the lines
(26:11):
of delivering on what he promised during his campaign. And
the Democrats are simply beside themselves. They're the ones that
created the immigration crisis, and more and more of them
are aware of that, and more and more of realized
now that you know what, that was not a winner
for us. We dropped the ball. It was dumb policy.
I've got a whole article that was written about that
(26:32):
I can talk about. So what are the consequences of
the open borders that they regret, because that was one
of the reasons Donald Trump got elected on strong border security.
Neighborhood has been overrun. It's a problem for America. Most
Americans want a secure border. Like to the tune of
eighty percent, most Americans by more than fifty percent. I
think it's a lot more than that. That mostly the criminals,
(26:54):
but at least a lot of the illegal immigrants deported.
The deportation efforts of are a consequence of the open
border's policy that helped them lose the election last fall.
They own that and they can't run from it. And
yet there they are standing out in front of ice
officers and we have these criminal acts against ice officers.
(27:15):
They're trying to prevent ice officers from doing their job,
telling them to get out of the area and get
out of my town. It's the antithesis of representative government,
to be quite honest with you, and they're going to
live the reality of that. So let's blame Trump for
the flood. Five point thirty six fifty five K see
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Speaker 6 (28:53):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station on.
Speaker 3 (29:02):
Here's your ten and nine first one to one of mores.
It's a humid day to day. Very muggy day, say,
partly clotty skies and high of eighty six. It's going
to be very humid over night, partly cloudy in seventy
Another muggy day tomorrow with scattered showers, films possible eighty
four for the high. Muggy and partly cloudy overnight Wednesday
sixty nine, and on Thursday it's going to go up
(29:23):
to eighty seven and it's going to be a cloudy
day with isolated chances of rain seventy one degrees.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Right now, time for first traffic.
Speaker 9 (29:31):
From the U see Health to Traffic Center. You see
Health that's expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and
supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at u
seehealth dot com. No accidents at this time, but overnight
construction closing off two lanes on southbound seventy five between
(29:52):
Paddock and Norwood Lateral and Cold Raine now reopened from
roadwork between US twenty seven and Day Road. That he's
I like, I'm fifty five KRCD talk station.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
It's five forty two, fifty five KERCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
Happy Tuesday, fifty y two three talk for care to
call otherwise stack is stupid.
Speaker 10 (30:21):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (30:22):
We go to Australia. We have a woman convicted of
a murder after her husband's parents and aunt ate beef
wellington that she prepared that was made with toxic mushrooms.
Aaron Peterson hosted the Intimate Neal July twenty twenty three.
She maintained a beef pastry dish was accidentally poisoned with
(30:45):
death cap mushrooms, described as the world's most leal lethal fungus.
A jury didn't didn't buy into it. Twelve person jury
found the fifty year old guilty of triple murder, which
carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. Also found guilty
of atempting murder of a fourth guest who actually survived.
July twenty nine, So you set the table for an
(31:05):
intimant family meal lunch guests that afternoon Don and Gail Patterson,
parents of her long estranged husband Simon, places set for
Simon's maternal ant, Heather Wilkinson, and her husband Ian, described
as a well known pastor to local Baptist churchband and
Simon urged to come, but he declined because he felt uncomfortable.
(31:27):
Also it is noted that her relationship with Simon started
to turn sour. They were still legally married, but they'd
been fighting over Simon's child support contributions. Maybe that's why
she was insisting that he'd show up to dinner, but
he didn't. Soweech was given an individual parcel of beef
Wellington death cap mushrooms, apparently mistaken easily for other edible
varieties and possess a sweet taste, which of course does
(31:50):
not suggest toxicity. Guests that it was a good meal, Sadly, though,
the deadly amatoxin swiftly going through their veins. Don Gale
and Heather died of organ failure within a week. HM
Patterson told her guests that she received a cancer diagnosis
(32:10):
and needed advice on breaking the news to her children,
but medical records show Patterson received no such diagnosis.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
Hmm.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
Prosecuston said this was a lie, cooked up to lure
the diners to her table. She also lied about owning
a food dehydrat, which police later found dumped in a
garbage bin. Forens success found the appliance contained traces of
the fatal fung guy. At trial, she said, I agree
that I lied because I was afraid I'll be held responsible. Yeah,
I'd say. Computer sees from her house had browsed the
(32:42):
website pinpointing death cap mushrooms spotted a short drive from
her house a year before her life, so she did
a search for death cap mushrooms. There's a little red
flag for you right there. Anyway, sentencing date has not
yet been set.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Five forty five. If I have care see the.
Speaker 2 (33:03):
Talk station, jesuase.
Speaker 3 (33:09):
I guess you gotta really trust who's preparing your food,
don't you. Plumb type plumbing. Those are folks you can trust.
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free estimate. Certainly you get free estimates. They have an
A plus with better business Bureau. Plumb type plumbing for
(33:31):
all residential plumbing needs, including tankless water heaters. Try states
number one installer those tankless. I've been mentioning those a
lot on the spots for these folks because they have
a you know, there's a lot of reasons to go
tankless unlimited hot water is one great when never a
cold shower, lower energy bills. They save a heap looat
of space. You don't have that giant tank anymore. It's
about the size of the suitcase hanging on the wall,
(33:53):
and they last longer than a traditional tank, so go
with tankless trenchlist. Sewer Line repair also something that plumb
type offers. Don't have to have your yard dug up
if you've got a sewer line repair problem or in
need of replacement. They're experts at all that they do,
and again a plus for the better business fewer so
for any plumbing need, it's plumb tight plumbing done right.
Five one three seven two seven eighty four eighty three.
(34:15):
That's five one three seven two seven tight t t
E online, plumtight dot com fifty five KRC.
Speaker 11 (34:22):
You're great at protecting your personal inter Channa and I
first one to weather hookhasts got a be a muggy
day to very muggy, partly cloudys.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Guys, and I have eighty six gonna be partly cloudy
every night.
Speaker 3 (34:34):
Also very humid with a low of seventy Partly cloudy
and yes, very humid tomorrow as well. Scattered showers and
storms are a possibility. Eighty four the high overnight lows
sixty nine against muggy and.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
A cloudy Thursday.
Speaker 3 (34:47):
No mention of muggy or humid humidity, but it's eighty
seven for the high predicted for Thursday, seventy degrees.
Speaker 1 (34:53):
Right now, it's cyber traffic from.
Speaker 9 (34:55):
The u SEE Health Traffic Center. You see health as
expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at UCHealth dot com.
Overnight double lane closure on southbound seventy five between Paddock
and Norwood Lateral. That'll be there until six a m.
(35:16):
And through Northern Kentucky seventy one seventy five no delays
between Erlinger and downtown six minutes. That he sounds like
on fifty five kr CD talk station.
Speaker 3 (35:28):
By fifty to fifty five KRCD talk station, Happy Tuesday,
inside Scoop, the Bright Bart News, Daniel Davis Deep Dive
in the eight o'clock hour, Corey Bowman at seven oh five,
Is you gonna be in studio?
Speaker 1 (35:39):
Joe?
Speaker 3 (35:40):
Now it's a bummer. Well, he may show up anyway.
Sometimes he does and a special Tech Tuesday with Dave
Hatter coming up in the next hour at six thirty o'h.
Go ahead and check this when it is in. The
stack is stupid, and I think with good reason. Former
Democratic Representative Jamal Bowman New York described as going on
a fiery rant on CNN blaming all kinds of health
(36:03):
issues in the black community on Republicans. Okay, he said,
the problem is we're not dealing with America's original sin
and its disease of hate and racism towards black and
brown people, and sexism towards women and anti LGBTQ sentiment. Really,
(36:25):
we're not dealing with that. Your college and the Republican
Party do not hold each other accountable when it comes
to the racism that comes from the party on a
constant basis. You can't be calm about this. I'm a
black man in America. Here's the reason I fully made
the stack of stupid.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
Quote.
Speaker 3 (36:43):
The reason why heart disease and cancer and obesity and
diabetes are bigger in the Black community is because of
the stress we carry from having to deal with being
called the N word directly or indirectly every day.
Speaker 1 (36:58):
Close quote it, idiot, things because they're idiots.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
Well, I mean, white people can't use the N word anymore,
And honestly, I and I know, I'm only one man
with one level of experience. I haven't heard a white
person refer to a black person using that word like
in like years, decades, probably, But what I do know
(37:24):
is that I have found that, you know, white people
aren't allowed to sing along with rap music, rap music
which is filled with the use of the N word.
So is his stress a consequence of his fellow black
people referring to each other using the N word, which
I think we all can acknowledge is happens on a
regular basis. I mean, watch old Dave Chappelle, watch Dave
(37:46):
Chappelle generally speaking, or any other black comedian. They use
it all the time. Listen to to movies where they
refer to each other using that word. Now, white person
certainly couldn't do that to be getting all kinds of
trouble for it, and I understand that. So I just
I think his and I don't know that he's relying
(38:06):
on peer reviewed research that use of the N word
as a direct result will directly result in you getting diabetes.
Just say it, please, say man is in custody after
making a bomb thread while on board an Allegiant airflight
leaving from Saint Pete Clearwater International Airport. Happened over the weekend.
(38:29):
Legion officials said the incident happened about two pm. Passenger
on board became disruptive while the plane was en route
to Roanoke Blacksburg Airport in Virginia. Letter identify passenger twenty
seven year old Taj Taylor. Investigation revealed this Taj tailor
guy had reportedly told another passenger that his laptop was
(38:50):
a bomb.
Speaker 12 (38:52):
Keep your stupid mouth shut.
Speaker 3 (38:54):
Thank you, Joe. Passenger immediately flagged the flight attendants. Investigator
said several other witnesses on the plane reported hearing Taylor
say he had a bomb. Doesn't listen to Jay Ratliffe obviously.
Allegiance spokesperson said Legiance does not tolerate disruptive behavior of.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
Any kind, thankfully, so they.
Speaker 3 (39:13):
Had to return to the airport where law enforcement took
the passenger into custody. All of the passengers were asked
to deplane. Law enforcement on board a Legion flight ten
twenty three. Unfortunately, the crew are reaching their FAA mandated
time limits, so we must recreu the flight cord to
the spokesperson at the time. Once that's done, the flight
(39:34):
will continue to its destination. We apologize for the inconvenience
that has caused our passengers.
Speaker 1 (39:39):
Thank you Taj Taylor.
Speaker 3 (39:44):
Of course they searched his belongings the Bananas County Sheriff's
office along with canines. No bomb located, of course, but
everybody's lives were disrupted because this guy was well, we'll
just go ahead let him share with the award we
gave out earlier, biggest doutione in the universe anyhow, five
(40:08):
ffty five ifty five krc DE Talk Station learn from
others' mistakes, plenty to talk about, plus a special Tech
Tuesday Today with Dave Hatter at six thirty. Don't get
scammed on Amazon Prime Days. That will be a discussion
point at six thirty. I hope you don't go away.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
Big things are happening. This justin will tell you more
at the top of the hour.
Speaker 3 (40:31):
What they are doing is terrorizing immigrant families.
Speaker 1 (40:34):
Fifty five KRZ the talk station have a fifty five
kr see de talk Station.
Speaker 3 (40:39):
Brian Thomas wishing everyone a happy Tuesday and inviting you
to stick around as they always do. Bottom of the hour,
a special Tech Tuesday, Dave Hatter and interest It is
going to give us some insight into how to avoid
getting scammed on Amazon Prime Days. Didn't even know scamming
on Amazon Prime Days was a thing. Well, that's why
we have Dave Hatter Corey Bowman. Fast forward an hour,
(41:01):
seven oh five. Corey Bowman's going to well join the
program to talk about violence in the city. Of course,
that's a topic we talked about yesterday with since a
Police Fop President Can Colbert as well as Christopher Smith Aman.
He was on a wild tear on the h Well,
the silence from the administration on the violence going on
and a lot of crime. It's just heartbreaking to see
(41:23):
how much crime and how many young people, teenagers are
getting shot down, are gunned down. Also, congratulations baby Ezra
to Corey Bowman and his wife. Ezra was born healthy
apparently and the family's doing great, So another addition to
the Bowman family. Inside Scoop with Bright Bart News fast
forwarding two hours. Today we hear from Texas border reporter
Randy Clark, but not about the border, but about the
(41:45):
Texas floods and as in spite of the fact that
Democrats are blaming Donald Trump for a natural disaster that
of course he had no control over. Their narrative has
fallen apart considering that the cuts to the Weather Service
had nothing to do not only the natural disaster, but
there were more than adequately staffed. In fact, they had
I think five weather forecasters and meteorologists on staff and
(42:09):
working at the time from the beginning of the floods
all the way through the aftermath, and that is apparently
more than double the number of forecasters that are usually there.
So claims that the defunding had some impact on this wise,
it's kind of generally perceived now that maybe it's because
the children and the everybody else was asleep at four
(42:29):
o'clock in the morning when the river started rising, just
absolutely overwhelming speed. I still cannot get over the video
footage of how quickly that water rose. Feels so sorry
for those victims, and they're still looking for a lot
of them. Death toll now I believe more than one hundred.
So we'll talk with Randy Clark about that and the
(42:54):
Daniel Davis Steve Dive, of course, with the latest on
Russia Ukraine. The latest on Iran and the hoofyes shooting
at ships out of Yemen. And we'll see if we
can get a comment or two from Daniel Davis on that.
Comments from you are always welcome here in the fifty
five Carecening Morning Show. Love talking to the listeners. Maybe
there's a topic you want to talk about. It's five one, three,
seven four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight to
(43:15):
two three talk or go with pound five fifty if
you have an AT and T phone. So, oh real quick,
here you heard top of the our news about the ticks.
I did have an article about that. This summer of bugs.
Apparently it's not just the ticks invasive insects invading the
United States eight tsunami, as the article says, pests thanks
(43:36):
to warming winters increase humidity that allows the summer bugs
to survive longer. They're calling you the summer of bugs.
Millions of cicadas, which we've already been through here, anybody
missed them, lantern flies, which are a problem for the vegetation,
and ticks. Fordham University researchers in New York say the
summer's tick risk factor and they've got one of those
(43:56):
ten out of ten suggesting people go to a movie
instead of taking a high. Black legged ticks known as
deer ticks, of course, causing a surge of lime disease.
Incident rates have risen fivefold over the past thirty years.
Spotted lantern flies, they say, could cause billions of dollars
(44:19):
worth of losses to plants and trees. Lanterflies love to
consume grapes, apparently so we have a multi billion dollar
US wine industry which says they may be in jeopardy.
Insect born diseases like West Nile virus thanks to the mosquitos,
lime disease and Zika virus all a potential problem. Called
to Environmental Working Group, Eastern equine encephalitis spread by infest
(44:45):
invested mosquitoes rare but also extremely serious illness rate can
cause brain infection and has a thirty percent mortality rate.
Speaker 1 (44:52):
Ah good, they say.
Speaker 3 (44:54):
Survivors offer suffer ongoing neurological problems. So some recommend from
the Centers for Disease Control on protecting yourself. Empty flower
pots and bird baths, to get rid of all the
standing water and cut back on branches, and get your
yard treated for pests. Cover up with long pants, long sleeves,
(45:15):
wear socks when hiking through high grass or brush that
may be infested with insects, which would be I think
all high brush grass. They also recommend using a point
five percent permethrin. You to treat your clothing and gear,
check thoroughly for ticks before going indoors, and remove and
dispose of them properly. They say the most effective method
(45:37):
is to put the tick into a matchbook or paper
bag and then burn it. Another method drown the ticks
in alcohol or methylated spirit. They also warn, though, do
not flush ticks down a sink or toilet, as they
can survive underwater for a month. Use mosquito nets fans
(45:59):
both in door and outdoor dining areas, cover strollers and
baby carriers with nets.
Speaker 1 (46:04):
They say.
Speaker 3 (46:04):
Use the repellents responsibly, though, according to the directions on
the labels. Handy guide for repellents recommended by the us
EPA visit the Guide to Bug Repellence site. Use products
with the lowest concentration of chemical repellents, especially for children,
and repellents in aerosol containers. It says, as you can
easily spray the chemical into your eyes instead. Lotions pumps
(46:27):
and towel letts, but also to wash your hands after
applying the product. Never use a sunscreen that contains a repellent,
so if you reapply the sunscreen of a couple of hours,
are going to be exposed too many chemicals. Always apply
insect repellent after sunscreen, wash clothing and repellent coated skin
when you get back inside. If you're bitten by a mosquito,
(46:48):
avoid scratching and applying over the counter anti itch or
antihistamine product to relieve itching. There's your recommendations for handling
the bugs, the mosquitoes, and the ticks. Over to the phones,
we go, miss Mississippi James on, Hey, Mississippi James. Good
to hear from you, my friend.
Speaker 5 (47:04):
Yes, sir, Doctor Brian, Hey Brian, my cell phone crashed.
Only you was reporting on that last just before you
went to break and I think you telling my stress
in People Live, Can you give me a quick recap
on that?
Speaker 3 (47:21):
Oh that was Let's see here representative former Representative Jamal
Bowman saying that the reason here we go, let me
quote him, Representative Jamal Boma, former from New York talking
about health issues. He said, the reason why heart disease
and cancer and obesity and diabetes are bigger in the
Black community. Is because of the stress we carry from
(47:43):
heavy to deal with being called the N word directly
or indirectly every day. So if you have diabetes, it's
because you've been called the N word directly or indirectly
every day. So says Jamal Bowman.
Speaker 5 (47:58):
Well, that's a combination of the way you live your life,
the way you eat, your exercise. Yeah, the stress, the oppression, depression,
they all factored in.
Speaker 1 (48:07):
Yes, sir.
Speaker 5 (48:08):
I have a problem with a person when they go
in and extract one part and say this is the reason.
Speaker 1 (48:14):
Yeah, we got a whole collage of what we need
to work on. Amen.
Speaker 3 (48:20):
You know, well though, that's why that's why this the
statement comes across as so stupid, you know it as
well as I do diet, exercise, environment and multiple multiple
things or other. You know, obesity is a big problem
in this country among white people, black people, everybody pretty much.
We have like this massive obesity problem. And I know
there's a whole lot of obese white people that are
(48:42):
not being called the N word directly or indirectly, and
you can't blame their obesity on some sort of name
calling thing. It's lifestyle choices. So yeah, you're I mean,
that's the point. That's why he made it into this
deck is stupid.
Speaker 5 (48:58):
Yeah, and we got to get away from that as individual, collectively,
group or whatever. They're trying to keep it extracting out
one part, yeah, you know, and make that be the issue.
And it's the same way if we talk about Trump,
you know, we go in and extract one part to say, oh,
he's the worst guy in the world. Trump is doing
(49:20):
a lot of stuff that we've been asking to do
for eons.
Speaker 10 (49:26):
You know.
Speaker 5 (49:26):
Now we may not like the way he doing it,
the speed he doing it, and some of the stuff
he doing is completely you know, counterproductive to the way
the system was was operating. Just like, for an example,
this doge supposed to come in and they the arized
they were going to find two tree in dollars with
(49:49):
a way fraud, but they only found what.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
One hundred and ninety billions so far, it's nowhere near
the mark, nowhere near the Yeah, I think they overstated
the case. But if they were allowed to and could
go after and figure out all the fraud, waste, and
abuse in the American military budget, in Social Security, in
Medicare and Medicaid. I guarantee you as sure as I'm
(50:15):
sitting here, James, that they would have been able to
find two trillion dollars worth of fraud wasted abuse, except
they weren't allowed to go into those various areas, most
notably the military budget that hasn't been touched by Doughe
So I've been a critic of that military budget for
a long time because if there's so much fraud, wasted
abuse in every other program the government offers, you cannot
tell me that the spending in the military is immune
(50:37):
from fraud, waste and abuse. I'd be able a joke
to even suggest it. So, yeah, they missed the mark.
Sometimes people overstate their case, James. They got to live
at the consequences. Appreciate the conversation, James. As always, I
hope you have a wonderful day or in your next
you don't mind holding got to take quick break here
and strongly encourage folks to get in touch with Zimmer.
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is go Zimmer.
Speaker 1 (52:00):
Fifty five KRC. Here is your Channel nine first forty
one forecast.
Speaker 3 (52:08):
We're gonna have a very muggy day today, partly Thotishkys
and the high of eighty six seventy overnight with partly clodtieskys.
Speaker 1 (52:16):
That'll be very humid.
Speaker 3 (52:17):
Laura's partly clodian, still very humid. Scattered showers of storms
possible eighty four for the high sixty nine overnight with
yes humid, muggy conditions and partly thotiskys and a cloudy
Thursday with a high of eighty seven seventy one degrees.
Speaker 9 (52:31):
Right now, Time for traffic from the u See Health
Traffic Center. You see Health as expert traumacare focusing on prevention,
treating injuries, and supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn
more at u See health dot Com. Two seventy five
remains down to one lane for the ongoing repairs of
the Carrol Cropper Bridge seventy one north and southbound. No
(52:53):
delays between downtown and two seventy five overall fourteen to
fifteen minutes on that he sound like I'm fifty five
KRCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (53:05):
It is six twenty coming on at six twenty one
to fifty five car Seed Talk Station five one three
seven fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three talk
Time five fifty on eight and t phone is going
to go over to the phones. Maureen was kind enough
to hold over the break. Maureen, Welcome back to the
fifty five KRC Morning Show, my.
Speaker 7 (53:18):
Friend, Good morning, Brian. I had a little bit more
to add to your tick story. The I had a
tick on my arm. Oh gosh, I'm only about a
month ago. My daughter had gone camping and she west
dollar laundry for.
Speaker 13 (53:32):
Me to do.
Speaker 7 (53:33):
Naturally, I'm doing her laundry. I figure that's how I
got it, and so I immediately investigated what to do.
Pull it off with Tweezer's put it in a baggie
and there's a tick lab at Ohio State and you
mail it off to there. Cost fifty dollars, but you
get back a report about a week later, and it
tells you everything your tick had.
Speaker 1 (53:54):
Oh so you know if you've been infected with lime disease.
Speaker 7 (53:57):
Then yeah, exactly, but you don't know if you've actually
been infectivated. It sells what your tick could have exposed
you to.
Speaker 1 (54:04):
So I stay.
Speaker 3 (54:05):
On your heighten your awareness. So, okay, my tick head
lime disease. It doesn't mean I necessarily contracted it, but
look out for the signs of lime disease.
Speaker 7 (54:14):
Yeah, oh oh, exactly, which is kind of a bullet rash.
And I started on box of cyclone right away and
I never had any l effects. I started it before
I got the results back, so just the precautionary.
Speaker 3 (54:27):
Can I ask you how long it takes from mailing
the tick until you get your results back?
Speaker 7 (54:33):
Seven days and that's not bad.
Speaker 1 (54:35):
That's not bad your TICK tests.
Speaker 7 (54:36):
Yeah, yeah, that's a yeah. Anyway, I also wanted to
report on at CBG right now, and there's the DHL shooting. Well,
I don't know if it's a shooting yet, but it's
being investigated, so they're urging people to stay away from
the DHL area, but the regular airport is just fine.
Speaker 3 (54:54):
Oh well, thank you for the update on that. Honestly,
I've not been paying attention to the top of the
air news. I didn't realize it was a DHL sho
shooting going on or incident going on. Appreciate it, Maureene.
Take care of yourself and save travels on your flight.
Speaker 1 (55:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (55:09):
The other thing, I mean, disposing of ticks is one
thing I'm a little hard to believe. You're supposed to
put them in a bag and light it on fire.
They are tough to smash though, but I suppose on
that tiic test, the waiting will be the hardest part.
You know, we get sitting on pins and needles, wondering
whether you got lime disease or some other tick born
(55:31):
illness frightening stuff.
Speaker 1 (55:33):
Oh and you know I didn't get to it. The
other day.
Speaker 3 (55:34):
And since we're talking about bugs, Orcan came out with
its top ten list of infected cities with the bed
bugs one of the most the grossest creatures on the
planet from my perspective, or one of the grossest.
Speaker 1 (55:46):
God the idea of bed bugs are just.
Speaker 3 (55:48):
Awful, awful, awful, awful things, and Cincinnati is usually on
the list. Sadly, in top ten, we were not on
the top ten list. Numero uno Chicago. Yeah, apparently it's
a real problem with bed bugs in Chicago. So all
kinds of tips on that one. But heat is the
one thing that can most assuredly kill bedbugs. And so
(56:10):
one of the strongest recommendations and one that my wife
and I follow religiously, is when you get back home,
unpack your luggage, put the clothes directly into the clothes
dryer and put it on high and then take your
bag outside and put that in the sun's heat and
let that stay outside for a while. Get rid of
those ticks or get rid of those bed bugs. And
don't park your luggage too close to anything in a
(56:32):
hotel room, like curtains, for example, or the bed itself.
Also tips on what to look for. They did tiny
little things about the size of a sesame seed except black.
And I had this sad experience with my uncle and
I were on a motorcycle trip. We used to take
these multiple day weekends and go out cruising around cheer
Ahola Skyway and Hail the Dragon. We did Blue Ridge Parkway,
(56:55):
all that kind of stuff. But we'd always stay at
low rent motels and hotels, you know, budget kind of trip.
And we went to a red roof inn and the
first thing I always do, go in and pull the
bed sheets back and look in the corners and lo
and behold, oh my god, on the bile came up
the back of my throat. And we turned around and
(57:16):
went to the front desk. My uncle looked at the
manager and he said, you gave us the room that's occupied.
He's like, what you have the rooms occupied? Said no, no, no, no,
one's in there. He said, yeah, it's infested with bed bugs.
The guy totally freaked out. We got our money back
and left. So they're out there and they are disgusting
(57:38):
and they will certainly hit your ride. So watch out
for those guys while you're at it. Six twenty five
fifty five kr CD talk station. And get in touch
with every Federal Credit Union. Because you want to go
to the website EMORYFCU dot or because you want to
join the golf Outing. Yes, it's the nineteenth annual charity
Golf outing. Every does this every single year and this
year the proceeds benefited since our Children's Hospital charitable fun
(58:00):
helping folks on life margins get the wonderful care offered
by Children's Hospital. So the date August eighteenth, taking place
at four Bridges Country Club, get yourself a force from
together and enjoin a fun filled day of golf with
the opportunity to support this worthy cause in our community again.
Learning more about the benefits of banking with Emery. You
can do that at the website as well, but also
(58:20):
sign up for the golf tournament EMORYFCU dot org. I'll
be there to say a few words of the golfers
as they head off for the round of golf. I
do that every year and it's a pleasure to be
in a position to do that. So support the great
cause today. Register online at Emory FCU dot org.
Speaker 1 (58:35):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 3 (58:38):
It is we'll call it six thirty fifty five kr
CD talk station. It's not Friday, but there's nothing that
says we can't do a Tech Tuesday and welcome back
to the fifty five KRC Morning Show from interust it,
the best in the business in terms of helping your
business with its computer related needs and issues. Interustit dot
com where you find Dave Hatter and the team to
help you out. Dave, welcome back, man, thanks for coming
(59:00):
on for a special edition.
Speaker 13 (59:02):
Always my pleasure. Brian, happy to be here and hoping
we're doing some good out there.
Speaker 1 (59:06):
Well, so today's the kickoff day of Amazon Prime.
Speaker 13 (59:10):
Apparently it is. You know, I'm not a big Amazon
Prime Day guy myself, but I know a lot of
people love this sort of thing. It is an opportunity
to find some great deals and of course, because of that,
the scammers are always out there ready to attack.
Speaker 3 (59:27):
Yeah, I got to interject real quick before we get
the details of this and how we protect ourselves. I
read an article this morning starting off the program. There
are and I can't use FCC non compliant words to
describe them, although I would scammers out there targeting the
victims of the flood in Texas.
Speaker 13 (59:46):
I'm not surprised by that. I mean, it's hard to
imagine something much more despicable and sick than that. But
you know, anytime there's some sort of disaster and there
are relief efforts out there, the scammers always.
Speaker 10 (59:59):
Show up up.
Speaker 13 (01:00:00):
And you know, Brian, sadly, it's just getting easier and
easier things to generative AI, to generate things that are
very realistic looking and you know, unfortunately try to take
advantage of good samaritan types who want to help as
well as these unfortunate and tragic situations like that when
they happen.
Speaker 3 (01:00:17):
Yeah, some like for the miss the victims that are missing.
Still they're targeting family members and saying we've got your
daughter or whatever and to pay us ransom money. That
kind of stuff. It gets that depraved.
Speaker 13 (01:00:29):
I had not seen that. That's even more surprising to
me because the regular scams of and we're raising money
to help these victims because of this tragic situation. Yeah,
you tend to see that, yeah, all the time. But wow,
that's just sick.
Speaker 1 (01:00:44):
That is sick.
Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
Anyhow, moving over to Amazon Prime Day, it's actually days,
it says here between July eighth and July eleven, So
it's more than just one day.
Speaker 13 (01:00:54):
Yeah, it's basically the rest of this week. It started
out as a day, but it's expanded and over time,
I think due to its popularity. And I mean, let's
face it, Brian, you know, Amazon, however you feel about them,
is a very popular place to shop. The bad guys
know this. They know what Prime Day is. They know
people are looking for great.
Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
Deals, you know.
Speaker 13 (01:01:14):
And this is a similar conversation that we've had year
over year around Black Friday and Cyber Monday and holiday
shopping and so forth. They know people are looking for
great deals. And like I just said, it's it's really
easy now to create spoofed content that looks realistic, whether
it's an email, whether it's a text message, whether it's
a phone call, or even an entire website. And some
(01:01:35):
research from NordVPN. They make a very popular virtual private
network product, NORD. That's what I Yeah, I found that
within the last two months, over one hundred and twenty
thousand fake Amazon websites have sprung up. I'll think about
that for a second. One hundred and twenty thousand, Yeah,
And in my mind that points out two things. The
ease with which you can create a fake website. I
(01:01:58):
just can't stress enough to people spoofing, the idea of
creating something that is bogus but looks legitimate again. Email, website,
text message, phone call. All of these things are relatively easy,
and the quality of them is improving thanks to generative AI,
because you no longer have all the old school tells,
the bad grammar, the weird punctuation, all that sort of thing. Right,
(01:02:21):
So one hundred and twenty thousand in just the last
two months, according to nord VPN, ninety two thousand of
those were geared towards phishing you, trying to get your
credentials so that they could then go to Amazon.
Speaker 1 (01:02:32):
And they know many.
Speaker 13 (01:02:32):
People will use the same bad credentials, use your name
and password across multiple sites. So if I can get
your Amazon credentials, maybe that gets me into your bank
or Netflix or whatever. Right, So ninety two thousand geared
towards phishing. There were another twenty two thousand gear towards
ransomware or malware of some sort. Again, keystrokelogger. You go
(01:02:53):
to the fake thing because you get a deal. It
seems too good to be chewing a downloads some kind
of ransomware or other type of malware. And then the
last eleven thousand ish 're geared towards either they just
never send you anything, or they send you some cheap
knockoff products. So it's pretty amazing when you think about
the volume. But again, it's really easy for them to
(01:03:14):
create these bogus websites, these spoofed websites. And you know,
it's even easier, especially thanks to all the data that's
been leaked about us and stolen over the last year,
you know, ten years or so we've talked about for
being in records here, sixteen billion records there. It's really
easy for them to target you. It's in many cases
they'll know whether you have an Amazon account or not
(01:03:34):
because of that stolen data. And so you know, naturally
they go where the people are, they go where the
money is, and you know, so here we are. So yeah,
I'm glad you guys wanted to talk about this today
because a lot of people are going to try to
take advantage of prime days and you really need to
be on height and alert, and you know, as always Brian,
be extremely skeptical because the scams are rampant.
Speaker 3 (01:03:55):
All right, Well, pause of bringing back and you can
give some direct information for people to avoid this kind
of stuff. Honestly, Dave, you rattled off, you know, the phishing,
the email, the phone calls. I personally get hit with
that almost every single day. I mean, I believe it.
I've gotten so jaded and so cynical, and I so
in tune and in touch with what you have told
(01:04:17):
me over the years about the warnings and the red
flags that I'm very very very reluctant to click on
almost anything, and because I have actually seen these fake
generated sites and they look real. So I'll bring day
back and give you some helpful hints on how to
keep out of trouble. Six thirty five fifty five cars
the talk station and thanks again to interest It for
(01:04:37):
loading Dave out the fifty.
Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
Five KR see de talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:04:42):
Of course, got to throw some rush and the bumper
of music when you're talking to tech Friday's Dave Hatter,
big Rushman.
Speaker 1 (01:04:48):
And good for you.
Speaker 3 (01:04:49):
Yep, all right, back over to the Amazon scams. One
of the things that people get caught up on this
and it's been expressed in the article excitement and urgency
around limited time deals. One of the reasons they get
people to click on things they say, it's only going
to last for an hour, and you better hurry up
and click, or we're going to run out of the product.
And you know, it's like the deal of the century,
which makes which prompts people to do things they otherwise
(01:05:10):
wouldn't do, even if they're listening to Dave Hatter and
trying to apply the hygiene that you recommend to the
clicks that you engage in. But oh my god, I
don't want to miss out on this opportunity.
Speaker 13 (01:05:23):
Yeah again, Brian. These people are professional con artists. They
just happen to have this new mechanism to get to people.
Speaker 5 (01:05:29):
Right.
Speaker 13 (01:05:30):
They know about human psychology. They know that people are
looking for these great deals and that there are often
legitimate deals that you can only get during these particular
shopping times like Prime Day.
Speaker 5 (01:05:43):
Right.
Speaker 13 (01:05:43):
They know that, so of course they try to leverage that.
They try to take advantage of people who are excited
and not really thinking clearly. And you know, get that
email that looks just like it came from Amazon, and
I I want to stress the folks, it is incredibly
easy to send this boofed email. And again, as I
said before, but thanks to all these generative AI tools,
(01:06:03):
it's incredibly easy to create spoofed content that looks one
hundred percent They know this right, And you know, just
a couple of tips. First off, you're what you said
in the last segment is the right thing to do.
You know, I am incredibly skeptical of virtually anything I
get via email any and you know, it's always best
(01:06:25):
to stop, take a breath, no matter how good the
deal seems, no matter what urgency level there is, no
matter how long they tell you have to, you know,
do this in the next hour, it's gone. Stop take
a breath. Remember a lot of this stuff is scam based.
It's easy for them to do. And then you know,
if you are interested in that, and then you go
in this case, to Amazon dot com and you see
(01:06:47):
if you can find that deal on their website or
if you have the Amazon app. You know, I'm not
a big fan of apps, Brian, I don't install the
apps from retailers like Target or Amazon or anything like that.
But you know, whether it's the Amazon app or the
Amazon website, if you're interested in doing anything, you should
initiate the transactions yourself. After you've stopped and taken a
(01:07:08):
breath and calm down a little bit, go to Amazon
dot com, open the Amazon app on your phone, you know, first,
and Amazon is very clear. They have a whole page
set up to how to report scams and these sort
of tips themselves. But you know they'll tell you they
will never ask for payment in any way other than
on their app or in their website. They're not going
to ask you to send in gift cards or do
(01:07:29):
Venmo or anything like that. Okay, you know, they only
accept payment through their app or their website.
Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
And like the irs, they don't call you. They will not.
Speaker 3 (01:07:40):
Amazon is not going to call you. Trust me on
that one. They got billions of customers every day. They
got like two people probably that have access to a
phone anyway, they're not going to call it. They even
say they will not call you.
Speaker 13 (01:07:52):
I was just going to say, yes, they'll tell you
straight up. You know they're not going to initiate calls
to you, try and call them. See how hard good luck?
And see if you think they're going to pick up
the phone and call you because your order is delayed
or whatever's and you know whether whether it's the deals
too good to be true, your order is delayed, there's
a problem with your order, your credit cards expired. There's
(01:08:13):
a million different angles they could take to try to
leverage this Prime day thing, right, you know, be skeptical.
Don't click the links, whether it's a text message or
a phone or an email. You know, Amazon is not
going to call you. You stop, think about what you're doing,
and initiate whatever the transaction you need to initiate is
(01:08:34):
yourself on their website or in their app, and then
the likelihood of you getting scams goes to next to nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:08:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:08:40):
Yeah, that's another one that I've gotten quite a few times, Dave.
Is that the it's sort of the cryptic email. We
just wanted to confirm your four hundred and random dollar
purchase on Amazon, and like I didn't make.
Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
That, and you know you didn't, and you didn't.
Speaker 3 (01:08:57):
Because if you have any question in your mind that
someone's ripped off your don't go to Amazon dot com,
log in and look at your order list and let
me guess it's not there.
Speaker 13 (01:09:05):
That's that's exactly right, Brian, And I mean, no matter
what the source is, if you get something like that,
then yes you should. Whether it's whether it's go check
your credit card, your bank, the retailer. Yeah, don't click
the links. It's a scam. They want to steal your
credentials at the very least. Right you go and check,
it won't be there. And it's funny you mentioned that
because I got something similar to that yesterday from Square.
Speaker 5 (01:09:28):
Right.
Speaker 13 (01:09:28):
Square is a payment processing thing telling me that a
nine hundred dollars transaction through Square to me was disputed
and I should click this link to go find out
about it.
Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
Well, that's it.
Speaker 13 (01:09:39):
I don't use squear.
Speaker 1 (01:09:41):
I I don't tell you.
Speaker 5 (01:09:42):
I didn't.
Speaker 13 (01:09:43):
I'm not expecting a nine hundred dollars payment from anyone
for anything, so.
Speaker 3 (01:09:47):
I know I've gotten those too. It's like that's a
software that I don't even use. What the hell?
Speaker 13 (01:09:52):
But to the naked eye, very realistic looking. The branding
was right on because it's easy for them to do,
and you know they they know they're going to hit
some people that you swear they know they'll hit some
people that are like, well, what is this? Maybe I
should look into this, Maybe this is some sort of
fraud being perpetrated on me, And yes it is. It's
not the payment dispute. It's trying to get you to
(01:10:13):
click that link.
Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
Well, and Eric says Amazon will absolutely text you when
it's about your delivery. They will text you. But I
wouldn't click on anything, even if Amazon legitimately texted it
to me. I'm not setting clicking it, period, end of story.
I don't care if the driver's on his way right
if I got to deliver it.
Speaker 13 (01:10:32):
If I got a text that purported to be from
Amazon about some order, I would do what you said before.
Speaker 1 (01:10:37):
I would go to Amazon dot Com.
Speaker 13 (01:10:38):
I would log in, I would go to orders, and
I would let Amazon's website where again their app if
you've used it, I would let them tell me what
the status of the order is. Because it I just
can't stress enough. It is so simple to send a
bogus text or email message and make it look incredibly realistic.
You know, with text you only have limited limited capability
(01:10:59):
in terms of the content you're sending. Anyway, which in
my opinion, makes it even easier for them to scam
you and harder to tell that it's a scam because
there's not as much information to work with to the
naked eye, and you can't really dig into it like
you could an email on a computer. So well, always
be skeptical and go to whether it's Amazon, Walmart, target, whatever,
(01:11:20):
you go, log into their websites yourself. Yeah, and check
on the order status.
Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
And even if it's excitement and urgency that you better
hurry up and do it. How long does it take
to just go Amazon dot com and log into your account?
I mean, is it going to disappear before that amount
of time?
Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
I doubt it.
Speaker 3 (01:11:35):
And if it suggests, if it suggests that it will
disappear in that amount of time, I think you know
that you have been delivered something. This nefarious something. I
got to ask you because it's mentioned in the article
that you provided. You mentioned that we're you know, one
hundred and twenty thousand fake sites related to Amazon. It
says twenty one thousand fake Amazon websites attempting to install malware. Now,
(01:11:56):
can you have malware installed just by clicking on a website?
Speaker 13 (01:12:00):
You sure could because when you click a link, it
could take you to a page that in the background
downloads some sort of malicious packets or a keystroke blog
or ransomware or something like that.
Speaker 3 (01:12:10):
But if you have cookie blocking and all those those
blocks in place on your computer, can you avoid that
from happening?
Speaker 13 (01:12:17):
Uh, it just depends. Probably not. Most people are not
going to have the security settings turned onto their browser
to prevent something like that by default. I mean, there
are ways where you could potentially reduce the likelihood of that,
But also keep in mind, Brian, if they're crafty enough,
you know, you might be clicking a link to check
(01:12:37):
on your order status or something, and it pulls up
something that looks like an invoice or whatever, and in
the background it's downloading some malicious ransomware, keystroke blogger or
you know, something like that.
Speaker 3 (01:12:48):
But that applies more broadly to literally any Internet related
activity then it does.
Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
It does.
Speaker 13 (01:12:54):
I mean, again, you need to be This is why
you need to have tools installed that it's to like
DNS filtering, which attempts to stop you from going to
known malicious sites, although it's you know, not one hundred
percent effective because new ones pop up every second as
we see here in this article one hundred and twenty
thousand new websites in two months. If a new malicious
(01:13:16):
website is set up by the bad guys in ten
minutes from the time we talk, your your filtering software
is not going to know about it yet, right, So
you can't just assume that's going to block everything. You
need to have good anti virus slash endpoint protection software
on your devices, you know, multilayer defense. You need software
tools that are trying to keep you from getting to
(01:13:36):
this bad stuff, trying to filter the bad stuff out,
spam filters and so forth. And then but at the
end of the day, because they're very crafty and they
will have workarounds for a lot of this stuff, including
I just set something up ten minutes ago send down
one hundred million emails. No one is going to know
this is malicious yet, right, And that's where the human
element always comes back in and having a dose of skepticism,
(01:13:59):
taking it breath moving slowly, using trusted sources and sites
like the Amazon app on your phone or the Amazon website.
Speaker 5 (01:14:06):
Right.
Speaker 13 (01:14:06):
If you if you slow down think about it, you're
always skeptical and you always go back to the source
the likelihood of you'd be geting scammed is very slim.
Speaker 3 (01:14:14):
Tech Friday Day have had our intrust it dot com
as you find Dave and the crew. If you got
a business, we know you have computers you need. Dave
and the crew business carrierss are the best in the
business and we of course enjoy you coming on the
fifty five KRC Morning Show and keeping us out of
trouble every week. Dave, I'll look forward to another discussion
with you on Friday.
Speaker 1 (01:14:45):
Seven five at fifty five kr CD talk station. I
had a very happy Tuesday the insights scoop of bright
Bard News.
Speaker 3 (01:14:52):
In one hour, we'll talk to the Texas Border Porter
Randy Clark on the Texas floods and the Daniel Davis
deep dive, will the additional weapons we are now sending
to you after pausing them and do any Good among
other topics with him in the meantime, Welcome back to
the fifty five Carsey Morning Show. Help support his campaign.
Coreybowman dot com is where you find him. Welcome back,
hopefully the next mayor of the City of Cincinnati, Cory Bowman.
(01:15:13):
It's great to have you on the show this morning.
Speaker 10 (01:15:16):
Brian it's awesome to be here.
Speaker 3 (01:15:17):
Thank you, and it's awesome to be you and your
wife Jordan. Congratulations. I guess yesterday was the big day
for the delivery of Ezra Ray Bowman.
Speaker 8 (01:15:27):
Yes, thank you so much.
Speaker 10 (01:15:28):
We just had our fourth child yesterday morning.
Speaker 3 (01:15:31):
And beautiful pictures. Obviously, he's a cute baby. All babies
are cute. And everybody's doing well.
Speaker 12 (01:15:39):
I know about that, but healthy, very healthy. Yeah, the
baby and mom are perfectly healthy and happy and we're
enjoying it.
Speaker 3 (01:15:49):
That's wonderful. So congratulations to you on the new addition
to your household. All right, let's start with just generally speaking,
how's the campaign going and people helping you out. I
know you've got an event coming up next Monday. You
might want to tell folks about that one too, because
there's an opportunity for them to help out.
Speaker 12 (01:16:08):
Yeah, I mean for anybody that knows their story. We
made the decision really in February to get involved in
this race, and this is our first political race.
Speaker 10 (01:16:18):
But we've had great momentum.
Speaker 12 (01:16:20):
Great strategy on that, and so we have a big
fundraiser that's actually coming up on July fourteenth downtown Cincinnati.
Speaker 10 (01:16:28):
You can go to our website Corey Bowman dot.
Speaker 12 (01:16:30):
Com and get all the information there. And that's that
you could be a part of really helping our campaign
make the biggest impact going into November.
Speaker 1 (01:16:39):
And I see that brad Winstrop's going to be there.
Speaker 10 (01:16:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (01:16:44):
So the last person to do it as far as
running for mayor Cincinnati as a Republican was in two
thousand and nine, and that was doctor brad Winstrip And
he's a great man. I've had many conversations with him.
He's got great insight on how to run this race
awkwerly and so I asked him that he would consider
being a part of our first big event.
Speaker 3 (01:17:05):
He said, yes, Oh that's great. I'm glad he's helping
you out. He does it obviously, he's run multiple races
before and he did come close when he ran for mayor.
Speaker 1 (01:17:14):
He came close.
Speaker 12 (01:17:17):
Yeah, and you know, we hadn't had a Republican mayor
actually since I believe this nineteen seventy nine, nineteen eighty
was the original base, but last person to run in
two thousand and nine. When you look at that race,
he did come fairly close, and through that it opened
up the doors for a lot of different policies and
(01:17:37):
different mindsets to come in the city. And so I
was very encouraged by our conversations and once get I'm
very happy to work with them.
Speaker 3 (01:17:44):
Well, and you live in the West End, so you
probably see it firsthand. We have a serious crime problem
in downtown Cincinnati. It seems like it's getting worse and worse.
Of course, with the summer months and the humidity and
tech temperatures running high and flaring that that's kind of
a thing. It's sort of generally recognized, but the city
of Cincinnati, it just seems to be getting so much worse.
(01:18:05):
I had FOP President Ken Cobra on yesterday talking about it,
followed by Christopher Smithman who was talking about it, and
it was an interesting statement. There was just the other
day a fourteen year old boy shot dead in Avondel
happened yesterday. WCPO interviewed Bishop Ennis Tate, who had this statement.
He said, it's literally a public health issue and the
(01:18:27):
spirit of violence is contagious. If we treated this gun
violence as seriously as we did COVID, it will be
a different outcome for our city. And I was thinking
to myself because both FOP president Ken Cobra and Christopher
Smithmen were both complaining about the deafening silence from the
mayor's office and council on this violence that's going on.
(01:18:47):
They don't speak a word about supporting the police or
encouraging communities to engage with and help the police find
the bad guys and prevent violence. That's what was done
during COVID. Elected officials took it very seriously or out
literally every day telling us what we could do and
could not do. It was a twenty four to seven
news cycle involving nothing but COVID, COVID, COVID from elected officials.
(01:19:10):
You would think, given the gravity of the problem in
the city with violence, that we might get some something
out of the administration. But nothing. I mean, how do
you what's your reaction to that? Is that your perception?
Speaker 12 (01:19:20):
Corey Bowman, Well, no, I think it's funny that you
mentioned that, because actually the biggest thing that helped that
motivated us to start our church was all the things
that was happening during COVID, Because if we learned anything
from COVID, it was the importance of your local leadership
and your local city government.
Speaker 10 (01:19:41):
Because during that time.
Speaker 12 (01:19:43):
There were so many mandates and so many things that
was actually going against the rights of people, but they
were taking it very seriously because it was seen as
a very big social issue.
Speaker 10 (01:19:53):
Well, then we've got.
Speaker 12 (01:19:54):
This thing that is actually impacting our streets on.
Speaker 10 (01:19:57):
A daily basis.
Speaker 12 (01:19:58):
You've got, like you said, a fourteen year ol kid
gets shot. But then we don't hear anything from it.
It's because the political correctness of everything might not be
in the handbook right now, and they're trying to figure
out what to do. But we've got to take action
right now. And it's not even about being reactive right now.
This is something that if you live downtown, if you
(01:20:19):
lived anywhere close to the city, then you saw this coming.
Even in winter and springtime. There were so many people
that were warning that this once the weather was going
to get warmer, that this was going to happen based
on what they were seeing in the city. And they
were doing what they thought they could do when it
came to the Act, Cincinnati programs or whatever. But the
(01:20:40):
reality of it is that they're not taking the right
approach when it comes to decreasing crime in our city.
Speaker 3 (01:20:45):
Well, what approach would Corey Bowman take? I know one
of the problems in the frustrations expressed by Ken Kober,
the FOP president, was you know, we do have a curfew,
and we've got these roving gangs of teens that outnumber
people and threaten people and commit acts of i'm in violence,
generally making the downtown area kind of like a very
unwelcoming environment and frightening people away. Like you want to
(01:21:08):
go to Rubi's for dinner, No, because at seven o'clock
dinner reservation means I'm not going to get done till
maybe nine or nine point thirty, perhaps even ten o'clock,
and you don't want to be walking around down there
at that late.
Speaker 1 (01:21:18):
Hour, I'm afraid. So you've got that.
Speaker 3 (01:21:21):
But then, as Ken pointed out, if we pick someone
up and arrest them for violating the curfew, they don't
even prosecute them. The minute the magistrates will just dismiss
the case. They will be left back out on the streets,
no record, no no consequences. I mean, there's a problem
in and of itself. The police can issue tickets and
(01:21:42):
arrest people, but there's apparently no follow through on the
judicial end of it.
Speaker 10 (01:21:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (01:21:48):
Well, whenever you look at what's going on in our city.
A lot of people want to look at the police
department and want to look at certain individuals, but this
comes from the top down. This is a culture that
they've set and that they've put the morale of our
police officers at the lowest level it could. What's happening
right now is that because the month of June, crime
(01:22:08):
was spiking like crazy, and even in our coffee shop
on my phone, I was on the phone with cops
on a regular basis just trying to figure out and
learn what's the morale.
Speaker 10 (01:22:19):
What's the situation going on within the police department.
Speaker 12 (01:22:22):
And there was a general consensus from talking with multiple
police officers, not just heads, but I mean I'm talking
about beat cops and those that are doing the everyday work,
and the general consensus is they're not happy with the
support from their local government. They're not happy with the
support or even the enforcement from the prosecutors like you
(01:22:43):
were talking about. They feel like that they're not supported
as far as if they were to make arrests or
if they are to do certain things to do their job,
that they wouldn't have the full backing of their city leaders.
And then when it comes to the propecuting. Yeah, it's
a revolving door of criminals.
Speaker 10 (01:23:01):
That go in and then they go out and they
do the same things.
Speaker 12 (01:23:04):
And so a lot of officers don't even see the
point of it, because what's the point of booking somebody
that's going to be right back on the streets doing
the same thing the very next week. And so this
is from the top down, and these are things that
have to change. Our police officers love our city. Our
police officers want to protect and serve our state. That's
why they got into the job. But right now you're
(01:23:24):
seeing officers, even at a rapid pace, they're saying that, hey,
when retirement comes up, you know, I'm out because there's
no way that we're going to subject ourselves to this
on a regular basis.
Speaker 3 (01:23:37):
Well, and I think it's worse than that. According to
to Ken, people are retiring early. They're just saying, no
the hell, I'm not even going to go through the
drop program, which benefits those officers who make it through
the DROP program a lot in terms of finances and
their pension payment. So if they're not willing to stick
it out to their own financial benefit, that means that's
(01:23:58):
a bad sign, right, there cor.
Speaker 12 (01:24:01):
No it is, and so you have to start like
day one, you asked what would we do different as
being the mayor.
Speaker 10 (01:24:07):
Well, first off, I would say.
Speaker 12 (01:24:09):
That this needs to be done right now. It doesn't
just need to be done after a November election. There's
lives on the line right now. They're doing things to
try to help. They've actually implemented lateral hiring and a
bunch of other.
Speaker 10 (01:24:22):
Things that they're trying to decrease the crime.
Speaker 12 (01:24:24):
But I think the number one is that the police
officers have to feel like the city has.
Speaker 10 (01:24:29):
Their best, whether it be through whether it be through press.
Speaker 12 (01:24:31):
Conferences, whether it be through social posts, whatever it is.
They have to know that the police officers are getting
the support and the backing from their city officials.
Speaker 10 (01:24:40):
And then when it comes to their.
Speaker 12 (01:24:42):
Everyday job, you've got to untie the hands of the
police officers and you got to let them.
Speaker 10 (01:24:47):
Do their job.
Speaker 12 (01:24:48):
And then from the proftscuer standpoint, you've got to put
you got to put a very big encourage on the
profitscuers and say we have to have harsher sentences.
Speaker 8 (01:24:57):
We've got to be able to enforce these laws.
Speaker 12 (01:25:00):
Because you can say, hey, we're implementing this policy.
Speaker 10 (01:25:03):
We're implementing this, but.
Speaker 12 (01:25:04):
There's no consequences to it, and so yeah, on the surface,
it looks like you're trying, but from the background of
it all, it's not doing any good because people are
just going through that revolving door again.
Speaker 3 (01:25:17):
All right, pause, We'll bring Corey back for some more
thoughts and ideas about the crime problem and other ideas
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Speaker 6 (01:26:42):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio Station our iHeartRadio
Music First Guarantee.
Speaker 3 (01:26:51):
Jenna nine says We're gonna have a muggy day to day,
partly cloudy skies, Anahei have eighty six, muggy overnight with
a low of seventy and some clouds. Muggy steaming tomorrow
with the high of eighty four and partly thoudy skies.
Possible scattered showers and storms partly Thoudy and Muggy overnight
sixty nine for the low Thursday's going to be cloudy
and I have eighty seven and seventy one right now.
Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
Let's get a traffic.
Speaker 9 (01:27:13):
Updates from the UC Health at traffic centers. You see
health has expert trauma care focusing on prevention, treating injuries,
and supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation.
Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
Learn more at.
Speaker 9 (01:27:25):
Ucehealth dot com. Earlier accident now cleared out eastbound Ronald
Reagan Highway before seventy five. A little bit of stop
and go traffics though still from Galbrat as it returns
back to posted speeds that he sound like. I'm fifty
five k rc the talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:27:45):
If you have KRCD talkstation, Corey Bowman from Arisincinnati. Core's
on the line right now. You can go to Corey
Bowman dot com, get your tickets for the event next Monday,
the fundraiser, and learn more about his policies, platform and
how to help him out. Oh look, the big donate
today click so donate the Corey's campaign. There are choices
(01:28:05):
to be made, and doing the same thing over and
over again certainly doesn't appear to be going to be
doing anything to better our so our situation with the
crime in downtown. You know, talking with Smith Aman yesterday
during the Smith event, Corey, I think he hit the
nail on the head, I asked. I said, you know, Christopher,
you live in one of the fifty two neighborhoods in
the city. You interact with people in the various communities.
(01:28:25):
I mean it's notably you know, like, for example, the
African American or black community. He talks to folks, what
do they really want insofar as policing. Are they against
policing in their neighborhood. Do they think police are all
terrible people? Or would they prefer a big police presence?
He said, no, Overwhelmingly, it's the silent majority. They like
the police, They want the police, they want safer neighborhoods.
(01:28:46):
And yet the council members, you'd think they could tap
into that phenomenon. If it's what people want, then be
a representative for any representative situation here, which is what
they're supposed to do, and tell people that they've got
their back, Tell people that we want the police there.
Tell people that we're hoping to approve public safety with
greater police presence. All of that might resonate really well
(01:29:08):
with the citizens of the city of Cincinnati who are
struggling with the crime problem. As it turns out, though,
his suggestion was that it's this is motivated out of
the far left wing of the Democrat Party, who are
the defund the police. Rethink the police folks. They are
the loudest, squeakiest wheels in spite of the fact that
they don't represent a majority of people who have to
(01:29:29):
live around the crime and yet they show up to vote.
You saw what ten percent of the citizens of the
city Cincinnati showed up for the primary, and you know
it was probably a whole bunch of these radical leftists
that showed up in order to get votes. I guess
you have to appeal to that group because you at
least know they're going to show up at the ballot box,
unlike I guess the rest of the citizens.
Speaker 1 (01:29:49):
What's your take on that, in Natty feel Corey.
Speaker 12 (01:29:53):
Well, what I would say is that on it was
actually last week, I was walking through the West End
and we were doing a community outreach. This actually last month,
we were doing a community outreach where we were doing giveaways.
Speaker 10 (01:30:08):
And we were just providing stuff.
Speaker 12 (01:30:09):
For the community, and I talked with the family that
was on the side of the street. One of the
mothers was there. She was selling something at a table
and I go up to them and I'm not even
promoting the campaign. I'm just promoting this outreach that we're
doing because we want to be able to bless people.
And as we're doing it, the lady looks at me
and says, you're the one running for mayor right now.
Speaker 5 (01:30:32):
This is a.
Speaker 12 (01:30:32):
Family that lives in very low income area. And so
there was two moms and there was probably about about
seven kids overall.
Speaker 10 (01:30:40):
And one of them was a young gentleman. He was
about seventeen years old. And they were there and they.
Speaker 12 (01:30:45):
Looked at me and they said, what are you going
to do for our community.
Speaker 10 (01:30:48):
I looked at him, I said, well, what this community right.
Speaker 12 (01:30:51):
Needs right now is they need the gun firing. They
need the crime to stop in this area. And they
just nodded their head like into.
Speaker 8 (01:31:00):
He asked them.
Speaker 12 (01:31:00):
They said, we don't want the crime to be hitting
our children and affecting us like what it's been.
Speaker 10 (01:31:06):
And then I started.
Speaker 12 (01:31:07):
Talking to them about when it came to having a
hand up instead of a handout, and we've got to
be able to provide jobs and programs that not just
keep people in poverty, but they've got to be able
to lift people up. And we got to give young
men like this, I'm pointing to the gentleman right there.
I said, we got to give him an opportunity to
not only live in a neighborhood that isn't affected by
(01:31:29):
this crime, but we got to give him an opportunity
to if he wants to get married, have kids, and
get into how and get into a job to where
he's able to move out of this situation. And they
started balling their eyes out.
Speaker 10 (01:31:42):
And they said, you've got our vote.
Speaker 12 (01:31:44):
That's exactly what our city needs. And I started going
through the practical processes of them too. But I talk
with people NonStop, especially in the West End, and the
general consensus of the community is they don't want this crime,
they want the police to be involved, They feel forgotten about.
But like what you said, the people that are the
most radicalized are the ones that are more active in
(01:32:06):
these voting situations.
Speaker 10 (01:32:08):
And we've got to change that. We not only have
to ignite.
Speaker 12 (01:32:12):
The conservative base and the people that we know agree
with us, but we've got to turn the hearts of
the people in the communities around to say hey, we're
for you. And I really believe that we're going to
have record turnouts for the vote in November because of.
Speaker 1 (01:32:25):
This, I hope.
Speaker 3 (01:32:26):
So when you got that coupled with the right to
choose your own destiny in any given neighborhood in terms
of development, I think that's a winner for you because
you're in favor of local decision making when it comes
to that, unlike the city foisting upon Hyde Park or
Bond Hill or any other neighborhood. It's vision of the
future and what can and cannot be developed. So a
(01:32:46):
lot of great talking points, a lot of great campaign
issues for you, Corey, and I can only you know,
hope and pray that people pay attention to realize you know,
you do have a choice. Why keep doing the same
thing over again. If you're unhappy with the current situation,
you know who is responsible for it, So change course.
Corey Bowman dot com is hey you help Corey out.
Speaker 1 (01:33:06):
Corey.
Speaker 3 (01:33:06):
Wish you best of luck on the fundraiser on Monday,
and encourage my listeners to participate in that, whether or
not they live in the city. What happens in the
city has wide ranging, far reaching implications for everybody, even
in the entire Hamilton County area, but also northern Kentucky
and the surrounding county. So let's push him in the
right direction and help Corey out. Corey, You're always welcome
on the Morning show. And again, congratulations on the birth
(01:33:29):
of your your your new son, Ezra. That's a beautiful thing.
Speaker 1 (01:33:32):
Man.
Speaker 12 (01:33:33):
Hey, thank you so much, and as always, thank you
for having me. It's a privilege being on.
Speaker 3 (01:33:38):
It's a pleasure, man, I really get. I can get
some sense of optimism for the city when I talk
to you. So best of luck, brother, Corey Bowman dot
Com seven twenty six. Right now, if you have k
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Speaker 1 (01:34:58):
Fifty five far the tox to come.
Speaker 3 (01:35:03):
Gota nine first one to weatherforcash and muggy, Muggy, Muggy, muggy,
let us see here in addition being muggy, it's gonna
be partly cloudy today and high of eighty six remains
muggy overnight a low of seventy partly thiny skis another
partly thirty day Tomorrow, a couple with possible scattered showers
and storms. Muggy eighty four, muggy overnight sixty nine with
(01:35:24):
some clowns, and a cloudy Thursday with a high of
eighty seven seventy one. Right now, traffic time.
Speaker 9 (01:35:30):
From the UCE Health Traffic Center. You see health that's
expert trauma care focusing on prevention, treating injuries, in supporting
long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at u sehealth
dot com. Still some slowdowns east found on Ronald Raken
Highway between Wenton Road and seventy five. That is an
earlier accident. It's still cleared away, the traffic returning to
(01:35:52):
posted speeds and northbound seventy one seventy five slow traffic
from Dixie Highway to twelve on that He's like on
fifty five KRCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:36:03):
Seven thirty up to seven thirty one. I think about
KERCDE talk station. Fund lines are open. Maybe you got
a comment about something Corey said or some other topic.
Speaker 1 (01:36:10):
Do you want to go over?
Speaker 3 (01:36:11):
Five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eighty two to three talk PUN five fifty
on at and T Funds. Since I did mention Christopher
Smithman a couple of times with his smith event on
the topic of crime and the deafening silence from the
mayor and the council members. You can check out the
smith event online at fifty five care sea dot com.
Also conversation along the same lines with FOP President Ken
Cober and it's a sad, sad reality and viviting over
(01:36:34):
to local story, He's got a fourteen year old boy dad.
Happened uh yesterday morning in Avondale. According to the Coroner's Office.
Police set officers showed up as a after a spot
shooter report eight hundred block of Hutchins Avenue about one
o'clock in the morning. They located the boy who had
been shot, taken to the hospital but later pronounced dead.
The boy tak Kwan Jones, Alexander. Police said a second
(01:36:58):
person showed up at the hospital after the shooting, but
it's not clear whether that's a related crime. To WCPOS
Grace Hamilton reporting, thank you Grace, and I mentioned she
spoke with Bishop Mistate. He apparently worked with this boy,
Jones Alexander briefly and when he was younger, as a
part of community outreach which works to tackle the root
cause of gun violence and let children know that there
(01:37:19):
are options.
Speaker 1 (01:37:20):
He said.
Speaker 3 (01:37:20):
It's a perfect example of when you touch a young
person's life and in a short period of time it
can turn around in a different way. It's literally a
public health issue, he said, and the spirit of violence
is contagious. If we treated this gun violence as seriously
as we did, COVID, it would be a different outcome
in our city. Yeah, and I'll double down to what
I said to Corey. Yeah, COVID, these elected officials, the mayor,
(01:37:44):
and the council members would all be running around telling
you how serious things were, to mask up, to stay
at home, to social distance every single day. They should
be doing the same thing in support of this insane
police department in an effort to deal with this violence
problem we had.
Speaker 1 (01:38:00):
They said.
Speaker 3 (01:38:00):
Many of the kids are in survival mode and acting
based upon what they know.
Speaker 1 (01:38:03):
He said.
Speaker 3 (01:38:04):
He always works towards improvement on the gun violence issue.
Communities need to address the root causes, which he claims
of poverty and homelessness, that they need to work together. Yes,
and they also need to work with the police. And
if they know where one of these hidden guns is,
and I always kind I just scratched my head. You know,
as a firearms owner, I know how expensive they can be.
(01:38:25):
So you're gonna spend about four hundred maybe five hundred
dollars to get you know, the favorite gun on the street,
the glock. I don't know how a fourteen year old
comes up with one, Joe, when you were fourteen years old,
did you have four hundred plus dollars laying around that
you could purchase a firearm all the time? Yeah, and
when you went to buy one, they never carded you
or made you go through an FFL background check and
(01:38:46):
didn't tell you that. Well, by the way, you're not
old enough to even own one of these things. So
clearly they're getting them from someone. And I've learned time
and time again because we've had the organization on the program,
there are ways to get those off this So if
you're in any given neighborhood, an you know where that
hidden gun is because it's like a lending library. They
hide him in a special place. When it comes time
(01:39:07):
for you to need one, and I use that word
loosely as if they really truly needed one. They borrow it,
use it, and then put it back. So there's one
step that members of the community can tape call and
drop a dime.
Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
And work with police.
Speaker 3 (01:39:24):
You got a tip, your son or your daughter perhaps
is an involved in crime or as contacts with the
criminal element, let the police know, work with them.
Speaker 1 (01:39:34):
Word it'll get out and maybe it'll reduce the violence.
Speaker 3 (01:39:39):
Emilon Kenny says, it is going to keep tabs on
about it has to keep tabs on a three thousand,
roughly people on adult probation on any given day, and
now the Probation department is reorganizing the system to keep
track of them. Maybe because people aren't being followed when
they're supposed to have ankle monitors on. Maybe director of
the County is Adult Probation Department says she stands by
the risk based supervision model, which relies on state scoring
(01:40:01):
system that uses several factors like an inmate's criminal history
to determine how much supervision he or she needs.
Speaker 1 (01:40:07):
Hamilton kind of Adult Probation.
Speaker 3 (01:40:08):
Director Tanya Tiana Johnson, speaking with Mike Shell of Fox nineteen,
Community Safety is our highest priority. We would not do
anything that would compromise community safety.
Speaker 1 (01:40:19):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:40:23):
Sarah Herringer, you may remember her her husband was stabbed
in their own home. She said she has no choice
to become an advocate to monitor the Adult Probation department.
On June fourth, my husband was murdered in our home
by someone who was in the PRC prole program and
had gone a wall. Her husband Patrick, stabbed to death
in their home and over the rhine. Ordisha Black the
(01:40:45):
man who's on parole from the state prison and charge
with Patrick's murder after he cut off his ankle monitor
and went missing for several months. Sarah Harringer, there is
no one that has more skin in the game than
me at this point for wanting to hold these systems
accountable for reform, to make sure that it doesn't happen
to another family. As for Gianna Johnson, the Adult Probation director,
(01:41:08):
she says, under the model, all the county Adult Probation
field offices will be closed. Right now, we have twelve
officers assigned to the various neighborhoods and that number will
be reduced to six field officers assigned to nothing but fieldwork,
not case management of any sort.
Speaker 1 (01:41:23):
Does that sound good? Said?
Speaker 3 (01:41:25):
The other six officers would deliver what is called intensive
services and serve as a backup for the field officers
conducting visits. Johnson said the field probation officers will work
out of eight hundred Broadway. This is an approach to
ensure effective supervision and swift effective interactions with our probationers
as needed. Aarringer expects skepticism, but a little hope too,
(01:41:48):
to really make sure that this program is going to
be effective. Again, it's not just a reorganization and optics
they're after, Johnson said, We're not cutting back on services.
We're not diminishing our present within the community. In fact,
what we're doing is stepping into a smarter, wiser, more efficient,
more responsive approach to community supervision. H keep your fingers crossed, folks,
(01:42:11):
seven thirty six coming up at seven thirty seven. Feel
free to call if you got a comment. I'll be
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Speaker 6 (01:43:14):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 13 (01:43:18):
Want a sneak peek at this year's sys HI Channel nine.
Speaker 3 (01:43:24):
Since the following a by the weather, partly cloudy day
to day, very muggy high of eighty six, going to
be remain muggy overnight, Partly cloudy and dropping to seventy
eighty four of the high tomorrow maydy scattered showers and storms.
Definitely very humid and partly cloudy. Partly cloudy overnight again
muggy and sixty nine.
Speaker 1 (01:43:40):
For the Wealth.
Speaker 3 (01:43:41):
No m word mentioned on Thursday, but that you say
it's going to be cloudy with a high of eighty
seven seventy one degrees.
Speaker 1 (01:43:46):
Right now, it's time for traffic updates.
Speaker 9 (01:43:48):
From the u SEE Health Traffic Center. You see health
as expert trauma care, focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and
supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more ucehealth dot com.
Seeing some slow traffic along northbound seventy one seventy five
between Donaldson and Twelfth Street, A five minute to lay
(01:44:09):
in a minute or two, we're the DeLay's northbound fourth
seventy one from Memorial Parkway up to seventy one on
that he's like on fifty five KRCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (01:44:22):
Seven forty two ifty five carsite talk station Happy Tuesday
five one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred and eighty two three help eight two three talk
bound five fifty on eighteen and T phones and where
that came from, uh, I know where it came from.
Came from at text from Christopher Smith and he's been
listening to the program this morning, and I appreciate that.
Christopher shout out to you. He suggests asked the governor
(01:44:44):
for help. Part of the solution to state highway patrol
can increase patrols on state highways like Route fifty or
Reading Route. And of course he did mention he and
Joe Treker were going back and forth with comments on
the crime situation. Council is on summer or break, and
a reminder that the city council positions are considered part
(01:45:05):
time jobs, even though they usually don't view them that way.
But they can reconvene for an emergency, then call for
an emergency session, get council together, and would you consider
the crime and violence that's going on in the city
of Cincinnati to be an emergency justifying them getting together?
So maybe we could argue about that. But just because
(01:45:28):
they're on break doesn't mean that they don't have access
to local media, that they don't have access to their
social media feed. They've all got them that they can
still in spite of being on break, reach out to
people in different ways and effectively communicate their support for
the police and their outreach in terms of trying to
(01:45:49):
get the communities to work with police and provide some
measure of, you know, at least moral support for the
declining morale police department that we're dealing with. I mean,
I got the impression from Kenkovery yesterday they don't feel
wanted or needed that you know, the police department is
(01:46:09):
sort of a thorn in the side of the elected officials.
That these silence from the elected officials in terms of
support of the police is reflective of an attitude that
they do not appreciate the police, and they're maybe all
part of this whole defund rethink the police program, and
considering they're using a substantial chunk of the money allocator
for the sincein police department to send counselors on police runs,
(01:46:33):
maybe reflective of exactly that by denying or ignoring that
the problem exists means they don't have to take account
for their leftist crazy policies that include defunding or rethinking
the police department. And again, I'll go way beyond the
police department. Someone's got to hold these judges accountable and
give them a tongue lashing. You know, social media can
(01:46:55):
be a real pressure for us, for the judiciary as well.
Speaker 1 (01:46:58):
Hmmm.
Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
Did they protest out a Justice Kavanaugh's house in the
wake of the abortion decision and etc. Of course they did.
I don't have had any impact on his decision making
down the road, but clearly it has an impact. Boycotts
have an impact sometimes, but social media pressure maybe.
Speaker 5 (01:47:21):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:47:22):
Listen, judges, we got crime out there. Our young people
are running amok in the street. The police have no
incentive to arrest them on the legitimate charge of violating
curfew or even bigger crimes that they are caught committing.
If you don't follow through and meet out punishment, then
we're going to continue to have this downward spiraling problem.
So wake up to the reality and start changing your
(01:47:44):
attitude towards sentencing and bonds.
Speaker 1 (01:47:49):
Not much work.
Speaker 3 (01:47:50):
I don't know how much that could possibly do, but
you know what, it would sure sound good. It would
sure sound like those council members and the mayor are
looking out for the population at large, not just some
fringe element within the population that thinks that there shouldn't
be any punishment for crime. That's part of the woke ideology,
(01:48:15):
and it doesn't work. And so we're now living the
aftermath of years of this being put in place, years
of appointing liberal judges who don't believe in meeting on punishment,
electing a left wing prosecutor. And I'm not sure how
much Connie's done by way of prosecuting crimes, or if
(01:48:35):
she has any connection with not moving forward with prosecutions.
It could be that's a prosecutor standing in the room
saying no, no, we really need to charge this kid
and con victim of violating curfew. Whether or not that's happening.
If you have a judge it's falling on deaf ears,
then you're not going to get anywhere, which going back
to the police is a disincentive for them to even
(01:48:56):
do their job. And I got to ask this question
out loud. If the police actually, you know, and I'm
not saying they're not doing their job, but if they
had incentive to do their job and have been doing
their job and arresting these unruly kids are violating curfew
or doing whatever else is they're doing, and they're not
being overlooked. They're actually arresting them and citing them.
Speaker 1 (01:49:18):
How bad.
Speaker 3 (01:49:19):
Do you think the crime statistics would be. I mean,
if they're bad right now, if all the criminal activity
that the police are charged with dealing with actually resulted
in an arrest, you can only imagine what the numbers
would look like. Seven forty seven fifty five K CED
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Speaker 2 (01:50:58):
Fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 8 (01:51:00):
It's Champion Winnows.
Speaker 3 (01:51:03):
Here's your Channel nine first one on the forecast, It's
going to be very humid today, partly cloudy skies ana
high of eighty six, remaining humid over night, down to
seventy with partly cloudy skies. Another muggy, human day tomorrow,
maybe some scattered showers or storms popping in. Otherwise partly
thotty with a high of eighty four. Muggy and partly
cloudy overnight with a low of sixty nine and eighty
(01:51:24):
seven high on Thursday with body skies seventy one degrees.
Speaker 1 (01:51:27):
Time for traffic update from.
Speaker 9 (01:51:29):
The uce Health Traffic Center u SEE Health as expert
trauma care focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting long
term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at u sehealth dot com.
On southbound seventy five traffic slow between the Lachland Split
and Town Street, looking at a five minute delay. Also
(01:51:50):
going to find delays on four seventy one north found
between Memorial Parkway and seventy one on that ezeak on
fifty five KR see the talk station.
Speaker 1 (01:52:01):
Seven fifty to two.
Speaker 3 (01:52:02):
I think about KERSD talk station Happy Tuesday inside scooping
and bright part news, but the Texas flooding after the
top of the hour news and the insanity from the
Democrats and blaming Donald Trump for that. And as it
turns out, the blame game centered around the number of
meteorologists were on site there, and they're claiming that Donald
Trump's budget cuts, which don't take effect until January of
next year, somehow impacted the flood. Does the lack of
(01:52:26):
meteorologists cause the flood to become worse? Boiled down? That's
kind of the argument they're making. But no, in fact,
they had double the meteorologists that they normally would have
why because the flooding was predicted. Announcements went out twelve
hours in advance, another announcement when it got to an
emergency level, but that happened at four o'clock in the morning,
when post most people were sleeping, and apparently communications, most
(01:52:46):
notably at that summer camp where all the tragedy with
the young people happened, probably didn't get the message. So
they're just screaming, and it's because they have nothing to
scream about. They don't have a policy to run on,
and they're dealing with the aftermath of their own policies.
It was an interesting New York Times report on Sunday
talking about how they are now acknowledging day the Democrats
(01:53:10):
that they failed in terms of border security. Now, people
who were looking at conservative media early on in the
Biden administration saw the hordes of people flowing across the borders,
and they were all in to denial. Now it's not happening. Now,
it's not that bad. Until we finally saw that we
could believe our eyes and could believe the reports and
did see the bus loads of people being shipped to
(01:53:30):
places like that that had declared themselves sanctuary cities, and
we did see those mayors in those cities complain about
what Florida and Texas were doing. Blah blah blah blah blah. Yes,
it was a real thing, and we're living now the
aftermath of it. These ice raids wouldn't have happened, It
wouldn't be necessary were it not for the failed border
policies of the Biden administration. We are now dealing with
the aftermath of a problem that they created. So what
(01:53:52):
are they doing now? They're screaming about the remedy for
the problem that they created. Representative in Sinde Gonzalez. He's
a Democrat from Texas. This quota is saying, when you
have the most Latino district in the country outside of
Puerto Rico, vote for Trump. That should be a wake
up call for the Democratic Party. New York Times are
(01:54:12):
reported our highlight of the Gonzales witness President Trump win
every count this is his words, win every county in
his district along the border with Mexico. So this is
a Democratic district that's been blue for over a century. Well,
maybe they weren't happy with the reality of living on
the border. Senator Reuben Galago Democrat out of Arizona said,
(01:54:37):
the Democratic Party quote got led astray by the twenty
sixteen and twenty twenty elections, and we just never moved back.
And the report highlight of the fact that during the
twenty twenty Democratic primary to debate, every candidate, I think,
with the exception of one, raised their hand in support
of decriminalizing illegal border crossings. They did it to themselves.
(01:55:00):
Now they're moving in a different direction. Consulting with the
Center for American Progress, described as a left wing think tank,
the organization calling for expanding legal immigration, but also for
ramping up border security and clamping down an abuse in
the nation's asylent system. Oh, you mean those longtime Republican priorities,
(01:55:21):
priorities that Donald Trump ran on. That's what you're going
to pivot over to. Well, it's obviously very popular with
the American people. You realize, maybe a little bit too late
in the game, you're on the wrong side of the ledger.
You've seen the polling over and over again. People of
all political stripes want to crack down on this. We
want to prevent it from happening, and we're happy with
(01:55:41):
crazy criminal types being rounded up and sent out of
the country near at tandem the president and CEO of
this liberal organization Center for American Progress. But the way
we're going to be able to to do that, meaning
fix the problem, is to also honestly assess that the
(01:56:03):
border has been too insecure, that it allowed too many
people to come through, and that we need to fix that. Wow,
you call that a come to Jesus moment. Maybe seven
fifty six fifty five krs. The talk station inside scoop
with Bright Bart News Texas Border reporter Randy Clark on
the Texas floods. Daniel Davis deep dive at eight thirty
(01:56:27):
on of course Russia, Ukraine, Iran and the Huthi's launching
missiles out of Yemen. That'll be up next.
Speaker 1 (01:56:34):
You will be called the twelve Day War. I suppose that's
what we were nicknaming it already.
Speaker 12 (01:56:37):
Another updates at the top of the hour, the use
of military force.
Speaker 1 (01:56:41):
Fifty five kr.
Speaker 3 (01:56:42):
See the talk station for what's developing.
Speaker 12 (01:56:46):
This is just developing out of the Middle East now right.
Speaker 6 (01:56:49):
Now it's developing.
Speaker 3 (01:56:51):
Fifty five KRC. The talk station eight O five A
fifty five Karsee the talk station. Brion Thomas here always
looking forward to this time the week because we get
to talk to breit Bart get the inside Scoopers would
like to call it from bright Bart News, b R
E I T B a art dot com book market.
(01:57:11):
I always like to start out with a suggestion you
do that you'll be glad you did take me up
on that advice, because you'll be reading at least stuff
about Texas and the Texas border with my guest Randy Clark,
who is the bright Bart News Texas border reporter. Randy,
welcome back to the Morning show. It's always a pleasure
having you on.
Speaker 14 (01:57:27):
Good Morning, Brian, Thank you for having me.
Speaker 3 (01:57:29):
Looks like we're pivoting away from the border itself for
the border related issues to talk about the floods, which
of course dominating the news. What an absolute, outright tragedy
and almost even more tragic, and I don't say that
too seriously, the fact that Democrats are blaming Donald Trump
for the death of these young people and the others
who perished in the flash floods. I just beside myself
(01:57:51):
in disbelief that they would go that low, but that's
what they do.
Speaker 14 (01:57:56):
Yes, it's a sad situation, and that just compounds it.
You know what we know right now. As of late
last night, we've got one hundred and four deaths in
six counties there in the central part of Texas. The
worst hit was Curville, where there's eighty four deaths. Many
of them were children from some of these camps. So
this was the perfect storm. It was the worst day
(01:58:17):
of the year for this to happen, and obviously the
hour of the day it hit between three and five
am on July fourth, when most folks were asleep and
we turned cell phones off or or you know, we
just get so many alerts during the day, we just
tire of that. So a lot of effort went into
notifying people as far as information that came out from
(01:58:37):
the National Weather Service, but a lot of that came
out as this became more imminent after right shortly before midnight,
and then shortly after midnight. So but you're right, the
miseries compounded by what we're seeing not only from you know,
the left, but also from some members of the media
who show up, you know, to these press conferences that
(01:58:57):
are designed to provide some information to the public by
county officials and city officials, and in some cases it
appears they're being heckled more than they are being asked
questions at times, So it has become politicized unfortunately many instances,
you know, in today's day and age.
Speaker 3 (01:59:15):
Yeah, and you're right about your observation in terms of
the time that there's like there's a warning, there is
you know, alerts that go out. There's sort of gradual, Hey,
we might expect some flooding, be aware that there is
a potential for flooding, and then it moves over to
what an outright emergency where yes, it's flooding, get the
(01:59:35):
hell out or and all those came in over time.
Twelve hours was the beginning of the notices, and that
was of course during the day. Obviously people were in
a position to be able to get that information. But
in the middle of the night, four am when you
send out the emergency alert, I understand not only were
obviously people asleep, but this was in a low communication
(01:59:56):
area in terms of cell phone connections and the like,
so it's possible that they may be didn't get an alert.
Speaker 14 (02:00:02):
That's correct. And some of the camps, they you know,
they pull the cell phones from the children attending, you know,
for good reason, because they're there for you know, wholesome
activities and kind of get away from that. Yes, right,
camps are Christian camps and you know, and the adults
are watching over them. You know, the camp there was
most impacted camp missed it. Their director, you know, this
(02:00:22):
camp's been in their family since nineteen thirty nine, lost
his life trying to save these poor children. And so
it's just a tragedy. But that tells you the likelihood
of a flood event like this happening. That camp was
established in nineteen twenty six. We've had ex presidents Lyndon
Baines Johnson send his daughters there. Laura Bush worked.
Speaker 5 (02:00:41):
There as a camp counselor. So it's a prominent place.
They wouldn't put the children in harms way on purpose.
We know that.
Speaker 14 (02:00:48):
So to politicize it, it's absolutely despicable.
Speaker 3 (02:00:52):
Yeah, and hindsight, of course, is twenty twenty. I've read
an article in fact on Breitbart, a discussion with Kirk
County Judge Rob Kelly, who apparently has property that was impacted. Kelly,
the county's top elected official, edited that a flood warning
sirens system was in consideration to be placed along the
now devastated Guadalupe River before he was in office, about
(02:01:13):
six years ago, but it was never executed. He's quoted
to saying we've looked into it before, but the public
reeled at the cost. So there was some reason and
a motivation to talk about a public alert system because
this has happened before in that particular area, has it
not well?
Speaker 14 (02:01:31):
So there have been floods all throughout the region. Right
The Gualla Looupe is just only one river that traverses
that area. You've got the Blanco, the Frio, the Medina.
You've got tons of rivers in this hill country area.
And where rainfalls impacts. What areas are going to flood,
low lying areas, low water crossings on tiny roadways, you know,
(02:01:53):
they're subject to flooding almost with any amount of rain.
The last major event was in nineteen eighty seven where
a loss of life, you know, close to this occurred.
Ten children from a camp were lost when they were
trying to evacuate. So the second guessing, if you put
an alarm system and you start moving children in a
big storm like this, you may lose some in the
(02:02:14):
evacuation process if you get them out. There were seven
hundred and fifty you know, girls at that camp, So
you can imagine what it would take to evacuate those
folks in short order, the chaos caused by that, getting
buses in order and moving in on those roadways. The
bridges were all but washed out to that camp, so
if they would have tried to leave the area, they
(02:02:35):
may have suffered. If they have gotten without shelter up
on higher ground, you have lightning strikes. So this was
just the perfect storm. And you know, we've got to
look at this and decide. I think, you know, are
people going to begin to ignore a siren that may
go off two or three times a month and not
materialize into flooding where they are at. That's human nature
(02:02:57):
and that has to be looked at in the light
of day. But when you do that, we need to
leave politics at the door, when you go in to
discuss this and come up and formulate a plan.
Speaker 1 (02:03:05):
No doubt about it. I thought.
Speaker 3 (02:03:06):
There was an interesting observation from Brian Stettler over at CNN.
He he said, warning fatigue was being cited by quite
a few experts as one of the causes of the disaster,
and I don't necessarily draw a correlation between warning fatigue
and the disaster. But insofar as he said, when everything
is labeled extreme weather, nothing seems extreme anymore. And I
(02:03:29):
think there's a good point to be made there, because
you know, it's twenty four hour day shocking on news.
You know, they even like the weather channels like, oh
my god, we're all gonna die hurricane season. Yeah, there's
like nine thousand predicted. Oh my god. And you know,
they predict these dire weather events and quite often they
don't manifest or materialize, and we're like, all right, there's
another crazy warning. It's like the Boy who Cried Wolf.
(02:03:52):
You know, at some point you're like done with it.
Speaker 14 (02:03:55):
Well, and we see that. We saw that happen with
Hurricane Helene. You know, you get the warnings you don't
think to happen, and it materializes. Look at Katrina, a
complete and utter disaster. So it happens when you get
the warning that materializes, and sometimes it's worse than what
the warning is. But that's the tea comes from. Not
just weather alerts, but you know, we get important amber
(02:04:17):
alerts as well. So when you're dead asleep and that
cell phone starts to go, often you've got to go
to work, you're likely to just silence it because you're
going to think, well, I'll look at this in a
few hours when.
Speaker 5 (02:04:28):
I wake up.
Speaker 14 (02:04:28):
Well, that river rows, you know, near twenty nine feet
in two hours. That is extremely significant. It's the second
highest level it's ever achieved.
Speaker 3 (02:04:39):
Now, do they have like the civil defense sirens in
the area there? Because I honestly, and I've said it before,
I'll say it out loud again. We do a text
segment every week on this program on Fridays, and one
of the things I always say, you know, I don't
pick up a phone if I don't recognize the number,
I just let it go into voicemail. But in the
middle of the night, I want to get a good
night's sleep, so I keep my phone off. So someone's
(02:05:00):
trying to reach me, they're not going to be able to.
But I could be awakened by a civil defense sirens
screaming and going off in the middle of the night.
That's like a backup system for us. Is there anything
like that in that general area?
Speaker 14 (02:05:12):
No, And that's what they were proposing, you know, to
have added that was going to cost a million dollars,
was actual audible sirens because in that river bottom and
I experienced that watching you know, this unfold the following day,
and you know, seeing the rescues come in and you
get on that river bottom and even the authorities had
(02:05:32):
to beg bar and steal to get some starlink apparatuses
to get out in some of those areas because the
towns are not gigantic towns. You move away from the city,
that river stretches two hundred and thirty miles to the
Gulf of America. Now, so if you move out of
those cities yourself on coverage drops, if you move into
that river bottom, which can be up to a quarter
mile wide, that's it. You kind of lose signal in
(02:05:55):
some of those spots.
Speaker 3 (02:05:57):
What also was overwhelming was just absence a volume of water.
And now I've seen other floods before, and I'm always
overwhelmed by the amount of water that can accumulate, But
in the amount of time that it accumulated, I mean
that it came out of nowhere and the river rose
what twenty six feet in a matter of forty five minutes.
Speaker 14 (02:06:16):
Yes, And so that's why this was the perfect storm,
because if that storm had dropped that water, you know,
several miles to the east or the west, or just
downriver of Kerrville by just a mile or two. We
probably wouldn't be speaking right now because that water was
directed into that particular waterway by two offshoots that feed
(02:06:38):
into that Wadalupe River just upstream of Hunt. So it
was the worst place, worst day, and the worst hour
for it to happen. And being that the camp's been
there since nineteen twenty six and in the same hand
since nineteen thirty nine, tells you nobody expected since that
day that this was going to endanger that many girls
that were camped in that area.
Speaker 3 (02:06:58):
That's such a tragedy and lost. The life is now
north of one hundred and there are still how many
people missing at this point, Randy.
Speaker 14 (02:07:06):
Well, that's the big question.
Speaker 10 (02:07:09):
You know.
Speaker 14 (02:07:09):
We know from the camp we've got ten girls and
one councilor they still have folks that remain unidentified that
they have recovered. So a lot of this area, especially
along the wall A Lupe, the cities and towns like Kurbville,
did not get you know, horribly damaged. It's what structures
were on the river bottom, which mainly the camps and
(02:07:29):
the RV so folks that may not have told their family.
They were going to be at a particular park in
that county. We don't know if they haven't shown up
to work and that they're added to the missing, but
you know, we suspect there's several dozen missing still and
at least eleven from the camp, one councilor and ten campers.
Speaker 3 (02:07:47):
Well, and since you're familiar with the area, how difficult
is it for first responders and search and rescue folks
to get in there and scour the area? Is it difficult?
Generally speaking? I figure if these camps have been there
for that long, they have to be released somewhat readily accessible.
Speaker 14 (02:08:04):
Well, so they aren't in fair weather. When the roads
aren't destroyed, you can get into Curval. It's off Kurveling
Comfort sit right off byin so it's an easy drive
from San Antonio sixty miles. Then you're going to be
hoofing it on foot through that river bottom to conduct searches.
But the searchers are in the water, in the air,
on horseback. You name it. A multitude of federal agencies
(02:08:25):
and that's the good that I witnessed the volunteers coming out.
We've got fire Department from Mexico coming. I hear there's
some coming from California to help. That's the good. But
when you start getting towards Hunt and Ingram, some of
those roads were damaged and they had to air drop
supplies into those kids. The ones that survived a flood.
There were eight hundred and fifty rescues just within the
(02:08:46):
first twenty four hours.
Speaker 3 (02:08:48):
Wow, well, it's I appreciate your reporting on this and
you're updating us on the situation. Randy Clark, boarder expert.
Can I pivot it just for a brief moment here?
What is the border crossings have virtually ended? I mean,
the Trump administration has virtually has basically stopped people from
(02:09:10):
getting gaining entrance into our country. Is there a noticeable
like change of attitude improvement, a general up uplifting feeling
in the general in the area based on the population
and what they're experiencing.
Speaker 14 (02:09:21):
Now, yes, you don't hear very many border residents complaining
that the border's not wide open. A lot of them
have lost sleep for the last four years from the
Texas Real Grand Valley all the way to San Diego, California. Yeah,
so the morale is better on the border. Troll on
the line. But if you see yesterday we had that
nut attack one of the facilities for the bordertroll and
McCallum Texas. You see what's happening in La with Mayor
(02:09:44):
Karen Bass trying to shoe off the agents, and you
know what's the officer was shot in Alvarado. So we're
seeing the left creative situation that's almost as dangerous to
the agents. That's what they were facing by an open border.
But it is night and day for the residents. In
some areas, they're less than five to ten crossings and
places there used to be five thousand in a day.
(02:10:05):
So it is night and day difference at the border.
And it was all done with messaging and an effort
to enforce the law.
Speaker 3 (02:10:12):
Well, Trump's certainly following through what he campaigned on a
campaign in terms of shutting down the border that was
wildly successful, even along the southern border. There was a
New York Times article about that. I just commented some
of the quotes from some of the Democratic representatives there
that seemed like, oh my god, you know, we've been
Democrat now forever. And look, Trump took all of the
border counties and it was an amazing turnaround, so they're
(02:10:34):
sort of having a come to Jesus moment on their
position on border security, recognizing the vast majority of Americans
want a crackdown on border security. Absolutely, I'll tell you what,
it is always a pleasure talking with the Texas Border
reporter Randy Clark. Thank you for the time you spent
my listeners with me today. Keep up the great work
at Breitbart. I'll look forward to another edition of the
(02:10:54):
Inside Scoop next Tuesday. Take care of my friend.
Speaker 14 (02:10:58):
Thank you, Brian, have a wonderful day.
Speaker 1 (02:10:59):
Thanks you.
Speaker 3 (02:11:00):
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Speaker 1 (02:12:04):
You're ten of nine, first morning one of the horre.
Speaker 3 (02:12:06):
Cast sticky, summing it up at a word, partly cloudys
sky's day, very muggy high of eighty six, very humid,
muggy overnight with partly cloudys sky's in a lotus seventy
eighty four to the high tomorrow very cloudy and very
human scattered showers of storms also a possibility sixty nine
every night with partly cloudy skys and muggy conditions. Thursday
(02:12:29):
described as cloudy in a high of eighty seven seventy
one degrees time for ade traffic update from.
Speaker 9 (02:12:34):
The UCE Health Traffic Center. You see health as expert
trauma care focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting long
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It's an excellent off on the right shoulder moved from
the right lane on eastbound two seventy five at seventy
five in Sharonville, northbound seventy one to seventy five. Disabled
(02:12:58):
vehicle on the entrance ramp from to seventy five and
Erlangerer on that he'zamach on fifty five KRCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (02:13:08):
Coming up on a twenty three fifty five KRCD talk station,
Daniel Davis Deep dive coming up next. Will the new
arms are going to be sending to Ukraine to have
any impact at all on the conflict raging right now?
Don'ta tend to think not. But Daniel Davis will address
that among other topics with Daniel Davis and I mentioned
(02:13:29):
this shift in strategy and policy that The New York
Times highlighted the Democrats are going through and they've been
working with their Democrat left wing think tank Center for
American Progress, calling for expanded legal immigration, which a lot
of people don't have any problem with. I don't have
any problem with legal immigration as long as they're vetted,
and you know, you have some sort of limitations, maybe
(02:13:49):
green car limitations, time they can be here, maybe working
towards citizenship and maybe a smoother path to citizenship. But
legal immigration is a okay with me. But also talking
about taking the position that we need to ramp up
border security and clamp down to the abuse of the
nation's asilence asylum system. Democrats are Democrats now leaning toward
Republican you know, campaign promises and ideas, and if you
(02:14:15):
think about it, because as I read La Mayor Karen
Bass denouncing in the and in interfering with Ice who
was doing a sweep for illegal immigrants in a gang
plague area. Apparently this area they were canvassing and arresting
people has a heavy MS thirteen influence. So you don't
want gang members in your neighborhood, I presume. But during
(02:14:37):
Biden's open border policies, when they all thought this was
a grand and glorious idea, before the rest of the
American American population figured out how bad it was and
the impact on their cities, and their budgets and the
strain on housing that this has created. It has exacerbated
the housing problem. But there you are, as a sanctuary
city mayor, free medical coverage, free college education, free housing,
(02:15:01):
free food, free stuff, free things. Of course they're going
to gravitate to your city. Now you're dealing with a
problem of your own creation. You're backing off the idea
of open borders and immediate amnesty for every illegal that
comes in. That's a bad idea. It doesn't play well
at the polls. It's the reason Donald Trump won all
the border counties in Texas who were otherwise blue.
Speaker 14 (02:15:22):
Hmm.
Speaker 3 (02:15:23):
We can't cling to that principle anymore. But ICE is
cleaning up the aftermath of your failed policies. So now
you're gonna scream about that good luck deal with the gangs.
I thought it was pretty particularly interesting, Ice, pointed out
(02:15:48):
Border Patrol Chief Gary Bovino, the ICE official talking with
Fox News. I don't work for Karen Bass. Better get
used to us now, because this is going to be
normal very soon. We will go anywhere anytime we want
in Los Angeles. So obviously, the words of La Mayor
(02:16:09):
Karen Bas falling on deaf ears insofar as ICE actually
continuing to do its job. A twenty six fifty five
K Steve Talk station that Daniel Davis Deep Dive coming
up next. But first, a word for my friends who's
at Low's camp across country mortgage whatever state you are in,
including Puerto Rico, which I know is in a state,
she can help you with the mortgage experience. She got
more than thirty five years experience, the finest in customer service.
(02:16:32):
I know that not only for a fact, but also
because one of my listeners, Rob sent me an email
talking about that he found out when he was working
with her he had three open mortgages that were never
released on his property. He's had his home paid for
over a decade, so he's going to buy a new place.
Mark working with Suzette, she solved the problem for him.
Didn't even ask you to do it, he said. I've
(02:16:52):
heard you heat praise on her, and today I want
to tell you that if it was in my power,
I would hold a parade and she would be on
the lead float. Customer service is alive and thriving with
Suzette and CCM.
Speaker 1 (02:17:06):
No kidding.
Speaker 3 (02:17:07):
I'm glad you took my advice Robin. I'm glad it
worked out. So if you have any mortgage related need
question refinancing, buying a new home, call Susette lows a Camp.
She's working for you and she will find great rates
at low cost, no application fees, no junk fees, and
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an email as well. Suzette dot Low's Camp los e
Kamp Suzette dot Low's Camp at CCM.
Speaker 1 (02:17:34):
Dot com fifty five KRC. For more information about consts.
Here's your Channeline weather forecast.
Speaker 3 (02:17:42):
A lot of humidity going on here today Partly clotty,
very muggy eighty six for the high or remain muggy
overnight low seventy with partly cloudy skies eighty four, Yes,
muggy and maybe scattered showers and storms.
Speaker 1 (02:17:53):
Tomorrow with a.
Speaker 3 (02:17:54):
High of eighty four partly cloudy sixty nine overnight muggy again,
cloudy skies and a cloudy Thursday as well in high
eighty seven seventy one degrees right now. If you have
KERCD talk station Traffic.
Speaker 9 (02:18:06):
Time from the UC Health Traffic Center, you see health
as Expert traumacare focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and supporting
long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at UCHealth dot com.
Northbound seventy five has got the lup lane block from
an accident before Paddock Road. Looking at a five minute
to laid back from Mitchell and eastbound two seventy five
(02:18:29):
at seventy five and Sharon builds an accident off on
the right shoulder. I'm at eazeek on fifty five k
RCD talk station.
Speaker 1 (02:18:41):
Six point thirty right now.
Speaker 3 (02:18:42):
If you have CARCD talk station and always enjoy this
time a week, get to talk to Daniel Davis, retired
within a Colonel Daniel Davis with the Daniel Davis Deep Dive.
You can find his podcast where you get your podcast.
Welcome back, my friend. It's always a pleasure to haveing
you on the show.
Speaker 1 (02:18:56):
Always a pleasure to be here.
Speaker 3 (02:18:57):
Brian can't wait forgive the camera angle chain. I came
in here this morning and someone had shifted switched up
the cameras and I'm not the tech guy, I have
no idea how to get the camera back, so I'm
kind of looking at you from a different angle. Apologies,
but I can see you, and We've got a lot
to talk about this morning. Let's start with Russia Ukraine.
They had a Russia massive strike on Kiv the other day,
(02:19:20):
and I know Trump's been trying to finagle some negotiations,
Putins not necessarily cooperating. Trump then has a conversation with Zelensky,
and after saying last week that we weren't going to
be providing any additional arms, I wake up to find
out that Trump is now resuming sending weapons to Ukraine.
Question for you, Daniel Davis, after all the conversations we've
had on this, can it do any good? Will additional
(02:19:43):
weapons shipment's whatever they happen to be have an impact
on the direction of this war, which is not going
well for Ukraine.
Speaker 11 (02:19:51):
Yeah, that's why I'm kind of scratching my head as well,
because I thought the ideal that they should withhold the
weapons was good a week ago when you and I
last talked, Because look, there is a certain number of
ammunition stockpiles, especially most importantly on interceptor missiles, air defense
interceptor missiles.
Speaker 1 (02:20:12):
That's something that there is a certain number that.
Speaker 11 (02:20:14):
The United States has to keep in our stockpiles in
the event that we get into a war, especially one
that has to be sustained for some period of time.
We've got to have enough to provide for our own
national defense. Sean Parnell the Defense Department last week said that, hey,
we did a review. Turns out that we're getting close
to that. So we have to look out for the
needs of America first and will help Ukraine as we can.
(02:20:35):
And then all of a sudden last night, then the
President completely changed his course when he was talking with
reporters with Net and Yahoo over dinner and says, no, actually,
now we're gonna go ahead and do it.
Speaker 14 (02:20:47):
Now.
Speaker 11 (02:20:47):
It's unclear exactly what that is because he specifically said
defensive weapons. They need some help, but he didn't say
what those weapons were. Is it is it defensive interceptor missiles,
is it more artillery. It's unclear because they haven't specified
what it was. Sean Parnell listed or issued a statement
last not confirming what the President had said, but he
(02:21:07):
also didn't say what the weapons were or anything else,
So we don't know what that is, but I can
tell you authoritatively, whatever they are, it's going to be
in small numbers and it is absolutely not going to
have any impact on the war at all. I mean,
when we had everything in the world, especially in twenty
twenty two, twenty twenty three for that offensive, if that
(02:21:28):
didn't change the dynamic, This small trickle just to a
slightly larger small trickle is also not going to change
the term. So I'm not really sure what the objective
is here.
Speaker 1 (02:21:38):
For the US.
Speaker 3 (02:21:39):
Well, the listed armaments, at least as report of the
Wall Street Journal is start out Patriot anti missile interceptors,
and we can That's what I want to focus on.
But AM one twenty anti aircraft missiles, how it's arounds,
AGM one fourteen hell Fires missiles to arm the hi
Mars rocket launchers, Stinger anti tank missiles, and grenade launchers.
(02:21:59):
But focusing on the Patriots, those are the defensive weapons.
Those are the ones that shoot the rockets coming in
from the foe. Now I seem to have read and
correct me if I'm wrong. If you saw something different
that there was expectation that Russia could maybe launch as
many as a thousand rockets at Kiev or pick another
target or area of targets. I mean, you're not going
(02:22:20):
to send over a thousand Patriot missiles. I mean those
things are multimillion dollars a pop. And the idea of
shooting down that kind of barrage of missiles, it just
seems like it's an impossible task.
Speaker 5 (02:22:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:22:33):
Well, the claim is that there will be a thousand.
Speaker 11 (02:22:36):
There could be soon up to one thousand air air
objects going towards Ukraine. So those combination drones and missiles,
And what the Ukraine side has done is that they
limit the air interceptor missiles only to like the kinsols
or the cruise missiles, et cetera. They don't shoot them
at the drones. Problem is you can't just ignore the
(02:22:58):
drones because the drones are often sent to the missile
batteries and if you don't take those things out, then
you're not going to have them to shoot the missiles
down later on, which is one of the Russian objectives.
Speaker 1 (02:23:08):
But the bigger issue is we don't have them.
Speaker 11 (02:23:11):
It's not even as important how much each of those
interceptor missiles cost, and you're right there, very very expensive.
But the problem is how many we have According to
open source information. We produce maybe six hundred per year,
and in that and a blast like this, you could
use thirty, forty or even more interceptor missiles in one barrage.
And you can see that's not going to last any
(02:23:31):
time at all for the whole year. And we can't
go down on our own stock pologer. We put our
national security at risk. So I just don't know how
you're going to.
Speaker 3 (02:23:39):
Square this circle. Well, what's your prediction for what happens next?
If Phutan's not willing to sit down. I mean it was,
Zelenski's all giddy with excitement about getting another arms shipment,
but that doesn't solve the problem. It doesn't solve the
problem of their manpower shortage, and it doesn't solve the
problem of Russia making further and further inroads in the
Ukraine territory.
Speaker 11 (02:24:00):
A couple of things that happened in the last week
since you and I talked Julian and Urupka for the
German journalist, who's probably one of the best cover in
the war in the West. He's very pro Ukraine, but
he admitted in an interview on the July first that Hey,
I'm sorry, folks, but there are not enough Ukrainian men,
(02:24:20):
he said, there are sometimes just a handful of men
to defend an entire village, and the Russians have more men,
and they have more bombs, they have more drones, etc.
So they're able to take them methodically one after the other,
even if it's slow.
Speaker 1 (02:24:33):
The Ukraine side can't stop them. That's the one issue.
Speaker 11 (02:24:36):
Then on the second side, you had just last night,
you had Sergei Lavrov again say hey, look, we want
to have a negotiated settlement.
Speaker 1 (02:24:43):
We're looking.
Speaker 11 (02:24:43):
We're inviting the Ukraine side to come back to the
third round of direct talks, which they've had two up
so far in this nimbool. But then he listed his conditions,
which are just as draconing as they have ever been. Meanwhile,
Russia has made more offensive operations and advancements in the
area Pa Krowsk, and they have now resumed their offensive
in the Assumi area and then also kind of in
(02:25:04):
the northern Kupeyansk area, et cetera. So they are continuing
to relentlessly onslaught move in as they say they want
negotiated settlement, and you have the Ukraine side doesn't have
enough manpower and they don't have enough ammunition to do
anything on the battlefield, So, well, where's it going. Russia's
gonna win the war if we don't have a negotiated settlement.
Speaker 3 (02:25:24):
That's well, and that's obviously from you have to give
them props the Russians for having the strategic objective in
their sight. Continue to pound away, you're winning. You're whittling
down their troops to virtually nothing. They're running out of munitions,
and that pushes us further and further to a point
of capitulation where we get what we want. Draconian as
our terms may be.
Speaker 1 (02:25:45):
Well, that's the point.
Speaker 11 (02:25:46):
And either they're gonna and they keep saying this and
they've never said anything else. Quite frankly, they're either going
to get it through a negotiated settlement, which are these
draconian terms, right, or they're just gonna seize it on
the battlefield and they're showing that they have the capacity.
Speaker 1 (02:26:00):
And believe me, Russia is able to read the newspapers too.
Speaker 11 (02:26:03):
They know how few ammunition or how little ammunition the
Ukraine side, the Western side has to give, and they
know that there are continuing to shrink the Ukraine army
every day because it is clear that Ukraine is not
able to force mobilize as many people as they lose
on a daily basis, probably in the order of several thousand,
and so that means every month their army is shrinking,
(02:26:24):
and that diversity or that disparity that Julian Rupka noted,
is only going to increase. And at some point, Brian,
at some point there has to almost methodically mathematically, there
must be a break somewhere, and then the Russians have
hundreds of thousands of operational reserves that they can flood
into a break if they find one.
Speaker 1 (02:26:44):
That's where we're at.
Speaker 3 (02:26:47):
Doesn't paint a very pretty picture, at least for Ukraine
right now. Pivoting over to the Israel Iran situation, I
see Iran basically cracking down on its people, confiscating cell phones,
murdering or executing a lot of people that they believed
to be friendly with Israel, perhaps spies.
Speaker 1 (02:27:07):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (02:27:08):
The graduate imagine the sweep is a little bit broader
than people who are actually guilty of cooperating with Israel,
but that seems in the direction they're going. I presume
that the powers of Beer a little worried about a
coup or perhaps like a military coup for example, or
a popular uprising.
Speaker 1 (02:27:24):
Yeah, they are the.
Speaker 11 (02:27:27):
Issue with the surprise attack by Israel on the so
called twelve day War, because it was predicated or started
with Massad agents being physically inside the country and you know,
firing these drones off, very similar to what the Ukraine
side did to Russia a month or so ago and
the bomber fleet.
Speaker 1 (02:27:45):
The Massad agents did the same thing.
Speaker 11 (02:27:48):
Well, they had to have some help on the ground,
That much was very clear, and they had locations all
over that had a much bigger effect than just a
tactical help on the first couple of days of the war.
Now has the Iranian regime and a panic, and so
they were cracking down. And I actually had a conversation
yesterday online with a friend of mine who has direct
(02:28:09):
contacts in the Iranian side, and they're just in anguish,
especially the Kurds, because the regime is using this opportunity
to crack down on anyone's even suspected of anything. And
they're definitely going way overward because they figure, look, let's
just use a big net and that way we'll be
sure to get the all of them, even if we
get some people who aren't guilty, Yeah, whatever sucks to
(02:28:29):
be done, but we're gonna do it. That seems to
be their attitude, and the Iranians have to be careful
with that because if they go too far on that,
they could actually cause some of this simmering hatred toward
their regime from the inside that could give it fuel.
It remains to be seen, and this source who's been
connected for many years and wants to see an uprising
(02:28:50):
on inside says, so far it's not that far. It's
not gone that direction because the opposition is not unified enough.
But if you keep pushing pressure, you could create it.
Speaker 3 (02:29:00):
Just briefly before we part company today, Daniel Davis, a
brief word or two on the Houthy's firing rockets at
ships going off the coast. There, where is this going?
And where do you see this ending? I mean, if
I can even use that broad of a question for you.
Speaker 11 (02:29:17):
Yeah, there was another ship that was suck in the
Red Sea, which the Houthi's claim was a ship going
to that was helping Israel. It was from a company
that already has one ship in a port at Israel.
So that's the connection between the two here. But this
just shows that despite what we did to the houthis
the spot with the Israelis because they also lount another
(02:29:37):
series of attacks against Houthie targets and some ports, et cetera.
You're just not going to shut them down. They just
are going to suffer and suck down whatever missiles you
want to send. But they are committed to what they're
doing and they're going to continue to fire at some
lower level, but some level it is as they've been
doing for a full decade already against the Saudia's, against
us and against Israel. You're just not going to shut
(02:29:58):
this down. Okay, real quick?
Speaker 1 (02:30:00):
To what end?
Speaker 3 (02:30:02):
Yeah, they have to want something, But if they're I
mean they're if they're if they're in a shooting.
Speaker 11 (02:30:05):
War the hoodies, do they want the war against the
the the Palestinians in Gaza to stop?
Speaker 1 (02:30:13):
They said, if you stop that, we stopped this one.
Speaker 11 (02:30:15):
And when we had the ceasefire last time, they did
until we started attacking again. So if there is a ceasefire,
if Trump is able to get a ceasfire with Nan Yahoo,
as he says he may be within a week.
Speaker 1 (02:30:26):
Then that will also stop. Huh. Well, maybe there is
a bright spot in this discussion. Daniel Davis.
Speaker 3 (02:30:32):
Daniel Davis Deep Dive every Tuesday here in the fifty
five Cars Morning Show. Of course you can find his
podcasts throughout the week. Daniel, always a pleasure having on
the program Sir.
Speaker 1 (02:30:40):
My pleasure, my friends.
Speaker 3 (02:30:41):
See you next time, next Tuesday. It's a forty two
right now, fifty five R see the talk station you
mentioned Gaya Heaven Cemetery. Moving away from violence and war
and all the just the awfulness that goes along with that,
there is a place for tranquil, peaceful meditation, prayer, remembrance
of your Gate of Heaven's Cemetery. Montgomery Road really easy
(02:31:05):
to get to off at two seventy five. I drive
past it every day on my way home and to work.
It is absolutely beautiful. It's tranquil, the landscaping is perfect.
It's ideal for prayer, reflection and remembrance. And that's what
it's all about. There to affirm and remember that every
stage of life is so important that of course is
(02:31:25):
a final resting place for you or a loved one.
It's an ideal choice. But if you just need a
police to unwind and contemplate the importance of life and
exhale and clear your mind out. Consider Gate of Heaven.
It's open to everyone. To learn more, go to the
website Gateoveheaven dot org. That's gateof Heaven dot org.
Speaker 6 (02:31:43):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.
Speaker 1 (02:31:50):
Gentlemen, one more time for the first warning. Weather forecast.
Speaker 3 (02:31:53):
Partly cloudie, very muggy, and high of eighty six partly
clode every night remaining very muggy, a little seventy another
mudd e d tomorrow, the high of eighty four, perhaps
scattered showers and storms and partly cloudy skies. Remains partly
cloudy every night also remains muddy, sixty nine low and Thursday.
No m word in there. This says cloudy eighty seven
(02:32:15):
closing out at seventy three. Right now, Time for final traffic.
Speaker 9 (02:32:17):
Uh Well, you see Health Traffic Center. You see Health
as Expert Trauma care focusing on prevention, treating injuries, and
supporting long term recovery and rehabilitation. Learn more at U
seehealth dot com. On eastbound two seventy five accident off
on the right shoulder at seventy five in Sharonville on
(02:32:38):
northbound seventy five before Paddock Road the lane block from
an accident up to a six minute delay back from
Mitchell On at Ezelak on fifty five k RCD talk station.
Speaker 3 (02:32:56):
Eight fifty comingup an eight fifty one if you've got
care CD talk station Judge Jennenapaultana tomorrow in the fifty
five KCY Morning Show eight thirty for that. It's also
listener lunch wandering Monsters Brewery, Beach, Mount Avenue. Hope to
see you there. A lot of thumbs up for that place.
I usually get some you know, like yeah, that's a
great place, a great place. I got more than more
emails and comments to me about that place than a
(02:33:17):
lot of others we've been to. But always enjoy the
fellowship of listener lunch. So please if you can around
eleven thirty. Obviously this is not a firm start time.
You can show up early and you can show up
a little bit later. Looking forward to my cribbage game
with cribbage Mike, my submarine or friend. Thank you for
your service, Mike. I don't know where I'm sitting on
this thing. Elon Musk said he wants to start a
(02:33:38):
new part of the America Party, and part of me
like bully for him.
Speaker 1 (02:33:42):
Why not.
Speaker 3 (02:33:44):
Unhappy with the big beautiful bill because of the deficit
spending that we're going to engage in. We're continuing on
this fiscally irresponsible trajectory. So if there is a refreshing,
welcome alternative, someone who's actually going to do something about that,
then I'd be inclined to go with that particular candidate
because I happen to be a deficit hawk, something the
(02:34:05):
Republican Party is supposed to be. But when you pass
a big beautiful bill and it does dig us further
in the hole, you got to scratch your head. Wait
a second, that was one hundred percent Republicans. Democrats had
nothing to do with it. And when you look at
the arguments back and forth, look, it had the effect
of turning Democrats into fiscal hawks. You got Chuckie Schumer
screaming about the deficit for a change. I thought that
(02:34:25):
was pretty damn comical. When did they care? But as
part of the platform less regulation across the board, especially energy,
free speech, pro natalist, reduced debt, responsible spending only and
he said he's a big defender of the First Amendment
(02:34:47):
as well, as bitcoin and in cryptocurrency. So among all
of those things, that's typically things that the Republican Party
tends to stand for, but they just don't walk walk
when it comes to the talk. They talk on being
fiscally responsible. But considering they're so closely aligned, at least
(02:35:11):
in historic party platforms, this new America Party and the
Republican Party, does it concern anybody else that America Party
candidates might siphon away votes from the Republican Party. I
can't imagine America America Party candidates would siphon away votes
from the Democrats. So if you actually ran an America
(02:35:32):
Party person on the ticket, it's like running an independent.
We've all seen that happen before, and the independent siphon
off a number of votes from one party or another,
and an unexpected outcome occurs, which is the election of
someone who otherwise wouldn't have been elected were it not
for that third party being involved in the race. And
so as much as I applaud elon Musk and his
(02:35:53):
concept and the idea that maybe all he's trying to
do is smack the Republican Party upside the face and
try to get them to a engage in something that
is remotely close to fiscal responsibility. I just see this
as a recipe for disaster and a recipe for helping
Democrats win elections. Just my thoughts on it. I mean,
I'm just one guy with an opinion, but that was
(02:36:15):
my initial reaction to it. So keep your popcorn out
and we'll see what happens down the road. I know
it hasn't done well for Elon Musk and his Tesla shares,
which dropped precipitously the other day. I think the shareholders
won Elon Musk to get back to run in the
company as opposed to being engaged in politics. Well, when
you announce you're forming a new party, you're not going
(02:36:37):
in that direction. And apparently it impacted his stock to
the tune of billions of dollars and losses. So I
know Elon gets away unscathed on this. He's got plenty
of money and he apparently isn't concerned about it. But
just another wrinkle in the world of Elon Musk. So anyhow,
early on the program, we had a special Tech Tuesday
Beware of Amazon Prime Days. Dave identified the fact that
(02:36:59):
there's about one hundred and two twenty thousand fake Amazon
Prime sites out there of different forms. Don't answer the emails,
don't click on the links. Go to the website Amazon
dot com. You're gonna get text, you're gonna get potentially
phone calls. Amazon doesn't call anyone, So lots of great
information there. If you don't get a chance to listen
(02:37:19):
to Dave, pull up the podcast fifty five car Sea
dot com. A couple of segments with Corey Bowman of
course running from mayor of the City of Cincinnati, and
congratulations on the birth of baby Ezra. He and his
wife Jordan gave birth yesterday. Everybody's doing great. But also
he talked a lot about violence in the city, which
is what we talked about yesterday with Smitheman and FOP
President Ken Cooburn. Those podcasts also fifty five care Sea
(02:37:40):
dot Com, along with the Inside Scoop with Randy Clark,
the Border Reporter, and My conversation with Daniel Davis. Get
your iHeart media app while you're there too, folks, so
you can stream the content from my Heart anywhere you
happen to be tuning. And tomorrow for judgment, Paula tannot
have a wonderful day. Thank you Joe Streker for producing
the program without you when there wouldn't be one.
Speaker 1 (02:37:58):
Folks stick around. Clemback is coming right up.
Speaker 11 (02:38:01):
President Trump made clear that a peaceful resolution was possible
if Iran agreed to give up its nuclear weapons ambitions.
Speaker 3 (02:38:07):
Another updates at the top of the hour fifty five
KRZ the talk station this report