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July 30, 2024 • 143 mins
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(00:06):
Five O five is it's above KRCthe talk station Happy Tuesday Tuesday said,
well a vacation call Kenny Loggins becauseyou're in the danger zone list indeed,

(00:31):
uh, thank you for the soundby Joe Dereker executive Douce somewhere names Brian
Thomass to the fifty five care SeeMorning show. You can find me online
at fifty five care seed dot com. Stream the audio directly from the website,
or get your iHeart Media app downloadedand listen wherever you happen to beat
all the I heart Media content.There. You got that little promo out
of the way. I always enjoyhearing from you if you feel like calling
in this morning. It's not likethere's nothing to talk about. Five one
three, seven four nine fifty fivehundred, eight hundred eighty two three talk

(00:55):
don five fifty on AT and Tphone. Speaking of talking, always in
joy when Joe Lyne's guests up,rather talk to the guests than here it's
down in my own voice, likeI said, I'd rather talk to you
too. FOP President Ken cober So. The Inquirer's reporting that juvenile crime is
down, question is it really down? We'll find out from Ken Cober what

(01:15):
his perception of juvenile crime is,or parenthetically, perhaps the judges are doing
a better job of hiding violent juvenileoffenders. Talked with that with Hammon cutting
prosecutor quite a few times. Missypowers need to elect her. She's tough
on crime. We know that,and we need to downvote judges Judges judges
GOP judges dot com. In caseyou're wondering who you should vote for,

(01:37):
I strongly encourage you for law andorder's sake, GOP judges dot com.
Steve Gooden, you heard Biden's absurdScotis changes. He wants to create this
code of ethics that will politicize theSupreme Court. It's dangerous, it's gary.
Of course, you don't get yourway. You want to change the
dynamic of the Supreme Court. Andisn't rather an interesting sight to behold?

(02:00):
Joe Biden calling for term limits forjustices maximum serving what is it? Eighteen
years under his proposal? Just becausewhy they're too old? Joe did He
also proposed term limits or age limitsfor the presidency. That' say anything about
that now? I was suspiciously absentfrom his suggestion. All right, we'll

(02:24):
do a deep dive with speaking ofdeep dives, doing deep dive with Steve
Goodin regarding what those changes might mean, and have lots of very thoughtful and
reasoned analysis out there this morning oped pieces galore talking about the horrors that
would be unleashed under Biden's proposal,plus a proposal that is not going anywhere.

(02:45):
It would require one of two,actually two things. First off,
a constitutional amendment that would be required, and do use anybody think that the
flyover red states out here would votefor something like that under a Biden administration.
Not happening. Plus the speed atwhich this might happen not going to
be happening before November. Alternatively,legislative action by our Congress, which is

(03:05):
obviously polarized divided, couldn't be anymore divided. The Republicans in the House
not likely to embrace a suggestion byJoe Biden in advance his desires anytime soon
or ever, even if we weretwo years away from the election. That
wouldn't happen. What this will provide, Biden, I'm sorry, what this
will provide is a great talking pointfor Kamala Harris among all those people out

(03:29):
there in the world who think thatthe Supreme Court is irreparably damaged, it's
corrupt, it's biased. That's amessage we get all the time, isn't
it. And I wonder if ourlords and masters in the social media world,
and those that run the social mediacompanies alphabet for example, have had
some say in manipulating the public's perceptionon the Supreme Court, among other things.

(03:52):
The answer, you know, isyes, And with that I can
pivot over to this crap. OhBrightbart at eight to five com Madia on
this topic Google editing auto correct,we'll talk Paris Opening ceremony, which has
now gone from YouTube. Apparently they'reediting that out as if it didn't happen.
Plus technology in the twenty twenty fourpresidential race, followed by Daniel Davis

(04:15):
deep dive new evidence around Trump assassinationattempt which didn't happen, did it?
It's fictional? What you mean?I didn't see that with my own eyes.
They didn't actually well the firefighter,mister COMPATORI didn't actually get murdered.
They didn't well take out the wouldbe assassin of Donald Trump with a sniper

(04:39):
rifle. That never happened. It'sfictional. This is so hard to believe.
Well, it's not hard to believe, but it's just just difficult to
behold Meta AI assistant artificial intelligence fromMeta claiming the attempted assassination the former president
Donald Trump was a fictional event.Fictional In their words, Mark Zuckerberg calls

(05:04):
the tech giants the most intelligent AIassistant. His is the most intelligent.
This on the heels of what welearned yesterday, Google's search engine failed to
bring up the July thirteenth shooting whenprompted on at search bar. No reference
to Donald Trump. You get ArchidukeFerdinand's assassination, but no Trump's suspiciously absent

(05:25):
from one of the most profound,important events that happened within our lifetimes.
One could look at it that wayanyway. So a New York Post did
its own meta AI search quote wasthe Trump assassination fictional? Close quote response,
there was no real assassination attempt onDonald Trump. I strive to provide

(05:46):
accurate and reliable information, but sometimesmistakes can occur close quote really. The
bot also added quote to confirm therehas been no credible report or evidence of
a successful or attempted assassination of DonaldTrump. Also among the responses in the

(06:09):
search. The artificial intelligence generated responseto the question there have been numerous reported
threats and incidents against Donald Trump,but no confirmed assassination attempts. However,
I can provide information on notable incidents, but he twenty sixteen, Michael Stephen
Stafford attempt to grab a gun froma police officer a Trump rally in Las
Vegas. Twenty seventeen, Jonathan Trandbreached White House security and approached the residents,

(06:34):
but was arrested without incident. Intwenty twenty, men arrested near the
Right House after claiming to have abomb in his vehicle. You remember all
the details about those, don't you. Hardly anything coming even close to a
bullet whizzing by Donald Trump's head withininch or within less than an inch of
blowing his entire Craney moth, No, not even there. So when the

(06:57):
Post typed in the prompt quote whathappened to Trump in Butler, PA?
Close quote response. On July twentyeight, twenty twenty four, a shooting
occurred at a rally for Donald Trump'stwenty twenty four presidential campaign in Butler,
Pennsylvania. One person was killed,two others injured. The suspect was shot
and killed by law enforcement. Interesting, no reference to Donald Trump getting shot

(07:18):
in the air. So they askedthe Meta spokesperson yesterday, what's the story
here? The well AI has beenproviding quote incomplete, inconsistent or out of
date information. Well, appreciate yourcandor on that. Representative speaking on the
post said, we're in the processof implementing a fix to provide more up

(07:40):
to date responses for inquiries. Andit's possible, it's possible people may continue
to see inaccurate responses in the meantime, inaccurate or deliberately fabricated, you know.
And in this swirld's all over?And what was it with Ray whose
comment was you know it wasn't abullet necessarily, I mean he danced around

(08:03):
the idea whether or not a bulleteven actually hit Donald Trump in the ear?
Do you think something's afoot here?See, because we're so divided as
the country, and so few peoplepay very close attention to details, and
so few people are critical in theiranalysis of what they read. When you
continue to dodge, dip, duck, dive, and dive the Five Days

(08:28):
of Baseball. When I asked straightforwardquestions about what happened on that day and
what you know as opposed to whatyou might know down the road after some
report is released. Give us theinformation, try to dispel the conspiracy theories
that are flowing around there. No, no, no, no, that
would fly in the face of themotivations. They want conspiracies, they want
division, they want denial, Theywant people to think this was a made

(08:50):
up event. These these artificial intelligenceresponses after media social media fury over responses
provided by Meta's chatbot to a promptasking quote, why is there rich and

(09:13):
structured information about harris campaign but notabout the Trump assassination attempt? Interesting question
to post artificial intelligence. The replythe reason for the disparity and information is
due to the fact that the Trumpassassination attempt is a fictional event, whereas
Kamala Harris's twenty twenty four presidential campaignis a real and ongoing event. You

(09:37):
know, this is no equivocation there. They say, definitively, it was
a fictional event. Quote. Sincethere hasn't been no real assassination attempt on
Donald Trump, I couldn't find anycredible sources to provide detailed information on the
topic. On the other hand,there is a wealth of information available from
credible sources about the Harris campaign.Now, how do they think they can

(10:03):
cover this up? It was inall the globes, newspapers around the globe,
is what I probably should more properlyphrase it. People witnessed it real
time, the crowd at the event. I mean, you talk about credible
witnesses, you have people who werethere and watched it happen. You had

(10:24):
people who saw him on the roofwith a rifle. We had Secret Service
response, including shooting him in thehead and ending his miserable existence. None
of it happened, No real assassinationor temp on Donald Trump. So I'm
not quite sure what they're hoping toaccomplish, other than reducing the credibility of

(10:45):
this Zuckerberg artificial intelligence platform to causeus to all conclude it is a bunch
of biased wise can't believe your owneyes, You can't believe your own ears,
and you sure can't believe what you'rereading these days with artificial intelligence.
And Facebook got in trouble they censoredthe iconic Trump assassination of photo. They

(11:07):
said it was fake. It wasdoctored wrongly calling the popular imagered Trump with
his fist in the air after theassassination attempt. Quote an altered photo,
and they admitted it was a mistake. At least it was an error.
The fact check was initially applied toa doctored photo showing the Secret Service agent

(11:28):
smiling, and in some cases oursystems incorrectly applied that fact check to the
real photo. This has been fixedand we apologize for the mistake. So
I say it the Facebook spokesperson,I don't know that it necessarily makes me
feel any better. Elon Musk quote, they're getting themselves into a lot of
trouble if they interfere with the election. Referring to Google, which of course

(11:54):
had the search ban on President DonaldTrump, he referred to it straightforwardly as
election interference. Someone noted the otherday, would this arguably be an in
kind political contribution? I mean ifFacebook had if you had to buy access
to Facebook or social media in orderto spread a message, even if it

(12:16):
was a lie, you'd have topay them. That's a campaign contribution,
isn't it of some sort? Fiveto seventeen fifty five ker Cdtalk station five
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(13:01):
Imaging services is an MRI with acontrast. The entire package, everything included,
including the radiologists report, which you'reboth you and your doctor, will
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thing with the radiologists report is fourhundred and ninety five dollars. An ultrasound
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(13:52):
Here's your nine first one to Wetherforecasts. It is going to be
partly mostly sunny today, careful drivingin. I know the roads are just
really really some places have a lotof water standing water hot and even today
I have ninety down to seventy oneovernight, partly clotty. Wednesday, partly
clotty, isolated storms in the afternoonand evening, ninety one for the high

(14:15):
end of seventy three overnight with spuckychances of storms. And on Thursday mostly
Sunda days still a chance of showersand thunderstorms. High of ninety five right
now seventy three degrees fifty five caresee the talk station. It's five two
couple of five twenty three fifty fivekcity talk station. So we have the
nefarious actors over at Facebook and Metamanipulating the Internet data to tell you that,

(14:39):
well, the assassination was a lie, it was a fiction, it
didn't happen. And they're not theonly ones out there with access to social
media and influence operations. And accordingto a press briefing yesterday, the US
intelligence officials have said Iran is tryingto sabotage Donald Trump's presidential campaign. Now,
I find it interesting that the curand Biden administration intelligence officials would actually

(15:01):
utter these words out loud, becausethey clearly are in defense on some level
of Donald Trump. Be wary onlinebecause the Iranians are trying to influence the
election. Official with the Office ofDirector National Intelligence in US by agencies quote
observed Tehran working to influence the presidentialelection, likely because the Iranian leaders want

(15:24):
to avoid increased tensions with the US. It is observed. They did say
American spies haven't observed to shift inIran's preferences since twenty twenty, mean Iran
was still targeting Trump. During thebriefing, the intelligence official all said Iran
is utilizing, in his words,vast webs of online personas and propaganda mills

(15:46):
to spread disinformation. Ran not theonly foreign adversary accused of meddling in the
twenty twenty four presidential election. Julytenth od and I official called Russia the
pre eminent threat to the election.So we have the Russians on one side,
the Iranians on the other. Russiais undertaking a whole of government approach

(16:07):
to influencing the election, including thepresidential race, Congress, public opinion.
That's what intelligence officials said at thatbriefing on July tenth, adding that Russia
has grown more sophisticated their words inelection interference. They said, the country
generally targets the Democratic Party in theUS elections. So what the Iranians are
on one side and the Russians areon the other. Point being, and

(16:33):
I'm sure we engage in this too, Well, we don't interfere with international
elections. I'll blow it out oryou know what everyone does. In this
odn I briefing the July tenth briefing, Russia reportedly using artificial intelligency ready to
mimic American, Southern and Midwestern actionaccents on social media. Foreign adversaries continue

(16:55):
to experiment with and have adopted atleast some generative AI tools to more quickly
and cheaply generate authentic looking content tailoredprimarily for social media platforms that can target
specific audiences, including the United States, where if you are not a weed
dweller and are not regularly paying attentionto what's really going on in the world,
you might be duped by a fakeout there on social media. We

(17:22):
live in a strange world, folks. And on that note, real quick
here Dave Hatter talks about this alltime. Ferrari, the company Ferrari,
Yeah, the fastcar Ferraris almost fellvictim to a scam after someone attempted to
impersonate the company CEO Benedetto vigna youknow WhatsApp message in a phone call to

(17:48):
another executive. Message didn't come fromhis usual number, which raised an eyebrow
for the executive. For the unnamedexecutive suspicion, but the impostor tried to
explain the discrepancy wants on the phone, We're in a bloomberg. The impersonator
did a spot on imitation of Vigna'svoice. However, the executive picked up
on a few inconsistencies, prompting himto do the smart thing, verify the

(18:10):
identity. The executive asked the callerto name the title of a book Vigna
had just recommended to him. Iguess earlier. The caller didn't answer,
hung up. So Dave talks aboutthat kind of thing all the time,
and I thought it was a ratherinteresting while we're talking about social media manipulation,
the Russians doing it, the Iraniansdoing it, and of course Facebook

(18:32):
and Alphabet clearly are doing it aswell. You have really got to be
on your toes out in the worldthese days. By twenty seventy five cars
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four ninety four ninety five fifty fiveKRC. In today's marketers report Eric and
five uh partly cloud in a mostlysunny han humid high in ninety today rain
should go away rather quickly this morning, they say. Over night partly cloude,
humid seventy one, partly cloudeed tomorrowisolated storms in the afternoon ninety one

(20:23):
down to seventy three. Wednesday nightwas spotty storms possible, and on Thursday
we've got it mostly Sunda day witha chance of showers and thunderstorms as well
well, all the way up toninety five. Right now it's seventy two
degrees fifty five Kersen e Talks stationfive thirty two and a very happy Tuesday
team. I'm going to read somelocal stories here. Why not you can

(20:45):
feel free to call though h sinceany please investigate a robbery having a Camp
Washington gas station shortly after five amyesterday at a BP gas station on Hoppel.
Five police vehicles respond to the parkinglot and gas pumps interesting two separate
response areas suspect where a black maskduring the offense was last seen fleeing the
business on foot. No injuries reported. No additional details immediately available. Thank

(21:11):
you to Fox nineteen reporting see here. Warren Knty grand jury decided not to
indict a man connected with it connectedwith a fatal shooting where the driver was
cut off. According to the WarrenCounty Prosecutor David Thornshell, shooting chap in
June seventeenth, north State Route fortyeight and US forty two in Lebanon resulted
in the death as sixty three yearold Andrew Rainey. Place investigator. The

(21:34):
incident, which started with a trafficincident with another driver cut off Rainey as
both were traveling north found On Bypassforty eight. According to Prosecutor Thornshell,
Rainey got out of his vehicle ata stoplight and approached the driver of the
other car. Levin and Police sayRainey was shot in the abdomen. Taking
Atrium Medical centerar he was pronounced deadDispatch just Say. One of the nine

(21:55):
to one one calls about the incidentwas from man who said he shot another
driver Thornshell said witnesses provided conflicting descriptionsof the events leading up to the shooting,
including varying accounts of Rainey's demeanor inactions. Grand jury considered a high self
defense law. According to Ohio Sectiontwenty nine oh one point zero five RC,
a person no longer has the burdenof proof that they acting in self

(22:18):
defense. They're presumed innocent until provenguilty, be on a reasonable doubt.
Second, person can act in selfdefense if they are in a vehicle or
a residence and the person is unlawfullyand without privilege to be in that residence
or vehicle. It's like the castledoctrine. Lastly, a person does not
have to withdraw before using deadly forcewhen acting in self defense, that being

(22:38):
the law. Thornshell explained that theselegal changes and inconsistencies and the witness statements
likely led the grand jury's decision notto issue an indictment. Let's see here,
driver the MASTA is not going tobe identified by law enforcement and is
an uncharged suspect because there is noindictment, so it gets to maintain his

(22:59):
amity. Let's see here. Oh, so we've had him on the program
A bunch of times. Why notjust a little positive local story here.
After years of planning and design work, officials is going to be breaking ground
on the USS Cincinnati submarine's new homethis week. Joseph jab president of the
Submarine Cincinnati Memorial Association, said,from the Soccer Fields Athletic Complex at VOA

(23:23):
here, it will appear as ifthere's a full size nuclear powered submarine right
here alongside this pond moored here inCincinnati. Public's welcome to the groundbreaking taking
place July thirty, first, nineam at Voice of America Park Keeping Track
at Home. That's tomorrow. Membersof the cincinnta chapter in the Navy League
of the United States, have beenworking for more than twenty years to establish

(23:45):
this memorial. US of Cincinnati wasa nuclear powered submarine built in Cold War
one of sixty two Sisters submarines,and its purpose was to defend the US
homeland and carriers against the USSR.Also, the USS Cincinnati gathered information about
the USSR memorial three hundred and sixtytwo feet long weighing one hundred tons in

(24:06):
total. We're going to include theoriginal US of Cincinnati pieces that were donated
in twenty thirteen on display the conningtower and attached forward planes. The upper
Rudner emergency diesel engine generator called theBig Red Machine. That's after the shipyard
decided to paint it red since itwas built in nineteen seventy four when the
Cincinnati Reds won the World Series.So that's going to be really cool.

(24:29):
I've seen photographs of the various bitsand pieces going into that memorial. What
a wonderful thing it'll be to havethat there five thirty six. If I
have krcit the talk station, feelfree to call in. Otherwise I'm going
to dive into the stack of stupid. But after I mentioned Zimmer Heating and
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cool carrier comfort rebate worth up totwenty one hundred dollars off the new AC
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to for all things HVAC. Counton them. They're wonderful folks. Go
Zimmer dot com. That's go Zimmerdot com. Fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio

(25:34):
Station, the exclusive audio home onNBC's coverage of the twenty twenty four Paris
Olympics. Hi Herby, partly cloudy, mostly sunny Today, Hi Human ninety
for the high over nine, partlycloudy humans seventy one. Tomorrow, partla
cloudy, isolated storms in the afternoon, slash evening ninety one down to seventy
three with mostly cloudy skies and justa chance of spotty storms, mostly sunny

(25:59):
Thursday, ants of showers of stormsas well. Ninety three for the high
right now seventy one. Time forfirst traffic from the UCL Traumphic Center.
No mind of the injury U seehealth Orthopedic Sands sports Medicine where he defines
recovery to get you back to doingwhat you love. Call five one,
three, four, seven, fiveeighty six nine zero. Highways are doing
fine, with one exception. That'ssome flooding from the storms that pass through

(26:22):
just a few minutes ago. That'stwo seventy five near mostellar let lanes block
both sides of a highway. Chuckingbram on fifty five KR Seed the talk
station by forty one on Tuesday fiveone, three, seven, four fifty
eight hundred eight two three talk Timefive to fifty on eight and t phones
fifty five kr Sea dot com.Check out the podcast page. Christopher Smithman

(26:45):
with the smither vent of course MoneyMonday with Brian James. That's yesterday and
today we've got some good games realquick here. Public service announcement And my
dad was so involved with the dlHIH skirt Game. So it's a tribute
to my father and saluted this wonderfulcharity, in this organization and in the
name of going well against the wokebacklash that this fun event created a little

(27:06):
while back. It's the forty seventhannual del High Skirt Game. August second,
five pm, dal High Township Park, food, drinks, fireworks,
games for everyone, music by thatOne Party Band and fireworks by Queen City
Pyro Production. Thanks to the ShivitEagles Chapter twenty one to ninety seven,
who brings this event to you.All proceeds go to assist people in need

(27:29):
and del High Township Neighbors helping neighbors. So good, A good event,
what a great time that My dadjust absolutely loved helping out that thing.
It's just all the firemen and policeofficers dressing up in drag. It's all
in the name of charity. Solighting up, Francis, Have you ever
been screwed? In the A wordquestion? That's in quotes. That's what

(27:52):
a forty year old woman allegedly allegedlyasked her daughter before using an electric screwdriver
to drew a screw. Dara directedscrew into the twelve year old victim's rear.
End, according to police, hasexplained the arrest. Abadavia Died,
Jacqueline Gozinski close enough quote and threechildren were hanging picture frames in their Florida

(28:15):
residence when the defendant used an electricscrewgun and screwed a nail into the victim's
left side buttocks. Why are youdoing that? Let's find out if we
can question by police about the incident. She reportedly said that when the girl
walked past her, she asked thevictim who is her? Who is her?
Twelve year old? About getting againscrewed in the A word? What?

(28:36):
No idea? What that's supposed tomean? Cop said, she placed
the screw gun on the girl's leftbuttock cheek pressed down on the trigger,
driving the screw into her buttocks.The screw, which left the visible mark,
was stuck in the girl's body untilshe took it out. Do what
the hell? Guskinski arrested Friday eveningby the Petersburg, Florida Police Department charge

(29:00):
of felony. Chowdaby's being held inthe County jail on a twenty five thousand
dollars bond has been ordered by ajudge. You have no contact with the
victim. Cording to the court filingsand an ongoing small claims matter, This
woman recently moved into a small,three bedroom rental home in Saint Petersburg.
Court records contained no employment details.She's previously been licensed in Florida as an

(29:21):
estician. Whatever. Idiots doing idiotthings because they're idiots. Let's see here.
Gwyne County Police on the lookout.This is Georgia lookout for Who's response?
Before hiding thousands of dollars worth ofdrugs inside a guitar amplifier and shipping
it to a local business, Employeesat the Guitar Center on Pleasant Hill Road

(29:42):
discovered the drugs inside the amplifier Julyseventeenth. Employees were handling what appeared to
be a standard box and got suspicious. The box had an out of state
shipping address, but was returned tothe guitar center listed as the return address.
Employees opened the box found cocaine andmethanfetamine stuffed inside the amp. Sergeant
Colin Flynn of the Gwin County Policestate, in the obvious, it's extremely

(30:06):
rare this happens at any business,thanks buddy. They think it's part of
a larger problem involving shipping of drugsdo not at the United States and the
mail system. Investigators think the drugdealers have attempted this method before. Just
last year, a specialized Gwynet policeunit intercepted forty five hundred pounds of drugs
worth approximately seventy million dollars shipped throughFedEx and UPS thanks for the help of

(30:27):
the canine Unit. Spokesperson for theGuitar Center said they are fully cooperating with
law enforcement, have been since thedrugs were found, and they don't believe
anybody at the business has any connectionwith the delivery. Yes, Joe,
clearly that amp went to eleven,cocaine and meth amphetamine forty five. If

(30:49):
you five Kerzy the dog Station,Joe channeling, spinal tap twenty two three
Role forty two Between Mason eleven andbest gun shop you ever going to go
to? Why Well, the bestpeople own it when and Jeff, they're
outstanding human beings. You're going tolove the fact that you're buying something from
them. Support their business. It'sa great one, safest, cleanest indoor
range you're ever going to be on. They have wonderful classes. The classes

(31:10):
that range from I've never picked agun up class to I'm an experience shooter
and I'd like to hone those skills, including the CCW class, which again,
it's important to have your concealed carrylicense even though we're constitutional carry in
Ohio because when you're traveling to states, many states require a issued concealed carry
license from the state where you residein order for you to carry concealed in

(31:32):
their state. So enjoy reciprocity.Get your CCW license there. So just
a couple of things. They gotevents going on throughout the week. I
love the date night event. Trythat one out, guys or gals as
the case may be. Huge selectionof firearms, both handguns, long guns,
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at twenty two three located on Routeforty two between Mason and eleven, and

(31:53):
please tell them, Brian said,Hi also a gunsmith. Got to interject
out there online twenty two three thenumber twenty two fall by the word three
spelled out twenty two three dot comfifty five KRC. We need your party.
Cloudy to mostly Sunday today hot,humid ninety for the high, partly

(32:14):
cloudy every night, also humid seventyone for the low ninety one with partly
cloudy skies and isolated storms in theafternoon possible anyway. Overnight seventy three for
the low, mostly cloudy, andThursday and mostly sunny day with a chance
of showers and storms. Ninety fivefor the high right now seventy one.
I'm time for traffic from the UCLTramphic Center. No matter the injury you
see helped Orthopedixhans supports medicine, redefines, recovery to get you back to doing

(32:37):
what you love. Called five one, three, four, seven, five
eighty six ninety highway traffic doing okayeven with what roads this morning, and
there's some flooding issues on two seventyfive near mostellar let lanes block post sides
of a highway. Traffic is lightenough right now if you stay to the
right, go get pie without aproblem. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC

(32:59):
the talk station five fifty one fiftyfive KRC Detalk station Epy Tuesday, FLP
President Ken Kober, is the juvenilecrime really dropping in downtown Cincinnati. He'll
be on seven oh five Steve Goodenwith our wonderful, wonderful legal analysis,
but Biden's effort to change the SupremeCourt. Tech editor Colin Madine of Bright

(33:22):
Bart at eight o five on theGoogle editing autocorrect, among other topics,
and Daniel Davis deep dive with newevidence around Donald Trump's assassination attempt, which,
as I started the program off.If you ask Metta's AI tool about
that, they deny it happened.God anyway, let us see here,

(33:45):
maybe dust off the why are youdoing that? Or walk away, Joe
you the one may apply equally herean argument over the air conditioning set an
allegedly spurred husband to use a cookingpot to douse his wife in guests and
then lighter on fire, resulting inher gruesome death out there, of course,

(34:06):
Florida home fifty eight year Robert hadfacing charge of the first degree murder
in arson, according to the probablecause affidavit. Willison Fire Rescue responded it
about ten till eight pm on Thursdayto report a structure fire. When they
arrived, was fully engulfed in flames, and they were alerted that a woman
was still inside. Crews rushed into find it a woman decease. The
officers also told that mister Head wasresponsible for the murder. Cops found him

(34:30):
hiding in a dog kennel, holdinghim a sheetty. They said he was
going to harm himself. They tookhim into custody. The victim's daughter told
deputies that she was in the homewhen had allegedly set her mother on fire.
She reportedly described the relationship with Headas fraught and said he and her
mother often argued. Said she camehome from work Thursday, the air conditioning
was on low and it was hot. Daughter said Head and her mother often

(34:53):
argued about the temperature of the home. Verbal confrontation ensued. Had allegedly called
his wife names I will not repeat, walked outside smiling, returning with a
cooking pot full of gasoline. Allegedlysaid if I were going out, if
we going out, we going outtogether. Sorry, the grammar threw me
on that one, folks, Itold you I ain't never leaving you.

(35:16):
That's when police say he took thepot emptied it on his wife's body and
feet. Thank you, Joe.Daughter told them he had lit a piece
of paper through it at his wife, causing an explosive reaction. Daughter also
burned when she ran out of thehouse after being read as Maranda rights,
defendant allegedly admitted of setting his wifeon fire. He said he'd been upset

(35:37):
because his wife was defending her daughterduring arguments. Ever since she moved in
with them about two years ago,and after the two argued with him over
the ac he allegedly said he wentoutside and filled the pot with casts and
then set her on fire. Hesaid he'd planned to take his own life
before the officer showed up. Whenasked, the defendant stated that he deserved
to die for taking the life ofthe victim. Being held with the Lovey

(36:00):
County Jail. No bond on thatone and similarly, stupid news out of
Florida. It is the stack ofstupid. A Florida man arrest over the
weekend after after he allegedly shot hiscousin multiple times after arguing about a parking
space. Fifty one year old elberCruz what ECUs the one kind of each

(36:23):
of attempted felony murder causing injury,wild armed grand theft involving a firearm,
discharging a firearm in a recreational aresidential area, according to Miami Dade County
Court records, happened directly east ofDouglas Park and Coral Gables. Happened late
Saturday night, cording to the arrestreport obtained by local news there, WPLG

(36:44):
credits officers showed up to report ofthe shooting of the victim. Residents there
showed up about eleven pm. Victimfound suffering from four gunshot wounds. Man
identified only as Salinas in the reportwas shot once in his wrist three times
in his left thigh. Cruise isalso the victim's roommate, was still at
the scene when the police showed up. Two men have been arguing over a

(37:05):
parking space, started when the victimasked Cruz to move his vehicle. Defendant
said to have declined, saying thatthere was nowhere else to park and he
would leave the vehicle where it was. So Linus in Spanish told Cruse he
didn't know why he was acting toughwhen his wife ran the house. Oh

(37:27):
did of an insult there? Maybethat's a court of the police report.
Defendant allegedly is alleged to have respondedto the presumed verbal attack on his masculinity
by taking out a glock nineteen pistoland pointing it at the victim's neck.
Then also allegedly said in Spanish somethingakin to do you want to see what
kind of man I am? Victimat this point allegedly seated the man with

(37:51):
the weapon and pleaded, don't dothis, You're going to kill me.
Cruise then allegedly fired one shot,grazing his cousin's wrist, prompting the victim
to run. As he fled inthe direction of his bedroom, Three more
shots were fired and connected with thevictims thigh cording detectives. Each of the
final three bullets produced entry and exitwounds. Police also allege the gun used
in the shooting was previously reported stolenback in twenty twenty one. Bickram taking

(38:15):
Jackson Memorial Hospital. Defendant arrested atthe scene, being held without bond the
Turner Guildford Night Correctional Center. Prosecutorsmove forward and receive pre trial detention.
Defendant also order no contact with thevictim pending trial. There's a better path.
There is no moral of the story, Joe. Keep your stupid mouth

(38:38):
shut or going back to your SoundBiteearlier. Just walk away right, lived
to fight another day, not spendyour life in prison. Stick around plenty
to talk about the six o'clock hour. I'd love to hear from you.
I've got something to say. Iwill be back after the news. You're
just minutes away from refreshing your newsfeed. At the top of the hour,
I have never seen anything like that. Exclusively fifty five KRC, the

(39:02):
talk station I heard radio is theexclusive six six here fifty fouck kr CD
talks Date. If you're having adecent Tuesday, hang around here right here
on the fifty OIU KRC Morning Stick. I got great guest lineup. Thank
you to Joe Strecker, Executive producerone r F now FLP President Ken Kober
returns of the morning show talk aboutthe Quire article claiming that juvenile crime is
down in downtown Cincinnati. Question isthat true? And I hope to god

(39:27):
it is, rather than just thewoke judges that we have a problem with
in Hamilton County sort of hiding thereality of juvenile crime certainly a reality.
He talked with the Hamilton County crossgive him a loss of powers about these
woke judges and their treatment of juvenileoffenders. So that's one hour from now,
follow by Steve Gooden, Legal expertExtraordinary. He's going to do a

(39:50):
breakdown of Joe Biden's efforts to transformthe Supreme Court into something that's not,
which is a politically malleable body that'ssubject to the whims of Congress and the
executive branch, which is the lastthing we need. It's separation of powers.
It's supposed to remain independent, andthe proposals from President Biden would ruin
that independence and subject the Court toall kinds of political attacks. It's just

(40:13):
it's an insane idea brought about bywell the insane reality that they do not
like original lists. They want theflexibility of activist judges to issue opinions from
the bench which are more along thelines of legislation than they are legal opinions
analyzing something that Congress did by wayof passing laws. Anyway, Steve Gooden
does a wonderful job here in theMorning Show. Looking forward to having him

(40:35):
back on that again. That's seventhirty two hours from now. Bright Bar
Tech editor Colin Madine. He's goingto talk about Google editing auto correct,
which is just the tip of theiceberg. As I pointed out in the
last hour, they disavowed that thatthere was even an assassination attempt. Meta's
AI tool multiple searches called Donald Trump'sassassination attempt fictional, I mean unequivocally stated

(41:02):
fictional. And I read the accountson that in the last hour. It's
just absolutely, absolutely mind boggling.I mean, again noting that we've all
seen it, we know it happened. They're doing congressional investigations of it.
The FBI director testified about the SecretService, a director quit over the whole

(41:22):
debacle. I mean, do wenot see all that happening? Was this
all predicated on a non event,a fictional event? Lord Almighty, I
don't know if they think we're thatstupid, Well, not my audience.
This is the point that I madelast hour, and I think it's a
legitimate one. It's easy to dopeople who don't do any critical thinking.

(41:47):
I mean, you still hear peoplelike Kamala Harris. Remember she was perpetuating
a lie about those those agents whippingmigrants. But that was a lie,
and there are still people out inthe world that'll circulate that and believe it.
It's been thorough lead debunk They weredoing their job. They were properly
using the reins to manage the horsesand the crowd. No, there was
no whipping going on there. Onceyou get it out in the world,

(42:07):
if you just get a small percentageof the people to buy into the lie,
then you get a small percentage ofthe people that'll buy into the lie
period and of story mission accomplished,every little bit counts. And the world
of artificial intelligence. When you seejust absolutely outrageous bias in the face of

(42:28):
all that we know, you realizethe rig is in the game is fixed.
Paris Opening ceremony has disappeared apparently fromYouTube. We'll talk about it with
Colin Maydine. Also as well astech and the twenty twenty four presidential race,
just a quick recap on that.Yes, our US officials have widely
reported that Iran is tinkering, electronically, tinkering in the election in order to

(42:52):
move the hearts and minds of folksagainst Donald Trump, one of probably multiple
countries out in the world trying tomanipulate the election to their advantage. Davis
deep dive. We'll be talking aboutnew evidence arounding the Trump assassination attempt.
Daniel Davis knows it was real.Maybe he should get in touch with Metta's
AI program Sadly, you know,the situation in the Middle East is just

(43:13):
not not looking good at all,which is something I probably could have said
with a straight face my entire life. But Israel is going to do something
about that. Hasbala rocket attack thatkilled twelve children, young people court to
Israeli Prime Internet Yah who in announcementyesterday, our response is coming and it

(43:34):
will be severe. Israeli Prime Ministerand his Defense Minister Jov Gallan received formal
authorization from an emergency Security Cabinet sessionthat happened on Sunday to retaliate in a
way of their choosing against his Bala. That was a six hour meeting.
If I recall reading about that yesterdayaccurately, Israel immediately said, yesterday Hisbala

(43:59):
has begun moving around its precision guidedmissiles. And that's a development in and
of itself. Remember the old days, you didn't have to go too far
back, and I think it wastwo thousand and six or so roughly in
that timeframe when they used to justshower Israel with a bunch of random bottle
rocket type attacks that had no precision. It was just sort of lighted and
hope that it was going to landsomeplace strategically. Now they usually landed in

(44:20):
fields and they never hit any militarytargets, and it was just it was
kind of an absurd exercise the waythey sort of waged their war of terror.
Now they have precision guided missiles.Israeli ministers are signaling that it will
remain a limited response, though othersources have warned that all out war in

(44:42):
Lebanon is coming. Official with theLebanese group told the Associated Press yesterday that
Hisbala's stands has not changed, thatthe Iran backed organization does not want full
blown war with Israel, but thatif war breaks out, it will fight
without limits. The officials, speakingon a condition of anonymity, of course,
said as Bali since Sunday has startedmoving some of it's again smart precision

(45:04):
guided miss missiles to use if needed, moving them away where they were known
to be, probably hiding them untilIsrael launches whatever response it launches. That
now, who said of the victimsof the Madjidal Shams attack, visiting the
scene, these children are our children, the children of all of us.
Israel will not and cannot let thispass and carry on as usual. Our

(45:27):
response is coming and it will besevere. After that statement, the US
Embassy in Lebanon issued a video yesterdayurging Americans to leave the country in advance
of the inevitable crisis. Were ina Bitter, US Assistant Secretary of State

(45:49):
for the Bureau of Consular Affairs,said in the video posted on social media,
we recommend US citizens develop a crisisplan of action and leave before a
crisis begins. Should come Marshall airnot be available. Individuals already in Lebanon
should be prepared to shelter in placefor long periods of time. She wanted
to say, anyone planning to visitLebanon, Joe, were you still planning

(46:10):
on visiting Lebanon? I know youhad? Really? Uh you had?
That was like your bucket list,right, passport's been delayed. Ah,
anyone planning to visit Lebanon should reconsidergiving the difficulties that would hinder departure.
Should conflict increase in the region,ahem, And I didn't say world War

(46:32):
three very lightly. Here's a fundevelopment. Turkish President Receptey Erdigan on Sunday
threatened to invade Israel in order tosupport Palestinians. We must be very strong

(46:53):
so that Israel can't do these thingsto Palestine. Just as we entered Nigorno
Karbach, just as we entered Libya, we might do the same to them.
There's nothing we can't do. Wemust be only be strong. Organ

(47:14):
described as one of the most bittercritics of Israel. And here's where the
problem breaks down for me and peopleon either side of the equation needed to
focus on this. Israel is notgoing after the Palestinian people. It's like
when I have criticism about the China. About China, my criticism is not

(47:35):
in any way, shape or formdirected to Chinese people. It's the government,
the regime, their ideology, theirmindset, their well global domination efforts
that I'm critical of. They areanti American generally speaking. Now might that
philosophy seep over into a sizable swathof the Chinese people. Yes, I

(48:00):
also thoroughly believe a sizable swath ofthe one point four billion Chinese people don't
appreciate the direction their government is takingthem. They'd prather have some freedoms and
liberties. They'd rather not have asocial media score and be judged based upon
how loyal to the party they are. Israel's not attacking the Palestinian people.

(48:22):
They're going after those who are wagingwar against Israel, and that will be
right. Has Bala Hamas and otherterrorist organizations which Iran is funding Iran,
of course, hates Israel and theIsraeli people and would love to see all
Jews eradicated from the face of theearth. That's a different political posture,
it's a different war posture, it'sa different philosophy. They want to eradicate

(48:44):
the Jews, like Adolf Hitler inthe Nazis. I'm not looking at the
leanings of the President of Israel.They don't suggest this should be a more
left leaning coalition over net and Yahoosor something else. They want to eradicate
the people, and so the otherside tends to flip that and exacerbate it

(49:04):
and say Israel wants to eradicate thePalestinian people, which is nonsense. I
think they would be very happy witha regime change that isn't run by a
terrorist organization, so the Palestinian peoplewould be freer to well live their lives
in greater comfort and greater freedom.Five one, three, seven, seven,
four, ninety four ninety five.Feel free to chime in, disagree,
agree, it doesn't matter. Maybeyou have a different subject you'd like

(49:27):
to touch upon. I welcome thecalls. In the meantime, I also
recommend calling Peter Shabier Keloorwilliams seven Hillsoutstanding real estate team. He has got
just the best around five star experiences. What you're going to get working with
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experienced, they are very knowledgeable andextremely professional. Peter sets an extremely high

(49:50):
bar. Who makes it to theSpree group Keloorwilliams seven Hills Chabri team,
and I've met quite a few ofthose agents over the years. Just sharp
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(50:14):
sorry, you don't like the house, We'll sell it for you.
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what that program is all about.Just a couple of the programs they offer
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would ever consider calling if I wasgoing to buy or sell a house.

(50:37):
Find them online seven zero eight threethousand dot com seven zero eight three thousand
dot com, put a five toone three in front of it and give
a call. Today five one threeseven zero eight three thousand, fifty five
krc iHeartRadio can be partly to mostlysunny today, partly clodet, mostly sunny,
rather hot and humid ninety for thehind seventy one overnight with UH partly

(50:59):
cloudie skuys humidity ninety one the highTomorrow partly thotty isolated storms in the afternoon
or evening over nine seventy three withspotty storms possible. Thursday is going to
be mostly Sunday day with a chanceof showers and thunderstorms ninety five seventy one.
Right now, tyme for traffic fromthe UCL Traffic Center. No matter
the injury, you see howth orthopedicSands supports medicine reydefines recovery to get you

(51:22):
back to doing what you love.Call five one three four seventy five eighty
six ninety. Good traffic on thehighways now drying out from the storms that
passed through earlier. Crews have gotthe storm drain open again on eastbound two
seventy five at Mostellar no longer highwater there. Chuck INGRAMAM fifty five kr
C the talk station six twenty oneFI five KCD talk station. By the

(51:47):
time I was wishing a happy Tuesdayfive O three seven four nine fifty five
eight hundred eight two three talk Timefive fifty on eight and t phones.
Posity of callers this morning. Anyway, I do a lot more to talk
about in I see that anybody elsekind of feel believe that something's real,
weird, crazy is going to happenbetween now and November, and I tend
to look toward like some sort ofcyber attack, you know, a grid

(52:10):
attack, uh, any any kindof terrorist attack. To see all of
this division and pots during that goeson in the world, fueled in large
part by nefarious elements on social media. Obviously, this has a profound impact
on people's psychology, and people arewilling to do crazy things. We do

(52:34):
live in a crazy world. Allyou need is one small sliver of the
small sliver of nutcases in the worldand you've got a real catastrophe on your
hands and turn to France in theOlympic Games. Well, it's the kind
of thing that I really kind offeel deep down in my heart that probably
is going to happen. We needto be prepared for the reality of it
and keep our collective heads cool.So France's Interior minister, guy named Gerald

(52:59):
dar Main, speaking with French mediayesterday, he just pointed the finger at
left leaning saboteurs for the shut downof the French railway system in advance of
the Olympics. Saboteurs cut burned signalingcables at three sites around the country's rail
network in a coordinated and targeted attack, which of course caused chaos on the

(53:21):
high speed lines right before the openinggames. Quote. This is the traditional
mode of action for the ultra left, the minister said. Interesting. I
guess he didn't get the social medialeft wing dominated memo that it's all right
wingers that are responsible for political violence. Police set of fiber optic networks of
at least three telecommunications operations were vandalizedon Sunday night in several regions. Something

(53:46):
else that concerns me It's not knownwhere the couple of incidents are connected,
though they presently have the largest whatdescribed as the largest peacetime security operation in
the France's history, more than seventythousand police soldiers, security guards, etc.
Hoping to shield the country from threatswhich they have identified from Islamic terrorist

(54:09):
groups to sabotage by far left activistsor adversaries such as Russia. Russia a
notable concern for the French. Yougot the well first, Russia was banned
from the Olympics because of the invasionof Ukraine, and of course France and
under President Emmanuel McCrone, has beenone of the leading hawks against Moscow in

(54:30):
the efforts by to defend Ukraine againstthe Russian invasion. So the Russians obviously
have a vested interest in stirring thepotted division and problems over in France.
So the question is whether these peoplehave been manipulated by others or whether it's
for their own benefit. Referring tothe motives behind these well terrorist activities,

(54:52):
the railroad investigation, of course,the cutting off of the internet cables,
and you know, when you thinkabout it, we have internet cables that
run all over the place. Manypeople know where they are quite often they're
even identified on maps like Google.And I don't know how difficult it is
to cut an international Internet communication cablelike from between the underneath the Pacific Ocean.

(55:16):
But didn't they do that in theBlack Sea? And will it happened
if the Internet just magically shut down? I mean, we saw what can
happen with one small company, wellmonetarily speaking, not small publicly traded company
that CrowdStrike. But fortunately many peoplewith Microsoft operating systems were not using CrowdStrike

(55:42):
as their defense against nefarious actors.It's kind of like Norton's antivirus software on
steroids. You have an option,though it was an add on, but
that little add on shut down businessesfrom operating for multiple days. Can you
imagine that on a broader scale inadvance of the election? I hate to
think what would happen six twenty sixfifty five KOs to the talk station.

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today hak humid ninety for the highpartly cloudy every night. Also a humid

(57:15):
seventy one tomorrow's high ninety one,isolated afternoon storms, overnight spotty chance of
storms. Otherwise it is mostly cloudyin seventy three and a mostly sunny Thursday
ninety five for the high with achance of showers and storms seventy one.
Right now, let's hear about trafficfrom the UCL Tramphic Center. No matter
that the injury you see, healthorthopedix sands sports medicine redefines recovery. To

(57:38):
get you back to doing what youlove. Call five one, three,
four, seven, five eighty sixninety Highways doing fine now he's found two
seventy five left lanes open again atMoss Teller after some flooding issues earlier.
In bound seventy four that's wide openedpast Montana chut Ingramont fifty five KRC the
talk station six thirty one pick fivekerr CEV talk station. Just another reminder,

(58:07):
since Ken Connolly, the committee memberof the Dala Hiah Skirt Game,
asked me to pass. The LongSkirt Game is August second, five pm
at Della Hai Township Park. Greatopportunity to help folks in need in Delahi
Township. Neighbors Helping Neighbors is thepoint of the event. And again I
just go back to my dad's justhe did that event for decades, just

(58:28):
absolutely loved it. It's fun time, and haters get over it. It's
fun. That's what the point is. And you know, to that end,
you're dressing up like a woman.I don't think I would have gone
to college. At least my parentswouldn't have paid for college. And my
dad didn't dress up like a woman, right, the whole granny thing.

(58:49):
And just because you dress up awoman does not mean you are of any
particular sexual orientation. My dad quiteheterosexual. I do know that for a
fact. Greg Landsman, alongside leadersof fc Cincinnati, unveiled how more than
four where million dollars in federal holidaysis going to be spent to improve Central
Parkway. Leaders explain to the projectCentral Parkway complete street improvement, combination of

(59:12):
efforts from city officials, federal funding, and philanthropic support, total number of
federal dollars four million, one hundredand sixteen thousand change going to go toward
the infrastructure of the project. CornelLandsman and image is shown it yesterday's press
conference display upcoming growth for pedestrian spaceenhancement to sidewalk and bike pass also an
increase in trees and art in themedians. Mark Mallory was there corner of

(59:45):
Mark. We want to transform CentralParkway so that becomes much greater opportunity and
not a divider between two communities,but a bridge between two communities. Landsman
keeps saying that he hopes that thiswill help increase tourism in the area.
Meanwhile, money's flowing into Claremont County. More than six million dollars have been
approved by the Ohio House of Representativebenefiting communities in Claremont County House Bill two

(01:00:07):
the appropriations Package where the funding isallocated for various community projects courted David Paynter
or the Claremont County Commissioner. Mostof them are looked at to ensure that
the scope of these projects really makesa difference in the village or the townships
of the county that they're awarded to. It's going to be distributed to help
fund fifteen community projects and operating fundsfor local nonprofit child focus officials, state

(01:00:29):
representative, state senators all work togetherto advance their local communities and get them
funded. Bringing the Bacon home ofthe fifteen projects, the rebuilding of the
Goshen Fire Department Station eighteen is goingto get the most at two and a
half million. That one well washit by a tornado several years ago.

(01:00:49):
They said. The funding for HouseBill two bridges the gap to finally rebuild
Station eighteen, making it safer forthe community, as well as including a
new cancer prevention methods to help firstresponders. Let's see, you got the
Goshen Fire Department, Felicity Veterans housingprojects getting a million, four hundred thousand
for the Milford Five Points Landing CommunityCenter two hundred and sixty eight and changed
for Union Township Community Splash pad NisboutPark Amphitheater is getting a quarter of a

(01:01:14):
million dollars and about that much goesto the Moscow, Ohio Rivers Stabilization Phase
three some other smaller projects on thelist. So there you go. Is
that pork barrel projects? Joe?Are those legitimate need projects? You're gonna
go half and half on that.I'll let the residence of Claremont County make
that decision. Southgate community being evacuatedfrom their homes after hillside slippage which occurred

(01:01:42):
in the area on Friday. Quarterto the Cinsini Inquire active landslide may have
been caused by a government sanitation project. Inquire reporter that residents received a letter
from Wooden Lamping, the law firm, stating quote, the evacuation and construction
are excavation apologies. Excavation and constructionor potentially caused a shifting in the hillside
which has caused the recent cracks andother issues in the building which you and

(01:02:06):
your neighbors have been noticing. Cornto the press release from the Sanitation District
number one, a third party,a third party relocation specialist was going to
be assessing each resident to accommodate theirindividual needs. Once a list of those
needs is made, the Sanitation Districtand the homeowners Association will find a new
location for all residents without facing financialhardship. Well, isn't that nice?

(01:02:30):
Six thirty five fifty five? Caresee the talk station. You feel free
to call. Let me mention oneother thing before we do that. Foreign
Exchange to get your imported car fixed. Your satisfaction. My wife's old car
just sold sold it yesterday, andI'm telling you Foreign Exchange kept that thing
in top running order. I guaranteeyou that was the smoothest, best running,

(01:02:52):
most well maintained car of the twothousand era deal or manufacturer that she
had German. It was on theroad. Foreign Exchange had all the records
from over the years. Everyone everythingserviced on that car came with the full
warranty on parts in service, justlike they will for you. And I
know for a fact we saved aton of money by taking it to Foreign

(01:03:13):
Exchange and not the dealer, consideringthe work that was done on it over
the years that she had that car. Loved that car to death. Anyway.
They specialize in imported cars, whetherit happened to be a German car
or any European manufactured car, Asiancars as well. They do it all.
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abroad for the front. Partly cloudy, mostly sunny day, says Channel nine.
Hot, and you been going upin ninety degrees Tonight, partly cloudy,
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in the afternoon or evenings. Ninetyone the high seventy three overnight with chantus
body storms. Thursday's going to bemostly sun with a chance of showers of
storms and a high of ninety five. It's a year seventy two degrees.

(01:04:26):
Time for traffic update Chuck from theUCL Traffic Center. No matter the injury
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issues in Bend seventy four. Thatlooks good too, less than ten minutes
from two seventy five at the coalrain split to seventy five chuck Ingram on
fifty five tier see deep talk stationsix six forty one. If you're about
kartersee talk station. I gotta bea kick out of iHeart media aviation ext

(01:05:10):
for Jay Rattler for friends on Facebook, and I always says rather uplifting messages,
sometimes comical. This morning something alongthe lines of while both parties scream
at each other and call each othernames, does anybody realize we just passed
thirty five trillion dollars in debt.No, nobody's paying attention to that.
Jay sadly, how's that money beingspent? I love this. While Kamala
Harris endeavors to unring the bell ofher profound claims that there is no question

(01:05:33):
I'm in favor of banning fracking overthe weekend, she said, well,
no, I'm in favor of itnow trying to win over the hearts and
minds of the folks in Pennsylvania.Does anyone really believe that she wouldn't be
continued, wouldn't continue to buy administration'spolicies of trying to get rid of fossil
fuel. Generally speaking, I personallydon't believe it. She's in total waffle

(01:05:57):
mode now, given all of theprior criticism she had about the well the
police Department, for example, hercriticisms of the Border Patrol agents and ICE
and seeking to abolish ICE. She'strying to backpedal on that one. And
we all know because the mainstream mediahas now set it over and over again
that no, she was never theborders are this was never her issue,
never her problem. Okay, Reallysome of the language come back to Haunter,

(01:06:21):
and she's got a real problem withMichigan because the Muslim community up there,
and if he can check it out. The Wall Street Journal did an
article on that about well, herChicago moment, Kamala Harris's Chicago moment.
They're still expecting one hundred thousand peopleto show up to Chicago, most of
them pro hamas anti Israel. Ofcourse, she sort of leans to that

(01:06:44):
side of the ledger. But shecan't abide lawlessness, now, can she?
What's she going to do if there'scrazy lawlessness going on on the streets,
is she going to come out againstit? Well, we got a
popcorn out to wait for that.But how's that money being spent? Let's
go to one of Kamala Harris's highestprofile responsibilities as Vice president, the person
responsible for spearheading the federal government's multibillion dollar efforts to deploy thousands of electric

(01:07:08):
buses at yourlocal school districts. How'sthat working out? Clean School Bus program?
Funded? Two years ago, Harrison, the EPA administrator Michael Reagan unleashed
one billion dollars in federal rebates forthree hundred and eighty nine school districts across
all fifty states to help deliver twofour hundred and sixty three Here, let

(01:07:31):
me pull a figure from my sphincter, four hundred and sixty three electric school
buses Washington freeb Beacon looked at thedata. Twenty seven of those school districts
have proven of the EPA that theirbuses were delivered and that their diesel fuel
buses being replaced have been discarded.That will be a victory. That's what
they wanted across the board twenty sevenOver a couple of years, collectively,

(01:07:55):
those districts have deployed drum roll sixtybattery powered school buses, while at the
same time, fifty five districts havepulled out of the program citing technological and
infrastructure concerns. More school districts havewithdrawn from the program than those have have

(01:08:16):
completed it. Here's a free busand they don't want it. People are
pulling out of the program. Itran into some hurdles, practical hurdles in
the rollout. This started about threeyears ago as a provision of the twenty
twenty one Infrastructure Bill, which putaside five billion dollars for the EPA to
distribute in the form of rebates andgrants. Since Harris's initial announcement, the

(01:08:39):
agency has then had unveiled one billionfor these school districts a second trance of
rebates worth nine hundred million for anotherfive hundred and thirty school districts. None
of those districts have deployed any busesunder the program. Here's one. Jeff
Dick, superintendent of the New Fondaand Albert City Truesdale School System in Iowa.

(01:09:00):
This only makes economic sense if thebus is paid for with a grant
like we receive. The cost isso prohibitive that the cost savings are not
worth it. That school district,among a whole bunch of them, received
funds for the school bus program.Albert City Tuesday awarded three hundred and ninety
five thousand dollars money used to funda single electric bus and a corresponding charging

(01:09:26):
station. District would be able tosave money on fuel, but only because
the bus was acquired free of charge, a superintendent pointed out, based on
on the EPA's funding calculus, averagenew school bus under this clean school bus
program costs upwards of three hundred,three hundred and seventy thousand dollars, which
is three times the cost of atraditional diesel bus. Translated, and I

(01:09:53):
remember keep that thirty five trillion dollarsfigure in the back of your head.
That implies the cost to replace theentire US flo of five hundred and forty
seven thousand school buses out there inthe world with electric alternatives two hundred and
actually north of two hundred and twobillion dollars. One superintendent of a place

(01:10:15):
called Modoc Joint Unified School District innorthern California. Ultimately, what sealed for
US was the performance concerns. Theywithdrew from the program five months after it
had been selected to receive two pointfour million dollars for six buses. Superintendent
said the funding came short by aboutfifty thousand per bus, which means the
buses were more expensive than projected.It would have cost the district hundreds of

(01:10:38):
thousands of dollars even though the programwas intended to provide free buses. Superintendent
pointed out the performance concerns were aneven bigger hurdle, particularly on how electric
buses fare in rural and cold weatherconditions. I guess they didn't think about
that, he said. We getsuper cold in the winter, we get
down a blow zero the winner,and it's cold here about nine months out
of the year. Basically, you'rebeing told that you can't run the which

(01:11:00):
means you can't defrost your windows becausethey take too much battery power. So
we're told they'd get two or mileson a charge, but people in the
field were telling us seventy seventy mileswith a loaded bus. That just doesn't
work that just doesn't work. Oneof multiple school districts in colder climbs who've
rejected and fallen out of this programbecause of the practical realities of this.

(01:11:25):
Another big practical reality the infrastructure doesn'texist to charge them. Ready fire aim
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fifty five car the toxte I haven'tdone one of those in a while,
So you have a few minutes remainingin this time. After the top of
the our news, FFP President KenKober whill we be talking about juvenile crime
in downtown sinsaying which the inquiry reportsis down? Is that accurate? Steve

(01:12:54):
Gooden joins a program at seven thirtyAre legal expert on Biden's scotus or change
the Supreme Court anyway over the plagueup date We'll start here. Measles outbreaks.
Federal health officials say the number ofmeasles cases so far this calendar year
has already tripled to total for allof last year. US Center for Disease
Control data points out at least onehundred and eighty eight cases of measles so

(01:13:15):
far reported in twenty twenty four inall. Twenty six states as well as
Washington, DC have now reported casesof the virus. Fifty eight cases reported
across the entire United States last year, so sixty five percent of the cases
related to outbreaks and outbreak is threeor more related cases. There have been
thirteen outbreaks. Children under the ageof five account for half of them.

(01:13:41):
Lots of states have experienced it,as I mentioned it. No deaths from
the virus have been reported so far, but ninety three patients have been hospitalized.
Don't freak out too much, apparently, they say, in spite of
the global increase. In the increasehere, the numbers are below those reported
in twenty nineteen, when about thirteenhundred cases were reported here in the United
States. Plague update number two.We go to Athens, Georgia, where

(01:14:03):
they had to close the courthouse becauseof a bedbug infestation. Oh that's so
I hate bed bugs. They Thethinking about bed bugs is discuss me to
no end had to close for aweek. Superior Court Judge lease A Lot
issued a judicial emergency order to closethe courthouse, which also canceled jury trials
and hearings and suspended many judicial activities. Bed Bugs only found one different area

(01:14:28):
in three levels of the courthouse.Source of the bed bugs unknown. Those
little critters can glom onto anybody's clothesand they love to travel that way.
And finally we go over to AthensGrease, where authorities of ordered a nationwide
restriction for goat and sheeps to combata deadly viral outbreak. Minister of Agriculture

(01:14:48):
and Role Development announced the ban oncommercial slaughter of goats and sheep, as
well as the movement for reproduction expandingmeasures already in effecting parts of Greece.
It's called the goat plague. That'sthe PPR virus, highly contagious disease affecting
goats and chep causing severe illness anddeath. No adverse effect on human health,
according to the Greek officials. Letme just stick the word yet in

(01:15:11):
there so false. So far,some seven thousand animals and herds where the
disease has been identified had been culled. Another twelve hundred added earlier this week,
set for culling. I guess sothere you go. This has been
your plague update. Let's talk localcrime, juvenile crime in downtown Cincinnati with
FOP President Ken Kober right after thetop of the hour news, followed by

(01:15:34):
Biden's effort to change the Supreme Courtwith Steve Gooden at seven thirty Remember Bright
Bart inside scoop at eight o five, A bunch of topics to talk about
with their tech editor Colin Medine,and then Daniel Davis deep dive on the
new evidence concerning Trump's assassination attempt,which again Alphabet's Meta AI program denies was

(01:15:56):
even an event. I still can'tbelieve they have the audacity to say that
was a fiction. FOP President KenCober is next. I hope you can
stick around worldI guys don't exactly happenon a schedule, but the latest Tom
dates do at the top of everyhour. Fifty five KRC Talk Station seven

(01:16:29):
oh six. Here fifty five KRCDE Talk Station. Very happy Tuesday to
you, Brian Thomas. Always pleaseto welcome with the fifty five Carson Morning
Show. FOP President. Chapter sixtynine of the SINSINNI Police Department Union president
Ken Kober, Welcome back to thefifty five KRC Morning Show. Can It's
always a pleasure to have you onmy show. Hey, good morning,
Brian, thanks for having me.Let me start as always by thanking you
and all members of the Cincinna LawEnforcement Kennedy for what you do to serve

(01:16:54):
our community. It's a huge sacrificejust even deciding to become a police officer,
and these trying times in which wefind ourselves make that even more of
a commitment. So God bless allthose who protect and serve, and we
do everything we can here on thefifty five Casey Morning Show to support police
generally speaking. And although there stillis a significant backlash and anger against police

(01:17:14):
departments generally after the Black Lives Matterprotests and the defund the police movement,
a person at the spearhead of thatwas Kamala Harris. Now getting my political
ideology out of the way, KenKober, Since I inquire headline juvenile crime
is down in Cincinnati, law enforcementsays it's worse. So who's got it
right, the Inquirer or the policedepartment. Well, the interesting part is,

(01:17:36):
you know you can manipulate statistics tosay whatever you want them to say.
There's not really college forces. Collegeswill teach how to lie with statistics.
You know, as I looked atsome of these graphs, and you
know, you know, violent crimescleared by arrests are down. You know

(01:17:56):
the interesting part is, yes,canny police officer that is dealing with juveniles
on a day to day basis takingguns off of them, you know,
fighting them as they resist the rest. I think they would probably disagree that
juvenile crime is down. Well,I know, we came off a pretty
significant period of violence a year orso ago, or actually it wasn't.
In January this top of that Ivenuewas talking about, there were more indictments

(01:18:18):
and another a sentencing related to thepedestrians that got attacked by two groups of
teenagers. That's fresh in a lotof people's minds. And I have even
talked about anecdotically, anecdotally speaking topeople who I'm never going downtown, this
is just crazy bunch of crazy teenagersout there running in packs that are going
to beat the crap out of meor something. I mean, that's a

(01:18:39):
perception among many that are outside oflaw enforcement. Of course, in law
enforcement includes not just the police officerson the frontline dealing with them, but
folks living in the various communities thatare seeing it, and of course the
criminal justice system. So I've talkedto him on County proscut them a list
of powers on this a whole bunchof times, and she's idd and named
quite a few illustrations of very verywoke judges letting very very violent juveniles out

(01:19:03):
with basically no sentence and of coursemost situations no bond in advance of the
court date. Well, sure,yeah, there's no doubt that that continues
to go on. Now if youlook at like, you know, homicides
by juveniles are down, but probablyis the case, and that that's something
that's pretty easy to measure. Butwhat it also doesn't show is that these

(01:19:26):
kids are still shooting at each other. They're just not they're not actually shooting
someone. They may be missing,you know, And that's something that of
course year to year, it changes, and it changes with adults as well.
If you know, people are becomingmore proficient with firearms or one year
they're less proficient, then that willgo down. Because the fact remains most

(01:19:48):
of the times when when juveniles oreven adults are shot at. There's just
a lack of cooperation that will leadto the police not being able to clear
something with interest. I see that. So it reports the shots fired at
X block, you show up there, no one got hit with a bullet,
there was in fact a gunshot,but no one will identify the person

(01:20:11):
responsible for squeezing off the round.So case closed basically goes nowhere. Since
there's no harm, there's no criminalinvestigation, or at least if you have
no tips, you can't even engagein a criminal investigation. So that's not
a statistic that goes on the book, I suppose, well not at least
as what's covered in this because ifthere's no victim, right, you know,
you can't do a offense report.Yeah, you can't pin it to

(01:20:33):
a juvenile or an adult or anybodyfor that matter. Right now, they
will still go and show up,and you'll retrieve shell casings and process them
like normal, and then you'll beable to on the back end see if
this particular firearm has been used inother incidents. So there are investigations that
still occur, but as far ashaving a victim and being able to report

(01:20:55):
a violent crime based off of thatincident. Can't do it because there's no
victim. Well, there you haveit. I mean, that's your quote
in the enquire and not of acrime is solved, he said, so,
so arrest don't always reflect a numberof severity of the crimes. These
kids certainly much more violent than theywere ten years ago. Your quoted as
saying in the Inquirer, do youis that a noticeable reality among members of

(01:21:16):
law enforcement that kids are simply moreviolent? And do you have any reason
to explain why that might be?A lot of it is a lack of
parenting, a lack of them caringfor themselves, caring for anybody else.
If you you grow up in ain an environment where you feel like you
have absolutely nothing to lose, you'renot going to value life. You're not

(01:21:40):
going to value your own life.You know, there is certainly and I
would love to see the statistic asto how many juveniles are being arrested with
firearms that has been if you dowhatever, the past ten years, there
has been a huge uptick in juvenilescarrying guns, and not only carrying guns,
but carrying guns that are manipulated tobe fully automatic. Wow. Well,

(01:22:05):
and that's an easy manipulation too.You get that glock switch, which
are readily available out there in thedark web or an internet. Just pull
the trigger once and it just willunload a magazine in a matter of a
second or two. That's frightening stuff. Fortunately, they're not very good at
hitting their targets at least yet theygot some range time in you could have
a real bloodbath on the streets.Ken Well, there's no doubt. I

(01:22:27):
mean, that's the other part ofthe statistics that they don't talk about with
violent crime is things that aren't reportable, like simple things like running from the
police, fighting with the police.You know, the Juvenile Court has made
it very clear that resisting arrest,regardless of how violent it is, is
not considered a violent crime really,and that's something that resisting arrest is not

(01:22:49):
a reportable offense per se, Sothat would not be included in your violent
crimes that are cleared with an arrest. Wait a second, are there not
laws on the books that speak toa crime related to resisting arrests violently or
otherwise? I mean, that's onthe books, isn't it. Well,
sure it is, but it's notconsidered a reportable offense, so there may

(01:23:13):
be a statistic kept for it,but that would be excluded from what this
data shows because under what the statelaw says and what people are you know,
juvenile court is saying, is aresisting arrest is not a violent offense?
Well, I'm sorry, I'm puzzledby that. My brain is not
processing that. How could that beif there is a juvenile out there,

(01:23:39):
and that juvenile you're trying to arrestthem and gets violent with the police,
officer punches them, otherwise try towrestle with them. I don't know that
sounds like a violent offense. Imean they're also interfering with the course and
conduct of your duty as well inlaw enforcement. I mean that's got to
be a charge as well. Imean, isn't there a number in like,
you know, a two fourteen orsomething like that that describes a new

(01:24:00):
barankly what resisting arrest is and whywouldn't that end up in juvenile court.
Not only were they involved in criminalactivity beating up a pedestrian that was walking
by, they also when the policeshowed up to arrest them for doing that,
resisted violently. Perhaps that that shouldbe a charge I'm just well,
so it has a charge. There'slittle higher revised code statute that's addresses resisting

(01:24:24):
arrest. But the juvenile court's positionis that it is not a violent crime,
which is why we went down thewhole rabbit hole of the unofficial docket,
because resisting arrest is is eligible fordiversion because it's they don't see it
as being a violent crime. Now, yes, the officers that get scrapes,

(01:24:45):
pumps, bruises, you know,and whatnot for fighting with these juveniles,
and they certainly have a different positionthan the court does. Yeah,
i'd imagine. So, I meanyou think at juvenile your brain may immediately
default to some slight of build,you know, twelve year old or something.
But no, they make kids bigthese days. I mean that's runningto
kids in there, you know,sophomores and juniors in high school that tower

(01:25:08):
over me. They're giant, fullgrown, adult sized kids, and they
could be extraordinary violent and do extremedamage to a police officer trying to fulfill
their mission. So there's no doubt, there's absolutely no doubt that those are
the things that goes on. Butthose are also the things that aren't reported,
and stories like this that suggest thatjuvenile crime is down. Violent juvenile

(01:25:32):
crime is down. It's also reflectiveof the children's hearts and minds when they
have absolutely no respect for law enforcement. Let's see if they have any respect
for well, the juvenile justice system. Let's pause and bring Ken cob or
FOP president back to talk about thetreatment of juveniles in the courts and whether
that might have some connection with theirlawless mentality. Seven to fifteen. Right

(01:25:54):
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(01:27:02):
of the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics. We're going abroad for the first time.
There's your nine first one to weatherforecast. Hot, humid egy going
up that ninety degrees under, partlycloudy and mostly sunny skies over night,
partly cloudy seventy one for the low. It'll be humid again ninety one to
high tomorrow. Isolated afternoon and eveningstorms possible otherwise just partly cloudy. Spotty

(01:27:25):
storm chance over Wednesday night. Otherwisejust cloudy. Is seventy three in a
sunny day for the most part.Thursday to the chance of showers and thunderstorms
welling all the way up to ninetyfive seventy two degrees. Right now,
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from Grand Chuck Ingram Moon fifty fiveKRC the talk station con up in sevent

(01:28:13):
twenty one to fifty five KRC DEtalk station. We'll be talking Biden's efforts
to well remake the Supreme Court.After my conversation here with FOP President Cancover.
He'll join us at seven thirty.In the meantime FOP President cancover.
Okay, So we've got jew doesword get out among the juvenile community that
hey, by the way, ifyou resist arrest, then that's not going

(01:28:35):
to be something that you're going tobe accountable for in juvenile court when you're
there. Oh, there's no doubt. I mean that's these juveniles. They
talk to each other. They're smarterthan I think some people give them credit
for. Yeah, and when they'reblatantly saying two officers, look, I
know we'll be right back out.I don't care. Do what you gotta

(01:28:56):
do. That's that's not sending avery good message for law and order.
Yeah. Well, and that's that'sthe judicial component. You have Hamilton County
prosecuted Melissa Powers, who'd be morethan happy to charge these violent young people,
and you present the charges, youget a Grand Jurion Diama. However
it process works, it ultimately endsup in front of a judge, and
that's where we seem to have abit of a breakdown. The all important

(01:29:20):
punishment leg of the criminal justice systemis a deterrent for juveniles and everybody.
If you do something, you violatethe law, you commit a crime,
you harm somebody, you are goingto be punished. It's supposed to keep
people from committing crimes. And yetif there isn't that punishment leg that's something

(01:29:40):
else that gets out on the street. You mentioned the revolving door when you
were talking to the inquire about this. You know, I just recently posted
a decision by Judge Bloom on theFFP facebook page where a juvenile was charged
with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest andobstructing official business. And it was all
relating to a report of juveniles armedwith firearms and a park in North Side.

(01:30:08):
It went through the court system.The magistrate adjudicated this juvenile's delinquent essentially
said this juvenile did what they said, did what the officer said they did,
and found that they were wrong.It was appealed to Judge Bloom and
in her decision she reversed all ofthe charges and the decision stated that this

(01:30:32):
was all precipitated because of the police. What so when you see things like
this going on and only further emboldensthese kids to do whatever they want because
essentially this this judge says that,well, they may have thought you resisted
arrest and you ran from the police, but it's okay because the police are

(01:30:53):
the ones that are at fault forthis. Oh my god, these are
the kind of things that I'm gettingcalls daily from officers saying that, look
that this is another decision that cameout of juvenile court. This is another
decision. This was a trial courtmagistrate that found that these kids were judicated

(01:31:15):
to linquid because they did the thingsthat that they were charged with, only
for it to be overturned and thepolice blamed for this juvenile's actions on what
evidence? Did she just make itup whole cloth? I mean, it's
all on video. I've actually I'vewatched a video of it. It's this
is the bet. What happened thebeating of the high school student in Washington
Park. That's the kids suffered atraumatic brain injury. That case, No,

(01:31:40):
this, this was a completely differentcase cut no media notoriety. Wow.
Well, okay, let's just brieflytalk about this one because it was
brought up in the same article JuvenileJudge carry Bloom again handling the teenager beat
a high school student Washington part soseverely suffered a traumatic brain injury. Apparently
they had this on video, Yetshe refused to allow the video of the
attack to have even shown in thecourtroom and sentence the one of the attackers

(01:32:01):
to probation. Yeah, yeah,exactly, probation for a fluentious assault for
a victim that is going to havelifelong, life altering injuries. But we're
going to give a kid probation forcommitting these violent crimes. Well, my
listeners know her name now, it'sjuvenile Judge Carrie Bloom, and that's just

(01:32:23):
one of a couple of illustrations ofher woke mentality. When it comes to
trying to well deal with juvenile offenders. You got to get them off the
street. You have to show thatthere will be punishment, there will be
accountability. And word'll get around aboutthat too, won't it ultimately Canjeez,
that's the only way that crime andjuvenile crime is going to go down,

(01:32:44):
as if we ever start holding thesekids accountable and I'm not talking about putting
them on probation and giving them abook report or alternatively, when we go
back to having nuclear families with parentswho actually care about what their children are
doing and raise them with responsibility,morals and ethics, well that's where it
starts. It all starts at home. It absolutely does, Ken Cobra,

(01:33:06):
I wish it was a more upliftingconversation, but important information as we fast
approach the November elections where there arejudicial races and there is a race for
Hamilton County Prosecutor. I hope weall keep cooler heads and are on the
side of law enforcement for the purposesof protecting our community and not go completely
woke. Ken Cobert, it's wonderfulhaving you on the program, So keep

(01:33:28):
up the great work. God blessyou and the rest of the Sinsint Police
Department, and thanks for all thatyou do for our community. Well,
thanks Brian, thanks for having me, and thanks for supporting law enforcement.
My pleasure, my pleasure, myobligation. Honestly, I feel that way.
Stick around, folks, We're gonnalearn about Joe Biden's Joe characterize them
as absurd Scotus changes. I thinkI'm gonna go with Joe on that one.

(01:33:48):
From what I've read, Steve willdo a wonderful legal analysis of the
direction that would turn our country ifBiden gets his way, or should I
say Kamala Harris gets her way.First of a word for cover since the
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Tramphic Center. No matter the injuryyou see, health orthopedicsan supports medicine,

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bit out of Lockland. And there'sa wreck bubomorrow. That's on twenty two
at Stubbs Mill. Chuck Ingram onfifty five KRZE He Talks station seven thirty
two fifty five car Ceed Talks Station. I've been looking forward to this all
morning, knowing that Steve Gooden wasreturning to the program at this time to
talk about Biden's efforts to transfer fromthe Supreme Court into some sort of I

(01:37:01):
don't know, liberal mind meld cord. They're I'm unhappy with various decisions.
They don't believe in originalism. Theybelieve in judicial activism only when it benefits
them. Welcome back from the lawfirm. Reporter, right, Steve Gooden.
Great to have you on the showtoday, my friend, good morning.
Good to be here. Brian.Well, let's just start from the
realization that there's no way in God'sgreen earth that Biden's proposals to transform the

(01:37:24):
Supreme Court are ever going to gothrough. One would require constitutional amendment,
which requires well and embraced by thevast majority of states, which many would
not do. Second would require congressionalaction, which, of course in a
divide in Congress where the Republicans atleast control the House. It's not going
anywhere. But this is going tobe a springboard for advocacy by the Kamala
Harris campaign and hopefully not administration.Correct. I think that's one hundred percent

(01:37:51):
correct. This is politics, pureand simple. I mean, I think
it's as simple as this. TheSupreme Court's approval rating right now now with
about thirty six percent. The Dobbsdecision overturning Roe v Away was very,
very unpopular among younger voters. Soreally, this allows Harris Biden and whoever

(01:38:15):
congressional candidates whatever to talk about theCourt in a way that will really potentially
appeal to those voters. It letsthem talk about abortion without directly talking about
abortion, and sort of the ideahere is, look, we're unhappy with
Dobbs, so we're going to changethe court. It's very very similar to

(01:38:35):
what FDR did back in nineteen thirtyseven when the Supreme Court refused to approve
some of the new aspects of theNew Deal Plan, which were politically popular.
So he tried to quote unquote packthe court. He tried to take
it from nine members to fifteen.He was ultimately unsuccessful, but it was
a real political hot potato back then. It was advantageous to him and to

(01:38:58):
his party. And I think there'ssomething very very similar going on here.
Well clearly, but I suppose historyhas demonstrated that when FDR tried to pack
the Court, the judges ended updoing a liberal more liberal pro FDR policy
shift. They see their own jobson the line, maybe and decide to
capitulate onto some degree. Well,that's correct. He did get two of

(01:39:20):
the big things he wanted, theNational Labor Review Board and the Supreme or
the Social Security Administration ended up beingnarrowly approved after that because I think a
couple of the judges probably did flip. And I do think you're going to
see some action from the Court here, particularly the one aspect. Well,
I think the eighteen year term partis dead on arrival, and the efforts

(01:39:43):
to overturn their recent decision about presidentialimmunities dead on arrival. But the code
of ethics part of it, Ido think the Court will end up doing
something different with they've been kind ofgrappling with that. Justice Roberts, the
Chief Justice, has been grappling withthat. We have a couple justice this
is Alito, particularly Thomas, whohave admitted going on, you know,

(01:40:03):
big trips and so forth with withwealthy political donors. Even though those donors
didn't have cases immediately before the court, they were the kinds of gifts and
at the kind of price point thathave attracted attention. So I do think
they're going to do something on theepics front. Well, and that's fine,
but and I know Thomas didn't disclosethat he flew in a friend's private

(01:40:26):
aircraft, but that was before theJudicial Conference changed its rules to require that
judges disclosed that kind of flight.So he didn't violent any judicial rules at
the time, but I know theappearance of impropriety is right there, and
that's just what's genning all the peopleup about Clarence Thomas. I think,
Look, Clarence Thomas has been alightning rod since the moment he got nominated.
Yeah, so it doesn't matter whathe does or doesn't do, He's

(01:40:49):
going to come under some you know, more trutiny than than anyone else I
think who serves on the court,maybe ever, maybe anyone in the history
of the who has served in thecourt, no one has had their personal
life, finances and things scrutinized theway Thomas has. But you know he
did in this one. I thinkkind of lean into it. You're right,
he didn't violate any rules. Butthat's the kind of thing that the

(01:41:12):
average person when they hear about it, just the kind of you know that
is that okay? Is that right? You know they're you know, big
Republican donors, you know, flyingon private jet, dedicate they paid for
a cruise for he and his wife, have several several items like that that
I think when you add them allup, it was a value of several
hundred thousand dollars, things that theaverage citizen really can't afford. It is

(01:41:33):
it is an appearance thing, andI think that's going to kind of linger
for him because there's so much there'sso much animus against him anyway. I
think that that they're going to continueto make that tough, and I predict
that the court will do something onthe on the ethics side of it.
But these other two items I thinkare purely political that are going to linger
or are They're just as political talkingpoints are legal experts Steve getting from port

(01:41:57):
to right. Let's possible we'll bringit back and find out why the fix
changes may end up being a trainwreck as well. Considering enforcement seven thirty
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mostly Sunday day chance of showers andstorms as well. Ninety five for the
hive. Right now, we're lookingat seventy two degrees. It is time
for traffic chuck from the UCL TraumphicsCenter. No matter the injury you see,
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the talk station about Krcity Talk Station, Brion Thomas with legal expert Extraordinary from

(01:44:18):
the law firm Reporter Rights Steve Gooden. Always welcome to you coming on the
program and explaining things for us.Steve I wrote the word lawfare down on
this. The Justices already have acode of conduct, but it's kind of
like the Internal Affairs Department of SinSaint Police monitors its own. If there's
a complaint, the IA looks atit and then makes a decision on whether

(01:44:38):
there's been misconduct or not. Idon't the justices already sort of monitor each
other under their code of conduct BecauseBiden is basically calling for outside enforcement,
wanting lower court judges to investigate chargesof ethics violations and then rule on Supreme
Court justices behavior that sounds to melike a train wreck waiting to happen with
thousands of complaints following, And they'vehave that going on right now. Judge

(01:45:00):
Eileen Cannon, the one that's sittingon Donald Trump's document case, apparently he's
already received more of a one thousandcomplaints in one week, what the Circuit
Court called an orchestrated campaign. Ifthat kind of volume comes in, they're
not going to be doing anything butinvestigating allegations of judicial misconduct's how could this
be right or a good way toghos Steve or is it? I think

(01:45:23):
it's a terrible way to go.And I mean, look, I get
again the politics behind this. Imean, we have this situation where you
know, in my view, twoof the justices, particularly Thomas, you
have opened up this issue by acceptingand ultimately disclosing these gifts. But you
know, what we're forgetting is isthat you know, when they updated and

(01:45:43):
redid their code of conduct last year, it did require these disclosures, and
Thomas quickly disclosed them. So weknow about them. We know about them
for sure because he told us.So. From that standpoint, it is
working. If there was any youknow, presumed bias or anything, it
has been disclosed and it's out there. That's the whole point. But you're
right. Otherwise this, you know, the Supreme Court has really been you

(01:46:04):
know, outside the nomination process,which is terrible now and highly politicized,
but outside of that process, theSupreme Court is one of the last parts
of our government that really kind ofis exempt from lawfare and does work the
way it's supposed to work. Imean, these are lifetime appointments. Once
folks are there, they're able todo generally able to do their job.

(01:46:25):
This would change that. This wouldopen the door, as you put it
out, to all kinds of artistsin the tax. It would open the
door to orchestrate the tax. Thatwould open the door to you know,
if you don't like the politics ofsomeone on the court, you can engage
a lawyer who is like minded tofile a complaint and just tie the justice
up and these endless disciplinary processes.That's not what this is before about.

(01:46:49):
And you know they call this Biden'sCone, this that nobody is above the
law act. Well, we're notreally sitting the Supreme Courts above the law,
but they are there. They basicallyare the fire arbiter of the law
under our constitution. Our founders,you know, set it up this way,
and I think they were They werecorrect set it up this way.
See right, I think this wouldjust be the opening a door into nothing

(01:47:12):
but more chaos. Will undermine therule of law long term, but will
undermine the Court's legitimacy. Ironically,there's things we're doing this to make the
court to preserve its legitimacy. Allit's going to do is long term undermine
it's legitimacy. In my view,Well, couldn't they just simply ban the
judges from accepting any outside contributions,gifts, donations, flights on aircraft period

(01:47:33):
in the story, regardless of whetherit results in a conflict or not.
Oh oh, but the hypocrites inCongress might have to look to themselves in
the mirror and say, gee,we go on all kinds of trips and
conferences, resorts, we get speakingfees, we get booked on. I
mean, I mean, physician healedthyself. Oh, that's exactly right.

(01:47:53):
I mean, look, if you'rein Congress, your ability to take honorary
for speeches with no limit, likeyou can you could charge somewhat, you
know, two thousand dollars for speech. They'll pay it. You can write
a book and have your donors buyit massive amounts of copies of it because
no one in the general public's evergoing to buy your book, but the
book has become profitable because donors buyit in an orchestrated way. I mean,

(01:48:15):
there's all these things that people doto supplement their income in Congress,
and some of the justices have exploredthings like that over the years, there's
no question, and they've been prettyopen about it, both liberal justices and
conservative justices. And in fairness tothem, they get paid roughly what a
regular judge is paid in the federaljudiciary. They're not getting rich. They're
getting paid roughly two hundred thousand dollars, which is a lot of money for

(01:48:39):
the average citizen. But if you'reliving in the district at club are the
most expensive places in the country tolive, and you really have to travel
the country check you know, asa part of your duties supervising the federal
courts, it's truly not as muchmoney as it might seem. So the
temptation to look for outside income,speaking fees and so forth is very much

(01:49:00):
there. But you're right. Imean, look in Ohio, if you're
a public official, you know,if you are the governor or even work
for in a Department of National Resourcesor a state trooper, you can't take
more than fifty bucks from somebody,and any gives time. And that's but
if again, it's good for thegoose is good for the gander. If
you're going to do something like thatto the court, you're going to have

(01:49:21):
to do it to the other brandchto the government as well, and that
would send shock waves through Washington becausethe average citizen, I don't think,
understands how these things work and howcan particular members of Congress find ways to
supplement their income through speaking fees andbooks and things of that nage. It's
interesting even brought that up, because, as you know, subjects subject to

(01:49:42):
the SEC's rules. I've got aheap load of rules about you know,
plug all a pail. You can'taccept anything more than like twenty five bucks
or something. I mean, it'sthey're really, I mean, across the
board, very broad prohibitions on youknow, because I have a forum here,
I could you know, promote somethingfor as a favor for a friend
or whatever. I at least understandand get all that. But here I

(01:50:04):
am living under these types of rulesand wouldn't be a wonderful thing if Congress
had to do the same thing.But now he'll think they're going to vote
money out of their own pocket.To you, Steve, they haven't yet.
We've been waiting two hundred and thirtyfour years for something like that.
I don't think it's that, butyeah, yeah, still lay away and

(01:50:27):
night dreaming of the day. Hey. And finally, in so far as
the proposal for eighteen year term limitfrom justices, and coming from a guy
like Joe Biden, given his age, I thought was kind of comical.
The Constitution does give them life tenure, which means there would have to be
a constitutional amendment to change that.Correct, you know, I believe.
So. Now what's interesting to meis this commission that he has put together.

(01:50:49):
Biden has put together seems to beof the impression that Congress could change
the terms themselves, and that's nothow I understand it. You know,
there's other folks much much more versethan these matters than I who are throwing
the caution flag on that particular proposalas well. In a way, it
doesn't matter. There's absolutely no noway this gets through Congress, and even

(01:51:14):
my senses, there's even quite afew Democrats who are sort of institutionalists who
would really not want to make thesechanges. So I think it's dead on
the proposals, dead on arrival.But if you read his proposal closely,
he seems to be the mindset thatCongress has the ability to do that.
So and I think if somehow oranother he wanted to get through the votes,

(01:51:34):
or if Harris were to win andget a large majority in both houses
next time and actually pursue this,which I don't think even would if they
did. But if they did pursuethis, I think that would end up
being litigated and ironically right back infront of the court. So I would
think that this would require a constitutionalamendment that they seem to think it would
not, And the Constitution is hardto him end on purpose. You know,

(01:51:58):
it requires it's kind of passed bothhouses of Congress by supermajority, and
it has to pass three orts ofthe state legislatures. You have to have
real support among the state. Beena country for two hundred and thirty four
years, give or take, andwe've only been in the Constitution or what
twenty six times, and those arefor big giant issues, you know,
like deal with you know, womengetting the vote and ending slavery and things

(01:52:20):
of that, where there are giganticpolitical movements and a lot of consensus,
and they're certainly not that kind ofenergy or consensus around this. So I
think that's that's the debt on arrival. But you know, they do seem
to think that they could just dothis by Act of Congress, Amen,
and I just just before we partcompany. That approval rating in people's approval

(01:52:41):
rating of the constant of the SupremeCourt, to me, that just represents
a fundamental misunderstanding of how the courtswork. Whether you're a originalist or a
liberal activist. That's the real distinctionbetween the left and the right. The
originalists believe in the righting of thedocument and stick to it, and that
to me is a sound legal foundationto be, you know, to be

(01:53:02):
working on. Can you imagine ifthis conversation came up during the war in
court administration, where the right wasfreaking out about all the left leaning decisions
coming out. No, we didn'tscream and yell and talk about packing the
court back then, did they?No? You know? And I think
that really cuts to the bottom ofwhat's happening here is you know, there

(01:53:23):
were folks in the conservative legal circleswho were very, very upset about Roeback
in nineteen fifty or seventy three anda lot of the other decisions that followed
out of that court. So theybegan what was really a fifty plus year
project kind of grooming conservative justices andgoing through the political process to try to
get those justices appointed over time sothat a different sort of philosophy, you

(01:53:46):
know, would take over the court. And that's what's happened here. So
you know, this group Biden isbasically saying, Hey, we don't like
the ben of the court. We'renot going to do We're not going to
do our own project and groom ourown judges and make the argument win over
in Congress and try to win thepresidency. We're just going to change the
rules. And that's that's really whatthey're doing here. Amen. That's Steve

(01:54:09):
Goodinporter right dot Coms where you findthem online. Thank you for your thoughtful
analysis, Steve. It's always areal pleasure having you on the program sir.
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(01:55:15):
you informed. Dad's up to datenow more than ever. I check in
throughout the day so I know what'sup. Fifty five KRC the talkstation.
You heard it eight o five ona Tuesday means it's time for the insight.
It's good. Bright Bart Bookmarket,Breitbart dot Com, b r E

(01:55:39):
I T B A r TS Integralto the preparation of the fifty five KRC
Mornings, shod I certainly appreciate,appreciate the reporting you get out of Breitbart,
which is honest and factually based andof course outside of the cloth of
the mainstream media. Welcome back tothe fifty five krs morning your show from
Brightbar the tech editor, Colin Madine. Colin, welcome back to the show,
my friend. Good to have youon today. Hey, happy to

(01:56:00):
be here, Brian. I dohave a question for you. I'm curious
if you attended the White Dudes forHarris meeting last night. I did not.
I didn't realize there was such athing. Yeah, they had a
band of doom call with about athousand soy boys complaining about masculinity and saying
how Kamala had to win the election. Oh wow, man really to save

(01:56:25):
manhood? Oh my god. Well, let's just say the ven diagram of
people who wanted to throw unvaxed peoplein concentration camps. And that call was
pretty much an exact overlap. Ohnow much Kamala loves ven diagrams, don't
we call him? Oh lord,well, you heard it right there in
the intro I asked Joe to throwin the Shenanigans declaration, because Lord Almighty,

(01:56:47):
don't we have one in connection withthe Donald Trump assassination attempt, at
least in so far as trying tofind information on it on Google Meta ai
as well. That's a new development. Did you see the New York Posts
Meta ai inquiry into the Donald Trumpassassination of what they got from that?
Yeah, it's pretty incredible. Soyeah, that's an understatement, really,

(01:57:13):
Brian, what you're seeing is atried and true playbook. So step one
is they create tools in Silicon Valleythat they say will make things like searching
for data, searching for information easierand more convenient. So let's talk about
Google. Google creates a feature ina search engine called autocomplete, and we

(01:57:36):
all use it because what happens isyou start searching typing in a search.
It kind of based on, youknow, millions of people googling. It
gets a sense for what you're lookingfor, and it pops up with the
whole sentence, you know, andyou can just click it and you get
exactly the search you want. Yeah, happened, right, A funny thing

(01:57:58):
happened. They use that tool becausethey create it because they want, you
know, they say it's going tobe easier, but then they can manipulate
searches by deciding what appears and whatdoesn't. So people started typing in things
like the assess the attempted assassination ofDonald Trump. Just no p, nothing
shows up. It's talking about attemptedassassination of the FDR at somep the assassination

(01:58:21):
of Fidel Castro. The reason theydo that is because, you know,
for someone like you, for someonelike me, we just type in the
search and go. Young people werehad been using these shortcuts and these convenience
tools since the time they were little. So they see that and they just
say, hey, my parents andthis Brian Thomas guy in the radio must

(01:58:45):
be crazy because Google says nothing happened. So, you know, it's it's
a very insidious thing because they makethese tools that are supposed to make life
more convenient than those tools are usedto manipulate the truth around the election.
And we'll just around the attempted assassinationof Donald Trump. Well, you know
I was talking about, you know, using one's logic and reason and critical

(01:59:08):
thinking skills when going about anything onthe internet, approach it with a jaded
cynicism. But if that to meis an illustration of young people not even
thinking for themselves at all, tojust default to allow the Google program to
identify what it thinks is important toyour response without delving a little bit further.

(01:59:30):
Because let's face it, if youtype in Donald Trump assassination attempt,
you will get articles that are widelyavailable on the internet. I mean,
lord, even if it's just FoxNews or Breitbart reporting it, it's there.
But that you would default, justrely on whatever it popped up and
end up clicking on a search relatingto the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand, I
mean, come on, that's justa sign of our children's being ignorant.

(01:59:55):
Well, Brian, you know,and you can't completely braame the children because
they have a trillion dollar Silicon Valleyindustry going against them. When you say,
when you say, you know youngpeople and plenty of old people people,
but you know, when we saythey're not thinking, they're not using
critical thinking skills that keeps people likeme and you awake at night in Silicon

(02:00:18):
Valley, they're rubbing their hands withglee because that's a perfect consumer. That's
someone who will buy what they're toldto buy. They'll vote how they're told
to vote, they'll take the prescriptiondrugs that they're told to take by advertising.
And you know, all they haveto do is count the money.
That's that's what they want. Theywant drones, right, indeed, much

(02:00:41):
much like the you know, thethe other story you mentioned is medaim.
Let me just read the inquiry andthe response from ATAI so you can launch
into it, my listeners. Ihave a foundation to know how crazy this
is. So the New York Postran a test on meta AI, that's
the artificial intelligence will provide answers questions. Right, was the Trump assassination fictional?

(02:01:02):
That was the question posed. Theresponse, there was no real assassination
attempt on Donald Trump. I startto provide accurate and reliable information, but
sometimes the mistakes can occur. Therewas no assassination attempt. To confirm this
is a quote, there has beenno credible report or evidence of a successful
or attempted assassination of Donald Trump.That's an outright fabrication Colin outright, so

(02:01:28):
you know again, and our independenttesting at Breifer confirmed this, So we
ran that story as well. What'sgoing on here is they want to create
a society that relies on AI andbelieve AI will tell it the truth and
then they can have it say whateverthey want. So again, the goal

(02:01:50):
is for someone to see that andsay, I knew that Brian Thomas was
lying. I knew my parents werelying. Nothing happened to him. Know,
it's all a trick, and Igot to vote for Kamala or I'm
not a good ally. That's that'sthe goal here. Okay. Now,
of course what happens is Facebook comesout and so we'll see, you know,

(02:02:12):
Meta, oops, we made amistake, you know, We've updated
it and now it'll now it'll saythere was an assassination Trump attempt on Donald
Trump. But they're doing this onmany fronts of one. So let me
give you another example. Meta createstools and processes with humans to detect,
you know, misinformation and artificially alteredpictures. Everyone to some extent can get

(02:02:38):
behind that, right, we don'twant fake pictures shown as real. But
the problem, and we see thistime after time from Silicon Valley, is
these rules are used in an oppositeway. If it's an altered picture of
Donald Trump or JD. The answor whoever, it'll be called real.
If it's a real picture of DonaldTrump, it'll be called fake. So

(02:03:00):
this iconic ecogma style picture of Trump, you know, when he stood up
and the flags in the background.Yeah, Facebook started labeling that as a
fake altered image, and they starteddeleting posts and erasing people's comments. Now
days later they say, whoopsie,you know it's They say the same thing
each time. It was a mistake. We thought it was altered, but

(02:03:24):
it's real. But and they getaway with it. So you know that
the problem is they take this conceptthat seems like a good concept. There
should not be artificially altered pictures anddirty tricks and deep fakes posted as real.
But they call real pictures fake andsay pictures real. Welcome to Silicon

(02:03:45):
Valley. Welcome to Silicon Valley.And in a world where you can whole
cloth create video that looks brand spankingnude genuine as the day is long,
and of course you can deep fakepeople's voices. And I mean, we
have gotten to the point where we'reall going to question literally everything, whether
it's real, whether it's fake.We're just not going to know. I
think it's going to keep everybody backon their feet. And I don't know,

(02:04:06):
I can suggest as George Orwell inhis wildest dreams, couldn't come up
with this scary stuff. Now pivotingover to YouTube, they're at it as
well. Have they deleted the Parisopening ceremony and the blasphemous mocking of Christians?
Now that has that been eradicated?Colin Well, you know, yeah,

(02:04:26):
and most likely, yeah, exactly, most likely what happened there is
that the Olympics themselves took it downbecause someone you know, you think they're
completely brain dead. Someone had afew brainsalls to im say maybe the satanic
imagery that's costing us advertising is notthe right course. And you know it's

(02:04:47):
actually telling that they would move totake it off YouTube, because that tells
you, you know, so manypeople they're not watching NBC, they're not
watching Olympic broadcasts, but they're oryou know, on their phones looking at
YouTube. Yes, sir, soyou know again you can go out there
to their channel. You can seethe Beijing opening ceremony, you can see

(02:05:12):
the England to opening ceremony. Youcan't see the Paris Games opening ceremony because
they they's appted. You know,it's it's as you mentioned, Doorwell already
He called it the memory hole becausethe main character of that book, you
may recall his job was to removefrom the news. Yeah, and convenient
truth. So you know, thisis how they do it. And again,

(02:05:33):
you know, to tie it intowhat we were just talking about.
Pretty soon, what will happen ispeople will go to Metai and say,
was there really anti Christian mockery andbias in the Olympic opening ceremony and almost
say nope, now there's no notrouble there. It was all good fun
and diversity and DEI and LGBT allies, right, and they won't have that

(02:05:57):
video for records. Well. Well, and it's interesting we've been focusing on
sort of United States based companies.I know, these are global companies alphabet
they deal with with searches and folksaccessing the information around the globe. But
we have foreign actors who are activelyengaged in manipulation and interference. The North
Koreans, of course, we haveRussians, we have the Iranians, and

(02:06:20):
most recently it was reported the Iridiansare interfering with the twenty twenty four election
by going after Trump. You know, misinformation spreading online, you know chat
bot, fake bought centered comments thatusing artificial intelligence looked like a real human
being. The Russians, apparently onTrump's side of the equation, trying to
interfere in the election on his behalfat least, that's what's been a legend

(02:06:42):
some of the reporting on this.I mean, this is a global phenomenon.
We could, you know, tryto rein in Facebook or Alphabet through
the legislative powers or regulatory powers ifthey could do it, but not so
much for the rest of the world. Well, there's a couple of things
going on Bryan for one thing,and the sad truth is Bilicon Valley as

(02:07:03):
a financial incentive to not solve thebot problem, because those bots show up
as active users and that's the mainthing that makes them money. So they
can go to advertisers and say,look at all these active people x.
Formally, Twitter has a very seriousthought problem, Facebook, Instagram, all

(02:07:23):
these platforms have bots, and theylet they let those exist because it makes
the numbers look good. It's kindof sickening that they do that, but
that's that's what happens. And onthe other hand, you know, we
have the hostile government of China runningthe most popular social media platform the young
people in the United States, andthey're allowed to do it, and it

(02:07:44):
continually blows my mind. You know, the latest thing that we're about to
publish today about TikTok is that theDepartment of Justice found that they're exporting user
data to China, those things likewhat's your position on gun ownership, what's
your on the pro life movement.You know, that's just making less of

(02:08:05):
people that are going to be youknow, on that the social credit score
that end right, yes, andyet we as a country allow that to
happen. And that's that's very troubling. You mean, well, you know,
it's a young people to typically geton TikTok, and they say like
fifty percent of the eighteen to twentynine year olds or on TikTok. Those
are adult people who should be ableto make up their own minds to just

(02:08:26):
drop the damn platform because it isa vehicle for the Chinese communist parties nefarious
activities. I mean, I couldsay that's all one blue in the face,
and yet oh here we go,Well everybody's on TikTok, so that's
just we're uninvolved. They figured outthe cat meant for young people is virality
and getting engagement as soon as theyget on there and they get a thousand
lights because they did some stupid stuntthat probably risked their life or the life

(02:08:50):
of others. Yeah, they can'tquit it. It's addictives. It's it's
the most addictive thing is that dopaminehit of seeing all these people, you
know, laughing with you. They'reactually laughing at you most of the darde,
but you know, getting that attentionis the ultimate addictive quality, and

(02:09:11):
that in and of itself, tome, from my perspective, is sad
and pathetic. Colin Madine, heis the tech editor of Breitbart. Again,
bookmark the site. You'll be gladyou did. Colin. Keep going
the great work at Breitbart. Bestof health to you and the team,
and I'll look forward to for anotherinside scoop next Tuesday at eight oh five.
I have a fantastic deck you too, Colin. Again, keep up
the great work. Daniel Davis deepdive Bottom of the hour, New evidence

(02:09:33):
around Trump assassination attempt. You seehe hasn't been relying on artificial intelligence.
He's drawing his own conclusions. DanielDavis coming up in a few minutes here
that you can stick around for thatone. And I hope you give a
Colin Electric a call. You'd beglad you called Colin Electric Andrew Collin and
his team of awesome electricians. Customerservice is superior with Colin. The price
is always right, the work willbe done to your satisfaction, and you'll

(02:09:56):
get a warranty. Anything they dofor you. From the smallest residential electric
project the largest comes with a tenyear wiring warranty. They have an A
plus with a better business Bureau,and they did a ton of projects for
me. So think outside of thebox. If it involves electric, it
involves Cullen. Tons of LED lightingsolutions out there. Maybe you might want
to consider that for your sh shack, your man cave. We had them

(02:10:16):
installed in our closets sort of behindthe woodwork, so the clothes themselves are
illuminated, but you can't see thelights, and it's kind of like a
department store effect. It looks great. Collin Electric. The folks are the
right connections projects big and small.You're in great hands. You want to
learn more, check them out onlineat Cullen Spelled c U, L L
E. N. Colin Electriccincinnati dotcom. Tell them, Brian saidhim,

(02:10:37):
and you call for the appointment fiveone three two two seven four one one
two five one three two two sevenfour one one two fifty five KRC iHeartRadio
Olympic Tuesday. Regular listeners know itis that time of week when we do
a Daniel Davis deep dive retired LieutenantColonel Daniel Davis. You can find them
online. Just search for it whereyou find podcasts. Good to YouTube and

(02:11:00):
find Daniel Davis. I think praymaybe you available on the iHeartMedia app Daniel
Davis, Welcome back, my friend. It's always a pleasure having you on
the fifty five KRC Morning Show andalways a pleasure to be here. Brian,
Well, and I don't understand thetopic today. It says new evidence
around Trump assassination attempt and you weregoing to enlighten us on that. But
just having a conversation with Bright BartonNews tech editor Colin Medine, and I

(02:11:22):
saw this article this morning. TheWashington Post question asked Meta Ai, you
know the artificial intelligence tool was theTrump assassination fictional? And Meta AI said,
quote, there was no real assassinationattempt on Donald Trump. Definitively,
I mean on multiple different searches theycame up the same results. So I'm

(02:11:43):
not quite sure why we're even talkingto Dave Daniel Davis, Seriously, I'm
not kidding. You got to checkthat out. It is an insanity going
on out there in the world oftexts. You can just suppress information and
re spin in an Orwellian ministry oftruth fashion. But here we are today,
and every day a little bit moreinformation comes out about this yes they

(02:12:03):
did, or that kid did aattempt to assassinate Donald Trump. What more
of you learned over the past weekand a half, Daniel, Well,
you know, there was actually anew video that was at least publicly released
yesterday from someone who is videoing rightalmost in the line of fire in between
the building and Trump, and wasalerted to it. One of the things

(02:12:24):
that is alarming that we see.You remember one of the first comments that
we have from on a Monday lastweek from then director Cheatle when she said,
you know, we only had afew seconds from the time they finally
identified that there was someone in theroof before the shots rang out. Well,
this video puts conclusively that to thelie, because there was physical evidence

(02:12:46):
where there were numerous, like sevenor eight different policemen on the ground,
all looking up with their weapons drawn, looking around the building, and I
mean minutes plural. But before thisrang out, and you can actually hear
Trump in the background speaking, soyou can tie exactly to what happened.
It matches with other videos, andyou just have to wonder, why did

(02:13:09):
all of these people know what wasgoing on, and yet no one took
any action. No one called theplatform to get President Trump off the platform.
No one thought, well, maybeI'll just fire some rounds into the
air so people can hear shots firedand they get them down because they were
so alarmed that weapons were drawn.And you know, a policeman's not going
to draw his weapon if he's justyou know, suspicious about something, He's

(02:13:30):
got to have a high probability something'sgoing on. Concurrently. We also you
may have seen these pictures of crooksthat were taken from a position above him
where it was looking down on him. He was looking at a cell phone
in one and he was looking offto the left and another, etc.
Those were taken from an open windowabove this's the roof line where crooks was
at. And one has to reasonablyask with all of these cops on the

(02:13:54):
ground and shouting, and then youhear the people on the ground before the
shots that he's got a gun,he's got a gun, etc. Why
would someone in that window, who'sstationed there expressly to provide security for the
president not look out the window,see the shooter there and take action to
stop it. So there's a lotof things that are just not lining up
well, not lining up, includingwhat seems to be an absolute utter failure

(02:14:18):
trying to be delicate here and complywith the FCC rules regarding using curse words,
but an epic failure communication breakdown.Apparently nobody was talking with each other.
The Secret Service didn't have direct linesof communication with the officers who were
witnessing this activity. I mean youmentioned that they were on hire alert.
They drew their weapons. I thinkin large part because there was a widely

(02:14:41):
circulated report among law enforcement that therewas suspicious behavior by this person on the
ground. They were looking for him, they identified him, they saw him
using arrange fires a refinder, sothat gets around clearly they're going to be
on heightened alert. And then lowand behold, there he is on top
of the roof of a firearm.Yeah, and then you know, we'll
take that part there about the rangefinder, because that's also curious. From the

(02:15:03):
ABC News video where you've probably seenwith the local squad team was interviewed,
et cetera. They themselves and someof their text messages identified that he was
using a rangefinder pointing towards the platformalmost an hour before. And so to
me, I'm like, hey,fellas, you all need to be taking

(02:15:24):
some action here. If you seea guy with the rangefinder in again your
express purposes to protect the president ofthe United States, why did you not
take active and aggressive action instead ofjust sending somebody a text and say,
somebody should check this out because that'sa red line, you know, a
big siren blairing and whatever that youshould have like immediately went into action.

(02:15:45):
And yet apparently all he did wassend the texts and taken from their action.
And that's another question that I thinksomebody needs to answer well clearly.
And all of this, of coursefeels conspiracy theories, and I thought it
was particularly interesting. I can't rememberwhich representative an interview or when examining Cheatle
who was appearing before that committee,said are you aware of all these internet
rumors and conspiracy theories out there,and she said, yeah, and do

(02:16:05):
you think they're bad for the countrythat they're out, Yes, they're bad
for the country. Well, thewhy in the hell don't you do something
to dispel them? Answer a damnquestion, give us some information, you
know, and then they roll outwhat FBI Director Ray who suggests maybe it
wasn't even a bullet that hit DonaldTrump's ear. I mean, I'm it's
almost as if they're intentionally stirring thepot of conspiracy theories by hiding information from

(02:16:30):
the American people. And you know, one of the things that will also
stir conspiracy theories when you and thisis from Cheetle, when you will simultaneously
not answer a whole bunch of questionsto say, it's only been nine days.
We're gonna do this for you know, detailed analysis. It'll take at
least sixty days before we come back, you know, because we want to
really do a good job. Butthen you conclusively say, oh, there

(02:16:52):
was definitely not a second shooter,one hundred percent, sure, definitely not.
Because people are going, hang on, you haven't even done an investigation.
How can you conclusively state that there'snot a second shooter, when some
of the evidence actually does support thatcontention, because the acoustic signatures, and
I saw literally before I came onyour show here from now six different audio
sources all show a very distinct differentaudio signature from the first three and then

(02:17:18):
the second five shots that are verydifferent. So somebody who has access to
all the information needs to do athorough analysis an investigation. But don't tell
me that there's none when you haven'teven investigated well, and she wouldn't even
answer the question about information that wasin her hand the time she was asked
specifically, did you interview every agentthat's a Secret Service assigned to that event?

(02:17:39):
She said yes, I had whyby the time she was in front
of the hearing, but then couldn'tsay at the earliest moment when the Secret
Service was alerted. It's like,well, wait a second, what do
you know now? She wouldn't evenanswer that question. Okay, fine,
you can change it if a reportcomes out and says you were notified earlier
or later, or the information changes, you can say at the time of
the hearing, we thought it wasa minute, it five minutes, ten

(02:18:01):
minutes, whatever. She wouldn't evengo down that road, which to me
I found extraordinarily suspicious. Yeah,and let's see what happens, because here
in Washington, in a little overan hour and a half from now,
there's gonna be I think the actingdirector of the Secret Service is going to
be again testifying. So that personand I'm not even sure who it is,
but I just saw that that testimonyis going to start at ten am

(02:18:22):
today. Better have those kinds ofanswers that all of America deserves to find
out what's going on. So let'shope that it's not a repeat of last
Monday. Yeah, no doubt aboutit. In as far as the second
shooter is concerned. So we eitherhave there wasn't a second shooter or that
they were whoever is trying to pullthis off, assassinating Donald Trump were even

(02:18:43):
more grossly incompetent achieving their goal thanwhat we believe to have the facts to
be right now, Yeah, andyou hit on it a second go,
and I don't want to miss itcompletely. But the communication aspect is far
more egregious that I think appears,because as someone who's done a lot of
military operations, especially when you havemultiple entities. It is absolutely, guaranteed,

(02:19:07):
essential and vital to have communication withall of the different elements together,
because it's absurd to think that you'regoing to have a coordinated operation and the
entire portions of the element to haveno communication. I mean, that's so
elementary that it's that by self raisessome questions, how is it possible?
And this was also revealed yesterday thatthe Secret Service guys in the inner ring

(02:19:28):
around Trump never heard anything. Noone ever allegedly told them that all these
cops for two minutes were running aroundthat building. How come none of them
ever heard that. Why would noone make that communication when that is central
to their role and their mission.So that's another big question that needs answered,
it really is. And if anyone of them had gotten the information,

(02:19:50):
or if they did get it,they didn't follow through with protocol,
which is say hey, Donald,don't go out on the stage. Yet
we got a guy in the roofwith a rifle. I mean, right,
they had enough time for that baseballon what we know right now,
definitively proven that everybody saw that guyup there, including members of law enforcement,
before he was able to squeeze roundsoff. Someone should have easily been

(02:20:11):
able to call secret service, gethim off the stage, or don't let
him out on the stage, simplecommand like that, the whole thing would
have been avoided. Yeah, andyou know the video that I referenced to
KA yesterday that showed two minutes andfour seconds before the shot. So the
fact that those cops were already onposition means that there were minutes probably before
that, yes, when someone elsealerted them that there was a shooter up

(02:20:33):
there. So there's a pretty substantialperiod of time where law enforcement officials at
both the state and the local levelfor sure knew what was going on,
but somehow that inner ring never gotthe word. And it's just hard for
me to understand where that breakdown mayhave occurred. Or why do you ever
think we'll find out the truth onthis one? Is this gonna be like
a Warren Commission thing with a magicbully? You know? I don't think

(02:20:54):
so, because, for example,unlike the Warren Commission for the assassination of
Jay k, there weren't two hundredpeople on the grass, you know,
with cell phones and recorded So wehave a data now that can't be suppressed
because so many people have it.So I think that we're gonna end up
getting the truth of this one.All right, I'll ask you to a
little tea leaf reading and anticipation thatwe will get the truth. How long

(02:21:16):
is it going to take? Isit going to be before November or after
or well, now that's a littlebit about because the suppression of this information
from from the official government, thenit's going to be a lot harder.
But I think of it, lookwill come out like they treat Foyer requests
from our from our elected officials toget information our elected officials should have access

(02:21:37):
to because that's who they answer to. M that's a problem. It is
more than a problem. Daniel Davis. It's the Daniel Davis Deep Dive every
Tuesday or a day thirty and thefifty five care see morning showing throughout the
week. Just search for them.You'd be glad you did, Daniel,
until next Tuesday, my friend,thanks for the time you spell my listeners
and me pleasure. Always see younext week. Take care, my friend.

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