Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Five O five and fifty five k r C the
talk station.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Happy Tuesday, some sation.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Do I tally? That's a okay, It's Tuesday, and a
very happy one to you.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Brian.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Tom's right here. Glad to be fifty five KRC dot
com stream the audio from the website, get your heart
media app so you can stream it wherever you happen
to have your smart device. That is, of course, unless
an Amazon outage causes a global shutdown, which is pretty
much what happened yesterday. Some analysts are saying that that
the the glitch which impacted like two thousand businesses but
(00:51):
resulted in billions and billions of dollars of lost revenue,
lack of productivity, downtime, fare to process transactions. So anyway,
we survived it. Kind of a bit of a reflection
about our reliance on one company with one glitch and
how many problems can arise when one glitch can impact
(01:11):
thousands of companies. Scary. Maybe we should diversify our reliance
on various cloud services. Anyway, what is coming up on
the fifty five cascene morning should Thank you Joe Strecker,
and good morning to executive producer Joe Strek also does podcasts.
It's got a side gig. You're going to do a podcast.
Get Joe'strecker to do it, kind of like Todd zenz
Er Citizen Watchdog. Anyway, you're hear at the top of
(01:34):
the our news Police chief three so Thiji on administrative
leave depending on internal investigation. We'll get to that a
couple of minutes here. We're also going to get to
that with FOP President Ken Kober, who's joined the program
at seven oh five to discuss that. Yeah, Chief Assistant
Chief Adam Henny, who's been an assistant chief now for
two weeks, has taken over the role of running the
(01:55):
police department. Really looking forward to hear what Ken has
to say about that. I'm sure he's got a delicate
I mean, I don't know if he's got a position
about Henny if the officers collectively do. If it's someone
who would they you know, like prior to Issue five,
given the mayor and the city manager authority over who
to hire as a police chief, if the police department
itself would have chosen him, I don't know. But that's
(02:19):
where we have Ken Cobra FOV President again seven oh
five Fall by empowery. This is going to be wild.
Mike McCormick, author of an almost insurmountable evil. So this
one's taking place tonight seven pm. You can do it
virtually only Empoweroamerica dot or get a register ahead of time,
(02:40):
get a load of the topics he's going to talk about,
because in this book here let me read, reveals how
the Obama Biden Whitehouse Jeez Louise networked the Catholic Church
in human trafficking along the Southern border, schemed Ukraine into
becoming a biological warfare threat to Russia. We're hed with
(03:00):
China to release the Wuhan pandemic in order to up
end President Trump's twenty twenty campaign. Wow, So the ideas
they're going to be discussing this Obama and Biden deep
state overreach, courting the materials of what Archbishop the Ghana
refers to as the Deep Church and what Robert F.
(03:24):
Kennedy Junior refers to as deep Health, in an effort
to understand betrayal, death, economic destruction, and emotional damage perpetrated
by the nation on our perpetrated on the nation by
our government, the Catholic Church, and the global elites they serve. Wow,
there's some bold accusations right there. Maureen, are you awake?
(03:45):
You're going to want to attend. That's empower you summonar again.
Tonight's seven pm. Log in from home or wherever you
happen to be. So Michael mccormy's going to join us
at seven point thirty to talk about that. Got a
lot to unpack in that segment. Inside Scoop with bright
Bart News immigration reporter John Bender, get some information about
my immigration. Donald Trump's really doing a good job on
that one deep dive, the Daniel Davis Deep Dive every Tuesday,
(04:06):
we get him at eight thirty today, No more Middle
East peace. Apparently that's true. I said that the other day.
They're talking about keeping the ceasefire agreement in place that
I'm like, wait a second, If Hamas is shooting at
Israeli forces and Israeli forces are responding with gunfire, doesn't
that definitionally mean there is no ceasefire. I'm struggling with
(04:28):
the terminology. I something tells me Daniel Davis will kind
of see it my way. I don't know. We'll also
get the latest on Russia and Ukraine. Looks like Donald
Trump is suggesting to Zelunsky that, dude, you're gonna have
to give up some land in order to resolve this thing.
I know you don't want to. I know you don't
want to be the guy who turned his back on
certain segments of the country of Ukraine given its current border.
(04:50):
But you know you're losing so plus, I think no
more tomahawks for you. Five one, three, seven, four, nine
fifty five, one hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three.
Talk go with pound five fifty on eight and t phones.
If you like love to hear from you. Maybe there's
something you want to talk about other than yes, since
a plea Chief three. So Thiji has now been placed
(05:11):
on administrative leave. She's going to be doing a press
conference today at ten o'clock with her lawyer. That would
be interesting. So Cheryl Long apparently pulled the trigger on this,
placing her own leave paid administrative leave, of course, pending
an internal investigation on the effectiveness of her leadership.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
The city continues to Here's what she said. The city
continues to face serious public safety challenges that underscore the
need for stability at the command level. Therefore, I have
named Assistant Chief Adam Henny as the innim police chief.
Our focus remains on maintaining stability within the department and
(06:04):
ensuring the highest standards of service to our residents. Huh, hey, Joe,
isn't she part of the AFTAB Parvol administration? Aren't they
uniform in messaging? Isn't the Pervoll administration at least up
until the moment in time ago of the mind that
we do not have anything by way of a public
safety challenge going on in downtown Okay. I thought I
(06:27):
would recall it that way. Also recalled coming to the
conclusion based upon some informed people that are in the know,
notably FOP President Ken Kobra among others, read it and
local reporting that pretty much Chief Fiji was just following
directors of AFTAB Parvall and presumably the city manager who
hired him and had the control to have the ability
(06:50):
to fire him, just following their directors in so far
as maybe de rethinking the police department getting some non officers,
getting some funding allocated over there to the non officer folks,
the mediators, the negotiators, whatever the hell those things those
people are called. They don't have the ability to arrest
or engage in law enforcement activities. They're there to de escalate.
(07:12):
I suppose, well, when you take part of the city
police officers funding and you give it to those people,
I don't know that that's the right way to go,
but that's the directive from the AFTAB provol administration, and
everybody's just following along with what he was saying. You
sort of campaigned on the whole rethink defund the police
thing rose to power during the height of that nonsense
(07:33):
going on in the world. So I don't know how
you blame Fiji for following the will of the mayor.
Maybe the internal investigation will reveal something concerning the effectiveness
of her leadership. Excuse me, maybe a more effective leader
would have said, Hey, I'm the law enforcement here, a
(07:55):
person here. I'm the one with thirty five plus years
experience on the street and in administrative capacities with the
Cincinnati Police Department. I know a hell of a lot
more about law enforcement than you do, Mayor Aftab. Per
of all, I know you hired me to do this job.
Once you leave me alone and let me do law
enforcement the way I think law enforcement should be done.
And if you got a problem with it, then you
(08:15):
can relieve me in my command, put me on paid
administrator to leave, and launch an internal investigation about the
effectiveness of my leadership. But basically, you're launching an internal
investigation about the effectiveness of my leadership, which really your
leadership because you told me what to do. That's kind
of the way I see it as it's been well
explained to me. And does Chief Heny have the experience
(08:40):
necessary to run the police department? Again, that's why we
got Ken Kober coming up. He was promoted to assistant
chief earlier this month. He's been in the role of
assistant chief for two years or for two weeks, although
he has worked for the police department they say for
twenty six years. He apparently was in charge of patrols
for the Central Business Section, Down and Mount Adams. One
(09:01):
of the deputy commanders of the Civil Disturbance Response Team
that was created in twenty sixteen in the wake of
the Michael Brown's death in Ferguson, Missouri. Civil Deturbinance Response Team.
So Steve m the Finny Law Firm lawyer that's representing
(09:23):
TG again press conference at ten, get your popcorn out
for that one, and does anybody think she's going to
remain in that role? Is she going to ever come
back to that role? Or will the City of Cincinnati
be writing a big fat check much in the same
way they'll be writing a big fat check to the
former fire chief who was wrongfully terminated, as it's already
been determined. He's just waiting around to figure out how
(09:44):
much money he's going to get for his wrongful termination.
Nice administration. We got an election coming up. Did I
mentioned that of late get out and vote? Please choose
a different path? Five fifteen right now for you. Five
KCIT the talk station love to hear from you. Please
give me a call five one three, seven four nine
fifty five hundred eight hundred eighty two to three talk
pound five fifty on AT and T phones. Be right back.
Speaker 4 (10:06):
This is fifty five krc an iHeart rates six degrees
right now.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
If you give about KRCD talks day Patty Tuesday, I
feel free to call five one three seven fifty five
hundred eight hundred eighty two three talk or go with
pound five fifty on AT and T phones. Hey, look,
government still shut down. That was number eleven vote yesterday
(10:31):
and an effort to pass the continuing Resolution and leaving
everything in place. It's last year's funding level. We all
know the story. We all know what's going on behind
this question is what are the Democrats waiting for. Some
were suggesting was the No King's Rally, which I don't know.
Maybe it's the website that I'm consulting when I'm looking
in preparation looking for stories in preparation for the morning show,
(10:53):
widely ridiculed those No Kings rallies. I mean, everybody his
brother's pointing out, well, dude, if we had a King,
that rally wouldn't have taken place, along with a whole
bunch of other things. We have a duly elected president,
like him or not. I know, we have lived through
some periods of time where, for example, maybe some of
the members of my listening audience were not happy about
the president that was elected. And you're looking around going,
how could the American people have done this to us?
Speaker 3 (11:16):
Right?
Speaker 1 (11:16):
The American people did it. How could the residents of
the city of Cincinnati re elect mayor have to have prowall?
Some of us might ask after the election in November,
if that in fact happens anyway, you get the idea
it was our decision making. We the people. You don't
elect kings. What's that line from money Python? No system
(11:44):
of government throwing throwing swords from water, retard throwing swords
from a lake at somebody, right, but widely ridiculed they were,
So they're over. Did anything? Was anything accomplished? I guess
the answers from my standpoints Perrely, No, I don't even
know what they were yelling and screaming about. But that's over,
(12:07):
the government's still shut down, So that wasn't the defining moment.
What is I'm thinking it's the Democrats waiting for real pain.
They're looking to get a sizable number of people who
are going to wake up and realize that, oh my god,
look what they did to me. They the government did
to me. Now, these Enhanced Affordable Care Act premiums are
set to expire December thirty. First, we know the root
cause of the shutdown. This is what they are arguing about.
(12:28):
The sole singular issue that were shut down over is
the extension of Obama of the Obamacare subsidies that showed
up during COVID. COVID worst was the predicate for waiving
the income cap. COVID COVID, COVID, COVID, COVID. But at
the time they waved it. At the time all of
these new American people signed up for Obamacare because of
(12:49):
the enhanced premium subsidies, they knew or were in a
position to know that come December thirty first of twenty
twenty five, you were no longer going to get a
premium subsidy if you made north of sixty eight hundred
dollars or something in that general area four hundred percent
of poverty. Did anyone tell you ahead of time that
that was going to happen. Look, you know, you're not
(13:09):
gonna have to pay a premium, but this is only
going to last until December thirty first of twenty twenty five,
because that's why the Democrats wrote the bill, So don't
rely on it. Recognize that your premium is going to increase.
You're no longer going to get a government handout. The
American taxpayer is not going to be helping with your
medical insurance after that period of time because you make
too much. I guess they didn't have that discussion. So
(13:32):
as we fast approach open enrollment, people are then going
to realize, oh my god, my premiums going up, some
say double, although there's some arguments out there that it's
not necessarily going to double. But you all know it's
going to go up because you aren't getting a handout
from the American taxpayer anymore. So there's pain associated with
that moment in time when the people who should have
(13:52):
known ahead of time that these supplements weren't going to
be around past the end of the year, when they realize,
oh my god, doing the math on this for next
year's meta insurance, I got a lot of money I'm
gonna have to pay, I guess, so, welcome to government healthcare.
(14:13):
It will become even more apparent to everyday Americans why
we need to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits,
because by that point November first, tens of millions of
people across the country will realize that their health insurance premiums, copays,
deductibles have skyrocket to be on what's affordable because of
Republican inaction. That asks according to Hakien Jeffreys, that was
(14:34):
his quote, and that's the point. But it wasn't because
of Republican inaction. It was because of Democrat action, notably
even creating Obamacare in the first place, but then waiving
the insurance premiums to make it all palatable for people,
which was a lie. The premiums didn't go away, it
would just offload the American taxpayer, increasing our deficit. Point
(15:01):
number two. I saw this over at zero hedge. Think
about It's one of those think about it kind of things.
Will it happen, don't know, keep your popcorn out and
finding out. But the government spends one hundred billion dollars
annually on the food stamp program SNAP. This year, about
(15:22):
forty two million people tap into SNAP benefits. That's twelve
percent of the American population. Now, the last government shutdown
that lasted thirty five days, the twenty eighteen nineteen shutdown,
foodstams continued to remain available. But here's the point they
were making over the Tyler Durton over at zero hedge.
So a number of economists are warning that SNAP has
(15:44):
a contingency fund of about six billion dollars. November benefits
expected to total around eight billion dollars. They say the
USDA utdown Plan note of the funding is available in
the event of a lapse, but if the current conditions
hold i e. The shutdown, SNAP would ostensibly run out
(16:07):
of cash in early November, so recognizing the level of
anger and hostility the Democrats sort of display on a
daily basis, the docsing, the anger, the vile statements, the
well outright violence. If you cut off the SNAP program,
(16:32):
twelve percent of Americans aren't going to get anything from
the SNAP benefits. Do you see a recipe for some
sort of riot situation here? Potentially, maybe that's what they're
waiting for, the beginning of the class warfare riot. I'm
just going to use that as an opportunity to say, geez, Louise,
let me kiss my mom and thank my dad my
(16:55):
in heaven for the gift of education, the freedom from
government control over my life. It's one of the things
I've always to think about. Pharmaceuticals. You know, if you
were on a pharmaceutical and you needed it to live,
you are essentially beholding to a pharmaceutical company. I can't
live without that company's existence. Now, thank the company for
(17:18):
creating the pharmaceutical that allows you to stay alive. What
would we do without pharmaceutical manufacturers? But if you have
to rely on this dysfunctional government, take the most hardcore leftists,
they hate the way the federal government working. It's dysfunctional.
Evil Orange Man's ruining in the world for everybody. Oh
my god, we're all gonna die. Right, that's the dysfunctional
(17:39):
government that you are relying on. Go over to the
other side of the political ledger. You want to rely
on this dysfunctional government to eat scary five twenty six
City five kre CEE Detalk station. Feel free to call
me right back after these.
Speaker 5 (17:55):
Words fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
You're one stop for AUTA.
Speaker 6 (17:59):
Fifty five care City Talk Stations five thirty on a
Tuesday and Happy one day five one, three, two three
talk fifty on AT and T phones.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Let us go to the phones as is tradition, Tom,
thanks for calling this morning. Always look forward to hearing
from you man.
Speaker 7 (18:15):
Good morning. How you doing.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Ah? Pretty good for a Tuesday.
Speaker 7 (18:19):
Yeah, not bad for tuesday. Uh. Driving past these exits
here on seventy five north of town, make sure everybody's
aware that between Cincinnati Dayton Road and Tylersville there is
an eighty cent difference eighty gas price is on the
sign eighty cent and like a mile mile and a half.
(18:40):
That's crazy. So the one on Cincinnati Dayton Road is uh.
Clearly see two point thirty nine on the sign. I
rewarded them yesterday for being so bold, and I filled
up my gas tank on my way home from work yesterday.
So keep keep up the good work whoever is keeping
that gas price down. But well, next difference is insane.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
Nationally speaking, gas prices have fallen below three dollars per
gown for the first time in four years. And uh
and I just checked in my neighborhood gas running about
two seventy five to seventy six uh to here the
search by zip code. It was going to get downtown Cincinnati.
Speaker 7 (19:22):
That's that one. That one gas station on UH on
Liberty is that the one you're looking for?
Speaker 1 (19:26):
You you got it at three to nine on East Liberty,
which means the gas station on Camargo is probably at
five to eighty a gallon.
Speaker 7 (19:34):
Right, Well, the one at Tylersville on the sign is
says three to nineteen, and then the one at at
since A Dad Roads two thirty nine. Well, so it's
just yeah, it's crazy. So the other thing is, do
you can we use the words scapegoat for U for
uh Theresa Fiji? Do you think you think she's being
used as a Oh? Look, we're doing something. And do
(19:57):
you think that investigation is going to be done before
the election?
Speaker 1 (20:01):
You know, I don't know. I just find it rather
interestingly not the change in attitude from the Provole administration
from about three weeks ago to right now. Apparently three
weeks ago there was no crime in downtown Cincinnati. Now
we're faced with an existential threat of crime.
Speaker 7 (20:16):
Right. Well, let's remember this is not a change in attitude.
This is a change in the facade that they are
putting out for everyone to see. So there, Yeah, their
attitude hasn't changed at all. So that's why, that's why
we need to get rid of those people, get them,
get them out of there. And the lastly, the shutdown.
It is time that there's some pain that's going to
(20:38):
be felt. In order to fix this, we all of
us are going to have to endure some pain. And unfortunately,
when it comes to the government giving money away to people,
that's one of the first areas that's going to get hit.
And taxpayers do not need to be funding all kinds
of things, and so it's it's gonna hurt. We just
kind of what do you what's your favorite one of
(21:01):
your favorite slogans gird your lawins, get ready. If this
is gonna get fixed, it's going to hurt, There's no
doubt about it. And we got to have people in
there who got the stones to be able to make
those decisions. And yes we can. We got to point
out who who made all this happen, Who's the one
who brought Obamacare to be in the first place, and
(21:21):
and all that, and and everything, all the ways these
laws are written. But it's it's up to people to
have the spine to withstand it politically in order to
deal with it and at least try to get this
thing going in the right direction. And that that's not
a Democrat. The democrat is not if they want to
give everything away and put us farther and farther and
(21:43):
farther in debt. So we'll vote Rhino.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
Go ahead, Bryan, I just was I mean, and I'm
just this whirlwind of the of thoughts going through my
mind right now. My mind is a raging torrent, you know,
of all the opportunity, all the things that we threw
in the hands of government. Oh my god, we got
this big problem. Government should fix it. Government should fix it,
and we end up putting more control over our lives
(22:07):
in the hands of government because we have this you know,
alleged problem we perceive, and we keep turning it over
to the people who have let us down time after
time after time after time. You know, big government programs
equal fraud, waste, and abuse. They equal deficit and the
obligation to pay debt service. We keep digging ourselves at
a bigger and bigger hole. In the retort from the Democrats,
(22:28):
we need more government in our lives. No, we don't.
You guys are screwing it up.
Speaker 7 (22:33):
Everything costs more money when the government gets involved. The
exact same building, the exact same group of people, all
costs more money when the government's involved. Because everybody thinks
the government has a bottomless pit of money, and they don't.
That is your money that they are taking. And just
because it's a lot of money doesn't mean it's bottomless.
(22:56):
There's got to be an end to it at some point,
and we're gonna have to feel some pain to get
to that end. So don't vote Rhino and don't vote Democrat.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
Have a great date, Thanks, Tom, You do the same
five point thirty five Jordan, hang on, Brother'll take your
call right out of the Gate five and three seven
hundred eight hundred d two three Talk. Stick around.
Speaker 8 (23:13):
This is fifty five KRC, the talk station.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
Five thirty nine on a Tuesday. Always enjoy hearing for folks.
I'm gonna take Jordan's call. You can call to five
and three seven fifty five hundred eight hundred y two three
Talk or we'll dive into the stack. Is stupid. But first, Jordan,
thanks for holding over the break. Welcome to the program.
Speaker 4 (23:33):
Hey, good morning brother. I just want to call in
and say, Man, it was good meeting you at the
listener lunch and I just had a few things to
said about Chief stiegy Man. I cannot believe that you know,
not that I was a fan of Chief DD that
she's getting fired. And I'm gonna use Corey Boma's term
because trickle down the competition. She became escape goat listening
(23:53):
to avtab yes, sir alone, and I think that it's
gonna it's going to backfire, and I'm like crazy, and
I want to end with saying flip the natty and
I'm going to listen from here.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
Thank you, Jordan. I appreciated great great meeting you as well. Yeah,
I want to believe that, Jordan, because it's the common
sense thing to do. I mean, this, the crime issue
alone is enough to want to flip the Natty, but
it's not the only problem. Look at the roads, the infrastructure,
the prioritization from this administration. I mean, the guy's all
(24:25):
about green projects for God's sake, as if the city
of Cincinnati has some impact on the globe's climate. That
I mean, listen, I don't live in the city, and
you know my politics. That right there alone would be
enough to disqualify somebody from office. We've got much broader problems,
and you know, the lives of these residents of the
(24:47):
city have been implicated, and here are are impacted rather
daily with crime. The administration's foisting its concept of what
it perceives to be the best path, the best path
for development, a one science fits all approach. Boom. Collected
community sucks to be you. You're gonna have to deal
with it. But we here in Hyde Park, or we
(25:09):
here in bond Hill, we would like, Nah, you don't
get a say in the matter. I mean, what the audacity, No,
there's no crime going on in Downtownson saying it's just
your imagination over and over and over again up until
like five seconds ago. And now please, Chief Diji's being
hung out to dry because well, we apparently have a
(25:33):
crime problem in the city of Cincinnati. Huh, what's changed?
Maybe they have some internal appolling data going out there
suggesting perhaps that, like Jordan, it's about time to flip
the Natty. Please please can't we try it? Is it
(25:57):
so bad to vote for a charter right or an
dependent I'm thinking of good and the Smithmen right, And
then there's some Republicans they have some good ideas. Liz
Keating is no reactionary. I mean, if you had to
draw a spectrum within the Republican Party like liberal Republican
all the way over to real hardcore reactionary Republican, I'd
say she probably falls somewhere in the middle. So it's
(26:22):
not exactly like you're voting for some hardcore Trumper when
you're voting for Liz. But she's a hell of a
lot better choice than some of these other left wingers.
They're just going to go down the same path. This
is a mayor that hired and contracted and pays for,
you know, I outside contractor Iris Rawley. What is she
(26:42):
doing well? Apparently impacting choices involving policing. We all know
what her attitude is. She's effectively part of the administration.
That's what you want to continue with. And remember, with
only one out of four people voting, your voice has
so much or your vote has so much power compared
to other elections. You know, I'm just praying for that.
(27:05):
I'm praying for it, Jordan, I'm praying for it. But
trust me, my expectations are thoroughly managed. I'm used to
being disappointed. Go to the stack and stupid, or you
can call it rather hear calls, but let's stack of stupid.
We go to the Travers County Travis County, Texas, specifically
(27:29):
jail officials they're monitoring and inmates phone calls on what
they describe as an unrelated incident. When the man told
a relative that quote, a corrections officer had provided him
with chicken wings after he sent the officer money on
cash app Yeah, I know. The inmates specifically said the
officer agreed to supply him with habbannierro mango chicken wings
(27:49):
from Wingstop in return for fifty bucks. Subsequent reveal the
JA surveillance videos showed the food delivery arriving the Transcrafis
County Correctional Complex. After the paper bag run through an
X ray scanner. Amos Nanway picked up the bag, ate
some of the wings himself. Nanway hired just last year,
(28:12):
then takes several chicken wings from the bag, puts them
in a paper town, then hands them to an inmate,
and the inmate walked away with the chicken wings and
ate them. Court filingly do not identify the inmate or
wine officer with a jail security thread intelligence and it
was monitoring his calls. Investigators have obtained the search warrant
for cash app and they tend to well the extent
(28:32):
of Nanway's involvement in bringing contraband into the jail. Nayanway
busted for a misdemeanor contraband charge, citing Texas Penal Code
thirty eight point one four. If you want to look
it up, chicken wings are not provided or authorized to
be provided to inmates, according to the charge. Doesn't it
(28:58):
suck to be incarcerated? Yeah, but you have cares the
talk station more stupid coming up. Phone calls are welcome.
I'll be right back.
Speaker 5 (29:05):
Fifty five KARC.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
It's five forty nine on a Tuesday. Thomas sitting in
front of a stack is stupid. I'm in front of
a phone as well. Feel free to call if you
had a care to comment on something going on coming
away have FAP, President can cover set police Chief DJ's
on leave. I didn't see that one coming today. I'm
looking forward to the press conference and then anyway. Drunk
(29:34):
and angry that a neighbor parked near her yard, forty
eight year old Marshall Morgan covered the car with toilet paper.
According police, While doing so, Morgan was dressed in a
hot dog costume. Happened at four pm. What Florida woman
busted Monday afternoon after being charged with disorderly conduct or
(29:55):
resisting arrest. Please note of the Morgan was, in their words, intoxic, catered,
and refused to cooperate with the investigation. Amenjo pleaded no
contest and misdemeanor counts adjudged guilty of the charges. Find
five hundred and fifty dollars place. Court records do not
offer any explanation of why Morgan was dressed as a
(30:16):
hot dog during the toilet paper incident. Why are you
doing that? We'll never know how many licks does it
take to get to the Tutsi roll center of Tutsi
Pop What the world may never know. Let's see here
unmatched potency of a dairy queen Blizzard on display again
this week when the frozen delicacy helped end an armed
(30:39):
stand off between Washington police and an arson suspect. Corner investigators.
Forty year old Elijah Reagan set fire to his apartment
by using a mortar to shoot a firework into the ceiling,
resulting fire damaged eight apartments and resulting in the evacuation
of dozens of residents. In detailed in court records, Reagan's
(31:02):
a strange wife told police that he had called her
to say, quote, I bombed my apartment and that bad
people were after him. Reagan, who was smoking meth amphetamine
at the time, led police on a high speed chase
in his twenty twelve Kia Sedona, was disabled by a
spike strip. He had a shotgun, bottle, rockets, fire logs,
(31:26):
and lighter fluid in his vehicle. Not yet an arm
standoff followed. See there's more to the story, with police
seeking to arrange Reagan's surrender his Blizzard remain or his
blizzard demand rather emerged in the negotiations, mister Reagan requested
a meal from Dairy Queen as a condition to surrender.
(31:50):
Cops bought a blizzard and a hamburger from Darey Queen
brought the food to the scene. The food delivered to
Reagan's car via a tactical robot. Hours after the fire started. Reagan,
whose auto had been boxed in by armored vehicles, surrendered.
He was booked into the jail and felony arson and
eluding charges, being held in a two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars bond. Court records do not identify what flavor
(32:14):
blizzard law enforcement provided him.
Speaker 8 (32:17):
The aricocrat.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
Gainedville, Florida puttnam kind of shaffs. Deputy's arrested the manner
for they say he threatened his neighbor with a knife.
Arrested Minor Catildge sixty one charge evagrator Assaul Wutsa. Cattildge
confronted his neighbor when she was walking her dog on
a public road adjacent to his property. According to the victim,
(32:48):
Cattlidge claimed the public path was his property and threatened
to eat her dog if she trespassed again.
Speaker 9 (32:55):
What the hell.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Deputy spoke with Cattildge about the property dispute, they believing
the incident was resolved, but an hour later, Cattlidge went
into the victim's property and began threatening her and her
family with a knife. While on his way to jail
catlishe told deputies he was going to, in his words,
beat the victim when he got out booked on a
five thousand dollars bond. Let us see here got an
(33:24):
old lady won in court against her neighbor. Now he
can't smoke weed in his own home. Josefa at Bildo Shepherd,
seventy six, Washington d c. Said the feces or skunk
smell coming out of the seventy three year old next
to your resident Tom Crackett's doorway made her well hate
to come home. Said she even once vomited when her neighbor,
(33:47):
who lives on the ground level of the adjoining unit,
fired one up. She said, I wasn't interested in money,
I was interested in getting fresh air in my homes.
Speaking to the lawsuit, After five years of represent herself,
she finally won her case in the DC Court of Appeals.
The lower court judge had ruled even her favor back
in twenty twenty three, but the well the Stone or neighbor,
(34:08):
mister Kakitt, appealed higher court ended up siding with Hippolito Shepherd,
saying her use and enjoyment of her own property was
more important than Kackett's use and enjoyment. It was marijuana,
he tried, arguing that he only smoked once a day
and never for longer than five minutes. Apparently, he said,
to cope with his many health conditions, including skin cancer,
(34:31):
chronic hepatitis, arthritis, and sciatica. I'm not who can argue
with that. I'm not snoop dog, he said in court.
What the panel, however, said, have found doubtful. The Cacketts
smoke for just a couple of minutes a day. He's
now banned from smoking within twenty five twenty five feet
of her home, including on his own property. A violation
(34:53):
can result in civil or criminal penalties for him. Marijuana
apparently has been legal in Washington since twenty fe fifteen.
This is a precedent setting case five fifty five fifty
five krsee the talk station More coming up, got like
talkstation at six A sixth Here a fifty five garas
Ay Talk Station Fine Commas wishing everyone a very happy
(35:15):
Tuesday and inviting you to stick around all morning, and
of course inviting you to call if you'd like to
love hearing from the listeners. Five one, three, seven, four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight two three talk
with Pound five fifty on eighteen t phones. Remember fifty
five krs dot com. You try Heart Media appstream the material,
the blog page, all the content anywhere you happy to
be in any of the content Right there, fifty five
kr sea dot com. Listen to the conversation I Hey
(35:39):
with money. Monday's Brian James, the Smith of Vent episode
one hundred and eleven, most important election of our lifetime
in downtown Cincinnati. I think he's right right on that.
And going back to Jordan's call earlier in the program,
time to flip the natty, if you want to call
it that way, I think we need to go in
a different direction, just obviously based upon the issues the
revelation that they've suspended police Chief three Sydiji. I mean,
(36:01):
I don't know that I was ever a huge fan
of Police Chief Dji, but you got to come to
her aid in her defense considering the circumstances that she's
been placed in. So here what Christopher had to say
about that yesterday the tune in at tenek for her
lawyer's address to the public. So Ken Cober on that
very issue, FOP President Ken Cober seven o five, followed
(36:23):
by empower Us Mike McCormick and his book and almost
Insurmountable Evil and the some may call them conspiracy theories
that he outlies in that book. He's going to be
talking about tonight seven pm. Login from home, just go
to empower you America dot organ He'll join the program
at seven thirty to sort of scratch the surface of
the Catholic Church and all these other organizations working with
(36:44):
the Biden administration for again the various purposes. Insurmountable Evil
eight o five. Fast forward a couple of hours inside
Scoop with Bright Bardon is immigration reporter John Bender's got
some good information to pass along the success of the
Trump administration and looking down on the well overwhelming number
of criminal illegal aliens that have come into our country. Man,
(37:07):
you look at the records of some of the ones
who were most recently incarcerated or picked up by ICE agents.
You got to scratch your head and wonder what the
hell is wrong with the left wingers in this country
that they don't want these people arrested. Scary stuff. Daniel
Davis deep dive. We'll talk about the Middle East peace
that seems to have disappeared. And I was joking earlier,
you can't call it a cease fire if the two
(37:29):
parties to the ceasefire agreement are shooting at each other.
I wanted to be optimistic about that. But when Hamas
starts killing its own Palestinian people and then starts shooting
at Israel, Israel's going to go back and start shooting
at the Hamas people. It's a natural reaction. So Daniel
Davis on that, plus we'll get an update from him
on Russia and Ukraine as he perceives where things stand.
(37:51):
Five one three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight
hundred eight two three top pound five fifty on at
and T phones. Yeah, Plae chief three FIGI out apparently
the minute stration purvol and city manager long now acknowledging
that we do have a crime problem in downtown Cincinnati.
It's almost a comical change in positioning. You know what,
I know it We've been hearing for weeks and weeks
(38:13):
and weeks, if not months, if not the entire purvol administration,
how there is no crime in downtown since say, look,
the crime stats are all much better. You don't believe
your own eyes, believe what we, the elected officials, are
telling you, and then re elect us so we can
continue along our merry ways, which includes, as I mentioned
the last hour, a bunch of Green New Deal type
programs that don't help anybody accomplish anything, but do divert
(38:34):
resources scarce as they are away from getting your roads
paved and away from maybe hiring more police officers to
achieving a oh, I don't know, carbon neutral skate park
or something. Give it a rest, aftab. You're not going
to change the world from the city of Cincinnati. Our
(38:56):
entire nation can't even change the carbon the amount of
carbon in the world anyway. Accord to the statement from
City Manager A Long, the city continues to face serious
public safety challenges. Well, that's an admission. Challenges that underscore
the need for stability at the command level. You know,
(39:18):
I read into that maybe the mayoral level, we can
change the word stability for the word change, which is
apparently what Police Chief Dji is facing the change at
the command level, meaning she's going to be ousted probably today,
and someone's going to take her position. Maybe Chief Henny,
(39:40):
who's the interim chief right now. I don't know. Maybe
parvol and Long will just pick somebody else random, maybe
a little point to Iris Rawley to be chief of police. Hey, Joe,
do you think that would work? That would be awesome.
You'd go to it from an understaffed contingent of almost
(40:03):
nine hundred police officers to an understaffed contingent of maybe
four police officers patrolling the entire city of Cincinnati at
that moment in time. Anyway, I have to have Purvoll
express full confidence in Chief Henny and the department's command
staff to continue their dedicated work at this time. That's
what he had to say about it. What an amazing revelation.
Though at least he's acknowledging we have a crime problem.
(40:27):
But as police Chief, Teresa thigi to blame for it,
an internal investigation on the effectiveness of her leadership. I
don't know if that means internal affairs is going to
look into it. I doubt that. I think maybe someone
from the Purvole administration will be doing that maybe little
point Iris Rawley. She seems to know a whole lot
of policing. But as I understand it, I on go
(40:49):
through with Win again last hour, and I'm probably gonna
go out with Ken Cober. She was doing what purvol
and long told her to do, right, I mean, just
play the old footage Pearl and what he campaigned on.
You rethinking the police department, imagining the police department more
so called. I don't know what those community officers are called.
They're not even officers. They're consultants, they're mediators, they're facilitators,
(41:13):
I don't know, but they're not police officers. And how
much money do we throw at those people to patrol
around and sort of de escalate situations nonviolent deescalation. Now,
maybe we need more police police presence alone, uniform police
officers with firearms and tasers walking around a given community
provide a sense of safety and comfort, unless, of course,
(41:35):
you're an insane person who looks at a police officer
immediately balls up into a fetal position because oh, I
don't know, police officer bad or something. That person's there
to protect you and those in your community. Why don't
you embrace the concept They're not bad evil people. You've
been sold a bill of goods. Are some peace police
officers bad evil people? Yep? Take out the words police
(41:56):
officers and put any other profession in there. Fill in
the black judges, evil, bad people, lawyers, doctors. Yes, always
across the board, stating the obvious. A certain segment of
society is always bad and evil. Does that make all
the other members under the same quality heading, by way
of employment, or anything else, all bad? No, all police
(42:19):
officers are not racist. Let's get over that narrative. Were
there periods of times where we had problems in this world? Absolutely?
Have we moved beyond that. Have laws been put in place,
have new precedents been set, have new protocols been put
in place? Yes? What we need is some stability in
(42:40):
the community, stability that can be brought about by proper policing.
It's frustrating for me, really is. But we do have
an opportunity in this mess to maybe come out the
other side in a different place, maybe with a different
administration or different choices, different prior authorities. You know what,
(43:03):
I just want to wake up one day. It seems
like a simple ask I don't live in the city
knowledge that, but I do drive around in the city,
and I do, you know, go and to participate in
activities in the city. And my one big ass that
I come into the fifty five Carosite Morning show someday
(43:23):
and there it is an article from the Inquirer Fox
nineteen or CPO or WLW that says something along the
lines of the Sunset resurfacing project is complete. It's that
too much to ask if you've never been on Sunset.
(43:44):
I'm not going to encourage you to go drive on
it because you're going to need an alignment. Six fifteen
fifty five car cit the Dog Station, and I'm sure
you have your own illustration of a road that has
been neglected for the past decade or so, and you
just kind of scratch your head and wonder where are
the priorities in the city. Since seat Station three two
(44:05):
three talks, Judy hold On Ken is first by just
a few seconds. Ken, thanks for calling this morning. Welcome
to the show.
Speaker 8 (44:12):
Sorry, Brian, I love the show.
Speaker 1 (44:13):
Oh thank you. Man.
Speaker 8 (44:14):
Question that's okay. The question for you is this puzzling?
Is I listened to advertisements from Rollman in this cover Cincinnati.
And also the people who do the medical imaging.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
I can't remember them Affordablemadimaging dot com perfect.
Speaker 8 (44:33):
Now I have no expertise, but I just have a question.
Why is no one within the Republican Party offering this
is a counter to this Obamacare which is at the
heart so they say of this shutdown, which I'm not
sure is. I just don't see any Yeah.
Speaker 1 (44:49):
I don't understand that, John, And you know, I do
a show with John Roman of Cover Since You on
Sunday and we dive into the details of what he
does every day. And it really is I mean, you
think about discussing insurance and be bored, but I find
it very fascinating. But he is doing something that shouldn't
be really unique. He's just a broker. He's working for you.
He realizes that there are all these medical insurance companies
(45:11):
out there and they have different ways of writing medical coverage,
and he explains it in detail. There are choices out there,
and nobody seems to realize that. It's like you know,
for I was the same way for years and years
when my employer would offer, oh my god, I've got
benefits through my employer. Here are your choices. You got
an HMO, you got a PPO, and you got something else.
They're all coming from one company like Anthem or something,
(45:34):
But that ignores the fact that there are hundreds of
other companies that also offer medical insurance differently, so you
can get these layered coverages. Maybe your initial coverage with
the out of the the dealing with the out of
pocket expenses is one company. Maybe you have another larger
catastrophic policy comes from another company. So it just depends
on you know, what medical treatment you're getting, which policy
(45:57):
you would you would tap in for coverage. So yeah,
it exists as a concept, just so few people know
about it. Most insurance agents are an agent of a company.
So if you go to a state farm office, they're
going to sell you a state farm policy, you're going
to cover sensity. They're going to sell you one of
a multitude of potential policies depending on your circumstances, and
(46:19):
their formula may include an Obamacare plan at the core,
but then you'll have like ten thousand dollars of out
of pocket liability. What do you do about that? Well,
they've got other coverages that layer in front of that
which help you avoid those those out of pocket expenses,
so it can be done and it can be more affordable.
You just got to ask the question of someone who's
(46:40):
competent like John on the team of Cover Sinsey and
has turned into a long winded way. But yeah, some
politician could use his commercials in his business method as
a counter to the narrative that this one size fits
all miracle that is Obamacare doesn't and isn't so right.
It's just yeah, like in going over the medical imaging,
(47:01):
you don't have to go to the imaging department. People
doesn't realize that. Are you telling me there's a freestanding
clinic out there that the CT scans, MRIs and X
rays and ultrasounds. Yes, I didn't know they existed until
I met Cover Sinceing and got a bunch of imaging
done there for a fraction of what I would have
paid the hospital. So you know, you've got to know
(47:22):
before you can exercise this these options that exist. Most
people don't know, including I've made this point a million times.
Our elected officials in whose hands we place the keys
to our lives and our decision making, which is always
a big mistake. Judy, thanks for calling this morning. Welcome
to the Morning Show.
Speaker 9 (47:42):
Good Morning. I remember when Carrie Lake was way ahead
in the polls years ago and the Democrat won, and
we found out later it was the dominion machines that
were crooked shortly after Lrose got the dominion machines here
in Ohio. So how safe is our vote? And I'll
(48:05):
hang up and let you answer.
Speaker 1 (48:07):
Well, I never really was one of the people who
was convinced that dominion was at the root of all
evil insofar as our election is county is concerned. And
there was an update about dominion. I think they're not
being used anymore. I've just been eradicated as an option.
I'm not well versed in it right now. And I
was always, like everything, a little reluctant to come to
(48:30):
some conclusion because I don't know. This is why I
always wait for the details to surface and could come out.
Has anyone definitively proven that the dominion voting system actually
changed votes? Has that ever been proven in a court
of law? Have they ever been sued successfully because they
(48:51):
well impacted and undermined the American people in the election.
I don't know if that's ever happened. So, and I
didn't do the research anything about computer programming. I know
very little about Dominion itself as a company. I just
haven't seen any finite or definitive resolution or conclusion rather
that that's exactly what happened. So apologize. I can't go
down that road because well, I'm admittedly, I admittedly don't know,
(49:14):
but I do know about Shabri Group, Caloriam Seven Hills.
If you want an ideal real estate agent, whether a
buyer's agent, local stories, phone calls are welcome, but in
as far as the last caller is concerned, I thought
I recalled Dominion got bought out. That's one of the
most recent developments. Scott Liandecker announced he was buying Dominion
voting systems fairly recently said you know, as today Dominion
(49:35):
is gone blah blah blah blah blah, you know, restoring
faith and dominion. But the broader point, the bigger point is,
as I mentioned, I'm not aware of any lawsuit or
proof that Dominion, you know, messed with the vote, otherwise
didn't count correctly or interfered with uh. In fact, apparently
they didn't because Fox News got sued by Dominion for
reporting on those claims of fraud in the twenty twenty
(49:58):
presidential election ended up paying seven hundred and eighty seven
and a half million dollars seven hundred and eighty seven million,
five hundred thousand dollars to settle. So Dominion made a
lot of money because of Fox News suggesting that well
they were guilty of fraud in the twenty twenty presidential race.
Now ask yourself this question, if it really did happen,
(50:23):
why would Fox News write a check? If they had
information supporting their on air claims of fraud, why wouldn't
they have submitted it to court, gone through discovery process,
defended themselves. They wrote a sizable check, and I'm sure
Fox News could afford a check for seven hundred and
eighty seven and a half million dollars. But if I
(50:43):
was in that position from a corporate standpoint, and I
could prove my case, I'd have gone to court and
proved it. Five one, three, seven nine fifty eight hundred
y two to three. Talk got a man acused of
shooting and injuring two people last Monday at Fountain Square,
also linked to another shooting that happened a couple of
days early earlier. According to the Hamilton County Prosecutor David Hickenlooper.
Shaquille Ferguson, twenty four years old, now charged with two
(51:06):
counts of felonious assault, having weapons under disability and improperly
discharging a firearm also involved in his shooting that happened
on Spring Grove Avenue on October eleventh. Ferguson in front
of the court for arraiement yesterday after he turned himself in.
Police released the surveillance village of a video last week
showing two people walking away from the City Bird Restaurant.
(51:30):
Person with his face blurd turns around first points of
points and then a man in a white shirt believed
to be Ferguson, turns around, pulls out a gun and
starts shooting. Sixteen year old boy and a nineteen year
old man were injured in that one. Prosecutor said at
that time that he was already on probation for prior
Flonius assault conviction from earlier this year after prosecutor's alleged
that he pistol whipped somebody outside of a metro bus.
(51:52):
Prosecutors also claimed Ferguson fired at a man two days
prior to the shooting outside of the City bird location
of Fountain Square. Shell casings from both shootings match up
according to the National Integrated Ballistics Information Network. That's why
prosecutors requested a high bond. Hi it was, Judge said
Ferguson's bond and the Fountain Square shooting at two point
one million dollars and the Spring Grove shooting netted him
(52:17):
a five hundred thousand dollars bond, so two point six
million dollars total bond. Judge Jinochio, hmm, there are some
judges that do set high bonds. This is actually say
what you want. I consider this to be a kind
of comical. Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones apparently making hundreds
(52:39):
of millions of dollars because they're housing illegal immigrants in
the Butler County lock up. Over the past twenty years,
the county collected more than two hundred million dollars sheriff.
Sheriff Jones quoted as saying to Fox nineteen, that's a
lot of freaking money, amen, brother, he's raising the Rady
(53:00):
charging US Customs Enforcement Ray ICE will now be paying
one hundred and five dollars per prisoner per day, up
from the current sixty eight dollars in the first eight
months alone this year, sheriff said his office has built
the US government nearly nine million dollars. By the end
of the year, the figure projected to be twelve million dollars.
That's six more than originally projected, and we'll spell to
(53:23):
twenty two million dollars in total next year, according to
the sheriff. He said, about fourteen hundred illegal aliens have
been deported from my jail out of about seventeen hundred
that have come through here in just eight months. Most Americans,
he said, agree to fix our borders, and I'm doing
my part. Come here legally or get out simple. It
didn't pullety punches, does he. Hey, Joe, do you know
(53:48):
if we in Hamilton County lock up, assist ice and
hold illegal immigrants for a fee? You don't think we
do so? So Charmeie mcuffey and the Hamilton County Sheriff's
Office is going a different path than the path that
Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones is going down. Sounds like
it's a profitable endeavor. Just saying how many potholes could
(54:14):
be fixed with this money? Joe, you say, well, three
is better than none. Six point thirty five Right now
fifty five kr SE DE talk station. Feel free to
chime in the talk station. It's sixty fifty five krc
DE talk station. Just rather intrigued by Butler kind of
making so much money housing illegal immigrants on behalf of ICE.
(54:36):
They have a contract with him. I was jogging around
with Joe said, does Hamilton County do this? And of course,
of course no, because Welson Sinnat declared itself a sanctuary
city Dayton as well. So you got Butler kind of
right there in the middle of taking up all the
ICE detainees and making heaploads of cash on them. About
three hundred ICE prisoners are held of the DAAL on
(54:57):
any given day, according to Sheriff Jones, that's more than
half of the federal inmates in jails contracted emphasized the
word to detain. Two hundred prisoners from the US Marshals
approximately also house there every day about five hundred local inmates.
Sheriff Jones quoted is saying, well, the federal money pays
for my local prisoners. Not so, says County Commissioner President
(55:20):
Don Dixon. He says, ah, now, whatever's collected any revenue source,
including the prisoner revenue coming from ICE, goes directly to
the general fund balance. Fine, anybody think Hamilton County commissioners
could use an extra ten to fifteen to twenty million
dollars anyway? Accord to the commissioner adiction, that revenue does
(55:42):
not go to the sheriff's budget. The Board of Commissioners,
as it does every year, will identify the highest priorities
and apply funding accordingly. That could be economic development, further
reduction of the burden of taxpayers, or any other impact
that benefits the taxpayers. Note the point being, this revenue
benefits the taxpayers, and there's no reason Hamilton County couldn't
be getting a slice of this revenue.
Speaker 5 (56:03):
You know.
Speaker 1 (56:03):
It's kind of like it's like when you've got a
governor of a state, as much as you might not
agree with him or like him, who's offering law enforcement
resources to a county that's struggling with law enforcement problems.
Oh maybe Hamilton County. Perhaps perhaps the City of Cincinnati.
They offer a full month every month of officers to
fill the holes in the gaps in the police force,
(56:23):
but the elected officials say, we'll take two now make
that four days of assistance, we're going to turn our
backs on all the rest of the assistants. So we're
declaring ourselves as sanctuary city. We're not going to house
immigrants in spite of the fact that it might take
a lot of weight off of our budget issues. Hum
(56:48):
elections have consequences. I suppose continuing a general theme here
and Ken Cober, we'll be talking about that at the
top of the art news a stack of news. I mean,
we've got the government shutdown and everybody's pulling their hair out.
No King's rally, Donald Trump, evil orange man. Look at
what's going on out here in the real world. Gas
(57:09):
prices are below three bucks a gallon for the first
time in more than four years.
Speaker 7 (57:13):
Now.
Speaker 1 (57:14):
You got to give OPEC credit for some of this.
They've been raising oil production, but I'll take what I
can get. We're also producing much more here in the
United States of America because we've moved away from this
nonsensic old green new deal crap. Gas Buddy reported the
first dollar ninety nine price at a gas station. Go
to Evans, Colorado to get dollar ninety nine gas. Locally,
(57:35):
you're looking at two seventy five and unless you're on
Camargo at that one gas station where you're going to
be paying four dollars and ninety five cents a gallon
or something. It's three bucks by Joe's house, kind of
the general coal rain area, and out by my house
it's just at right under three. So it's varying a lot.
We heard from Tom this morning. He saw an eighty
cent price difference in just a one mile radius. But
(57:57):
overall it's down that benefits everybody a lot.
Speaker 8 (58:03):
Look.
Speaker 1 (58:03):
Trump and the Australian Prime Minister signed a five eight
point five billion dollar critical minerals deal. Met with Australian
Prime Minister Anthony Albanize and yesterday they signed the Agreement
of Rare Earths and Critical Minerals, obviously in an effort
to well counter China's dominance over the market. Huh. You know,
guess what, hey, Prime Minister, We've got these minerals here
(58:26):
on our own land. Do you have them in Australia, Yes,
we do. Maybe we should join in a concerted effort
to mine our own stuff rather than buying from the
Chinese Communist Party. Hey, don that's an interesting idea.
Speaker 3 (58:39):
I like it.
Speaker 1 (58:40):
Let's sign the agreement Job said yesterday, in about a
year from now, we'll have so much critical mineral and
rare earth that you won't know what to do with them.
And get a load to the point. This part of
the agreement, the two administrations agreed to cut permitting for mines,
(59:02):
processing facilities, and related operations for the purpose of boosting
production of rare earth and critical minerals. Oh, you mean,
permitting regulations are standing in the way, Environmental lawsuits are
standing in a way, A bunch of crazy leftist Green
New Deal folks are standing in the way. By the way,
Green New Deal folks, you need these critical rare earth
(59:22):
minerals well to do anything related to decarbonizing the planet.
Er so trying to produce our reliance on China. So
there's a step in the right direction. Apparently we do
have a lot. Now China's got a lot more. They
produced two hundred and seventy thousand tons of rare earth
at least as the last calendar year, they have forty
(59:45):
four million tons of reserves. By comparison, we produced forty
five thousand tons. We have one point nine million tons
of reserves. Last year Australia produced thirteen thousand tons five
point seven million tons of reserves. So we can do it.
We are doing it, We're just not doing it to scale.
Welcome to yesterday's agreement. Yes, moving forward in the right
direction to counter China, but also let's keep the money
(01:00:09):
here at home. Six forty five right now fifty five
K see the talk station. Get in touch with QC
Kinetics if you're a person living with pain. At the
top of the air, news of course, with police Chief
Diji being suspended, Adam Henny's been named the interim chief
of police. Thank you to my friend John a story
career in law enforcement. John had He said, Adam Henny
was the one who signed the charges against the white
(01:00:30):
guy who got the crap beat out of him in July. Remember,
someone ordered the police to charge him. The officers on
the scene didn't have any reason to charge him, and
yet there was a lieutenant out there. I guess this
is Adam Henny who actually filed the charges at the
behest of the Purvole administration. He's only been an assistant
(01:00:52):
chief for two weeks, so he just recently got promoted.
And this is not a criticism of Henny. He's got
twenty five years of service to the force. But it
just seems like an odd combination of events. He capitulates
to the whims of the administration issuing a citation that
shouldn't have been issued, and then only to be promoted
two weeks a couple of weeks ago to an assistant
(01:01:13):
chief position and now promoted to chief of Police interim
police chief. So we'll see what Ken has to say
about that. What else is going on? I just wanted
to know another triumph for the Trump administration, at least
I perceive it this way. What do we learn from
COVID Right, we rely on China for everything. That was
(01:01:33):
the last article. China supplies with everything. Pharmaceuticals is a
real problem and that is a genuine threat to our
national security. If our military men and women in uniform
have to rely on Chinese pharmaceuticals for their treatment, then
we've got a major problem on our hands. Enter merk
spending a lot of money here in the United States.
(01:01:56):
They announce they're going to start correction a brand construction
of a brand new three billion with a B four
hundred thousand square foot facility in Elkton, Virginia. This is
part of the overall seventy billion dollar manufacturing and research investment.
Excuse me here in the United States of America. State
of the art facility is going to include active pharmaceutical
(01:02:17):
ingredient and drug product investments supporting small molecule manufacturing and testing.
The point is five hundred full time positions, eight thousand
construction jobs that one project alone, and domestic production. Mark
also committed six billion dollars in manufacturing investments North Carolina, Delaware, Kansas,
(01:02:39):
Virginia no reference to WUHAN. Those are expected to create
more than sixteen hundred American jobs one billion dollars. It
is completed construction of a one billion dollars two hundred
and twenty five thousand dollars square foot vaccine production facility
in Durham, North Carolina, yay domestic production. Earlier this year,
(01:03:02):
they broke down on Mark Wilmington Biotech, a one billion dollar,
four hundred and seventy thousand square foot biotech center for
excellence in Wilmington, Delaware. They announced in May eight hundred
and ninety three million dollar expansion of their manufacturing plant
into Soto, Kansas. HUHH Wrathway, New Jersey. Also get in
(01:03:23):
some love three billion dollars in biologics and small molecule
manufacturing sites. Three point five billion dollar upgrade is should
more properly state in Rahway, New Jersey. So at least
someone's woken up to the reality we need to bring
(01:03:43):
manufacturing back into the United States of America. Ah didn't
Donald Trump run on that?
Speaker 8 (01:03:48):
Ah?
Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
Shay you what about evil oarge man? No kings rally.
These are genuine investments billions of dollars into the United States,
and these massive manufacturers facilities aren't going to disappear overnight.
A change of administration is not going to mean Mark's
going to pull the plug on a five hundred thousand
square foot bio logic center in Wilmington, Delaware. So lasting jobs. Certainly,
(01:04:11):
the construction jobs are really wonderful. Unions out there probably
grinning ear to ear over these opportunities. Yes, another illustration
of success. Donald Trump probably not get an ounce of
credit for it, but he deserves it to a large degree.
And then say what you want about the Immigration Enforcement.
(01:04:34):
Department of Homeland Security has now arrested more than four
hundred and eighty thousand illegals in just nine months. And
that adds to the overwhelming numbers of Deportations. Administration has
deported over five hundred and fifteen thousand illegal immigrants since
January of this year. Then they're the ones who voluntarily deported. Reportedly,
(01:04:58):
one point six million folks illegally in this country voluntarily
self deported. So the numbers are adding up. You're looking
right now at over two million illegal aliens who have
left the United States under the Trump administration. Draw your
own conclusions. I kind of view that as a measure
of success, most notably since Trump ran on that and
(01:05:22):
people elected him in part on doing exactly that. Don't
go away. Ken kober Or FLP, president for the Cincinni
Police Departments, joining us after the top of the hour
news followed by Mike McCormick. He's oh my god, this
empower Youth seminar is going to be wild. We'll get
the details about an almost insurmountable evil. That'll be at
seven thirty. I sure hope you can stick around today's
(01:05:42):
stop hid dec I have seven oh six here forty
five car c DE talk stations. Wlacky things going on
in the city of Cincinnati as we fast approached the
Oga Bay November election. Early voting is open if you
want to change the course of the city. Welcome back
to the fifty five CARC Morning Show. President for the
Fraternal Order Police Chapter sixty nine, Ken Kober, representing the
(01:06:04):
Cincinnati City of CINCINNTI Police Officers, Ken, real pleasure as
always to have you on the program.
Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
Hey, good morning, Brian, Thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
And I'm sure you're familiar with Cheryl Long's announcement and
statement yesterday UH putting Police Chief three cy Thigi on
administrative leave paid administrative leave pending an internal investigation on
the effectiveness of her leadership. She said the city continues
to face serious public safety challenges that underscore the need
for stability at the command level. Therefore, I've named Assistant
(01:06:33):
Chief Adam Henny as the interim police chief. Our focus
remains on maintaining stability within the department ensuring the highest
standard of service to our residents. Ken, is this an
acknowledgment by the at parvol administration that we have a
problem with crime in downtown Cincinnati? And why is Police
Chief Fiji being put on administrative leave subject to an
(01:06:54):
investigation into her ability on her job when she as
I understand it and you can correct me and for
my listeners if I'm wrong on this. Wasn't she merely
following the parvol Long directive in terms of how they
view law enforcement, you know, rethinking the police department allocation
and resources, et cetera. So she's being suspended for following
the will of the administration. Now, am I close on that?
Speaker 3 (01:07:18):
Now you're you're You're absolutely right, And that's the problem.
I've said it before. She Fiji absolutely has the ability
to lead this police department, but she's not given that ability.
This goes back to fourth and Elm, you know, and
I said a nauseum that politics need to stay out
of policing. And here we are yet again seeing you
know that exact very thing infiltrating this police department is
(01:07:39):
you know, having them, you know, put her on administrative
lee for simply doing what she's told to do by
city administrators.
Speaker 1 (01:07:47):
Well, your reference to fourth and Elm is, of course
that terrible beatdown situation. And I always like to refer
my listeners to Holly specifically, who is merely rendering aid
to someone who had been beaten up and got cole
cocked in the face, have done absolutely nothing to deserve it.
But that was the day my understanding from I know,
you know John Newsom. He said, Henny the new assistant
(01:08:09):
or well former assistant police chief, Henny who's now interim
police chief, was the one who issued the citation against
the white guy who slapped that black guy in that
fight when the other police department said there was no
grounds for a citation on that is he the one
who actually cave them to the whim of the Parvoll
administration and issued that citation. He was the one that
(01:08:29):
was ordered to do it, ordered to do it correct.
Speaker 3 (01:08:32):
He ordered to do it to protect the two investigators
that were involved because they fought out said I'm not
doing it, and he didn't want them to be put
in a position where they had to stand up to
the administration, so he said, I'll do it for him.
Speaker 1 (01:08:47):
So you're not suggested that he too should have stood
up to the administration since there was no at least
in the hearts and minds of the officers that were
there no justification or grounds to issue a citation.
Speaker 3 (01:08:59):
Yeah, and what we're seeing right now is exactly that,
you know, the chief, my understanding, at some point decided
that she's going to stand up to this administration and
the end result is okay, fine, then we'll replace you.
And you have to understand that this this going on,
that this isn't going to be fixed with a new
person in charge of this police department. As long as
City Hall decides that they are going to control what
(01:09:21):
goes on the police department, this exact same thing's going
to continue. That's that's just the reality of this.
Speaker 1 (01:09:26):
Well, so now I suppose you could say, well, Fiji
deserved to be placed administratedly because she refused to follow
the administration administrations and control of her destiny. They can
fire her. They could fire her if they're not happy
with her leadership role. But she's being let go because
she I thought, worked with the administration, did what they wanted. Now,
(01:09:49):
if Henny, as in current role, goes on his own
and you know, performs law enforcement as chief of police
the way he sees fit in his twenty five years
of experience, and he tells a per of all, no,
I'm doing it my way. This is the way I
believe that resources should be allocated. I mean, that's what
we kind of want from a police chief, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:10:09):
Oh, without a doubt, you know, but this has been ruined.
Issue five has essentially ham strained every police chief from
being able to do that. And that's the problem. Like
I said, until something like that changes, until a police
chief has protections to not be fired because they are
making the best law enforcement decision that they can make,
(01:10:31):
not you know, being dictated by what city Hall tells
them to do. Until that changes, none of it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter who you make the police chief.
Speaker 1 (01:10:40):
Well, what's your reaction to the administration? Per of all,
Cheryl Long acknowledging what we collectively have known has been
a real problem crime. They've been denying it up until
within the seemingly the last five minutes, and now it's like, Wow,
we need to get rid of police chief TG. We've
got a law enforcement problem. We have a safety a
public safety challenge on our hand. That's rather profound, and
(01:11:02):
I mean a couple of weeks away from the election,
isn't it.
Speaker 10 (01:11:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:11:06):
Well, I mean it's no different than you heard the
marror last week when he was asked the question do
you still support or do you still have confidence in
the chief, and he goes, all options are on the table,
everything's on the table. We're not really sure we're gonna
do well, then as this progresses, he goes, Look, this
isn't my decision. This is a city manager's decision. It's
not mine. So, I mean, it doesn't surprise me that
(01:11:26):
there's absolutely no transparency. There's no truth in any of this.
But there's one thing that's for certain. The way the
chief has been treated is wrong. If you were going
to do this, why would you have her fly back
across the country after she just flew out to represent
this police department, and as soon as she lands you
tell her to fly back and then you do nothing
and you just sit on this for days. You know,
(01:11:48):
if they wanted her gone, we can agree to disagree
about that. However, you don't treat somebody this way. That's
the matter at hand. Here is the way that she's
been treated. It's absolutely wrong.
Speaker 1 (01:11:58):
Well, I don't want to tea leaf read into this.
They've got a meeting with her lawyer at ten o'clock
at the Finny Law Firms, so we'll find out what
the story is behind this. But do you expect that
she will be terminated and that her actually asked to resign,
and that along with that resignation will go a check
written from the city of Cincinnati and the police Chiefdiji's pocket.
Speaker 3 (01:12:18):
Yeah. I mean when they say that there's gonna be
an investigation, I said it to me, it's more like
we're going to negotiate further. Yeah, they're gonna put her
on administrative leave, so she's still employed, so she can't
go out and say what she wants to say, what's
going on, And that's going to just kind of buy
that city more time to say that you're going to
take this agreement or we're gonna or we're gonna fire you.
Speaker 1 (01:12:38):
Huh So you expect a gag order to go along
with this, Well, there's.
Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
Not a gag order because she's still an employee. She's
just on administrative leaf.
Speaker 10 (01:12:47):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:12:47):
As long as you're administrative leave, you still have to
follow the orders because if you don't, then they'll fire you,
and then they may have a reason.
Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
Then for cause. I see, that would create a four
cause motive to terminate, right. Huh So right now we're
just kind of well, I guess they're just waiting around
un till ten o'clock and see what her lawyer has
to say. I doubt he's going to step in that
potential downside risk for police chief Dji though, now.
Speaker 3 (01:13:14):
You know, if she hired you know, one of the
one of the best employment attorneys that are around here.
So I certainly expect that they will do the right
thing and that there probably won't be a lot said.
But yeah, that's that's yet to be seen. We'll see
at ten o'clock this morning.
Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
Well, if we have the as the city manager place
to these serious public safety challenges, I guess I'm kind
of wondering because you and I are in agreement of
our perception that police Chief Theji is being fired for
following the will of the Pervol administration. So that seems odd.
But it seems also kind of odd that Provol and
presumably Manager Long were the ones that were in a
position to accept Governor de Wine's offer of a full
(01:13:52):
month every month worth of Ahouse State patrol when they
only took two or four days, originally two and only
four days. I mean, that is their decision, not Police
Chief Diji's decision, right, So we have them to blame
for not taking up the offer of additional resources.
Speaker 3 (01:14:08):
Yeah, you're you're absolutely correct. You know, she doesn't get
to make that decision, you know, that's that's the city
manager that's the mayor's decision, and they chose not to
take you know, everything that the highest state patrol was offering.
And by the way, it was free. I've never seen
in my life, you know, politicians that are offered something
that's free and they didn't take it.
Speaker 1 (01:14:30):
Well. The Butler County sheriffs making millions and millions of
dollars off of merely housing ice of illegal immigrants that
ice picked up. We're not doing that in Hamilton County.
So we've turned down an opportunity to make millions of
dollars along those lines as well. So this doesn't surprise me. Sorry,
I had to connect that, Ken, what's your hold wrong?
(01:14:50):
Because Christopher Smithman had an idea, this whole thing, this
politization of the police chief's office brought about by Issue five.
He had an idea, and I wanted to bounce it
off your head to see if you think would better
the situation. It's seven point fifteen right now. More with
Ken Cober, First USA Instulation, the great no Brainer product.
It is Station sevent nineteen fifty five KR City Talk
Station Tuesday, Bryn Thomas with FOP President Ken Kober. We're
(01:15:13):
talking about well management instructure, in the City of Cincinnati.
Of course, a police chief DJ on paid leave. Now
having been placed on paid leave yesterday, we have the
interim chief, Adam Henney, who just recently got promoted to
assistant chief, now running the police department. Ken Kober commented
on that and the reasons of the things that came
(01:15:34):
about and brought about police chief Fiji's I call it termination.
I think we can expect that or maybe retirement. But
city manager Cheryl Long and Parvall decided this. They have
the authority to hire and fire the chief. The same
thing with the fire chief. Christopher Smithman suggested that, well,
at least you know, prior to Issue five being passed
that you on the police department, the men and women
(01:15:54):
in uniform decided who the chief was going to be
with an internal vote. Your vote or your recommend was
ignored post Issue five. That's in the hands of pro
Wall and Long. They ignored your recommendation on who you
wanted to hire. They hired Fiji anyway, and so we
see that it's in political hands. Same thing with the
fire chief. Now, Police Cheryl Long fired Michael Washington as
(01:16:16):
the chief. He's now sued the City of Cincinnati Most recently,
Judge Stephanie Bowman determined that Well City Manager Cheryl Long
didn't give him his due process before firing in March
of twenty three, violating his pre termination due process rights.
He's now seeking punitive damages back paying loss benefits, and
it looks like he's going to win. So Christopher Smithiman
(01:16:37):
solution is this is not to go back to the
pre issue five days, but maybe a new way amending
the rules to require unanimous approval of all members of
council and the mayor and the manager. I guess for
hiring and firing of the various chiefs, chief of fire
department or the police department. Would that solve any perceived
problems with the structure? Ken is at a step in
(01:16:59):
the right direction. We have a different solution.
Speaker 3 (01:17:02):
No, I think Christopher is spot on, you know, but
issue five it's less about who they hire and it's
how they fire them. So previously, if you five like
a chief striker when he was here, he was he
fell under the FFP Bording agreement, so he was able
to work absolutely independently of city Council, the mayor of
(01:17:23):
the city manager. They could try to tell him what
they do and his response could be, I'm not doing it.
I'm doing what I think is law enforcement professionals best
for this police department. If you don't like it, I'm
sorry about your luck, you know. And currently now we
have this system under Issue five that it basically gives
a city manager the authority, the sole authority, to terminate
the police chief or the fire chief, and it's just
(01:17:44):
not working. You know, We've seen that. You know, we
saw with James Craig. He was here for two years
after Chief Striker retired, and you know, he pushed back
to city Hall at the time, and they didn't like that.
So the end result was, Okay, at the end of
your two years, you're out. We'll find somebody else. And
that's that's what's going to continue to happen. So I
do agree with Christopher that you have to give the
(01:18:06):
police chief some protection from being thrown into a political
circus that we're seeing right now. And maybe that's that's
the solution, is that your city council has to unanimously,
you know, vote to fire the chief. Because I could
tell you right now there are plenty of city council
members that support the chief. I've had these conversations with them.
(01:18:27):
They all believe the same thing that I've talked about
that cops feel is that she's being absolutely railroaded for
political purposes. And all it would take is one council
member to stand up and say we're not doing this,
otherwise she'd be here right now.
Speaker 1 (01:18:40):
Well, I'm glad you characterize a current makeup of council
along those lines and that you have had conversation with
the current council, because, as Christopher was explaining that, I'm thinking,
you know, Purvol's probably got enough sway and influence over
the unanimously one Democrat council that he could get his
way regardless of the way the rules are set up.
But you're telling me, no, that that's not the case
right now.
Speaker 3 (01:19:00):
No, I've had conversations with several council members that you know,
of course have not said much publicly, of course, but
have said listen, this isn't right, this isn't right. So
they're trying, they were trying to do things behind the
scenes to try to get this resolved, you know, But ultimately,
if they had their feet to the fire and they
had to stand there and say, yeah, yeah, I agree,
(01:19:23):
we should fire or there are council members that just
wouldn't do it, so the system has to change. The
days of the chief being under the ffp's collective bargain agreement.
I recognize it that would never ever happen in this climate, sure,
but I do think there's opportunity for change. And there's opportunity.
You elect the city elects these council members, trust them
(01:19:44):
collectively to do the right thing. You take this out
of the hands of one person and allow collectively for
people to decide the fate of a police chief. This
is a person that is in charge of the police
department for the city. It shouldn't just be one person
making this decision.
Speaker 1 (01:19:59):
Now, I know it's just been it's been a couple
of weeks brewing leading up to yesterday. How do you
have any comments on or perceptions of how this particular
component of dealing with police chief DJ has impacted morale
the City of Insane police department.
Speaker 3 (01:20:17):
Well, yeah, I mean the cops are absolutely frustrated. They
don't know who's in charge until so last night we
finally found out Okay, this is who's going to be
in charge. But absolutely because cops are walking around thinking
they'll do this to the chief, What are they going
to do to me? And I think the long term
effects of this, and I talked to a council member
yesterday about this. Long term effects of this are going
(01:20:38):
to be recruitment and retention. The very things that they
were trying to focus on to get people in the door,
to keep people here are things that are going to
be certainly negatively affected by this.
Speaker 1 (01:20:50):
This is terrible marketing, right Ken.
Speaker 3 (01:20:54):
Let's put it this way. If they were in charge
of marketing for a private business, they'd have been out
of business a long time ago.
Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
FOP President can cover. I'm sure you're a popular guy
today getting this out there. I'm sure you're going to
be well watching the ten o'clock news conference with Tiji
and her lawyer. And you know you're always welcome here
on the morning show show, Sir. I really appreciate your
willingness to discuss these important issues with my listeners.
Speaker 3 (01:21:15):
Absolutely, Brian, thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:21:16):
I have a great day, my friend seven twenty five
care Talks. This is ought to be a real eye opener.
I'm happy to welcome to the Pick five KRC Morning
Show author Mike McCormick. He's got an amazing Background's written
multiple books. He's gonna be doing to empower you, Sminar
tonight log in from home only, power you some and
are going to empower you America dot org. Make sure
your register and make sure you're in front of your
computer at seven pm, because this is going to be
(01:21:39):
I mean amazing. Mike McCormick, he is served, get a
load of this. Served as the White House stenographer for
fifteen years under the President Bush, Vice President Biden, President Trump.
He transcribes speeches and meetings across the Oval Office in
West Wing and around the world on Air Force one
and Air Force two, high pressure around the clock environment. Again,
(01:22:00):
multiple books, including the one Who's going to be talking
about tonight and an almost insurmountable Evil. How Obama's deep
sate defiled the Catholic Church and executed the Wuhan pandemic.
Bold statements, Mike, Welcome to the fifty five Carosee Morning Show.
Speaker 11 (01:22:16):
Hey Brian, thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:22:18):
So you note in your materials and of course in
the book, that you know, questioning the pope a little
bit difficult for Catholics around the world to do that
and not being Catholic. I questioned authority all the time,
and if it was if I was Catholic, i'd questioned
the Pope if I disagreed with the direction he was going.
But I know that's a little difficult. But the Pope
and Obama and Biden worked together.
Speaker 10 (01:22:41):
And I.
Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
Explain to my listeners in boiled down terms and in
what way they worked together along these nefarious lines.
Speaker 11 (01:22:51):
Well, what happened was I was in the White House
as a stronographer, and I listened to Joe Biden talking
over and over. I was primarily his stenographer, and at
one point in time I had an idea what was
the worst what was the most evil thing Joe Biden
ever talked about? And I could quite easily picture it.
(01:23:13):
He talked at length about his close relationship with a
very bad man named Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. Cardinal Theodore mccrick
was a prominent Catholic clergyman in Washington who was abusing
altar boys and seminarians throughout his career. Secretly, oh, Jesus
Biden used to know, knew Biden had this guy as
(01:23:37):
basically his spiritual advisor. So what I did was I
started looking into White House visitor logs, well, what about
this guy, Cardinal McCarrick. Was he going in there? Turns
out he was going in there a lot, and he
was dealing directly with Obama and Biden and a guy
named Dennis McDonough who was a White House chief of staff,
and he was going in and out of the White
(01:23:58):
House during the time when Pope Benedict resigned and Pope
Francis was basically brought on and mcrick, as I looked
deeper into it, McCarrick was a very very solid part
of the process in Rome that elected this Argentinian bishop
(01:24:21):
of the Argentinian cardinal to become Pope Francis. Almost as
soon as he was elected, McCarrick began going back and
forth to the White House and to the Vatican to
talk to this new Pope Francis, and Pope Francis started
basically doing policy for the White House. He did policy
(01:24:46):
with the Iran nuclear deal directly. He Obama went and
visited Pope Francis in the Vatican in March of twenty fourteen,
and immediately after that, Pope Francis and mcarrick went to
what they called the Holy Land, which was Israel West Bank,
and Jordan, and they started promoting what then was this
(01:25:08):
great new way of dealing with the Middle East, and
it turned out to be a really terrible way of
dealing with the Middle East because they gave it tons
of money to Iranian terrorists. Mcarick had had longtime relations
with Iranians. He had gone to Iran years earlier and
released some hikers that were held in prisoner So he
(01:25:30):
was working behind the scenes with and sort of this
emissary between the Catholic Church and the US government very suspiciously.
And that's where this whole thing came from. The worst
of it came from when mcarrick and Biden and Obama
and the Pope put together something called the Alliance of Prosperity.
In the summer of twenty fourteen, all these young kids
(01:25:53):
started coming up at the border and in the south
along the Texas border, and Joe Biden put together something
called the Alliance of Prosperity, which was basically him giving
money to cartel affiliated government officials in South America are
taxpayer money, and they opened up the doors for this
(01:26:14):
illegal invasion. When Joe Biden became president in twenty twenty one,
he opened the doors for all this illegal invasion, illegal
immigration invasion, and that came through with help from the
Catholic Church.
Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Well, and you know that's one of I'm glad you
brought that up and explained it along those lines. Mike McCormick,
who's doing the empower you seminar tonight on all of
this in Grant and Gloria's detail the Catholic Church among
other church organizations. I mean, I'm sixty years old. I've
been hearing my whole life separation of church and state,
separation at church and state, you can't fund the church. Well,
(01:26:49):
a lot of these NGOs were getting money to facilitate
the movement of illegal immigrants from the border into the
various communities around here in the United States were run
by the Catholic Church. Is this the connection?
Speaker 11 (01:27:01):
This was intentional, Yes, exactly, And it was intentional. It
was a connection. It was set up, and they used
the Catholic Church. They used Pope Francis as what I
call morality laundering, so they made it look like, oh,
it's okay, the Pope says they're migrants, they're not illegal immigrants.
(01:27:21):
And they're still saying that.
Speaker 1 (01:27:23):
And Vatican City never opened its doors to the general population.
Did they.
Speaker 11 (01:27:29):
No, say they do, but they push it on everybody else.
They don't pay the heavy.
Speaker 1 (01:27:33):
Left, No, they don't. Now the more nefarious and I'm
hoping almost that you say no, was this mass migration
facilitated by the Biden administration and the Catholic Church? Was
it purposeful to bring in children from a lesting? I mean,
because there's a component of that that was going on
the whole time. We all heard about the children who
(01:27:54):
were being fired across the border unaccompanied miners. Talk about
people in a dangerous situation. So was there an la
of helping get more young kids into the country so
we could molest them?
Speaker 11 (01:28:07):
Yes, Oh, that's unfortunately part of it. Young kids women
were raped along the border by cartel coyotes. Pope Francis
Cartl McCarrick, Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Dennis McDonough had a
direct that was a direct result of their policy.
Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
Now you looked into this particular company also had comments
in here about the CIA's involvement. Were they involved in
this as well?
Speaker 11 (01:28:39):
I think McCarrick was a CIA operative for a long time.
He came up through the ranks in the Catholic Church
quite quite quickly, and he came up through the ranks
at the time when the CIA was actually working with
the Vatican. This is the late forties early fifties. Recent
(01:29:00):
documents that have been declassified from the CIA files on
the Kennedy assassination include comments testimony by a guy named Angleton,
and Angleton was a CIA superspy, but he in this
testimony with Senate investigators, he explained, yes, I used to
(01:29:23):
work closely with the Vatican and one of the people
I worked which was Pope Paul the sixth, Well, Pope
Paul six was the guy who basically put McCarrick on
this conveyor belt to be a superior priest while he
was molesting. There was a lot of allegations of him
molesting young children and seminarians as he was moving up.
(01:29:45):
So the Vatican kind of worked on it, and that
came through the nineties. In the nineties McCarrick I think
it was either George H. W.
Speaker 8 (01:29:55):
Bush or.
Speaker 11 (01:29:57):
Clinton who sent mckarrick in into the State Department, and
mcarick would go around the world as an emissary of
freedom of religion, but he was really working behind the
scenes and what he was doing was giving away money.
That's what the CIA does. They go around out in
the world and they give away money. And that's how
he got the pope. That's how he got this Argentinian guy,
(01:30:20):
Brogolio named as the pope. He gave away money, bribe
Bishop a, bribe cardinals to vote for him.
Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
So as White House stinar for I presume he had
a security clearance.
Speaker 11 (01:30:30):
No security clearance. It was a public facing job because
it was worth the press office.
Speaker 1 (01:30:35):
Oh how about that? But I mean Michael McCormick again,
tonight and Poweroamerica dot org. Register now register sometime during
the day. Logm at seven pm and listen to this
because we haven't even scratched the service. One of the
other things that you unfold in your book and almost
insurmountable evil, you say that the Biden Barack Obama administrations
collaborated with China to release the Wuhan pandemic on the world.
(01:30:57):
This is a completely different, well, I guess, completely different
conspiracy going on here.
Speaker 11 (01:31:07):
Yeah, there's two parts to it. It's pretty sinister. What
happened was so I'll just give a quick In twenty eleven,
I went to China with Joe Biden. That part of
my job was a travel. He did a speech in Chengdu, China.
He said to the Chinese people, you have too many
old people. You have too many old people. They had
(01:31:29):
a policy in China one child policy where every family
could only have one baby for generations, and all of
a sudden, they didn't have any young people.
Speaker 7 (01:31:38):
They had all old people and all.
Speaker 11 (01:31:40):
He pointed that out to them, you have a terrible
economic future. Not eight years later, in August of twenty nineteen,
after being developed in a wu in a lab in
wu Han, China, Wuhan virus was released and it killed
mostly old people, and it also helped Joe Biden become
(01:32:04):
the President of the United States in twenty twenty one.
Speaker 1 (01:32:08):
Oh, Mike McCormick, this has been a real eye opener.
I recommend you folks get your book on My executive
producer will add a one two year book on my
blog page fifty five caresee dot com an almost insurmountable evil.
How Obama's deep state defiled the Catholic Church and executed
the Wuhan pandemic. Mike, this has been an eye opening conversation.
Its tonight at seven must register and then log in
(01:32:30):
and the power your America dot org appreciate you to
put a pen of paper on this one. Mike, is
just amazing when you've onquired your own conclusions on Mike
McCormick's research and what's in his book. You know, I've
always been led to believe this wave of open borders,
illegal immigration was designed by the Democrats for the purpose
of while securing vote. They presume that all these new immigrants,
(01:32:51):
you know, having no connection with the United States of
America are definitely dupes and probably could easily be convinced
to vote for Democrats, the party that let them in,
party that help to keep them here, the party that
funded their entire lives when they moved here, hooking them
up to the well the American taxpayer social welfare safety net,
in spite of the fact that they haven't solved the
social welfare safety net problems that exist see Medicare, Medicaid
(01:33:13):
and social Security and the train wreck that they are
even under the weight of the American population, notwithstanding adding
an extra twenty million people on it. But that's one thing.
But I've been hearing these, you know, conspiracy theories about
pizza and molesting children and all this, and those are
the ones that kind of parked on the back burner.
Haven't yet personally seen anything successful by way of litigation
(01:33:35):
or had people being held accountable, people being prosecuted. But
that he writes that that was one of the reasons
to do this, that it was a motivation to bring
children in the country illegally unaccompanied so that they could
be molested. That is little too much for me to take.
(01:34:00):
But then I thought about Epstein files, and I don't
want to get into some grand conspiracy conspiratorial you know,
a wormhole here, but you know, a lot of very
well healed, well connected folks were swirling around Epstein's world,
right he is a con was rather convicted pedophile, And
(01:34:21):
we all know there's so much information out there demonstrating
that there were underage girls consorting with and hanging around
with all these well healed, well connected folks like royal
family members and you know, billionaires, et cetera. Were they
directly involved in molesting young ladies? I don't know. I
don't know that any of anybody was prosecuted. And you
(01:34:42):
can always ask yourself that kind of question. Why maybe
because they're well healed, well connected, multi multi billionaires or something,
So you know, it's one of those things. God bless
Congressman Thomas Massey for moving forward that maybe ultimately we'll
get some answers to this, because it is disturbing as hell.
(01:35:06):
And I know, Maureen, you have been saying for years,
since we've been talking, since COVID nineteen, the reason that
COVID nineteen was released on the world, and she's always
believed that was intentional. Maybe yeah, was for the purpose
of killing old people and reducing the global population. It
did go a long way to doing that, didn't it.
Remember New York City intentionally forcing all of those folks
(01:35:29):
into facilities where they could easily spread COVID nineteen among
the elderly population, not letting them out, not letting family
members go visit them, and a lot of people died
without any family comfort next to them, comorbid conditions. Being old.
You were number one in line for the quote unquote
vaccine that came out that really wasn't a vaccine. Interesting
(01:35:53):
fun fact on that too. I don't know, I you know,
this is the problem I have with all these conspiracy theories.
I don't want to believe them. I find the idea
that anyone could molest a child that's so painful to
(01:36:15):
even think about that you are so evil you can
ruin the life of that young person. There are plenty
of ripe adults around you. You blank and pervert, move on,
leave them alone. But there is, without a doubt, a
massive network of people who are engaged in acts of
(01:36:36):
pedophilia and molestation and violence and evil towards these poor
little children. They have no context for what's going on
around them, and they have no control over their lives.
That's something needs to be rooted out. And God bless
my sister, as Smithman always likes to point out, and
I do from time to time, spend thirty years under
(01:36:59):
twenty five LUs years in the sinsane Police Department, and
some of the most devastating time on the police department
emotionally for my sister, And I hope she doesn't mind
me saying this, but I lived through it and watched
her deal with the emotions when she is in special
Crimes and having to deal with perverts out there who
molest children. To have to witness and view the video
that they capture from these evil, evil people, you cannot
(01:37:23):
wipe that vision out of your mind once you have
seen it, and you go home every night investigating somebody
out there, you're looking for this pervert. You've got the
evidence that they may have been involved in the crime,
but you don't have sufficient evidence to yet file a
charge against this guy. So you know right now as
you go home to try to get a good night's
sleep and enjoy your what's left of your non workday hours,
(01:37:44):
that's on your mind. He's out there, in this very moment.
He may be committing another vile act against an insant,
innocent child. How can you live under the weight of that.
It's very difficult, and that's why I have this just
profound respect to all the men and women in uniform
who are going after these people and are capable of
stomaching what they have to see every single day and
(01:38:08):
what an impact that has to have on their perception
of society at large. Yes, you live in a world
where these kind of people are free and rome around
the life of law enforcement officer, you're constantly surrounded by
the dregs of humanity. That's why we need to salute
all of them and thank them from the work that
they do. Rather than try to rethink them or reimagine them,
(01:38:33):
have to have provol anyway, Inside Scoop Bright Part News
Immigration reporter John Bender with I'm seeing some really great
information at least in terms of the volume of illegal immigrants,
and some really profoundly evil illegal immigrants, like yeah, illegal
immigrants who come into our country and been convicted of
molesting children. And yet there are members that left out
(01:38:54):
there no kings rally. We don't want to deport them,
we don't want to pick them up off the street.
What the hell is wrong with you? People?
Speaker 3 (01:38:59):
Said?
Speaker 1 (01:39:00):
Fifty five fifty five KRC de Talk Station, be right back.
Speaker 12 (01:39:03):
Today's top headlines about this now more than ever, listen
as often as possible.
Speaker 1 (01:39:10):
Fifty five KRC the Talkstation. It's eight o six and
a happy Tuesday to you. A special time to be
tuning into the fifty five KRC Morning Show. I believe
so anyway, because at this time a week, in this
moment in time, we always get to talk to get
the inside Scoop with Bright Bart News, and I always
start the segment out by trying to remind you to
bookmark Breitbart b R E I, t BA, RT dot com.
(01:39:32):
It's a wonderful resource, outstanding reporting, especially if you want
to read about immigration, because you'll hear from John Bender,
who is the immigration reporter for Breitbart. Welcome back, John,
It's great to have you on the show today. I
hope you're well. Thanks so much for having me, and
amazing numbers rolling out. I mean, from the moment Donald
Trump was sworn in to this moment in time, we
have seen nothing but a tremendous success for at least
(01:39:54):
those of among us like me who believe we need
a secure border. The unchecked, unregulated flow of immigration was
just amazing thing to behold, and so sad to hear
the Biden ministration there's nothing we can do about it,
nothing we can do about it. Well, the laws are
on the books, and Donald Trump decided to use Immigrations
and Customs enforcement and his legal resources to actually enforce
the laws that are on the book. And lo and behold,
(01:40:17):
at this moment in time, we have about or at
least we're on track to have more than two million
illegal aliens either arrested, rounded up and deported, or self deporting.
That is a tremendous accomplishment. John, your reaction, it.
Speaker 5 (01:40:31):
Is a tremendous accomplishment, especially considering, as you mentioned, the
prior four years of what Biden was able to do,
and so much of a Republican talking point which was
really like the wrong way of putting things during the
Biden years was this claim that there was chaos at
(01:40:52):
the border. It was not chaos. It was very controlled.
It was very deliberate what Obiden and Alejandra Majorcis did
in the last four years, which was importing millions of
migrants with no legal status to be in the United
States indefinitely. And the Trump administration in nine months has
(01:41:17):
been able to completely turn that around. And we've seen
that in labor data, which is part of the self
deportations that DHS tracks, where many millions of migrants now
have fallen out of the labor market can indicating that
(01:41:38):
they've left and gone to their home country, and the
number of deportations. And we saw that with the arrest
announcement that was done this week by Christinome where DHS
announced that over four hundred and eighty thousand illegal aliens
have been arrested by ICE in nine months. This is
(01:41:59):
absolutely tremendous. These are illegal aliens who are within communities
across the United States, we have no idea who they are,
and seventy percent of those so you're talking over three
hundred and thirty thousand. Of that, four hundred and eighty
thousand are illegal aliens with criminal charges against them or
(01:42:20):
criminal convictions. So this is the greatest accomplishment of the
Trump administration, in my opinion, bring.
Speaker 1 (01:42:28):
About some measure of safety for our communities by getting
what I always describe as the worst and the worst
off the streets. I mean the announcement the other day.
We got a Dominican national who's picked up, convicted the
word convicted is means due process, convicted of rape of
a child in Boston. Got a Guatemala national picks up
arrested after being convicted of traveling to meet a child
for unlawful sex. They got another guy from Mexico who
(01:42:51):
was convicted of indecent liberties with a child. I mean,
these are people, They're indefensible people, and it just blows
my mind that so many of these left wingers are
running monks saying we can't deport them. That's inhumane. These people,
many of them, are literally convicted of some of the
most inhumane acts.
Speaker 3 (01:43:07):
You could think of John, That's exactly right.
Speaker 5 (01:43:11):
And you know something that the media always attacked Trump
over is when Trump would talk about at his rallies
or in speeches how foreign countries under Biden were emptying
their prisons into the United States through our US Mexico border.
And this was something that the media relentlessly claimed was untrue.
(01:43:35):
They attacked him for saying this. Well, how do you
explain that hundreds of thousands of criminal illegal aliens just
in nine months have been arrested throughout the United States
by ICE, that is the small prison population of a
island country in South America. How do you explain that.
(01:43:57):
So Trump has been totally vindicated in this. And as
you mentioned, not only are they picking up what ICE
would call the worst of the worst illegal aliens, they're
also getting folks who maybe don't even have criminal charges
or criminal convictions against them, but they've been ordered deported
by a federal immigration judge. So Democrats love to talk
(01:44:21):
about so called due process. Well, everyone needs due process. Well,
many millions of illegal aliens living in the United States
with no criminal background have already had their due process.
They have been ordered deported by a federal immigration judge,
and yet the Biden administration, the Obama administration, did not
(01:44:43):
deem them important enough to deport despite a federal judge
saying they must be deported.
Speaker 1 (01:44:51):
Isn't that amazing? And is it a John? What do
you read into that they were so And I don't
want to say their job was an easy one, John,
But in this short period of time, and you pointed
it out, they've collected and rounded up hundreds of thousands
of known criminals, people with you know, convictions or have
already had the deportation order. They clearly know where they are,
(01:45:12):
don't they. And that suggested the Biden administration, maybe even
the bomb administration knew where they are as well and
didn't want to lift a finger to kick them out
of the country.
Speaker 5 (01:45:20):
Well, the Biden administration, as we know, absolutely knew where
people were. Because how do we know that because local
jails who typically would work with ICE throughout the United States.
So these are jails and police departments, not in sanctuary states,
not in sanctuary jurisdictions, and they had a history of
(01:45:42):
working with ICE and turning over illegal aliens when they
got those illegal aliens in their custody. Now that could
be for a traffic of violation all the way to
a conviction for manslaughter. The Biden administration deliberately ignored local
jails and police departments that tried to turn over illegal
(01:46:04):
aliens to them who they considered nonviolent or not a priority.
So you basically had to kill or rape an American
in order to be a priority for deportation under the
Biden administration. So someone that had seven drunk driving convictions
would still not be a priority for deportation under the
(01:46:26):
Biden administration. And when a local jail, you know, say
in Pope County, Florida, that typically works with ICE, would
try to turn those illegal aliens over to ICE, the
Biden administration would not let them. So the Biden administration
knew exactly where be so called worst of the worst
illegal aliens were. They just deliberately were not picking them
(01:46:48):
up well.
Speaker 1 (01:46:49):
And as I learned, I had a guest on earlier
who's written a book on the topic, and it's rather
frightening one and almost insurmountable evil talking about the Biden
administration working with the pub Francis to facilitate the influx
of all these illegal immigrants. He suggests for very nefarious purposes,
but that was I wanted to get to that point.
Though they Biden administration use American taxpayer dollars to fund
(01:47:13):
non governmental organizations, including many that were run by the
Catholic Church. But there are others out there to facilitate
the movement of humanity across our boarder and make it
easy for them to to help them establish roots, regardless
of how bad these people were that they brought in.
Speaker 5 (01:47:30):
Yes, a number of religious organizations are directly involved every
single day with the facilitation of illegal immigration in the
United States. That has largely been shut down under Trump's
second term, which is another incredible victory for the Trump
(01:47:51):
administration to shut down the NGO facilitation of the legal immigration.
But many religious organizations are implicated in that, not only
Catholic charities, but Jewish Family Services is another huge organization
involved in that, as well as Lutheran Services another huge
(01:48:11):
one involved with that. And you have to realize because
people will often ask like why would these religious organizations
be so involved in making sure as many illegals get
into the United States as possible. There's a reason, and
it's money. As you can imagine their budget at Catholic
charities and Jewish Family Services rely on these government contracts
(01:48:36):
and grants to facilitate illegal immigrations. So that is the
reason they are involved. It is not some huge humanitarian
you know, boy, it is money.
Speaker 1 (01:48:50):
That's that's really sad when you when you when when
you put it in such stark terms, I have no
reason to doubt you, John Bender, immigration expert over Breitbart.
Isn't it kind of comical? I've comment on this quite
a few times on the radio about this, but prior,
I mean, if a conservative administration, if a Republican administration,
if any other administration beyond the Democrats were doing this,
(01:49:12):
then there will be screams and lawsuits over the separation
of church and state, and how we're not allowed to
give up a religious organization's taxpayer dollars, would we not?
Speaker 5 (01:49:22):
John, That's exactly right. Yeah, when you think about a
number of issues, when and you think about you know, okay,
if the tables were turned like, for instance, you know
an issue that Democrats and I don't really know why
because they're partially responsible for this, but they are constantly
bringing up like we're seeing this in the mayoral race
(01:49:44):
in New York City. This is constantly being brought up,
which is housing costs. Like Democrats are shrieking about the
cost of homes, and their solution to that is to
build more Section eight, more mixed income family homes well
and basically destroy single family units.
Speaker 1 (01:50:02):
By the way, on in the city of Cincinnati right now, John,
they're doing the very thing you're talking about.
Speaker 5 (01:50:09):
Yes, this happens across the country every single day, and
yet the Democrats are so implicated in the cause of
sky high housing prices because immigration, as we know, study
after study after study shows that the more people you
(01:50:29):
import to compete against Americans, when Americans are competing against
the world for housing, yes, housing will be enormously inflated.
And we've seen that come down tremendously from the Biden years.
You know, there was that recent chart going around showing
(01:50:50):
that Trump's ban, you know, on migrants getting sha loans,
that that has had a huge impact in terms of
the competition that Americans face to buy homes. That you
know that they should not be indirect competition with people
who have just gotten to the United States, people who
(01:51:11):
do not have green cards, no citizenship. They're supposed to
be on temporary visas, and yet they're competing for homes
against you know, Americans who are in their late twenties,
early thirties who still cannot afford a hunt, right.
Speaker 1 (01:51:26):
And quite often with the use of American taxpayer dollars
to assist them with their living conditions and pay for
those living conditions.
Speaker 5 (01:51:33):
H So, no, that's exactly right. It's they're being unfairly
subsidized in the market. And then we wonder, you know,
why are so many Americans being priced out of the
housing market. Well, immigration is a huge plays a huge
role in that. It's supply and demand.
Speaker 1 (01:51:48):
How could it not be. You you take a population
of X and over the period of four years add
twenty million or so additional bodies, you're going to have
a supplying demand problem. You can't solve the housing crisis
in a momentman's time. That takes time and a slow
gradual building up, all right. And the other component of
this John Bender, Breitbart Immigration Reporter, is it's going on
(01:52:10):
in the European Union. They seem to now be waking
up to this concept of open borders and how much
it whittles away and undermines sort of what a nation
stands for, its values, its principles, its heritage, like what
is it to be a French citizen? Well, that's what's
going on here. It is ultimately the concept here. This
(01:52:31):
is globalist phenomenon to water down what is truly American,
that is our constitution and the freedoms and liberties that
only this country understands and knows, because you brought in
a whole bunch of people who've lived under a oppressive
regime and don't get the idea of freedoms and liberties
that we enjoy here. This is a restructuring and reshuffling
of everything globally, isn't it.
Speaker 8 (01:52:52):
It is?
Speaker 5 (01:52:52):
And you know, the European model of open borders has
been such an utter failure and in many ways it's
a lesson for the rest of the world. I mean,
certainly the United States like to not do what the
European Union has done. And what you know, many European
(01:53:14):
countries have been so immensely involved with I mean Germany
in particular has been so powerful in making sure that
small European countries are forced to take endless amounts of
unchecked immigrants. And you know, I mean Marine Lapen in
(01:53:34):
France has been talking about this for decades now. And
I don't think people understand how courageous it is to
talk about how bad open borders are for nation states
in a continent like Europe, where many countries, I mean,
like France, they don't have the freedom of speed laws
that we have in the United States. Marine Lapenn was
(01:53:56):
literally prosecuted for you know, some alleged financial crime when
we all know why she was actually prosecuted, right, I
mean it's because she talks about what open borders have
done to France.
Speaker 1 (01:54:11):
Well, just I'm sure the citizens of the European Union
can all see with their own eyes. They don't need
somebody to say it out loud. Unfortunately, here we can
talk about it out loud. That's where we have you.
John Bender and Breitbart bri I, t BA, art dot com,
book market. John, I appreciate the time you spent with
my listeners of me today. Keep up the great work.
We'll talk again soon, I hope. Thank you so much,
(01:54:31):
my pleasure eight twenty one fifty five KC Detalk Station Daniel.
I always look forward to this time we because get
to talk to Daniel Davis, retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis
doing the Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Welcome back, Daniel Davis,
my friend. It's good to have you on the show.
Speaker 12 (01:54:45):
There's always a pleasure to be here, Brian.
Speaker 1 (01:54:48):
Okay, So you have two sides to an agreement. You're
in a ceasefire, Israel on one side, him As on
the other. Obviously, devil's always in the details. But if
you agree to a ceasefire and you declare that a
ceasefire is in place, if you start shooting at each
other and killing each other, doesn't that definitionally mean there
is not a ceasefire in place? Daniel. I'm struggling with
(01:55:08):
this because everyone keeps talking about keeping these ceasefire agreement
together and we need to hold keep on the hold
onto the ceasefire agreement. Seems to me and both sides
just maybe capitulated. I don't know, Daniel, that's why we
have you welcome.
Speaker 12 (01:55:22):
Yeah, that does seem to be what's happening, because it's
it's definitely not just one side or the other. Even
President Trump himself and he was acknowledging some of this said,
I don't think it was the Hamas leadership per se.
It may have just been some rogue elements. And if
that's the case, and I actually don't doubt it that
israelis I actually showed some video and it would seemed
pretty clear there was some armed men in the strip
(01:55:42):
that were heading towards some of their troops. But then
their response was, I think completely out of proportion of anything.
They bombed all kinds of other areas of the strip,
killed sixty people, not just the ones who did the killing.
And if someone fires in it in a violation of
the ceasefire, then by all means go after them, because
that's it's authorized according to the rules of engagement. But
(01:56:03):
you can't go after somebody else. It's not even related
to that because the prompt's probably right. It probably wasn't
the Hamas because the organization it self has no motivation
to do this because it can only be bad for them.
But there are some out of control elements, as there
were on ten to seven. By the way, it was
not all Hamas. It was some out of control elements
that killed the majority of the non military people. So
(01:56:24):
this has been an enduring problem over there and one
of the things that they're going to have to get
a handle on.
Speaker 1 (01:56:28):
So it's just reflective of the fact that Hamas is
not the cohesive, connected organization that they're presented to the
world as I mean, I joked about this, I think
last week when you and I talked. If you're familiar
with the movie Mighty Python, Life of Brian, they have
all these splitter organizations. Every single one of them doesn't
want the Romans, you know, this is in Jesus's times,
(01:56:49):
but they can't get along together. So we have various
elements who all hate Israel, let's say, but they're not
necessarily beneath the Hamas controlled umbrella, so they're free to
roma Ba and do whatever the hell they want.
Speaker 12 (01:57:02):
Well that's that's a good part of it, because there
is for sure widespread hatred of Israel inside the Strip,
and frankly, it's not hard to understand why when the
whole place has been turned into a moonscape and everybody
has lost their home and their way of life, et cetera.
And that's just an you can't escape that kind of
an outcome when that's what happens for two years. But
(01:57:24):
the problem is that they're not, you know, this monolithic group.
And also you have inside this is also not surprising.
You have a lot of the Palestinian people absolutely in
sense and hate Hamas more than they hate Israel because
they realize that until this group agrees to stop and
leave the place, they are going to continue to be attacked.
(01:57:45):
And they can blame Israel for dropping the bombs, and
there's some credit or there's some credibility to that, but
it's also true and they recognize it that as long
as Hamas is resisting, they're the ones who are paying
the price. So they're frankly sick of all the combatants
and they want them all.
Speaker 1 (01:58:00):
Out well, recognizing that we have this you know, splitter
for this faction issue maybe going on. They also are
having a problem finding or delivering the deceased hostages, and
Hamas keeps saying, listen, we're trying. We just don't know
where all of them are. And I think you had
made the point last week, and it's an excellent one.
You know, since everything has been bombed, it is certainly
(01:58:22):
possible that some of these hostages are buried beneath rubble somewhere,
and Hamas doesn't necessarily know where they are. But even
if they do, how to get them out.
Speaker 12 (01:58:31):
Right, And they apparently do know where most of them,
maybe even all of them are because they know where
they were held. But there continues to be a very
difficult situation. And listen, there's there's again no motivation for
Hamas to hold off on this. They gained literally nothing
from this. Once they gave the last of the living
hostages back, that was the end of any kind of
leverage that they had, So there's no motivation to hold
(01:58:51):
this back. And even the International Committee of the Red
Cross has validated from within the Strip that these places
where these remaining hostages are are literally buried under buildings
that the Israeli defense forces have dropped over the two years,
et cetera. So they've got to bring in heavy equipment
that they've got to have a peaceful situation so that
they can come in and excavate these areas, and it's
(01:59:12):
just going to take some time.
Speaker 1 (01:59:14):
There's clearly going to need to be like a post
World War two rebuilding kind of thing going on. That's
going to require leadership and some sort of independent force
that can substitute itself in the place of the Hamas leadership.
If I can use that term loosely, Hamas has to
move out. Some acceptable force is going to have to
be there. What do you think is going to be
(01:59:37):
acceptable to the Palaestinian people living in Gaza. Clearly, Israel
running that is not going to work for them. They're
going to want some sort of maybe perhaps international body.
What do you think is going to come from this, Daniel,
This is the.
Speaker 12 (01:59:49):
Absolute biggest issue that has to be overcome now for
there ever to be any peace here at all. Everybody
said Trump in fact, it was talking about, you know,
peace in the Middle least and all that, and signed
that Charmel shak Egypt, et cetera.
Speaker 3 (02:00:03):
But all that was signed.
Speaker 12 (02:00:04):
There was phase one, which is basically a ceasefire and
an exchange of hostages on both sides.
Speaker 1 (02:00:10):
That has been completed.
Speaker 12 (02:00:12):
All of the hard part that Phase two and beyond,
which is substantial, hasn't even been negotiated yet. So none
of those issues have been accepted or resolved by the
two sides. And it's not even just what the Palastinian
people will accept on their it's what the Israeli forces
will accept either, and they both have to accept it.
Speaker 1 (02:00:30):
And that is really really.
Speaker 12 (02:00:32):
Hard to imagine how both sides are going to find
somebody that can accept on a long term negotiator leadership?
Speaker 1 (02:00:38):
Well, is it possible that leaders from the countries who've
entered into the Abraham Accords or at least leaning toward
maybe entertaining that notion of let's work collectively. Let's have
our differences, but let's work collectively for our economic benefit.
That seems to me to you could get a draw
from various Arab countries in the region that could successfully
manage the situation might.
Speaker 12 (02:00:57):
Be at there's two separate things that place, and you're
one hundred percent right on that. In fact, in the
news just this morning, Egypt has said that they would
send a contingent of up to four thousand along with Indonesia,
and I can't remember the other two countries. There's there's
four countries. Azerbaijan might have been one of the other ones,
or maybe it was Armenia. Sorry to get those confused sometimes,
but those those countries have said, yes, we'll do the
(02:01:19):
interim stabilization force. What is going to bring initial peace
to the place, And that's completely separate from who's going
to govern the Gauza strip from the Palestinian side on
a go forward basis, And as you may know, that's
one of the big sticking points for the Israeli side,
because many in the government don't want there to be
any kind of permanent residents of the Palestinian Enclave. They
(02:01:42):
still harbored the idea that we want to get them
all out. So having them agree to whoever's going to
be there is one of the most difficult things that
has to be negotiating, and I of course understand the
challenges that presents. But if you were if you found
this acceptable peacekeeping force that could stabilize the region, you
could maybe sometime down the road establish enough peace and
enough you know, stability to maybe have an election.
Speaker 1 (02:02:08):
Well, yeah, and for sure that's going to end up happening.
Speaker 12 (02:02:10):
You may recall that did happen in two thousand and five,
which is when Hamas was initially elected, and then everything
broke down after that, and we had, of course the
two thousand and six war in Lebanon, which then had
ramifications inside the strip, and then Hamas quit having elections
after that. People didn't get any more choices after that.
That will certainly happen in the future here. But there
is additional issues beyond those really hard ones, like what
(02:02:34):
about the region, because Israel wants to expand the Abraham Courts,
Trump wants to expand the Abraham courts, but the regions,
the countries in the regions say for that to happen,
like Saudi Arabia, the kingpin of all this, they say,
there has to be some kind of Palestinian state, which
Israel is still adamantly opposed to. So the region, the
countries in the region absolutely do want and they have
(02:02:54):
been emphatic about saying we want peace throughout the region
with Israel, but it has to be a mutual piece.
And there again is one of the big difficulties.
Speaker 1 (02:03:03):
Well, I think we'll be living with this reality for
a while. Daniel Davis ain't gonna solve itself between now
and next Tuesday. I'm sure about that. I don't think so,
Daniel Davis. We cannot have a conversation without addressing the
current status Russia and Ukraine. I thought I had seen
earlier in this week or very recently that Trump basically
told Zelenski, dude, you're gonna have to give up some
land to negotiate a peace on this. I know Zelunsky
(02:03:25):
doesn't want to do that, but it sounded also like
the idea of US giving him Tomahawk missile is something
that you and I both agree on bad idea. That's
not going to happen. So where are we with Russia
and Ukraine? Daniel Davis, Yeah, that's definitely not going to happen.
Trump unambiguously said that. I don't know why he ever
entertained it, because in the first of last week, even
before you and I visited last Tuesday, he said I might,
(02:03:47):
I might just give them up, and then on Wednesday
he said, yeah, I'm not going to do that, So
that was pretty clear to his Zelensky.
Speaker 12 (02:03:53):
I guess he was just posturing. But the bottom line
is now Zelensky's going back and he's still trying to
get with his European friends to find other things to
give him, etc. While they're looking for ways to increase
a nineteenth sanctions package. Don't know why they didn't recognize
the first eighteen failed, but somehow they think maybe this
one will. But in terms of the bigger meeting that
was agreed to by Trump with Putin, there's supposed to
(02:04:15):
be a ministerial meeting between Sarrogate, Lavrov and Rocker Rubio,
and then legs was going to be a Trump a
Putin meeting in Hungary.
Speaker 1 (02:04:23):
If they come about.
Speaker 12 (02:04:24):
And as of this morning, there was some contentious conversation
reporting between Rubio and Lavrov because they're still pretty far
apart on what the two.
Speaker 1 (02:04:32):
Sides we'll both agree to. So this is not looking
like it's going to be solved anytime soon. By next
Tuesday either we'll be talking about it next Tuesday. Then
Daniel Davis Deep Dive wherever you get your podcast, find
Daniel Davis doing what he does throughout the week. And
you know, I can't thank you enough. I love the
time you get to spend another day together, Daniel. It's
truly informative, and obviously you're pretty good at explaining some
(02:04:52):
complex stuff in a very easy to understand manner, and
I truly appreciate that. Until next week, sir, have a
wonderful week. My friend. Blame to you, my friend. See
you next Tuesday, eighty forty right now, fifty five car
see the talks the talk station. Happy Tuesday tonight, seven pm.
Got to hear Mike McCormick. This's just an eye opening
conversation I had about his book, An almost insurmountable evil
(02:05:14):
Hell Obama's deep state defiled the Catholic Church and executed
the Wuhan pandemic. I mean, those are serious charges, but
he gave us a little bit of insight into tonight's seminar.
Log in from home, registered in Power America dot org
sometime the day before seven pm and be there ready
to hit the ground running at seven pm. I think
my next caller is probably going to be tuned into that.
(02:05:34):
I know she was listening earlier, Maureen. I was expecting
your call. Welcome back to the Morning show.
Speaker 13 (02:05:39):
Good morning, Brian. Wow, that was some interview with Mike McCormick.
I had not heard of him, but I had heard
of a lot of it, the things he was talking about,
so I definitely want to tune into that.
Speaker 1 (02:05:49):
The child molestation, child trafficking component of it is just
I'm struggling to believe it. I do there's some element
of truth in there, I'm certain, but the idea that
the church and Biden administration would work together for a
goal of getting children in the country to molest is
just something that I'm trying to I'm having a different
time to get my head around.
Speaker 13 (02:06:10):
Yes, I agree, but I also think one thing is
important to understand the difference between the head of the
Catholic Church and the deep state churches. Archbishop Igeno repers
to it as I then separate that from the hierarchy
of the church, the different pockets below. I know that
it's hard to separate that. But there is good within
the Catholic churches. Oh there's so much evil as well,
(02:06:34):
and it's thickening, and I'm glad he's exposing it because
it does definitely exist. And it's just like you said,
follow the money. There's a group called Hope for Justice
and they put out their annual Global Profits Report and
they said that that the money involved in the child
trafficking it exceeds two hundred and thirty six billion dollars
(02:06:55):
would it be as of twenty twenty four, And I'm
sure it's and higher than that to this day. And
it's sickening the money that's involved in this. And I
do think that we're in the process of exposing all that.
As I've said many times that we're in the midst
of a strategic military operation and part of it is
to expose that connection between Obama, Biden and child trafficking.
(02:07:18):
The Clintons, the Clinton Foundation, HAITI Children, Protective Services of Children,
and how these children are used for profit. It's sickening
and it's unbelievable, but it is going to be exposed.
But it's going to be exposed in increments so that
the population can understand it little by little. And I
(02:07:38):
think this seminar is going to go a long way
in waking people up to the horrific things that are
going on from this deep state that Trump is dealing with.
Speaker 1 (02:07:48):
Well, I sure hope so when you put it and
you characterize it in terms of the billions of dollars,
that there is any in the coordinated effort, that there's
that much demand out there, Maureen, I just I'm sure.
Drug it's another component that I struggle with. I mean,
the farthest thing from my mind would be molesting, harming,
hurting a child. They're so innocent, and there's I mean,
(02:08:09):
you're just going to take their life away from them
with that that somebody is willing to do that, and
apparently there's a sufficient quantity of people out there to
turn this into a multi multi billion dollar industry. It's horrific.
Speaker 13 (02:08:20):
It's absolutely horrific, and it's unbelievable, and I think people
are going to hear that, and I think what's going
to unify both sides of political parties and everything else
is what has been done to the children. It's sickening.
That's the one thing you can argue about so many things.
But if you don't, you have to not have a soul.
Speaker 1 (02:08:41):
To not have this affect you right when it all
comes out right, Yeah, there's no question about it. Well,
and I suppose there's a certain element of this. I'll
say it out loud for me of you to comment
on the idea that these Epstein violes. We know he
was a multi multi multi million dollar well connected with
all the billionaires and the well healed people in the
world of children, so convicted monstrably, So why can't we
(02:09:04):
have the documents? Marine?
Speaker 13 (02:09:05):
But why I'll tell you why. Here's why. You have
to have the judges in place. We have corrupt judges
in place right now. We need the House and the Senate,
which we have, but we have too many rhinos in there.
He needs. This is what Trump is working on from
what I've heard from my sources, that we need the
right judges in place, not to say that we need
judges that are going to do whatever he says. The
(02:09:27):
ones in power now are corrupt. They were put in
by Obama and Biden, and that we're going to get
a taste of that when Komy and Bolton and Brennan
and all those come, you know, when their trials come
to light. But we've got to get the right judges
in place, and we've got to get the House and
the Senate and the majority of good, good people, not
(02:09:47):
Rhinos and not Democrats.
Speaker 1 (02:09:50):
Perhaps a cecafhiaan like challenge. I'll hope that someday that
we can accomplish that goal. Marine. Thank you very much.
Speaker 13 (02:09:56):
As always right around the corner right.
Speaker 1 (02:09:58):
I like your optimism. Marine, will keep my fingers crossed
that you're right on that one. Let's see what Nick's
got this morning. He Nick, thanks for calling in, Welcome
to the program.
Speaker 10 (02:10:06):
Well thanks, Brian, good to talk to you.
Speaker 13 (02:10:08):
Hey.
Speaker 10 (02:10:08):
I agree with the Marine one hundred percent, and I
think you've had a lot of good discussions this morning.
But the one thing I wanted to say is that
dominion voting machines are not the problem by themselves. It's
all the voting machines. When you put your vote into
that computer, it can be changed and there's nothing you
can do about it. When we put stuff into a
(02:10:30):
computer like that, it can be changed, and that's what's
being done. And what we keep talking about is having
paper ballots hand counted, and that's what we actually need
to have to make sure our elections are honest. And
it's just been going on for a long time and
it needs to be stopped.
Speaker 4 (02:10:47):
Now.
Speaker 1 (02:10:47):
Well, I will observe that John F. Kennedy got elected
because paper ballots were manipulated in the city of Chicago
to the tune of fifty thousand in his direction, I think,
voted by dead people. But so, paper ballots don't solve
the problem. Elections are determined by the persons counting the votes,
not the people casting the votes. And you say that
it is being done the dominion voters that you say
(02:11:09):
the votes can be changed, of course anything electronic, of course,
theoretically absolutely your vote could be changed. You then said
it was being done. And that's the element of this
Dominion allegation that seems to be missing. Why did Fox
News say that happen on the air and then write
a check to Dominion for seven hundred and eighty five
million dollars because well, perhaps they didn't have any evidence
(02:11:30):
supporting their on air claim. That's the missing link. I've
never seen it proven that the votes were actually changed.
They can be its computers. Did they? I don't know,
But I don't have any problem going back to paper
counting as long as you got both sides of the
political equations standing there looking at each other with great
skepticism to ensure that the votes are being accurately counted.
(02:11:51):
Appreciate it, Nick, certainly do thank you for your comments
this morning. Of course, earlier in the program, ken Kober,
it's going to be a big day to day ten
o'clock because Police Chief Teres of Thigi's lawyer, the Finny
Law Firm, they're doing a meeting about her being well
placed on administrative leave. Why well, because they have to
launch an investigation against her for how she was running
the Sinsint Police Department. Of course, ken Kober confirmed my suspicions.
(02:12:15):
She was running the Sin Sint Police Department the way
aft pervol and city Manager Cheryl Long told her to
run it. Huh that being the case, why are they
using her as a scapegoat. She was only doing what
she was told.
Speaker 11 (02:12:31):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (02:12:32):
Well, here what a lawyer has to say at ten
o'clock this morning, So keep your popcorn out on that one.
So Chief Henny, temporary chief right now. Empower you, Mike McCormick.
Speaker 8 (02:12:40):
This