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December 10, 2024 145 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Five o five.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
If if you have k RC the talk station, Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
I'm the dude, man, and I'm Brian Thomas. I am
not the dude, and Happy Tuesday. Thanks to Dan Carol
for covering from me. Yesterday I went out to UH
Camp Attleburn to shoot fifty cows with Navy Seals. Man,
I'm telling you, it is sometimes really good to be me.
The friends that I have made as a consequence of

(00:52):
being here on the fifty five Jersey Morning Show, including
retired Colonel Bob Kattyre, who is I gut. He's the
sniper training guy for the fifty cows, teaching the Navy seals,
you know, how to operate and shoot the fifty cows.
I guess they don't typically use them, so just you know,
broadening their general area of expertise in terms of firearms.

(01:13):
But it's the second time I was able to go
out there, and yesterday he invited my son, who was
really the I really only squeezed off about ten rounds yesterday.
My son did the lion's share of that. He had
a phenomenal time, got to meet some wonderful people, and
my wife has got a fan club.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
Now.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Yes, the United States Navy Seal Teams six and ten
are huge fans of my wife, as there's literally everybody there.
She made a couple several dozen schnicker Doodle cookies for
the seals and the shootings the folks there and everybody
loved them. And one of my police officer friends who
was there is also on the fifty caliber training team,

(01:54):
Yo Yo police officer told me to tell my wife,
you can let her know that a hop set her
cookies are better than doughnuts. So it was kind of cool,
and all the seals are like, oh, these are great,
these are great. It's like, I know, I married out
of my element. My wife is an amazing, amazing baker.

(02:14):
So thanks to Paullette, and again thanks to everybody who
was involved with facilitating my being there and having just
such a wonderful day spending time with those guys and
my son.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
So enough of that.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
Coming up at the fifty five Kossey Morning Show. You know,
the Orlando Sons is not going away. I have high hopes,
in spite of the fact that he lost his race,
that he has a future in politics or something great
because he's a brilliant guy, great family man and outspoken
on immigration. He wrote a Washington Post op ed piece,

(02:48):
Orlando's going to join the program at seven o five
to talk about it. And as he just starts out
in his op ed piece for the Wapole, illegal immigration
poses one of the most pressing challenges to the United States,
undermining national securities or any public resources, limiting opportunities for citizens,
for lawful immigrants. Opponents of illegal immigration office mischaracterized as
anti immigrant, ignoring Donald Trump's strong support for legal immigration,

(03:13):
which he views as the cornerstone for the American strength.
And here's the point. As someone who came to this
country through legal immigration, I know firsthand the contributions immigrants
make when they follow the rules and enforcing immigration laws
insures fairness for those who respect the system, protects taxpayers,
and preserves opportunities for lawful immigrants. And that's just the

(03:35):
outset of it. Or that is going to dive on
a little bit deeper in that, And I appreciate him
writing that it is important that we hear from the
legal immigration community. And isn't it something that was revealed
during the most recent election. We had a lot of
folks who the Democrats, I believe, thought were going to
just immediately vote Democrat. Within the immigration community generally, I mean,

(03:57):
how many times did you read articles over that, you know,
the election and run up where you had you know,
reporters going out and talking to immigrants and asking them
what their perception of the open border was, and you
heard a lot of them say it's crazy. Shut it down,
this isn't good. Look at the Democrat cities. Mayor Eric
Adams in New York City is considering return turning Republican

(04:19):
and he is now working to bypass this city council
on their sanctuary city law. Eric Adams, Yeah, people write
almost riot, not rioting, but certainly letting their voices be
known in very Democrat cities about the problem the illegal
immigration system is caused. This just unchecked flow of humanity

(04:40):
over the border. Biden administration could have done something about it,
like the Trump administration did before it.

Speaker 1 (04:45):
It didn't. It encouraged it.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
It projected to the rest of the world that it
was wide open, and so the rest of the world
got the message and literally the four corners of the
globe ended up in the United States of America. Not
good for Biden, of course, translating to not good for Harris.
She lost, including lost the popular boade by about three
million people. So it's an excellent point on the Republican

(05:09):
side of the Ledger. We enjoy legal immigration. I'm a
proponent of legal immigration. It's the illegal immigration that's the problem.
And while the world is a crazy place, isn't it?
Oh wait a minute, the rest of the morning show,
smither Van, Yes, Christopher Smithman's going to join the program
today since I wasn't here yesterday, and thanks to Dan

(05:29):
Carol A little upset that I didn't get to interview
Congressman Brad Weinster. But Congressman Winster bon the program yesterday,
and I'm sure that was an excellent interview. I was busy. Breitbart.
It is Tuesday, so we get the insights scoop of Breitbart.
Joe Pollock returns to the program. I'm talking about the
fall of the shar Ali Sade in Syria. What in

(05:49):
a wild, wild situation that has unleashed in Syria? Big
question mark now, is it a great thing or is
it a bad thing? I think most people are viewing
it as a very positive development, showing the weakness of
Iran and the weakness of Russia, both proper uppers of
the Basharlesad evil regime. That guy killed just hundreds of
thousands of people and an interesting start to that civil

(06:13):
war which has been going on for thirteen years, ultimately
resulting in him being exiled. I guess they all reports
say he's been granted asylum in Russia.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
But who's going to fill the void?

Speaker 3 (06:24):
The insurgents, a lot of which are dangerous, you know,
Islamic fundamentalist rebels. So if they end up taking it over,
I don't know that that's going to be a positive thing,
but we'll see. It's certainly the weakness of Iran in
Russia could help facilitate maybe a little bit more common
Israel since Iran's you know, lost one of its vehicles

(06:47):
to fund rebels in fighting against Israel. But also Russia
and its involvement need eve involved in the Ukraine. A
lot of resources, of course, Russia's expended there, including fog
of war. You picked the number of Russians that have
been killed in the war in Ukraine. I can't put
my thumb on it. It's just impossible to tell. But pulling

(07:12):
out of Syria gives them a little bit more attention,
allowing them to attention put more attention to focus on Ukraine,
but also again revealing Russia's weakness. It may serve as
a mechanism to negotiate a peace deal and end that
ridiculous conflict. So we'll talk about that with Joel Paul Locke,
at least in so far as the Basharlesad regime falling

(07:35):
and how it might impact something. And of course it
being Tuesday, you know Daniel Davis Deep Dive is going
to be focusing on that Syria. I'm going to ask
him what the post a Sad regime is going to
look like. Do we have any idea Israel ceasefire with
Hisbawa sort of kind of? And did Trump negotiate a
Russia Ukraine ceasefire? I think as of right now the

(07:58):
answer is no. But we're gonna see what Daniel Davis
says to say about that at eight thirty.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
So there's your line up today.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
You know I enjoy hearing from you, so feel free
to call five one three seven fifty eight hundred eight
two three talk pound five to fifty on AT and
T phones. And I think a justice has finally served
in so far as Daniel Penny is concerned, a jury
found him not guilty of the lesser charge in connection
with the death of thirty year old Jordanneely. Jordan Neely

(08:29):
a disturbed, disturbed man, and he literally scaring the hell
out of folks Broaden on the subway that day, and
of course attracted national attention. The George Floyd folks caught.
This was very analogous, different though, because of course Daniel
Penny Marine turned good samaritan, helping people on the train,

(08:53):
including women and children, stepping up to the challenge in
spite of his own concerns and protecting them from the
outrageously dangerous. Excuse me, Jordan Neely mentally disturbed, very threatening criminal.

(09:14):
He has a long record. He was on some kind
of drug, artificial synthetic drug described as a stimulant, and
he made threats. So you know, someone is going to
die today, he said, And it's noted. Daniel Penny could
have looked away, but he didn't. He came to the

(09:36):
aid of his fellow passengers. They were scared witless. I'd
use the FCC non compliant word. You know what I'm
talking about. When Neely got on the plane and started
ranting about someone's going to die today, you think about
New York City. Historically people turned their heads away from crime,
they do not report it. I'm not getting involved, and

(09:58):
is that what we want in the world? Those are
rather interesting observation. You can read the op ed piece
yourself from William mcgern. But he pointed out, you know,
this is the kind of thing that we hope that
there are more Daniel Pennies in the world. He said,
fathers hope there will be a Daniel Penny on the
train every time their daughters ride the subway. Folks that

(10:21):
are willing to step up to the challenge dealing with
a clearly mentally disturbed and very threatening criminal. And yet
he was charged for defending those folks. It's just a
simply outrageous thing. But that's Alvin Bragg. What do you
expect and what lesson is to be learned on this?
Daniel Penny had to go through a full year plus

(10:43):
worth of defending himself when all he was doing was
stepping up to the challenge and trying to put a
stop to this dangerous guy harming other people on the
subway train. And if you look at the history, and
you probably know what anybody pays any attention to, what
goes on in New York City. People get shot into trains.
I mean, there are all kinds of crimes on trains,

(11:07):
all kinds stabbings and robbings and shootings, and it's just
people already walk into It is an unsafe place to be.
And if you take out of the equation the idea
that a good Samaritan might come to your aid in
a city that, well, it makes it virtually impossible to
own a firearm. You've just made that place a much

(11:30):
more dangerous place. And you've given people more reason to
feel insecure when writing on public transportation. And then lo
and behold. You know, after the acquittal, Black Lives Matter
has called for black people to kill white people. I
found this appalling. Some guy named Hawk Newsom, who described

(11:51):
as the founder of BLM of Greater New York, explicitly
called upon Black Americans to respond to this not guilty
version by killing white people. Quote, we need some black vigilantes.
People want to jump up and choke us and kill
us for being loud. How about we do the same.

(12:14):
Is that what he was doing being loud? He was
screaming death threats, and the witness testimony said that they
were very scared more so than the normal train ride. Okay,
you basically get on a New York subway frightened anyway,
and then neely jumps on the train and starts talking

(12:36):
about someone's gonna die today, acting all freaked out. He
was high on something called K two. He had a
history of psychosis, described as being on one of the
I think that one of the New York City's top
fifty people. He was here it is he was on
the city's top fifty list of homeless and desperate need

(12:57):
of help. Even Eric Adams know that, said the city
failed him. New York Mayor Eric Adams again spoke for
the law abiding residents of the city, complaining that nearly
clearly mentally disturbed and very threatening criminal being presented in

(13:17):
the press as a young innocent child, a Michael Jackson
imitator who was murdered for no reason. Eric Adams said, no,
that is not the case. So I was pleased with
that outcome, and I hope you are as well. What

(13:37):
we need to do is foster and encourage the idea
of us stepping up to the challenge when evil and
violence threatened our fellow citizens. And so salute to Daniel
Penny for sucking it up, dealing with it, doing the
right thing at the time, being a marine, and maybe
even saving a life. Five nineteen ker CD Talks Days

(14:01):
Stick Around, I will be right back Channel nine first
one and well forecast. Today we have well spotty showers
overcast with steady temperatures high a fifty overcast. Tonight temperatures
will drop fast to say some light snow is even possible.
We're going down to thirty Tomorrow's I have thirty four

(14:21):
with spotty snow possible and cloudy skies also windy clear
every night down to eighteen tease partly cloudy on Thursday,
and I have thirty one. It's say forty seven degrees
right now. I have fifty five ker CD coss station
five twenty two on a Tuesday from three to call
five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred, eight

(14:42):
hundred and eighty two to three talk found five fifty
on AT and T phone. Meanwhile, Black Lives Matter calling
for a killing of white people because Daniel Penny's acquittaled.
Don't make any sense out of that. It's impossible too.
And then here's an equally insane reality going on.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
Social media excuse me.

Speaker 3 (14:58):
Social media makes it so easy for people to just
sort of make outrageous and stupid, stupid statements, and so
we got Luigi MANGIONI no relation to Chuck from what
I've heard. He's the of course, arrested person in the killing.
The United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania,

(15:21):
yesterday after McDonald's customer and employee spotted him said gee,
it looks like that guy's picture who's floating all over
the world. So police showed up, they say they started
talking to him. Officers approached, they recognized them wearing a
medical mask. He allegedly handed over a fake I geek
id gave a phony name, and when police ask him

(15:44):
if he'd recently been to New York City, became, in
their words, quiet and started to shake, so I guess
they patted him down. They found a ghost gun, which
similar looked similar to the one in the photograph ghost
gun created at home. It's kind of funny. There's a
buyback program. I think it was in New York City,
and I guess they offered two hundred and fifty bucks

(16:07):
or something for every gun you turned in, so some
guy got his three D printer out and printed hundreds
I guess. So there's glock switches which turned the clockhan
gun into a fully automatic, and those qualified for the
buybacks we ended up like pocketing twenty one thousand dollars, forcing.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
Them to change the policy.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
So any ghost guns turned in the max available for
the buyback programs twenty five bucks. Sorry, just a little
side note on that, But people took the social media
and started putting negative reviews on McDonald's restaurants in Altoona,
Pennsylvania because the employee called the police.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
On this guy.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
They're trying to make a hero out of this miserable
piece of excrement. One post the working class has betrayed humanity,
very large rat behind the count or not very nutritional food.
I've heard employees get free food for working a shift.
Hope they have health insurance to cover the future heart attacks.

(17:08):
So you know, this guy, I guess had a beef
with the healthcare system. Generally speaking, it's really not quite
clear where his beef was what specifically. The details slow
to come out on that, But this is the kind
of crap you read on social media, and we all
know what opinions are like yes, and even idiots with
stupid opinions drawing stupid conclusions, suggesting murdering people because you

(17:32):
got a problem with the system. Murdering people is a okay,
and that this guy, this, this Mangioni guy is somehow
a hero for shooting a human being in the back.
Now you can say we want all day long about
the healthcare system, but I'm sorry, I can't abide that.

(17:53):
You know, there but for the grace of God, go
you or I. Someone could have a beef with what
you or your company does. There's always some with a
chip on their shoulder, and we want to foster and
encourage murder. No, I don't think so. They jerks come
out of the woodwork, don't they. Five twenty six If
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(19:24):
dot com.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
Red fans, there.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
Here is your nine first warning weather forecast. Got spotty
showers today, overcast hi a fifty overnight overcast temperatures will
be dropping, they say quickly, some light snow as possible,
get down to thirty degrees, high a thirty four tomorrow, fouty, windy,
spotty snow possible, clear overnight down to eighteen and a
partly cloudy Thursday with a high a thirty one forty seven.

(19:53):
Right now for the five cam RACD talk station, that
is five thirty one, and a.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
Happy Tuesday to you.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
If I've cares dot comedy, can't listen live, get the podcasts,
and really looking forward to having Orlando Sonza back on
the phone at seven oh five, and of course always
enjoyed talking with the Christopher Smith and so that'll be
on the seven o'clock hour. We have time to talk,
feel free to call five one three, seven four nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eight far flammable wood pallets,
rubber plastic stored under Cincinnati Bridge headline from WCPO. The

(20:27):
ITEAM was looking into a lot of the other bridges
since the Dan Beard Bridge obviously has some serious structural
problems after the fire broke out underneath it. They're busily
working to repair the bridge, taking a little bit longer
than normal, and officials from the city of Cincinnati pointed
out that homeless yes took up residence underneath the bridge.

(20:50):
Some are suggesting the silence is deafening from the re
how the fire started. I heard from a little bird
that ahead of blink. Now again, don't take this as gospel.
This has heard from one of my connected little bird friends.

(21:11):
But behind the scenes, it was suggested the mayor aft
had purvault moved the homeless people out of the city
and told them or relocate them underneath the Brents Benz Bridge.
Obviously they had some shelter there. I suppose the rubber
playground surface provided a little bit softer place to sleep on,
and they start a fire to keep warm, and that

(21:32):
stuff goes up like gasoline. Anyway, whether or not that's true,
obviously there's a problem when you store flammable material underneath
the bridges. We had learned a hard lesson, so cpo's
I team went around and started looking at a lot
of bridges and found out that this is a pervasive problem.
It's happening all over summer storage hotspots. I DOT has

(21:56):
already been focusing on for years, and yet when the
IT team went there. They said, well, there's still a
bunch of stuff piled up underneath them. So they did
some public records requests, found some communications back and forth
or trying to learn as much as they can about
the Big macfire. Everyone's still looking into that. One Federal
Highway Administration urged state bridge inspectors to watch out for

(22:18):
flammable material being stored underneath bridges. This after a fire
on the Santa Monica Freeway a year ago. There's these
things happening all over the place again. Lessons can be
learned from tragedy. And thanks to the I team and
WCPO for at least following up on this and metaphorically

(22:38):
lighting a fire underneath our officials to get something done
and get them cleaned up. They did have some success
on that. Parenthetically, what else is going on all you'd
be happy to know. Since I City Manager Cheryl Long
got an eight and a half percent raise this year,
not making quite as much as Joe Strecker, her salary

(22:59):
is now three hundred and nineteen thousand dollars a year. Jeez, Louise,
that'd be a cost of living increase in a five
percent raise approved by the city. City of Cincinnati Council.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
Hmmm.

Speaker 3 (23:17):
Sharon Coole at CINCINNAI inquiry reporting a review of who
makes the most money in the city based on city
pay or record shows Yes, of course it's City Manager
Cheryl Long. Under the city's carter charter. She runs day
to day operations. They should point out from trash pick up,
the police into keeping the city streets paved. Joe, do
you think it's interesting that they pointed out that she

(23:38):
is responsible from seeing that the city streets are paved?

Speaker 1 (23:43):
Didn't you?

Speaker 3 (23:43):
Aren't you aware of the backlog of roads that need
to be repaired in the city of Cincinnati. I know
you and I have read about that over the years. Yeah,
a lot of things. Just yeah, I suppose that's just
wanted a long list, isn't it?

Speaker 1 (23:59):
Okay?

Speaker 3 (24:00):
Last year apparently made two hundred ninety five three hundred
and forty one dollars. Hired in twenty twenty two at
a salary of two hundred and eighty six thousand, seven
hundred and thirty nine dollars that was identified by Sharon
Coolidge as more than any prior city manager. So over
the past two years she has gotten eleven percent increase.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Joj was your tongue in your cheek when you said
worth every penny? You didn't sound you didn't sound very
sincere when you said that five thirty five fifty five
ks the talk station five one three seven four nine
to fifty five hundred eight hundred eight to two three
talk pound five fifty on AT and T phone stack
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Speaker 4 (26:01):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
It's the Marketers Report.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
General nine says Today will be spotty showers, steady temperatures
with the high fifty. Cloudy, overcast, with dry falling temperatures overnight.
Some slight snow is possible. We'll see a low of
thirty with a high thirty four Tomorrow. Spotty snow is possible.
It'll be windy and cloudy, clear every night Wednesday, but
a low of eighteen and on Thursday, a high thirty

(26:30):
one with partly cloudy skies forty seven degrees.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Right now, it's time for first traffic.

Speaker 5 (26:34):
From the UCL Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why the UC Health Comprehensive Stroke
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Speaker 1 (26:42):
Learn more at uce health dot com.

Speaker 5 (26:44):
I wane traffic is in decent shape early on this
Tuesday morning, no accidents to deal with. I'm not seeing
any delays as of yet. North bound four seventy one.
You're under five minutes to seventy five into town. Inbound
seventy four wide open at North Bend chun King Bramant
fifty five krs deep talk station.

Speaker 3 (27:06):
Shy A five forty one fifty five KRCD talk station
in a very happy Tuesday to you. Stack is stupid.
This is such a Florida story. Over the years, we
find that Florida is a crazy, crazy place. It's got
great a lot of great qualities, but a lot of
strange people shown up in Florida and including teachers. Yeah,

(27:30):
we have a Florida teacher facing accusations after police discovered
him naked and surrounded by what are described as disturbing
items in an elementary school classroom over Thanksgiving break. Joe
your Ayas, thirty four years old, who taught operative word
past tense at Somerset College Preparatory Academy until his arrest,

(27:53):
spotted at Windmill Point Elementary School in Saint Luci Saint
Lucie County. Deputy Eric Holbert, one of multiple deputies in
the county who lives lives on school grounds, speaking with
local news CBS twelve, the more it unfolded, the weirder
it got. He happened upon the scene Thursday night, allegedly

(28:15):
seeing a nude your Eyas surrounded by an assortment of
sex toys, women's underwear, and marijuana. Hulbert said, there's a
large pillow that kids sleep on. There was some sort
of stain on that he was naked when I saw
him close quote thank you, Joe Strecker appropriately timed sound effect.

(28:43):
When your eyes noticed the deputy's presidents, he attempted to
grab his clothes and make a run for it, allegedly
punched the police officer in the face. Officer Hobert said,
I identified myself. I held up both my hands and
said Deputy Sheriff stop and he said no, bro, and
tried to run through me a little bit. He hit
me right here in the lip. I hit him in
the jaw and I was able to hold him with

(29:04):
a jiu jitsu seat belt grip. On further investigation, police said,
your eyes is actually homeless. Broke into the school through
an unlocked window, knowing that it was closed for the holiday.
Port Saint Luci Police Chief Leo Nimezick, so there were
no children president. Thankfully there was nobody inside the school

(29:26):
at the time. He was by himself, you know, as
the vulgarity. I think I just don't even want to
get into his mind and think about what he was thinking.
He said he was homeless and that he's been doing.
What he's been doing is teaching at his school and
then hanging out at a Starbucks and then sleeping in
the public wherever he can. He knew this week the

(29:48):
schools were out, so he's going to break into the
school and stay there for the week. The Preparatory Academy
promptly terminated his employment. Now facing a slow accusation including
loot and lascivious behavior, burglary of an unoccupied structure, marijuana possession,
and battery of an officer, according to the arrest Avidat affidavit.

Speaker 6 (30:10):
The aritocratic.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
Yeah, I think everybody has seen a Christmas Story by now.
Remember the leg lamp for glay Well Larry's Plumbing in
Marysville had a leg lamp. Of course I replica the
one from the movie. But it has been stolen. People

(30:35):
making fun of the fact that it was stolen, owners
calling themselves the joke of Marysville. But it was a
robbery and someone did break the big window in the
front of the store to steal the leg lamp. That
was the only thing that was stolen, which is interesting
considering there are probably a lot of valuables in the store.
Owner the store, Eric Klemp, loved the movie. He said

(30:56):
when he first brought the property, he knew he wanted
to create the holiday windows. And I can remember it
as a kid going to the mall with my parents.
Every store by Marche J C. Pennies, et cetera, and
I wanted one two and being a fan of a
Christmas Story, the first thing I said was, we're buying
a leg lamp. Replica leg lamp. They say, a heartfelt loss,
but the window, that's what really hurt because it's going

(31:19):
to cost them three thousand dollars to replace. No word
on how much the leg lamp replica cost them five
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number five one three, six four four twenty six, twenty six.
That's six four four twenty six twenty six fifty five
KRC the talk station the holidays. Here's your channel nine

(32:52):
first one one to forecasts spotty showers today overcast Anahei
have fifty. If you overcast Tonight, temperatures drop down to
thirty degree use the light. Snow is possible. Cloudy skies tomorrow.
Windy spotty snow is also possible. I have thirty four
down to eighteen overnight with clear skies, and I high
thirty one on Thursday, partly cloudy forty seven degrees Right now.

Speaker 5 (33:13):
Traffic time from the ucup tramp Thing Center. When it
comes to stroke, every second counts. That's why the UC
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above Union Center through downtown in Bend seventy four is

(33:35):
problem free pants col Rate, Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC,
the talk station.

Speaker 3 (33:44):
Five fifty to fifty five kr CD Talk Station, Bryan
Thomas happy to be back thanks to Dan Carroll covering
for me yesterday and going back to the stack is stupid.
Absent phone calls, you can feel free to call five one, three,
seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two
three talk Time five fifty on AT and T founds.
Make sure you get your heart media when you stop
there at a fifty five carocea dot com. Check out the podcast,

(34:04):
which will include today at Orlando Sonza at seven oh five,
smither Van Christopher Smith and at seven twenty Wrightbart's Joel
Pollock on the fall of the shar Ala Sade in Syria.
Of course Daniel Davis Deep Dive at eight thirty, also
on Syria, but as well as the Israeli the Israeli
ceasefire with Hezbawa and some commentary on Trump negotiating a

(34:26):
Russia Ukraine ceasefire. Democrats a little wigged out about Donald Trump.
Everybody in the world is treating him as the president.
Where is Joe Biden? Is he still wandering around the
rainforests asking for a friend?

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Anyway?

Speaker 3 (34:43):
It sounds like a terrible idea, a tabletop fire pit.
Apparently it was a terrible idea, because I have a
Miami company that made tabletop fire pits, now facing lawsuits
from customers, has said they were badly burned. One woman, plaintiff,
Kyla Homensky, struggling with tremendous pain and suffering she was

(35:06):
burned on more than forty percent of her body, saying
it happened just and just very quickly. The Coulson fire
pit was being used while she was entertaining friends one night.
Flames looked like they went out, so said said her husband,
would you please relight it? According to Khloa Lemensky, he
went to pour the liquid in, obviously the flammable liquid

(35:29):
that makes the fire pit run. But as soon as
the liquid was in the pit, a giant fireball blew
up like an explosion. It's called flame jetting, which says Kurz,
when somebody pours a flammable liquid over and exposed fire,
so the flames can shoot out as far as fifteen
feet or more, burning people nearby, I guess, including this
man's husband. Kyla Lemensky, her attorney, said flame jetting is

(35:53):
not something people are familiar with. It's an absolutely horrific
situation because it can burn somebody to death in a
matter of seconds. Stuart Ratson representing Kalin in a federal
lawsuit against Coulson Fire Pits LC, as well as a
couple of other companies. The lawsuits say the product produces
flames that may not be readily visible, increasing the risk
of flame jetting. She said, I just remember hearing screams

(36:16):
and saying you're on fire, and I just remember kind
of trying to slap off the fire, if you will,
and those types of situations you're in so much shocked,
you're just kind of working to stay alive. Burned from
head to toe, as it's described in the lawsuit, he
had to spend weeks in the hospital, a couple of
skin grafts, daily bandage changes. She said she had to

(36:37):
learn how to rewalk again, relearn how to do most
physical and every day to day things that you really
don't even think about, so severely injured totally. Nineteen people
claim the Coulson firepit caused them comparable burn injuries.

Speaker 7 (36:52):
M do.

Speaker 6 (36:54):
What the hell?

Speaker 3 (36:55):
The website parenthetically for Colson firepit is shut down. Homepage
now has a called notice urging customers to stop using
the fire pit and throw it in the trash. That's
actually the words they wrote. So anyhow, I again just
sounds like a bad idea having a firepit on top

(37:16):
of the table. Well, clearly it was in that particular case.
Let's see here. Smartphones obviously we're all using them. One
woman successfully made it past the gauntlet of putting the

(37:40):
phone down and not touching it for a total of
eight hours, and as a reward for those efforts, she
ended up winning thirteen eighty dollars.

Speaker 1 (37:53):
According to the.

Speaker 3 (37:53):
Article, a merchant in the municipality in China held the
public welfare challenge with my drivers, reporting that the individuals
selected ten random people to participate and by inviting them
to lie down for eight hours in the merchant's store.
They said there were a few rules that participants had
to abye bye with the most important one being that
they were not allowed to touch their smartphones. Also not allowed

(38:17):
to sleep deeply, as that would have defeated the challenge's
purpose of being awake and not touching your cell phone.
In the end, the unnamed woman inner pajamas overcame the
test and won ten thousand You on i E thirteen
hundred and eighty dollars equivalent. Report doesn't mention if any

(38:37):
of the other participants won the competition, but if that
was not the case, then it's a simple example of
how smartphones have become an indispensable part of people's lives.
Some may argue people are addicted to them. It's also
pointed out researchers have found that reducing daily smartphone usage
can have a positive impact on your personal health. Reducing

(38:58):
usage by just an hour can lead we need an
individual's anxiety levels as well as increase their life's satisfaction.
I can't argue with that, never seen the studies, but
certainly sounds logical and reasonable. Five point fifty five fifty
five kr CD talk station plenty to talk about the.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
Six o'clock hour.

Speaker 3 (39:17):
I'd love to talk to you, so you can feel
free to call five one three, seven, four nine, fifty
five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three talk
right back after the news.

Speaker 1 (39:26):
Look what it happened. This is the greatest political comment
comeback of all time.

Speaker 3 (39:30):
This has ever been two three four times today fifty
five KRSD talk station. I've here a fifty five kr
CD talk station. Bryan Thomins wishing everyone a happy Tuesday.
Thanks again, Dan Carroll for covering for me yesterday, and
thanks again to the deal the Sealed Team six and
ten and retired Colonel Bob Kattire and the rest of

(39:52):
the crew that invited me to go shoot fifty cows
out of Camp Attterbury yesterday. Had a wonderful time with
my son and the whole crew that and again going
back to my wife making snickerdoodles for everybody. She has
a massive fan base among the Navy seals now. Anyway,
she actually said, and I told her about this, she goes, oh,

(40:12):
I would love to go there and watch you guys
shoot sometime said a little worried about her being around
those Navy seals. And those guys are awesome. By the way,
God bless America, and God bless that's two. That's four
chunks of Navy seal teams. Last time it was two
and three. I think it was six and ten yesterday,

(40:35):
and so I've had an opportunity to meet quite a
few of them. Man, we got some quality, quality men
serving the Navy Seals. Anyway, Orlando Sons are coming up
in an hour to talk about immigration. He is the
product of legal immigration, and he, of course understands the
problems associated with illegal immigration, wrote a Washington Post op
ed piece. As I pointed out the last hour, you

(40:57):
know you haven't seen the last of Orlando Sanza. I
see a great future in front of him. Christopher Smithman,
former Vice mayor of the City of Cincinnati smither event
in delay of the day since I wasn't here. I
love having him on the program seven to twenty for
Christopher bright Bart inside Scoop every Tuesday eighth five. Today
the return of Joel Paulock. We'll talk about the fall
of Bashar Ali Sad and Syria and what that might mean.

(41:19):
Also on the topic of conversations with Daniel Davis for
The Deep Dive at eight thirty, Well, Douk Syria, What's
what lies in the store for all of us? Some
are drawing a parallel to the fall of the Berlin Wall,
with the fall of Bashar al Asade, Israel ceasefire with
Hisbala question mark, and questions about whether Trump is going
to be able to negotiate a Russia Ukraine ceasefire, and

(41:42):
of course the falling apart of Syria may assist in
that regard. And yeah, I honest, got to be honest
with you, I'm not real familiar with Syria's history, but
for the last thirteen years there's been this this absence
outright civil war going on, claiming the lives of they say,

(42:03):
well over half a million people.

Speaker 1 (42:07):
How did that start? Look?

Speaker 3 (42:10):
According to reporting from the Telegraph, this remember the Arab
spring back in twenty eleven spreading through the Middle East.
Syria apparently at the outset remained kind of neutral on
the whole thing until one night in February a group
of children in the southern town of Deira wrote some

(42:31):
graffiti on the wall quote it's your turn next, doctor,
referring to Bashar al Assade, who was an optomologist. It
was kind of a taunt at a Sade, who apparently
is very thin skinned and very insecure. On top of it,
so he got all angry about that local security chief,

(42:52):
a cousin of Bashar Ala Sade, had his men round
up and torture the children, resulting in crowds gathering around
demanding the release of these children. According to the reporting,
As'ad's generals and maybe Ozma herself that would be Bashar
Assad's wife, a very controversial woman in their own right,

(43:15):
begged him to comply and apologized for rounding the children
up and torturing them in order to defuse the crisis
that was obviously unfolding before their very eyes. However, bish Assad,
being who he is, gave an order to open fire
on the protesters, which triggered the thirteen year uprising that

(43:38):
obviously ultimately saw him have to flee the country the
other day. By all accounts, he is now an asylum
in Russia. But over the months following that slaughter of protesters,
he got even worse in terms of torture and blood.
They say, in the following decade, the Bisharlesade regime would

(44:01):
kill hundreds of thousands of their own citizens, torture more
than fourteen thousand prisoners to death, and caused what was
described as the greatest refugee crisis since the Second World War,
half of serious population fled the country, going back to
problems with immigration, and of course a lot of them

(44:23):
ended up in Europe, causing major problems there.

Speaker 8 (44:28):
Now.

Speaker 3 (44:29):
Apparently early on in his after he took over, his
brother was above him and in line for succession, which
is why b. Charlsade ended up going to ophthalmology school.
So that his brother was apparently kind of a thrill seeker,
and he died in a car accident speeding around Syria.
So next in line, Alosad and apparently initially on encouraged

(44:51):
by his wife, was thinking about turning Syria into more
progressive democratic state. They called it Damascus Spring. He released prisoners,
gave some degree of freedom of expression, and at that
time was actually somewhat popular. However, as reported, it didn't

(45:13):
last long. Apparently it dawned on him that democracy would
mean the end to his family's dominance because he's one
of the Awl Whites. They're a minority, they only make
up ten percent of the population. So he saw the
writing on the walls, like, wait a second, if I
let people decide their future here, then I'm going to
be out of power. So he went the opposite direction,

(45:35):
and that forced him into the arms of Iran because
he was losing support, so he became dependent upon Iran,
and that dependence increased after the uprising forced him to
become more reliant than ever on Tehran. By then, they say,
his horizons had narrowed in Syria. He can only trust
members close to his family, and the uprising spread in

(45:56):
twenty eleven. His younger brother, described as even almost a
bigger thug than Dashar al Asad was charged with suppressing
descent as ruthlessly as he could, which, also, as the
reporting says, a role he relished. I guess he liked
abusing people and killing them. In fact, there's some video

(46:16):
footge out there of this mahar guy laughing while firing
shots at unarmed protesters in Damascus, not a great reputation,
not good for power, and of course also feeding the
fuel of descent and rebellion, which is exactly what the
aftermath was, and being chucked out of office. So the

(46:39):
toping of his regime at the hands of rebel forces,
they say, can have far reaching consequences, and we're not
quite sure what they're going to be because the rebel
forces are led by the Islamist militant group Hayat Tarir
al Sham. Notice they're described as an Islamist militant group,

(47:01):
which makes me think of Iran and the fall of
the shaw of Iran being taken over by yes, the Iotolokamani,
a well fundamentalist Islamic guy. So they captured Damascus over
the weekend, and of course Bisharolo's side, with his tail
between his legs, fled and according to everybody out there
kind of reporting on this, he is now in Russia.

(47:21):
Some of the reports early on set his plane crash.
But anyway, so Western nations currently described as cautious because
we don't know what's going to happen in terms of
the power vacuum in Syria, and if a chaotic and
contested transition happens, it could be problematic.

Speaker 1 (47:40):
Hmm.

Speaker 3 (47:45):
So there are competing factions. They're the one I mentioned,
the foregoing one, and then there's the terrorist group styling
itself as the Islamic State. They're infighting as well, but
they say for now, the fall of the Asad dynasty
of over fifty years in power as some immediate global ramifications,
with Russia and Iran now seen as losers because he

(48:09):
was ousted. They were his primary supporters. There's a chief
economist at Brenberg Bank. I guess he's an expert on
such things, Holger Shimmitting. He said, Iran has likely lost
its major route to send weapons to the Hazbala terror
militia in Lebanon. Despite the potential power vacuum in parts

(48:30):
of Syria for a while, the Middle East could eventually
be as a little less unstable as a result. See
there's where Israel might benefit from this. And in the
United States, economists point out that the far Bashar al
Assad and the company weakening of Russia and Iran after
losing their key ally in the region, will give Trump

(48:53):
a welcome boost. Strategist Bill Blaine said, the new reality
is when Donald Trump assumes I was in January twentieth,
he will be facing a threat be facing a threat
board where the opposition looks massively weakened, and how the
United States holds many of the cards. That does not

(49:14):
mean the world is getting much less dangerous. It's entirely
unclear what kind of new Syria might emerge from Asad's overthrow,
but it feels like power and global initiative could be
shifting back to the West. They say, we might hear
some benefit on that in light of the growing, you know,
calls for bricks currency. They think this might shore up

(49:34):
the US dollar and also provide Trump with some leverage
in Ukraine, because again Russia had all of its resources
sort of focused on Ukraine, which said, you know, I
guess if they had a choice, We're going to pull
the plug on Syria. We're going to pull the plug
on our war with Ukraine. They chose to pull the
plug on Syria. They set of sod's downfall in the
defacto defeat of Russia and Iran in the process as

(49:58):
massive implication for markets in terms of unwinding fears around
the dollars pre eminence, while increasing the momentum that could
develop behind Trump and his global trade vision, both in
terms of put in the United States in the US
dollar front and center. Let's hope that's true, they say.
The major winnicle, major geopolitical winners right now Israel and Turkey. Israel,

(50:21):
of course, because of the drying up of weapons going
to Hisbala, and Turkey, which shares a five hundred and
sixty mile long border with Syria, and Turkey's been the
main backer of opposition groups in Syria aiming to topple
Bashar al Asad. So I guess they were on the

(50:43):
winning side of that. According to some experts quoted, Turkey
is for now said to be the biggest external beneficiary
of Asad's fall. They caution that Ankara will only feel
the benefits of regime change in Damascus if no dangerous
vactor of power emerges and the power is transferred relatively

(51:04):
peacefully from now on, according to the expert, In other words,
Turkey stance benefit only if the Ashad regime is replaced
by a functioning government able to face the daunting task
of delivering stability to a diverse country while competing factions
that will need billions of dollars in aid and investments

(51:25):
to rebuild. I'm sorry, I can't find any optimism in
that after thirteen years of civil war, all these different
warring factions and sort of the enemy of my enemy
is my enemy, and you got these multiple Islamic factions
fighting sort of collectively to Topplbashar al Asad. I suppose
they're now going to be looking at each other, and

(51:47):
since there is a power vacuum. I suspect one or
more of those groups is going to want to be
the one leading the country, probably resulting in more war
in Syria. It remains to be seen, but the situation
is unfolding rapid. Stick around more to talk about. It's six.
It's amazing how the world can change in the moment's time,
isn't it? Six eighteen fifty five kre see the talk station.

(52:10):
Bobby's on the phone. Look forward to talking to you, Bobby.
Hang on a second. I want to mention Colin Electric
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plus for the work they've done at my home many
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Speaker 6 (53:03):
Com fifty five KRC your holiday today.

Speaker 3 (53:12):
Time for the nine first one one forecasts will have
well a high a fifty today and some spotty showers
down to thirty overnight, maybe some light snow also overcast,
cloudy skys Tomorrow, windy and a high thirty four and
some spotty snow possible going down to eighteen over Wednesday night,
clear skies and thirty one. The eye on Thursday with
a partly cloudy day forty seven. Right now, Time for

(53:34):
traffic update Chuck from the UCUP tra Emphing Center. When
it comes to stroke, every second accounts.

Speaker 5 (53:39):
That's why the u SEE Health Comprehensive Stroke Center is
the clear choice for rapid life saving treatment. Learn more
at u s Health dot com. Highway is doing just fine.
I'm not seeing any time delays to deal within the
downtown as of yet. Clues are working with an accident
on Glen Way at bottom Chuck Ingram on fifty five

(54:00):
hers the talk station.

Speaker 3 (54:04):
Dasha I six twenty three on a Tuesday. Puhne number
here if you'd like to call him talk five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty eight hundred and eighty two to three
talk with Time five fifty on AT and T phones.
I remember, get her to think I've Karsy dot com
when you're there, to get your I heart media so
you can stream the audio, the content, get the podcast
wherever you happen to be, and let's go to the phones.
Bobby's on the phone, Bob, thanks for holding over the break,

(54:24):
my friend. Welcome back, and happy Tuesday.

Speaker 9 (54:27):
Happy Tuesday, my brother. I'd like to make a comment
about the serious situation.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
Yeah, please, Well, the Kurds hold.

Speaker 9 (54:36):
More territory than any played any other group in Syria.
But my question is, poor mister Biden isn't in kroll,
isn't in control of this situation. Because the leader, the
leader of the rebellion that's situated in Damascus right now,
that's supposed to be the head of you know, the rebellion.
He's got a twenty million dollar bounty on his head

(54:57):
from our State Department as a terrorist oh wonderful. Oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (55:03):
So so Bobby, if we're looking for some smooth transition
and some stability and some sort of stability in terms
of the government, if it's the opposition leader, then that's
not going to go out real well, at least in
so far as US relations with the country on a
going forward basis.

Speaker 9 (55:23):
It's not going to go well. And all the Trumpster
told him right off the bat first words out of
his mouth, he said, stay out of it. He knows
we've been arming the Kurds for a long time, all
the way from back in Hillary Clinton. Because I know
where they stored the arms at. Wow, right right there
in being Ghauzi, the being Ghazi Medical Center, five nice

(55:44):
buildings that we built for you know, the country there,
and we stored arms there. Nobody ever understood why the
representative of our country was in being Ghauzi. Well, it's interesting,
the being Gazi Medical Center where we stored our arms there.

Speaker 1 (56:01):
Well, what do you what do you make of Israel?

Speaker 3 (56:03):
They say they destroyed chemical weapons and other weapons caches
in Syria right just yesterday, I guess, or maybe even
this morning, because they got that shared border and since
there is now this power vacuum in Syria, they said,
you know what, we're gonna keep the hands of the
We're gonna keep these weapons out of the hands of
the Sunni Islamic rudbulls. So we're just gonna blow them up.
I don't know anything about blowing up chemical weapons, but

(56:24):
it's like blowing up nuclear facilities where they have radioactive material.
Is there a concern that when you blow that stuff
up that it releases the chemical weapons or the nuclear
radiation as the case maybe, and it goes out into
the world. I don't know if they think about that
kind of stuff ahead of time, but this is way
beyond my knowledge base.

Speaker 9 (56:44):
I think they just take it displaced, like a pup
of smoke on a windy day.

Speaker 1 (56:48):
Or that evening.

Speaker 3 (56:50):
That's a scary thought, man. So anyway, so understand Israel's
desire to do that, but they're now worried about Israel
maybe occupying that what they call demilitary zone there and
expanding the territory, which is of course going to really
irk many folks in the Middle East about Israel maybe
trying to take over. Given the power vacuum that exists there,

(57:11):
it's very complicated, wouldn't you agree, Bobby.

Speaker 9 (57:15):
Well, the goal on hide scenariosing was going to be
a nice powder keg within the next few weeks.

Speaker 3 (57:20):
Yeah, yeah, well, I guess Israel took that away from
Syria a long time ago, but that was I believe,
nineteen sixty seven. And to the winner go the spoils.
And you don't want to let go of the goal
on heights if you're Israel, because that is an unbelievably
strategic thing. If you give somebody else power of the
goal on heights, you are letting them sit in territory
that looks right down over the top of Israel. It's

(57:43):
got some great military reasons that they want to keep it,
so I doubt that's going to go anywhere anyhow. Frightening stuff, Bobby.
I certainly appreciate your call. God bless you, sir, and faith, flag,
firearms and family right six twenty six. If I have
Kero see talks, maybe you got some other opinions or observations.
Love to hear from you on this very complicated and

(58:04):
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had a couple of problems on his roof that he
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Speaker 6 (01:00:25):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
Waking up on the.

Speaker 3 (01:00:29):
Time Channel nine first one of weather forecasts says, I
have fifty today, not bad. I got a few showers
out there be overcast Overnight. Overcast numbers will be dropping
down to the low of thirty with some light snow possible.
Tomorrow's high thirty four. Spotty snow is possible, enemy windy
along with clouds. Clear over Wednesday night, but going down

(01:00:52):
to eighteen and on Thursday, we'll see a high thirty
one with partly cloudy skies.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Right now forty seven degrees.

Speaker 5 (01:00:57):
Now for traffic update, the up Traffic Center when it
comes to stroke, every second counts. That's why the u
See Health Comprehensive Stroke Center is a clear choice for
rapid life saving treatment.

Speaker 1 (01:01:08):
Learn more at uce health dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:01:10):
Cruise continue to work with an accident or a car hit,
a utility pull and cotfire on Glynnway at Wilder. Traffic
on the highway is doing just fine northbound seventy five
at northbound for seventy one. Just beginning to build a
bit into downtown. Chuck ingramon fifty five kr see the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
Six thirty three fifty five KRCD talk station. It's Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (01:01:35):
Christopher Smith is going to be on today seven to
twenty for him right after Orlando's Sonza with his Washington
Post op ed peace on immigration. There's illegal immigration and
there's legal You can jar your own conclusions as to
which side of the ledger or Lando is on that.
He's a great guy. I'm looking forward to having back
on the program and always a joy hearing from New Hampshire. Gary,
Thanks for calling today, Gary, It's good to hear from

(01:01:55):
this morning.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
Welcome back.

Speaker 10 (01:01:57):
Good morning, Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:01:58):
How are you I am doing well? Thanks? Yeah?

Speaker 10 (01:02:02):
Hey, By the way I speaking, I agree with Bobby
one hundred percent on the Ben gatziview. But yesterday there
was a one hour dissertation with Ben Shapiro. I had
to listen to it twice. He had it complete. If
you can watch it, it's better than the podcast because

(01:02:23):
they had it complete with a map, showed all the
different factions and was basically a breakdown of history starting
from nineteen sixty in the whole Middle East, what mess.
There are different factions of Kurds, Syrians, and Palestinians, and
it breaks it down really well so that you can

(01:02:46):
get a good comprehension of just how complex the whole
thing is.

Speaker 3 (01:02:50):
Yeah, I've seen a couple of maps, and I can't
disagree with you. I have not seen that particular segment,
and I will have to go look at it because
it sounds fascinating, and I will be the first one
to admit, I mean, it's difficult when you look at
the history of those regions and all the different factions
that are going on and who's taking control and who
has and I mean, hell, you just look at the
history of Israel since nineteen forty seven and it's crazy also.

(01:03:11):
But in the final analysis, let me ask you this
what is your candid opinion New Hampshire.

Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
Gary.

Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
Will this result in some sort of peaceful resolution and
transition of power to something that can resemble a stable
Syria or will it be the monstrous Charlie foxtrot that
I anticipate that it'll be based upon what you just
sort of, you know, thumbnail sketched out.

Speaker 10 (01:03:34):
Anybody who believes their enemy that they're not gonna that
used to be part of isis k as a fool?

Speaker 3 (01:03:42):
Okay, fair enough? I think we know exactly what you're anticipating.
If after Gary was a betting man, he's going with,
I believe the Charlie fox trot scenario and I think
that's probably where the money goes. Question whether it will
any of this will adhere to our benefit because as
of right now, all the political plunders are saying this

(01:04:02):
shows Iran and Russia are both weakened by the fall
of Syria in a variety of different ways, some suggesting
this is a reflection that Russia is incapable of fighting
on two fronts, of course, because it was a huge
financial and arms backer of the Bisharalasad regime and they're
using up a lot of those resources in Ukraine. As

(01:04:23):
we all are well aware, Gary, thank you for calling
this morning, folks, if you feel like connould love to
hear from you. In the meantime, though, there's another number
you should call, Affordable Medical Imaging because you don't want
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(01:04:46):
You know, there's not a single one of those images
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(01:05:30):
I did the same thing. A doctor said, you need
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(01:05:52):
CT scan with a contrast is only six hundred bucks
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At the imaging department. They had a surgeon with doing
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(01:06:15):
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Find out in advance what the difference is going to be.
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Speaker 4 (01:06:45):
This is fifty five KRC, an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 11 (01:06:49):
What's up, everybody, I'd man working a type of a
new podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:06:52):
It's editl time with a nine first warning. Weather forecast.

Speaker 3 (01:06:56):
Spotty showers today, high on fifty overcast as you might
have imagine, overnight overcast dropping temperatures down to thirty degrees
with some light snow possible thirty four to the high. Wednesday,
cloudy and windy, maybe some spotty snow down to eighteen
Wednesday night to be clear skies and a partly clotty
Thursday with a high of thirty one forty seven degrees.

Speaker 5 (01:07:16):
Right now, let's give an update on traffic conditions. Run
the UCL Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke every
second counts. That's why the UCE Health Comprehensive Stroke Center.
It's a clear choice for rapid life saving treatment. Learn
more at you see health dot com. Highways not bad
at all to deal with for your Tuesday morning commute.
Just beginning to build a bit northbound seventy five past.

(01:07:36):
Kyle's crews are working with an accident on Glenway at
Wilder Avenue, Carcot Fire. Kingram on fifty five KRC Deep
Talk station, Say.

Speaker 3 (01:07:49):
Forty two at fifty five PRC Detalk station, I hope
you're having a happy Tuesday. Orlando Suns at the top
of our news on immigration for the Washington op ed
piece on that looking forward to having him back on
the show. I wish I was having him back on
the show to congratulate him on the victory. But Hamilton
County tough not to crack, although I think it's possible
we can retake Hamilton County. Look what's going on across

(01:08:11):
this country of ours. When Mayor Eric Adams is talking
about becoming a Republican and now working to bypass New
York City's council to overturn their sanctuary city laws, you
can see a sizeable like a huge shift in the
attitude in the hearts and minds of folks in elected
capacity because they got big, big problems on their hands

(01:08:33):
given the Biden administration's open border policies. And you know,
I was thinking about the the not guilty vertict for
Daniel Penny. I mean, no one suggested he wanted to
kill Jordan Neely. Jordan Neely a deranged, drug induced, disturbed,

(01:08:53):
mentally challenged individual who was literally threatening people on the train.
And you heard Sean point out that one of the
women who testified on the trial and the trial on
his behalf or as a witness, she was scared to
death black woman. And Daniel Penny obviously didn't go after
this guy because he was black. He went after him
because he said people are going to die. Someone's going

(01:09:16):
to die today, while he's whacked out on drugs and
is also described as having a long, long history of
mental problems and challenges. In fact, Mayor pointed out the
city failed Neely identified as the cities and one of
the city's top fifty list of homeless in desperate need
of help, including psychological help and help with drug addiction. Apparently,

(01:09:40):
he had a record demonstrably dangerous, and it's a good thing.
We got folks seize our citizens like this marine to
look out for us, because you know, we can't lie
on our elected officials. Where were the cops, Al Sharpton,
where were the police? You know, we're supposed to put
our hearts in our rather our lives in the hands

(01:10:00):
of those who are licensed and hired as police officers.
But when seconds counts, y'all know they're at least minutes away.
Where were they on the subway train? They weren't there.
So we got a veteran standing up to the challenge
and protecting those young women on the train from this
deranged guy. We need more people like that. We need

(01:10:25):
a lot more people like that. And it's very disturbing
when you got a district attorney like Alvin Bragg going
after this guy when after it was initially invested and invested, investigated,
he was not arrested at the outset. Bragg shows up
a little bit later and charges him. But why why

(01:10:47):
would you want to discourage this kind of behavior. I mean,
if he targeted a black man, if he targeted some
individual and intentionally wanted to murder him, then that's one thing.
But protecting folks, and this guy's medical condition apparently is
really what was the proximate cause of his death. Yeah,
you take your people as you get them. But a

(01:11:10):
good day for Daniel Penny, and I think it's a
good day for America as well. And I hope that,
you know, more of us would actually step up to
the challenge like that, because if you have people in
elected capacity that go after the good Samaritans of the world,
you know a lot fewer good Samaritans left around. In
New York City has been notorious for years for people

(01:11:32):
just outright ignoring crime while it's happening. One story that
was described in the context here sixty years ago, twenty
eight year old Kiddy Genovies raped and murdered outside her
apartment building in Queen's and The New York Times reported
back then, while thirty eight people either saw or heard
the attack, not a single one called the police or

(01:11:55):
came to her aid. Now, they said that time story
was greatly exaggerated with hindsight, But as William mcgerrn observed
the day in the Wall Street Journal, she became a
metaphor for a cold, uncaring city where people don't want
to risk getting involved but when you pivot over and
look at the absolute outright anarchy, it seems to be

(01:12:18):
the New York City subway system. People get on the
subway already scared out of their minds, and that's some
of the testimony that came through into this Daniel Penny trial.
You know, you're already freaked out, and then this guy
comes on. He's talking about someone going to be killed today.
Isn't it a nice one? You can think that somebody's

(01:12:40):
going to come to your aid if you need it.
If you are one of the weaker individuals in society
in a city that won't allow you to carry concealed
or arm yourself to defend yourself, the great equalizer is
not available, and if you use it, you know, damn
well the district Attorney, Alvin Bragg is going to charge
you for defending yourself. And I almost think that is

(01:13:01):
what the left wants, that attitude, that mindset that you
won't defend yourself, that you will not use deadly force
even when you are allowed to, as in, when you
are faced with eminent apprehension of grievous bodily harm or death,
you have the right to defend yourself and use deadly

(01:13:22):
force that you won't use it just because you know
you're going to be rung through the criminal justice system.
You're gonna have to lawyer up at a massive expense,
and it's most notable. Daniel Penny is still facing a
civil suit. Fortunately he's accumulated a rather substantial legal defense fund.
He's probably going to have to use every penny of
I think the three million dollars if people have donated

(01:13:44):
for his defense. So he's facing a civil suit, and
we are now all facing calls from at least one
Black Lives Member founder in New York City that white
people need to be killed. Yeah, Hawk Newsom, founder of
Greater New York. We need some black vigilantes. People want
to jump up and choke us and kill us for

(01:14:06):
being loud. How about we do the same. Oh, that's helpful,
That's real helpful. Apparently he was not aware of the
factual information underlying the prosecution either. Six forty eight fifty
five kars de Talk Station. Maybe feel differently, feel free
to call, but definitely stick around for Orlandos Sonza and
definitely get in touch with Prestese Interiors. When you do that,

(01:14:27):
you get in touch with John Ryan, and he is
the master of kitchen remodeling. I think we're at like
thirty five years of experience for John doing almost exclusively kitchens,
and he does a great job. I know because I
walk into mine every day and I'm happy every time
I walk into it, and i still remember what it
used to look like and what it looks like now.
And boy, we are enjoying our kitchen we have now
for more than a decade.

Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
Time passes so quickly.

Speaker 3 (01:14:51):
But whether you simply want to replace worn out cabinets
and countertops or got the whole thing like we did
and redesign the entire kitchen space for better style and function,
is great to work with, real sweet guy, wonderful ideas
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for so long he has seen every size kitchen and
every size project, and he will have terrific ideas for

(01:15:12):
better flow and storage. And it's just he's a good
guy to work with. He'll keep that team and uh
it check. You know, one stop shopping and you hire John.
You sit down with him from an initial designed to
final installation, and he is the uh well, the mechanism
behind the well oiled machine. That'll be your kitchen remodeling
team A plus with the BBB and remember the National
Kitchen and Bath Association. Check out some of the work

(01:15:33):
he's done over the years online. Go to Prestige one
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and then tell him Brian said, I when you call
him up at five one three two four seven zero
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Speaker 6 (01:15:47):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
You'll have financial questions. Sure, uh time for the nine
first one and weather forecasts.

Speaker 3 (01:15:54):
We're gonna have a uh well, I have fifty day
tot AB overcast. We'll have a spotty shape showing up
perhaps down to thirty overnight with maybe some light snow.
And on Wednesday high thirty four with spotty snow, possible
cloudy and wendy eighteen the overnight low Wednesday with clear skies.
And I have thirty one on Thursday with partly flotty skies,

(01:16:16):
the forty seven.

Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
Right now, let's get a traffic update.

Speaker 5 (01:16:19):
From the UCL Traffic Center. When it comes to stroke,
every second counts. That's why the UC Health Comprehensive Stroke
Center is the clear choice for rapid life saving treatment.

Speaker 1 (01:16:28):
Learn more at uc health dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:16:30):
Northbound fourth seventy one, beginning to load up quickly between
Grand and Downtown at an extra three to four minutes.
Westbound two seventy five, a bit heavier coming out of
Milford towards Ward's Corner, but not a whole lot of
extra time needed there. There's a wreck on Glen Way
at Wilder Avenue. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KR seed
the talk station.

Speaker 3 (01:16:54):
Yesh, I have six fifty four here at fifty five
care CD talk station Orlando, Sanza Washington op ed piece
wapell op ed peace about immigration and going back really
quickly to Mayor Eric Adams again. Trump's victory, I think
sent a warning shot to the balot Democrats about these
sanctuary cities, and more and more are fighting back against them,
mostly the citizenry showing up at council meetings and the like,

(01:17:17):
screaming their heads off about wasted resources and budget problems
and all of that. And now Mayor Eric Adams he
is actually working to bypass the city council to change
their city sanctuary city law ahead of an upcoming meeting
with the Trump administration. Borders are hmm. He said he

(01:17:38):
wants criminal illegal aliens to ported. First, he wants to
protect his citizenry, going back to this old Daniel pennything,
someone's got to protect the citizens. You've got known convicted
with due process, criminals that aren't lawfully allowed it to
be in your city. Isn't it a good thing to
want to eradicate the city because you are legally allowed

(01:18:00):
to do so, And yet you're staring at a bunch
of elected officials who have declared that you're well. The
police and those involved in enforcing immigration law, at least
assisting with ICE and helping to enforce the law are
told not to do it. They're directed to not work
with ICE to help these people or to help them
get these people out of the city. Criminals, dangerous types,

(01:18:22):
demonstrably so people have actually gone out and committed crimes
against your own people. And Mayor Eric Adams has, you know,
his electorate, the residents of the city to concern himself about.
Isn't it a nice thing that he does care about
him enough that he wants to work with ICE and
get them out of the city. Anybody think that's one
of the reasons Donald Trump won And no, I don't

(01:18:45):
think Trump's going to be capable of, you know, pulling
off what they keep calling mass deportation, mass deportation. He
got eleven, twelve, fifteen million, whatever the number is of
illegal immigrants in this country. Not all criminals, but boy,
if you can identify the criminals, and you can, isn't
it a nice thing to protect your country from all threats,
both domestic and foreign. In this figular case, foreign people

(01:19:10):
have come into our country and they now represent a
domestic threat. Let's start there. Maybe difficult road to hoe,
but we can at least start there. And I think
that enjoys popular support even in the most left wing cities.
Orlando Sanza on after the top of the area needs
to talk about that. I hope you can stick around.

Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
There we go again, another news updates. We're gonna get
all the.

Speaker 7 (01:19:34):
Facts, an ear full of information.

Speaker 1 (01:19:36):
At the top of the hour and they'll break it
down fast fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 12 (01:19:42):
This report is sponsored by seven.

Speaker 1 (01:19:58):
Five AIRCD talk station. Brian Thomas glad to be.

Speaker 3 (01:20:01):
Back on a nice three day weekend, thanks a Dan Carapher
covering for me, and so happy and many in most
respects to welcome my next guest Orlando Sons, and I
wish I was welcome, welcoming him to congratulating him on
his victory in the most recent election. Sadly, he ran
in Hamilton County, and my listeners are painfully aware the
direction Hamilton County has gone. We didn't get Melissa Powers elected,

(01:20:24):
Jarreff Neil didn't get elected, and of course one of
the finest candidates that was running this year, Orlando Sons,
that went down as well. But I'm happy to have
you back on. I read your op ed piece, Orlando
Sons at excellent President Donald Trump's plan to fix immigration
is what we need op ed which was in the
Washington Reporter op ed Peace. Welcome back, Orlando. I hope

(01:20:45):
you and your family are doing well.

Speaker 7 (01:20:48):
Brian, thanks for having me.

Speaker 1 (01:20:49):
Always great to be on Well.

Speaker 3 (01:20:50):
It's always a pleasure to talk with you, such an
intelligent man and someone who knows a lot about immigration,
because you are the product of legal immigration, which you
and I and I think most of my listening audience
embrace go through the process legally. It perhaps is a
little bit long and drawn out. It's difficult, it's challenging.
Perhaps there are some hurdles we can get rid of.
But in the final analysis, that allows our country to

(01:21:13):
do what it's supposed to do, which is manage its
own best interest. When you have an open border, obviously
it brings about lots of problems. Many cities are experiencing those,
and as you're out, ed Peace points out, it's costing
the American tax bears a heap load of money. Orlando Sonza, right, Brian,
and listen, going back to November fifth, let's just celebrate

(01:21:35):
the wins up from that night we took back the
White House.

Speaker 7 (01:21:38):
Isn't that right, Briant. We are sending Donald Trump back
to the White House and he's going to fix the
many problems that our country is facing right now, immigration
one of them. We have taken back the United States
Senate and sent our good friend Bernie Marino to the
US Senate for Ohio, and we've held the majority. Now,
i'llbe it slim, you know, I wish it was the

(01:21:58):
other way in the US House. But listen, we've got
all three of the key crucial bodies in order to
pass good legislation, and especially when it comes to fixing
our immigration problem. I mean, you laid it out clearly, Brian.
And we've been talking about this for this last year. Immigration,
illegal immigration, what it's done to this country, in the

(01:22:20):
financial burden it's caused, in the national security concerns, it's raised,
the human trafficking has gone up, fentonol has gone up
in terms of the illegal drug trade finding its way
to Southwest Ohio. How are we going to fix it? Well,
President Trump ran on a platform of how he's going
to secure the southern border on day one, and then

(01:22:41):
he is going to make sure that the fifteen plus
illegal immigrants that are in this country that we actually
through a priority list send back to their home country
those that should not be here. And that's what I
laid out in my op ed that President Trump's plan
is clear that the first and foremost, the criminal that
have committed violent acts in our country broken our laws

(01:23:05):
in the southern border, broken our laws. Even right here
in southwest Ohio. Some of them that I prosecuted as
a former assistant prosecutor at the Prosecutors Off s Hamilton County,
they're leaving. They're gone because we don't want them here. Certainly,
we don't want them wreaking havoc, just like we've seen
the last four years and then it goes on from there.
I mean, Visa ober stays accounting for forty percent of

(01:23:27):
illegal immigration. Look, this comes down to, Brian, are we
going to be a country of laws again? Are we
going to uphold the rule of law? And Donald Trump
is going to do that. Tom Homan at the Helm
as the Borders are is going to make sure that
that's done. But we're going to do it in a
way that welcomes immigration the way it should be legal, safe,

(01:23:49):
you bring in families, just like just like my parents
want to pursue the American dream. They're just going to
do it the legal way. And that's what I'm most
excited about in this administration is going back to the
rule law.

Speaker 1 (01:24:00):
And isn't it insane?

Speaker 3 (01:24:01):
I mean I just cited Mayor Eric Adams in New
York City. He needs to bypass his own city council
and do some executive action to try to get around
this sanctuary city law that they refuse to withdraw. I mean,
he's the one that's looking out for the constituents of
New York City. They are his own people. The residents

(01:24:22):
in New York City are screaming at the top of
their lungs. They're over budget, they got a billion dollar hole.
Most of it's because of the illegal immigration cost on
the city. The residents of the city's resources are being
used and directed to illegal immigrants, which shouldn't be there.
He's trying to do the right thing. He wants to
work with the Trump administration, but his own elected officials
are standing in the way. I mean, this is insanity, Orlando.

Speaker 7 (01:24:46):
That's exactly what it is. It's insanity, Brian. I mean,
it's so abundantly clear that the results of November election
reaffirm that Americans want decisive action on illegal immigration. They
do not want politicians just like you highlighted in New
York across the coasts, where they're defying federal law and
think they know better than the American people on how

(01:25:07):
to keep them safe, how to make sure that the
economy is not overburdened by what immigrations. Illegal immigration is
costing the American people. And that's why President Trump's plan
targeting high priority offenders, empowering local law enforcement, enforcing existent laws.
It's offering a comprehensive solution to secure our borders and
safeguard America's future. But back to your point Brian on

(01:25:29):
these sanctuary jurisdictions. Look, the fact that we've got cities,
and sadly even here in Cincinnati, where you've got a
city council, you've got you've got mayors, not just current
but in past, where they are trying to shield dangerous
illegal immigrants for prosecution. What that's doing is jeopardizing public
safety and national security. And so President Trump's plan again

(01:25:51):
I lay it out in my out bet, that he's
got a plan in order to hold these jurisdictions accountable.
It promotes accountability, it fosters strong cooperation between federal and
local law enforcement. And so that's why we should not
be surprised when we actually see out of this incoming
administration these sanctuary cities held accountable, because that's what the

(01:26:13):
people want to see. They want to make sure that
our local leaders are upholding the laws. And if their
federal laws, well guess what if the American people, the
average everyday American needs to uphold every law from local, state,
and federal. Absolutely we should be expecting that our local
elected officials are also abiding by the law.

Speaker 3 (01:26:33):
Well, I can't come up with any other conclusion. Then
there is some profound nefarious intent among these elected officials
who insist on allowing you know, sanctuary cities, not cooperating
with the ICE specifically when it comes to this very
dangerous criminal element. We're talking about people who already have

(01:26:53):
records that have been through the process. This isn't just
every illegal immigrant. We're going to start with the worst defenders,
ones who have gotten due process, have been convicted of crimes,
are known to have been have come into crimes here,
even in the United States or their home countries. How
is it that anybody in elected capacity would think they're
doing the citizenry any good by allowing these people to

(01:27:15):
stay here and not cooperating with the folks who can
get them out. Have you given any thought to that, Orlando?
I hate to put you on the spot from that,
but I mean, it's just it's baffling to me.

Speaker 7 (01:27:25):
Well, Brian, it begs the question again, what is their
motive for doing this? Right, It's obviously not to keep
the people safe. It's obviously not to make sure that
our American taxpayer dollars aren't going to I mean, look again, right,
another mandate that the American people delivered on November fifth,
was they wanted to fix this broken economy that we've
seen out of the last four years in the Biden

(01:27:45):
Harris administration, and so for you know, we even talk
about the cost, the cost of illegal immigration is putting
on the shoulders of the American taxpayer one hundred and
fifty one billion dollars annually. And Brian and you know
people that talk about, you know, a deportation effort, saying
that it's not feasible, it's it's it's too expensive. Well,

(01:28:09):
it is substantial. I mean again, from conservative estimates, we're
talking about three hundred billion dollars. But one time, a
one time effort that Trump has tried to lay out
that would in effect fix the problem that we're seeing
out of the legal immigration compared to one hundred and
fifty one billion dollars annually. I mean again, I think

(01:28:29):
it's it's a high cost, yes, but in comparison to
what it's doing to the American people on an annual basis.
But it again just blows my mind that when you've
got criminals that are wreaking havoc in our streets and
you've got now these local elected officials that want to
do nothing about it. In fact, they order their local

(01:28:50):
police department to not comply with with federal law and
report these criminals to Ice and federal law enforcement. You
just got to ask yourself, why in the world would
they be doing that. And again, it's for the American
people to hold them accountable, hold these elected officials accountable.
The Trump administration is going to certainly hold them accountable.

Speaker 3 (01:29:12):
Well, I certainly hope we turned the corner on this
here locally as well as the other sanctuary cities, and
I think, you know, all these mayors that abide by
the sanctuary cities are on full notice.

Speaker 1 (01:29:23):
Again.

Speaker 3 (01:29:24):
Just turning to Eric Adams in New York, I think
he's setting a great example for the rest of the
mayors in the country to, you know, get their act together,
go to different direction. Recognize that that election of Donald
Trump was really largely, or at least in a substantial part,
built on the open borders problem that the Biden administration facilitated,
and that they're in the wrong political posture by sticking

(01:29:46):
with the open borders policy and sanctuary cities. And maybe
we'll get a result and we can turn things around.
Orlando a wonderful op ed piece, and as we've parted company,
I hope you and your family have just a joyous,
joyous holiday season and everyone who's in good health. And
anytime you want to come on the program to talk,
I enjoy our conversations. You do have a brilliant analysis

(01:30:08):
when it comes to things like this, and I really
wish I was talking to an elected official, but you know,
you're a very valuable man for us to have down
the road. I've got big, big ideas for you, and
I think we're going to see big things from you, Orlando.

Speaker 10 (01:30:22):
Brian, I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
Thanks so much.

Speaker 7 (01:30:24):
Happy Mary Christmas, Happy near to you and your family,
and on working up.

Speaker 3 (01:30:28):
Work onwarding up at Orlando signs and returns on Mary
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See the talk station.

Speaker 3 (01:33:15):
Seven one if if you have KCD talk station A
regular staple on the Monday morning show, Christopher Smith and
former Vice mayor of the City of Cincinna with a
Smith event.

Speaker 1 (01:33:23):
Since I was off.

Speaker 3 (01:33:24):
Yesterday and Dan Carrol filled in, and thank you again
Dan for doing so. We moved him over to Tuesday.
Welcome back Christopher for the Smith event. Love having you
on the morning show, my friend. I hope all's well.

Speaker 13 (01:33:35):
Oh brother, thank you for having me on. And you
know we always miss you. Dan Carroll did a good job,
but we definitely miss you. And you just that kind
of wake up in the morning and at five am
and listen to you tell us what's going on in
the world. And you know, I've been listening to your
show and you and I are on the same page

(01:33:55):
about what happened yesterday with the full acquittal of mister Penny. Yeah,
but I I want to spleen vent on it because
there are significant racial components that I think it's important
for me to be outspoken about, and you were touching
on them this morning. And so one of the things

(01:34:17):
is I don't believe Penny would have been charged if
the person who died was white. Yep, his first thing,
and I think that prosecutor Brags was pressured in his
mind by people who were living in New York that
were saying, Hey, you've got this young white guy who
killed somebody on a subway. But one of the things

(01:34:40):
that I think the media, intentionally, particularly mainstream media, didn't
share was the diversity of the people who testified, black
and white, male and female, that said my life was
on the line. And I view that what Penny did
was interview so that I could live. There were no

(01:35:02):
cops there. There's a guy that got on the subway
said I feel like killing some people and I really
don't care what happens to me. And so you know,
if this veteran was on a battlefield, he would have
gotten a purple heart. Instead, what he got from Brags
was prosecuted where they said we're gonna take away your

(01:35:23):
life in liberty for fifteen years for you just standing
up for the little guy. And I appreciated how you
said that the person who can't defend themselves. They take
away your guns in New York, so you can't defend
yourself with a weapon. Now, even a good Samaritan, their
life is on the line, Their life in liberty is
on the line. If they intervened to save my life.

(01:35:46):
That's a hell of a place to live. Brian Thomas,
and so it's a scary place to think that even
good Samaritans out here. And that's why I watched that
case so closely because of the implications of any American,
whether they're living Georgia where they have the right to
use a firearm, whether they're in Ohio with you know,

(01:36:06):
stand your grounds, any of us who might see something
happening the Penny case would have us go, well, should
I get involved? Will the prosecutor in Hamilton County decide
to prosecute me? If I decide? Somebody walks in and says,
I'm gonna kill everybody. I have my weapon. I say, no,
not today. I'm gonna take this. I'm gonna make sure
I protect everybody. I'm just trying to figure out where

(01:36:27):
this society is going, Brian Thomas, and I'm going to
weigh in on Black Lives Matter and the commentary that
came from them on the second half of the show,
because that really got my goat yesterday.

Speaker 3 (01:36:36):
Too, oh without question, And I am glad you're going
to comment on that, because Lord Almighty calling for sort
of black people to go out and exact justice on
white people just because Penny gets acquitted for something that
was just a service to society's I am just side

(01:37:00):
myself in disbelief, although you know this is the world
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Fifty five KRC.

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That's to some spotty showers today high on fifty overnight
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Speaker 3 (01:39:31):
Seven nine if if you have ker City talk station.
Happy to have Christopher smithon on talking about the Daniel
Penny acquittal, which I think everyone agrees is a good thing.
With the exception, notably of at least one founder of
the Black Lives Matter Greater New York City, Hawk Newsom,
who had this to say, and I will quote him,
we need some black vigilantes. People want to jump up

(01:39:52):
and choke us and kill us for being loud. How
about we do the same. So he is not calling
upon Black Americans to protect people in danger, he's encouraged
him to kill white people basically for being white. And
Daniel Penny, or the victim or the disturbed Jordan Neelly
in this particular case, wasn't just being loud. He was

(01:40:13):
threatening people with death. He had a history of psychosis,
high on K two, a synthetic form of marijuana, a
lengthy criminal arrest record. And I have no doubt in
my mind that Daniel Penny, if it didn't matter what
color skin Jordan Neely had, if Jordan Neely was a
deranged Asian or white guy, he would have done the
same thing to protect his fellow citizens on that subway

(01:40:36):
train where there were no police around to help out.

Speaker 13 (01:40:41):
And I think your point about he wasn't just being loud,
He was articulating a position, I'm going to kill somebody.
People understood that they understood what that meant. And by
the way, you know just what happened to the CEO
of United Health as he walked down the street, you know,

(01:41:03):
in the early mornings. You know, whether that was random
or not, which we obviously know it wasn't, it still
was a major act of violence in New Yorkers are
seeing that. Meaning this is the context of this of
what was happening on the subway is other people had
been attacked on the subway, oh, would have been attacked
on the street right outside. And so the New Yorkers

(01:41:26):
were sitting around going people are just walking down the
street punching women in the face, right, This was something
that was happening last year. And so the context was
here's a man who got on the subway and said,
I'm here to kill somebody. And Penny heard that as
a veteran, right, he said, you know what, not today,

(01:41:46):
You're not going to kill these people. Today. I'm trained
and I'm going to put my life on the line.
And no one knew what he had. He could have
had a knife, he could have had a gun, Yeah,
he could have had anything. Let me speak to a
Black Lives battle. Look what he said was so outrageous
and so over the top, and we need leaders whether

(01:42:07):
they're white or black, Democrats are Republicans, are independence to
call them out. You just can't sit silent when someone
gets on the mic and says, you know what, I
think I need a visual handing out here to kill
white people, right, because that's not what is happening, doesn't
fit the situation at all. And so it's such an
outrageous statement. As if the African Americans who were on

(01:42:31):
the train who said my life I felt was on
the line and testified in court, thank you Penny for
saving my life. If Black Lives Matter was serious, that
leader he would say, Man, thank you Penny, you saved
a black life. I mean, there were black people who said,
I'm concerned. I thought this guy was going to kill me.

(01:42:52):
That's the craziness of what's going on. And let me
make sure everybody understands this, Brian, because every time I
talk about these issues, I'm going to make sure that
I'm balanced and people understand racism is real. I've experienced
racism in my life. I've been attacked, which I've never
talked about publicly, where my life was on the line

(01:43:13):
just for being an African American in the city of
Cincinnati when I was a young person. So racism is
real and you have to have good referees on both
sides of the aisles. We need right leadership to do better,
like you, Brian Thomas, who called things out. You know,
like somebody called into your radio station once and start

(01:43:35):
talking about the LGBTQ plus community and you called them out.
You're not a person.

Speaker 8 (01:43:40):
I mean.

Speaker 13 (01:43:41):
My point to you, Brian Thomas is you are a
good referee. You're not sitting here saying, hey, man, if
I see something that happened bad to somebody who was
African American based on their race, I'm going to lend
my voice to it and say it was wrong. That's
what I'm doing today. I'm lending my voice as a
leader who happens to be African American saying, hey, listen,

(01:44:02):
what that leader said or whoever that was in New
York from Black Lives Matter that said we need a
vigil annie today to go out and kill white people
based on the acquittal of Penny is so outrageous and
so over the top that somebody needs to lend the
voice and say you're out, You're out of bounds on
those comments.

Speaker 3 (01:44:20):
Totally outrageous, totally totally out of line. And you know
the other component of this Christopher is, you know, had
he been convicted of the mere fact that he was
prosecuted for this, talk about you know, a negative effect
someone out there who is in a position where you know,
military trained guy like Daniel or Daniel Penny who has

(01:44:45):
the skill sets to engage this guy and take him
out in terms of preventing him from doing further harm.
He didn't want to kill Jordan Neely, that wasn't his point.
His point was to subdue him until the point where
some police officer might show up and take over. You know, sadly,

(01:45:05):
the guy died. It wasn't intentional, and the jury of
course realized that that's why he's found not guilty. But
you know, how many people are out there going to
be second guessing? How many people out there, for example,
they're faced with eminent apprehension of death. You know, somebody
over there has got a gun pointing it at them,

(01:45:26):
and they're afraid to use their own personal firearm to
defend themselves because of the color of the skin of
the person that's coming after them. Oh my god, if
I defend myself, I'm gonna get you know, I'm gonna
be accused of being a racist or something. That's just
that that effect is profound, and I know a lot
of people out in the world really genuinely feel like that,

(01:45:47):
you know the Oh hell, No, I'm not going to
get involved. I don't want to be prosecuted. I don't
want to be drugged through the ringer. I don't want
to be labeled on social media as a racist because
I defended myself or defended my wife or daughter or
some other young person or you know, frail elderly female
on the subway train or anyplace else. No, I'm just

(01:46:08):
going to turn my head and walk away.

Speaker 13 (01:46:10):
But Brian Thomas, one of the points that's important is
that Penny wasn't the only person subduing. There were other
passengers once Penny got him into the position, and the
person looked like an African American male. I don't know
if he was he might have been defined as a

(01:46:32):
Haitian American. I have no idea, but he was a
man of color who was also helping to do him.
On that train. He had his hands on him saying, hey,
I'm trying to help. There were other passengers, and so
the reality was it was just another affirmation that it
wasn't about race. It was about people on the train
who felt that their life in that moment was in jeopardy.

(01:46:54):
And this good Samaritan said, I'm going to intervene today.
I want to let every good so marinon out there,
no as they listen to you and I. We have
to be our brother's keeper, no matter the race, that gender,
the situation. We must look out for each other as
Americans to keep ourselves safe. We're in a society now

(01:47:16):
where people walk in with guns and knives and they
say and do things. And the only thing we can
do right now, Brian Thomas is believed them. What happened
was this veteran believed what that man said. I'm here
to kill people and guess what, I really don't care
what happens to me. And at the end of the day,
what happened to him, unfortunately and unintentionally is he lost

(01:47:39):
his life. And now this man is going to face
a civil case. I'm not a lawyer and I don't
understand all the details, but my understanding is the threshold
is much lower now they're coming after everything that he
owes his entire life, there will be a civil trial
where this man has to go back on trial again
and put everything that he has on the line. Tell

(01:48:01):
me what goods the Meridan out there who's walking through
a mall right now, are walking in a parking lot
and see somebody in trouble, says, you know, what's better
for me not to get involved, because the prosecutor, no
matter where they live in the United States of America,
might charge me, and then I might be civilly charged
and lose everything if I get involved.

Speaker 3 (01:48:21):
Yep, you got a great point on that one, and
it's important you mentioned the lower legal standard in a
civil case. It's preponderance of the evidence. If you look
at a sliding scale like a seesaw, the fulcrum in
the middle, that's fifty percent. You go one percent over
and you can be found guilty. In a civil trial,

(01:48:41):
clear and convincing evidence is like three quarters over, and
then beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the criminal standard,
is like all the way over to ninety percent. On
one side, you've got to be thoroughly convinced by a
you know, beyond a reasonable doubt that the person is guilty.
They can't be found guilty, so he ends up in

(01:49:02):
a civil suit. You know, some other jury may say,
you know what you know, find him guilty, and you're right.
They would literally take everything that man has. And I'm
not sure as a you know, as a marine, how
much he's got. But I don't think that's the point
of going after him. I just think they want to
continue to make an example out of him for doing
the right thing.

Speaker 13 (01:49:20):
Well, let's say that he has a pension that pays
him three thousand dollars a month and they take his
pension away from him.

Speaker 10 (01:49:26):
I'm a financial planner.

Speaker 13 (01:49:28):
That would be devastating for that man to take his
three thousand dollars away for being a good Samaritan and
serving his country, and then being on a plane, on
a mean being on a train in a subway saying
I'm intervening to save other people's lives, and I think
it's so important no matter what your race is or gender,

(01:49:48):
people who are listening and trust my leadership in this
city or in the county, or people who are listening
to you, look at this case fairly, it has nothing
to do with race to do with a man and
people on a train who were all different, they all
came together in that moment in time and said, listen,
my life is on the line. You need to be

(01:50:11):
hurt here. And if it were my wife, if it
were my significant other, if it was my child, right,
if it was one of my daughter you know, if
it were if it were my daughter, you know, if
it were a friend. I don't know whoever in my
life that I loved. If it was your beautiful wife, Paulette,
you would want somebody in that moment to say, you

(01:50:31):
know what, Paulette's life matters, and I'm going to intervene
here and make sure that she gets off the train.
And so it's such an atrocity for the leader in
Black Lives Matter, and I call all groups out many
you know, some people don't know that I served as
the president of the Cincinnati NAACP for seven years. I
worked very hard to be fair right every so things

(01:50:55):
that came before us, this is nonsense. I'm not dealing
with that. You're wrong, I'm not involved. You have to
have balanced leaders in these positions that can call balls
balls and strikes or strikes. Now, I'm gonna say one
more thing before we get off Brian Thomas, because this
is an important detail and it's personal to me. We're
going into the holidays and people are in their families

(01:51:16):
are coming together. If you're in a room and someone
is telling a racial joke and you're sitting there whatever
it is, or they're saying something bad about the LGBTQ
Plus Committee and you're sitting there and people are laughing,
and you don't have the courage to shine a light
to say, you know what, Uncle, you know what, Grandpa,
you know what, cousin, that's not funny. I've got a

(01:51:39):
friend who fits all the things you just said, and
they're not that. Why would you say that over the holidays.
We have to be better within our families to call
this stuff out when it's happening. Because I know, Brian Thommons,
you would never let anybody sit around your table. I'm
getting a little emotion. You would never let anybody sit
around your table and say something crazy because of our relationship,

(01:52:03):
the love that we have for each other, the love
that you extended to my wife, to my five children.
No one would get away with that in the Thomas household.
And so that's our point. We have to do better
as American to stand up for what's right. When no
one's watching. Christmas is a great time to do it.
Our families are coming together. People say things that are outrageous,

(01:52:25):
and I'm asking people who love me, who like me,
who care about me, who respect me, to shine a
light on anybody who's saying anything disparaging in your homes.
Stand up and say, you know what, that's not who
we are. You don't have to be negative. You can
just say that's not I don't think that joke is funny.
And I tell you it makes a big difference in

(01:52:45):
our American families. If we all just did that little
bit what we could be the penny. We could be
the penny. We could be the guy on the subway
that's standing up for what's right.

Speaker 1 (01:52:55):
Well.

Speaker 3 (01:52:56):
See, and that's why I love living in America, and
that's why I'm a little low libertarian. America is filled
with all kinds of people. And isn't it a beautiful
thing that we don't live in some oppressive regime that
will literally kill you for, for example, being gay. And
we know there are countries in the world that will
do that it violates their religion or whatever. And I

(01:53:17):
don't get that any religion could you know, kill someone
or hate someone merely because of their sexuality. And we
all need to learn to play nicely together. And freedom,
liberty and allowing people to live their lives as they
see fit, as long as they're not bumping into what
I live and how I live my life. I'm great.
I can play nice in the sandbox. And I know
you feel the same way. Christopher Smithman. God bless you.

Speaker 13 (01:53:40):
Yeah, God bless you, Brian Thomas. People can follow me
on social media media at vote Smitherman. And I appreciate you.
If we I hope we'll talk again. Oh yeah, if
by chance we don't. But if by chance we don't
marry Christmas to you, okay, I know we will. But
by chance we don't marry Christmas.

Speaker 3 (01:53:58):
Okay, brother, love you, brother, tell us and best of health.
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job on that of course too. So give him a
call five on three seven two seven eighty four eighty three.

(01:55:06):
That's five one three seven two seven Tight t I
t E Online. You'll find him at plumtight dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:55:13):
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Speaker 3 (01:55:17):
Man if you're suffering from your jock, your morning news
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Fifty five krc D talk station coming up on eight
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Here fifty five kr c E talk station right time.
I was fishing everyone a very happy Tuesday. And thanks
again to Dan Carroll for covering for me yesterday. Always
a pleasure having him cover and I know it does
a wonderful job. And understand he had a conversation with
brad Winsterrip yesterday, so I'm gonna have to go back
and check out that podcast. You can find that at
fifty five kr SE dot com. Also my conversation with
Christopher Smithman Orlandossanza on at the last hour at seven

(01:55:58):
oh five on immigration. And right now it is time.
Every Tuesday, at this time we get the inside scoop
from bright Bart. You got a bookmark at Breitbart dot
com br E I T b Art dot com. Great
reporting there, most notably by Joel Pollock, who's return of
the program to help us unfold the fall of Bashar
Alissad in Syria. Welcome back, Joel in a very happy Tuesday.

(01:56:20):
Tell you good to heavy back on great very complicated
situation unfolding in Syria. It's like the fall of the
Berlin Wall. What's next? Mischarlisad obviously an extremely violent and
murderous individual, has been involved in a civil war in
his country now for going on thirteen years. It seems
like there's multiple factions that have been fighting against them,

(01:56:42):
and it looks to be like one of those the
enemy of my enemy is my friend. So while you
had everyone sort of uniformly going after Bashar al Assad
and fighting him and his collectives, backed by Iran and Russia,
looks like Iran and Russia both kind of pulled the
plug on their support and that led to all the
almost immediate fall of the charl Assad. He apparently has

(01:57:03):
now fled to Russia, who's giving him sanctuary. But what
becomes of Syria now that these multiple factions are now
seemingly left sort of in charge. We've got a while
to work this all out, Joel.

Speaker 8 (01:57:20):
Well, Syria is a disaster. It's going to continue to
be a disaster, but at least it won't be a
disaster that helps Iran. True, and what's been happening over
the last forty eight hours since the Assad regime fell
has been a number of things. First of all, you've
got the rebels trying to consolidate power, and they're going

(01:57:43):
to Assad's prisons. They're opening them, emptying them. Political prisoners
are being released. This is the part that people are
celebrating because Asad ran these torture prisons. There are Lebanese
Christians who were imprisoned in Assad's jails for decades after
being arrested in Lebanon for activism against Syria because the

(01:58:05):
Syrian regime occupied Lebanon for a long time. So there
are some scenes of rejoicing and so forth. At the
same time, there are reports of attacks and atrocities and
other incidents happening, especially in the minority communities in Syria.
The Asad regime was terrible for everybody, but he posed
as a protector of Christians and other minorities. He himself

(01:58:28):
was not a Muslim. He was from a minority sect
called the Alowhites, who lived primarily on the coast. So
the Syrian regime said that it protected minorities. Of course,
as I mentioned earlier, they imprisoned Lebanese Christians and were
certainly not kind to the Jewish minority. In Syria which fled,

(01:58:48):
but there have been a lot of concerns about the
fate of the Kourds, the Christians and the Alohites and
so forth. And then you've got Israel, which is using
the vacuum of power in Syria to destroy whatever is
left of the Syrian military. Israel has been conducting hundreds
of air raids every day. According to reports, the flight

(01:59:10):
of F fifteen aircraft is just constant over Israel, as
the Israeli Air Force takes off almost as soon as
it lands to go bomb something else in Syria. They're
avoiding civilians, which is why you're not hearing about civilian
casualties in Israel bombing. They're even avoiding the rebels. They're
not avoiding they're not attacking the rebel military. They're not
attacking troops, but they are attacking equipment and they're attacking

(01:59:33):
chemical weapons production facilities. So what they're doing is they're
removing any threats that the rebels might be able to
get these weapons into their hands, and they're also removing
any air defenses that Syria might use to defend Iran
from a potential strike on Iran's nuclear program. There is
a possibility given that there are only about five weeks left,

(01:59:55):
but before President Trump takes office five or six weeks,
Israel may use that period to knock out Iran's nuclear program.
Iran is now defenseless. They've lost Hesbola, They've lost Syria,
They've lost Hamas after starting a war with Israel on
October seventh last year through Hamas. So Israel is now
going to take the opportunity to make sure that Iran

(02:00:18):
can never become a nuclear power. Potentially, but Iran has
no air defenses and now it has no advanced warning.
In Syria, the Israeli Air Force dominates the Syrian skies
and will do so for the foreseeable future. I'll tell
you something really interesting. Less than three weeks ago, I
was in Israel and I was standing on the slopes
of a mountain called Mount Kramon. There are two mountains

(02:00:39):
in northeastern Israel, and the goal on heights. One is
called Caramon, one is called Hard Dove or Mountain Dove.
Mountain Dove is a flashpoint between Israel and Hesba. Hesbola
had been attacking places on mountaind Dove, and in fact,
a couple days after I was there there was a
drone attack on the troops that I had been with.
But Mountcharmon is an even higher peak. The Israelis have
a milagey very based on the side of Mount Carmon,

(02:01:02):
and the Syrians for over fifty years had a military
base on the top on the very peak. So the
top of Mount Caramon was Syrian and that was under
an agreement to In the nineteen seventy three war that
Syria started with Israel. On Sunday, the Israeli special forces
took the peak of the mountain, and the Israelis now

(02:01:23):
take They now occupy the peak of Mount Ramon. So
the Israelis have that peak of the mountain that I
was standing on. I was just on the on the
side near the peak, but not at the top. So
now they have that mountain, which is crucial for Israel's
defense against drones and rockets and so forth flying in
from Lebanon and from other places. So I don't think
the israel Is going to give.

Speaker 1 (02:01:43):
Back that territory.

Speaker 3 (02:01:45):
No, they will. If I had to make a production,
I put it all in on them keeping the entire
to the goal on heights. That is strategically, That's why
Israel needs it because it looks down over the country
and it represents an easy opportunity for anybody with rockets
military base up there to launch an attack on Israel.
So the strategic significance cannot be understated. But let me

(02:02:07):
let me ask you this. I've been kind of puzzling
over this and just wanted to get your reaction, Joe Pollock.
Had the Iranians not and I presume on some level,
the Iranians approved the attack coming out of the of
gaz On Israel. Had that October attack not occurred, would
this situation be where we are today in Syria?

Speaker 1 (02:02:33):
Well, they did, they undermine the daily.

Speaker 8 (02:02:35):
Wouldn't have because the October seventh attack prompted Israel to
respond by declaring that this would never be able to
happen again. In order to do that, Israel had to
take out the threats on its borders. So no one
would like to say that the October seventh attack was
a good thing, but it did force the issue. I

(02:02:55):
will say this also, it wasn't necessary that things happened
in precisely the way they did. But had the Biden
Harris administration been stronger in its response, had they allowed
Israel to do what it needed to do. Had they
also put pressure on Iran instead of sending billions of
dollars to Iran, then October seventh itself might never have happened.

(02:03:19):
So you know, how much further fact do you want
to go? But you know this wouldn't have happened and
didn't happen under Donald Trump. Not that aside again would
have been good to keep in power either. It's just
that what happened here was the Uranian regime was able
to do whatever it wanted to do because the Biden

(02:03:41):
Harris administration allowed it to. And the only reason that
you're seeing has Bolla defeated and the Syrian regime collapsing
is because the ordinary Israeli decided they were never going
to allow this to happen again. It wasn't like Nishinnyahu decided.
In fact, when I was in Israel in October twenty
twenty three, just after the October seventh attack, I talked
to people who were joining their reserve units going to

(02:04:04):
the military after the call up. They were preparing to
go into Gaza, and the determination of the Israeli people
to make sure Hamas could never harm them again. Was
so strong that if they didn't invade Gaza I, remember
they hadn't gone in at that point. If they didn't
invade Gaza I felt like the army would have turned around,
gone back to Jerusalem, overthrown Ntan Yahu, and then gone

(02:04:25):
into Gazaah. The Israeli people keep in mind also who's
fighting in these wars. So Israel has a very small,
regular professional army. It's an army of conscripts. Everybody goes.
To call it an army of conscripts is to belittle
the enthusiasm with which Israelis go to the military. Aside
from religious Israelis and a few others, many Israelis are

(02:04:47):
very pleased to go to the military. They're drafted, they
have to go, but they're very excited to go. And
people serve in the reserve units until their mid forties.
So a lot of the fighting right now is being
done by ads with small children who have jobs and careers,
and some of them even live overseas. They may be
working in the United States and Europe. To get the

(02:05:08):
call up to go home, and they leave their families
for months at a time. Those are the men and
sometimes women who have won the war. They are just
determined never to allow the situation to happen again. So
the face of the Middle East has really been changed,
not fire Turberty seventh necessarily, but by the sheer determination
of the Israeli people to survive and to make sure

(02:05:31):
that they can never be attacked again.

Speaker 3 (02:05:33):
Well, and I certainly understand that and is an amazing
thing to behold. I guess in many respects, I kind
of think about like the Ukrainians and they've called up
and got literally every person who's still alive to join
the army to try to defend the country with obviously
not a whole lot of success right now. But moving
back over to Israel and the situation in Syria, I'm

(02:05:54):
wondering how much influence we have, the Turkish influence, because
they have a vested interest in making sure their border
with Syria is secure, and maybe whatever future administration runs
Syria they're going to have some involvement with it. Iranians
look like they're completely out of it. The Russians looks
like they're completely out of it. I guess I just wonder,
you know what future lies in store for Syria because

(02:06:17):
these rebel forces there are a lot of Islamic fundamentalists
in there, which is not a good thing for Israel
and a lot of the other countries that are surrounding it.

Speaker 8 (02:06:27):
Well, we don't know what the future is to Syria.
The likeliest future is that it remains a disunited, divided place.
The Turks are going to probably take some kind of
territory that they want to come to the Kurt. The
Israelis have moved their military, as I said, onto the
peak of the mountain and into the buffer zone that
used to exist between Israel and Syria because they need

(02:06:49):
to protect themselves against the rebels. And who knows whether
this Islamist ragtag bunch can administer the country. I mean,
if you had to make a prediction, and you would
probably predict that it ends up in civil war for
quite some time, because there are a variety of factions there. Yeah,
And you know the problem is, I mean this morning's

(02:07:12):
headline in Politico, the Biden Harris administration is thinking of
changing the terrorist designation of the group that actually overthrew
the regime, or the rebel group that led the rebellion.
You know, this is a terrible idea. The same mistake
they made with the hutis the fact that they want
a country doesn't make them any less terrorists. You know

(02:07:33):
these people. The leader is a guy named al Jabulani,
which in Hebrew is al Golani. But he wasn't even
born in Syria, but his parents are Syrian and he
traces his roots. He says to the Golan, which tells
you he's not going to stop at Damascus. He wants
to take the Golan back from Israel, which Israel will
never give back because it is such an important strategic territory.

(02:07:55):
So the rebels clearly are trying to cause trouble. It's
going to be a mass in Syria for quite some time,
and you know it troubles me at the first instinct
of the US under Democratic Party rule is to throw
a bunch of money at them and hope it helps them.

Speaker 3 (02:08:12):
Well, who will be arming this dysfunctional, disparate, ragtag group
of various factions. I mean again, I just I sort
of maybe overstating the case. Iranian pulled the Iranians pulled
the plug. The Russians pulled the plug. They were You know,
I'm in large part responsible for a lot of the
arms and weapons shipping in if the rest of the

(02:08:33):
world just says, hey, you know, you know, we're not
going to give any weapons of the Syrian rebels, And
that would just be the end of it, wouldn't it.
They couldn't launch any major offensive against Israel, or take
back the goal on Heights, or fight off the Turks,
as the case may be. They would just be a
sort of a dysfunctional, impoverished third world country, wouldn't they.

Speaker 8 (02:08:55):
Well, the Turks are very much involved there. The Turks
are probably going to make sure that these rebels continue
to receive arms. We need to reevaluate, Yeah, we need
to reevaluate our relationship with Turkey. They have been supportive
of Sunni terrorism, particularly against Israel. They have hosted the
Hamas leaders, they have given rhetorical support and other forms

(02:09:18):
of support to Hamas, and they're also behind the Syrian rebels.
You know, Yes, Israel destroyed has Bala, leaving the Asad
regime defenseless. And that's not why Israel did it. Israel
because Hesbola attacked it, right, But but it's also the
fact that the Syrian rebels got a lot of help
from the Turks, and that Airedwan sees himself as a

(02:09:40):
leader of a Sunni Islamist revival, and the Turks may
be involved in Syria in a very deep and nefarious way.
So you know, that's why Israel is basically taking a
buffer zone, even though you know, the odd thing is
that Israel and Turkey until Airediwan were actually good allies.
But Airedwan, he's an Islamist, does not want to work

(02:10:02):
and play nicely with Israel, so he's basically making advances
in Syria. The United States has interests there. We have
troops there to counter ISIS. But there are some ISIS
branches that are involved in the Syrian rebels, so we're
probably going to have to maintain some presence there. Trump
may say he wants to pull them out. That could happen,
but then what happens to the Kurage, who have been
our allies against ISIS. So look, it's going to be

(02:10:25):
a mess. The only thing I can tell you is
that Iran has lost. Iran has lost the most important
forward buffer and staging base that it had for its
terrorist operations. The Iranian regime is very, very vulnerable. The
Iranian people are great friends of America, and it would
be incredible if the regime would somehow disappear and a

(02:10:47):
new pro Western government would take over in Iran. Then
we'd have a real ally there to help counter the
threats that might emerge from disorganized Syria. But we'll see.
For the meantime, Israel is destroying whatever military assets the
rebels might have hoped to get their hands on, and
we'll just have to see it. And the Biden administration again,

(02:11:08):
of course, is trying to shovel money at them. You know,
if humanitarian aid, let's get some eight. You know, this
is the same mistake they made with the uties. They
took the uties off the terror lists so they could
send Yemen a bunch of money, and look what happened.
People like we were screaming, you can't do this, you
can't do this. We've got a US Navy base across
the strait from Yemen, you know, and of course they
disrupted international shipping and continue to do so. So you know,

(02:11:31):
there's no sense of reality among the bureaucratsy staff these
Democratic party administrations. But we'll have to just see.

Speaker 3 (02:11:38):
Really makes you wonder why ultimately, Joel Paul Ott Rightbart
dot Com book Market, Joel, I love having you on
the program. I appreciate your thoughtful insight, and we all
have our you know, metaphorical popcorn out as we wait
to see what happens in Syria. We'll talk again real
soon and keep up the great work at Breitbart.

Speaker 8 (02:11:55):
All right, thanks so much.

Speaker 1 (02:11:56):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (02:11:56):
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Speaker 1 (02:13:02):
Station Hey thirty on a Tuesday.

Speaker 3 (02:13:04):
Regular listeners know it is that time for the Daniel
Davis Deep Dive talking to retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis
about Oh my god, the whole world's coming unglued almost overnight.
The world has changed, kind of like the fall of
the Berlin Wall in Syria. Welcome back, Daniel Davis. It
is a pleasure to have you on, particularly in these
very interesting times.

Speaker 11 (02:13:24):
Well interesting times is an understatement, Yeah it is. It
is a lot of chaos and lots and lots of uncertainty.

Speaker 1 (02:13:30):
That's a fact.

Speaker 3 (02:13:30):
Well, and that's the bottom line. Everybody's got their popcorn
out to find out what's going to happen. After the
fall of basharoloside. Obviously he's been in civil war for
thirteen years. The Iranians are heavily involved, the Russians are
heavily involved. You got the Turkish involvement, you got the
Israeli situation because you know the goal on heights and
the issues there. It's just in a mess. Charlie Foxtrot,
I think out of accurately summarizes it.

Speaker 1 (02:13:52):
But Ba Charlot's side, bad guy.

Speaker 3 (02:13:55):
So nobody's really that disappointed that he's gone, considering his
murderous regime. But what is going to fill the void here?
We had multiple factions of different organizations, some of them
are the lo most fundamentalists, and Okay, so the way
I've been viewing it, and please correct me if you
think this is an inaccurate assessment, the enemy of my

(02:14:15):
enemy is my friends. You got all these different factions
who are more than happy to sort of fight collectively
the Bashar al Assad regime. But now that he's gone,
who fills the power void? Yeah, that's exactly the right.
One hundred percent agree with you.

Speaker 11 (02:14:31):
I think your assessment is spot on because we had
seen you may recall when the Obama administration had tried
to affect the regime change in Syria with Bashar al Assade,
and we were, you know, funding all these allegedly moderate
rebel groups which were nothing more than offshoots of al
Qada and several other kinds of violent Islamic agreements. But hey,

(02:14:54):
we were engaging in the friend of my enemy of
my enemy is my friends situation. So we were funding
all the But you famously remember that some of the
Obama CIA funds went to one group, some of the
Obama Pentagon funds went to another group, and then they
end up turning on each other, and so they were
as distracted as anybody else. Well, this guy here appears

(02:15:15):
to have figured out how to solve part of that
problem by getting all these different factions working together, or
at least he assembled enough factions that could effectively work together.
And so they did, and then they started this march.
But then, because of the absolute rot of the internal
security forces in Syria, they basically just marched on the capitol,

(02:15:37):
not unlick the Taliban did against the Afghanistan security forces
because of the rot there, and there wasn't even much fighting.
And it was very similar how those two things came about.
But now comes the real question. This guy is saying. Jolani,
the leader of the HTS that was the umbrella group
over all this has said, you know, hey, we're kind

(02:15:57):
of modern now. We just want to govern. We don't
want to know start this Islamic caliphate that's going to
suppress all these people, all these Christians and drus and
you know, other kinds of minorities. They're fine, We're not
going to harm them. But that's not what he said
earlier in his career. In twenty fourteen, he said almost
exact opposite.

Speaker 1 (02:16:14):
So now it's going to depend on what happens later on.

Speaker 11 (02:16:17):
I'm guessing that he's going to act like a good
guy for now. But we'll see if this coalition holds
together as you just mentioned, and then we'll see whoever
comes out. Do they still have that same moderate view
or do they go Talibanesque and start changing when they
get into power.

Speaker 3 (02:16:32):
Well, during this period of absolute dysfunction, I mean I
just talked with Joe Pollock from Breitbart, and the Israelis
retook that base that Siria had and the goal on heights,
which of course helps Israel in terms of its security.
The Turks now have an opportunity to advance into this
you know, disarray, this this defenseless region. And they've of

(02:16:54):
course had their eyes on the situation for a while.
And the Turks, I understand, will be very influential on
a going forward base is to see who actually comes
into power. The Iranians, it looks like they pulled the plug.
The Russians looks like they pulled the plug. So you
don't have them coming to the aid of the sad regime.
And I'm not sure where either of those two countries
thint to the equation now, because their hands seem to

(02:17:16):
be full. I mean, I guess I'm just kind of
at a law. That's why I say, am a popkar.
It's going to be out for a long time on
this one.

Speaker 9 (02:17:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:17:24):
See.

Speaker 11 (02:17:25):
Interestingly, so Israel has done more than just you know,
secure the gold on hots. They're actually, as of this morning,
continuing to move closer to Damascus, and we don't know
how far they're going to go yet, how much territory
they're going to take, what they're gonna do with it.
They have been bombing incessantly throughout Syria and destroying all
kinds of ammunition deposed weapons, e posts, basically just crushing

(02:17:48):
the ability of anyone to rise up to even use
this for the foreseeable future. Right then in the north
you have the Turks who have been the actual Turkish
army has been making some in roads and they've had
true in Syria for a long time, and there's Turkish
back group. Here's the biggest problem for US is moving
more aggressively against the Syrian Democratic forces, our proxy. So

(02:18:09):
you have two NATO countries has proxies going against each
other in the north east part of Syria, and this
just has a lot of opportunities.

Speaker 1 (02:18:18):
To go bad.

Speaker 11 (02:18:19):
There's already a lot of bad blood between the US
and Turkey on a number of other fronts, and you know,
obviously Turkey and Israel are not on the best of
terms as well. So there's you may need a bucket
of popcorn for this one.

Speaker 3 (02:18:32):
And maybe it's fair exactly well insofar as the Turks concern,
is this a potential opportunity to perhaps right the ship
a little bit in terms of our relations with Turkey.
Could a Trump administration sort of you know, diplomatically reach
out in an effort to you know, forestall the Turks
supporting some radical Islamic form of government in Syria.

Speaker 1 (02:18:53):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 11 (02:18:53):
That's going to be tough to do, because the air
to one is an opportunities and he will exploit any
and everybody he can, and he'll work with somebody only
to the extent that it gives him benefit. And if
Trump doesn't come in and have some benefit for him,
then he's probably not very willing to do that. And
Trump has got a difficult task to navigate with the
Syrian Democratic Forces because does he just say, okay, everything

(02:19:14):
that we've done up to this point, to include when
he supported them during his first term, that now he's
just gonna say, okay, well, aired one wants to so
you guys are all on your own.

Speaker 1 (02:19:23):
We're gonna withdraw all our guys and good luck to you.

Speaker 13 (02:19:26):
Now.

Speaker 11 (02:19:26):
I will say that that should be the first thing
he does, is withdrawer troops for our sake. But it's
gonna be it's gonna I don't deny, it's gonna be
a tough play to what do you do with the
Syrian Democratic Forces? Do you give them some other kind
of support? Do you negotiate something with AIRED one? And
what if air to one doesn't do it and they
literally kill thousands upon thousands of the Kurds in that area.

Speaker 3 (02:19:46):
It could get ugly, very ugly. And insofar as israel
I know, they've been striking chemical weapons facilities, rocket missile
arsenals to to you know, again take away any ability
of whatever future government might have to launch it again.
Some have suggested that by doing so, that frees up
the airspace and gives them free reiin to hit Iran

(02:20:08):
and maybe wipe out the Iranian nuclear program during this
period of time before Trump's takes over. Any thoughts on
that theory, Yeah.

Speaker 11 (02:20:16):
There's I mean practical whether that was the intention or not,
that certainly is the effect because now then there's no
Serian to even worry about what the air defense or
anything else, and they have destroyed much of what might
have existed on top of all the other targets that
they've been servicing. But and you've had Jack Keen on
Fox News a couple of days ago, it recommend exactly
that that Trump should go in and basically go to

(02:20:37):
war with Iran, which I'm one hundred percent against. That
is not a good play. We do not need to
go to war with Iran in fact, what all this
has shown is that Iran is substantially weaker than we thought,
and now they're even weaker still the area. Oh, they
are no threat to us, so going to war with
them gains us absolutely nothing and could cost us a
great deal.

Speaker 1 (02:20:57):
So we can contain them. We do not need to
go war with Iran.

Speaker 3 (02:21:00):
Well that I like hearing that, because I don't want
to engage in another war. But let's face it, the
Israelis told the Biden administration where to go. They went
and defended themselves. They went into the uh Uh to Gaza.
They dealt with the the Huthis and the Hama or
Hesbala and Hamas very successfully. So maybe maybe Israel just decides,

(02:21:23):
you know what, well, Iran is weak, while Siria is decimated,
We're just going to blow up ourselves some nuclear facilities.
So there's that. There's that military angle. But then there's
also the question I have burning in the back of
my head as I read about the Israel strikes on
the on the chemical weapons facilities. Isn't there any collateral

(02:21:43):
concern about blowing up chemical weapons facilities and releasing the
chemical weapons out into the atmosphere. Same question goes for
radiation when you're bombing all these centrifuges. Is that is
that a legitimate concern.

Speaker 11 (02:21:59):
I've but that also causes me to be a little
skeptical that there are all of these chemical weapons factories,
you know, and all the places here, because that's exactly
what you would see you released into the air. It
can't be any other way, and at least so far,
and there's plenty of international organizations that monitor that stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:22:16):
That we haven't had any reports of that.

Speaker 11 (02:22:18):
I think all the targets up to this point have
genuinely been military targets the regime. I mean, I'm talking
about tanks and artillery pieces, conventional weapons depots, arms depots,
et cetera.

Speaker 1 (02:22:32):
So I don't think that's going on.

Speaker 11 (02:22:33):
I will say though, that let's don't get too much
ahead of our sales on the Israeli success, because they
have had enormous tactical success, it's spectacularly so. But the
medium and long term issues because none of the issues
that will caused ten to seven, for example, have been resolved,
and a lot of the civilians that have been killed
in Lebanon and in the West Bank, in the Gaza,

(02:22:55):
there's going to be some medium and long term difficulties
for Israel to have to navigate what's happened as a
result of those, so they're not out of the woods
by any stretch.

Speaker 3 (02:23:03):
Daniel Davis Deep Dive. Enjoy talking to you every week,
and wow, we've got an entire year's worth of conversation
just sticking with this one subject matter. You know or
maybe not. We're gonna find out together again. Your bucket
of popcorns out, mine's out, and I will enjoy another
conversation with you next Tuesday. Between now and then, my
friend will encourage my listeners to search for your podcast,

(02:23:24):
Daniel Davis Deep Dive and tune in next Tuesday for
another another discussion. Take care of my good friend, always
my pleasure, my friend. See you next week.

Speaker 1 (02:23:32):
Take care.

Speaker 3 (02:23:32):
It's a forty fifty five KR. See the talk station.
Got my buddy John Roman coming out. You're gonna be
happy you're hearing hearing from John Roman. He's this terrific guy.
And a better way to get medical insurance, saving the
heat loads of money and I meantime Zimmer heating and
air conditioning.

Speaker 1 (02:23:49):
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HVAC system twenty two one hundred dollars savings on the
Carrier Comfort System brand new Carrier Comfort System from Zoo
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Why not take advantage? I mean, I call twenty two
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(02:24:12):
Third generation and family ownership and an operation. You give
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(02:24:33):
experts at Zimmer and get that cool carrier, warm carrier
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Speaker 1 (02:24:53):
It's go Zimmer dot com.

Speaker 4 (02:24:56):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio staf Asia

Brian Thomas News

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