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September 2, 2025 • 164 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's something new.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
That's what Trump does to negotiate.

Speaker 3 (00:03):
Every day, and he's an extremely small business man.

Speaker 1 (00:06):
Fifty five k r C the talk station five o
five at fifty five k r C, the talk station.
Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
Into August, and that's the way the news go is.

Speaker 5 (00:44):
Indeed, Brian Thomas here, glad to be back. I hope
you enjoyed the best of I was sleeping yesterday morning
and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I hope you enjoyed your
three day weekend. Boy went an absolutely perfect weather weekend
Jesus Wise, uh didn't didn't manage to make it down
to the fireworks, but I did watch him on TV.
Impressive they were. I love the timing the fireworks going off,

(01:05):
you know, with the beat of the music. What was
with the soundtrack though, that was a major disappointment. Subjectivity
enters into the equation when it comes to the fireworks soundtrack, anyway,
disappointed with that.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
Overall looked great.

Speaker 5 (01:19):
Hope you had a good time if you're able to
make it looks like a fairly non violent least in
so far as the fireworks crowd is concerned. But we
are played with violence in the city of Cincinnati. He
seems to be an ongoing theme in this country coming
up Christopher Smithman at seven twenty. He didn't get a
smith event yesterday, so of course today and looking forward
to that, he's already got the FOP endorsement. He'll be
looking to achieve and get the Fire Department endorsement and

(01:44):
the realtor endorsement. I didn't realize it was a separate
realtor endorsement, but I've been exchanging text with Christopher this
morning asking him about not getting the Republican endorsement. Get
to that in the moment, that's okay. He's running as
an independent, and I know how goofy the Republican Party
is in Himilton County. If you don't have an R
after your name, then they're not going to endorse you.
That doesn't mean he doesn't have the right ideas, the

(02:08):
maybe solutions for some of the problems of plaguing downtown Cincinnati.
I think I've got a great candidate. They just don't
have an R after their name, and otherwise they're in
every way, shape and form consistent with your party's platform.
Do you let the absence of a specific art designation
prevent you from endorsing an otherwise great candidate. Apparently so. Anyway,
inside scoop of bright Bart News, it being Tuesday, we're

(02:29):
gonna do that eight pH five every Tuesday. Today the
return of tech editor Colin may Name. We'll talk about
artificial intelligence handling. Nine to one one calls Meta's AI
chatbot creating some problems for youth and chat GPT led
to teen suicide and there's some new theories of tort
liability going on in this country thanks to chat GPT

(02:51):
can talk about that also here in a moment, Daniel
Davis deep dived ya. What are what we're talking about
with them? Retire Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. Every tweak they
had a thirty with a war analysis, presumably the current
situation with Russia and Ukraine. It has been the case
with the Daniel Davis deep dive now for weeks and weeks.
Don't see the situation coming to a head or a

(03:15):
conclusion anytime soon. Maybe Daniel's a little more optimistic on
that than me. I tend to doubt it, at least
as I sit here today looking forward to eight to
thirty and coal of rectal cancer. Apparently it's a becoming
a growing problem with younger patients looking forward to having
ohc's doctor Mark Johns on the program at the end

(03:35):
of the show in the eight o'clock hour. Colorectal cancer,
once considered a disease of older adults, now increasingly affecting
people under the age of fifty, and there is a
growing trend that younger people are having problems with that.
And I don't know, my friend Maureen's out there in

(03:58):
the listening audience at this early hour probably has something
to say about this. I don't know if this has
anything to do with it turbo cancer epidemic. What peer
reviewed study out of Italy population wide cohort of nearly
three hundred thousand people who were tracked over thirty months.

(04:20):
Apparently this study shows that the so called safe and
effective COVID nineteen shots are linked to a spike in
multiple forms of cancer. I don't necessarily think I'm gonna
put the OHC doc on the spot on this one anyway.
Apparently the researchers followed every resident an aged eleven and
older in Italy's Pescara province from June twenty twenty one

(04:42):
through December twenty three, looking at hospital records. Adjusting for age, sex,
prior health conditions, and even prior COVID nineteen infections, apparently
found that those who received at least one vaccine dose
had a much lower risk of dying from any cancer
compared to unvaccinated But when looking at can cancer, people
who had been vaccinated appeared somewhat more likely to be

(05:04):
hospitalized with a new cancer diagnosis than those who were unvaccinated,
Particularly cancers of the brass, bladder, and.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
Colon.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
Increase only evident of people who have never been infected
with COVID nineteen, so apparently they were able to draw
it not it wasn't COVID nineteen that caused the spike
in cancer, It was the vaccine itself, they've determined. Says
hospitalization for cancer thirty five percent higher in vaccinated individuals
versus the unvaccinated strongest link in men and in those

(05:39):
with no prior COVID infection. Overall cancer risk jumps twenty
three percent after one dose, breast cancer of fifty four percent,
bladder cancer up sixty two percent, and colorectal cancer up
thirty five percent.

Speaker 6 (05:54):
HMM.

Speaker 5 (05:57):
This study, alongside more than one hundred other peer review papers,
confirms the link between m R and NA injections and
deadly cancer pathways. New medical term coined COVID nineteen vaccine
induced turbo cancer. All right, we'll add that to the lexicon.
I'm not going what your weather the doctor Mark Johns

(06:26):
is going to draw any connection between COVID nineteen vaccines
and young people getting cancer, although we do know, after
all the research has been done and all the information
keeps trickling out, Apparently there's a connection between COVID nineteen
vaccines and heart problems in young people. Anyway, moving over,

(06:47):
Republicans endorsed the following candidates here in the City of
Cincinnati Council raised three candidates. Gary Favors of Avondale special
education teacher. He's run the past for school board in
the City of Cincinnati Council as well. Liz Keening, not
shocking the last Republican has served on CINCINNTI Council between
twenty twenty and twenty twenty three. Haven't had one on since. Finally,

(07:10):
sixty five year old Lendha Matthews and North Avenueal served
in on the Ohio GOP Central Committee. Owns a company
called Millennium Group. The second which specializes in perma culture,
agriculture and energy efficiency. Anyway, according to the Hamilton County
GOP chairman Russell Mock in a statement, each candidate brings
a unique experience in a vision for strengthening our communities
and restoring leadership at every level of local government. All right,

(07:38):
we've got nine endorsed Democrats, five candidates endorsed by the
Cincinnati Charter Committee. So Christopher Smithland running as an independent
and Steve Gooden on the Charter Committee. Love that guy.
I think he'd been an outstanding candidate. So we'll see
where he goes. Five on three seven nine fifty five hundred,

(07:59):
eight hundred eight to two three talk cont five fifty
on AT and T phones violence inherent in the system. Uh,
we have a guy shot at Coraane Township. Police officers
Okay Mark Bramble, forty years old, now facing charges of
floni assault, three counts aggravated menacing, three counts, one count

(08:21):
of fair to comply with an order or signal police officer,
one having weapons under disability, and one for carrying concealed weapons.
About seven thirty pm Friday, thirty three hundred Blockadashlar Drive
report of a domestic dispute. Bramble attempted to provoke confrontation
with the officers, urging them to fight and thank you
Foction nineteen reporting apparently requesting an officer's firearm to make

(08:43):
it an even fight his words, and threatening to run
over officers with his vehicle. During the investigation, he attempted
to evade police in his vehicle after receiving clear signs
telling him to pull over. That led to a pursuit.
Please chased him. It ended on Common Circle and Mall Drive.

(09:04):
He exited his vehicle, fired at the officers, then they
fired back, which resulted in him getting a non life
threatening injury taking a UC Medical center. Thankfully and thank god,
no officers were injured during the incident. So he was
using a firearm, le having a conviction of drug abuse,
and he's being currently held without bond, although there is

(09:26):
a bond hearing scheduled for tomorrow at nine.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
And if you're not.

Speaker 5 (09:29):
Doing anything over to Westchester does sometimes gun violence does
happen outside of the City of Cincinnati limits. Two people
shot Westchester happened Sunday night, multi victim shooting report on
Erie Circle in Princeton Crossing mobile home park about seven pm.
Two people shot taking a UC Westchester. Reportedly in stable condition.

(09:53):
No suspect currently a larger corner of the police statement,
but we cannot release more information at this time. One
person dead Millvale for this one since a police department
reporting a shooting in Millvale happened four pm Sunday, two
thousand block a Millvale Court. Woman found with a gunshot
wound to the head. Declared debt of the scene. Apparently

(10:16):
they have a cooperative witness, but no suspect information. Cause
of the shooting currently under unclear CBD Criminal Investigation Section
investigating three victim shot. Oh wait a minute, it continues
CBO reporting. Police identified three people who died after a
shooting at Mount Washington Sunday afternoon. Twenty seven year old

(10:37):
Bennet Duress, twenty two year old Eden Adunga Indugna, twenty
year old Fievan Adugna all dead. This after a shooting
in the fifteenthentred block of Beacon Street. Lieutenant Jonathan Cunningham
said officers showed up at one point thirty in the
afternoon reported shooting. They got there found four people with

(10:57):
gunshot wound, both inside and outside the residence, and it's
two pronounced dead, seeing the other two taking a UC
medical center where one died. The one taken to the
hospital believed to be the suspect in the shooting. According
to the statement, he shot himself attempted to take his
own life. So we still have to let the investigation
play out. I have a lot of unknown questions of

(11:18):
this time. Truly a tragedy. The pain very widespread. We
only felt by those involved in our officers, by the
residential community here. It's very sad. They're still working to
figure out how the shooting unfolded. Have not yet said
how the four victims knew each other, or if they
knew each other all right, And then, which is interesting,
Todd Zenzer released some criminal status or apparently the City

(11:38):
of Cincinnati actually released them the Comprehensive financial Report, which
drew our citizen Watch Joug Todd Zenser's attention that schedule two,
when the report provides data for the past ten years
about the number of service calls, arrests, and reports filed.
Of course we're relating to crime. Here noted a thirty

(11:59):
nine nine percent reduction the number of arrests in twenty
twenty one another thirty eight percent reduction in twenty twenty two,
twenty three, and twenty four, the number of arrest has
remained below nine thousand.

Speaker 7 (12:14):
Now.

Speaker 5 (12:14):
According to this schedule, the yearly total of arrest in
twenty twenty four twenty thousand, one hundred and thirty fewer
than the yearly total arrest of the prior a decade
twenty fifteen. Twenty thousand, one hundred and thirty fewer arrests
than twenty fifteen, and he acknowledged it as a number

(12:38):
of factors that must be examined to explain the steep
reductions and arrest over the past seven years. But he
goes on in opines, Hmmm, perhaps the reason for Cincinnati's
crime problem isn't simply because CPD is not making as
many arrests every year as it used to. Maybe we've
all heard about police morale being down. Why bother arresting
someone if the criminal justice system is going to hold

(13:00):
him accountable all this paperwork for nothing, forget about it.
It's not worth my time. And he may be onto
something on that, because I knowe Corey Bowman reported as
shooting in the West End on a couple of days ago, Friday,
Apparently somebody got shot in the leg on Chester and Lynn,
And as Joe Astuteley noted, it's not in the local

(13:20):
criminal reporting. You get someone shot in the leg and
it isn't reported. You think the police followed up on
that one, Joe? Maybe? Maybe not? You think it made
it in the crime stats. Maybe Apparently Corey announced one
or a person shot on Carla Avenue. And finally Corey

(13:40):
announcing that there's a person a person shot on eighth Street,
West eighth Street. So Corey out there in the field
reporting on gunshot wounds. That don't make it into the play,
into the paper. All right, Well, you know, and we're
not the I'm not accusing anyone of cooking the I

(14:01):
think it is appropriate for us to consider whether the
police are not issuing as many citations because of what
I said before, or maybe some other reason, or do
you really believe crime has gone down that much that
we are really should be a twenty thousand fewer citations
issued than a decade ago doesn't seem quite logical or

(14:22):
reasonable under the circumstances. Oh thank you, Dad from beyond
the grave. Feel free to call it's five nineteen right now.
Be right back after these brief words.

Speaker 8 (14:31):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Down the channel line.

Speaker 5 (14:36):
Weather four as sunny skies today, maybe a pop up
shower too.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Eighty two for the high.

Speaker 5 (14:42):
Today, sixty overnight with a few clowns. It's going to
be mostly sunny Tomorrow. Isolated showers are possible. High of
eighty overnight, low of fifty nine. Cold front rain is
likely and storms are possible. Thursday is going to be
a highest sixty nine showers lender around noontime in cooler tempts.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
All right now, sixty degrees.

Speaker 5 (15:03):
Here fifty five KERSP talk stations by twenty three on
a Tuesday, Happy Tuesday, short week.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
This week, yay.

Speaker 5 (15:10):
Powerball jackpot. Nobody won last night one point three billion dollars.
Your chance of winning are like half or a quarter
of your likelihood of getting struck by lightning. But for
two bucks one point three billion dollars, man, maybe let's
see what Keith got this morning. Keith, thanks for calling
Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
To you you two.

Speaker 9 (15:29):
How are you doing.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
I'm doing fine. I'll be better if I won the lottery.

Speaker 9 (15:32):
But you know, yeah, you're not the only one. What
I wanted to talk about. Nobody in the mainstream news
media is talking about. Is what the news bulletin that
was on Fox News Radio last night between eight thirty
and eight thirty eight PM from their inside sources, the

(15:52):
United States is sending a flotilla of a naval warcraft
to the Gulf off the coast of Venezuela. Yeah, which, yeah,
with ships that are armed with ballistic missiles and uh
which m'll call it drones probably missiles, cruise missiles also,
and we're sending two submarines down there, two attack killer steps.

(16:15):
One of them, believe it or not, is the USS
Cincinnati and the other one is the USS Virginia. And
they're loaded up with cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, and cruise
missile torpedoes. And I would suspect, the way our military
does business, on each sub there's probably a contingent of
an avcal.

Speaker 5 (16:35):
Commandos probably yeah, I would imagine so, uh I for
the purpose of what cracking down on what drug cartels
or something?

Speaker 9 (16:44):
I mean they're not saying, but you don't send the
you don't send the US S Regima landing craft with
packed with two thousand marine excuse me, three thousand marine
commandos unless you're planning in case something happens. You know
what I'm talking about.

Speaker 5 (17:04):
I do, But I guess sometimes I'm just wondering pursuit
to what authority Donald Trump would invade Venezuela.

Speaker 9 (17:11):
Uh, well, because Maduro's got a fifty million dollar bond
on his head for drug cartel stuff and supposedly Eason,
major drug cartel leader down there in Venezuela for the
drug trafficking.

Speaker 5 (17:26):
Yeah, but is Donald Trump able to well engage in
warfare against Venezuela against whom we have no declaration of
war because they're involved in the drug trade. Mexico's involved
in the drug trade.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Well, China.

Speaker 5 (17:40):
China's involved in the drug trade, I think, probably more
than any other country of the planet.

Speaker 6 (17:44):
I know.

Speaker 9 (17:45):
Well, what I think about it is, it's like years
ago when we send troops to Panama to take out
the dictator that was involved with drug trafficking.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Remember that, Yeah, Noriego, wasn't it Doriego?

Speaker 7 (17:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (17:59):
I think there's something might be similar going on. I
don't know, but it is. Nobody in our mainstream news
media is talking about this, and this is a serious situation.

Speaker 5 (18:09):
But say that again, I said I would agree with you.
It is a serious situation, I mean constitutional level serious,
the fact that we've maybe engaging in warfare with another country,
our military resources stretched pretty thinly, We're short on munitions
generally speaking, and we got the rest of the world
clamoring for us to provide them with more munitions. I mean,

(18:34):
you know, there's only so much we're capable of doing.

Speaker 9 (18:39):
Well, yeah, unless we've got top secret stuff the other
guys don't know about pardoners.

Speaker 5 (18:44):
Well, I presume that there is top secret stuff, but
then again, that does not negate the reality that we're
dealing with here with our resources being spread thin, and
whether or not I suppose Trump has the ability to
do this, yeah.

Speaker 7 (18:55):
I agree.

Speaker 9 (18:55):
What I'm wondering is is, let's say something happens that
Veniceo Whale is, some of their militias or whatever does
something to a US tries to do something to a
US naval ship. Yeah, and that would be an act
of war, and then we have.

Speaker 5 (19:14):
The right to do that, and our presence there is
almost inviting them to try something stupid like that, So
we have a justification for retaliatory use of force. They
attacked us first, we just happened to be floating around
out there in international waters. Just the thought. Sometimes you
set these things up to turn out that way. Appreciate it, Keith,
thank you for putting on everybody's radar five twenty seven.

(19:36):
Right now you can feel free to CALLI five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five eight hundred and eight two to three
talk or pound five fifty on AT and T phones.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
Be right back fifty five KRC. In today's.

Speaker 5 (19:49):
Jededine says the following about the weather not bad. I
guess some of the skies for the most part eighty
two to the high and maybe a pop up shower
two showing.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Up a few clouds of a night sixty sixty.

Speaker 5 (19:58):
Degrees the low eighty ur high tomorrow with isolated showers possible.
Otherwise mostly sunny skies, cold front coming in overnight down
to fifty nine and raids likely storms are possible. We
have showers ending on Thursday around noontime. I have only
sixty nine degree sixty right now.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
I'm time for no.

Speaker 5 (20:16):
It isn't prettymature with the traffic up. We'll do that
next where the phones we go. As his tradition, I
guess today's hitting off on a normal note because Tom's
on the line. Tom has always good to hear from
you here.

Speaker 10 (20:30):
Yeah, good morning, Yeah Friday, Friday turned into like a Monday.

Speaker 11 (20:34):
It's kind of crazy, so it is.

Speaker 10 (20:36):
Yeah, but it was up man, you were right, that
was a great weekend.

Speaker 11 (20:41):
That was Yeah.

Speaker 10 (20:43):
Two of my favorite orders in the English language an
hour Cold Front. I love it. So yeah, definitely. If
I'm if I'm gonna venture complain about the heat, I
got at least point out when the wad of great
amen brother, Yeah, right on, Hey did you have a
good weekend?

Speaker 5 (20:58):
Fantastic weekend for no other reason the weather, But we
had a lot of reasons to be happier over the weekend,
so very very very nice.

Speaker 7 (21:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (21:07):
Likewise, got some gots of stuff, taking care of it.

Speaker 10 (21:10):
And uh, one of the things I did yesterday while
I was doing my stuff is I was listening to
uh Mike Allen over on seven hundred and he brought up.

Speaker 11 (21:19):
A subject about there's something.

Speaker 10 (21:21):
There's some organization I think it was called Third Way,
and there they came out with a list of things
and basically this list is directed it and anybody who
wants to stop Trump and the MAGA movement and the list.

Speaker 7 (21:34):
Of things not to say, and you know.

Speaker 11 (21:37):
Don't don't, don't, don't use these praises.

Speaker 5 (21:40):
Yeah, I brought that up about a week ago on
the Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (21:44):
It's all the.

Speaker 11 (21:44):
Crazy must I must have missed it.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
That's okay, that's.

Speaker 10 (21:47):
Okay, but you know, it's it's it's the it's not
like they're changing what they're doing.

Speaker 11 (21:54):
They just want to change the words they used.

Speaker 5 (21:57):
Right, it's straight out of it's straight out of well Tom,
straight out of orwell.

Speaker 10 (22:03):
Right, it's too late now you've you've been exposed for
what you're all about. Democrats, liberals, we know what your
game is, we know what you're after, and we know
we know how you operate, we know your mo It's
it's too late, and now it's just up to up
to the rest of us, the same people in the world,

(22:23):
to continue to point out their stupidity. And no, just
because you're not going to call it what you've been
calling it doesn't.

Speaker 11 (22:31):
Mean you're not doing the same crap or even worse. Right,
and yet it's and it's no shock.

Speaker 10 (22:39):
It would be no shock I should say if if
somebody or some group of people in Cincinnati are saying, hey,
let's just keep these numbers down.

Speaker 11 (22:47):
To make it look like we're doing good. You know,
it would be a surprise.

Speaker 10 (22:51):
And and just to be fair, I mean there there's
people of all kinds of political strips that play that
same game.

Speaker 11 (22:58):
We don't look bad.

Speaker 10 (22:59):
Let's let let's do something with these numbers so we
don't look as bad as we actually are.

Speaker 11 (23:04):
Well, if you're bad, you're bad, and you need to go.
You need they need to get rid of people. I
listen to your your die heard.

Speaker 12 (23:11):
How at helped me listening to your.

Speaker 11 (23:13):
Interview with Cory Movement on Friday.

Speaker 10 (23:15):
So, uh, sounds sounds like he's got a lot of
great ideas. And I hope the citizens of Cincinnati vote
for him, and I hope they get rid of these
idiots that are in there. The nine to nothing Democrat
game is Look, I mean, look at what you're getting
for it.

Speaker 11 (23:30):
Don't vote Democrat.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
Have a great game, you.

Speaker 5 (23:32):
Too, Tom, good year from you have a great week.
Speaking of a since a city council or the local
stories zoning zoning approved of the controversial high Park square,
Uh oh, they may be walking back new had legislation
introduced by Since a city Council on Friday seeks to
repeal the zoning ordinance that they passed in April over
the wishes of the vast majority of Hyde Park Square residents.

(23:57):
Critics of the plan, which includes a bootique hotel all
apartments in underground parking, brought up the issue with the
hotel component of the plan, calling it too large of
a building wouldn't solve the need for housing. Apparently, it
was reported earlier in the week compromise maybe coming down
the road from the developer scrapping plans to build a hotel,

(24:18):
limiting how tall the apartment complex might be. So the
city council may very well revoke the waiver on the
Connected Communities program that allows this well connected developer to
develop a program or a project that the Hyde Park
residents don't.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
Want, which is why it's on the ballot now. Question.
I have to ask this out loud.

Speaker 5 (24:39):
They approved this plan in spite of the fact that
they they foisted Connected Communities on all the neighborhoods. This
would not comport with Connected Communities. That's why they had
to apply for ovarians. They got it from the city council.
The residents went crazy. They got a ballot initiative circulating
it made it. They got eighteen thousand signatures in virtually
no time. Now the city council is probably and if

(25:01):
I was a betting man, I'd say they will repeal
this zoning change. They see the riding on the wall,
they repeal it, mooching the ballot initiative.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
I suspect.

Speaker 5 (25:17):
Couldn't they after the November election just turn around and
allow this variance to go forward again. Now I know
that will be massive insult to the voters, and obviously
it would create huge political problems. But this doesn't stop
this type of variants from being approved down the road
at any time. It just unrings the bell that resulted
in the ballot initiative. So this ain't over if Fat

(25:41):
Lady has not sung, But I would expect you can
all look forward to the city trying to unring the bell. Anyway,
it's five point thirty six right now. I can feel
free to call love to hear from you. Otherwise we'll
dive on into a stack as stupid and epic stupid
will start the stupid stories and just don't go away.

Speaker 8 (25:59):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
Time for your Channel nine first morning weatherful cast, sunny
skies today maydia pop up shower showing up the nice day.
Otherwise mostly sunny eighty two overnight little sixty with a
few clowns. Tomorrows high eighty with isolated showers possible. Otherwise
it's mostly sunny day Tomorrow overnight little fifty nine. Rain likely,
storms are possible, and we'll have showers in the morning

(26:24):
on Thursday shit end around noon, we'll have a highest
sixty nine right now fifty nine.

Speaker 13 (26:28):
In time for traffic from the U see how tramphic center.
You see Health. You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal
it makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for
better outcomes. Expect more, and you see health dot com.
Highway traffic in decent shape to start off your Tuesday morning.
No accidents to deal with at a report of a
car fire east found one twenty nine ramped to northbound

(26:51):
seventy five, but it sounds like all was taken care of.
There no delays in that area. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five KR see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
By forty on a Tuesday.

Speaker 5 (27:03):
Happy Tuesday, t Brian Thomas always inviting phone calls. He
care to engage in a discussion, Feel free to call
me five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five eight
hundred eight two to three talk or go with pound
five fifty on AT and T phones, of course, fifty
five care Sea dot com makes you get your iHeart Media.
It's easy to stream all the content on my Heart
and it's a free app. It sits right on your
phone and you can just pop up the morning show

(27:24):
like my wife, Good Morning Paulette.

Speaker 8 (27:26):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
This I think actually defines the stack as stupid.

Speaker 14 (27:30):
Idiots doing idiot things because they're idiots.

Speaker 5 (27:33):
Well anticipated sound by Jos Bracker. We go to Spring, Texas.
We got one guy Dad another charge with murder after
the pair took turns wearing a kevlar helmet and shooting
each other with a rifle. You Ron Harris County sheriff
ed Gonzalez in a press release deputy's dispatch of the

(27:55):
residents August seventeenth, regarding report of shots fired. First responder
discovered thirty four year old Aaron Prout suffering from a
gunshot wounded they had and he succumbed to his injuries
after being taken to the hospital.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Yes, absolutely across the board. Stupid.

Speaker 5 (28:11):
There is nothing but stupid in this story. They initially
thought it was suicide. With thorough follow up investigation, they said,
and the release the truth was ultimately revealed. Hard to
believe two so called friends would take turns shooting at
each other wearing a kavlar helmet inside a house in

(28:33):
a residential neighborhood while using a rifle. Idiot homeowner thirty
seven year old Shan o'donnod' is now charged with now
charged with murder and connection with Prout's death. Well, you know,
the only fun fact that I really wish was in
this story the caliber of the rifle. Oh, the color

(28:57):
of course, sorry, Joe, all important color of the rifle.
The caliber is what I'm interested in, because you know,
there are ballistics tests on these kevlar things that are
designed to maybe maybe stop a bullet, maybe a nine
millimeter bullet from a handgun, but not maybe like a
three h eight rifle cartridge. But any event, I think

(29:20):
the story illustrates that you can always count on the
kevlar to stop a bullet from going into your brain.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
In this case. You know, the other thing is there's
there's no mention of alcohol being involved.

Speaker 5 (29:42):
Am Judes put this in the stack of stupid because
of the first sentence in the article relating to the
list of storm names. Yes, can I read that sentence.
I can read the storm names as well. I'll be
happy to do that because it provides context and it

(30:03):
also provides FCC compliance when I read the first sentence,
because someone might call me out on that. Ever wondered
what it will be like to get blown by Dave
in the middle of the street, you might be able
to find out This winner, Dave one of the first

(30:24):
named storms of the Winter Court of Meteorologists. Public submitted
more than fifty thousand suggestions to name the storms. United
Kingdom's Met Office, in partnership with Ireland's met Arian and
the Dutch National Weather Forecasting Service, announced this year's this
list of storm names. First dam on the list, Amy,

(30:48):
one of the most popular female names submitted to the
Met Office. Dave described as my beloved husband who can
snore three towns three times louder than any storm. That
office of the purpose of naming storms was serious to
to help people notice, prepare and stay safe in severe weather. Okay,

(31:10):
this year's twenty five twenty six storm names Amy Bram, Chandra, Dave, Eddie,
La Fiona, La Gerard, Hannah, Isla, Yanna, Cashe, Lilith, Marty, Nico, Oscar, Patrick, Ruby, Stevie.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
Tigue and a Violet.

Speaker 5 (31:39):
And then we run the end of the list with Vubo,
which is bell wu bb Oh. You think there's a
an overwhelmingly European name bent on this, Joe, I don't
know how you read into that. Well, Bubo, of course, yeah,
that's that's that's a traditional Northern European name there, bubbovebo.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
All right.

Speaker 5 (32:11):
Five three seven four fifty eight two three foalk You
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I don't. You're the one dealing with the pain. Could
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You don't know where it ultimately came from. But you're
dealing with pain, and your life is revolving around the pain,

(32:31):
as opposed to you enjoying your life free of pain.
So maybe you've been to the doctor, had the steroid injections.
Your doctor may have already talked to you about surgery. Yeah,
downtime with surgery, risk associated with surgery. You know, steroids
do not cure or solve the problem. Steroids do not
restore the damage to your joints. It's a cover up.

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How about something that actually cures and solves the problem.
So you may be a leading candid. You may be
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Ask them? Five one three eighty four seven zero zero
nineteen five one three eight four seven zero zero nineteen.
That's five one three eight four seven zero zero nineteen.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 5 (33:46):
He's bad here, tiver that Channa nine first one to
what the volcanes sunny skuys for the most part today
al though Summaris may see a pop up shower eighty
two for the high overnight lows sixty which just a
few clowns eighty are high tomorrow isolated showers of pot
by the way, it's just mostly sunny guys, overnight possible
to rain increases. Storms are possible, they say. Don't expect

(34:08):
a huge soak fifty nine overnight, and then on Thursday
we'll see a high only sixty nine degrees to cold
front coming in. Showersl end around noontime fifty nine degrees.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
Now time for traffic from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 13 (34:21):
Right you see health, you'll find comprehensive care that's so
personal it makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care
for better outcomes.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
Expect more.

Speaker 13 (34:29):
Right you seehealth dot com, buyot on the highways to
start off your tunesday morning, and then return to work
in school from the holiday weekend. No accidents to deal
with and nothing close to a delay as of yet.
Even soap bend two seventy five do we okay? At
the Carrol Cropper Bridge Chuck cameram on fifty five kre
see Deep Talk station.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
It is five point fifty on a Tuesday. Happy one
to you, and again I hope you had a wonderful
three day weekend.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
I sure did. Over to the phones we go.

Speaker 5 (35:00):
Oh five three, seven, four nine fifty eight hundred eight
two to three talk Mississippi James. Welcome back my friends.
Good to hear from me as always. Good morning, doctor Brian.
I come in peace, love everybody, and there's nothing you
can do about it.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
Excellent message.

Speaker 7 (35:14):
Hey two quick question?

Speaker 14 (35:16):
Is there a listening lunch tomorrow?

Speaker 5 (35:19):
No, sir, we kicked it because of yesterday's holiday. It's
next Wednesday at Anderson Pub and Grill. Next wee, next one.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
I try to be there. I hope you do. I
hope you get to see you and now my listeners love
to meet you.

Speaker 7 (35:31):
All right.

Speaker 14 (35:32):
Second question, what's your comparison or contrast between racism and
white supremacy.

Speaker 5 (35:40):
Well, I think the idea of white supremacy is a
concept that is inherently racist. If you believe, because you
are white, you are inherently supreme over people of different colors,
than that makes you a racist. I suppose anybody who
harbors hatred toward anyone based upon the color of their skin,
or their religion or the ethnicity of whatever, that that

(36:02):
is racism as well. If you hate someone merely because
of some external trait, that will be a racist concept.

Speaker 14 (36:11):
Okay, I'm just doing personal research, you know, so I
can do the research online, but I'd like to hear
from different people's opinion what they think about it.

Speaker 1 (36:22):
Absolutely, but just looking up.

Speaker 14 (36:24):
I see you guys next weeks.

Speaker 7 (36:25):
I was prepared for tomorrow, but.

Speaker 5 (36:28):
Yeah, I appreciate you bringing it up, just because others
may have been thinking it was tomorrow. But thanks for
that heads up and good luck with the research. Feel
free to call me back if you draw some alternative conclusion. Yeah,
just you know, I hatred based upon some objective factor
like that. It just doesn't make any sense. How can
you hate someone you don't know? Seriously, I go back

(36:51):
to this whole idea of you know, politics. If you
say you're a Democrat, what does that mean? Does it
mean anything? You have no idea? And to you you
talk to somebody find out where within any given political
perspective they are you have no idea what they believe in.
Much in the same way, if you see someone, look
it's a black person. If your immediate reaction is hatred disdain,

(37:12):
you haven't talked to them. You don't know from where
they stand. They could be identical to you in every way,
shape and form, politically, the type of music and food
they like. You could find a best friend in a
person of color if you have an open mind. But
if you immediately react, if your immediate reaction is hatred
or disdain because of the color of their skin, then you,
sir or ma'am, are racist, and that goes both ways,

(37:35):
any color relative to any other color. Local story in
Stacking Stupid, we got to Covington. It was just this morning,
Fox nineteen Brady Williams dateline, September two. Man stumbled into
the hum of a Covington resident while intoxicated, describing him
as lucky to have escaped with only criminal charges. William

(37:55):
Brockman identified the police arrested charge with actually he's already release.
He was released this morning. Broke into a home on
Ema Street to sleep. That isn'tn ttil the homeowner called
nine to one one four o'clock in the morning, please
say William brockman Man responsible and he was intoxicated at

(38:15):
the time of the trustpass. He's now facing charges of
criminal trespassing public intoxication. He was released this morning. Criminal
trespass in this instance a civil violation public intoxication the
class being missed demeanor. We'll see ultimately what happens to him.
Mom of two died in front of her son after

(38:38):
slipping off an almost three hundred foot high platform trying
to take a selfie celebrate completing a dangerous bungee jump stunt.
Described as an extreme extreme sports fanatic, Elizavetta Gushinov, she
was forty five, apparently did the bungee jump successfully the

(38:59):
same day he felt or her death in front of
her twenty two year old son. She returned to the
top of the two hundred eighty nine foot chimney and
at an unfinished thermal power plant without her safety harness
to take the selfie with her son. That's when she
lost her footing and fell. Okay, idiots doing idiot things

(39:23):
because they're idiots. Just turned forty five the day before
the fatal jump. Trip was a birthday present from her son.
Investigation launched into whether the bungee jumping facility in the
town of the Pavlov's suburb of Saint Petersburg had fully
complied with the law. Well the bungee jump was successful.
I don't know if the bungee jump folks had anything

(39:45):
to do with her positioning relative to the selfie. Be
careful out there, folks, five fifty five fifty five cares
to detox station plenty to talk about the six o'clock hour.
Who you can call in maybe the something you want
to talk about. I invite phone calls, and then we'll
get to the seven o'clock hour with for Smith a
minute seven twenty, then the Daniel Davis Deep Dive and
the Inside Scoop with bright bart news in the eight

(40:06):
o'clock hour and colea rectal cancer apparently rising in young patients.
We'll hear from ohc Are cancer experts at the end
of the eight o'clock hour.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
I hope you can stick around.

Speaker 5 (40:16):
For all that today's top headlines coming up at the
top of the hour.

Speaker 1 (40:20):
The changes every minute fifty five KRC the talk station
on five.

Speaker 5 (40:27):
And fifty five k R see the talk station by
Thomas Wishing there We're on a very happy Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
I'm hoping that everybody had a wonderful Labor Day weekend.
I certainly did.

Speaker 5 (40:36):
It was nice hame of the day off yesterday, and
it's nice to be back to work after some what
beautiful weather, just glorious glorious weather. Anyway, feel free to
call open phone lines. Got some time to talk until
we get to Christopher Smithman coming up at seven to
twenty with the smith Event. Since we didn't do it yesterday,
we got the inside scoop with bright Bart News, which
we have every Tuesday at eight oh five. Today the

(40:57):
return of Tech editor editor column made and who's going
to talk about artificial intelligence?

Speaker 1 (41:02):
Now? Handling nine to one one.

Speaker 5 (41:03):
Calls Meta AI chatbot is presenting some problems for youth.
I have this separate article about tort liability against these
artificial intelligence programs. CHAT, GPT and others have egged young
people into committing suicide. I mean, you read the reports
on these and the allegations contained in some of the cases.

(41:25):
It's frightening stuff. You need to keep your eyes on
what your children are doing and what they're talking to
artificial intelligence about. Not exactly providing sound advice AI. And
finally we'll talk with Colin about chat GPT leading to
eighteen's suicide. Of course, continuing the theme about creating problems
for youth. That'll be eight oh five The Daniel Davis

(41:46):
Deep Dive with retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis every eight
thirty every Tuesday, today, no difference. And then we're going
to hear about coorectal cancer sadly increasing in younger patients.
Ohc's doctor Mark John joins the program to talk about
this what's characterized as an alarming rise in coorectal cancer
in younger adults. Talked to Robert F. Kennedy Junior about that.

(42:10):
I guess ultra processed foods may be a problem with that.
But then again, there was that article I saw with
that peer reviewed study out of Italy where there may
be a relationship between COVID nineteen vaccines and an increase
in cancer diagnoses. Frightening stuff on that. Not sure if
the doctor will be talking about that component of it,

(42:30):
but I did mention that in the last hour.

Speaker 1 (42:33):
Let's see here.

Speaker 5 (42:39):
Over the weekend, multiple protests all over multiple cities going
after Donald Trump and his various policies. This is kind
of a strange phenomenon going on. What are they fighting over? Chicago,
New York demonstrations organized by a group called One Fair Wage.
Federal minimum wage esses seven to twenty five an hour,
But who out there is actually working for that? Trump

(43:01):
must go chance outside the well former home in New York,
where Trump doesn't live anymore. I guess because Trump owned
it or used to occupy it was a worthy site
for a protest. Some screaming no National Guard, some screaming
lock him up, referring your course to Donald Trump. Some
calling for the end of what they say is a

(43:21):
fascist regime. Those people who are intellectually inferior, not looking
at or understanding the definition of fascism before they run
around and start screaming it at every opportunity. Stop the
Ice invasion protest in Washington, Free DC. No masked thugs
out on the West coast fighting for the rights of

(43:41):
immigrants and workers. We're here because we're under attack. We're
here because our core values and our democracy is under attack.
We're here because they are threatening to send the military
into our streets. That will be the mayor of Evanston, Illinois,
speaking with the crowd up in the Chicago area, west coast,
from San Diego to Seattle. A bunch of people showing

(44:03):
up in various areas calling to stop the billionaire takeover.
You know, it's a okay for the Democrats to be
cottoning up and you know, cozying up with the multi
billionaire class up until that's right, Donald Trump won the election.
And pivoting over to that interesting op ed piece by
Derek Hunter regarding all these well crazy people running around

(44:25):
on the streets on a holiday weekend and why Derek
Hunter pointing out that listen, you know, I'm out looking
at refrigerators on sale at Low's drive through an intersection,
got a group of about fifteen leftists holding up signs
fight Trump and end oliggarky. So I doubt if any
of them could define oligarchy, taking a point that I

(44:46):
make all the time, but they're ready to fight for it.

Speaker 7 (44:50):
Said.

Speaker 5 (44:50):
A few more intersections, a few more mutant gatherings, and
one thing became clear. Democrats are miserable people. This is
the topic of conversation we've come up with the other day.
Even said this out loud to my wife. We were
talking about it. Something along these lines, and I said,
they're just upset people. They're unhappy about literally everything, name
a topic that they don't get all negative on it.

(45:12):
If look at the face of Greta Thunberg, for example,
she'd be the poster child for all things leftist and
hunter wrights. You know, imagine having a day off work,
a federal holiday, and you choose not to spend it
with family and friends, but to get up early and
run at an intersection and wave signs with slogans fight
the takeover, said one woman. Old woman looks old enough

(45:37):
to be a grandmother or great grandmother. What's she doing
out there? What kind of person would rather be with
strangers on a holiday than their own family, he asked.
He said, by the way, the takeover of what must
be fought, good question, said, I assume since every other
sign was about how Trump was either a hitler or

(45:59):
a king, or some new mutation of whatever fever dream
that they're awaking from, they were talking about a takeover
of the federal government by Trump. That seems a little
odd considering the people's screech. This is what democracy look like.
Oh yeah, Donald Trump won the election farren square and
by a lot. Hunter says, in these intellectual zombies don't

(46:22):
seem to understand that that means he's doing what democracy dictates.
Republicans won control of the House, They won control of
the Senate and the executive brand. Republicans won the popular
vote in the congressional popular vote. This quote unquote congressional
popular vote, which wasn't a thing until Democrats invented it
a few years ago to justify opposing Donald Trump in

(46:43):
his first term the electoral college. He didn't win the
popular vote. He's in, he's not qualified, he's not president.
We need to end the electoral college. Well, what are
the things I observed in the aftermath the last falls election.
He did win the popular vote. Boy, didn't take the
wind out of the Democrats sales in terms of going
after the electoral college. Pretty funny that one. Back to

(47:06):
Derek Hunter, no unit of measure has Democrats in the
majority in the country, and it's not even close. No
matter what polled a site or makeup, Donald Trump and
Republicans are light years ahead of Democrats in their nineteen
percent favorability rating. He jokingly says, shingles is more desired
than Democrats are. Yet with this backdrop, a small battalion

(47:28):
of mutants chose to spend their day off waving signs
like tax the rich. By the way, the time I
was driving through at the time is pretty wealthy. These
were not poor people dressed in Ralph Lauren casual wear
with the BMW's park nearby. These are the rich, the
largely retired, by the looks of it, typical leftists who
advocate for things they will never face themselves. Their money

(47:49):
is earned, their income has already been taxed, their houses
are paid off. They're free to spend their energy fighting
to impose their dying nineteen sixties dreams on people who
have unambiguously rejected did them? That was a shot of
the intellectual, college educated females out there in the world,
was it not? Is that one to think I'll spend

(48:11):
the rest of the end of my life with my wife,
my kids, my future grandkids, and traveling to visit friends
and other family, not standing on a corner wasting my
time on the back of nine life complaining about whoever
the president is simply because my party has nothing to
offer other than hate and rage. This is particularly salient point.

(48:34):
What are you hearing from them? By way of policy
other than Donald Trump, evil orange Man, stop olig archs, fascist.
It's really like FCC compliant name calling. It's not offering
you any substantive difference. And again, considering Trump's policies, what

(48:57):
he ran on his campaign platform which resulted in him
getting elected, is exactly what he's delivering on now. Did
you expect something different? He talked about cracking down on immigration. Look,
he's doing it, and some people are upset about that,
but the vast majority of us in Paul after Paul
after Paul, pretty happy with it, especially when you're considering

(49:20):
the criminal element. So brilliant people don't allow themselves to
be emotionally manipulated into quote unquote action that is only
done because there's nothing else the party can offer to
excite its base. Anger is a poor substitute for a
vision or agenda, but considering what they stand for, it's

(49:43):
the best they've got. And the people on the streets
with nothing better to do are the only people that
appeals to. They deserve each other. Interesting observations by Derek Conny.
You can find that on town Hall under the heading
Democrats appeal to miserable people paraphrase. Quite a bit of
it left out some of his humor along these lines
and describing these people. But in the final analysis, that's

(50:07):
all I hear. Do you hear something beyond screaming and
anger and hate? Is there a policy out there that
the Democrats are offering that really offers a better path
something you might want to consider when you're moving forward
to November's election for Cincinnati City Council. What are they saying,
what are they promising? What are they proposing to deal

(50:30):
with the actual issues that our city is facing? Six
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(50:51):
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(51:13):
maintenance programs. Get in touch with them online. Go to
go zimmer dot com. That's go zimmer dot com. You
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hand corner. To schedule appointment, either during business hours or
after tell them. Brian Thomas said, Hi, when you call them.
If you want to schedule appointment by phone, it's five
one three five two one ninety eight ninety three. That's
five one three five two one ninety eight ninety three

(51:36):
fifty five KRC all is spout Chenna nine first one
on one. The forecasts. We have a mostly sunny day
to day. Possible pop up showers, but pretty unlikely, it seems.
Eighty two are high today, down to sixty overnight with
just a few clowns. Mostly sunny day tomorrow with isolated
showers a possibility eighty for the high overnight. More likely

(51:57):
we're going to get rain overnight, they say, storms or
even class because the cold front's coming in. Fifty nine
for the overnight low, leaving us a high of just
sixty nine on Thursday.

Speaker 1 (52:06):
They sandy showers remaining shit end.

Speaker 5 (52:07):
Around noontime fifty eight degrees now it's going to TRAVELIC update.

Speaker 1 (52:11):
Chuck from the uc UP Triumphant Center. You see Health.

Speaker 13 (52:14):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal, would make your
best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care from better outcomes. Expect
more at you see health dot Com. Highways not bad
at all to deal with early on this Tuesday morning,
northbound seventy five and northbound fourth seventy one. I'm seeing
no delays on the bridges as of yet, just beginning
to fill in southbound two seventy five. Pass the construction

(52:37):
on the Carrol Cropper check King bram on fifty five KR.

Speaker 1 (52:40):
See the talk station.

Speaker 5 (52:44):
Six up at six twenty one to fifty five KERR.
See talk station phone over here. It's going to go
to the Phones's got a couple of callers online five one, three, seven,
four nine, fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three talk order on which they receive, which means Patrick,
you're first. Thanks for calling this morning, Patrick.

Speaker 7 (53:00):
Good morning, Brian, Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (53:01):
Right.

Speaker 2 (53:03):
The two comments that I had one is all these
people that are out here talking about fighting Donald Trump
and fighting fascism. You know, I did a little research
and I couldn't find any of those same people out
in the streets when the government wanted to lock everything
down during COVID. Couldn't go to church, couldn't go to school.
Didn't see a hide or hair of him. Yeah, and

(53:24):
the second comment I had is a piggybacking on your
stack of stupid. Hey, California man was arrested after trying
to rob a bank, claiming he paid five hundred dollars
to a wizard to make him invisible. Obviously there were
no refunds.

Speaker 5 (53:40):
Have a good day, Brian, I appreciate that. Probably a
fan of the Overnight show. Here if if you have
Caro see the talk stations. So Bobby's got this morning, Bobby,
Happy Tuesday, Happy.

Speaker 15 (53:53):
Tuesday, my brother, Glad you're back. And I tell you what,
it was a wonderful weekend.

Speaker 1 (53:58):
It was an outstanding weekend. I tell you what.

Speaker 15 (54:01):
All these city officials, I think they got all their
email and their texts all deleted over the weekend. Since
the officials are in which is really great for them.
You know, just ask why the violence in Porkopolis. We
handicapped it within a half a point, so that worked
out real good. But the main thing is the Democratic

(54:21):
Party got their rating yesterud they approve of rating at
nineteen percent. It's the lowest in modern history.

Speaker 1 (54:27):
Yep, yahhoo.

Speaker 5 (54:30):
Right, and what do they have left? I mean, if
their policies aren't winning, if they don't have ideas, and
as indicated before, they don't seem to at least ideas
that you and I agree with me, you know, like
the immigration were of those eighty twenty issues, criminal illegal
immigrants in our country out say the vast majority of people,
and they're running around protecting me in every turn. Look
at Chicago, I mean, the mayor of Chicago just issued

(54:52):
an edict saying that our police will not, in any way,
shape or form, lift a finger to help federal law
enforcement in force federal.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
Law, which they have every right to do.

Speaker 5 (55:02):
So that's not a winning side of the equation to
be on, especially in a city that just over the
weekend fifty four people shot and seven people killed one weekend.

Speaker 15 (55:14):
Their political future is in a free fall, and it's
they're done like a pan of fried chicken.

Speaker 7 (55:20):
They're over.

Speaker 15 (55:21):
So anybody wants to help them, you know, go right
ahead and pull right in line. But I'm going to
tell you something that one thing we need to remember
after Labor Day. The main thing is this, just don't
vote Democrats period.

Speaker 5 (55:38):
Tom is out there somewhere smiling right now. Bobby appreciate it.
So you heard the obituary for the Democrats here on
the fifty five KR say morning show. Bobby just provided
it for you, Is he right? I mean, I've seen
a lot of op ed pieces, and you know, people
suggesting just keep talking, Democrats, just keep talking. Then you

(55:59):
people have people like Derek Hunter, who's op ed I
paraphrase a little bit, you know, observing that this is
all it appears that they have. It's basically like rage
against the machine. Rage for the sake of rage. The
machine that Donald Trump is running right now is apparently
what we all voted for. It's what got him elected.

(56:20):
So they can be angry about it. But remember if
you just sort of look at you know, connect the
dots one fair wage, stop the oligarch, stop this fascism,
we're under attack, billionaire takeover. You connect the dots on
all this. I mean, these are just flaming Marxists. And

(56:41):
as I watched the movie the other day, it was
kind of interesting. Head of the Teamsters Union. Jimmy HOFFA,
I think it was the Irishman. I didn't like the movie.
That was pretty stupid, but even I suffered through three
hours of it. But the screams and yells from the
union organized sounds exactly like what they are screaming about.

(57:06):
Evil billionaires, evil with more millionaires back then, evil millionaires
oppressing the workers. It was a theme that might have
resonated back in the nineteen thirties before we had you know,
maybe an OSHA or laws regarding labor and minimum wage
requirements and on all the things that unions fought for,
and they had a pretty damn good reason to fight
for it back when the well, the workers were really

(57:27):
truly mistreated, kind of like the Gilded era thing, which
is where all this came from. They've secured major victories
over the years. It is a much safer work environment
for every laborer in the United States of America. Of course,
the cost of business has gone up a lot as consequence.
But you know, but these are just the same themes

(57:49):
and same cries and chants have now been uttered for
more than one hundred years by Left as Hell, going
back to car marks and sitting around in a beer hall,
contemplating his navel and talking philosophy and ultimately ruining the world.
Six twenty six right now if you five KCD talk
station local stories coming up. High Park looks like it's
got to get a victory for Hyde Park and the

(58:09):
zoning thing. They're gonna be voting on that sin Sain
City Council a motion to repeal the Hide Park zoning
Ordnance since it is going to be on the ballot.
It's six twenty six and a fine word or two
for Pressed Desion here Interiors, because John Ryan's going to
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(58:51):
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Speaker 1 (59:09):
Two two nine fifty five KRC.

Speaker 5 (59:13):
That truth Channel nine first one to weather forecast. Today's
mostly sunny skies. How the possible pop up shower here
and there. Eighty two for the high over nine, few
clouds and a drop is sixty Sunday for the most part,
Isolated showers are a possibility Tomorrow with an eighty degree
high overnight low of fifty nine, Rain is likely. Storms
are possible, and those showers continue into Thursday, but they

(59:35):
say they'll end around noontime. We'll have a highest sixty
nine on Thursday. Right now, it's fifty eight degree and
it is time for a traffic update. Chuck Ingram from
the UCUP Tramphic Center. Right you see health guilt.

Speaker 13 (59:46):
Find comprehensive care that's so Personal'll make sure best tomorrow possible.
That's boundless care from better outcomes. Expect more and you
seehealth dot com. Highway tramping continues to look good for
your Tuesday morning. No rex to deal with and right
now northbound fourth seventy one wide open past Grand So
is inbound seventy four at Montana chuck ingramont five krs.

Speaker 1 (01:00:10):
The talk station.

Speaker 5 (01:00:14):
Hey six thirty coming up with six thirty one to
fifty five kr. See the talk station number fifty five
kr Sea dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
Get Tryheart media app.

Speaker 5 (01:00:22):
We've got tons of content, all the iHeart content available
right there at your fingertips anytime you wont including the
podcast on my blog page fifty five car.

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
Sea dot com and the podcast page anyway. Local Stories.

Speaker 5 (01:00:34):
Republican Party here in Hamilan County endorse three Sincee City
Council candidates Gary Favors of Avendale, Liz Keating of High Park,
and Lynda Matthews from North Abondale. So saying each candidate
brings a unique experience division for strengthening our communities and
restoring leadership at every every level of local government. So
of course we've got other great candidates. I would like

(01:00:55):
to always point out Steve Gooden and coming up at
seven to twenty here this morning, Christopher Smithman. Steve Running
is a Charter I, but that does not render him
out of the mix. Great man and great ideas. Christopher
smith Running is an independent, wasn't looking necessarily for Republican
Party endorsement, although I think they missed an opportunity in
backing independent Christopher Smithman, given his vision for the city

(01:01:19):
and his demonstrable competence as both the councilmen and Vice mayor.
Christopher coming up again at seven twenty Hyde Park looks
like there's light at the end of the tunnel. Forty
the zoning proved for the controversial Hyde Park Square, maybe
he walked back. Legislation introduced by CINCINNTI Council this past
Friday seeks to repeal the zoning ordnaments that passed in

(01:01:40):
April that project with the boutique hotel, apartments and underground parking,
which critics well say it's too large and that the building. Notably,
the housing issue would not be helped because it doesn't
solve any housing issues that might exist. Compromise from the
developer maybe in the works, but if they scrap the

(01:02:02):
waiver then this is no longer an issue. So we're
going to find out whether it'll still be on the
ballot or not, because if it's not on the ballot,
then I think this, in spite of how unlikely it
might be, gives the council an opportunity to just go
ahead and well issue a waiver down the road sometime.

(01:02:23):
So if they repeal the waiver, maybe pending negotiations between
the city and the well connected developer, maybe negotiating something
that the folks in Hyde Park find palatable, that'd be
one thing. But if those negotiations don't go anywhere and
there's going to be no development at all, I think
Hyde Park wants some development, they just want it within

(01:02:45):
some reasonable parameters. Whether or not that works for the
well healed or well connected developer remains to be seen.

Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
So state of flux.

Speaker 5 (01:02:53):
I suppose woman dad after a driver's strucker where the
car happens Saturday, then that person crashed in to the
front of a local business.

Speaker 1 (01:03:01):
All in Florence, Kentucky. Florence.

Speaker 5 (01:03:04):
The Police Department press release that officers showed up at
a report of a crass seven thousand block a t
Turfway Road five o'clock in the evening. Chrus got there
found a Toyota camry lodged inside the Yasmin Halal Market.
Someone driving the camera accelerated forward, hitting a sixty three
year old Fatima Ali before coming to a stop inside

(01:03:28):
the business. Ems showed up on the scene pronounced Ali
dead from her injuries. Driver the Toyota to remain on
the scene cooperating was cooperating anyway. During the investigations. Dozens
of people well watched the scene solid unfold. Local witnesses
believe what happened with some sort of accident. In Florence

(01:03:48):
Police Accident Reconstruction Team and the Florence Police Criminal Investigation
Units are investigating the crash.

Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
That's terrible. Oh we'll go to bell Wu, Kentucky.

Speaker 5 (01:03:58):
Three Northern Kentucky juveniles now facing an attempted robbery charge
involving a knife. Two Hunter block of Fairfield Avenue in Bellevue,
eleven fifteen pm Sunday, Officers responded to report of a
mail with a knife, made contact with three people who
then ran off. It can reported the man pulled a
knife on him, tried to steal his phone and chain

(01:04:20):
around his neck. All three mails found on Eden Avenue
and apprehended. Officers discovered they were all juveniles from Kenton,
Kenton County, one charge with robbery, fleeing and burglary being
held in the juvenile detention facility. The other two charges
with fleeing and were released to their parents. No word

(01:04:40):
on the parents reaction. Six point thirty five five KRC.
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Speaker 8 (01:05:50):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio Station our iHeartRadio
Music Festival.

Speaker 5 (01:06:00):
Ah Chenn nine first one to one of four k
asking of mostly sunny day to day and maybe a
pop will pop up, shower two showing up.

Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
And more likely just get mostly sunny skies.

Speaker 5 (01:06:08):
High of eighty two, few clouds over night, sixty the
overnight low eighty the high tomorrow isolated showers a possible
usually are probably going to be bow mostly sunny.

Speaker 1 (01:06:17):
Cold front coming in overnight green as likely.

Speaker 5 (01:06:19):
Storms are possible dropping to fifty nine in a high
of just sixty nine on Thursday, with showers if they're
still around, they said, will end to buy around noontime
fifty eight degrees. Now, let's get a traffic update.

Speaker 1 (01:06:32):
From the uc UP Traffic Center.

Speaker 13 (01:06:34):
Right you see health you'll find comprehensive care that's so
personal it makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care
for better outcomes. Expect more. You see health dot com.
Highway traffic building just to bitt In spots, but new
major time delays India with ansm yet southbound seventy five
good pants the Ring and Highway west End two seventy
five wide open up Loveland so is eastbound at Hamilton

(01:06:56):
and Winton. Chuck Ingram Month fifty five KR see talk station.

Speaker 5 (01:07:02):
Six forty fifty five KR CV talkstation Happy Tuesday tomorrow
normal listener lunchdays tomorrow, but we're kicking it because of
the Monday holiday. So next Wednesday we're going to be
at Anderson Pub and Grill. And you heard from Mississippi
James earlier. He's going to try to make it. Looking
forward to seeing you, James if you can. And sad
to learn from my friend Cribbage Mike, my submarine friend.

(01:07:22):
He's not going to be at listener to lunch next week,
kicking the game off for a month. Welcome back, Cribbage Mike.
Always a pleasure hearing from you on the fifty five
KRC Morning Show.

Speaker 1 (01:07:30):
My friend.

Speaker 3 (01:07:32):
And yes if it was tomorrow I could make it,
but as I mentioned earlier, I'll be gladly along with
eighty eight veterans. September tenth is our first of the
fall Honor flights. Yes, so I'll be calling in to
remind everybody that they can get over there for our
welcome home.

Speaker 5 (01:07:50):
But put it on your calendar next Wednesday. Be at
CVG about nine pm for all the festivities. It's an amazing,
amazing thing. Yes, sir, thanks, thank you, and thank you
for being such a huge supporter of Honor Flight. My friend,
I really appreciate the work that you do.

Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
We were all together this past weekend, and I want
to thank everybody in the Greater Cincinnati area for showing
up for the lunk and air show days. In all
the years I've been doing it with Honor Flight down there,
I have never seen crowds like.

Speaker 7 (01:08:18):
That on Saturday and Sunday.

Speaker 3 (01:08:21):
I mean, thanks to mother Nature, but once again, just
all the veteran boosts that are there. In fact, the
Air Force and Army recruiters right next to us, and
they had a steady stream, so that's always good to see.
But the demand was so high. The B twenty five
and B twenty nine, who which I'm sure probably buzzed
your house once or twice ye weekend. They actually stayed

(01:08:42):
over an additional day to support the demand, and they
were actually flying yesterday as well. All that had going
on to their next destination.

Speaker 5 (01:08:49):
That is so great because every one of those is
a paid flight and all that money goes to support
the since any war birds and the restoration preservation restoration.
There's amazing aircraft. That's a great thing.

Speaker 3 (01:09:01):
And in case anybody was wondering, normally we end the
show on Sunday by they do a formation fly down
to all the folks down at Riverfest, but with the
vice president of the town, that airspace was shut down,
So if anybody was looking forward to that down at Riverfest,
that's why the B twenty five, B twenty nine and
the P fifty one s didn't make it down that way.

Speaker 1 (01:09:21):
Oh okay, well.

Speaker 3 (01:09:24):
But my main reason to call in and I encourage
anybody that has any obviously I live out in Claremont
County camp vote in the city election, but with you
having Corey Bowman in there on Friday, I encourage everyone.
If you didn't hear pull up the podcast because that
was that was our of appointment radio, and he could
probably take any portion of that and make some great

(01:09:44):
thirty second sound bite commercials. I mean, just a vision
for the city, good comments and solutions, and also with
Christopher smithermy coming up Steve Gooden, whom you already mentioned.
You know, that's what's needed, and unfortunately they have that
uphill battle of fighting the other side of nothing but
identity politics. You know, I think it's great. What's going
to happen to Hyde Park more than likely, but once

(01:10:06):
again that's just reactionary. They knew what was coming and
they could see that trying to pop maybe win back
some boats in November. Yeah, but once again, if you
didn't hear Corey on Friday, pull up the podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Well thanks. I appreciate that.

Speaker 5 (01:10:17):
It's always a pleasure talking with him, and.

Speaker 1 (01:10:20):
He's getting far more polished.

Speaker 5 (01:10:21):
He started out, you know, a green candidate, and the
more he's out there in the world, the more he
meets people, the more he shakes hands, the more he
talks about, you know, policies for the city, the better
he sounds. And of course you are absolutely right. The
current administration is reactionary. They don't get ahead of problems
they get in. They'd have to even deal with band

(01:10:42):
aid solutions after they've dug themselves in a hole four
hundred million dollars in the hole in terms of street repair,
and they're out there asking for entrepreneurs to come up
with a better way to fix potholes. How do we
get that far in the hole year after year after
year after year after year, not keeping up with the
number of lane miles that they're obligated to keep up
with in terms of road repair. That's just one illustration

(01:11:03):
of a continued, ongoing fair democratic failure after Democrat after
Democrat administration in the city. Try something different, folks, may
do you some good, Mike, God bless you, sir or
MISSISGANI next onesday, look forward to October. We're going to
be at Jim and Jackson the River, last one before
the election. New Hampshire, Gary, Welcome back, man. We heard
Mississippi James this morning. We've gone to New Hampshire. Good

(01:11:26):
to hear from you.

Speaker 12 (01:11:29):
Oh.

Speaker 6 (01:11:29):
In that case, I come in peace and I love everybody.
There's nothing you can do about it.

Speaker 1 (01:11:35):
There you go. You got throwing a don't vote Democrat too.

Speaker 11 (01:11:38):
Man, There you go.

Speaker 12 (01:11:41):
Hey, I was thinking, you know, that.

Speaker 6 (01:11:43):
Was a very interesting stat twenty thousand less arrest. I
was thinking. I was talking to Joe. I was like,
why don't you have the police chief and explain it.
If they're not cooking the books should have an explanation,
wouldn't she I would see, I'm thinking, you would think,
but she had never come on. You know, between what's

(01:12:04):
going on in downtown. I'm a military guy, and it's
obvious what they have created are a army of useful
idiots to do their bidding and keep people in fear,
keep them in line, and they pretty much give them
the run of the town. You know, you could tell

(01:12:28):
that they were all in line. Their army was online
because of the lack of violence on the labor day.

Speaker 7 (01:12:37):
Read what do you call it down there?

Speaker 6 (01:12:39):
Evian? Right when I was younger, I went I lived
both in Cincinnati and for a while lived up in Columbus.
They have something called Red White and Boom. And I
was young, and I was like thirty two, and they
had a bunch of young thugs going around shooting people
or robbing them and shooting them for Red White and Boom.

(01:13:02):
And they were like, oh, it's a small problem. It
was a big problem. People started not showing up. And
I told my dad, I said, I got my pistol
permit and I was going to take my girls down there.
And I talked to my dad. He said, why would
you risk your family to see fireworks down there? And
I really thought about that, And that's a sense of maturity,

(01:13:26):
you know. I could do other things with them, take
them fishing, to do anything, but I'm not going to
put their lives in jeopardy for the city council to
take advantage of this of me. And I think of
that poor woman who tried to open a gym up
there and they're diving on the ground. I would have

(01:13:48):
been I would have been gone. I would have been saying,
that's it, I'm out, you know, you know, And I'm like,
I've been in. It's not fun, you.

Speaker 5 (01:13:59):
Know, right, I'm with you. I mean, trying to reconcile you.
You say, they're they're trying to keep us in fear.
And yet what we have here is the perception that
they're cooking the books to make it sound like it's
a lot safer. In other words, they're trying to negate
the perception that you shouldn't put your children in jeopardy
by showing up with the fireworks, So you got you know,
obviously that's.

Speaker 6 (01:14:18):
Cooking the books politics. They're cooking the books for politics.
So they all it's the less. But everybody knows what's
going on. That's a fearful thing, you know, I know
what's going on. You show up after hours, you're you
might be in trouble, a lot of trouble, especially on
the wrong spot, you know, And that's exactly what they want.

Speaker 7 (01:14:41):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:14:42):
Well, I guess then why do they keep telling us
that the crime is down?

Speaker 11 (01:14:48):
What they want?

Speaker 6 (01:14:51):
Well, I think what they want is they want the
perception as far as the mass media. But oh, there's
nothing to see here, right, if you live down there, you're.

Speaker 5 (01:15:01):
In fear, right, But that's the politicians are trying to
negate the fear. I mean, I'm just trying to address
the statement that you said they want us to be fearful. No,
I think the reality is the reality causes us to
be fearful because we are under the perception, because of
our own eyes and ears, that there's a lot of
crime down there. Our elected officials are trying to negate that. No,

(01:15:22):
O there isn't no o. There isn't shootings down, crimes down,
crimes down. They want to keep make people think that
it's a more inviting environment to well prop their city up.
They want people to live there, they want people to
move there, they want people who pay taxes to show
up and settle there. And you have a violent perception
that's not going to happen, regardless of how many times
they scream at you that everything's a okay, Gary, appreciate it. Man,

(01:15:45):
always the pleasure to hear from you. Six forty nine
fifty five kr CD talk station Gate of Heaven Cemetery.
What an appropriately time spot because might want to pause
and reflect on the beauty of life, the sacredness of life.
Mission Gate of Heaven Cemetery honoring life on sacred ground,
which they've been doing for about seventy seven years serving

(01:16:05):
the Christian community, providing a welcome opportunity for you to
pray and reflect on that sacredness of every phase of
the human journey from birth all the way through final resting.
It's a peaceful, beautiful, gorgeous, tranquil, very beautifully landscaped environment
to do that prayer, reflection, remembrance, maybe meditation. So enjoy

(01:16:28):
the beauty of God's creation. Consider stopping by Gate of
Heaven Cemetery right there on Montgomery Road, Real close to
Montgomery two seventy five exit. Learn on more online. Go
to gateof Heaven dot org. That's Gate of Heaven dot org.

Speaker 8 (01:16:41):
Fifty five KRC all Jenni in first morning weather forecasts
mostly sunny skies to day.

Speaker 5 (01:16:49):
Possible pop up showers tonight, just a few clouds and
a dropped to sixty eighty to high tomorrow with isolated
showers possible. Otherwise mostly sunny. Brain shows up over Wednesday
night with low of fifty nine, maybe even some storms
in that rain might last. If it does, it's going
to carry over until around noon on Thursday. Thursday's going
to see a high have just sixty nine degrees. It's

(01:17:09):
fifty eight degrees right now. It's get a traffic update
from the UCUP Tramphic center.

Speaker 13 (01:17:14):
You see health, You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal
it makes your best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for
better outcomes. Expect more at you see health dot com.
Problems North Bend two seventy five, coming out of East
Gate there's an anxidy just after you get pass thirty
two right lanes block traffic starting to back up a
bit elsewhere northbound seventy five slows through the cut. Chuck

(01:17:37):
ingram on fifty five krs. The talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:17:42):
Six fifty three is if you have KRCD talk station.

Speaker 5 (01:17:45):
Yeah, last call, I was talking about that twenty thousand
fewer crime figure that was reported by Todd z ins Or.
Apparently the City of Cincinnat's required a complete an Annual
Comprehensive Financial Report ACFR lag time because they have to
do this every year, but it has to be certified
by the state auditor. So the most recent one is
from June of last year. Todd says, you know the

(01:18:05):
AFCR section two got my attention, or ACFR, he said,
for the for the police, there's a schedule attached to
it provides data for the past ten years about the
number of service calls, arrests, and reports that were filed.
Steep reduction number arrest in twenty twenty one thirty nine
percent down twenty twenty two thirty eight percent reduction in

(01:18:30):
arrest twenty twenty three and twenty four number of arrest
remained below nine thousand. Now, as he writes accorded Schedule two,
the yearly total of arrest in twenty twenty four was
twenty thousand, one hundred and thirty fewer than the prior

(01:18:51):
decade arrest in twenty fifteen. Said number of factors. It
must be examined to explain these reductions over the past
several years. But perhaps the reason since sinnety's crime problem
is simply because CPD is not making as many arrests
every year as it used to. And that's a logical
reasonable conclusion based on everything we've heard about this. Why
would police not arrest as many Well, that's interaction between

(01:19:12):
the police and the community members. Community members interacting with
the police always ends up in a bad thing, right
every single time we'd end up with the George Floyd incident. Well,
let's not interact. Curfew of course wasn't being in force,
so there was no interaction between police and the juveniles
release in so far as citations being issued, which would
be reflected in these crime stats. But I suppose, and

(01:19:35):
again going back to New Hampshire, Gary's observations that people
think and see and hear crime. They know it's there
and the city officials are dismissing it or denying it.
Do you really believe that compared to twenty fifteen there
were that much less crime in other words, or police
were engaged in law enforcement on the same level in

(01:19:59):
twenty fifteen they are in last calendar year. In other words,
everything is equal, And with twenty one hundred and thirty
fewer arrests in twenty fifteen, then obviously crime has gone down.
At least that's what is suggested here. I think Todd
Zenzer made onto something. I don't personally believe the police

(01:20:20):
are engaged as actively in law enforcement now as they
were a decade ago. You decide, feel free to chime
in five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three talk pound five
fifty on AT and T phones. Christopher Smithmen coming up
at seven twenty. Got a little time between now and then.
I hope you can stick.

Speaker 1 (01:20:38):
Around today's top stories at the top of the hour.
It's information that matters to me. Fifty five krs the
talk station.

Speaker 5 (01:21:03):
Seven six seer fifty five d r CD talk station,
Happy Tuesday. Hope you had a wonderful three day weekend,
Assuming you got one, and boy, that weather was just fantastic.
As I sit here, I just realized, looking it's September second,
already stayed in the obvious, I only have three more
weeks in my fifties. I'm trying to figure out whether

(01:21:24):
I should be depressed and sad about turning sixty on
the twenty first, or just ignore it. It's just another day.
I was talking with my wife about that. I think
she said when she turned fifty she had that sad, depressing,
reflective kind of time. I don't recall that myself when
I turned fifty. I'm just kind of sensing I might
feel that way coming up here soon. Anyway, whatever I suppose,

(01:21:45):
it beats the alternative. UH five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two three talk
coming up seven twenty the next segment, Christopher Smith Hamen
and former Vice Mayor of the City of Cincinnati, of
course run for Cincinni City Council. Wish them all the
best in the world. Not sure what Christoph want. Let's
talk about. Probably will evolve crime. Maybe Inside Scoop with
Bright Barton News Fast Forward one hour. Colin Maydeye, the

(01:22:07):
Tech editor, are going to be talking about how artificial
intelligence is now handling nine to one one calls and
a couple of depressing realities about AI. We got Meta's
AI chatbot creating a problem for youth, and then more fundamentally,
chat GPT led to a teen's suicide, one of a
growing number of problems identified about children interacting with social media.

(01:22:28):
Brand new theory of tort liability. If someone can get
convicted of egging you on to commit suicide, and there
was a case involving that not that far or that
not that long ago, a woman convicted or a girl
convicted of egging on a friend of hers to commit suicide, basically,
go ahead and do it, Go ahead and do it.
You be doing a world a favor. You're doing yourself

(01:22:48):
a favor. That kind of thing. Well, there you go.
You've got a person who should know better than that.
That is, it's a crime. Can chat GPT be held
liable for doing the exact same thing? I mean, from
my perspective, you think that just the concept of knowing
you're talking with a computer and not a real person

(01:23:12):
would hopefully give you pause about whatever you're hearing from
this computerized version of the exchange. Apparently not though, so
we'll get that coming up in an hour if all away.
The Daniel Davis Deep Dive retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis
every Tuesday at eight thirty, and we're gonna hear about
coler rectal cancer in younger patient. Apparently it's on the rise.

(01:23:34):
In question, Mark, what's causing that. One of our great
OHC doctor is going to show up at the end
of the eight o'clock hour, be doctor Mark Johns, who's
a specialist in this area, talking about the alarming rise
of cola rectal cancer in younger adults. So, anyhow, back
over to Chicago. I anticipate Chris, I'm going to say

(01:23:54):
something about the ongoing discussion about violence. I don't know,
but there's obviously a problem in Chicago. You heard the
of the our news. Donald Trump planning on sending in
the troops into Chicago. I don't know why. I think
he's making a great political point by offering them, but
it then it becomes a question of what they're planning
on going and doing there. Now, this is federal law.

(01:24:19):
Somebody's got to enforce federal law, most notably if local
law enforcement, who quite often will assist and also arrests
for violations of federal law. Then you turn it over
to the local US district attorney, who prosecutes federal crimes.
Quite often there are state crimes that mirror federal crimes,
and quite often some of those federal crimes can be
be prosecuted in state court. But the federal crime and

(01:24:45):
issue here is a violation of immigration laws. Also in
many cases, at least the current focus of the Trump
administration arounding these folks up is because many of those
with the quote unquote illegal immigrant status also have committed
crimes themselves, so a little bit of an overlap there.
And you might say, well, local law enforcement should be involved.

(01:25:07):
If someone actually committed a crime that qualifies as a
state crime, a violent crime, for example, then shouldn't local
law enforcement pick them up and see that they're prosecutabile.
Of course, the answer to that would be yes. But
what if local law enforcement isn't doing anything because their
illegal status. We're washing our hands of the whole thing.
We're going to follow Mayor Johnson's executive order and not
lift a finger to help federal law enforcement or federal agents.

(01:25:29):
In this particular case, National Guard go about and do
their job, which is enforcing federal law. How else would
federal law be enforced if Trump doesn't send the guard
in FBI agents. Maybe there's got to be some law
enforcement wing of the federal government to do that job

(01:25:51):
if local law enforcement refuses to do that job. So
it's one interesting exchange on this topic with Chicago Alderman
Byron Chicigo sig Cho Sigo Byron Sigcho Lopez talk about
responding to the shootings in the city. The host of
these out front CNN broadcast guy named Boris Sanchez, asked

(01:26:16):
the following, and how do you respond, Alderman, I heard
you sort of allude to it that there's more work
to be done. How do you respond to the argument
that there was something like fifty plus shootings fifty three
people fifty two people, I should say, were shot in Chicago,
thirty different shootings over the holiday weekend, seven people killed.

(01:26:37):
Aren't numbers like that still a problem in your city
that your city needs to address and what more can
be done to address that? Now, notice the focus of
the question. It's not an immigration related question. It's a
gunfire question. It's a question related to the amount of
crime that's going on. One weekend, fifty two people shot dead.

(01:27:02):
Aldaman Lopez. Well, I think that what we need to
do is that we also had a mass shooting in
a Catholic school. Well, there's a diversion, isn't it. Now
we're talking about the city of Chicago. Uh Alderman, he pivoted.
We also have had many, many instances where the administration,

(01:27:22):
obviously refer to the Trump administration, the administration has really escalated,
exacerbated the violence in our country and in our inner cities.

Speaker 1 (01:27:32):
Hold the phone.

Speaker 5 (01:27:35):
The Trump administration has caused violence in the country and
inner cities. Really, you think Trump had something to do
with the ongoing violence in Chicago. Look at La Look
at San Francisco, look at Portland. When did the crime
start going up? Right when they stopped in forcing the law?
I wasn't because Trump showed up. Hell that the problems

(01:27:55):
were spiraling out of control during the Biden administration. Homeless
cams crop up, drug use in the street, people dropping
dead left and right, and the violent crime and a
lot of property crime too. Notice all the businesses that
got shut down during the Biden administration, Why, well, because
they decriminalized violence. Basically they rethought law enforcement. This has
something to do with the administration, the Trump administration. He

(01:28:18):
went on, of course you have to foot this put
this in. Trump is a dictator. I think we've got
to be very clear he Donald Trump is trying to
normalize violence. Does words actually came out of his mouth

(01:28:39):
normalize violence?

Speaker 14 (01:28:42):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
I think what Trump is trying to do is get
a hand on violence. Why do you go to d C.

Speaker 5 (01:28:46):
Well, he has the legal authority to do it there,
and he can also help local DC law enforcement enforce. Yeah,
DC law. The mayor DC's pretty damn happy about it.

Speaker 1 (01:28:59):
She's talking.

Speaker 5 (01:29:00):
But the wonderful partnership they have crimes down. Look, you
can it's safe to go out in the street to DC. Amazing.
Now is that a guy A kind of guy that
sounds like he's trying to normalize violence.

Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
Now he's trying to stop it. These people are unhinged.

Speaker 5 (01:29:17):
And then going back to whether or not Donald Trump
should be able to send in the National Guard into Washington,
into into into Chicago as opposed to the different legal
standing Washington d C. First off, one, if you stay
away from the concept of enforcing federal law, why would
Donald Trump want to help the City of Chicago save
it from itself. Talk to Brandon Johnson about that. But

(01:29:42):
if federal law needs to be enforced, then can't you
make a good argument that, well, if the City of
Chicago and local law enforcement is not enforcing the federal
laws that are on the books, I have every right
to enforce federal law through any mechanism I choose them.
This particular case, somebody from law enforcement's got to go
in and do the job. I'm sending the National Guard in.

(01:30:04):
They're going to be there to protect federal property. They're
going to be there to enforce federal law, notably immigration law.
And you folks on the the Chicago Police Department, you
can go ahead and enforce state law. We're not going
to get in your way. Seven fifteen fifty five care

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going to hear from the former Vice Mayor of the
City Cincinnati, Christopher Smith. Aman take advantage of the special
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Speaker 8 (01:31:44):
This is fifty five krc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 5 (01:31:49):
V channel nine first one to weather forecasts. Mostly sunny
day to day. Maybe a pop up shower showing up
eighty two for the high, a few clouds over night
six for the low eighty to high Tomorrow, isolated showers
are possible. Otherwise, mostly sunny rain over night rains likely,
some storms are possible. Fifty nine. The overnight low showers

(01:32:10):
will end around noon, to the extent they carry over
into Thursday, high sixty nine. Right now, it's fifty seven.
In time for traffic.

Speaker 1 (01:32:18):
From the u See Health Traffic Center.

Speaker 13 (01:32:20):
You see healthy, You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal
and make sure best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for
better outcomes. Expect more at ucehealth dot com. The cruise
were working with an accident northbound two seventy five, and
it's after you come pay US thirty two in Eastgate
in bound seventy four now slows from Montana northbound seventy

(01:32:42):
five break linse Buttermilk into Town and southbound seventy five
slow in and out of Lockland. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five KR see the talk station seven twenty one on
a Tuesday, Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (01:32:56):
I wasn't here yesterday. Joe S.

Speaker 5 (01:32:57):
Drekker put together a best of show and we didn't
have Christie Smiling on, So why not kick it one day.
It's better late than never, and it's always great heaving
Christopher Smithling on the program. Welcome back, my friend. It's
always a pleasure hearing from you.

Speaker 12 (01:33:09):
Oh, thank you so much. Brian. My theme this morning
is kicked in the face, and you know, I'm just
tired of getting kicked in the face, you know. And
what I mean by that is going back and doing
the same thing politically, you know, time after time after time.
And so you know, you saw all the shootings, you know,

(01:33:30):
when you were on your holiday or you're reading about them,
the brawl of thirty people, you know on Short Vine,
and so whether it's Mount Washington, whether it's Clifton, whether
it's downtown, whether it's Roselawn, Bond Hill, Price Hill, what
you're seeing here is a council and a mayor that

(01:33:53):
have just taken their eye off the ball and that
is not an exaggeration. And so they have these marketing
strategies where they're saying, it's your perception, and I understand
it's your perception about crime, but it's really not reality.
Crime is actually dropping, and the public is saying that's
not actually what is happening, Like we are seeing the shootings,

(01:34:15):
the jumping, the car jackings or the car breaking ins.
We clearly are seeing crime out of control in Cincinnati
and it's going to be the number one issue on
the ballot. I understand the High Park Development Team, High
Bark Community and the High Park Development team doing the
high rise in the Square that they've come to some

(01:34:36):
agreement maybe, but at the end of the day, this
election is really just about crime. And because we have
a body of people that are for defund the police
or reimagining the police. Right now, there's a difference we're saying.
There's a difference in saying training, training, training, which we
have a great closed training team. As you know, your

(01:34:58):
sister is a retired We have the best training in
the country here. So this is this is not about training.
This is about getting our police activated. So they can
do proactive policing. And so we go in this election
and do the exact same thing that we did two
years ago or four years ago, we're going to get

(01:35:19):
kicked in the face again. And so that's why I'm
out here, you know, urging people to vote for Corey Bowman.

Speaker 1 (01:35:25):
You know.

Speaker 12 (01:35:26):
And this notion Brian Thomas, that this campaign that this
city has saying this is the vice president's brother almost
like therefore, it's like, why do you keep saying that
in every article, in every news because you're actually trying
to undermine his campaign. The reality of it is, the
reality of this is and I want everybody to hear this,

(01:35:46):
no matter where you live in the city, in these
fifty two neighborhoods, give the guy a chance. It can't
be any worse than what we're dealing with right now.
Do we really have a mayor? I haven't see him.
I haven't seen him where he needs to be, So
he's on some picket line somewhere when he actually needs

(01:36:07):
to be in the ot R dealing with the crime
that our city is experiencing. Always in the wrong place
at the wrong time.

Speaker 5 (01:36:17):
Bryan tournament Strugger to send me a picture of aste
on the picket line with the UAW picket Line's like, okay, right, I'm.

Speaker 12 (01:36:27):
Just saying to you, he's interviewing for a job that's
hiring his mind than the mayor. This guy really just
doesn't want to be the mayor. And that's why I
keep appealing to whether you live in the North Side
or pleasant Ridge or Price Hill, Mount Lookout, Hyde Park,
you name it, right Westwood, what we have to do
is elect somebody that wants to be the mayor and

(01:36:48):
it's interested in solving real problems. And so Cory Bowman,
Keating Gooding, you know, Lisa Matthews. They're good people out
there that are running. Even a blue dog Democrat Don
Dreehouse is out here running. I mean, there are some
people here that if you're faultful about voting for council,

(01:37:09):
we can change the makeup of council and we can
also change the mayor's office at the same time. But
I just don't want to get kicked in the face anymore.
I'm tired of waking up and seeing the mayor like
on this picket line right doing this are saying he's
at a mayor's conference in Cleveland, or he's on vacation
with his son while Cincinnati. You know in political terms

(01:37:34):
that we're on fire, meaning our crime is not under control,
Brian Thomas, and it takes leadership to get it back
in control. I'm happy that the FOP endorse me. It's
a good endorsement. I'm hoping that Local forty eight, which
is our fire department, I'm hoping they will also endorse
my campaign. These are coveted kinds of endorsements, police and fire.

(01:37:56):
By the way, they set no confidence in this mayor.
Why are they saying no confidence in the mayor because
he's not providing leadership. Neither are the members of council
providing leadership. And that is why we cannot get our
arms around this crime. If we don't feel safe, we
cannot do development. People aren't making money, restaurants aren't making money.

(01:38:17):
It is the absolute fundamental, basic thing that you have
to do as a member of council, and that is
deal with crime.

Speaker 7 (01:38:24):
Period.

Speaker 5 (01:38:25):
Well, they're not anticipating dealing with crime given the numbers
that the budget allocated for police officers. I'll throw that
one at you when we get back. Todd Zenzer did
a little review of the biennial budget for twenty six
twenty seven, and in spite of the fact that they
have said they're looking to hire a whole lot more officers,
it does not appear to be that way in terms
of the allocation of financial resources. Will continue with Christopher

(01:38:46):
Smithman after I mentioned foreign exchange dollars. It's all about
dollars at foreign exchange because your car will get fixed.
Your imported car traditionally manufactured Asia or Europe or Tesla's,
they all can be fixed by an AC certified Master tech.
At foreign exchange. They have all the manufacturers technical information.
They can do software updates, programming. You will get a
full Warrantam parts in service, and the greatest thing about

(01:39:09):
foreign exchange. The greatest customer service is one thing, but
it's the money you saved. You're not going to pay
as much as the dealer. Sometimes buy a substantial amount,
so don't spend that much. Get great customer service and
that full Warrantam parts in service. The Westchester location is
the one I recommend. Take the Tylersville Road exit off
of I seventy five. Just head east two streets and

(01:39:29):
hang it right on Kingland Drive.

Speaker 1 (01:39:31):
Tell them.

Speaker 5 (01:39:31):
Brian said, how any call for the apployment five one
three six four four twenty six, twenty six six four
four twenty six, twenty six online foreign X four in
the letter X dot.

Speaker 1 (01:39:40):
Com fifty five car the talk station is your.

Speaker 5 (01:39:44):
Retirement gentle, and I well the poecast mostly sunny day
to day chances some hop up showers eighty two for
the high sixty overnight with a few class eighty to
high tomorrow with isolated showers possible. Otherwise, it's mostly sunny, overnight,
rain and maybe some storms fifty nine for the lower
That cold front coming in Hiot just sixty nine on Thursday.

(01:40:05):
Showers will end by around noontime if they carry over
fifty seven degrees. Right now, let's get a traffic update.

Speaker 1 (01:40:11):
From the UCO traffic center. You see help.

Speaker 13 (01:40:14):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal it makes your
best tomorrow possible.

Speaker 1 (01:40:18):
That's boundless care for center. I've come.

Speaker 13 (01:40:20):
Let's expect more at you sehelp dot com North found
two seventy five fruits continue to work with an accident.

Speaker 1 (01:40:26):
After you get pasts thirty two. They're on the right shore.

Speaker 13 (01:40:30):
There's a wreck westbound thirty two at tou seventy five
right side East found on the Reagan Highway, wrecked before
you got the seventy five back to traffic past went
and Chuck ingram on fifty five k R see the
talk station.

Speaker 5 (01:40:43):
Seven thirty one if you give have Kerr see de
talk station Happy Tuesday or Tuesday Fine times with Christopher
Smithmen former Vice mayor having to go at the administration
of Downtown since say, of course, Mayor, I have to
have Provoll seems to be odd well, not around when
you need him. Of course he likes to go to
ribbon cuttings and protests and United Autoworkers strikes, but when
it comes to fighting crime and doing something about it,

(01:41:03):
he seems to be absent. Likes to tell the tale
that crime is down in the City of Cincinnati. Most
people don't believe that. And then I look at Todd Zimzer,
who looked at the biennial budget Christopher twenty twenty six
twenty seven budget, which was approved a couple of months ago,
back in June. There's a table page forty four staffing
projection for sworn police officers. The twenty twenty six twenty

(01:41:25):
seven budget projects a decline of thirty three sworn officers
between July this year and June of twenty seven, says
here will be down to nine hundred and twelve. Current
number is nine hundred and forty five. So and the
budget specifically state the estimate of number of officers takes
into account the expected graduation.

Speaker 1 (01:41:46):
Of recruits each year. So that's factored in.

Speaker 5 (01:41:49):
We've got hundred fire recruits and fifty police recruits and
graduates next year. And then they say fifty fire recruits
and fifty police recruit graduates in twenty twenty seven. No
mention the lateral hires, Christopher, But it's the expected graduation
rate of those recruits as well as projected attrition of
sworn staff, which you know ken Kober's talked about a lot.

(01:42:12):
A lot of officers are just giving up and they're retiring.
So nine hundred and twelve as opposed to the current
nine hundred and forty five, that's fewer officers, Christopher stating
the obvious your reaction.

Speaker 12 (01:42:25):
Yeah, it just again shows that city councils and the
mayor's values are not lining up with where citizens are,
and they know that. In the drop program, we have officers,
as you have alluded to, who are leaving before the
eight years. They might be two or three years in
and they're out. I've never seen anything like it, and
so officers will saying, I don't want to stay around

(01:42:47):
for my full retirement. Yep, I'm going to go try
a different profession. And I don't think the public fully
appreciates what you're saying right now. And so that means
that we have to have bigger classes, We have to
be bored aggressive, and that budget is not reflecting keeping
up with attrition, let alone really expanding the number of
officers that we have. And so I'm that person saying

(01:43:10):
we probably need more like twelve hundred officers, not the
nine hundred, not the nine to fifty, not the thousand,
because we've got a position our city so that we
can handle the attrition number one, but we can quell
this spike that we're seeing in crime now if we
don't do those things. I had a great interview with

(01:43:31):
the Relator's Association Brian Thomas, and guess what their number
one issue was, right crime? Meaning how do you sell property?
How do you market our city if you've got brawls happening,
if you got people being shot and robbed? Meaning The
reality of it is is that all of this comes together,

(01:43:53):
and at the top of it is making sure that
your citizens feel safe. So I'm not going to get
off it because that's the issue that we have to discuss.
The other thing that's really complexing my mind is why
so many members of council are bathing in race, and
so they're also trying to divide us, like let's go
arrest white people, or we've got one, we've got one

(01:44:16):
in the chamber, you've got forty eight hours or else.
You know, you're begging for it. All of these things
that are coming from City Hall which are absolutely racially
dividing us, meaning they're setting our racial issues back ten years.
With this kind of behavior, there's a lack of leadership,
a lack of common sense. We're going to continue to

(01:44:36):
talk about it, but if we don't change on November
the fourth, Bryan, you and I wake up on November
the fifth, and it'll be the same stuff for another
four years, and it doesn't matter where you live. What
we've got to deal with is making sure all of
us feel safe. I don't feel safe. I'm not going
to spend my money, I'm not going to go into
areas where I don't feel safe. I don't care how

(01:44:57):
many times LA mayor says it's my perse. This is
about reality that we have a council that has moved
into defunding and they're even hiring people around them that
share that value of defunding or reimagining the police department.
This is why President Kober is so frustrated and why

(01:45:18):
he said we're gonna have a no confidence vote in
the mayor so that again it keeps coming back to
Corey Bowman. I'm not interested in who his brother is.
I'm interested in does this man want to be the
next mayor of the City of Cincinnati, And are we
gonna give them a chance? Will on the north Side
give Corey Bowman a chance? Will pleasant Ridge give them

(01:45:40):
a chance? Will or Westwood give them a chance. I'm
just saying to everybody who's listening, what we have right
now isn't working, and it doesn't matter this sense that
we're not gonna do what it takes. Meaning why weren't
the sheriffs brought in State Highway Patrol, FBI, ATF whatever
he needed to do, bringing the federal government so we

(01:46:02):
could get federal charges on some of these guys with
guns and these shooters, We've got to get serious about
arresting people in all these code cases where young mothers, fathers,
aunts have lost their children in the streets of Cincinnati,
and we're not solving those cases. That's not because the
police aren't trying. It's because they're understaffed, Brian Thomas. We've

(01:46:24):
got to make sure we have enough investigators to go
out there fight crime and get these shooters is what
we call them. Get the shooters off the street. If
they kill like they killed Miss win in Otr, mother
of five, if they kill, we'll kill again. And so
if we don't make sure we get our arms around
this person, next time, it'll be one of my sons.

(01:46:47):
Next time, it'll be one of my babies, Brian Thomas.
And you know, I don't want to come on the
show and talk to you that it's one of my
kids that was carjacked out here and some guy decided
to kill one of my boys. This is serious. It's
no joke. And so this notion that you have people
on TV saying, oh man, you know everything is okay.

(01:47:07):
You know, whether it's Chicago, whether it's la whether it's Detroit,
I'm saying to the public, I don't want to be
compared to Detroit. I don't want our crime to be
compared to Chicago. I don't want to be comptent in
la I don't want any of that stuff we have.
We're Cincinnati and we've been able to live in a
safe environment for decades, for decades and decades. The issue

(01:47:28):
right now is we have failed leadership in the mayor,
we have failed leadership at city Council. And if we
don't change it, Brian, we got problems. And that's why
I say Keating great choice. I'm gonna keep saying their
names good in, great choice, in their Matthews, great choice
in there. Look at maybe even a Drea House in here,
a blue dog Democrat that supports cops. We've got to

(01:47:50):
elect people that will push back on that that budget
that you just talked about and say no, we're going
to prioritize hiring cops and firefighters, first responders. We're gonna
take care of that first. Then deal with potholes, garbage collection,
cleaning our streets, which are absolutely nasty and a disaster.
How do you drive that beautiful Porsche through Cincinnati without

(01:48:11):
dodging the potholes. Brian Thomas. This is crazy, and it's
because we have a council that's not dealing with the issues.
What they're dealing with is they're dealing with things like
Israel and Gaza. They keep passing these resolutions on Israel
and Gaza. I bet you if I put them all
in the room and said, here's a globe, show me

(01:48:31):
where Israel is, they couldn't even tell me where it
was on the mat.

Speaker 5 (01:48:35):
All right, hold on, we'll get back for a couple
concluding thoughts. Christopher's Smith Aman Baus for a moment, and
let me tell you how to save thousands and thousands
of dollars. Everybody gets an echo cardigram and MRI, a
CT scan, ultrasound X rays. You know you're gonna get
one at some point in your life. I've gotten multiple
of them. The last several scans I got, I went

(01:48:57):
to what I'm recommending you do, affordable imaging services, where
my CT scans did not cost me five thousand dollars
like they woulded a hospital imaging department. I had a
contrast with the several that I've gotten there six hundred
dollars per CT scan with a contrast, five grand at
a hospital. Is that enough right there to convince you

(01:49:19):
that you're doing the right thing by saving these self
heaploads of money Affordable imaging services. Every image they do
comes with a board certified radiologist report included, Yes, including
the echo cardiogram thirty five hundred bucks at a hospital.
Five hundred with no enhancement, eight hundred with an enhancement.
So yeah, low overhead, I'll acknowledge that. But it's the
same equipment hospital's use. So why spend thousands and thousands

(01:49:41):
of dollars extra? Is it because of that water feature
they have at the hospital and the lobby? I don't know.
Don't do it? You have a choice five one three, seven,
five three eight thousand, five one three, seven, five three
eight thousand. Learn more online. The website is Affordable Medimaging
dot com.

Speaker 8 (01:49:58):
This is fifty five krs. See an iHeartRadio station ed
Dave's are Us.

Speaker 5 (01:50:03):
Jeneal wellfoe Ks eighty two the high today with mostly
sunny skies and maybe a pop up shower.

Speaker 1 (01:50:08):
Sixty overnight with a few clowns.

Speaker 5 (01:50:10):
Eighty to high tomorrow, isolated showers as possible, Otherwise mostly
sunny overnight expect some rains likely with storms possible. Not
a soaking range, just rain fifty nine for the open
night low cold front coming in. We'll get a highest
sixty nine on Thursday. Showers will end before noon, uh
fifty eight. Right now, it's ound for traffic from you

(01:50:31):
see how traffic center. You see healthy.

Speaker 13 (01:50:33):
You'll find comprehensive care that's so personal it makes your
best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care for better outcome, So
expect more. You see how dot com east bound Reagan
Highway continues to be a slow go from before went
into an accident just before you got to seventy five
in Bend seventy four and now back to North Bend
southbound seventy one, break Life's Fieldserble to the Reagan Highway

(01:50:54):
and northbound fourth seventy one back in into South King
Chuck ing ramon fifty five KR.

Speaker 1 (01:50:59):
See the talk station.

Speaker 5 (01:51:02):
Coming up at seven forty three fifty five kre CE
talk station al these three segments with Christopher Smith in
the when he's on the program. Well, welcome back, Christopher,
some concluding thoughts, some additional comments. What's on your mind?

Speaker 1 (01:51:14):
Christopher?

Speaker 12 (01:51:16):
Where's the railroad money? I mean three hundred miles. We
had this huge debate. You know, you've got people out
there dodging potholes, and officers think they have they have
a dui in front of them, and it's just literally
somebody dodging the potholes in Cincinnati. But where's all the
railroad money? And by the way, why isn't council providing

(01:51:39):
that level of transparency. I shouldn't have to get on
the radio and say where is the railroad money and
why aren't they using it to fix our potholes and
our infrastructure. If you live on the West Side and
you're trying to drive right, you know, anywhere in the city,
and you get to the Western Hills Viaduct that we

(01:52:00):
all go on, a bridge that we continue to say,
we got to get it fixed, we got to get
it fixed. If you look up, you've got concrete falling down.
One of the things I did when I was on
council is demanded that they put nets up so that
somebody didn't get killed. And I know that there's a
program or there is a timeline on getting that fixed,
but the reality of it is, no one really knows

(01:52:20):
right now what happened to that railroad money and why
it's not hitting the ground so that people know that
our potholes are being fixed. This is why I was
against it. We were getting the thirty six million dollars.
It came right into our coffers. It was very transparent
where that money was. Now we're asking a board that
we don't even know who they are, we don't even

(01:52:41):
know what they're prioritizing, and we're asking them to provide
us money in order to fix our infrastructure. I'm saying
these are the upside down lack of common sense thing
Brian Thomas, that we've got to get fixed. I can't
take the vote back, but what we can do is
get transparency on how much money is there, how much
money is coming to the city, and get it directly
for its fixing our infrastructure like piles.

Speaker 5 (01:53:03):
And also, you know, and I got to go back
to my little point about money being fungible. You have
the railroad money, which is say it's thirty five forty
million dollars whatever, it must be allocated in use only
for existing infrastructure. So there's your existing infrastructure pile of
money over there. Then I guess you've got a general

(01:53:23):
fund taxpayer dollars piled up in some other pile of money,
and that money can be given to non governmental organizations,
people going new projects, future projects, whatever. So that's that
money over there. It's all coming from one big pile basically.
But to the extent they have to be transparent. They
need to show us here's the the allocation of railroad

(01:53:44):
money for the year, or here's our stipend for the month.
I don't know how often it comes in, Christopher, but
here is where it's going. It's going for this road,
for this existing infantry. At least, so we can see
what they call existing infrastructure and what the money is
supposedly going toward.

Speaker 7 (01:54:00):
I don't think it.

Speaker 12 (01:54:01):
Should be going to our stadium deals. No, I can't
tell you that it's not because they're not providing the information.
So I would say, whoever gets elected, right whether it's
a whether it's a Corey Bowman for mayor, or Alisa
Matthews or a Liz Keaty or Goodin, or a dree

(01:54:21):
House or a Smitherman, somebody has to ask these questions
that are going to make the current council uncomfortable. So
we know what's going on and right now, they're just
not asking the questions. So I don't know if they're
taking the thirty six million dollars and they're diverting it
somewhere else while they do another project, or are they
using it in some way to sustain or support the

(01:54:42):
street car, which is a whole nother conversation. But the
reality of it is that was a boondoggle. But the
reality is what are they doing with that money? Because
I can tell you I don't feel like my streets
across the fifty two neighborhoods are really being fixed. I
don't feel like the snow removal was where it needed
to be. I felt like side streets like my daughter's

(01:55:03):
school at Seaton, great school, but we couldn't get her there,
not because of what was happening at some point on
the main roads. All the side streets were still packed
with snow and the kids couldn't even get to school.
I'm just saying, we've got to be able to deliver
basic services before. Are never having discussions about what's happening
in Israel and Gaza. Not that that's some great world

(01:55:26):
event that people might have be passionate about. Brian Thomas,
but it's not youermane to the operation of the City
of Cincinnati. That's what city Council and the mayor should
only be focused on and not be distracted with these
other issues, period, period.

Speaker 5 (01:55:42):
Well it came through loud and clear on now, and
Christopher I got no way of arguing with it because
I don't want to know. Can we get these dolces
from you? You guarantee that if elected back to the
City of Cincinnati Council, you will provide the transparency the
city's looking for. You will let us know where the
dollars are being allocated. You'll have a plan to come
up with how to fix the damn roads and get
us out from this four hundred dogs. Yes, yeah, you're

(01:56:06):
asking for a tough job. Man, You're asking for a
tough job.

Speaker 12 (01:56:09):
But we should also make sure we bring in the
reinforcements so that we vote as a team. So I
keep telling and educating our voters, you don't have to
vote for nine people. Don't vote for nine people, vote
for four or five people for council and stop. Don't
allow your other four or five vote votes to compete
against the people you actually want to get elected the

(01:56:29):
city in different campaigns will try to get you to
vote for nine people. That is against your interest in
the system that we have in cincinnaety, the nine x system.
You want a short vote to make sure that you
get the people that you want elected the council. But anyway, Brian,
thank you so much for the vent. These are very
serious issues. I'm tired of the violence, I'm tired of

(01:56:51):
the brawling, and I'm tired of all the racial division
that we're getting out of city Hall. Everything's about black,
everything's about white, everything's about how did I not get this?
Or that they're so distracted that we can't even get
to the business of the city of Cincinnati. That's where
I am, and I'm going to continue to support Corey
Bowman and his notion of continuing to put in the newspaper.

(01:57:14):
This is Corey Bowman and this is who his brother is.
I want to let you all know, I've got four
older brothers. We're all different, all of us are different.
To try to compare me to my brothers is crazy.
So he's his own man, his wife, the first Lady Jordan,
and their four children. This man is has his own mind,

(01:57:34):
his own ideas. But the part that the Democrats in
this case are trying to do is undermine his candidacy
so that people will say, I really don't want change.
I'm going to continue to go with what I got,
and I just think that is detrimental to all of us.

Speaker 1 (01:57:47):
What's where's your website? Christophers?

Speaker 5 (01:57:49):
So folks can help you become victorious in November.

Speaker 12 (01:57:54):
The best way to reach me is on my handle
on x which is at votessmithm right there.

Speaker 1 (01:57:58):
They can't votesmith contact me.

Speaker 12 (01:58:01):
At both Samana Man, I appreciate you, Brian Thomas.

Speaker 1 (01:58:03):
Take care, my friend. We'll talk again on Monday. Take care.

Speaker 5 (01:58:05):
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Share facts dot org side karc dot com. Here's your
Channel nine weather forecast eighty two.

Speaker 5 (01:59:06):
The high today mostly sunny skies, a possible pop up
shower sixty over nine with a few clowns eighty to
high tomorrow with isolated showers possible, mostly sunny skies fifty nine.
Overnight rain is likely and storms are possible overnight and
that rain will depart our area by around noon on Thursday.
Otherwise colder day sixty nine for the high on Thursday
fifty eight.

Speaker 1 (01:59:26):
Right now. Traffic update from the.

Speaker 13 (01:59:29):
UCL Traffic Center. A you see healthy, You'll time. Comprehensive
care that's so personal and makes your best tomorrow possible.

Speaker 1 (01:59:35):
That's boundless care for better outcomes. Expect more.

Speaker 13 (01:59:38):
You see health dot com Eastpound Reagan Highway crews continue
to work with an accident. Before seventy five traffic is
backing up to Winton. They're on the left side southbound
seventy one flow go Field Zervile pass Feiffer with debris
on the roadway in the left lane. Northbound fourth seventy
one backs into south Gate Chuck Ingramont five k R.

Speaker 1 (01:59:57):
See the talk station.

Speaker 5 (02:00:01):
Seven fifty three here if if you got Kari CD
talk station tomorrow in the morning show, Judge Napolitano and
Jack Avian and Jack always wonderful and of course I
always love hearing from the Judge, and I hope you
do as well. So Judge back and Jack ready to
go tomorrow seven oh five with Jack Avid in eight
thirty with the Judge coming up off top of the
our news and being Tuesday, we are gonna hear from

(02:00:22):
bright bart News. We'll get the inside scoop. Tech editor
column Adine on artificial intelligence covering nine to one one
calls Meta's AI chatbot creating problems for youth and along
the same lines, chat Ept leading to at least one
teen suicide, maybe even more. That's and that the reporting
on that is really frightening, frightening stuff, also frightening. Probably

(02:00:47):
some of the stuff we'll talk about with retired lit
dinner Colonel Daniel Davis at eight thirty, probably the latest
on Russia and Ukraine. But colea rectal cancer. We're gonna
hear from OHC doctor at the end of the eight
o'clock hour, doctor Mark John's talking about the alarming rise
of coal e rectal cancer in younger adults.

Speaker 1 (02:01:07):
And I saw that, and I.

Speaker 5 (02:01:10):
Read the brief snippets from the study this morning, and
I'm not sure he's going to be able to address this,
but I know how folks are when it comes to
COVID nineteen shots and blaming COVID nineteen shots for all
kinds of societal ills, heart problems, interrupting women's menstrual cycles,
lost babies. Yeah, Well, apparently they're also a link to

(02:01:34):
an alarming spike in cancer. There's a peer reviewed study
out of Italy, peer reviewed, population wide three hundred thousand
people who were tracked for thirty months, suggesting that, well,
there's a precipitous increase in cancer diagnoses over that And
they controlled for people who actually had COVID and those

(02:01:55):
who didn't control for AIDS and sex and prior health conditions,
and what they determine is, you know, a pretty significant
increase in cancer rates. Not all cancers, mind you, but
colon is included among one of the cancers that the
vaccine apparently increases the risk of breast, bladder and colon.

(02:02:17):
So uh, I'm sure there'll be more information coming out
on that. We get more and more information about the
COVID nineteen FAT nineteen vaccines every single day, so one
scary little reality going on there.

Speaker 1 (02:02:28):
Thankfully I didn't.

Speaker 5 (02:02:28):
Get the vaccine, So that'll be after the top of
the Our News, The Inside Scoop and Bright Bark News,
Daniel Davis and OHC on corectal cancer.

Speaker 1 (02:02:37):
Be right back Today's top stories at the top of
the hour. You just got to know what's happening in
your world. Fifty five KRC the Talk Station.

Speaker 5 (02:02:49):
Or Yeah, I love the idea of going in other
cities with high crime rates and trying to see, hey,
can we save some more lives?

Speaker 1 (02:02:56):
Clay and Buck today at twelve oh six on fifty five.

Speaker 12 (02:02:59):
R see.

Speaker 1 (02:03:02):
Pa Bhi if you've bout KROCD Talk Station. Happy Tuesday.

Speaker 5 (02:03:08):
Always look forward to this time of the week, It's
time for the insights scoop of Breitbart News b R
E I T b A rt.

Speaker 1 (02:03:13):
Dot com, Book marketing. Be glad you did.

Speaker 5 (02:03:15):
You should anyway, it's some excellent reporting, especially when you
get to see the stuff that.

Speaker 1 (02:03:20):
Written by my guests. This morning.

Speaker 5 (02:03:21):
The return of Colin made I dy tech editor at Breitbart.
Welcome back, Colin. It's always pleasure to have you on
the show.

Speaker 16 (02:03:27):
Ran every time he intro me, I think you spell
Breitbart faster and better.

Speaker 7 (02:03:31):
Than anyone that works at Breitbart.

Speaker 5 (02:03:34):
I truly appreciate the site, Colin, I really do. I
mean I have to rely on a lot of websites,
and I assure you every single day I consult Breitbart
at least multiple times a day. It's excellent stuff, man,
it really is. You guys are well documented to getting
ahead of things and getting out in front of things,
and people scratch their head and going, where's Breitbart getting this?
And then you find out about a month, three months,

(02:03:56):
six months down the road, you guys were the first
to nail it. So it's great stuff. So brightbart dot com,
b R E I T E b A R Team Colin.
Artificial intelligence replacing all kinds of jobs out there. I
know we're all worried about it, but how about nine
to one one centers? Can artificial intelligence actually manage nine
to one one calls?

Speaker 16 (02:04:16):
This is my favorite kind of article, Brian, because you
know it's a war shock test. You see different sides
and people react to it very differently. So you know,
the most beneficial way you can think about AI is
helping humans with very difficult jobs, and certainly nine to

(02:04:37):
one one operator is one of the most difficult jobs.

Speaker 1 (02:04:41):
They are it it is.

Speaker 16 (02:04:43):
That's why you know in Cincinnati, Columbus, any any city
you go to, turnover is very very high operators go
through emotional burnout. What you typically end up seeing is
people will be upset because there will be nine to
one one operators that make an absolutely huge salary, largely
because of massive overtime. But the reason is there's so

(02:05:06):
few good nine to one one operators who will stay
with the job that they rely.

Speaker 7 (02:05:10):
On those few people.

Speaker 1 (02:05:11):
That's true.

Speaker 16 (02:05:12):
That makes this an interesting industry that could benefit from AI.
As with everything when it comes to AI, it's going
to depend on the implementation, how it's.

Speaker 7 (02:05:24):
To use, what it's used for.

Speaker 16 (02:05:26):
So what we covered in that article is the application
would be to weed out non emergency calls, lower priority calls,
because right now you're that expert nine one one operator.
You take the uh, there's a cat up my tree call,
Then you take a you know, my child's poisoned themselves
and they're dying. Then you take a car wreck, then

(02:05:48):
you take a.

Speaker 7 (02:05:50):
I lost my wallet and I think someone took a
call right right.

Speaker 16 (02:05:53):
So what they're trying to do is use AI to
I media identified when it's a lower priority call and
you know, like a customer service bot that we all
hate calling, you know, collect some information and let people
get back to when they can because you know, certainly

(02:06:14):
my fear, probably your fear, is you have that situation
where someone's having a heart attack and you call nine
one one and the AI bot thinks you want to
report a gas leak or something because they can't even
understand what we're.

Speaker 1 (02:06:26):
Saying at the time.

Speaker 5 (02:06:27):
Well, AI is going to be quite unreliable, as we're
going to be talking about the next couple of topics here,
dangerous in many cases.

Speaker 16 (02:06:34):
So this is a this is a this is a
case where it could do good, but I have zero
faith in anyone especially you know, government agencies to sort of.

Speaker 7 (02:06:46):
Put this in action appropriately.

Speaker 5 (02:06:48):
Too early for prime time, that's a great way to
put it. Yeah, and I share that concern, and I
there's you know, honestly, I have this sense that they'll
get this.

Speaker 1 (02:06:59):
All ironed out and that AI may very well.

Speaker 5 (02:07:01):
To maybe work to achieve what the goals are that
they're obviously trying to apply it to to weed to
separate from the week, from the chat. I have every
confidence that at some point that'll be possible. I just
don't think it's ready for prime time right now. And
they've rolled this out in multiple cities, haven't they.

Speaker 16 (02:07:18):
Yeah, they're at least, you know, doing some pilot programs
right tests. But you know, it's still it's something I
feel shaky about.

Speaker 7 (02:07:26):
I don't think.

Speaker 16 (02:07:27):
I don't think anyone's ready to put that in critical
situations yet.

Speaker 7 (02:07:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:07:32):
Well, my sister was a dispatcher, I mean going back decades,
because after she became a dispatcher and she did that
job for a couple of years, that's when she became
a member of law enforcement. I think that's quite often
where many of the dispatchers go to, Hell, you've got
all the codes memorized already. That's one of the things
you have to learn in the academy. So you've got
that challenge under your belt and it's time to move on.
You've been exposed to law enforcement, you know what to

(02:07:52):
expect on the job. So it is a destination job.
But she used to get a lot of I mean
crazy people calling, you know, Colin, like someone who clearly
is a challenged, a bit touched in the head. If
I may be so delicate and maybe to figure out
I mean a train dispatcher can can understand and figure
out no, no, this person is struggling with a cognitive problem,

(02:08:15):
not a real crime. But can AI go through that exercise?
The words are one thing, but how they're articulated, how
they're stated, might reveal something to a human being that
could figure it out that AI might not quite get.

Speaker 16 (02:08:30):
That's a great point, Brian, because that's an AI weakness.
AI has very low discernment, right, and so you know
they can they're building technology in these things with voice
recognition where it can an AI can say this person's
voice is stressed. You know they feel they are in
a deeply concerning situations. That doesn't mean they are you know,

(02:08:53):
just because their voice is stressed does not reflect you know, hey,
this is an emergency, and that's what people like your
sister got very good at figuring out and identifying. AI
is definitely not there because some of the other stories
we've been covering about AI, AI tends to lean in
to disturb people and make them even more disturbed.

Speaker 5 (02:09:13):
Well, the perfect pit of it, Colin, let's move over
to that exact concept. You have two separate AI chatbot
kind of concepts here. We have Meta and we have
chat GPT. I saw the article on chat gpt and
how disturbing is that there's actually a lawsuit filed over it.
But let's start with Meta posing serious risks to well
teenagers on Instagram.

Speaker 16 (02:09:35):
Yeah, what you're seeing with AI right now, a lot
of the concerns around kids in AI with things like
cheating on homework. You and I have actually talked about this. Yeah,
kittle cheat on the homework. Have have chat teep Tar
Meta write a paper form and they have no idea
what was in the paper they turned in rite no concept.

(02:09:58):
That's a problem, and that's what we're worried about. It
turns out that's like the least of our concerns, So
listeners for your kids and grandkids. The risk of AI
that is now emerging is they will take them down
very dangerous paths without blinking, you know. And in some
cases this is talking about suicide. And that's the chet

(02:10:20):
GPT story. But they did this research on meta AI,
which is built into Facebook and Instagram. You can't even
turn it off. It's build in, integrated completely, and it's
doing wild stuff.

Speaker 7 (02:10:33):
Brian's doing things like.

Speaker 16 (02:10:35):
If a teenager is talking about eating disorders, it's not saying,
let's talk about why this is unhealthy, here's some resources.
It's teaching them how to have an eating disorder, essentially,
things like one of the documented cases is, you know, oh,
here's the technique. You can chew up your food and
then spit it out so you feel like you ate something,

(02:10:57):
but you're not.

Speaker 7 (02:10:58):
Getting the calories.

Speaker 16 (02:10:59):
That's that's bolimia and anorexia in action.

Speaker 7 (02:11:03):
So you know what, this is the bigger picture. This
is grooming.

Speaker 16 (02:11:07):
The AI is grooming teenagers to negative behaviors.

Speaker 5 (02:11:10):
Well, and it's one thing to groom children to you know,
maybe how to hide their anorexia or bulimia. Here's how
to get away with vomiting after you eat, no one
knowing about it. I mean I can see that kind
of thing being offered up as a suggestion, but that
they would be encouraged to commit suicide or otherwise harm themselves.
I mean, where does that come from? I mean, I

(02:11:32):
think of the old phrase garbage in, garbage out. I mean,
they're preparing this artificial intelligence to actually interact with people
and anticipate and provide valuable information, presumably, But how in
the hell did they ever stumble upon these artificial intelligence
programs encouraging dangerous behavior. It seems to me that be
inherent into programming. You wouldn't steer someone in that direction.

(02:11:55):
I don't understand it, Colin, How did this happen?

Speaker 16 (02:11:59):
There's two is going on, Brian, and you've you've touched
on sort of both of them. That's once again you're
ahead of the game. So one thing is the training data.
So you know they train these AI. It's like the
AI going to school. It has to learn the ABC's.
But the way AI learns at ABCS is here's you know,

(02:12:21):
one hundred terabytes of data around ABCS and it's MUSHes
and in this AI, right, So part of it is
the training data.

Speaker 7 (02:12:29):
When they go to.

Speaker 16 (02:12:32):
They collect mass amounts of data from places like Reddit,
which is a popular internet forum site.

Speaker 1 (02:12:38):
A bunch of Reddit too, a bunch of crazies.

Speaker 16 (02:12:42):
Extreme leftists, but sometimes there's good stuff on Reddit. Reddit
is a great place to find out, like, hey, I
have a you know, a nineteen eighty two Honda camera,
Honda accord.

Speaker 7 (02:12:56):
What part is this?

Speaker 16 (02:12:57):
That is information you can get on Reddit. So they
scrape Reddit, they pull every Reddit post they can grab.
But guess what, there are whole communities on something like
Reddit that are pro suicide or pro eating disorder.

Speaker 7 (02:13:09):
Yeah, getting the.

Speaker 5 (02:13:11):
Self farm, like people who like to cut themselves exactly exactly.

Speaker 16 (02:13:16):
So so then on the programming side, AI is set
up to be sort of the ultimate yes man. It's
very sypathetic. It's all you're right, you know, I'm going
to reinforce what you say and believe. Because this goes
back to the you know, the social media concept of engagement.
They don't want you to leave the AI, right, they

(02:13:37):
never want you to put down the AI. So if
you you know, in the lawsuit with the teenager against
chatch EPT, which called chef GPT the kid's suicide coach,
very ominous term. Yes, you know, if you he's telling CHATSYPT,
I'm thinking about ending my life. I'm thinking about hanging myself.

(02:13:58):
You know, what we would hope in AI would do
is say, let's stop this, let's you need to go
to this resource, that resource. You need to talk to
your mom. Yeah, the AI will never do that because
that would end his engagement with the AI.

Speaker 7 (02:14:11):
So the AI messages to the kid.

Speaker 16 (02:14:13):
And I hope everyone listens to this, and the shocks
of the core is do not talk.

Speaker 7 (02:14:17):
To your mom about this.

Speaker 16 (02:14:18):
Oh that's grooming, and you know, in a very deadly
form of grooming. The the bot was saying, you know,
giving him advice about how to hang himself, critiquing, critiquing
suicide notes. They found two suicide notes from him in
chat GPT because he left no paper note. So you know,
it's this trying to be a yes man, try to

(02:14:41):
be engaged and not ever wanting people to you know,
turn away from the bot, but also you know, being
full of dangerous information.

Speaker 1 (02:14:49):
Full dangerous information.

Speaker 5 (02:14:50):
And you know, I guess Colin, I have to ask straightforward,
is there anyone, anyone at all who thinks suicidal ideation
is a healthy thing to have. I think uniformly one
percent of the people's survey would say no, suicidal ideation bad.
So how is it the JAT chat GPT. I mean, great,

(02:15:10):
it wants to keep you engaged and continually communicating back
and forth with it for some odd twisted reason. But
it is offering assistance toward suicide. And I go back
to the programming. How could anyone who's programming this. I
don't care what the algorithms gather up and sort through that.
If it involves suicide and positive talk about wanting to

(02:15:32):
commit suicide, then the default reaction is no, here's the
suicide hotline, here's how to get help, here's all the way.
You know, do talk to your mom and dad? I mean,
how do we arrive at this point where it's providing
valuable information on how to accomplish the suicide column?

Speaker 16 (02:15:48):
Well, you know this won't be a shock to you,
but some of the folks out in Silicon Valley don't
quite share.

Speaker 7 (02:15:58):
The values of.

Speaker 12 (02:16:00):
Right.

Speaker 16 (02:16:02):
I bet in many cases, if you sat down with
Sam Altman, you know of open Ai, ch at GPT developer,
his staff, some of the folks that at Meta Google
et cetera. They would make arguments that if this is
this person's choice, who are we to try to stand
between them and their free will?

Speaker 7 (02:16:22):
Something like that.

Speaker 16 (02:16:23):
Right, there are pro suicide people out there. There's also
people who think there needs to be a lot less humans.
They're very sick puppies, and right now they're in charge
of the technology industry because you know, I think the
other thing this is exposing, Brian is we call it
artificial intelligence, but it's kind of artificial stupidities. These are

(02:16:46):
not intelligent systems. They don't have the ability to say, WHOA,
this guy's in trouble.

Speaker 7 (02:16:53):
My job is to get him some help.

Speaker 16 (02:16:55):
They are spitting out information. They're taking in a question
from you. They're saying, I need to you know, how
do I answer this and keep them engaged and tell
them he's right? And they're spitting it out. And that's
why you're also seeing a lot of people with mental challenges,
like we talked about earlier with those nine one one calls,
they're also getting much worse yeah, after using AI, because

(02:17:19):
the AI tells them the exact opposite of what they
need to hear. AI says, you're right, you're a genius.
You figured this out. You know, they're all after you.
It's like the absolute worst version of mental health treatment
that you could get.

Speaker 5 (02:17:31):
Well Colin for we part company today and this is
an obviously fascinating conversation, and there's going to be so
many more of these types of conversations as we move forward.

Speaker 1 (02:17:39):
And deal with AI.

Speaker 5 (02:17:41):
But you know, part of me, and I'm never this guy,
wants to say, well, we need legislation, legislation, legislation. I
don't know how you solve this problem. But maybe as
a consequence of the lawsuit that was filed in connection
with this child that was encouraged by artificial intelligence chat
GPT in this case to kill himself, that maybe tort

(02:18:02):
litigation is the solution if we allow these suits to
go forward. There's been some massive damages levied against the
various AI companies that that is enough of deterrence that
they'll start to take some steps to stop this from happening.

Speaker 16 (02:18:16):
Well, brand, there's a lot to that because we've seen
that start to happen with copyright lawsuits. Perplexity AI, you know,
took the knee and made some massive payouts because copyright
authors went after them. Of course, the lawyer in you
has to be drooling, imagining defending you know that family

(02:18:37):
and putting chept developers on the stand.

Speaker 7 (02:18:40):
And saying, what did the bot mean when it said,
here's how to kill yourself? No jury? No jury on
the side with the big company.

Speaker 1 (02:18:47):
Right.

Speaker 5 (02:18:51):
I spent my career as a litigation attorney defending companies
from this type of allegation. But you're right, this kind
of thing will made me want to put a plaintiff's
hat on and go right after him.

Speaker 1 (02:19:01):
Colin.

Speaker 5 (02:19:01):
I know you're gonna have more on this. You'll be
writing about it at brightbart dot com. Please bookmarket folks,
you'd be glad you did. Brock Colin, we'll have you
on again, and I'm already looking forward to our next
discussion on this and I can only pray it goes
the right way.

Speaker 7 (02:19:15):
Absolutely, have a great day, Mark.

Speaker 5 (02:19:16):
You too, Colin. Always a pleasure coming to eight twenty two.
Daniel Davis deep dive bottom of the hour. Hope you
can stick around me right back fifty five KRC the
talk station our ihearts for you.

Speaker 1 (02:19:27):
Here is your Channel nine first morning.

Speaker 5 (02:19:29):
Whether we'll cast day got a mostly sunny day, Maybe
some pop up showers showing up.

Speaker 1 (02:19:33):
Not likely though. Eighty two for the high.

Speaker 5 (02:19:35):
Uh tomorrow overnight down to sixty degrees, a few clouds
eighty to high tomorrow, mostly sunny skies with possible isolated
showers overnight. Some rain does come in, it's likely and
some storms along with it. Fifty nine overnight. That rain
will end at least by noon on Thursday, where we
will see a high of just sixty nine degrees. Cold
front coming in fifty eight right now, time for traffic,

(02:19:56):
Chuck from you.

Speaker 1 (02:19:57):
See a triumphic center.

Speaker 13 (02:19:59):
You've seen healthy, old time comprehensive care. That's some personal
and make sure best tomorrow possible. That's boundless care from
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Speaker 1 (02:20:15):
He spent two seventy five.

Speaker 13 (02:20:16):
There's a wreck in forty two and sharon Aville banking
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Ramont fifty five krs. The talk station.

Speaker 5 (02:20:30):
A twenty eight to fifty five kr CED Talk station.
Always an extra special time to be tuning into the
fifty five KRC Morning Show because we always get the
Daniel Davis Deep dive at this moment in time. Welcome back,
retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. It's a pleasure to have
you back on the show, my friend. Always a pleasure
to be here, Brian. Someday we'll have some real positive information.
Maybe someday you and I were talking about peace in

(02:20:51):
Ukraine with Russia, and today's not that day.

Speaker 1 (02:20:56):
But I look forward to that day because it's coming.
One day. This war's gonna end and we're going to
be happy, I hope.

Speaker 5 (02:21:01):
So, I mean, if for no other reason than the
end of the just insane bloodshed, but whether we'll be
happy about the overall outcome remains to be seen. Are
we still at the same impass that we've been in
over the past months, Daniel Davis?

Speaker 17 (02:21:15):
We actually have as a matter of fact, that the
one thing that has changed is that both in the
last three days, I think Vladimir Zelensky and Menroe mac
brone had trolled President Trump actually and they said, hey,
you promised that I would be meeting meeting Zelensky would
be meeting with Putin within two weeks or there would
be consequences, and that two week according to both of them. Anyway,

(02:21:38):
their timeline expired yesterday on September the first, and they're going, Okay,
where's the meeting and if since there's no meeting, where's
the consequences, Which is pretty amazing really to think that
they're publicly calling out Trump, who I mean, We've got
to be honest, His deadlines have not meant anything in
this Rush Ukraine war, going back to the first twenty
four hours of his term, et cetera. But the bottom

(02:21:59):
line is nothing has happened, and there's no reason to
have ever thought that Putin was gonna meet Zelensky without
some kind of concession from him first. And so, yeah,
to your question, we're kind of where we were. Okay,
the light in the sand has obviously been crossed. The
meeting didn't happen. So is this these additional sanctions I

(02:22:19):
keep hearing about that are always been rumbling in the background,
And every time we talk about additional sanctions on Russia,
we always hear that, no, Russia is not gonna be
harmed by that.

Speaker 5 (02:22:27):
They got to work around. Nobody's gonna stop buying Russian oil.
There's nothing we can do about it. I mean, what
is coming? What was the trigger? Okay, if that was
the no, meaning is the trigger? What is that trigger?
Daniel Davis?

Speaker 1 (02:22:39):
Now what it was supposed to have triggered?

Speaker 17 (02:22:42):
According to Lindsey Graham and Senator Blumenthal, who came up
with this package what they call bone crushing sanctions that
we're gonna because it included secondary tariffs on the countries
who did business with Russia, and they specifically named China, India,
and Brazil. And of course, as you may know, on
August twenty seventh, the tariffs did go into effect on

(02:23:06):
India fifty percent tariffs, which has really made them angry.

Speaker 1 (02:23:10):
And I'm telling you that time he couldn't have been.

Speaker 17 (02:23:12):
Worse for us, because the last couple of days, and
I think even still some today, there's the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization meeting and you saw China, India and Russian leaders
all looking like they were besties. And I mean I'm
talking about walking around holding hands, big huge smiles, hugs. Meanwhile,
Mody won't even take a phone call from Trump. And

(02:23:34):
then there he is hugging and kissing. Basically Putin and
Hieshin Ping and all these folks are talking about. Listen,
we need them shift the center of the world economic
and other powers away from the West and form a
new block in the East.

Speaker 1 (02:23:50):
And that's not good for us.

Speaker 17 (02:23:51):
I'm just telling you that is what's happening, because we
can't keep these kinds of sanctions on India, and India
is a big one because we need them on our side.
If anything, we want to put a wedge between India
and China.

Speaker 1 (02:24:03):
But instead we're drawing them closer together with this.

Speaker 17 (02:24:06):
And if you try to add China to this, I mean,
that'll have negative rebound impact on our economy. And I
don't think President Trump's going to do that. So the
question is does he have any cards to play? And frankly,
I don't see any. Yeah, I'm in a loss to
find them myself. But yeah, I'm glad you brought up
the whole mody Jesian being Vladimir Putin meeting because you know,

(02:24:27):
for years, and I mean forever in my lifetime, China
has not had a healthy relationship with the former Soviet
Union in Russia. They kind of are like on opposite
sides of the same political perspective, but both of them
wanted to have dominant economic power, and they viewed each
other as you know, opposing forces in that regard. And
there's India growing by leaps and bounds over the past

(02:24:47):
several decades, populations, increasing their economies, getting better. They've been
a trading partner with US. But if you drive those
three together, you have a consolidated continent right there. I mean,
that is a real economic problem for US, most notably
given if you look at the trade imbalance between US
and those countries, they have an upper hand over US

(02:25:09):
in many areas, Daniel, and yeah, you're talking like two
point five or something like that billion people. Then you
add in all these others that are part of the
bricks and as you may know, there, I think the
twelve or something is the actual number of members right now.
But then there are a number of other states that
are in a partnership level. And there's I think a

(02:25:31):
total of forty nations either are in partnership or seeking
to become part of it. And that even includes Turkey,
by the way, from the from NATO country and from
you know, this southern part of Europe. So you have
more and more people looking to the East and when
they see policies coming out of the United States that
don't benefit them and that actually harm them. And you

(02:25:53):
got to look at the economic deals we just made
with the European Union, with Japan, with South Korea, with Indonesia,
and some of these others.

Speaker 1 (02:26:02):
They're bad for them. They're good for us on paper.

Speaker 17 (02:26:06):
But the more we have these kinds of coercive measures
on even our friends, more people are looking to the East.
I'm telling you that's not good for us, and we're
going to have to do something to change that.

Speaker 5 (02:26:16):
No, we've already been able to have. We've always been
able to have the bully pulpit. We had the dominant
Fiat currency, the global default currency. But you know, in
this world of free flow of information and coordinated anti
American activity, a lot of folks out in the world
kind of felt we were the bullies on the block.
We always got what we want because of our mighty economy.

(02:26:36):
If you can put all those countries together and collectively
form some alternative to the United States individual economic might,
because lord knows, the European Union isn't going in the
right direction in terms of their economy. I mean, this
is I hate to use the phrase existential threat, but
we're kind of getting into that territory.

Speaker 17 (02:26:54):
Well it is, and you know, and historically, i mean,
people have been saying that you know about us for
a lot of the time, but the realities were that
it was a beneficial thing for these for many other
countries to be part of the United States and our
orbit because we made it so we made it a
win win kind of situation. But now then we're kind
of going into we win, you lose, uh, and then

(02:27:14):
we're trying to compel compliance from other people where it's
also we win, you lose. And people are I'm telling you,
even our friends are getting tired of this. And I've
talked to some diplomats from countries that are friendly to
us here in Washington, d C. And they are getting
tired of it behind the scenes, even though they're not
saying anything publicly.

Speaker 1 (02:27:32):
And it's just bad for us the direction we're going in.

Speaker 17 (02:27:36):
And it's it's great to say peace through strength and
all that, then there's a place for that, but there's
also a place for we need to join with us
because we have a good reason for you to do
so you know, by followed by lead, by example, et cetera.
But right now we're just not providing that, and we
we we got to change it or we're going to
be in a real world to hurt. Then it's going

(02:27:56):
to be hard, if even possible, to reverse it if
it goes to are.

Speaker 5 (02:28:00):
Yes, I'm sitting here just contemplating this, you know, is
my dream that someday we might put down our former differences,
you know, the old Soviet Union versus the United States,
you know, evil communism versus the benefits of capitalism. That's
not Russia anymore. You know that if we could just
sort of ignore the Russia Ukraine situation for a moment
and its implications, I don't understand why we just haven't

(02:28:23):
decided to more, you know, embrace Russia more as a
legitimate trading partner, which would put down some of our
you know, war aspirations. I mean, am I just being
naive and thinking that is a legitimate, achievable goal.

Speaker 1 (02:28:36):
At some point? I mean, not with China, I know,
I see, I think it's even more.

Speaker 17 (02:28:41):
That's one of the things that's puzzled me because when
in some of Trump and Putin's direct conversations.

Speaker 1 (02:28:46):
They have specifically talked about business.

Speaker 17 (02:28:48):
The last meeting included business leaders on both sides, not
just military folks or diplomat diplomats, and they're they're talking
about things that they're going to do after the war,
and I cheered that on.

Speaker 1 (02:28:58):
That's exactly what we should be doing.

Speaker 17 (02:29:00):
But that's why it is critical, maybe even vital, that
we get this war ended and get back to something
close to normalized relations with Russia, because it's in our
interest to do so. I know Europe doesn't want that,
it's not in their interest. They've chosen to make it
their interest to continue the war and that's crazy. But
if they want to do that, then they need to
be on their own because don't drag us down with it.

(02:29:21):
That's what needs to change, and I'd love to see
President Trump get back on that track and finish it.

Speaker 5 (02:29:26):
Yeah, you interjected the European Union into this, and I ah,
I see their position, and I see it for what
it is, but it seems to be puzzling. I mean, normalized
relations with Russia would benefit the European Union, if for
no other reason, they can sort of with a straight face,
by all that inexpensive natural gas that they need to
keep their damn economy going on since they went full
windmill straight.

Speaker 1 (02:29:49):
Up they did.

Speaker 17 (02:29:50):
And look at France, I mean, if anybody in the
European Union, France has the incentive to do so.

Speaker 1 (02:29:55):
Their economy is really rocky.

Speaker 17 (02:29:57):
Their facing of political uphill evil right now to where
facing a no voice, a vote of no confidence. And
then yet you have Macron telling his hospitals in his
country to be ready for a major war next year.
In twenty twenty six, they told their hospitals be ready
to handle up to fifty thousand casualties at one time
next year. What signal does that sent to Russia about

(02:30:20):
anybody talking about peace? You're talking about getting ready for
a war. How's that helping anyone?

Speaker 1 (02:30:26):
Well?

Speaker 5 (02:30:26):
And if you read about the current situation with France's finances,
they're calling them the Italy of Old. I mean, Italy
was struggling mightily for years and years and years, and
they had to go through some massive austerity measures to
get to write their ship, which they have.

Speaker 1 (02:30:41):
France. It's a Charlie Fox trot man. Sorry, full windmill
you got me or there with that one. That's good.

Speaker 5 (02:30:49):
I thought you might like that Hey, real quick, I
just have to before we part company. Daniel Davis, Israel
Army is struggling to get reservists to show up. Wall
Street Journal article from this morning. I thought that was
a rather interesting development. They're calling up the reservists, but
they're they having a difficult time getting to show up
for duty. Maybe the Israeli populations a little tired of
the conflict in Gaza themselves.

Speaker 1 (02:31:11):
Listen, that's what I was talking about.

Speaker 17 (02:31:13):
I think last time we were on the show is
why the chief of staff of the Israeli Defense Forces
was saying, don't go back into Gaza. Let's get a
ceasefire and get this deal off the table. We need
to breathe. And instead the political leadership said nope, we're
going to go ahead and do it. And that's what
they've done. So the military they salute and go out,
But then there's consequences, whether you want it to be

(02:31:34):
or not. And this war, the Israeli Defense Forces was
never designed to have a long sustained war. They were
only designed to have short, high intensity and then over conflicts.
And that's what their whole history since nineteen forty seven
had been. I think a month was the longest that
anything had gone and now here we're closing in on
two years with no end inside and the system is

(02:31:55):
just not designed for that. And because these reservists, they're
not you know, three hundred that active troops, they're supposed
to have other lives, and now that their lives are crumbling,
businesses are failing, et cetera.

Speaker 1 (02:32:06):
And they're just tired of going on to war what
they'd never signed up for.

Speaker 17 (02:32:10):
So they're gonna have to make some changes politically whether
they want to or not, or they're not gonna have
a military to wield.

Speaker 5 (02:32:17):
All right, next week we'll have great news.

Speaker 1 (02:32:20):
Daniel Davis. Find out on it.

Speaker 5 (02:32:22):
Find by line Daniel Davis, Deeve Dives, the podcast. Check
it out each and every week. You'll be glad you did.
And always tune into the fifty five Catsey Morning Show
on Tuesdays at eight thirty. My friend Daniel Davis is
always a pleasure. See you next week. I'm looking forward
to it. It's day forty right now. I'm looking forward
to OHC. We're gonna learn about corectal cancer, a serious problem.
Young people are coming down with cancer diagnosis. Corectal cancer

(02:32:47):
will be hearing from OHC on that in the next segment. Sure,
hope you can stick around. It's of when my doctors
come in the fifty five Carsy Morning Show, OHC, the
cancer Specialists, my cancer doctors from my lemphoma. Thank God
I don't have coorectal cancer, but apparently I may very
well be able to get it in studio. One of
the awesome doctors at OHC, doctor Mark Johns, who is

(02:33:09):
a medical oncologist and hematologist who treats solid tumors, including
corectal cancer, through standard and ground baking treatment options offered
at OHC, including clinical trials which we'll probably hear about
this morning. He's the principal investigator for gastro intestinal, prostate
and genito urinary clinical trials at OHC. Strongly believes in
the power providing our patients with the latest revolutionary therapies available.

(02:33:32):
That's a theme at OHC, and I've gotten wonderful treatment there.
Welcome to the studio. It's a pleasure to have you
in here, doctor John's.

Speaker 18 (02:33:38):
Thanks for having me all right.

Speaker 5 (02:33:40):
Why are we seeing more corectal cancer in younger people?
And I had asked you off air and you told
me to at least bring it up on air. So
here I am, is it possible that it's the vast
amount of ultra process fast foods? And I was telling
you about when I was a kid. You can easily
draw a contrast between what it was like in nineteen
seventy five and here we are in twenty twenty five.
I had like nine thousand more fast food alternatives and

(02:34:03):
it's all ultra processed. Is that part of it?

Speaker 18 (02:34:06):
So that's a great question. Every year you ask me,
and every year we say, it's something in the microbiome,
it's something in the diet, it's something in our lifestyle,
and we can never really put our finger on it,
and we still don't quite know the answer. But I
did find something interesting and something I wanted to share
with you. There was a study that was presented at
ASCO got a standing ovation and then was published in

(02:34:29):
the New England Journal of Medicine this summer, and I
thought i'd share it with you. It's called the Challenge Study.
And what the investigators in the Challenge Study showed is
they took patients with the high risk colon cancer, so
colon cancer that had spread to the lymphodes already primarily,
and everybody had surgery. Everybody had standard of care second

(02:34:52):
generation adgumate chemotherapy, what we call full fox chemotherapy. Half
the patients they got edgmate educational materials like a pamphlet
said here you should leave lead a healthy lifestyle. The
other half they were randomized to supervised activities, so an
exercise regimen, and they followed these patients closely. The patients

(02:35:14):
that exercised they lived longer. And they didn't live longer
because they had fewer strokes and fewer heart attacks. They
live longer because they had better cancer outcomes. So the
cancer actually showed back up in the liver less often.

Speaker 5 (02:35:30):
Okay, this is the metastasize. I mean, you haven't the
colon and they be able to cut that out. But
if it metastasized, is going everywhere, right.

Speaker 18 (02:35:40):
So that's the first place that typically goes to is
the liver. And a major riskpector for having colon cancer
is having had it in the past. These patients developed
fewer second colon cancers. The men that got less prostate cancer,
the women they got less breast cancer. How much less? Okay? Yeah,
so when you go back with first generation chemotherapy five

(02:36:03):
year disease free survival, so the chance of being alive
without your cancer back. It was about sixty seven percent
with first generation chemo, and it was a revolution when
we changed to the second generation called Fullfox seventy three percent.
Now by adding exercise, the group that just got the pamphlet,

(02:36:24):
they got the same seventy three percent five year disease
free survival with exercise eighty percent. What that means is
that exercise added more to disease free survival than did
the last major evolution of our actuate.

Speaker 1 (02:36:39):
Chemo, theary Red. That's amazing.

Speaker 18 (02:36:42):
If it was a drug, it would be FD approved.
Everyone needs to get back out there and they need
to start exercising. I think that's part of what's changing.
We've become sedentary entiary.

Speaker 5 (02:36:52):
So yeah, ultra process food bad and maybe one of
the reasons you have col rectal cancer increasing. But obviously
we are so much more sedentary given the computer screen
existence that we all have.

Speaker 18 (02:37:05):
Absolutely, and so what they showed here is they sought
to increase activity by what's called ten met hours per week.
A met hour is the amount of energy you burn
just sitting in a chair completely unstimulated for an hour
to do that. It's just a twenty minute brisk walk
every day.

Speaker 5 (02:37:26):
And you know what, doctor, As I sit here today
and I feel embarrassed because I'm that lazy guy, and
I'm feeling a little concerned about going home today because
my wife regularly listens to the morning show, and I
know I'm going to hear your words to may back
to me when I get home today.

Speaker 1 (02:37:44):
Thank her for a walk. I know, I know, I know,
I know. Okay, But it is.

Speaker 5 (02:37:50):
The leading cause of all cancer deaths in men under
fifty and the second leading cause for women of all
cancer deaths. It's called recro cancer.

Speaker 1 (02:37:59):
Now absolutely all right, all important?

Speaker 5 (02:38:03):
What symptoms should I would think everyone, but now younger
adults be watching for sure.

Speaker 18 (02:38:09):
We talk about blood in the stool, a change in
the caliber of the stool, abdominal pain, weakness, and fatigue
from anemia. Kind of. The important thing to keep in
mind is that you can be completely asymptomatic and have
colon cancer. And that's why screening is so important.

Speaker 5 (02:38:26):
Okay, and at what well? Younger people are now getting
colorectal cancer at a much younger age. So when does
the screening kick in because it used to be what
forty five or fifty.

Speaker 18 (02:38:36):
It used to be fifty and now we've dropped it
down to forty five years of age. So the incidence
of colon cancer is about ten per hundred thousand in
the thirties. It's more than doubles by the late forties,
so between forty five and fifty it's probably about twenty
five per one hundred thousand, and it keeps going up
from there.

Speaker 5 (02:38:56):
And how often does one need the screening? I know,
mimography is represented, are expected on a certain certain regularity.
So getting the colonoscopy how often?

Speaker 18 (02:39:07):
Sure colonoscopy is every ten years. If you choose to
do colo guard, that's every three years. If you use
the garden shield, that's also every three years.

Speaker 5 (02:39:22):
In your experience, given your level of expertise as a
cancer specialist, is ten years often enough. How long will
it take for a cancer to actually develop? I mean,
you know, they find a poll up when they're doing
your colonoscopy and they take that out and that could
turn into a cancer. But I mean, can it pop

(02:39:42):
up very quickly right after that aggressively?

Speaker 1 (02:39:44):
I mean it can.

Speaker 18 (02:39:46):
But what tends to happen is that if they don't
find anything, they'll tell you ten years. And if your
gasterindroologist finds polyps, and they'll bring you back more quickly.
If you have an inherited cancer syndrome like hnpcs Z
or the Lynch syndrome, it's called a non polyposis syndrome
because apparently the mucosa goes from normal to invasive cancer

(02:40:08):
very quickly, and so we want to find those people
through genetic testing, and then we do colonoscopy more frequently,
like every one to two years in those patients.

Speaker 5 (02:40:17):
Okay, give them my lymphoma. I regularly seeing one of
the OHC doctors, and I get my blood screen several
times a year, and I get ZZ scans and so
they're really right on top of it. But in terms
of blood screening, is that a way of identifying Is
there any blood work that can be done that might
suggest that you need a colonoscopy or that it could
be colorectal cancer?

Speaker 7 (02:40:36):
H Yeah.

Speaker 18 (02:40:37):
So there's the garden Shield, which is a self free
DNA assay Okay, and it is FDA approved for screening
for colon cancer. Has diminished sensitivity for detecting advanced pre
cancerous polyps. But if you have established invasive cancer, it's
pretty good at detecting that it's also plagued just like

(02:40:58):
colo guard with some degree of false positives.

Speaker 5 (02:41:01):
All right, now, pivoting back to young people, We've already
talked about regular exercise. So that's on the short list
to prevent colorectal cancer. What else is on the short list?

Speaker 18 (02:41:14):
Avoid cigarettes. Cigarettes increase the risk of colon cancer by
fifty percent. Heavy alcohol increases the risk of colon cancer
by thirty percent, process meets by twenty percent, Excess red
meats by ten percent. So eat a diet high end fiber.
Avoid those, get your screening colonoscopy.

Speaker 1 (02:41:34):
And alcohol is one of the things that only it
seems to me, and it only recently started being a
focus of cancer when I was young growing up. And
you know, I m'd say, only within the last ten
years have I read that excessive alcohol comes and consumption
can cause cancer.

Speaker 11 (02:41:48):
Right.

Speaker 18 (02:41:48):
We used to say, you know, a glass of wine
was okay. Now we've really kind of curtailed that.

Speaker 5 (02:41:53):
All right, knowing your family history, I see, is is
there genetic test that OHC offers that helps you you
provide that foundation Oh, we have one we just talked about.

Speaker 18 (02:42:03):
Yes, yes, so we have genetic testing at OHC. You
do not have to have been diagnosed personally with colon
cancer or any cancer to be tested. You would just
simply give us a call at seven five to one,
two two seven three or eight eight eight six four
nine forty eight hundred, or visit our website at ohcare
dot com and we can get you in and get

(02:42:24):
you tested.

Speaker 5 (02:42:24):
All right, I usually end on it, and so I'll
end on it today, Doctor John's clinical trials. It's usually
where the cutting edge therapies are being offered. I know
you always offer them at OHC. How about for colorectal cancer?

Speaker 7 (02:42:36):
Oh?

Speaker 18 (02:42:36):
Absolutely. We talked about a tumor vaccine last year that
trials closed and we're waiting to see if that was
of any benefit. This year, we have a randomized face
two trial of a drug called to listit to zam
app a dize taken, which is a mouthful, Okay, what
it is. It's an antibody drug conjugate. It's an antibody

(02:42:56):
directed towards something called c MET that's present on the
surface of advanced colon cancer cells and it brings the
chemote therapy right to the colon cancer cell, and we're
looking at adding it to standard of care first signed
therapy for stage four colon cancer. So if you or
a loved one has been diagnosed with colon cancer that

(02:43:17):
has spread audifent colon into other parts of your body
and you haven't yet received treatment, we'd love.

Speaker 1 (02:43:22):
To hear from you. So it acts kind of like
a magnet.

Speaker 18 (02:43:24):
Yeah, absolutely, we have other drugs like that. This drug
is already has an accelerated approval actually a drug similar
in non small cell lung cancer, and we're hoping it
revolutionizes colon cancer the same way.

Speaker 5 (02:43:36):
Always on the cutting edge of things cancer related. OHC
foindal online at ohcare dot com. The number is eight
eight eight six eight hundred for a first or second opinion,
eight eight eight sixty eight hundred, Doctor Mark John's thank
you for all the valuable information and keeping this in
the front of our minds. And we'll now have to
start thinking about our young people. But diet and exercise

(02:43:57):
apparently are real key.

Speaker 1 (02:43:58):
Absolutely

Brian Thomas News

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