Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
At fifty five KRC the talk stage, Happy Tuesday, into
the ceasefires and dusting it off. Wow, what year was
(00:26):
that anyhow? Brian Thomas, sorry here, glad to be a
little bit better mood than yesterday's. Apologies for my lamenting yesterday. Sorry,
I had apologized to my wife for that one. Anyway,
Today's a different day. I got a little bit brighter,
more sparkly feeling in my head this morning and ready
to hit the ground. Run and guests beginning seven thirty
here in the fifty five RC Morning Show. It's Tuesday,
Tom Zawastowski. People can mention dot org it is Primary
(00:48):
day Ohio and Indiana. Anyway, we got two more weeks
and commas massy ads. It would be crazy. Maybe I
should just not watch a Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy
before going to bed Lord Almighty, lots and lots and
lots of money being thrown to that particular race. Anyhow,
Primary day it is, and we have the Supreme Court
(01:09):
ruling on racial jeremanning Jerrymander. Can we talking about that
with Tom Zawastowski and what that might mean? Well, you
can't discriminate, you can't use race. Well, you can't just
leave the sentence there. You can't use race to fill
in the blank. Isn't it inherently races to decide a
(01:30):
jurisdiction or a district based upon race? In all this
argument about Jerrymanning predicated on the idea that black people,
well notably a obviously a minority population, that they're seeking
to preserve their ability to control their own destiny by
creating this weird looking space of land because everybody presumes
that are all going to vote Democrat? Is that what
(01:52):
it's all about? That is that an unfair presumption. Isn't
it even a sort of perhaps races to say that
Democrats always vote black people always vote Democrat. It's insulting
to Republican black people. It's an insult to independent black
people like my friend Christopher Smith, and I should say
our friend collectively as a friend of the community. Christopher
(02:12):
is so anyway. But we'll get the details and talk
about that with Tom Saustafsi coming up at seven thirty
five by the Inside Scoop with Bright Barton. News Today,
Economics editor John Carney returned to the fifty five KRSE
Morning Show. We'll talk about factory orders have increased as
a consequence of artificial intelligence. Stocks are surging sometimes and
(02:32):
more Trump tariffs. Of course, the Daniel Davis deep died
with the latest on I ron and it does appear
as though the ceasefire might be over. I don't know
how you start launching missiles and bombs at each other
and blowing things up and still can call it a ceasefire.
In fact, we had a couple of US Navy destroyers
going through the Strait of Horne moves. This today came
under Ronnie and fire barrage of small boats, missiles and
(02:55):
drones all at once a quarter reports. USS Truxton and
USS Mason, backed by fighter aircraft A sixty four patche
helicopters responded to the challenge and they called it a
substantial barrage. Neither of the destroyers, at least as the
reporting this morning was impacted. And I know there was
back and forth yesterday. The Iranians claimed they hit two
(03:16):
missile strikes on one of our ships, and Sencom came
out and said, no, that's a lie. All right, We
said we blew up six or seven little boats, and
the Rudians said, no, that didn't happen. That's a lie
who knows what's right in the fog of war. Daniel
Davis on that and a whole lot more coming up
at eight thirty. So I'm not quite sure what the
(03:37):
situation is with regard to the seasfire. Some are saying
it's over. Some are suggesting, like the editorial board of
The Wall Street Journey, we need to start hitting them
really hard. Let's talk about that. If you want to
talk about that or something else, feel free to give
you a call five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty five,
eight hundred and eighty two to three Taco pound five
fifty on eight and T phones, and don't forget fifty
five KRSE dot com or iheard media app where you can. Yes,
(03:58):
there he is right there, smiling Christopher Smithman with the
episode one thirty seven of the smith Event. The Dems
think you are stupid. That's what, Christopher, That's what. Judge
Strecker's perception of Christopher's overall three segment commentary boils down
to I'll let you listen to it yourself. I enjoy
the hearing from him, and you know I got it.
(04:19):
I just was scratching my head over so many stories
in the news. This morning, but apologizing to Trump's would
be assassin. You have a federal judge, a federal judge,
magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui, presiding over this Cole Alluen, this
nutcase who charged the ballroom with the White House correspondents
then and tried to kill Trump and everybody else that
(04:39):
was in the room, basically boiled down. I think he
was looking for anybody he could kill. He and his ideology,
his personal feeling. These are bad people, so he's gonna
get his way. Mmmm. Another one added to the list
of ever growing nut jobs, probably hiding in a basement
somewhere in an echo chamber where you know what, if
I do this, I'm gonna have a lot of people
(05:00):
praising me, kind of like Mangione. Oh, people will love
me if I'm the one that succeeds in killing Donald
Trump or any of his administration, I'll be a hero
from behind bars. Yeah, enjoy it. This is really I
think all that this boils down to that. You know
that Los Angeles fire, the one that they arrested a
(05:20):
guy that Jonathan Riddender necked. Anyway, he apparently they did
fifty billion dollars of damage. He's been accused of lighting
one of the wildfires out in Los Angeles. You remember
those right Pacific Palisades neighborhood. He started that thing, fifty
billion dollars that he caused twelve people dead. He's was
(05:45):
a fan of this, this Mangione guy that killed Brian Thompson,
the CEO of United Healthcare. Why because well, United Healthcare evil.
Somebody's got to pay for the crimes of denying people healthcare.
So Mangioni decides to blow his brains out. Now he's
a hero to some some the vast majority of us
(06:05):
think is a crazy nut job. But if you are
somewhat deranged, perhaps a bit Looney Tunes bent, or just
have been brainwashed because you're in an echo chamber where
left wing activism and Marxism are all the rage and violence,
And look at all the acts of violence done by
(06:26):
the left wingers. Can we finally come to the conclusion
of understanding that is not a bunch of crazy clan
people out in the world that are causing all the
problems and engaging in violence. Did the Klan shut down
all the cities with the Black Lives Matter protest, with
the antifough protests, with the you know, oh my lord,
the anti ice protests, the attempted assassinations, go ahead. Run
(06:47):
down the list of political ideology that these various crazy
people who will commit acts of violence and property damage
in the name of their cause. Turns out it's mostly
the bunch of left wingers anyway. My conclusion. You can
feel free to disagree with me, but this is what
we're facing here. They're looking for some sort of justification
for their existence. They want to be alouded as one
(07:08):
of these heroes. I my name will be in the paper,
and I will be celebrated, and I will live in history.
I will be the guy that killed Hitler before he
was able to commit massive genocide. Huh. Well, if you call,
as we've all noted by now, you call Trump an
evil nazi, right wing murderer, pedophile. Going down the list
(07:30):
of insults and people hurl at Donald Trump white supremacist
domestic terrorists. That from a Tennessee State representative the other day. Yeah,
Tennessee State Rep. Justin Pearson talking about the jerrymandering, just
accused Donald Trump of being, yes, a white supremacist domestic terrorists. Okay,
there's another one. All of these noted notables, people of importance,
(07:54):
people we have elected the high office are calling Donald
Trump a Nazi and a pedophile, and on and on.
I need to be the one to get rid of them,
and I'll be a hero among my people. I think
that's what this boils down to in a social media ward,
and we find ourselves that actually works because you know,
you rewind, before social media, the word had to get out,
(08:14):
Newspapers had to report it, and some certain level of
judicial eth or rather journalistic ethics. Sometimes they wouldn't be
West celebrating the guy, maybe not naming the person's name.
There's a little bit more integrity out there. You don't
want to celebrate a mass murderer. But you had to
read a paper to find out. You had to watch
the evening news. You had three choices, right ABA, ABC,
(08:38):
NBC and CBS, unless you watch the weekend news McNeil
layer News report for people old enough to remember that.
But seriously, this stuff gets telegraphed out of the world.
People are sitting in their isolated echo chambers. People are
being you know, convinced that this is all appropriate. Violence
against evil people is justified, they conclude, And then you
(09:02):
get nutcases run around trying to go after the president
of the United States of America. And now we go
back to the judge fariqu fascinated and disturbed. He said
he was by Allen's this Cole Allen, thirty one nutcase
his treatment in jail. Of course, he was placed on
suicide watch when he was first put into prison. Why well,
(09:23):
his little manifesto and his willingness to enter a room
filled with armed Secret Service agents while himself being armed,
suggests maybe he had a well, he anticipated his own demise.
I think it's safe to say if you're willing to
rush into a room and try to kill somebody, and
you know the rooms filled with armed people, you're gonna die,
or at least she probably would think about that. And
(09:45):
I do believe everyone thought he did. That's why you
put him on suicide watch. This is normal protocol. He
was allegedly denied a copy of the Bible. Aw really,
is that a big deal? Are you entitled to any
form of literature specific your request literature when you enter
into a jail. I'm not familiar with jail protocol, but
(10:08):
you know, maybe if he asked for a copy of
a pornographic magazine Will People be All up in Arms?
He was denied a copy of that, And no, I'm
not drawing parallels between pornography and the Bible. You understand
my point. I presume this judge for Rocky Anyway, started
with a prosecutor, a woman named joyce Lyn Valentine, pointed
out that since Allan told investigators he did not expect
(10:31):
to survive, he could be a danger to himself. And
can you imagine if he did he hung himself in
prison a lah Epstein and he was not on suicide
Watch the outrage. Oh my god. They kept they didn't
keep an eye on him. You know, the you can't
win in something like this. But it's the judge's conduct
that's got me puzzled. The judge wasn't convinced by the
(10:52):
argument advanced by the prosecutor, and he then drew comparisons
between Allen and the January sixth defend that were arrested
on Capitol Hill. Scratching my head, what even wrote wtf
next to this judge said to me, it's extremely disturbing
that he was putting five point restraints a person with
no criminal history. It's troubling. I never heard of one
(11:15):
January sixth defendant who was putting a five point restrainer
in a safe cell. If the only way to keep
him safe is the most putative thing, that's a problem. Well,
the January sixth protesters weren't on a suicide mission to
kill a bunch of people. They weren't running around with firearms.
In fact, they didn't squeeze off any rounds. I think
Babbitt was the only one that was victim of around
(11:37):
the rounds fired by a Capitol police officer who was
never prosecuted for killing that woman in spite of the
fact that he did not have any fear of eminent
apprehension of grievous bodily harm or death. Sorry, and then
he admonished the jail. They're gonna let me know by
(11:58):
tomorrow morning what's going on with your house situation. And
if I'm not, I'm going to have more questions for them.
The judge said to the defendant, we should be able
to get you into the medium portion of the jail
with windows all wonderful, he said, legal visits. Ask for
legal visits. Do not accept that these things are acceptable.
(12:19):
We will get you the Bible if we can get
some vegan food. We can get you a bible, we
can make sure you're not in five point restraints. Aw
can you get them a safe space? Two and a
cookie and a glass of milk? America where we now
(12:43):
have taxpayer funded water parks announcing a Muslim only day.
It's another disturbing trend going on in this country. Five eighteen.
Right now, I fifty five kc detalk station five one
seven nine fifty five hundred eight hundred eight two three
talk to theos right now. See what Gary's got this
morning to amster. Gary, welcome back to the show, my friend, I.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
Want my cup of warm oval team.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
How's that?
Speaker 3 (13:08):
There?
Speaker 4 (13:08):
You go?
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Add that to the list. Try to commit go ahead,
try to kill the president. Gary, get locked up in
prison and just give them a list of demands right
on top of the Bible, follow by your oval teene,
warm milk and a cookie and anything else come up
the Golden list.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Meanwhile, meanwhile, they locked up January six people in solitary
confinements for up to two years because of COVID. Yeah,
nobody said squat covid anyhow, Anyhow, medicaid millions. There's an
excellent article about Ohio and medicaid millionaires, they're calling it,
(13:44):
and it's Ben Shapiro, and they're uncovering at least sixty
six million dollars in one company, which ninety four shell
companies alone, And they're saying this is almost as big,
if not bigger than Minnesota fraud billions of dollars over
the last year. False billing, false faith services, providing false
(14:08):
addresses names, mostly to the migrant community, but not always.
It's just amazing all this under the wines a watchful eye.
But isn't Terry yost Ohio auditor still? You know, all
the auditors are Republicans, and along with everybody, you know,
(14:32):
it's Republican controlled and they're letting it go. They most
of these people, because it's happening up in Columbus, mostly
they know this stuff is going on. They do, and
they're too busy playing golf and patting each other on
the back while they're collecting their checks.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
Well, yeah, these remember these are large federal government programs.
You know, it's easy for them to overlook them. Oh
they're so big, they can't we can't get all the
fraudways to have used out of them. That's nonsense, especially
with modern technology that that see that to me that
the excuse no longer no longer applies. You know, in
a system where you've got to go through paper claims
and then to audit them would require going through physical
copies of something or going through some old computer program
(15:15):
it's one thing. But you got the modern artificial intelligence
back programming and data sorting and all of that. It's
been around for such a long time. I think that
excuse has gone the way that DOTO quite honestly.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Yeah, well that's the bigger government gets, the more corruptions
are going to be. Yeah, so on, don't we have
a program to pair back those programs and just that
you know, make people more responsible for their own doing.
That's what DOGE was supposed to be all about, wasn't
it pair back the programs where the money goes out
(15:46):
to all of these various organizations and you know, there
are non government organization problems, and we've been we find
out that all these these organizations out in the world
are being funded by our taxpayer dollars whatever the hell
they're doing with it. And then you move over to
federal programs, where the vault of claims into any given
program is so huge. There's so much opportunity for people
to builk the system. That's where our elected officials are
(16:09):
supposed to come in and put the brakes on that
or prevent it from happening at the outset, which is
exactly where all the focus should be. Going back to
tech Friday's day of Hatter, what does he say. They
don't care software programs about security first. What they want
to do is get their gizmo out into the world
and start making money on it and worry about security
later after someone finds out there's been a major breach.
That's exactly what the federal programs are. There's not enough
(16:31):
stoppage or there's not enough prevention up front. That certainly
that's where the efforts should be evolved. I think another
thing is they don't want it to stop because they're
getting they're getting the.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Benefit in Minnesota. See Minnesota, See Minneapolis. That's exactly right.
Money goes out of the federal coffers into the hands
of the people ripping us all collectively off, and that
money tends to work itself back into the conference of
the politicians who created the system in the first place.
(17:05):
At least what's leftover after the individual's ripping us off,
have sent the money back home to whatever country of
origin they came from. Five to twenty six. Right now,
if you FI have KC the talk station local stories,
more phone calls are always welcoming right back fifty five KRC.
Imagine an Olympics where doping is not only going back
to the article that he just referred to, Yeah, right
there on top, it's a daily Wire article which requires
(17:26):
you to have to create an account. I don't have one,
but right there on top in Ohio, one address for
these these fraudulent companies, well, one address listed for ninety
four companies. Apparently the building had no windows, it was
(17:48):
completely empty, and you, the American taxpayer, were built for
sixty six million dollars right here in Ohio. Uh huh,
fake billing, fake services, and right there's an opportunity like, hm,
why don't we check how many facilities could possibly be
at one address? That seems to be a simple ask
(18:09):
right up front, Tom, welcome to the Morning Show, and
a very happy Tuesday to you.
Speaker 5 (18:14):
Good morning. You know when you first mentioned this morning
about Smitherman's vent and how Joe labeled this, he said,
Democrats think you're stupid, and my immediate reaction was, well,
maybe not stupid, but ignorant. And then I thought, well,
let me look up what's stupid? Definition is stupid? No,
(18:35):
it's stupid. It's definitely stupid, tending tending to make poor decisions.
I mean, it's exactly, it's exactly not only what they
think voters are, it's exactly what voters prove they are
over and over again. And then you mentioned this thing
(18:55):
just now about the one address for all these things.
If you're not, you're either in on it, if you're
not trying to do something about that. If that doesn't
send up a red flag to you and make you
want to go, let's check this out. You're either in
on it or you are stupid. It's one or the other.
It can't be. Oh, I thought that was okay. No, No,
(19:16):
there's no way you can think that's okay.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
There's no way you.
Speaker 5 (19:19):
Can stop and look at the things that are going on.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
And I don't know.
Speaker 5 (19:22):
That's fine. We don't want to We don't want to
stop that because we don't want to appear to be
heartless or anything. Now you're being stupid and ridiculous as
you allow this stuff to continue to go on.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
Right, Well, especially if it's one thing, if you choose
tom to ignore politics, ignore what's going on in the world.
But the folks that we're talking about being stupid are
the people who are supposed to be responsible with our
taxpayer dollars, the people that are in charge of going
after fraud, waste, and abuse in any given realm of government.
(19:53):
They just ignore it. Yeah, or like in Minnesota or
minneapolists encourage you egg it on for their own personal
benefit apparently. So that's the yeah, I was joking about.
Speaker 5 (20:07):
You're either on it or you're stupid. And the other
people that let it, let it go on, or that
continue to vote for the people that let it go on,
they're the ones that are stupid. So that's the way.
So don't be stupid.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Don't vote Democrats, or in the case of Ohio, I guess,
don't vote Republican either. You know, with all this fraud
in Ohio where the Ohio State are the elected officials
and the like the treasurer, the auditor, Secretary of state,
possible for businesses. I imagine the ninety gazillion businesses that
(20:44):
were located in getting these medicaid dollars. Did they have
to start at the Secretary of State and open up
their business there? Questions abound. Now here's here's something. This
is very frightening to me. We've got a local story here,
investigation underway. A dozen gunshots fired. This in Butler County.
Happened on Sunday. You may have heard of a Granada
(21:04):
Court corner of Cordoba Drive in Liberty Township. That's a
nice neighborhood. Apparently houses start at five hundred and seventy
five thousand dollars in that neighborhood. According to Jennifer Edwards
Baker over at Fox nineteen, I'll take her to word.
I saw pictures of the house. It's a rental house. Basically,
someone rented the home a giant party. After prom party occurred,
(21:25):
hundreds or at least on one hundred and fifty or
so teenagers and others showed up, and of course cops recalled, noise,
complaints were made, and then the gunfire started. Great Sergeant
Joe Banks confirmed all this. Someone inside a car fired
in the direction of the home. This rental home after
the homeowner showed up because someone had got in touch
with the homeowner who rented this property to the young people,
(21:48):
and he came over to try to stop the thing,
stop it from going on. Oh, you have no idea
what's going on in there? He got a bullet hole
in one of the windows in the front yard. Short
term rental is operating in spot of the fact that
the township banned the short term rentals. Last year. Deputy
showed up the house twice, as I mentioned, once for
the noise complaint. They left and it had to come
(22:09):
back when the gunfire started, and lots of children in
the neighborhood and all the parents in the in the
in the residence neighborhood of course freaked out about this.
Can I ask an out loud question, does anybody think
this is a good idea renting homes short term? Like
one day, you spend a lot of money acquiring your home,
you settle down, and you have chosen to live in
(22:30):
a jurisdiction that is zoned residential. I would argue the
home is being used for commercial purposes. It is a
business being rented out to random people in and every day.
You have no idea what's going to be in your
in the next door neighbor's house. Any given day you
come home, and yes, they might use the homes rental
(22:51):
for a big party. Unruly, crazy teenagers running around drinking.
Oh that happened, Fortunately nobody was injured injured, A big
musk mess was left, liquor bottles and cans all over
the front lawn. That someone's shoes abandoned by people who
were fleeing bullets. She right, somebody found a cell phone
and sunglasses in the yard. Liberty Township began banning residential
(23:15):
rentals under thirty days last year. Residents and township trustee
Tom Farrell, quoted in this say that this one continues
to be an issue, as well as another house next
door owned and operated by the same company. Apparently they
had a problem back in twenty twenty four. Photos showed
(23:36):
the entire subdivision full of vehicles for some wedding party.
I guess that happened. Their vehicles completely blocked the neighborhood,
and it's reported here Fox nineteen people were sleeping on
the front lawn all night and trash was left all
over the street. Would you abide now? Being the little
libertarian that I am, I believe people should have some
(23:57):
measure of freedom over the control and use of their
own property. But I suppose you have. If you lack ethics, morals,
and values, and you don't care about the neighborhood that
your home is in, maybe because you're never there, you'd
you just put the money in your pocket and you
let your neighborhood go to hell. I can't. I can't
manage that, honestly, Jeff, you're next. If you don't mind
(24:19):
holding for a moment out of time in the segment,
it's time for you to mention cover since I'll be
talking to John. Did they record this? Just if I
have forty two fifty five Carcy talk station, you're gonna
go to the phones. Got Jeff on the line five
one three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred
D two three talk if you'd like to join in
the fund. Jeff, thanks for calling this morning, Happy Tuesday.
Speaker 6 (24:38):
And a happy Tuesday, Brian. I'm heading to the polls.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Good for you. Maybe you ought to be first, maybe
first first in line there, Jeff, as early as it is.
Speaker 6 (24:51):
There's something about voting in person. It makes makes me
feel like a proud American.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
Yeah, I'm with you one hundred percent on that, Jeff. I'
I maybe voted once, but I don't think I did.
I have early voted, but I've always done it in
person myself, Jeff, and I don't find it to be
problematic at all. It's pretty damn easy, isn't it.
Speaker 6 (25:12):
Yes, sir, Yes, sir, we have an interesting choice of
candidates on the Supreme Court ballot.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
Yeah. My wife and I were looking at that one yesterday.
What you're oh, you tell me, Jeff, I'm not going
to tell people what to do.
Speaker 5 (25:33):
Well not.
Speaker 6 (25:35):
I'm still on the fence about the gal is running.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
I think there are two, aren't there.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
Well maybe if.
Speaker 1 (25:45):
You're getting ready to go, I'm not. I'm not picking
on you, Jeff, but this is illustration my point. You're
getting ready to go vote and you don't even know
who is running for Supreme Court justice that you're going
to be voting on. So go ahead, and who is
running for Supreme Court in the state of Ohio and
only twenty six primary and then you get your choices.
The'll all be right there and you can read their
backgrounds and analyze what they have to say. A couple
(26:06):
of them. My wife and I immediately wrote off, so.
Speaker 6 (26:09):
Yes, same same, same here exactly. I already know. I
already know who I'm voting for, and it's it's it's
a gentleman.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
So yeah, I know. Thanks thanks Kevin. Good Get in line, man,
get in line again. I'm not meaning to pick on you.
Decide before you go print the ballot out at home
like my wife and I did. The hell I just
spilled my coffee. Great, let's get to this deck is stupid. Apologies, folks.
(26:42):
Memphis man accused of biting an infant on the face
and then running through multiple locations while claiming his family
was trying to kill him cuckoo for Coca puffs. He
is Larry L. Stark, thirty four, charge of domestic assault
After this incident, which unfolded across several locations, any in
a restaurant in North Hollywood. Officers responded to the call
(27:03):
at Memphis Wings one am, where they found Stark inside
the building screaming and panicking while holding the child. Stark
ran through the area with the infant and asked for helps,
at times shouting that his family indeed was trying to
kill him before he got there. He was seen at
multiple locations, including a couple of gas stations. Witnesses said
he was carrying the infant, be and behaving erratically, ran
(27:24):
south along North Hollywood Street toward the restaurant. Inside there,
Stark laid down on the kitchen floor with the infant,
continuing to shout for help. They attempted so people attempted
to intervene after noticing the child appeared to be in distress.
So the infants was being squeezed and began and began
turning blue. Was witness told police that when Stark was
(27:46):
asked what was wrong, quote, my family is trying to
kill me clothes quote. Witnesses reported Stark bit the child
on the right side of the face. They were eventually
able to remove the infant from his custody and fled
the and fled the business before calling police. Video shows
Stark inside the restaurant and several people held the door
shut to prevent him from leaving the building. Seeing the
(28:09):
baby face really broke my heart, said one witness. I
can't even sleep thinking about that baby. Infant taken to
the hospital with facial injuries listed in non critical condition. Thankfully.
Mother told officers that earlier in the night, Stark had
pushed her out of a moving vehicle while they were
driving dark taking into custody. The incident remains under investigation,
(28:33):
being held without bond because it hadn't yet. He hadn't
been in court yet at the time the reporting. There
you go, man go aheadn't given an award cars the
talk station five fifty one. I could about KRCE talk
station Happy Tuesday. It's Ohio and Indiana primary day. If
you didn't get the memo Tom z Awastowski, we the
(28:54):
people convention seven thirty on the Supreme Court ruling on
racial Jerrymanning. Plus he'll be talking about the primary day. Well,
maybe we'll get him to say who's going to vote
for Supreme Court justice? Anyway? Your child? Your options are
Andrew King, Joel Lanziger, Ron Lewis, and Colleen O'Donnell. Going
back to the last caller and going back to the
stack of stupid married couple now facing felony charges. They
(29:16):
admitted to burning a drone in their fire pit after
finding it in their property. On their property, why are
you doing? Christopher Paula, forty years old, was flying a
DJI Mini three Pro drone eleven thirty at night, lost
communication while was flying over the Point Saint Lucci neighborhood
(29:40):
n courd to the police, was programmed to automatically return
to its home point when connection was lost. Yet instead
of flying back to Paula's residence, the drone touched down
in the backyard of a house owned by Sandra Marcelius.
She bought the property in twenty sixteen lives there with
her husband, who I can't pronounce his first name, his
last name Danie as though anyway a husband and wife there.
(30:01):
Using a GPS tracking figure, Paula figured out the drones
last known position in a nearby backyard. Knocked on the door.
Woman's voice came through the ring doorbell camera said you
don't have a f wording drone anymore, sir? Close? Quote
what yeah? What's with that? He called. Police subsequently spoke
with the with Marcellus about the drone incursion. After reportedly
(30:25):
admitting that she and Daniels burned the drone, She said
the couple has experienced ongoing issues with drones flying over
the property. Flights prompted her to recently post on the
Ring Neighborhood app about her concerns about the drones. Marcellos
told police he was outside undressed when one drone flew
over her property week ago. Upon discovering the foreign object
(30:47):
with the camera in the yard, Marcellos stated that they
burned the drone in their fire pit. Due to the destruction,
Marcelis and Danis arrested for criminal mischief charged classified as
a FIES since the value of the damage errone exceeded
one thousand dollars. I don't know some part of me.
What's the fied fault that isn't possession nine tenths of
(31:08):
the law. Someone flies something into your yard, it crashes there,
do you have an obligation to keep it? It'sking for
a friend, Okay, I can't even read that. One Air
Force Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets conducting training exercises out
(31:30):
of an air base north of Helsinki seven thirty in
the morning local time. Four planes following a flight pattern
that trace the shape of Genitalia in the air flight pattern.
Look at the picture. This according to a finished tabloid
captured live on the publicly viewable flight tracking system flight Trader.
(31:54):
Screenshots of the crude patterns quickly, of course, spread across
social media, because we love talking about this kind of
stuff on social media, right finished Airforce confirmed the outlet.
The flights were conducted by students from the Flight Reserve
Officer course and condemned the trainee pilot's behavior. Pilots swiftly
disciplined for their actions, and investigation has since been lost.
(32:15):
According to one official, the Air Force requires soldiers to
follow good manners and rules of conduct, and if those
are deviated from it will be responded to an appropriate manner.
Flights were conducted for training purposes with a designated flight
zone and did not disrupt regular flight pattern. So just
for the entertainment benefit of those who happened to be
(32:36):
watching Flight Trader right there real time when the flight
pattern is being engaged in okay, fair enough to comment
up on five point fifty five Here fifty five KCD
(32:57):
talks It is six five fast approaching six or six
Here fifty five kr KRCD talks Ftation. My name is
Brian Thomas, host of this program. Jess Chrucker is the
executive producer, and he'll be answering your phone call ifee
call in this morning, have a topic you'd like to
talk about? Five one, three, seven, four nine to fifty
five hundred and eight hundred eight two three Talk Tom
five fifty on AT and T phone. Tom z Awastowski
had seven thirty first guest on the program We the
(33:19):
People Convention dot Org. Tom's Awastowski on the final primary day.
It is Ohio and Indiana primary day. I hope you
get out and vote. Vote, I mean a whole lot
more today because hardly anyone goes out and votes in
the primary. We'll talk about the Supreme Court rolling on
racial jerrymandering with Tom at seven thirty as well Inside
Scoop with Bright Bart News Tuesday every Tuesday at eight
o five. Today the return of John Carney, the Economics Editor.
(33:40):
He says factory orders have increased because of artificial intelligence,
also stock surging some days. Uh and Trump Tariff's. Of course,
with the what appears to be the end of the
ceasefire yesterday, it's kind of a swirling question mark over
whether we are still in a ceasefire or not. I
find it hard to believe that you can still called
a ceasefire when both sides are swapping shots at each other.
(34:03):
But yeah, when we had the Iranians at least this morning,
apparently it launched a multi prong multifaceted missile attack called
it sustained attack on some US ships going through the
Strait of Horror Moves is today USS Truxton and USS Mason,
and they had some air support AH sixty four, patchy
(34:23):
helicopters and fighter aircraft to defend them, but they again
were hit by what was called a sustained barrage of
small boats, missiles and drones. Neither of the destroyers was impacted,
according to the Sencom thankfully pointed out in the last hour.
I'm sure the Irridians will say that the ships were
damaged and Sencom says, no, they weren't. We say, well,
(34:46):
you killed blew up seven mosquito boats the other day.
The Irridians said, no, we didn't. Daniel Davis Deep Dive,
he'll be on at eight thirty. Maybe break that down
and ask him about the fog of war anyhow, Also
ask them about the Project Freedom, the idea of ferrying
through boats protecting boats going through the Strait of Horror Moves.
And they've tried to do that with a few boats.
Apparently the problem is logistics haven't really quite been worked out,
(35:09):
and companies and the companies that own the boats, and
the insurance companies who ensure the boats are kind of
the impediment in all this. They say, Okay, the Americans
say they're going to be ferrying us through and giving
us safe passes through the mind straight of horror moves,
but can they really do that. So, in spite of
the offer, a lot of boats not taking them up
(35:29):
on that, although a couple of them did get through
the other day anyhow. Daniel Davis at eight thirty retired
lieutenant colonel with a deep dive five seven four nine
fifty eight two to three talk pound five fifty on
at and T phones real quick. I just you know me,
I'm a Second Amendment fan, and on record is saying,
you know, well, armed population can defend against an even
(35:52):
a very large government with an army. I joke jokingly
referred to although it's not really a joke. The Russians
in Afghanistan followed by the United States in Afghanistan, and
I realized the rebels in Afghanistan that we were fighting
probably had more than just an AK forty seven, but
not a bunch of conventional weapons in the sense of
aircraft and tanks and all of that. It was pretty
(36:13):
much a bunch of ragtag group of people Muslim fundamentalists,
and they had their ideology keeping them going, and they
fought with us for years and years and years. You
can do that. I joke about Castro in the mountains
of Cuba, and they were very limited in the amount
of arms they have, but what they do. They successfully
threw over the government there and took power in the
(36:35):
nineteen fifties. We all know the story about that one,
and there are multiple illustrations throughout history of ragtag groups
of people with arms fighting back the evil oppressors with
larger armies. President Trump noted this just yesterday talking about
the population, and be thankful that you live in a
country where you do have the ability to defend yourself.
(36:56):
For a variety of reasons, we seem to be living
in a more and more lawless society these days, and
when seconds count, the cops, if they show up, are
going to be at least minutes away. And of course,
the defund police suffered out there fewer cops to respond
respond to even more calls than we used to get. Anyway,
Trump said, yes, that you can't have an unarmed population
(37:18):
against people with AK forty seven's and stand there even
if you have two hundred and fifty thousand people standing
there because his pointing it was really a rambling message.
His point is, look, you can have an outraged, inflame population.
They want to overthrow the government. They will take to
the streets. But there's the Iranians armed to the teeth
against the population that has no ability to defend itself,
and they mow them down in the streets. Forty two
(37:39):
thousand people so far reportedly killed by the Iranian government.
These are people unhappy with their situation. You know, for
all those people that are so critical of the United
States of America, you can go out and protest all
day long. You can make your voice heard. You can
write to your elected officials, and you have the opportunity
to vote them out of office or vote them into office.
You also have the right to keeping back arms to
(38:00):
defend yourself against grievous threats of our threats against grievous
bodily harm or even death, and that would include an
oppressive government who wants to go out and murder you.
Trump said, they have to have guns, and this is interesting,
and I think they're getting some guns. He said, as
soon as they have guns, they fight as good as
(38:21):
anybody there is. But when you have people that are
armed and they have very good weapons on the other side, now,
a lot of those people fighting don't want to fight anymore.
He's talking about the army of the Iranian army, he said,
because they've been so decimated, their morale is down and
they're not getting paid. I think that was a suggestion
that an armed populace could overthrow an army that isn't
(38:42):
really willing to fight for the oppressive government. Huh. And
I think about that in the context of this, you know,
Joe Biden saying, well, how's a population going to go
after an F sixteen? We've got to have sixteen. You know,
these people when their claims about Second Amendment rights and
they're eight their ar fifteens, Well, you can do a
(39:04):
lot with that. And what of the American military? What
of the American military if the population took up arms
and went into the streets to overthrow the oppressive government
that they find themselves under. And I suppose that it's
(39:25):
which side of the political argument these people in the
streets would be advancing. Now, you know, if you think
about in the context of Marxists and leftists taking to
the street, armed to the teeth, wanted to overthrow the government. Here,
I don't know necessarily, and maybe I'm being naive about
the political ideology or at least the philosophy of the
American military, which I would think are at least patriotic.
(39:47):
They appreciate the constitutions and the freedoms that we enjoyed,
like that freedom the protest, and they will be out
defending that concept. But if once of you know, pro
constitutionalists took to the street to fight off an left
wing a US of government that wants to take away
all of your freedoms and liberties enshrined in the Constitution
as a guarantee of your inalienable rights, including the Second
(40:08):
Amendment that the American military wouldn't necessarily take orders from
whatever commander in chief is trying to advance this leftist
ideology and get rid of the Constitution. Hey wait a second,
says the American military personnel. I took an oath to
uphold the Constitution in the United States of America, and
those people in the streets are trying to get rid
of it, or alternatively, those people in the streets are
(40:34):
trying to keep it in place. And if you were
out there trying to keep the constitution and keep the
system of government we've got in place, and you felt
the need to take up arms to do it. Things
had gotten so unbelievably bad. Would our troops fire on
their own citizenry? I'm going to scratch my head over that.
(40:54):
Maybe some of them would. We know, in the woke
military under Joe Biden got a lot of people who
really aren't necessarily constitutional protectors, so a certain segment might.
But how many military active duty service members are there?
Considering the population of the United States of America roughly
three hundred and thirty million plus or minus, and there
(41:16):
are five hundred plus thousand or so guns out in
the world, how could a military that consist of in
its entirety one point three million active duty service members,
some of whom wouldn't take up arms against their own citizens.
And with one point three three million acti duty service
members dispersed all over the world, how many of them
(41:37):
are actually here in the United States of America. Certainly
they could be transferred over here to respond to some
domestic crisis, but that would take a while. And what president,
even a left wing nutcase president, once get rid of
the Constitution would start dropping bombs on any given neighborhood
with an F sixteen. That's not how wars are won.
So I don't know, but I was glad to see
Trump point this out. It's an important thing for us
(41:58):
as Americans, given our history and the fact that we
did take up arms against an oppressive government and one, huh,
another illustration of how that can be done by a
ragtag group of people who are no longer interested in
being under the thumb of oppression. Yeah, we should put
(42:18):
that one first and foremost, celebrating the two and fiftieth
anniversary of that happening here in the United States of America.
Six fifteen fifty five KRCIT Talk Station, Feel Good to
give me a call? Six twenty fifty five KRSIT Talk Station,
Happy Tuesday Tomorrow listener Lunch see it snows Lakeside Tavern.
Show up about I have eleven thirty is usually the
official start time, but really loose on that one. We'll
(42:41):
let you in whether you show up earlier or late.
So I hope to join. I hope do you get
to see you tomorrow for the fellowship that is always
fifty five car Sea listener Lunch and good morning to
my submariner friend Curbage Mike, who will be playing a
game with me tomorrow. At least that's what he told me.
So that's tomorrow. Member. Today as Ohio primary vote day,
Indiana primary vote day two of the battle with Congressman
(43:01):
Massey on the television ads. Yeah, I know can recite
those commercials verbatim. I've heard them so many times comical
it is, especially for those who pay attention to politics. Anyhow,
I don't know quite what to make of this, And
(43:24):
you know I have observed over all the decades preceding
today and understanding marx at least on the level that
I do call Marxism. The middle class is the problem
for Marxists. If you have a healthy, comfortable middle class,
then you can't achieve your goal of communism. That middle
class keeps the system alive because they are comfortable, They
(43:45):
enjoy the system of government they live in, and evil
capitalism and the bourgeois and the proletariat, et cetera. So
if you rode the middle class and you have only
a small percentage of very very wealthy people who control
the means production, here comes the class fair argument, and
you've e wroted the middle class not comfortable, but an angry,
deprived lower class. You're going to create a revolutionary circumstance.
(44:10):
That's exactly what it's all about. And so as with
that kind of thought in mind and the ever growing
reach of the taxman, I turned to this article from
yesterday Virginia Governor Abigail Spanburger, of course Democrat, She was
asked if she was open to the possibilities some additional
taxes in Virginia. During an interview with someone named Tyler
(44:35):
england Er ABC eight News local news. She was asked
if she would sign a bill creating a new tax
on streaming services and dry cleaning and some of the
things that have been floated by the government in Virginia,
and basically said pretty much, yeah. I think every idea,
as long as it's reasonable and makes some amount of sense,
(44:55):
should be entertained and should be discussed in an effort to,
in her words, bring out revenue. I also want to
recognize that many of the patrons who brought forth different
ideas about taxation to bring out revenue that's necessary. Hmm. Streaming. Now,
(45:17):
this brings from a January Democratic lawmaker. Democrat lawmaker proposed
several tax increases in new taxes like the gun and
ammunition tax going after your second Amendment. There, yeah, tax
for events and storage facilities, gym membership tax, a counseling tax,
(45:40):
and taxes for deliveries from Amazon or FedEx. Taxes on
dry cleaning, taxes on home repairs. If it's something that
involves a transaction that with an exchange of money, They
randomly run around in pickerchews what is worthy of an
additional tax or services? The typic our a tax being
(46:01):
subjected to the sales tax? When is this going to end?
And I think of the folks out there in the
world that now are having to pay more for gasoline.
Obviously temporary, but housing is a long term problem here.
It's gotten much more expensive. That is eroding the disposable
income that many people used to have. And add to
(46:23):
the list everything else that is eating away at your income.
How about your energy bill, which of course is artificially
driven up by these climate change Nazis. Oh he used
the Nazi word. Yeah, I did that as a joke. Folks,
go easy on me. Everybody else is thrown it around.
(46:46):
Maybe I can get people to join in my opposition
to the whole concept that you and I are excelling
our way into devastation and destruction. Go ahead, joining the fund,
but you know your energy eroding the price of an
automobile way? Why did your car cost so much? Huh?
Could it have anything whatsoever to do with the mandates
and edicts on the automobile industry coming from the federal government.
(47:09):
You have to have this, you have to have this.
They're pushing forward with legislation that have automatic shut your
car off if the car detects that you well, the
car believes that you are impaired in some way, shape
or form. They talked about that a week or so ago.
You know how much it's going to add to the
price of a car. It's not gonna go down. Must
have a backup camera. All cars after a certain year
(47:32):
must have a backup camera. That costs money, folks. And
you realize how much money that then costs when you
go and you find out that yours isn't working anymore,
and you take it to the service station and find
out what they're going to charge you to replace the
backup camera. I'm going four figures on that. Here and
there and here and there, and of course the income
(47:54):
tax alone, sales tax, we could go on and on,
and you know, in Stay, it's like California. The damage
has been done. People are leaving, they're fleeing as fast
as they can because of the oppressive tax situation. There
are places out in the world where you can go
where you're not going to get taxed into oblivion, places
where maybe they don't believe in Marxism or socialism are
controlling every element of your life. Florida's doing pretty well.
(48:18):
Texas got a bit of a problem here of late,
noting that the Texas funded water park was having a
Muslim's only day. Can get to that story a little
bit later. That's is frightening in a state of Texas. Yes,
you have enclaves of Muslim communities, so much so that
they were dedicated an entire day at a water park
to only Muslims. Well, they backpedaled off of it because
(48:40):
they found out it was probably unconstitutional to tell everybody
else who was not a Muslim that they couldn't show
up at the tax funded water park. But it's a
frightening reality.
Speaker 7 (48:54):
Is it not?
Speaker 1 (48:55):
The whole thing going on with the Somali community in
Minneapolis is frightening huge enclaves here in the state of Ohio.
Going back to the theft in medicaid here in Ohio,
much of which is documented to the Somali community. No,
that's not Brian Thomas being racist. Is him poorting out
where the fraud generated from? Huh? Where did you come from? Sir?
(49:18):
That you have been arrested now on medicaid fraud? Where
are you from? Legitimate question?
Speaker 5 (49:23):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (49:23):
Somalia? Question number two to all those who would say
that's a racist thing to point out the country of
origin for the criminals. Are all of the Somalians ripping
us off? The answer? No, So I guess it's not racist.
I guess we're only talking about crime r in tweet.
It's a growing concern and of course common I made yesterday.
(49:45):
Zorhan Mandami is the mayor of New York City. Check
that guy's record out. We are truly speaking of Marxism
being destroyed from within. Six twenty seven fifty five kc
DE talk station every Tuesday, Equity. There's that word local
stories or you can call me five one, three, seven
(50:05):
four nine fifty five two to three talk Now. The
project they've done a Recreation Center Railroad Trust dollars two
point six million of it for renovations. Total investment, they
say expected to reach seven point six million dollars over
a couple of years since a recreation commission, said the
architects or seeking community input on how to modernize. This
is a thirty one thousand square foot facility home to pools, fields, gym,
(50:27):
game rooms, playground, been around for a really long time.
I have no problem conceptually with this, but what's with equity?
Purvoll said The investment is part of a broader push
for equity across Cincinnati neighborhoods. Joe, can you interpret that
for me? Are they going to look at all fifty
(50:48):
two neighborhoods and equally divide whatever railroad fund projects there
are so each one has the exact same amount of
community investment? Would that be equitable? Puzzling over that word anyhow.
Man accused of threatening the life of Mahamon County judge
and his family guilty Xavior Jackson mount Airy, acted as
(51:10):
his own attorney, faced a misdemeanor charge of aggravated menacing.
This is the one that everyone was so outraged. The
grand jury should have brought back a felony because any
competent prosecutor could have brought back a felony since the
man was heard by many people witnessed him threatening the
judge's life and the judge's family's life, that would be
a felony. However, they did return a misdemeanor charge of
(51:33):
which he has been convicted since the maximum time with
time served, which means this guy is going to be
out in virtually no time. Cidy, prosecutor made some objections,
sustained by Judge Mike Peck, who said many of Jackson's
questions were irrelevant. They went back and forth. Of course,
represented himself and in fact the judge who had been
threatened testified in the case, so misdemeanor should have Even
(51:57):
the judge in the presiding over that particular case yesterday
noted that it should have been a felony. North College Hill,
a fight was caught on camera at the Burger King
of North College Hill, sparking calls for action from city
leaders please searching for several people. After the fight was
caught on Cameron posted on Facebook. Five people fighting in
the restaurant. Children were there, workers were there, children were screaming.
(52:21):
North College Hill police had to come. When officers got there,
everyone involved had already taken off. Mayor Nichol said the
city's working with police to identify those responsible. That's all
on video. Shouldn't be an issue. Not the first time
there had been issues in North College Hill. February video
of teenagers causing chaos inside the North College Hill Kroger. Oh,
that was terrible. Punk kids, unruly kids throwing cans and
(52:46):
bottles and running them up in the store. City council
Membercathley curate And released a statement calling for immediate attention,
warning that those disruptions could get worse because summertime fast approaching.
The officers already looking ahead, exploring youth programming, available grants,
changes to summer curfew. That's it, throw money at it.
(53:11):
Can you buy your way into a well attended, well
behaved children. Actually, that's a concept that the left has
floated around a lot of like pay people to not
commit crimes? How about that? Sixty six fifty five kicks
Day Primary Tuesday, Ohio and Indiana, Get out and vote, Hey,
(53:35):
give me coffeed live five one three, seven, four nine
fifty eight two three talk fifty five caresee dot com,
Get tryheart media can stream the content wherever you happen
to be and listening to the Christopher Smith event from
yesterday and let us see Muslims Only Day. Yeah, I
alluded to this a couple of times earlier, so we
get it. This is Texas, of all places. People are asking,
(53:56):
how is a taxpayer funded city own entity allowed to
discriminate against non Muslims at a public water park. Well,
obviously legally they really can't. And the organizer of the
event had a backpedal off of the Muslim's Only Day
person named Amnea Knight now backtracking on how the advertising
is being done to make it clearer that this is
a modest dress only event centered around celebrating Eed or aid,
(54:21):
depending on your pronunciation. Eid Celebration. Epic waters Park, Grand
Prairie outside Dallas, Texas describes an eighty thousand square foot
indoor water park's been opened since twenty seventeen of a
sizable cost of the taxpayer. There eighty eight million dollars
funded by a point twenty five percent sales tax that
residents approved. We ask all attendees to uphold Islamic etiquette,
(54:48):
just as they do in other mixed gender spaces, suggesting
that men and women are not necessarily going to be separated,
but encouraging all the visitors to follow a modest dress code.
And here's a weird thing, lower their gaze around members
of the opposite sex and, in the words of the flyer,
(55:08):
to help preserve a spiritually, mindful and welcoming atmosphere for all.
So keep your eyes down, guys. No scoping out to women,
even though if they wear modest dress, You're not gonna
have a whole lot to scope out, I might observe.
They also had on the advertising for the website suggestions
on what to wear, with links to what are described
(55:30):
as modestly modesty approved swimwear for women, girls, boys and toddlers.
Event fifty five bucks, a ticket sixty five bucks. If
you get food, but it will be certified halal food
and you look at the fire, You're like, wait, what.
Speaker 3 (55:50):
I mean?
Speaker 1 (55:51):
You know, the immediate reaction for a lot of people
was like, what if you if you had a pool
party that said Christians only or pick a religion of
your choice, the world would go on fire on this.
And the flyer literally says four Muslims only a lot
(56:11):
of food serve with food ticket, modest dress code, private
prayer area closed to the public, Muslims only. So you
got a real problem with the taxpayer dollars used to
be funding an an exclusively a religious event. Of course,
once that was brought to everybody's attention, thank god for
social media. From time to time they put out a
new flyer. The Muslim only was replaced with again modest
(56:35):
dress only, and the woman responsible find or the guy
behind this said she didn't mean to exclude non Muslims.
The core intention behind this event is to create a
space where individuals and families who value modest dress in
a modest environment can come together and feel comfortable enjoying
recreational space that often doesn't naturally accommodate those preferences. You know,
(56:57):
I pause, and I thought about that. You know, I'm
old enough to remember the de evolution of society I
think spurred on of all people. And I'll bring your
name up, Madonna. It's like, what, Yeah, I'm going back
to the early eighties. Nineteen eighty five, the madonnataur Dad
used to get free concert tickets, and he gave me
a couple of free tickets to the Madonna. So I
was like, what the hell, let's go I was in college.
(57:20):
I was appalled at age roughly twenty. I think it
was nineteen eighty five, which put me a twenty years old.
My buddy and I were staring there when the lights
were on and all of these pre pewbess and girls
come walking through with the short skirts and boy toy belts.
It's like with their moms bringing them in like that.
(57:42):
So there were many people I would argue within the
Christian community. I found a fence with that. What is
going on with society that we have little girls that
are advertising that they're boy toys? We got? I mean,
is there something wrong with that fundamentally? So how about
a more modest dress code? How about a space where
we don't have to worry about our children looking like
little sleeves bags. So this transcends the Muslim community in
(58:06):
some argument, But this is going back to my ultimate point.
Do you think anybody would have offered a space where
you need to dress in a certain way and exclude
everybody else who refuses to abide in a taxpayer funded space.
Speaker 5 (58:20):
No.
Speaker 1 (58:20):
Something tells me the ACLU would have run right into
court and filed a lawsuit seeking in an injunction to
prevent the event from happening, because it excludes anybody who
wants to walk around dressed with a boy toy belt on.
Just a thought, but this is America, six forty five.
Pats on the phone, Pat, hang on, I get your
(58:41):
call when we come back, six forty five. Right now.
If you have KCY talk station and you want a
great real estate eight talk station sixty nine Happy Tuesday,
go over to the phone so you can call two five, one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eight two
to three talk I Pat on the line, Pat, thanks
for holding on with a breake there, Welcome to the
morning show.
Speaker 5 (59:01):
Thanks Brian.
Speaker 6 (59:01):
Hey.
Speaker 4 (59:02):
That Franklin City school tax.
Speaker 5 (59:04):
I just looked that up.
Speaker 4 (59:06):
It looks like it's a one percent income tax on
all income retirement, looks like disability pensions. The only thing
it doesn't tax is Social Security one percent six point
six million a year for ten years. That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (59:30):
Seems like it is a traditional income tax. According to
the information I've got, that's a lot of money traditional
income tax to address an alleged projected budget shortfall. Right
wow man, anyway, tat I guess you're a no on
(59:53):
that one. Ah Uh.
Speaker 2 (59:55):
You know.
Speaker 8 (59:55):
I'm in Middletown, but I'm right next to the and
I see the sign, so I know a lot of
people that lived there, and it's like, you know a
lot of people want it, Well, go ahead and pay
for it.
Speaker 3 (01:00:06):
Well.
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
And again, a part of the research I just quickly
did after you raise this to my attention, they say
they have not received the new operating revenue since twenty fourteen,
and other efforts to increase the taxes or generate revenue
have been shot down. So maybe this will go the
same way. It is a lot of money.
Speaker 5 (01:00:23):
I do know.
Speaker 4 (01:00:25):
My uncle did some research in Franklin City schools and
they're they're not ranked very high. So the schools are
not what he said, they're not doing a real good job.
Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
Well, maybe that's why the prior levees got voted down. Now,
the teachers' unions would argue, well, the reason we're not
doing well or ranked very well is because you haven't
given us enough money. I don't think that actually translates
to education. Going back to the old days when you
had one room schoolhouses and chalkboards and everyone was able
to move forward in life, do you really need all
of the amenities and all the things. I mean, they're
(01:00:56):
like country club schools these days. I know, I know, yep,
I know it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:01:02):
Anyway, bring it.
Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
I'm glad you brought it up. Pat. Someone out there
is going, Wait a second, Franklin City schools onces a
one percent traditional income tax. Yeah, somebody just learned something,
thanks to you, Pat. Wow. Elections have consequences, and you
know what these Pat says, A lot of people want it. Now,
if you surveyed everyone who is able to vote on
that particular levee, where would it turn out in terms
(01:01:24):
of the percentage of people who are willing to pay
that and those who aren't. Then think about the fact
that typically in primaries only about ten people's ten percent
of the people show up. So who's going to be
more vote motivated? The teachers' unions and the children who
have been told by their teachers to go out and
get their parents to vote for the levee that kind
of thing, or people who are incensed about a one
(01:01:46):
percent income tax? Will they go out to the polls
in greater force than those that are behind the levee.
This is why your vote is so much more important
in a primary day, which side are you on on
that both sides having a people, I would argue both
sides have an incentive to go in and vote. Why
is it that we don't vote in primaries? Welcome to
the seventy four or so tax levees that are are
(01:02:09):
school levees that are in play here in Ohio. I
haven't heard anything about Indiana, but I'm sure you've got
them as well, So make sure you get your sample
ballot before you go over to vote. Pull up the
sample ballot and see if there's a reason to go vote.
I was sadly disappointed when Paul Ott and I pulled
up a sample ballot for our vote today. How many
races there are no Republicans running in Hamilton County. That's
(01:02:33):
a sorry state of affairs. You can't even get someone
to try. You assured the Democrat victory, and you wonder
about the start sorry state of affairs in this country
and this left shift in this left move, that's how
it happens. You don't even bother to try. That's disappointing.
Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:02:56):
Now I just got to ask out loud because I
really don't know, and I'm not being critical the Hamilton
kind of republic looking party necessarily, but is it for
want of outreach by the party. Are people afraid to
run because they've given up the concept of Hamilton County
actually electing a Republican. That's scary. I know people have
given up, mostly in downtown Cincinnati, and understandably so. But
(01:03:20):
don't give up on Hamilton County. Please get some good
candidates to run. And if you're out there and you're
one of the people who complain and like whoa hurrumph,
why not run. You've obviously got a lot of great
arguments on your side to at least suggest that people
shouldn't vote for the other guy. That's a leg up anyhow,
(01:03:46):
if anybody can answer that question, if you've firdy, let
me know what is with Hamilton County having all of
these seats running with no Republicans in the primary? I
just want to know. Five one, seven oh six. Here
(01:04:12):
a pitty about KC Decalk station. Brian Thomas right here listening, everybody,
very happy Tuesday. It's election day, Primary day for Ohio
and Indiana. Important to vote, even though I'm lamenting and
going back and forth with a previously elected official about
the fact that a lot of Republicans aren't even stepping
up to the plate to run for quite a few
offices in Hamilton County. I guess, La, why, why is
(01:04:32):
that you have just given up? And apparently the answer
is yes, at least opinions are like sphincters. We all
have one. No one wants to suffer running for office
given the media bias and social media passing, says this
person who doesn't want to be the Debbie Downer and
call in and bring this to everybody's attention. Because the
Republicans don't have the backbone to withstand that does not
social media. He's the equal opportunity offender when it comes
(01:04:54):
to insulting people and dissing people and bashing people on
social media. You know, well, if you don't participate in
social media like me, you're not subjected to it. You
don't read it. I ignore that stuff completely. I refuse
to let it impact my world and say all you
want out there, I really honestly won't ever see it.
(01:05:14):
I do not choose to participate in that. Do Republicans
feel more threatened? Let me ask out loud and Brian,
I see youre on the line. I me and get
your call just a second here, I would suggest I
think that maybe there's a fear involved in this, And
when I think of judicial races, I think primarily of
that most notably since we had that guy convicted of
threatening the life of a judge and his family the
other day. Only netscha a misdemeanor in Hamilton County apparently.
(01:05:40):
But when you have to preside over issues like that
where you're imprisoning someone and you've got angry family members
out there and people who are friends with the accused
criminal threatening your life, I can imagine that might not
sit well with you from a psychological standpoint day in
and day out. So maybe that prevents people from Is
(01:06:00):
it perhaps because the left maybe is more violent and
unhinged given all these attacks on conservative politicians and the
constant cries that every single person has a conservative mindset?
Is some kind of maga Nazi or whatever. Do leftist
(01:06:22):
politicians suffer that kind of attack from the conservative population.
I wouldn't know. This person suggested it's just not worth it.
You're docked, your business is boycotted, and isn't that a
two way street as well? Can't you get a boost
in business if you are, for example, in the consideration
(01:06:42):
of a staunch conservative running for office in Hamilton County.
If your business is subject to a boycott from the angry, evil,
vile leftist, wouldn't you get a boost from the conservative side.
That person stepped up, that person's running, that person shares
my values. I want to give that person my business.
That happens quite a bit it the county is f warded,
(01:07:07):
says this person, and recognizing that this person is an
Anderson Township representative, saying well, we've already lost Anderson Township.
When I see that, and that just breaks my heart.
I guess every leftist moved out of the City of
Cincinnati because it's poorly run and brought their leftist ideology
into Anderson Township so they can turn it into where
they fled. So people leave Anderson Township and head on
(01:07:32):
over to Claremont County, where the waters want fine and
the conservative mindset is steeped into the mentality of my
Claremont County residents. I'm not discounting Butler Warren Counties, but
you know that's one option. I know my wife would
thoroughly enjoy it. If Claremont County reached out and annexed
Simms Township. She'd vote for that and it would take
(01:07:52):
the idea of moving out of Hamilton County off of
her mind. See, maybe he's onto something here. Thanks for
holding and indulging me with that little rant there. Welcome
to the Morning Show. Good to hear from me this morning.
Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
Good morning, Brian.
Speaker 3 (01:08:07):
I called about levees. But like your example of why
not run those Bevin Anti Bevan and Claremont County commercials
are a perfect example. The guy was arrested for, not
convicted of and they're running with it. That's just wrong.
If he was convicted, tell me he was convicted. But
all I say he was arrested for us. Anybody can
(01:08:27):
accuse you of anything and you can get arrested for it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:30):
That is an excellent play.
Speaker 3 (01:08:32):
Yes, But anyway, I was calling about levees. I've never
understood the stupidity with how we do this and fund
our schools. We pick a dollar amount and that's it.
You build ten houses, ten family afore move in. You
don't have enough money. Why aren't we doing this as
a percentage because the biggest driver of your property values
(01:08:53):
is a good school district. Well, hey, you can work
towards it and give yourself a raise there West Claremont
or New rich In Schools or whoever it may be. Yet, right,
it just would make sense.
Speaker 2 (01:09:06):
But if we're using.
Speaker 3 (01:09:08):
Common sense and logic, we know that's not going to
involve the government.
Speaker 1 (01:09:12):
That is correct common sense and logic. Brian. When do
common sense and logic and reason relate to any any
government program, I'm gonna paint with a broad brush on
that one, or any funding mechanism for a school district, Well, it.
Speaker 3 (01:09:26):
Would be a shorter list if we do the ones
that do.
Speaker 1 (01:09:29):
And not the ones that don't. Perhaps get that on
get that on a post it note. Yeah, appreciate the call, Brian,
Thanks for chiming in on that. Heartbreaking.
Speaker 2 (01:09:43):
I just.
Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
People are so wound to capitulate and just give in. Well,
you know, and I can't deny it's happening on a grand,
colossal scale over the United States of America. I mean,
look what he's fleeing the les leftist cities, What cities
are gaining population and which ones are losing? This is
what's so damn frustrating, Like thinking about Anderson Township. And
(01:10:10):
I'm not saying it's necessarily written off in the minds
of this particular person. I mean, maybe it's still more
conservative than liberal. I don't know, but it was always
a bashion of what I viewed as, you know, a
right way to run an operation. They welcomed business, they prospered,
they flourished. You know, it seemed to me they had
the everybody over there the right mindset. Was not like
downtown Cincinnati in terms of politics, but that's New York.
(01:10:36):
In California, I'm sure the Illinois lost massive quantities of population.
Why because they're so damn oppressive with taxations and regulations.
They're not business friendly. They're fully immersed in this leftist ideology,
and so I guess the best here's where it is.
The best and the brightest pack up and leave because
(01:10:59):
they know it's in their best interest and the best
in the briders can afford to pack up and leave,
taking their stuff and things with them, most notably very
large businesses who decide that they're not going to deal
with an oppressive government anymore. Bye, I'm leaving Hamilton County.
I guess, huh is that where we are? Why did
(01:11:19):
you leave for what I just said?
Speaker 2 (01:11:22):
Then?
Speaker 1 (01:11:22):
Why the hell would you bring those policies into your
new neighborhood, which is exactly what is going on. This
is the creep, the socialist creep. We will destroy you
from within. I can't imagine that this is an organized thing.
We'll get all the people who are of wealth, who
actually still think that these left wing policies are a
(01:11:43):
good thing to do. They pick up their bags and
they move someplace else, and then they start voting for
that stuff. That that is even a thing is hard
to grasp. You think you'd learn from your mistakes, or
learn from their mistakes the politicians. Let's not do that here.
(01:12:04):
Let's not repeat the mistakes of the past. Let's not
think that it's going to work here when it didn't
work there or anywhere else where it was tried a
sinking ships. What it seems like to me five one, three, seven, four,
nine fifty five, eight hundred and eighty two to three
talk pound five fifty on AT and T phones, Get
(01:12:26):
out and vote today. It is coming up with seven
twenty fifty five krcity talk stations revelations about Hamilton County
here having multiple exchanges with regard to Hamilton County getting
more and more solidly blue, so much showed that Republicans
don't even want to run anymore with all these empty seats,
lots of Democrats running. And another observation from my former
(01:12:47):
politician friend who I'm engaged with his exchange in from
Anderson Township. He said he noted that the big story
is the number of Democrats that are running in these
various races, and else to suggest that I'll wager Dusty
Roads couldn't get endorsed in today's Democratic primary, that is
our Democratic Party. That is an understatement, Dusty. If you're
(01:13:09):
out there, you know you happen to be the most
conservative person on the planet anymore. You're not a Democrat
at least in so far as what the Democrats call
themselves these days. But go ahead and cling to your
John F. Kennedy era Democrat days. Those are gone. And
that's kind of the point this person was making. The
young socialists are trying to push the old guard out,
(01:13:30):
and it's not just a local phenomenon. This is going
on all over the country, kicking out the old guard
in favor of the new sort of zorhan Man Dami
far left. And they're not even Democrats. Socialists, that's a
made up term. They're communists. Communists, and how is it?
(01:13:57):
This is obviously a direct failure of education system and
the indoctrination our young people have gone through in the
absence of a counter narrative, and I blame all of
us out there for not fighting against this left wing
narrative at least in so far as the education of
our children are concerned. It must be you are blind
(01:14:18):
and you have had your head in the sand now
for the past couple of decades if you don't appreciate
the fact that these public schools have become indoctrination camps.
In large part. I'm sure there's a teacher out there
going no, no, not in my school. But the vast
majority of them are the party that wants wants to
deprive you of the choice over where your child is educated.
(01:14:40):
That is not a Republican or a conservative leaning philosophy.
That is pure hardcore Democrats. That is their plan. No
to school choice because it screws up there indoctrination camp.
Who wants to take care of your kids? Pre k
the left get them in there early, start the indoctrination
(01:15:02):
process early. You are not the person in control of
your children. They are so say so many people from
the left teachers' unions, most notably confiscating property. I mean,
we could go on and on and on, but to see,
it's the ignorance of the younger generation leftists that don't
(01:15:26):
understand the pain that left wing ideology brings about the
ultimate reason for people packing up and fleeing these left
wing jurisdictions, cities, township, states, whatever. They can't see the
writing on the wall with that statistics bear it out.
(01:15:48):
Just read an article about it. How many citizens did
California lose? What were the reasons that Californians left the
state of California. They're all articulated and it's not really
that difficult to figure it out. Use your imagination. Maybe
taxes are too high, maybe paying seven dollars every single
day of the year, not even with the golf of
war conflict going on. Maybe that's getting hard. Maybe the
(01:16:08):
regulatory overreach. Maybe the fact that just a completely screwed
up state can't manage wildfires. But yoh, they're gonna go
after carbon dioxide. I mean, huh, failure. And yet this
is a growing concept. How is that even possible? Can
(01:16:32):
answer the question? Please give me a call. Five three, seven,
four nine fifty five hight hundred dy two to three
talk fifty on AT and T phones. Oh and here
you go. Uh, maybe we're not as far gone as Amsterdam,
but you know how I am on the whole concept
of climate change. Amsterdam, this one from the stack is stupid.
(01:16:53):
At least I could put it their first capital city
in the world to ban public ads for meat and
fossil fuels. You can't have ads for the chicken nuggets, SUVs.
You can't have an ad featuring anything involving fossil fuels
like airlines. I guess airlines aren't allowed to advertise that
(01:17:14):
they fly people from point A to point B. Why
fossil fuel climate crisis is very urgent, says Anika Vnha
from the Ready hair for it here, here's the name
of it, Green Left Party. I mean, if you want
to be leading in climate policies and you rent out
your walls to exactly the opposite, what are you doing
while engaging in business and commerce and industry and exercising
(01:17:35):
a free speech right that apparently they don't enjoy. An
Amsterdam unbelievable. Critics argue the policy crosses a line, calling
it an overreach that attempts to engineer personal choices, going
back to my indoctrination camp that are the public schools,
going back to the one side narrative from the left
(01:17:57):
wing media these days, engineering personal choices, depriving you of
a message like, for example, during COVID nineteen, you weren't
allowed to know that maybe the thing came out of
a lab in the Wuhan province. Maybe you weren't allowed
to know about the various other health alternatives you have.
Maybe you weren't allowed to know the dangers associated with
the COVID nineteen vaccine. Engineering the message for the purpose
(01:18:20):
of engineering your personal choices. Oh it must be okay,
I'll go ahead and get the JAB. I know that
kind of came out of nowhere, But it's just one
illustration of a multitude. You could probably come up with
a book long list of your own where the left
winging mentality and they're joining hips with the mainstream media
and every other outlet out there, funded in large part
(01:18:41):
anymore by your tax payer dollars going out to non
governmental organizations that are all filled with left wing ideologues.
You're fighting a challenge here, an uphill battle. The deck
is stacked against you, clearly from a messaging standpoint, and
that's what wins the day. When people aren't paying attention.
They can't even appreciate, siate the fact that the reason
(01:19:03):
people leave cities like Cincinnati or Los Angeles, or States California, Illinois,
New York is because of exactly people following the narrative
presented by the left. They can't even see that. Seven
(01:19:24):
twenty six, tom's Awastowski. We the People Convention coming up
next hoo. You can stick around for that and get
in touch with Gregory Lester. He's our guy. We had
Gregory Lester over the house last year and he talked
Station seven thirty on a Tuesday. It's that time of week.
You can find him at We Thepeople Convention dot org.
His name Tom z Awastowski does a podcast every week.
(01:19:45):
You should check that out.
Speaker 5 (01:19:46):
Tom.
Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
Welcome back to the morning show, my friend. Great to
hear from you.
Speaker 3 (01:19:50):
Oh, it's good to be on. But wow, what a
what a half hour or forty five minutes you've had
talking about elections? Brian, Oh my goodness, I'm just soon.
I can't argue with you, brother. You're saying some things
that people need to hear about how come there's nobody
on the bloody ballot?
Speaker 1 (01:20:05):
It really is mind blowing, Tom. And you know, the
sad news out of and I don't mean to talk
about Anderson Township, but that's where this individual, this former politician,
is talking about the problems mentioned Specifically, he said, everybody left,
all the conservatives have left. There's a very small percentage
of them left. He notably putting up the Tea Party
folks all bailed and that was a solid conservative area.
(01:20:26):
And I don't know if he's right statistically, but you know,
if he's painfully aware of all of the conservative mind
of people who have literally moved out of Hamilton County,
they've just given up, just completely given up.
Speaker 3 (01:20:38):
Brian, So I can speak to that, okay, because the
Tea Party came out of Hamilton County, came out of Cincinnati.
I know Chris Littleton in those guys, Okay. And the
thing that just one of your callers had mentioned common
sense a little bit ago, and here's the thing that
didn't pass the common sense test to me as a
(01:20:59):
Tea Party person, because the Cincinnati guys said, oh yeah,
we can run for a county central Committee, we can
run for State Central Committee. We can take over the
Republican Party and reform it, right, And I said, really,
is that right? Well, then all of a sudden, the
interesting things happen, Like jeez, when the Tea Party started
(01:21:21):
to run for county Central Committee positions. Instead of having
those races every two years, they made them every four years,
and oh yeah, and then once we started running again,
we're the Tea Party. I had no idea there was
anything called State Central Committee. Comrade, it sounds like something
out of the former Soviet Union, right, what the heck
is that?
Speaker 2 (01:21:41):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:21:41):
And they said, well, it's not on your ballot, and
I'm like, I don't even remember even seeing that that
you could elect people to these party positions. And then
we started to run for these things. I have a
friend right now today who's running in Star County for
a Republican Party State Central Committee seat. In the asked Brian,
you didn't spend any money on it. You just went
(01:22:03):
out knocked on doors. You went to the social events
that the Republicans would put on and said, hey, here's
my name, here's what I believe in. You know, vote
for me. He's got an opponent. Now, I guess this
this is a non paid position for Republican Central Committee.
His one opponent has spent fifty five thousand dollars to
(01:22:24):
run for this. Why would any sane person run for
a position that pays nothing and spend fifty five thousand
dollars of their money?
Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (01:22:34):
Good question, isn't it? Okay, it's a good question. How
about this question? All right? I don't know nobody ever
talks about this, but in Ohio, the way you become
a member of a political party's by voting in the primary.
Did you know that when you pull the Republican ballot today,
you're basically saying I want to be a member of
the Republican Party.
Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
Not a dues paying member.
Speaker 3 (01:22:57):
I might point out, Oh, and boy did I have
that discussion? Because people will remember those of their old
Tea party people that Tom Zawastowski ran to be chairman
of the Hio Republican Party back when Matt Borgius was
taking it over under Kasik, And I said to them, yeah,
you don't want to have a real political party. These
(01:23:17):
aren't political parties. These are country clubs. Because when James
Timpkin is the chairman a few years ago, she could
make four phone calls and eraise five million dollars from
their big donors. Why mess with those pesky you know,
two million Republican you know members and get them to
pay twenty dollars a year to fund our campaigns. We
(01:23:38):
don't want to do that. That's too much light work, Okay,
So then let's keep going on the insanity. You know
it's going to cost today for us, the tax payers
of Ohio, to put on primaries for what, Brian? These
are not political entities. The Republican Party, the Democrat Party,
the Liberton Party, Libertarian Party, the Green Party, whoever our
(01:24:00):
private entities? True, you and I are going to spend
fifty million dollars today to put on this freaking primary.
Fifty million dollars of our state tax payer dollars. Why
are we doing that? Guess what if we didn't do that,
you think they'd have primaries? They just have a meeting
and say here's our choices. They'll be on the ballot
(01:24:22):
in November.
Speaker 1 (01:24:22):
Yeah, you're right about it.
Speaker 3 (01:24:23):
What the hell would we care?
Speaker 7 (01:24:24):
What would we care?
Speaker 3 (01:24:25):
And of course the reason though he's on the ballot, Brian,
is because they can't pay enough to get on the ballot.
It's all pay to play.
Speaker 1 (01:24:34):
Yeah, money in politics. Tom Zawastowski, shocking, literally know one.
Although I appreciate the gory details and your criticisms of
the Republican Party, because you know, we like to think
as conservative minded people that we have our house in order,
clearly we do not. Tom's AWASKI hold on, I'm sure
you got more on that. We're going to talk about
the Yes it is primary care. See de talk Station,
(01:24:55):
Brian Thomas whed and People Convention dot org or dot com.
Tom's Awastowski, Tom, real quick. You had mentioned the Tea
Party and I used to think the Tea Party was
the greatest thing. Why because it really boiled down to
my pure little L libertarian principles fiscal responsibility, limited government,
and free markets. What's wrong with that? Whatever happened to
the Tea Party, Tom, that sounds like very solid principles.
(01:25:16):
It didn't involve social engineering, it didn't comment on you
know who you're sleeping with, like my little L libertarian philosophy.
I trust you with your zipper, I trust you with
your wallet. Let's keep politics out of all of that.
That was a great direction for the Republican Party to
go down. You know, you didn't alienate as many people.
You had these solid core principles like, hey, there's a
concept fiscal responsibility, less government, loved the idea and free markets,
(01:25:40):
free markets work. I mean, what did it get corrupted?
Did the Republican Party squeeze them out? Because it just
dealt with these pure core principles that I think is
at least were embodied some of them embodied in the
Republican platform. It's just the Republican platform was much bigger
than those three points. Tom.
Speaker 3 (01:26:01):
Yeah, well, you know we didn't get destroyed. We're still here.
I like to say that the Tea Party is the
skeletal structure of the mega body politics that we you know,
are still in the in the background, organizing the younger
folks who haven't gotten the experience that we've had in politics.
And you know, look, Ay Jim Jordan and those guys
(01:26:22):
are Tea Party guys. You know a lot of the
people still fighting the way you and I would like
them to fight were from the Tea Party. But what's
happened is Donald Trump and Mega and basically, you know,
it just brought in a whole another layer of people
and really, quite frankly, the money to take control of
things and kind of drive the agenda. But let me
(01:26:46):
just say to our friends out there who think like
you and I, because the Tea Party again, why we're
with the Tea Parte because we were we were following
the footsteps of our founders, of the Colonists and the
thirteenth Colonies, who fought the British and had to use
guerrilla tactics to win. I think you've got to use
those guerrilla tactics today in this election. What do I
mean by that, Well, first of all, you talked about
(01:27:08):
I talked to someone from Cincinnati yesterday. I guess there's
no levy on the ballot down there in a lot
of places, so there's like no reason to vote. They're
expected like ten percent turnout in Cincinnati. Well, that's a
tactical advantage for those of us who want to make
a surprise attacks, because if you vote, your vote gonna
be worth a whole.
Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
Lot more, right, Brian, Yes, sir, I'm glad you made that.
Speaker 3 (01:27:30):
Okay, So get there out there, and now what do
you want? Where are our opportunities?
Speaker 5 (01:27:35):
Now?
Speaker 3 (01:27:35):
You know again, I'm speaking from my knowledge of these
candidates and talking to them and analyzing them. I think
you got to vote for Verbak. I get the Casey
Push thing. He's now serious, you interviewed him. I'm sorry
he's disqualified. But we have two things that we can
do today. We can upset the part in Secretary of
(01:27:56):
States race by voting for Marcel Sturbage. I think a
lot of the Push people will turn out will vote
for Servage because they have the same attitude okay about politics,
so that can take him over the top, and that
will rock the vote of the big money people, okay,
who are trying to keep the carousel going.
Speaker 7 (01:28:16):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:28:17):
I know Robert Sprague. I like Robert s. Reggan is
a good guy, but boy, his TV commercials really turned
me off because we take the elections problems seriously and
his TV commercials were about like cartoon characters and stuff voting.
It was like a joke. It's not a joke. We
need a serious person and that's Marcel's service. The other one,
(01:28:39):
the other one. I don't know who's behind this, but
Jay Edwards and Christina Rogner for Treasurer of State. Jay
Edwards is a Blue twenty two controlled by the Democrat Unions.
And why Bernie Marino and JD Vance are pushing him
so hard. I don't know, but I know it has
something to do with money, because you can tell how
(01:29:00):
much advertising has. Christina Rogner is more than qualified. She's
not just another politician looking for a job because quite frankly,
she doesn't need one. Her in her family are very
well off. But guess what she's learning to be treasure
She went to the Wharton School of Business. She worked
for Mackenzie and Company. She's been in the accounting field
(01:29:22):
with major energy companies. Guess what she could be in
a freaking treasurer. Jay Edwards has no qualifications except he's
politically connected. If you turn out and you vote for
Rogner and Sturbage and we can pull those two victories off,
that'll be worth your efforts, my fellow patriots, that will
be upsetting the card and saying you can't just buy
(01:29:45):
my vote. So that's my attitude towards today's election. Love it.
Speaker 1 (01:29:50):
Stay on the soapbox. Tom's alist to ask you want
to hear your comments about the most recent Supreme Court
the talk station seven forty thinking about Catersey Talks day.
It's today, finishing up a half hour here with Tom's Awastowski.
We The People Convention dot Org is where you find
Tom's website and check out his podcast, Tom's Awastowski. We
had a recent Supreme Court decision saying you cannot use
(01:30:12):
race to jerrymander. That sounds like a perfect thing because
we're not supposed to be being racist when it comes
to allocating the jurisdictions for voting. I have never understood jerrymandering.
It is obviously one of the most political processes that
happens in this country. So if you vote for a
bunch of Democrats, they're going to read jigger the system
(01:30:32):
and make and try to ensure that they stay in power.
That's what jerrymandering does. So you can't use race to
do that anymore, Tom, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:30:41):
Supreme Court Justice gorse It's had a great line in
the decision saying, yeah, the way to stop being racist
is to stop doing racist things like this, okay, because
it was never intended that you could draw districts to
represent a specific race. That's totally against everything in our constitution,
(01:31:01):
and yet we did it for how many years, Brian,
And so this goes back to your point on the record,
Brian Thomas. Thomas Alasowski eight. Jerry mannering should not exist.
It should be you know, contiguous geographic areas, right, you know,
not all these twisty twirling, politically designed things. But unfortunately
(01:31:22):
we are at war. We are at war with the Communists.
You said it flat out. There are many Democrats anymore.
This is a communist takeover our country. And here's the
dirty little secret that you know the media is trying
to cover up. They readistrict decades ago. There is no
way that the Democrat quote Communist party should have fifty
(01:31:44):
percent of the Senators and fifty percent of the House members.
They sold them, Brian, by doing things like this racial
jury manning stuff. And so when the Supreme Court said, hey,
you can't do that, and they all quote, they all
cried Jim Crow two point zero, except nobody points out, yeah,
the original Jim Crow was you. You were Jim Crow
(01:32:04):
one point zero. And this is fixing that.
Speaker 5 (01:32:07):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:32:07):
People don't understand, Brian. This is huge. This is not
some normal thing. This is not something you can just say, oh,
that's nice, or don't even know about it. We needed
this badly because literally, this one decision could change the
House from the Republicans having four per seat four seat
(01:32:29):
majority to having a fifty seat majority by next year
so that we can't we get out of the situation
where oh, the Democrats buy off one or two Republicans
and they stop everything we do. If you have a
fifty seat majority, you can actually maybe legislate what a
concept and so go to our website we people can
(01:32:49):
mention dot org. You'll see the article there about the
racial Germans Jerry Mannering decision, and watch the CNN video
that's listened that's embedded in that article where they break
it down. Because across the South, and I just saw
this morning when I got up, the Supreme Court approved
Louisiana delaying their primary from May nineteenth in order to
(01:33:13):
have a session to redraw their districts before their primary
comes up. They're doing this in Florida, just did it.
Four new Republican seats, Louisiana, Mississippi, in North Carolina. It's
going to be like seven southern states are going to
do this. And when you change those seats, the whole
map is going to change, and we're going to get
(01:33:35):
something that reflects more accurately the people's values in this country,
not things that are fictitious are propaganda. It's a huge
decision and everyone needs to understand this is the first
step to our getting our country back well.
Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
And obviously this was going to happen. Turn about the
fair play. The Democrats did it in California. They had
to overturn a law on the books that allocated redistricting
to it so called independent panel. Get rid of that
and put it back in the hands of the Democrats
to make sure that they had more Democrat seats or
at least a map that helped them to achieve more
Democrat seats in Congress. So they're doing it.
Speaker 3 (01:34:11):
How about just Virginia, right What just happened in Virginia
right now? That's going to get overturned. I don't think
this thing where Virginia is six' five and they're going
to make a ten to. One they violated their constitution
like five different. Ways so that's going to go back
into THE gop. Side it's a big. Deal and the
other thing is we're going to wait to. See BUT
(01:34:31):
i think The Supreme court is going to. Rule election
day is election. DAY i hope people have no idea
how many seats that would say in twenty twenty. Four our,
members The Read People connection members In Southern california were
begging me for. Help we're begging us to send people
out there because The left just kept keeping the polls
(01:34:52):
open day after day for two, weeks and these ballots
would just appear and we won like six seats For
republicans in Southern california on election. Day by the time
they were, done we had won one.
Speaker 1 (01:35:05):
Seat, yeah, well how do we survive two hundred and
fifty years as a country until this most recent moment
in our country's history where you had thirty plus days to,
vote we all managed to do it on one day
up until that point in. Time it's amazing on, horseback, Right,
yeah it's walking to The.
Speaker 3 (01:35:22):
Pulgia you get. People Oh i'm so inconvenienced BECAUSE i
got to go show up to. Vote oh, Really Tom,
row you go Get starbucks real.
Speaker 1 (01:35:30):
Quick here going back to the whole idea of just
like taking an equally sized a grid in a, state
and rather than do it in these crazy twisted ways
to ensure that one person or one party or another gets,
elected why don't we have just equal mileage geographic you,
know Breakdown like let's, say if you could use, counties for,
(01:35:50):
example just make It Hamilton. County everybody In Hamilton county
is in one. District everybody. Weren't what's what is the
traditional argument against that? Conceptually, oh the argument is that
we can't control the.
Speaker 3 (01:36:02):
Elections, okay. Listen the thing The Tea party learned from
the very beginning is that they don't want fair. Elections
you pointed out that there's nobody on the ballot In.
Cincinnati i'm looking at my ballot right. Here in seventeen
of twenty Two republican races on my, ballot seventeen are.
Uncontested on The democratic, side there's sixteen out of twenty.
(01:36:24):
Three why is that they don't want fair? Elections they
want rigged. Elections both parties only want elections where they
control who's on the. Ballot you can vote for anyone
you want, To, brian as long as one of the
two people we picked for.
Speaker 1 (01:36:38):
You Tom's austowski put an exclamation point on it. Today,
TOM i really enjoy your, enthusiasm particularly, today and we'll
find your. Website i'll encourage my listener to do. So
we The People convention dot. Org, Tom you AND i
will do this again Next. Tuesday i'll look forward to
that and keep up the great, work my.
Speaker 3 (01:36:54):
Friend all, right go, Vote, patriots go vote and win
those two.
Speaker 1 (01:36:58):
Races thanks, ran great advice From Tom's. Auastowski don't go
away to the inside. Scoop Bright Bart News economics Editor John,
carney just shiveto six here fifty five KR cv talk.
Station it Being, tuesday it is that time of. WEEK
i always look forward. To it's time for the inside.
Scoop but Bright Bart news starting with a recommendation my
listening audience Bookmark BRIGHT BARTI R E I T B
(01:37:20):
A rt dot. Com you'd glad you did a lot
of great. Work they do each and every, day and
one of the guys does some fantastic. Work welcome back
to the fifty FIVE Krc Morning. Show economics editor at
Bright Bart John, carney good to have you back on,
today my.
Speaker 3 (01:37:31):
Friend, yeah thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:37:34):
So factory orders have increased because of the artificial intelligence.
SURGE i thought A i was going to put everybody
out of a. Job, JOHN i know that's boiled, down but, yeah,
NO i.
Speaker 7 (01:37:45):
Mean that is the complaint ABOUT ai is that it's you,
know it's going to be so good at what it
does that it's going to cause mass. Unemployment i'm a
skeptic of, that but in the, meantime in the near,
term it's definitely causing a lot of factory work in
(01:38:05):
THE us to be. Done and we're seeing. This it
shows up in THE gdp. Numbers it showed up in
factory order, numbers AND i think it's important that people
understand the factory order numbers are not Just they're not
measured from the consumer side or even from the businesses
making the order. Side it's these are orders being measured
(01:38:26):
from AT us. Factories so these aren't you, know orders
going into order things From china Or mexico or Even.
Germany these are orders that are expanding at a very
rapid rate in THE, us.
Speaker 1 (01:38:41):
So we're able to domestically meet. Demands one of the
hard lessons that we learned out OF covid nineteen is
that we don't make anything. ANYMORE i know that's a
broad brush, statement so don't hold me to, That, john
because we still make. Things but the vast amount of
things we bought From. China the revelation that are of
our pharmaceuticals were coming From, china that all the you,
know electronic goods and things were all coming From. China
(01:39:03):
so have we righted the ship over the past five, Years,
john not.
Speaker 7 (01:39:07):
YET i winish we had correct in course. Completely of,
course we actually are seeing a lot of imports as.
Well uh, frankly because we we we went way overboard
with the industrialization in THE, us so we can meet
some of. It one of the good things that has
been happening, though is that we're seeing a lot of
(01:39:30):
expansion of capacity in THE. Us we are we are
building more, factories we're and a lot of the equipment
we're seeing purchased are actually, well we went through a
period of time and this is sort of mind blowing
to people where a lot of the orders from FOR
us manufacturers were actually going to support manufacturing. Abroad so
(01:39:54):
companies would buy things to you, know machinery used to
make consumer, products and then they would ship those To.
China so we made the things that we're shipping our jobs. Abroad,
well we're not doing that as much. Anymore we're actually
now making more of the things so that we can
use them here in THE us for making. Things it's
going to take some time to completely reverse. That it's
(01:40:16):
not going to COME.
Speaker 1 (01:40:16):
Usy, no of, course building factories is a multi year process.
Anymore you got all the regulatory, Challenges you've got environmental
regulations and, challenges and insofar AS ai itself is, concerned
you got a real. Problem and there's this growing backlash
against artificial intelligence facilities showing. UP i GUESS i always
stand from the proposition, that, look this is a global,
competition THIS. Ai WHATEVER ai is supposed to do for,
(01:40:40):
us everyone's going headlong toward. It, China we're in competition
with them over the dominance OF, ai so we apparently need.
It so there's this growing. Backlash SO i think primarily
built on this left wing energy policy we. Face you,
know windmills cannot supply enough energy to build to run a,
city let alone a brand new artificial intelligence facility that
shows in your neighborhood forcing the energy builds. Up you
(01:41:01):
got to share with the great consumer of ELECTRICITY, ai
and nobody wants to do. That do you see AN
ai bubble? Bursting maybe as a consequence of, that or
because people just just they're not going to Abide, John
SO i do always.
Speaker 7 (01:41:15):
Worry you, know there's a lot of enthusiasm and a
lot of spedding IN. Ai and WHEN i see numbers
like you, know the electronic products category in the rising
twenty one percent year over, year that that is a
reason for, pause because that's a lot of sudden surge of.
Investment BUT i will say that we can solve a
(01:41:36):
lot of these. Problems, yes there is left wing opposition
to BUILDING ai, facilities building data, servers but, look the
left is going to oppose all. Reindustrialization they don't like.
Factories one of the reasons we lost a lot of
factories was not just That chinese mercantilism was sponsoring jobs
(01:41:57):
to move, abroad but also because you policy was actually
opposed to upgrading any. Facilities we can do. This there's
actually areas In america where there are where there's spare
electric capacity that will blow people's. Minds and you, say
how could that. Be, well areas that used to have
electric heavy factories that close down often still have the
(01:42:23):
generator capacity to power large manufacturing, plants which means they
have extra. Capacity so, Here so one solution is you
BUILD ai near where.
Speaker 1 (01:42:36):
We use near the power exactly. Interesting.
Speaker 7 (01:42:40):
Wow, yeah and also you can put, it by the,
way a friend of mine is working on a project
to put a lot of these things underground because that
you automatically get some cooling during the summer. Months if
you're underground park on top of, it it doesn't have
to look.
Speaker 1 (01:42:56):
Ugly, YEAH i like. That, so but you just mentioned
the left wing opposition TO. Ai so left wing opposition
TO ai largely based on the price of electricity in
the competition for energy consumption with THE ai. Facilities so
their left wing, policies which don't give us sufficient electricity
because they don't want us to exhale got to get
rid of it in favor of a, windmill serves to
(01:43:19):
benefit their opposition TO ai as. Well it's nice hand
in hand relationship. There what does the left have AGAINST?
Speaker 7 (01:43:24):
Ai is it The, Yeah, look they're only lying to
you when they say that they're upset about the price of.
Electricity what they don't like about THE ai plans is
that they use electricity at. All if it had no,
impact they would still on the consumer. Price that would
still generate their opposition because what they really oppose is
(01:43:47):
the use of energy, frankly but especially of fossil, fuels
and a lot of our electricity is going to be
for the rest of time supplied by fossil, fuels at
least as long as we are on this. Earth you,
know maybe when we have A mars colony or someday
you know that won't be oil, based, sure but everything
(01:44:10):
here On earth will be. Oil natural gas will be
made of. Carbon and they hate that they are Going and,
frankly that's why EVEN i don't even know that they HATE.
Ai they hate. Industry they do Not they want us
all to kind of have email server. Jobs they do not.
Speaker 1 (01:44:28):
Like consumption is what they. Hate, Success american success is
what they. Hate they want to undermine the model that
has worked so well for so many, people that has
served the entire globe because we make so much blanking
money that we pay for pretty much every other country
in the. World what would happen if they got their,
Way John carney from an economic, standpoint my economics Editor Barke, bart,
friend if they just was successful in pulling the plug
(01:44:51):
on This american experiment that has so far been able
to bring about such great things for everyone else who
hasn't gone down our economic experiment road collapse, Right.
Speaker 7 (01:45:00):
Well we would have to get used to Speaking, chinese
because we will become a colony Of china and not
a free and independent nation. Anymore we cannot oppose innovation
in THE, us and, FRANKLY i don't think it's going to.
HAPPEN i think they will succeed in some. Places vermont
may make sure that there is you, know you can
(01:45:23):
actually look at. Fracking if your state passed a fracking,
ban you're in danger of your state making sure that
there is NO ai facilities in your. State so what
will happen was is a lot of these facilities and
the construction jobs that go with building them will migrate
to states that are friendlier to. Them and by the,
way that's how federalism. Works i'm fine with, that and
(01:45:46):
they will stay out of the states that are going
to give them two hard of a.
Speaker 3 (01:45:49):
Time you.
Speaker 7 (01:45:51):
Know, again that'll be the experiment people can if they
decide that they don't want it where they, live that's,
okay somebody else will take. It.
Speaker 1 (01:45:58):
Yeah, well that's kind of like from a global PERSPECTIVE.
Ai if we don't do, it Then china will do
it and they will get all the benefits of artificial.
Intelligence we'll find fall behind the eight. Ball you, know
we're talking. Energy John, carnie you mentioned the fossil fuel
is going to be powering the world into the foreseeable.
Future if we weren't so resistant to small modular reactors
and could get those put together and in service very quickly,
(01:46:20):
EFFICIENTLY ai could pay for and bring its own power
source that it could share with the, neighborhood couldn't.
Speaker 7 (01:46:25):
It, Yes and a lot absolutely small module nuclear reactors
are going to be used in the. Future we, are
and we need to make sure that whatever barriers we, have,
look we want it to be. Safe but these things
can be done very, safely and we should have a
lot more of. Them, also there's a. Use there's a
(01:46:49):
lot of discussion about the use of, water AND i
just want to point out that the water THAT ai
facilities use is used to cool. Things it's not contaminated
in the, process, Right you're not washing off something. Dirty
and the, water by the, way never goes, away it's still.
Speaker 3 (01:47:05):
There and so the water use issue is.
Speaker 7 (01:47:09):
Overwrought AND i, mean, sure maybe don't put the you,
know you have to cool these, things you need a
lot of. Water don't put it in the. DESERT i
understand that we have a lot of places where there's
a lot WHERE i. Live if you dig a hole
in the.
Speaker 3 (01:47:24):
GROUND i have a well at my.
Speaker 7 (01:47:25):
House if you dig a hole in the, ground you get.
Water so there's a lot of places where water is abundantly, available.
Speaker 1 (01:47:32):
Right an excellent. Point though the water doesn't go, AWAY
ai isn't eating. It it goes back into the circulation
in the. System you, KNOW i. COULDN'T i had to.
Interject you don't build AN ai facility in the desert
where there's no, water and you shouldn't build a nuclear
power facility in an area that might be subjected to
a Tsunami, fukushima.
Speaker 7 (01:47:50):
Right, absolutely, yeah you keep. It you keep your nuclear
power off a fault, Line you keep it, away you,
know away from any place that might be by a.
Tsunami but you. Do and you keep YOUR ai processing
plant out of any place it gets to one hundred
and twenty degrees in the summertime and doesn't have, it you,
know out of quick. Water these are very common. Sense
(01:48:11):
by the, way the people building these things know. This
they don't want to you, know nobody wants to build
these things in the. Desert they want to build these,
things and they also don't want these things to be is,
sores you, know, right, now, yes some of the if
you drive out and you look for one of these,
things you can find. It but they're not putting these
things in the middle of your beautiful city. Park they're
(01:48:34):
usually act way out of the, way in the back
of a farm. Somewhere, well can you have to try
to see?
Speaker 1 (01:48:41):
It or where they put The amazon processing, facilities another
giant kind of squig big football size field or larger square.
Box all, right so pivoting over happen to be a
fan Of german. Automobiles and ALTHOUGH i know The german
auto industry is struggling mightily because of the ridiculous energy
policies and the cost of energy, THERE i think the
whole Entire german economy is going to collapse under the
(01:49:01):
weight of their. Stupidity but tariffs which may be coming
our way in terms of additional tariffs On european, cars
is that what's going to, Happen, JOHN i Think.
Speaker 7 (01:49:12):
Europe is actually going to back. Down they haven't been
compliant with What Donald trump says they agreed to In
scotland when he was first putting on. Tariffs so they're
going to have to have. Meetings they're going to, talk
and they are going to bring themselves into. Compliance it's
THE us economy and particularly access to THE us market
(01:49:36):
is much too important for the particularly Those german car,
makers and those people are very influential In, europe and
they are not going to allow.
Speaker 3 (01:49:48):
You, know themselves to be.
Speaker 7 (01:49:52):
Pushed out of THE us market by very high, tariffs
and SO i think they will try very hard to
bring themselves in. Compliance by the, way a lot of,
Them i'm also build in THE us and we'll probably
see more of that if the TIFFs stick. Right they
don't want to be shut, out so they will build.
Speaker 1 (01:50:08):
Here, well that will be, okay because it seems to
me that building them here is a lot cheaper than
building them In. GERMANY i, mean they got rid of
their nuclear, fleet they got rid of their coal fire.
Plants they are. Moving they do not bother with hydraulic,
fracking even though it's widely reported they have enough potential
natural gas that they could frack to provide them with
twenty years at current annual gas consumption, rate so they
(01:50:30):
could be self. Sufficient but this is forcing the price
of the energy through the, roof as you, Know, john
which means the product you buy from A german manufacturer
is going to be a lot more expensive in the
global world and in terms of competition than a car
from someplace. ELSE i, mean that just makes.
Speaker 7 (01:50:45):
Sense europe's policies are bizarre when it comes to, this
because the manufacturing will get done and so the energy
consumption will get. Done all that their energy policies do
is force that out Of.
Speaker 3 (01:51:00):
EUROPE i don't know.
Speaker 7 (01:51:02):
Why and when you're, talking you, know even if you're
concerned your greatest concern in life is climate. Change forcing
production out of your local area to whether It's North,
America South, America asia Or africa doesn't help you with
the issue that you think you. Brought it doesn't make
(01:51:22):
any sense at all that it's it's called global climate
change for a, reason and, they you, know yet they're
willing to force it out of their. Area it's OFTEN
i wonder If europe secretly signed a suicide pact and
they're just trying to live up to the terms of their.
Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
Bargain, john you couldn't have stated it better than. THAT
i regularly refer to these these the legislation in terms
of the energy alleged energy, production and it's an impact
on climate as self inflicted. Wounds clearly they. Are and
the other component of this, Is, john the idea that you,
Yourself germany Or European, union, whatever are not going to
do this evil thing called carbon, production and you're gonna
(01:52:00):
let somebody else do it so you can virtue signal and,
say ha, ha we're not producing carbon. Bore we're getting
everything From china Or russia or someplace else that is
belching pollutants into the. World it's, Preposterous, JOHN i can't
believe they've gotten away with it this, Long but here
we find ourselves.
Speaker 7 (01:52:15):
Ridiculous one thing that is actually benefiting. Them look in some, Ways,
Putin iran and Even china have really played into our
hands on this in That putin has made it clear
that you don't want to be relying On russia for
your energy. Resources you can't be reliant On iran or frankly.
Speaker 3 (01:52:37):
All The Middle east for you or.
Speaker 7 (01:52:38):
Oil this is making the one great world oil producer
that is, reliable, safe has a great ethical government that's
called The United, states really going to benefit us the
long long.
Speaker 1 (01:52:52):
Term right bart Economic, Cenator John, carney it's always a
pleasure having on the, Show, john to look forward to
having you back, AGAIN i keep writing stuff you write
each and every, day and again to my Listeners breitbart dot.
Com you got a bookmarket and enjoy what they do. There,
john we'll talk again soon and best to you and
everybody At. Breitbart, yeah thanks for having. Me my. Pleasure
eight twenty, TWO i fifty FIVE krc the talk. Station
so my pleasure to buy my daughter And Eric rhinoshield
(01:53:15):
see the talk. Station JUSTH i have a thirty one
to fifty FIVE krcd talk. Station i'm very Happy tuesday to.
You always made extra special because it's this time of
week when we get The Daniel Davis Deep dive with
Retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel davis getting his analysis of the. War,
lately the war has not been focused over With russia And,
ukraine but this situation WITH us And. Iran welcome, Back Daniel.
(01:53:35):
Davis always a pleasure to have you on the fifty
FIVE Krs Morning. Show always a pleasure to be, Here,
Brian thank you all, right sort of a maybe it's rhetorical,
Question Daniel, davis but here's the WAY i view. It
if you're in the middle of a, ceasefire and both
sides of the ceasefire start firing at each. Other isn't
it definitionally that the ceasefire is? Over oh, well according
(01:53:56):
to The.
Speaker 9 (01:53:56):
Secretary Of, defense just a couple of minutes, AGO i
literally just jumped off of AN nbc news hit on
there where we were watching live this press conference in The,
pentagon and he was specifically asked that, question and they, said,
nah it's still in. Place that's just kind of low level.
Stuff it doesn't meet the, threshold is what the way
it was. Described SO i guess it doesn't count unless
(01:54:17):
something gets hit or blown up of sufficient nature because
apparently The iranian side attacked us our, ships And General
kine actually said that there had been ten such attempts
but none had been successful so, far and apparently there
we have been successful at at least we claim that
we knocked down six of their fast.
Speaker 10 (01:54:37):
Boats we'll see how that that's been disputed on the other.
Speaker 9 (01:54:40):
Side but that's the claims back and. Forth but the
bottom line is that it's not in our interest yet
to end the cease, first and we'll say it's just you,
know low level, noise if that's what you want to call,
it unless we're ready to go back into. It AND
i think that would only be done if there was
a decision made to go back in big AND i
certainly hope we don't ever, do AND i hope we
(01:55:00):
figure a way to get this over. With but that
seems to be where we are right.
Speaker 1 (01:55:03):
Now, see it's a been a bit of An orwellian.
Newspeak you, know if you say it's not a, war
if you say the seafire is not, over it's not,
over even if you're shooting each. Other but THE uss
Trust in AND Uss, MASON us ships military hardware did
come under what has been described as Sustained iranian. Attacks
they got a whole bunch of missiles launched at them
in VARIOUS i guess a smart bar mosquito fleet going
(01:55:25):
after him as. Well, yeah and it's.
Speaker 10 (01:55:28):
Interesting they also.
Speaker 9 (01:55:29):
Said one of the questions that from the press gallery
was what are these fast boats armed? With and both
He secretary hecxth And General kine both, said, oh it's
just small arms STUFF ak forty. Seven's they said there
was some shore batteries that had been launching some small
cruise missiles anti ship cruise missiles that he said those
(01:55:49):
were knocked, down but they ascribed only machine gun fire
to these fast, boats which doesn't make sense to me.
Either why would someone in a fast boat attack a
warship with a machine gun which is just like mosquitos
and would just bounce trot off this stuff the Whole
SO i that doesn't seem to make sense to.
Speaker 1 (01:56:06):
Me but that's what they're reporting, well AND i would
seem a fairly easy thing if you can get us
one of those fast boats up close enough to a
ship that you could actually Hit. It wasn't it THE
uss coal that was attacked that? WAY a small bub
blew a giant hole in the size of one of
our ships so many years. Ago, YEAH i.
Speaker 10 (01:56:19):
Did that was a suicide.
Speaker 9 (01:56:21):
Boat And iron does have, those especially with these other
drone boats that they, have like Their ukraine side does Against.
Speaker 10 (01:56:29):
Russia but we haven't seen those employed. Yet well against THE.
Speaker 9 (01:56:33):
Us we did see them employed against some of the
tankers in the first few days when we saw a
lot of that dramatic you, know scenes of these tankers
on fire in the.
Speaker 10 (01:56:42):
Gulf so they have been used. Before they haven't been
used lately.
Speaker 2 (01:56:45):
Though.
Speaker 1 (01:56:45):
Well obviously The United states is projecting that it wants
to break the stranglehold on the straight of horror. Moves
that's This Project freedom That trump talked about over the,
weekend providing safe passage to the state of, horror the
state Of horror moves or the straight of horror moose
for various shipping companies who you, know he, says are
unfairly impacted by, this AND i understand that, argument but
it's a defensive. Shield it isn't a physical escort like
(01:57:07):
A us warship escorting any given, ship but it's sort
of a standback and provide this shield for folks going.
Through apparently many of the shipping companies are saying that's
good not good enough, assurances and are relying on in
pointing to these missile launches from The iranians against various,
ships including The South korean one that was actually. Hit
so conceptually it sounded, like, well won't that work helping
(01:57:32):
people get through the strait of horm moonves with military
power defending, them or is that an. Impossibility we've talked
about the mines, before and there's been wide reports that
they have actually removed some minds over the past several,
weeks and that several boats just the other day are
SHIPS i should rather state have actually gotten through the
strait of horror. Moves so is this a strategy that could?
Speaker 9 (01:57:50):
Work, no it's, Not and, listen whatever whatever we may,
say you want to. Do they described it as a
red watt and blue bubble a shield is how they
just described in here that you know has one hundred
planes in the air AND i don't remember how many
ships and some other cas sets AND i don't know,
why but the eighty Second airborne was sited as one
(01:58:10):
of the organizations that was helping out with this to provide.
Speaker 10 (01:58:13):
Protection BUT i don't know how you provide protection without.
Speaker 9 (01:58:17):
A physical, escort and they said it wasn't a physical,
escort even though there are two apparently warships in the
gulf itself and apparently have transited this strait of hormones
towards what. END i have no idea why you would
want to send two ships by themselves into, that but
that's allegedly what we've. Done but then the biggest issue
is in The chairman of The Joint chess Of, Staff
(01:58:37):
General kine said there are hundreds of ships lining up
to come, out but none Have and as you pointed,
out two ships work at The South koreana and one
other were attacked by a run.
Speaker 10 (01:58:46):
Yesterday look all they've got to.
Speaker 9 (01:58:48):
Do if they can't shoot cruise missiles at THE us,
warship they certainly can at any tanker because the thing
is it's like a. WHALE i, mean the thing can't
move and it has no. Defenses so If iron decides
they're going to attack the, ships there's nothing we can
do to stop. It and this shield won't do anything
to help one of these. Ships and that's why there
(01:59:08):
hasn't been one hundred ships, moving only lining. Up so
so far we've seen no effectiveness. Whatsoever so obviously.
Speaker 1 (01:59:15):
They want to sustain the closure of the straight up
our moves to bring about the economic pain on the.
Globe this is their only leverage at this, point and
we obviously are trying to keep their port shutdown as,
well which means their economy is continuing to. Struggle and
lots and lots of reporting how terrible The iranian economy,
is AND i GUESS i wonder do The iranians are
(01:59:35):
The iranians hoping to hold off and sustain. This i'll
call it a stalemate for one of a better word
on the fly here until after The november, elections for,
example to bring about some pain to The trump. Administration,
yeah there.
Speaker 9 (01:59:48):
ARE i, mean it's a stalemate of, sorts but it's dueling.
Blockades and The, iranians no matter, what they're suffering at,
home and they have mitigation factors for.
Speaker 10 (01:59:56):
This even they can see that they. Are they're hurting
and lots of, shortage.
Speaker 1 (02:00:01):
Etc but they.
Speaker 9 (02:00:02):
Are everybody That i've talked, to and every report That i've,
seen And i'm talking about on The west and on
The uranian, side says that they are definitely prepared to
suffer for a long. Time they've got history for, it
they've got, experience it's religious. Issue they can suffer for
a long. Time and they're, saying, hey we'll drag this
out for, months no, problem we can. Survive all they
(02:00:24):
want to do is survive because it is a literal
life and death issue for. Them and so they, say
but we don't think you can because there's already and
it's not Even, november we're going to start suffering severe
economic contraction about the end of this, month in the
first Of, june according to many of the Experts i've inquired.
About SO i think they're looking at those dates and they're, saying,
(02:00:45):
yeah you want to do this, Blockade we'll keep doing the,
blockade but we can hold longer than you.
Speaker 10 (02:00:51):
Can that seems to be their.
Speaker 1 (02:00:52):
Strategy what of our larger foes in the, world The
chinese and to some, extent The, russians ALTHOUGH i think
they've been given a lot more, projected a lot more
strengthen actually have my subjective, opinion but seems to me
The chinese and The russians might have a vested interest
in continuing the thorn that is on our. Side along these,
lines are they providing any financial or other material support
(02:01:12):
to The iranians behind the, scenes, because AS i, understand
The chinese are having a difficult time with the straight
of horror moves closure.
Speaker 9 (02:01:17):
Themselves they are in both cases they are having some
problems with the oil not coming, out but they also
have a massively bigger strategic patroleum reserve that can last nine,
months which is way bigger than what we had even percentage,
wise so they can weather this storm for a long.
Time though they are trying to get some ships. Out
(02:01:39):
but the one thing they had they have done is
they directly contradicted something That Scott bessen put out this past.
WEEKEND i think it was about some more sanctions on
anybody helping anybody taking into these old that tries to
break the our, blockade And china, says, yeah, no you're.
Speaker 10 (02:01:55):
Not and they said these Five chinese entities that we
said are.
Speaker 9 (02:01:58):
Sanctioned they, said, no they're non, sanctioned and we got
Back we're going to back them up the corporations that
are working on. This so they are directly contradicting our
attempts to sanction anybody. Else and they do want this
to come. Out and there has been reports of Both
russia And china bringing airlift of unknown quantities or.
Speaker 10 (02:02:16):
Supplies we just know that, Ships i'm, sorry planes are coming.
In we just don't know what's being.
Speaker 1 (02:02:20):
Unloaded, WELL i only brought that up, because you, know
it is something we need to take into. Consideration The
iranians by, themselves and that any assistance from, outside you,
know might face economic. Collapse but if they're getting help
and they can help them sustain this war of attrition
or this, stalemate, obviously that are nearest to their benefit
and to the detriment of The United states Of america
and the global. Economy do you see anybody any of our,
(02:02:42):
well maybe call them former. ALLIES i don't. KNOW i
like to think OF nato is still at LEAST nato
countries and The European. Union we still trade and and
play nicely with, them relatively. Speaking they're hurt big time on.
This so do you see them changing course and maybe
capitulating and offering any assistance down the. Road i've been
saying no for quite some time. Now any any landscape
change on, That Daniel, Davis, Yeah, no.
Speaker 9 (02:03:04):
There hasn't, been as a matter of, fact that The
South koreans are still saying. No and over the weekend
you Had Menuel macron, say, listen he was asked that
question at a press conference On, SUNDAY i believe it,
was and he, said, listen we had a plan in.
Place there was Fifty european nations to get. TOGETHER i
think you AND i mentioned this, before where we weren't
invited and they were trying to figure out ways to
(02:03:24):
get The strait opened up and all, this and he,
said and then in the middle of, It america puts
a blockade on, it which undid everything we were working on. It, so,
no we have no plans to come and help this military,
blockad we won't even. Participate so he's, saying, no that's
not gonna, work and it. Won't AND i think that
they recognized. It so nobody's going to send their ships
into a suicide. Mission we're not even putting our. Ships
(02:03:45):
and until we have our ships and say we're going
to escort something, out nobody else is even going to
possibly come and do what we won't. Do AND i
think that's really where the rub comes. In so as
we part coming, Today Daniel, davis this again stale me
war of. Attrition whatever you see this continuing down the
road with no hope for any negotiated. Piece is that
(02:04:09):
kind of where you are right?
Speaker 10 (02:04:10):
NOW i mean that's where we.
Speaker 9 (02:04:11):
Are and, Listen i've getting reports from those at the front.
Line General cain mentioned it again just a few minutes.
Ago everything is locked and. Loaded all this is a political.
Choice the minute That President trump says Are i'm sick of.
THIS I i'm impatient that this didn't.
Speaker 2 (02:04:28):
Work go with.
Speaker 10 (02:04:29):
That they can do it on a, MINUTE i mean
in a.
Speaker 9 (02:04:31):
Heartbeat the problem is that what we're doing now has
no prospect of succeeding getting this, done and that prices
of old goes up every day and the amount of
fertilizers and things coming out is not and that is
causing problems with our, farmers with their. Allies these things
just you can't just keep kicking this can down the.
Road we have weeks and we're going to have to
do something to either diplomatically open that straight or or
(02:04:54):
we're going to do something even more foolish and try
to force it militarily, anyway and, catastrophe that's HOW i see.
Speaker 1 (02:05:00):
It you, mean blown off the face of the earth
if they ATTACK us, vessels that kind of. Thing Daniel,
davis you could use that.
Speaker 10 (02:05:07):
PHRASE i don't know where it came.
Speaker 1 (02:05:08):
FROM i don't know. EITHER i just saw somebody who
was quoted as saying that the other. Day Daniel Davis
Deep dive find his podcast where you find your. Podcast
tune in Every tuesday at eight thirty for The Daniel
Davis Deep dive here in the fifty Five Carsse Morning.
Show appreciate your, Analysis, daniel as, always have a great.
Week we'll do it again Next. Tuesday