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October 2, 2024 • 140 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Where the spirit of America lives. Our freedom every day.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Freedom of speech is one of the anchors of our society.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
Fifty five KRC The talk station five O five at
fifty five k r C the talk Station.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Happy Wednesday, Some sad sat Well, we're Joe's optimistic today.
Happy Wednesday. Brian Thomas right here, glad to be and
looking forward to listener lunch if we can make it.

(00:49):
Gonna be at Anderson Public Grill today and usually starts
about eleven thirty, So put that down if you've got
some time, enjoy the Fellowship's last opportunity for us to
get together for a listener lunch before the presidential election.
Of course, did you watch the debate last night? I
will be honest with you, I did not, Although I
did watch the Sanza Landsman debate. Orlando Sanza just cleaned

(01:11):
Greg Lansman's clock boy. Lansmo came across as an idiot.
I don't know if you saw that. I was just
thoroughly impressed with Orlando. I am biased in favor of them, clearly,
but in terms of debate performance, I'm clearly the winner
on that one. And of course, the aftermath of the
vice presidential debate. It looks like vance chalk one up
in the chalk one up in the win column. And

(01:32):
that's from reporters both from the far right and left.
Get to that a few moments, so I'll let you
know what's coming up on the fifty five Case Morning Show.
Looking forward to seven oh five. First guest, and always
enjoy having Jack Atherton on the program. The Big Picture
with Jack Atherd and he will discuss the vice presidential debate.
Jack joined the program at seven oh five, follow by
claimont Kenny Veterans Services, Steve Balzo. He'll be back talking

(01:55):
about the Pack Dack and the Compact Act. More information
on that. Got to get that info out to our
veteran friends. It's really important and some amazing opportunities for
veterans get some help through the Pact and Compact Acts.
Seven forty with Steve, followed by Oh I love this Wednesday.
You know I love Wednesday's because the Judge Ana of Polatano.
But we will also have Congress Smamassi preceding Judgement polaton

(02:17):
which I call the favorite hour of radio. Congress Mamassi
will address the national debt and continuing resolutions, his favorite
topic the FEDS roll in January sixth, apparently had a
hearing on that this week, and we'll be hearing what
the updates are on that. I know there's a lot
of things swirling around, but the federal government's FDI is

(02:38):
involved in egging people on in January sixth. And finally,
John Carrey hates the First Amendment. Yes, I talked about
that the other day. He is on record he actually
hates America. Seemingly no no, no more question mark swirling
around John Carry's position relative to America. First Amendment got
to be thrown out. And it's so easy to get
things done in authoritarian regimes. Oh, we don't have to

(03:00):
deal with that, pesky Congress. We don't have to do
able debates. We just you know, Jijon Pinge just pulls
his pet out, waves his hand, has a couple of
people executed, and gets what he wants done. That's the
world John Kerry wants to live in. And it's really
scary stuff. Congress from Nancy on that topic, and then
Judge Ennenapolitano body blows the George W. Bush in connection
with Gitmo Deal or no deal was like, wow, I know,

(03:25):
I know the judge is no fan of George W.
Bush and the torture that went on in Getmo. Obviously,
he's been on record many times over the years criticizing that,
and of course that plea deal that was entered into
with the terrorist in Gitmo, where he was going to
come out and admit to everything, talk in detail about
how the nine to eleven the bombings were or the

(03:48):
nine to eleven terrorism was organized and all that he
promised that on the plea agreement. And there's some complicating
factors that the judge will go into about how we've
set our souls up to fail with Gitmo and that
plea deal and the complete deal obviously with the plug
that got pulled on it. So anyway, eight thirty, with that,
you want to feel free to call in. I'd love
to hear from you. Five one, three, seven, four, nine

(04:09):
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk
pound five fifty on AT and T phones and looking
at two sides of the reporting coin nine. I'll give
the Wall Street Journal a little bit more credibility when
it comes to actually reporting. But I always and am
fond of the opinion section. Sometimes agree with the commentators
in the opinion sections sometimes I disagree, and they even

(04:30):
offer commentators from a broad swath of the political spectrum.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
And I've been.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
Flipping over to Politico, a left leaning website. I think
most of my friends know that they know about Politico,
and they also have editorial commentators. Regularly, when Politico and
the Wall Street Journal editorial commentators agree on the outcome
of the Vice president should debate, you know, there's a

(04:58):
clear winner, and it was JD.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
Vance.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
So yeah, just a not overwhelming approval of Vance and
less criticism of Waltz, of course from Politico. But in
the final analysis, each of the political commentators Holly Otter
Byne and Steve Shephard, Lisa Kashinsky, Eugene Daniels, Adam Ran
all declaring the winner to be Vance in that debate,

(05:27):
and people who were wondering the issue of abortion came up,
and I think JD. Vance navigated the topic pretty well,
I should, some compassion, some understanding, talked about how the
Republicans need to regain trust, and got Waltz backed into
a corner about the killing a baby and you know,
the late term pregnancy and what if a baby's born
still alive? When you tried to abort it. Walt's got

(05:49):
into a bit of a sticky wicket there. But while
Donald Trump was watching, the question that apparently was unanswered
up until last night, a definitive rejection on a national
federal abortion because Donald Trump has been paying attention understands
the Constitution I think better than any of the Democrats
to keep talking about this alleged national abortion ban the
Republicans are behind, which any smart Republican knows would be

(06:12):
impossible because of the Supreme Court opinion. It came up
Donald Trump on social media during the presidential quote in
bold or I'm sorry in all upper caps some part
of its bold. Everyone knows I would not support a
federal abortion ban under any circumstances, and would in fact
veto it. And here's where Donald Trump understands the situation

(06:38):
in terms of the law and what the Constitution allows
and does not allow. The Constitution does not give the
federal government power of this topic. So say at the
Supreme Court it's a state issue. Here's where he says,
because it is up to the states to decide based
on the will of their voters, the will of the people.

(06:59):
Like Ronald Reagan, for me. I fully support the three
exceptions for rape incests in the life of the mother.
I do not support the democratic radical position of late
term abortion, like, as an example, in the seventh, eighth,
or ninth month, or in case there's any question, the
possibility of execution of the baby after birth. Thank you
for your attention to this matter. Exclamation point close quote

(07:22):
Donald J.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Trump.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
So people were clamoring for the definitive response from Donald
Trump on that topic. There it is, and he's right,
And it doesn't matter what Donald trump position is on abortion.
As president of the United States of America, he can
of course advocate for it or against it, but he
has no control over the law regarding abortion.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
It's in the state's hands.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
Welcome to Ohio, where we have a constitutional right to
an abortion under a pretty broad set of circumstances. Voter referendum.
Voter's got what they wanted on that one, apparently, I guess. Anyway,
some of the observations from the debate A great opportunity
need to talk about since Iran launched missiles into Israel

(08:04):
fairly unsuccessfully, looks like World War three breaking out. Of course,
we'll be talking about that this morning. Would you support
a preemptive strike on Iran if that's what the Prime
Minister of Israel said he was going to do. Waltz
didn't answer the question, apparently, just danced around it, used
a lot of time to blame Donald Trump for leaving
a more dangerous Iran walking away from the twenty fifteen

(08:24):
nuclear agreement. Vance said, clearly and succinctly, it's up to
Israel to choose what it needs to do to defend
itself in the US ought to support Israel's decision. Boom
answer the question, it's always nice. And then the fact checking,
the one big, the one big revelation of that slight

(08:46):
bias on the part of CBS and Margaret Brennan when
it was said ahead of time that there would be
no fact checking. What does Margaret Brennan do? She interjects
the fact clearing up the record and fact checking something
Vance said relatively. Springfield Ohio and the immigration situation. So
after the exchange from Waltz and Vance, just to clarify

(09:07):
for our viewers, Springfield, Ohio does have a large number
of Asian migrants who have legal status temporary protected status.
Obviously an effort to well, I guess prejudice viewers against
Donald Trump. And of course Vance's position hmm, which is

(09:29):
Biden administration shouldn't have made it so easy for them
to obtain this status. Margaret Vance interrupted as they attempted
to move away from that subject matter and onto another topic.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Margaret, the rules were.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
The rules were that you guys weren't going to fact check,
and since you're fact checking me, I think it's important
to say what's actually going on. So there's an application
called CBP one app where you can go on as
an illegal immigrant to apply for asylum or apply for
parole and be granted legal status at the way eve
of a Kamala Harris open border wand that is not

(10:04):
a person coming in applying for a green card and
waiting for ten years.

Speaker 4 (10:09):
Hmmm.

Speaker 2 (10:13):
Brennan interjected, Oh, thank you, senator for describing the legal process.
We have so much to get to, senator, and as
Vance persisted a little bit, Waltz endeavored to chime in,
and then that's when they shut the microphones off. Gentlemen,
the audience can't hear you because your MIC's art cut
and at that point, no more fact checking.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
So well done. JD.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Vans for shooting down her efforts to steer the direction
of the conversation in a direction that made, of course,
the Republican side of the ledger look worse.

Speaker 1 (10:43):
It didn't work.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
Kim Straussler with The Journal observed that Democrats thought Waltz
needed to provide something more than Kamala Harris's words, oud
sound bite answers to questions on policies and positions. No
one knows where Harris is, It's observed Waltz maybe was
sent in to do the job of filling in the blanks.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
He didn't do it. She said.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
The Minnesota missed the memo. Only a few questions into
the bait, the Walt's formula became clear deflect on any
Harris plans, and then turned to attack Trump. Would miss
Harris support a preemptist strike on Iran? Look at those
dumb Trump tweets. What's the Harris climate and energy plan?
Mister Trump called climate change hoax? How can we handle

(11:27):
the border mister Trump argued against the border bill. She
said this performance would gratify anti Trumper's and might speak
to some Americans who decided to vote on questions of character,
but many other viewers probably left with the strong impression
that Walts was evading questions about his own team's policies,
especially given Jade Vance's clear answers on Trump's plans, it's

(11:53):
now impossible to believe. She observes that this strategy by
miss Harris is anything other than deliberate. The campaign knows
them Americans are curious, but also that its ideas amount
to a supersized version of the unpopular Biden agenda of
more spending, big government, border chaos, and the Green New Deal.
So the goal is to say as little as possible.

(12:14):
Mister Watts at least followed campaign orders five point seventeen
fifty five KRCD talk station and not as not as
much praise over at the Politico and all their their commentators,
but again Vance chalking it up in the win column
from their perspective as well. Five one, three, seven, four
nine to fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two

(12:35):
to three Tako with pound five fifty on eighteen T funds, I'll.

Speaker 5 (12:38):
Be right back, fifty five car the talk station, the
free iHeart rate.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
Five one.

Speaker 2 (12:48):
If you want to say it's sick, can be saying
it it is. Listener lunch on Wednesday. Keep in mind,
because I'm hoping to see a lot of people today
at Dianason pum MC grow have nice political conversations and
get in uh ex I for the upcoming presidential election.
Still can't believe we're just like thirty days away a
little more. It just absolutely amazes me so much has happened.

(13:14):
I think afore, you know, like almost four years of
the Morning Show to the Biden administration and it's already
almost over. It's the passage of time. When you get older,
it just it goes by so much quicker then you
perceived time when you're a young person. So anyway, sorry
about that. But speaking of fact checking, there wasn't an
opportunity to do the fact checking. But during the debate,

(13:39):
Waltz claimed that the Trump era tax cuts predominantly went
to top guys, the top guys benefit of America's wealthy was
his words, top guys.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
Donald Trump made a promise, and I'll give you this.
He kept it.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
He looked, he took books to mar al Lago said
you're rich as hell, I'm going to give you a
tax cut. What happened there was an eight trillion dollar
increase in the national debt, the largest everyge.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
I love that.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Walls is complaining about the national debt increasing under the
Trump administration. He has the number wrong, But the idea
that any Democrat could be concerned about fiscal policy and
being fiscally responsible is just laughable. Anyhow, and that was
one of my main criticisms from the Trump administration. You know,
I've been on record multiple times. How is it that

(14:30):
our debt went up so much under a Republican president? Anyhow,
no one's in the mood to God's spending. It's pretty obvious.
We'll talk with Congress and Massey about that later this morning.
Waltz went on, Now he's proposing a twenty percent consumption
sales tax, and everything we bring in everyone agrees in,
including businesses, it will be destabilizing, would increase inflation, potentially

(14:50):
lead to a recession.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
That's Walts.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
However, according to December September twenty twenty report from the
US Senate Committee on Finance, middle income Americans are the
ones I saw the biggest decrease in total tax liability
between twenty seventeen and twenty eighteen, and when the tax
cups and jogs at went into effect. Data notes that
Americans with annual incomes between fifty and one hundred thousand
dollars saw tax liability drop twice as much as Americans

(15:15):
who make a million dollars or more.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Hmmm. In response, JD.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
Vance had this to say, Tim admirably admits that they
want to on to do the Trump tax cuts, But
if you look at what it was so different about
Donald Trump's tax cuts, even from previous Republican tax cut plans,
it's that a lot of those resources went to giving
more take home pay to middle class and working class Americans.

(15:44):
I think you got a tough job here. Vance went
on to say, because you've got to play whack them mole.
You've got to pretend that Donald Trump didn't deliver rising
take home pay, which of course he did. You got
to pretend that Donald Trump didn't deliver lower inflation, which
of course he did. And then he simultaneously got to
defend Kamala Harris as atrocious economic record which has made gas,

(16:04):
groceries and housing unaffordable for American citizens. Well stated, so,
post debate fact checking is okay. Mid debate fact checking
was under the rules for the debate last night for
about of course, when the fact checking come up you
knew it was going to be against the Republican coming

(16:26):
on in five twenty five If you've got care Cee talks day,
I got local stories to talk about. Of course we
will get into the details of Israel and the war
with Iran now World War three breaking out question mark.
A lot of folks suggesting this is the opportunity to
get rid of the Iranian nuclear processing facilities, the bomb
making facilities. Question do we have arms? Are there bunker

(16:49):
busting bombs big enough to reach down into the depths
of the planet where Iran is building its nuclear weapons
someday out there with military knowledge, Go let me know
about that. I've been told No. Five twenty five fifty
five KRSTEE talk station and be right back for local stories.
Fifty five KRC dot Com five twenty eight at fifty

(17:12):
five car CD talk station. Did I mention yet that
it's listener to lunch da at Annison pub and Girl Joe?
Did Did I bring that up before? Anyhow? Feel free
to call five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred and eighty two to three talk found five
fifty on AT and T phones. Always enjoyed the company,
h and the Daniel Davis Steve DIVESO on Israel Lovan.

(17:32):
If you didn't get a chance to listen to Daniel
Davis not exactly a warmonger, Daniel, anyway, check that podcast out.
Fifty five kr SE dot com. Information about the Parkinson's
five K. I'll be there for that one that's taking
place on Saturday and the run begins at ten am,
a gates open at eight. Details right there. Help out
the local Parkinson's community and this is the biggest fundraiser

(17:54):
of the year and the money that goes that they
make during this fundraiser helps support all of the programs,
the exercise programs for folks struggling with art Parkinson's as
well as everything else they do. So it's a fun event,
free food, great fellowship, and you don't have to run,
and there's a children's a tiny tot run and there's
also a one cave if you don't want to do
a five K, So lots of opportunities there to help

(18:16):
out the Parkinson's community. Fifty five krc dot com for
all the details right there. So, without further ado dive
into local stories. Apparently the Hurricane Helen Helen impacting the
stri state farmers big impact on agriculture in the tri State,
which could turn in turn impact the cost to fill

(18:38):
up your grocery card. Oh goodie. Most recent issue farms
have been facing here in Ohio strong winds or damaging crops.
Garver family farm harvested their field ahead of the arrival
of the bad weather, but has not changed what has
been a challenging year for the people who grow the
food that ends up on your tables, they report. They

(18:59):
said the drought impacted water levels on the Mississippi River,
meaning barges they used to export their harvests couldn't be
loaded to capacity because they hit the riverbed after jumping
hurdles with the drought and the river levels, winds from
the hurricane level the crops to the east, making them
difficult for farmers to harvest. Garbas said, you know Mount

(19:20):
Oraberra and so forth. I've heard that the drought was
more severe in that area. So feel for those people
because my brother Mike and I have experienced that. Last
time we had something that severe was around nineteen eighty three,
very very very stressful time to see something like you
put your hard work into and all you can do
is just watch it wither and suffer.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
It's very hard. Yeah, we were.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
My wife and I commented regularly about how terrible the
corn crop looked everywhere we went before the rain showed up,
because of course we were short on rain, so there
were crops that are already damaged due to weather.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
We have.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Other pressures inflation and what the hurricanes floodwaters have done
to farmers. Your grocery budget may soon need an adjustment.
That's reported. Oh, I had the port closure to the
problems associated with getting a fresh produce into your neighborhood
grocery store, and we might be facing a bit of
a crisis here. Hate to be gloom and doomy about it,

(20:16):
but that's reality. One person dad after a shooting in
north Amone happened on yesterday one hundred block a glenn
Ridge Place. Since they pleased, some district force showed up
at the call around eight pm. Officers that a fifty
three year old man had been killed. Police say the
car found of the scene was involved in the shooting.
Officers hadn't released suspect information yet, so details more details
I presume will follow. I suppose if you have any

(20:37):
information about that, give Crimesoppers a call it.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
Three five, two thirty forty. Yeah. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
Do we give the award to an eighteen year old
kid calling in a threat? Joe, he's an adult, he's eligible.
Another threat made to Tri State School probably heard at
top of our news, resulting in the arrest of a student.
Holly Hanzel, spokesman for the taliwan To School, said the
threat was made late Monday evening investigated throughout the night.
Hamilton Police said the eighteen year old Kenneth Cartwright has

(21:08):
been accused of posting a threat on Snapchat toward the
Tallewanto High School.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
Court to the report.

Speaker 2 (21:15):
Says Cartwright quote posted a picture of himself with the
caption do.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
Not come to school tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
I'm shooting the f wording place up close quote not
mincing words on that. Police confirmed the Cartwright is a student.
While the threat was deemed as not credible, additional law
enforcement was on campus yesterday as a precaution. Court of

(21:41):
the statement, She said, a threat of this nature is
very serious criminal offense. The school district will pursue all
disciplinary measures. This person is also facing serious criminal charges
in Butler County. Cartwright, for his part, now is behind
bars in the Butler County Jail facing one kind of
making terroristic threats, a third degree felony. Of course, he
joins the list of a whole bunch of other students

(22:01):
have recently been arrested in the tri State after making
threats against schools or having weapons on school grounds.

Speaker 6 (22:08):
Perios, the biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies,
there's no bigger douche than you.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
You've reached the top, the pinnacle of douche.

Speaker 4 (22:21):
Dum good going douce.

Speaker 7 (22:25):
Your dreams have come true.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
And someone who can share the award The person who
destroyed a park bathroom place you know the Kentucky looking
for answers after a park bathroom severely and intentionally damaged. Hell,
it looks like they took a sledgehammer to the thing.
Edrew Police say the restroom by the Tennis Courts President's
Park destroyed by a person or group of people. Investigative
believe the incident took place September twenty eighth, between seven

(22:51):
pm and ten pm. Photos posted online by the police
show the mirror windows completely shattered. Objects appear to be
rocks on the ground and the sink and the toilet
completely smashed. So officers are asking residents to live between
Turkey Foot Road and Colony Drive to check their doorbell
security cameras to see if they have any recordings of
suspicious activity. Writing online, the police said we were particularly

(23:14):
interested in any footage showing juvenile subjects wearing red shirts
and shorts. Someone somewhere in our community has information or
a tip that can hold that person or persons accountable.
Suspects will be criminally charged to say the police. If
anyone is information, please call the Edgewood Police Department non
emergency number eight five nine three five six thirty one

(23:37):
ninety one. Yeah, I don't think their allowance is going
to cover that. I presume it's a bunch of punk kids.
Five point thirty five fifty five KRC the Talk Station.
Feel free to give me a call, ife give anything
to talk about something in particular, maybe the debate last night,
or World War three breaking out in Israel, anything in between.
Love to hear from you in the meantime. I'll be
right back.

Speaker 5 (23:58):
Fifty five KRC the Talk Station. What's the best place
to reach new customers for your business? Wherever they are,
and that's exactly where you can be with iHeartMedia.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
We talked to our listeners etveruckstation.

Speaker 2 (24:11):
That's time for a stacker stupid this Wednesday, and why
not normally steer clear a celebrity news, but when it's
in the stack of stupid, we kind of make an
exception in this morning, two celebrities making it to the
stack of.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
Stud let's shart. We'll start with Sean.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
Diddy comes, yes, indeed now facing Teez Louise. So far
one hundred and twenty accusers.

Speaker 8 (24:38):
What the happens?

Speaker 1 (24:40):
He is in hot water.

Speaker 2 (24:41):
At news conference yesterday, Texas based attorney, pretty famous guy apparently,
Tony Busby said he represents now one hundred and twenty accusers.
Allegations against Sean Diddy comes going back more than twenty years,
and he's got a whole lot more clients. He's gonna
unfold here in the near future. Stead of the news contents,
we will the enablers who enable this conduct behind closed doors.

(25:02):
We will pursue this matter no matter who. The evidence
implicates a lot of veiled threats built into this statement, folks,
many powerful people, many dirty secrets, pointing out his team
has collected pictures, video texts, allegations will include, in his words,
violent sexual assault or rape, facilitated sex with a controlled substance,

(25:24):
dissemination of video recording, sexual abuse of miners. He said,
it's a long list already, but it's because of the
nature of this case. We're going to make sure, damn
sure we are right before we do that these names
will shock you. Referring to the celebrity names that apparently

(25:44):
he's got a list of involved in all this. He
said more than three thousand individuals have come to his
office with accusations against Comms, and then he plans to
begin filing lawsuits in a multiple states within the next
thirty days, saying that he will name those other defendants
at a later date. The other defendant that will shock you, apparently.

(26:04):
Among his new group of accusers, Busby said, sixty two
percent identify as African American. They hail from more than
twenty five states, the majority coming from New York, California, Georgia,
and Florida. Twenty five of the accusers were miners at
the time of the alleged incidents, and the lawyer further
claimed that one of the accusers was as young as
nine years old at the time of the alleged incident.

Speaker 8 (26:26):
What the hell hm.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
HM COM's currently being detained at the Metropolitan Detention Center
in Brooklyn. They denied him bail, comes repeated that has
fleeted not guilty, and his lawyers have said that he
is innocent of all charges. I was waiting to figure
out which SoundBite you were going to go on with that, Joe.

(26:50):
I thought it was going to be Liam with whatever whatever.
So you don't have a whole lot of faith in
Diddy's defense team. Huh no, thanks dad.

Speaker 9 (27:03):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
Another celebrities, green Day, has been banned from two Las
Vegas radio stations playlists after Billy Joe Armstrong, lead singer
green Day called their city an s whole.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
I know skeep your stupid amout.

Speaker 10 (27:20):
A been.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
J Rowler gour to San Francisco Bay area news station
k r O N four k ron four punk singers
said quote, we don't take s from people like effing
John Fisher. I hate Las Vegas. It's the worst shole
in America, I clearly, and so the radio station not

(27:47):
taken kindly to the comments. With radio station KMOP came
up ninety three riding on the Instagram. We have pulled
any and all Green Day from our playlist. It's not us, Billy,
it's you, not the Las Vegas radio station X whatdo simply,

(28:08):
also obviously distressed by Armstrong's comments, writing on their website, quote, well,
since the city heard him loud and clear, an X
one of seven point five is not having it. A
response to Armstrong's inflammatory comments, the station is banning all
Green Day music effective immediately. Considering he played a pop
show at Fremont Country Club last year, we're surprised at
his comments. The show was spectacular, but now Armstrong has

(28:31):
crossed a line with Las Vegas locals, so we're breaking
up with Green Day completely.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
Bye Bye Billy, no buddy care.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
Well that's why I normally don't put celebrities in the news.
I used to be a fan of Green Day. Normally
I don't let politics get in the way of my
musical selection and choice. I even saw him live in
concert back before they were, you know, an arena band.
But on a going forward basis, I think I'll manage without.

Speaker 11 (29:03):
Tell boat Democrats.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
Yeah, you know, and why go down that road. The
corporations have figured this out. If they go political, they're
gonna hurt half of their their customer base, and another
celebrity news Taylor Swift, apparently lost two million people who
used to follow her on some stupid Internet account. Why well,

(29:26):
because she endorsed Kamala Harris. Why would you do that?
Seven eight hundred and eighty two three talk nine five
fifty on AT and T phones. Uh, take advantage of
a free roof inspection. Call my friends at Fast and Pro.
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Speaker 12 (31:15):
Fifty five KRC October is cybersecurity awareness of mind.

Speaker 2 (31:19):
I think you get tired of me reminding folks of that.
But looking forward to a nice, nice lunch today. Give
himself a big old Anderson Public gril Burger. Go to
the stack is stupid. Let's get a naked Guy's not Friday,
but there are naked people in the stack of stupid
almost every single day, indeed, and quite often in Florida,
which is where we go for this. One Tampa, Florida

(31:40):
naked guy jumped a fence at a Tampa home, ultimately
arrested after deputy c he put a seven year old
girl in a choke called why are you doing that,
before then stabbing in an eighty year old eighty one year
old man. Four pm Sunday, Hillsboro deputies responded to home
and Spence Avenue. We got a report that a naked
guy jumped over the back yard fence and placed a

(32:01):
young child under that choke hold while she was on
her trampoline.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
Girl's mom and nearby neighbors.

Speaker 2 (32:06):
Rescue the child with the suspect, twenty seven year old
Yawn Gonzales, Vasquez took off to another residence. Court to
Sheriff Chad Carnister, I can't imagine the terror that this
mother must have felt as she watched a violent man
lay hands on her child. The bravery shown by her

(32:26):
and the neighbors who intervene to rescue this girl is heroic. Indeed,
vescar has learned that when Vasquez ran away, he entered
another home and then stabbed an eighty one year old man.
Victim taken a nearby hospital for treatment. Current condition not disclosed.
Sheriff said the individual evil actions targeted both a child
and utterly person showed that he has disregard for human life.

(32:48):
Video shows deputies find Vasquez hiding under a covered porch
in the backyard of a home near Kimball Avenue who
Vasquez arrested booked into the Orient Road Jail facing several charges,
including two charges of berkeley with battery aggravated battery with
a deadly weapon. Additional charges are pending. Doesn't say anything about,
you know, exposing himself in public got any theories on

(33:11):
whether drugs are involved with that one.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Okay, let's see here.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
Tyler Brawley, thirty years old, in court Wednesday, flank by
supporters and more than six weeks after police added additional
charges she was She was in August arrested at the
school after police launched an investigation allegations a seventeen year
old boy had been sexually touched by a female teacher,
taking to Liverpool Police Station in charge with sexual intercourse

(33:49):
with a person between seventeen and eighteen under special care.
Charged with sexually touching a person between seventeen and eighteen
under special care and aggravated sexual assault. She actually accused
of having sex with two students. Released on conditional bail,
but re arrested more than a week later, charged with
a string of other offenses relating to a separate complaint
enticing to commit offense sexual intercourse with a person under care.

(34:12):
Also charged with sexually touching a person as I mentioned.
Court documents indicate she's been accused of exchanging social media
message with a sixteen year old over a one week
period in July. Accused of soliciting and accessing child abuse
material via social media in July and then alleged to
have engaged in sexual acts with the same teenager at
the Southwestern Sydney School on another date, also alleged to

(34:35):
have incited a sixteen year old to sexually touch her
and sexually touch them during that same time. She is
also alleged to have incited the teacher to have sexual intercourse.
What is with teachers, She's thirty years old. Pick on
somebody your own size, pervert. And Finally, Pennsylvania father accused

(35:03):
of shooting and killing his son during an argument over
the family's vehicle waited twelve hours to call nine one
one while he watched what were described in the complaint
as religious videos. John Friditus sixty seven facing murder charges,
aggravated assault, recklessly and dangering another person in a simple
assault in the death of his own son, forty thw

(35:24):
year old John Gustitus. Shooting happened Sunday after the elder
man woke up sometime between eight and nine am after
hearing his son chasing a cat around the room. Father
allegedly went to his son's room to get the cat.
When his son demanded the family's car, the two argued.
The elder Guestditis allegedly retrieved a three point fifty seven
magnum revolver, went back to his son's room. Son grabbed

(35:46):
a screwdriver out of his bed post and approached his father,
and that's when the younger son, when his son got
shot in the head. Dad didn't call police right away
because he thought about taking his own life later telling
of Vesigs, I'm sorry. He later allegedly told investigators about
about taking his life. Instead, he watched religious videos for hours,

(36:08):
which led him to call the police.

Speaker 1 (36:11):
Okay, eight pm.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
East Union Township Police Chief Chris Dimmick, dispatch from a
shooting call to a home in Franklin Street, said in
the press release, when the chief arride the Elberg status
was sitting on the porch where he was arrested, and
investigators found his son dead in the bedroom from that
gunshot wound to the face. Suspect allegedly tolled investigators he
didn't remember pulling the trigger, but acknowledged he must have.

(36:34):
I guess say he knew his son was dead after
hearing his son making a gurgling sound.

Speaker 1 (36:39):
He's off to prison.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
Bail quarter of a million dollars set to a peer
back in court on the tenth how he responded to
something like that, five fifty six fifty five care see
de talk station. Lots more coming up. Bobby's on the phone.
Take your call, Bobby and listen to here. I look
forward to hearing others too. One three, seven, four, nine,

(37:00):
fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to three talk
hit pound five fifty on an AT and T phone.

Speaker 1 (37:05):
Stick around. I'll be back after the.

Speaker 3 (37:07):
News updates on the twenty twenty four presidential campaigns.

Speaker 4 (37:11):
Do you have it here?

Speaker 9 (37:11):
Invite?

Speaker 3 (37:12):
Uh, he's a threat to democracy.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
Fifty five krs the talk station. What can the Claremont
County BSO do for six to fifty five kr?

Speaker 2 (37:21):
Seed the talk station on a very happy Wednesday to
Brian Thomas inviting YouTube listener lunch. You're gonna get sick
out here hearing me do the invites this morning. But
it is today. It's the last one for the election.
I'm excited about going of the Anderson Pub and Grill.
They take great caravas, and the burghers and food are
always wonderful. About eleven thirty if you can make it
Anderson Pub and Grill. So of course, World War three

(37:43):
breaking out, Israel attacked by Iran direct missile strikes, and
some interesting observations on that. I will get to the
phones here just in a minute. Let you know what's
coming up here in the Morning Show one hour from now,
The Big Picture with Jack Avett and brilliant man he is.
He is going to offer his thoughts and comments about
the vice presidential debate last evening one hour from now,
followed by Steve Balzo from Kama County Veteran Services seven

(38:04):
point forty more information on the Packed Act and Compact Act.
My veteran friends and their families need to get that information.
Some really important benefits there, so Steve will join us
to talk about that. Two hours eight oh five. Congressman
Thomas Massey National Debt Continuing Resolutions. Here's one My listeners
will be interested in his comments on the FEDS roll

(38:27):
in the January sixth drunken fraternity party, which is what
I like to refer that to as I had a
hearing this week on that topic. So the details from
Congressman Massy, followed by John Kerry Well hates America and
hates the First Amendment. That's the three topics with the
Congressman followed by Judge Enna Politano at eight thirty five
one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred
eight two three talk pound five fifty on AT and

(38:48):
T phones, starting with CJ.

Speaker 1 (38:51):
Bobby hang on, get you in a second. CJ.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Welcome to the fifty five Carse Morning Show. Thanks for
calling this morning.

Speaker 13 (38:56):
Oh thank you. You know, I was asked yesterday by
somebody if Kamala is starting to look a lot older
and being aged as a candidate, and I said, you
know what, I don't know, but I can tell you
it doesn't sound like she wants to do the nuts
and jobs of the presidentcy based on how she responded
to the missile attack yesterday.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
That was an embarrassment.

Speaker 13 (39:17):
Reading that statement that.

Speaker 7 (39:19):
She read, in the fact that she read it the
manner that she you know, as we learned through the
Trump administration, if you can't since my sarcasm that unnamed
sources are always.

Speaker 13 (39:29):
Right, that she totally missed the briefing on the upcoming
hurricane last week and the damage that they could do,
and she only responded to Trump's response and showed up
to work for that and just watching how she's doing this,
she's running as somebody who wants the airplane and not
the job.

Speaker 2 (39:49):
I can understand your reaching that conclusion. Maybe she wants
the job, she's just not capable of well the position
because she lacks the cognitive ability to manage the position.
I mean, you can want something, you know, I want
to be an astronaut, Well, guess what, I'm not going
to be an astronaut. I want to be a basketball player. Well,
I'm only five to ten and I'm out of shape

(40:10):
and I'm fifty nine years old. That's not going to happen.
I want to be president of the United States of America. Well,
I'm an idiot. I'm incapable articulating my strategy for the future.
I've got a terrible hardcore left wing background. I am
desperately trying to hide from people. So here's a word, salad.
It's all she can manage to do. You talk, even

(40:31):
having this conversation. Listen to what we're talking about here.
She's the best that the Democrat Party has got. Now
they can say that about Trump, fine, go ahead and
let him say it. But he's demonstrably more qualified answer questions.
He does have a record that was solid for the
American people, and he delivered on some really, really, really
wonderful things in spite of the fact that he was

(40:52):
basically being you know, crucified the entire time in various forums.
I mean, he was in a threat of impeachment from
day one in office. Yet he's old, managed a lot
of different things, and the economy did really well until
COVID came along. She's got nothing to run on. That's
why she's hiding from her record. And of course, you know,

(41:13):
Waltz didn't do any service last night.

Speaker 1 (41:17):
At all.

Speaker 2 (41:18):
And congratulations of JD Events for continuing to focus on
Kamala Harris's record. It's a really good opportunity that he
took advantage of to put the spotlight on Kamala Harrison
the damage she's done to our country. Moving over, let's
do what Bobby's got this morning. Bobby, Happy Wednesday to you.

Speaker 14 (41:35):
Happy Wednesday, my brother. With all the things going on
in the world, I got a couple good things to
start the day off.

Speaker 1 (41:41):
Well, I'm glad to hear that. Tell me about it.

Speaker 14 (41:44):
East Palestine got six hundred million dollars for the residence. Wow,
that was a nice little clip for the people up
there that took that beating from the North Forest, so southern.
But they didn't claim any thing they did wrong, but
they still get up six hundred million dollars to them. Well,
last night I.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
Was just gonna say, I hope that's enough to make
them whole.

Speaker 2 (42:07):
I I you know, considering the price of real estate,
and I don't know how many houses there are there.
Can you imagine the price of a house before the
train derailment and after? I mean, do you think anybody
in his right mind would really want to buy a
house there? So they've lost a lot of they have
an actual you know, you can you can put it
on paper type of damages. And whether or not six

(42:28):
hundred million dollars spread across all the residents who've been
actually directly harmed by that leak, I don't know if
it's quite enough, to be honest with you, But if
that's what they negotiated and the residents are happy with that,
that's okay.

Speaker 14 (42:41):
And the next thing is this Orlando last night suhredded Great?

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Wasn't that beautiful?

Speaker 14 (42:48):
His political career is as dead as a pan of pride.

Speaker 2 (42:51):
Kick and Greg watch if anybody watched. Yes, I am
biased for Orlando. Signs I think he's a fantastic guy,
but that was what was demonstrated last night. The guy
as sharp as a razor, and Landsman sounded like a
I don't know a.

Speaker 1 (43:08):
Valley girl.

Speaker 14 (43:10):
It was embarrassing.

Speaker 2 (43:12):
Yeah, he should be embarrassed. I hope a lot of
people watch that. I appreciate Channel five, you know, posting
that debate. Anybody paying attention to the watch it knows
who's the man for the job. Orlando Sonza knocked it
out of the park. Thanks for bringing back out, appreciated Bobby.
Some positive news out actually out there.

Speaker 1 (43:34):
Yeah, go back and see that.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
I'm sure they've got a a loop of that video debate.
It was wonderful to watch. Orlanzo just do man. He
answered the questions directly while Lansman just danced around and
sounded a lot like Kamala Harris. To be quite honest
with you, call it dem speak formerly new speak. So

(43:56):
what's uh? What do you think Israel is going to do?
A lot of folks are talking about the next the
response from Israel, and Israel says it is ready, it
has a plan in place, and it's a question of
biding their time. And some are suggesting now is the
time that Iranian nuclear facilities should be targeted. We all

(44:19):
know they're building a bomb, we all know where the
centrifuges are. Then I'm certain the Israeli intelligence knows exactly
where these particular sites are located. Can they actually do
any damage to those sites if it's decided that they're
going to strike Iran? I think they're justified in the response.
You know, like JD Van said it last night, you know,
if Iran wants to defend itself, we should back Israel

(44:41):
wants to defend itself. We should back Israel's right to
defend itself and support them in that. How far does
that support reach and how far does it go? According
to State departments folks versus Matthew Miller today speaking with
reporters to initial assessments, we need time to collect all

(45:03):
the information, we need time to talk to our Israeli counterparts,
we need time to talk to other partners in the region,
and we'll do this over the coming days. But it's
clear that once again this is a significant escalation by Iran.
And then when asked about whether Iran's nuclear site or
sites as the case, maybe we're we're legitimate targets for
an Israeli strike, which I think that's what Israel's planning

(45:25):
on doing. His response, I don't want to get into it.
And this is not to say I'm ruling anything out
and that I'm ruling anything in. But I would answer
any question this way, which is, we want to have
these conversations with our Israeli counterparts over the coming days.
It is clear that this is an unacceptable attack by Iran.

(45:46):
There will be consequences. Good question the size and scope
of the consequences and how big this will become or
how big could this become Iran and Russia or have
a great relation relationship now, so would we be bringing
in the Russians in this conflict if Israel goes after
Iran and hits those nuclear sites. Frightening time to be

(46:12):
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You can schedule your appointment online at plumtighttite, plump tight
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Speaker 13 (47:17):
This is fifty five krc and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (47:21):
If you missed our twenty twenty six nineteen to fifty
five KRCV talk station, Happy Wednesday, thirty seven point fiftyive
hundred eight hundredywo three talk Yah speaking of the Israeli
response and what they're gonna do with Iran Journal's editorial
board kind of pushing in the direction of going after
those military of those nuclear bases writing Iran and Lisha's

(47:42):
second direct missiles suldagans c Israel on Tuesday, this time
with one hundred and eighty one ballistic missiles. All Israeli
civilians were ordered to bomb shelters, most missiles intercepted. This
is an act of war against a sovereign state, and
American ally and at warrants a response targeting Iran's military
and nuclear assets. That's pretty straightforward. This is around second
missile brorage since April. No country can let this become

(48:03):
a new norm. Israel reported a few citizens injured in
one Palestinian may have been killed near Jericho in the attack.
A terrorist shooting, possibly coordinated, killed seven Israelis. Work by
the US and Israel to shoot down most of the
missiles was spectacular, but it shouldn't have to be the
next time.

Speaker 1 (48:17):
It may not be.

Speaker 2 (48:18):
In any pause there, I saw some fun facts about
how expensive it is for those anti missile missiles, the
defense missiles, And I thought to myself, it's report of
that Iran has about three thousand of these nuclear or
weather cruise missiles of various forms, some supersonic or hypersonic.

(48:38):
You know, they launch one hundred and eighty and one
hundred and eighty times one hundred and eighty. I guess
anti missiles. How many of these interception missiles does Israel have?
Couldn't they just do sort of a exhaust the Israeli
ability to defend itself by just one barrage after another. Oh,
here's another one hundred and eighty. Maybe tomorrow will send

(48:58):
a two hundred, and then after that will fifty. At
some point Israel is going to exhaust its supply of those.
And that's what kind of worries me about Israel's ability
to defend itself. Anyway, back to the editorial. After April's attack,
Biden administration pressler pressured Israel for a token response, and
President Biden said Israel should take the win since there
was no great harm to Israel. Israel's restraint has now

(49:20):
yielded this escalation, and it is under no obligation to
restrain its retaliation.

Speaker 1 (49:25):
This time.

Speaker 2 (49:25):
Prime Minister Benjamin and Yah, who hinted a stronger response
in a statement to the israel Is quote, Iran made
a big mistake and it will pay for it.

Speaker 1 (49:35):
Regiment.

Speaker 2 (49:36):
Iran doesn't understand our determination to defend ourselves and retaliate
against our enemies. Close quote citing Hamas and his Balla
leaders who've been killed since October seventh, said, and there
are probably those in Tehran who don't understand this. They
will understand. Question, But does Biden understand or whoever his

(50:00):
running the presidency? I have to interject. Iran's active war
is an opening to do considerable damage to the razime's
missile program, drone plants, and nuclear sites. This is a
test for a president who's been unwilling even to enforce oil.

Speaker 1 (50:12):
Sanctions against Iran.

Speaker 2 (50:14):
It's also a chance to restore at least a measure
of US deterrence that has vanished during his presidency. Prior
to the attack, Lloyd Austin, Defense Secretary warned Torono severe consequences.
National Security Advisor Jake Zula Sullivan reiterated the pledge after
the missile barrage. Having issued such a warning, mister Biden
has an obligation to follow through or further erode US credibility. Yeah,

(50:37):
it's like putting that red line in the sand and
then someone walks over it and you make another line.

Speaker 1 (50:42):
Right, Nay, right.

Speaker 2 (50:45):
If there was ever a cause to target Iran's nuclear facilities,
this is it. Iran has shown that it might well
use a bomb if it's acquired, and Tehran would certainly
use it as a deterrent cover for conventional and terrorist
attacks on Israel, Sunni, Arab states, and perhaps the US.
Iran is closer than ever to a nuclear weapon and
won't stop itself. The question for America and Israel leaders
is if not now? When Iran's revolutionary regime has shown

(51:11):
itself again to be a regional and global menace. It
started with the war via Hamas, which it funds, arms
and trains to carry out masacers like the one on
October seventh. It escalated via Hasbala, spreading the war to
Lebanon other proxies, destabilize Iraq and Yemen, fire on Israeli
and US troops, and block global shipping. It sends drones

(51:32):
and missiles to Russia and rains ballistic missiles on Israel,
all while seeking nukes. Escalating this confrontation now is a
gamble for Iran. With Amas depleted in his Bala and disarray,
Iran's proxies can't defend it the way they usually would.
I told Ali Kamani, maybe betting that mister Biden will
shrink again from defending this civilized world from a dangerous regime.

(51:54):
Will he be right? That's a good question. I'm not
necessarily its in getting into war, but Israel can much
in the way Ukrainians have been busily defending themselves against
the Russian onslaught with the help of well people who
are supporters of Ukraine and providing them with military equipment

(52:16):
and hardware. I suspect the United States can continue to
do that. And don't forget, if you're talking about going
after the Iranian drone manufacturing facilities, Russia may have a
problem with that. That's the other challenge we have here,
this escalating to a much larger conflict involving maybe even Russia.
So lots of challenges, you know, it's times like these.

(52:38):
I'm glad I'm not in the one in the position
making all the decision and pushing all the buttons. But
you know, as far as I'm concerned. I'm with jd Vance.
Israel has a right to defend itself and we'll stand
behind Israel and well maybe watch them defend themselves. Although
we were involved slightly in defending Israel from the onslaught
of missiles yesterday. Apparently our ships took some of them

(52:58):
out twenty five Right now, Cribage, MIC's on the phone.
I'm gonna looking forward to seeing him and listen to
lunch today if you don't mind hanging on Mike amount
of time in the segment, I want to mention Odor exit.
I know you're on a submarine all those years, you
think Odor exit would have solved the problem. I hear
submarines have an interesting smell about them. That's another story
for another day. I try to do it relatable there anyway,

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Odor egsit does have wonderful products that will eliminate the
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(53:39):
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Speaker 1 (54:05):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 4 (54:08):
The Truth.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
Here's your nine first Forting weather forecast. Not bad today.

Speaker 2 (54:16):
We start out cloud he end up sunny, high seventy six,
get a few clouds every night out of forty ninth
sunny skies tomorrow with the highest seventy eight clear over
a night fifty six, and another sunny day on Friday,
going all the way up to eighty two fifty four.
Right now, it's time for chuck Ingram with traffic from.

Speaker 15 (54:31):
The UC Hunth Tramphing Center as the only eleven to
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setting the national standard for emergency care and preparedness with
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you need expert care. Highways doing fine. I'm not seeing
any major problems to deal with as of yet. Just
beginning to build a bit northbound four seventy one into

(54:51):
the barrels above Grand Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc
the talk station.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
Six nine.

Speaker 2 (55:06):
At the five krcn DE talk station. Don't forget to
the five kr SEA dot com. Git your podcast when
you can't listen live or cut and paste, refer to
a friend, get your iHeartMedia app why you're over there.
Strongly encourage that and so you can listen to the
content wherever you happen to be all the iartmedia content
without further ado five one, three, seven, four nine, fifty
five hundred, eight hundred and eight two three Talk Cribbage Mike,

(55:26):
looking forward to seeing you today. You are going to
be at Anderson pubmcgrill today for the fifty five kr
SEA listener lunch.

Speaker 14 (55:31):
Aren't you my friend with cribbage board in toe, Sir?

Speaker 2 (55:35):
You're gonna just look for another opportunity to gloat over
a victory.

Speaker 1 (55:39):
I know it. I can sense.

Speaker 10 (55:40):
Another another day of competition, and you are a very
good competitor, sir.

Speaker 2 (55:44):
Wow, it's nice for you to say. My win loss
record does not suggest that.

Speaker 10 (55:50):
If you look on the other side of the border's
a bunch of notches. I don't know where those came from,
but you know.

Speaker 2 (55:54):
Ah, you are a superior cribbage player. I acknowledge that
I'll learn a little bit from you though, so that's
that's helpful for me anyhow. What's on your mind there today,
mister submarine or Mike.

Speaker 10 (56:08):
Well, actually, that's an excellent point about odor exit because
if they were to ever get a government contract the
Submarine Force would keep them in business.

Speaker 2 (56:16):
Is it true what they say about the odor inside
of submarine?

Speaker 10 (56:21):
Well, we amine is the number one element in our
that removes the coach the co two from the air
and it does have a unique smell as well as
being totally encapsulated out of them, bringing in fresh air
whenever you do pop up. But there's a lot of
times either due to operational commitments or if the distiller

(56:42):
does go down, and that's making freshwater out of seawater.
We don't distill any kind of spirits done there. But anyway,
so the first thing that they eliminate are showers. So
there'll there'll be time two three days where if you've
got one hundred and ten of your closest friends taking
bird baths. Yeah, I could get the odor exit with
the number one.

Speaker 2 (57:00):
What you want to yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's uh
gross gross.

Speaker 10 (57:06):
Speaking speaking of submarines, and I surely hope it doesn't
come to it. I can guarantee you who does have
those nuclear facilities targeted is the USS Georgia submarine with
its one hundred and forty four missiles sitting right in
Iran's backyard right now, as well as special forces so
and god forbid if it comes to that, but they
got to know that. So I mean, if it does,

(57:27):
I mean, if you think the first go for it
was quick, you haven't seen nothing yet.

Speaker 2 (57:30):
So do those are they conventional missiles? Or are the
nuclear missiles conventional?

Speaker 1 (57:36):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (57:37):
Yeah, all right, yeah, last thing I want is, yeah,
I don't want to see nuclear war breaking out. So
are you using them for others to use them?

Speaker 1 (57:45):
Absolutely?

Speaker 10 (57:46):
And concerning both debate Class Night, I did watch uh,
first with the VP other than I think Tim Wallas
having his Admiral Stockdale moment, you remember him, went with, oh,
you know, I don't even know why I'm here, but
he called him elf and knucklehead last night, and I
just don't know when he couldn't answer that question about
Tieneman Square. But maybe he was actually in Nebraska.

Speaker 2 (58:06):
And well that was his problem. I misspoke, he misspoke.
You said you're a Teneman Square. It's one of the
most important events, you know, in in in the recent history.
For God's sake, we thought they were gonna go full
on capitalists. There was support for, you know, overthrowing this
oppressive Chinese Communist Party government. Next thing you know, tanks
are rolling over human beings. You were there or you weren't.

(58:28):
Were you at Woodstock or weren't you? I mean, this
is a simple question. Can you can you misspeak on
being at Tinaman Square when that was going down? No,
I don't think so. You can lie though.

Speaker 10 (58:39):
So I think it was that Margaret Brennan the one
moderator's only shiny moment when she did follow up, because
clearly he tried the duck dodge. Yeah through his initial response.
So but other than that, I think once again the
fact checking by the two moderators, I think, and I'm
glad Jadvans called her out for it, indeed, because it
was clearly and they got caught at their hands in
a cookie jar.

Speaker 1 (58:59):
Indeed. So you watch the other debate.

Speaker 10 (59:01):
Too, absolutely, and you talk about the varsity against the
freshman there, I mean, or Orlando was just phenomenal stuff
to the facts and Landsman said it sounded like a
ten year old valley girl.

Speaker 1 (59:13):
You're a liar.

Speaker 10 (59:13):
You're a liar, you're a liared. He'd had no facts,
and then once again he had his closing statement, and
that's when he brought out once again. Even Walls mentioned
Project twenty twenty five, you know, in January sixth and
then and then the debate was over. But hopefully my
Hamilton County friends watched that. I can't believe in this
country people were still considered quote unquote undecided. But you know,

(59:36):
let's let's get him in office, because having seen him
at listener lunch, don't know if he's going.

Speaker 1 (59:40):
To be there today.

Speaker 10 (59:41):
I mean, he is the guy. And for a Navy
guy to say that about an army guy, you know,
he's got to.

Speaker 4 (59:46):
Go n shot there.

Speaker 1 (59:48):
Mike. I'm glad you're able to watch that because I have.
I was.

Speaker 2 (59:53):
I was impressed with Orlando Suns before last night, and
I'm my, he's just gone up multiple notches, and I
didn't think that was possible because that was he was
so on point, very fact driven, very I mean professional,
in spite of the fact that they got bickering a
little bit back and forth. It was only because Lansman
just kept going off rails and making wild accusations. Yeah

(01:00:16):
he did, he did well, fantastic. I will see you
in a few hours there, Mike. Looking forward to taking
another stay at that curribage game and joining some great
fellowship with you, brother.

Speaker 1 (01:00:24):
Take care of Matt. Thanks for calling.

Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Six thirty five fifty five K Steve Talk Station, got
another mic online. You hang on for a second, Michael,
be happy to take your call. After I mentioned cover
Since he, I do a show with John Roman on
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I've learned so much about medical insurance and so much
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(01:00:46):
And Medicare is something that they manage really really well.
It's not just ensuring people who are working age. If
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five soon, please get in touch with the folks of
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for yourself to get the best possible coverage during those

(01:01:07):
Medicare years. So they don't often talk about that, but
I was talking with John the other day in preparation
and one of those shows and got really important time
to get in touch with him before you get on
Medicare multiple different ways to put you in a better position,
just the same way he does for people of working age.
You got insurance medical insurance, he's a dollar one coverage?

(01:01:28):
Does it really really expensive? Do you know anything about
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(01:01:49):
insurance plans that will be less expensive and provide better coverage.
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(01:02:10):
fill out on the website where you can learn more
about the team. It's coversincy dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:02:15):
Fifty five krc I'm Carrie Champion and this is season
four of Naked Sports.

Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Up first six forty fifty five KRCD talk station, Happy Wednesday.
At the top of the our news, Jack Addatin the
Big Picture with Jack Adamin, thoughts of commentary on the
vice presidential debate. We hear from the Klamark County Veteran
Services in one hour about the Packed Act and compact
at Get.

Speaker 1 (01:02:40):
Around the Radio.

Speaker 2 (01:02:41):
Veteran friends and their families got lots of information in
part coming up in an hour. In the meantime over
the phones five one, three, seven four nine fifty five
hundred eight hundred eight two three Talk, got Mike on
the line. Mike, thanks for calling this morning, and a
happy Wednesday to you.

Speaker 11 (01:02:55):
Hi, Brian, Happy Wednesday to you. One of the questions
that uh they asked last night that I've got a
few SCC and I can cliant words at the TV,
is uh, the uh they asked Dance about gun violence
is saying it was the number one killer of teens

(01:03:15):
in America's gun violence?

Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Is Is that even close to accurate?

Speaker 11 (01:03:23):
No, there's actually a fact check the other day. Aback
if somebody else put that out there and it's like
number five or.

Speaker 1 (01:03:29):
Six on the list, Yeah, it's kind of where I
thought it was. I mean it's the number one.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
So so that well, of course that went on question, right, Okay,
if you say it long enough, it becomes true, you know,
like like and then carbon carbon is killing the planet,
even though it's plant food. Say it long enough and
it becomes true and becomes embedded. It's like religion, you know,

(01:03:54):
and you can't turn away from it.

Speaker 9 (01:03:57):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
I appreciate the call, Mike, take brother. Yeah, the word
misinformation and the word disinformation keeps swirling around my head
since the Democrats love to complain about that. They just
want the opportunity to convince you that something is true
that is not. It was talking about the expense of

(01:04:19):
those ballistic missiles and the ones that Iran has that
they shot at Israel, and then the defense missiles that
of course Iran successfully used and knocking those one hundred
and eighty high speed ballistic missiles out of the sky
that's described here that I got the Guardian reporting on
this one. Tehran's EMOD and guitar missiles. They used those

(01:04:41):
earlier this year. They travel at six times the speed
of sound. Takes twelve minutes for those to fly from Iran.
That will be four thousand, six hundred miles per hour.
Iran said it deployed the even faster hypersonic fat Tet
two maximum speed ten thousand miles per hour. In a

(01:05:02):
court of the reporting, It's estimated that Iran has an
arsenal of about three thousand ballistic missiles. That original calculation
a couple of years old, though, so the number could
be higher, and I suppose arguably it could be lower,
and it suggested that Tehran may have wanted to restrain
the number of rockets, even though it was a substantial number.
They aimed at Israel and shot at Israel yesterday, so

(01:05:24):
they can keep a bunch in stock in case a
broader conflict with Israel breaks out, like a full blown war.
And the thing that I was thinking about in terms
of military strategy, and no I'm not a military strategist,
but they fly, they fling so many of those missiles
over such a short period of time. Then Israel has
to respond using, of course its air defenses. And could

(01:05:46):
it be that they're trying to overwhelm or exhaust those
air defenses. The sophisticated interceptor missiles are expensive, and how
many is Israel have we don't know. Stopping ballistic missiles
in flight. The task of long range US Israeli Arrow

(01:06:08):
three and Arrow two systems, first used during the Israeli
Hamas war, supported by the medium range David's Sling system,
the better known iron dome apparently used for short range
interception like those rockets that the Hamas fires from Gaza.
I was wondering about the cost of these. Here you go.

(01:06:30):
Former financial advisor to the IDF Chief of Staff said
that an Arrow missile typically costs three and a half
million dollars each David Sling's interceptor missiles coming in at
one million dollars, so eliminating one hundred and more missiles
would easily have run into the hundreds of millions of dollars,

(01:06:53):
though the missiles themselves, the ones Iran fired eighty thousand
dollars each or potentially more. But you see, the relative
cost to defend yourself is a lot higher than a
manufacturing of a missile and randomly just firing them in
to keep people on their heels. So that's the thing

(01:07:13):
that kind of worries me that while Iran could I
think easily if Israel just focused all of its attention
on wiping out Iran, it probably could do so fairly successfully.
But there's finite supplies. You know, Israel's not that large
of a country, and considering its location in the world,
could be a challenge keeping it stocked with this military hardware.

(01:07:38):
Just a concern, Chuck, I see, Chuck, you're on the line,
if you don't mind holding I just looked up and
saw you're on the phone six forty five right now.
Be happy to take that call in a moment after
I steer you in the right direction. If you have
an imported car to get your car service at porn
exchange and with the porch shutdown, and god knows how
long that's going to last. One of the things on
the list. I've read a whole bunch of lists of
stuff that might be in short supply. Auto parts. Yeah,

(01:08:00):
and I suppose most notably for European manufacturers. So if
you have a European manufacturer car and you needed service,
it's probably a great time to get it in. And
the great thing about foreign Exchange is they're not going
to charge you the price of a dealer. They charge
you less to service your car. Yes, you get a
full warrant ham parts in service, and trust me, they
know how to fix your car. I don't even know
what manufacturer car you've got. If it came from a
traditional Asian and European manufacturer, trust me they got the

(01:08:23):
skills to do it. Like I said, you leave with
a full warranty on parts in service, so plus more
money in your pocket makes it the right place to go.
I go to the Westchester location for our cars, Tylersville,
egsitt off seventy five head East two streets, hanging right
on Kinglin. Really easy to get to off seventy five.
They have an A plus with a better business bure.
Of course they do. You know, get your car service
to head a winner too. It's great to have them

(01:08:43):
do a complete you know, front to back and and
check up on everything. Make sure you're ready to go
when the winner gets hits in Earnest five one three
seven seven four ninety four ninety five five one three
seven seven four ninety four ninety five online foreign x.

Speaker 1 (01:08:57):
Dot Com fifty five Marty brend.

Speaker 2 (01:09:01):
On Wednesday, Jack Aither didn't returned The Big Picture with
Jack Addon. After the top of the Aaron is we
he'll offer his commentary on the vice presidential debate the
meantime over the phones will go Chuck, thanks for holding
over the break there, Welcome to the program.

Speaker 16 (01:09:14):
Hey, thanks Brian. Hey, there's a question someone who's voting
for Trump. I've heard Trump dodge it and jdie Vance
dodged it last night.

Speaker 5 (01:09:22):
I do.

Speaker 16 (01:09:22):
And the question was about deporting all these illegals, and
he was asked, what about separating the children from the parents,
And I've yet to hear Trump answer that, and Dance
totally dodged it. And like I said, as a voter
for Trump, I'd like to hear their.

Speaker 2 (01:09:38):
Answer separating the children from the parents. I guess under
what scenario, because I know the deportation argument that was
made is we're going to start with the criminals, because
it was of course recently made known to well brought
to the American people's attention that I guess some six
hundred and fifty thousand criminal record folks are in the

(01:09:59):
country illegal, thirteen thousand of which apparently murderers and god
molesters and things. Now, is the person being removed being
removed a parent that has children here, if they have
a criminal record, you remove them notwithstanding the status of
their children.

Speaker 1 (01:10:13):
I don't know. I don't think they're talking about just
going to Well.

Speaker 10 (01:10:16):
He wasn't asked about the criminals.

Speaker 9 (01:10:18):
That's how he answered it. I agree, that's exactly how
you answered.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
It, right, that.

Speaker 16 (01:10:25):
He's supporting all of them.

Speaker 1 (01:10:27):
Yeah, he question.

Speaker 2 (01:10:29):
I think the dvanced position was Okay, maybe that is
the grand vision to repoort all people who are not
lawfully in the United States. Obviously that comes with complications,
the logistics of it alone. It would take decades to
get it to accomplish that. So let's just start with
the criminals, and who among us can disagree that'll be
a great idea to kick out people who aren't lawfully

(01:10:49):
here in the first place, but also represent a danger
to society given their demonstrable criminal conduct. So that's I
think the softening of the kick everybody out position, which again,
I mean, you may think that's the ultimate great goal
and it might help or hurt, but it's just going
to be impossibility, I mean, or a huge long term challenge. Hell,
it takes ten years to get somebody in front of

(01:11:12):
an immigration judge to determine whether they have a valid
claim to be here. Can you imagine throwing in due
process to kick people out? They're going to demand a hearing,
and I'm a big believer in due process, a similarly gargantuan,
if not impossible challenge, which leaves us in a situation like, okay,
so then really, how are we going to do this?
So I think the backpedal position from the Trump side

(01:11:34):
now is let's focus on the criminals, and if any
of the criminals have children, I guess they'll cross that.

Speaker 1 (01:11:40):
Bridge when they get to it.

Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
But I don't think that that right now represents much
of a challenge for folks, at least in so far
as deportation is concerned. Start with the criminals. I think
we can all find an acceptable agreement point there. We'll
work out the others at some point in the future.
Appreciate that. Chuck good point west side, Jim, welcome to
the program. Am I going to see you today at
listener lunch Anderson Pub mc grill, Yes, sir, will.

Speaker 17 (01:12:04):
Be there with beer, bear bells on. I'm say beers on.

Speaker 1 (01:12:10):
That was a slip of the tongue on purpose.

Speaker 17 (01:12:12):
You know, I don't know how that's ever gonna happen,
getting all these people, especially criminals, out of the country.
It's just that's a great talking point.

Speaker 14 (01:12:20):
It sounds good.

Speaker 17 (01:12:21):
And every time somebody gets hit and t bone by
an illegal that doesn't have a driver's license, much less insurance,
and you you would think that's better. But I just
don't see how anything and anybody can get that done.
But yeah, I watched both of those last night. It uh,
the Democrats don't even have a B team. I mean

(01:12:42):
between Landsman and I know I pick on that on
his lapel with the American flag, but that that just
shows disrespect. I mean, you're you're working for this country
and you got that little yellow ribbon up there. I mean,
put an damn American flag on your lapel, will you?

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
Oh, Jim, that's fruit? Why would he did so poorly
in that debate. You're gonna pick on him for a
la palpin or absence there for a.

Speaker 14 (01:13:06):
Lot of stuff.

Speaker 10 (01:13:07):
But you know I pick on both of them.

Speaker 17 (01:13:09):
But you know, I know Greg Landsman, I could pick
on him for hours. It doesn't make any difference. But
you know, did I just sense you.

Speaker 14 (01:13:16):
Got thing from Papas?

Speaker 17 (01:13:17):
Did you happen to see that? I know I love
Facebook for these things. When he put on there like
a sheet that Walls was writing on. Oh, shoot, he's
kicking my rear. Must right to look smarter than I am.
Oh why tampons at Papas? You gotta love the guy.

Speaker 1 (01:13:35):
Hopefully we'll see him today as well. Oh he'll be
there today.

Speaker 17 (01:13:39):
But yeah, that was that was a total Like I
said in the beginning, they don't have a B team
and that that's making our decisions in life in Washington.
And that's a discuss and a slapped the American people
and right in the middle of the face.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
Well, and if you didn't get to see the Orlando
Sons or Greg Landsman debate. I'd say it's well worth
some of your time to check it out, at least
part of it. Landsman just looked absolutely dizzy and did
see he looked.

Speaker 17 (01:14:03):
Like he had some physical problems going on in his body,
the way he was twirking around.

Speaker 2 (01:14:07):
Yeah, he was very very uncomfortable, very uncomfortable, and he
did a miserable job trying to formulate answers to difficult
questions which Orlando Sonz had just kept knocking those questions
out of the park. Look forward to lunch, Jim, can't
wait to see you, brother Anderson, pubmcgirl show up at
eleven thirty and you can enjoy the fellowship of the
fifty five krs. He listener to lunch again, last one
before the election. Hope to see you there. Stick around

(01:14:29):
Jack Atherton after the top of the our news and
we're gonna hear about the pack Dact and Compact Act
Steve Bulter from the c CVS Clemor County Veteran Services
at seven forty plus Congressman Massy and Judge Topolitano in
the eight o'clock hour.

Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
I'll be right back October.

Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
The whole assassination attempt.

Speaker 4 (01:14:45):
This is sounding off so ridiculous. He has surreal fifty.

Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
Five KRZ the Talks Teach. This report is sponsored.

Speaker 2 (01:15:08):
Seven oh six fifty five k r C he Talk Station.
A very happy Wednesday to you show up a listener
to lunch today see west Side, Jim Keefer and Curbage,
Mike and whoever else might happen to show up. It's
gonna be Anderson Pub and grill and usually mean about
eleven thirty last one before the election and without further ado.
He is a former news anchor, a former reporter. He
is a lawyer. He's a student of history. He is

(01:15:30):
Jack Adtherton. It's time for the Big Picture with Jack
Addad and welcome back, my dear friend.

Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
It's always great hearing from you.

Speaker 9 (01:15:36):
Good morning, Brian Hope, everybody as well. We're gonna talk
about the debate. Sonza, of course, was with fantastic.

Speaker 1 (01:15:43):
You saw that too, Oh god, he was so good.

Speaker 9 (01:15:47):
He'll be on a ticket Sunday. I predict.

Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
I think you're right, but.

Speaker 9 (01:15:51):
Amesley and I watched the vice presidential debate with a
pretty big crowd. That's the GOP headquarters in our town.
And JD Vans's hometown, Middletown. That's right place that's taken
it on the chin thanks to corrupt economic policies of
Democrats and also establishment Republicans for decades, as JD pointed out,

(01:16:15):
they shipped middle class manufacturing jobs off to China and
other countries that make things cheaper than we can, because
those other countries often pay workers, including children, pennies per hour,
and as Tim Waltz did not point out, China doesn't
give a rap about the environment. It's been digging a

(01:16:36):
new coal mine every week using far dirtier technology than
we do, and there are only crickets about that from
the Democrats. Our hometown crowd started out cheering and clapping
because Tim Waltz started out nervous and hesitant, and because
JD methodically laid out the facts about Trump forty five's

(01:16:58):
great economy across board and the fact that in his
four years, no new wars broke out anywhere. Peace through strength,
brother war through sock puppets, like both of the incumbents,
but Brian is I have to admit the crowd got
quieter because Waltz gained confidence he was not the arm

(01:17:22):
waving loon we'd expected, especially on issues that appealed to
a lot of women, abortion, healthcare, family leave. Waltz made
his case citing real people, as Vance did, also speaking
about his own troubled family, and Walts, I think my
wife disagrees, seemed like a pretty nice guy. In the end,

(01:17:45):
I thought the winner was first our country because, unlike
the two presidential debates last night, there was not a
lot of name calling, almost no cheap shots. Vans in fact,
left a lot of obvious arguments on the table. The
Marine brought up Tim Waltz's stolen valor his false, repeated
claim about holding weapons in a war zone. Vance also

(01:18:07):
didn't bring up Walt's traveling incessantly to communist China. Earlier,
walt said he went there thirty times. Now he says, well,
maybe he was just fifteen, including his honeymoon. Walts did
sheepishly admit in response to the moderators that he was
not in Hong Kong or on Tianman Square during the

(01:18:29):
Tianman Square crackdown. I don't know how you forget about
that when claimed and I couldn't believe this. He claimed
that Trump threatened to prosecute his opponents if he's elected.
Nance never slammed the Democrats for all the lawfare prosecutions

(01:18:50):
of Trump, as well as the jailing the political opponents
like Peter Navarro and Steve Bannon. And we can't even
count all of the people you know who jail because
of not even being near the Capitol in some cases.
JD also did not spotlight Waltz's awful record in Minnesota,
like letting Black Lives Matter burn Minneapolis to the ground

(01:19:13):
and put tampons in boys' bathrooms. So there was a
lot that could have been said, but instead most of
the time Vance and Waltz seemed like two very chumming
colleagues on Capitol Hill. Waltz used to be there years
ago in the House and Vance of course now in
the Senate. Both of them attacked the candidates at the
top of the ticket, but they didn't attack each other

(01:19:36):
or whether you're like that or not. Besides the country, though,
I think the big winner of last night's debate was
Donald Trump. If he learned something from JD. Vance, If
Trump learns to be clear and direct and talking about
his record, his sterling record, and his plans for the
future to secure the border and to port criminals to

(01:19:59):
bring down and fight inflation by regaining America's energy independence,
as well as lower taxes and regulations. Fair trade policies.
I'm not sure about across the board's RAFs, but certainly
we have to be reciprocal, and we have to retaliate
when we're being attacked through trade and most important, restoring

(01:20:19):
peace through strength. Since Waltz did not go in for
personal insults, Vance was never distracted the way Trump had
been by Kamala Harris when she baited him repeatedly by,
for instance, claiming people walked out of Trump rallies because
they were boring that made Trump blues control. What this

(01:20:40):
means to me is that Trump now has to do
not another debate. I think he's right about that. Trump
needs to do more press conferences and interviews. He is great, patient, knowledgeable,
focused when he goes one on one with people, including
hostile reporters. And Trump will be terrific at the upcoming

(01:21:01):
town hall, probably much better than Harris at her separate
town hall, even if she gets softball questions we can
expect from her platitudes and lies. Last night, JD Vance
to conclude show to how to make Trump's case let's
spend the last thirty days of this campaign doing simply that.

Speaker 1 (01:21:23):
I agree.

Speaker 2 (01:21:23):
You know, wonderful analysis, Jack Atherton. And one of the
things I thought that Advance did a good job was
was pivoting over and putting the spotlight on Kamala Harris,
which you mentioned in one of the contexts was this
discussion about immigration, specifically Springfield, and he said, you know,
the people I'm most worried about in Springfield High are
the American citizens who have had their lives destroyed by

(01:21:43):
Kamala Harris open border. It's a disgrace, Tim, And I
actually think I agree with you. I think you want
to solve this problem, but I don't think that Kamala
Harris does. I thought that was a really brilliant pivot over,
you know, sort of being accommodating to his debate opponent,
you know, this mild mannered, sort of cordial back and

(01:22:06):
forth they were having, but then pivoting over and getting
that spotlight right back on Kamala Harris. That happened quite
a few times throughout the debate, and I thought that
was well done on the part of JD.

Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
Vance.

Speaker 9 (01:22:15):
And as you pointed out earlier, I thought that Vance
had one of his best moments by standing up to
a woman. You know, they made sure it was two
women moderators, Margaret who you know, said the Haitians who
are there in Springfield are there, they have legal status,
and of course Vance blew Bent out of the water.

Speaker 1 (01:22:36):
He did.

Speaker 9 (01:22:36):
He came into the debate with two huge advantages. First,
the polls showed that he and Trump are ahead on
every major issue except abortion, and even on abortion, Brian jd.
Vance made clear that Trump is not interested in nationalizing
the issue. And as you said earlier, Trump is now

(01:22:57):
doubling down to the spring Roe v. Wade abortion law.
Trump says, and this was his aim, is now once
again up to each individual states voters. We saw how
that went into Ohio. Not so well for us, but
the voters had their say, and now Trump says he
will veto any national bill that comes to his desk.

(01:23:19):
The GOP's second advantage I think going into the debate
was the Trump Advance agree on the issues. This is
not always the case. Maybe the best example people remember
of running mates not agreeing on issues was Reagan and
George H. W. Bush. Bush, the elder who during the primaries,

(01:23:39):
Bush called Reagan's low tax, low regulation, pro growth policies
voodoo economics. After Reagan served two wildly successful terms, remember
he won reelection with forty nine states, Bush Senior ran
for what amounted to Reagan's third term, and he promised,

(01:23:59):
read my life Lis no new taxes. But Bush had
never believed in that. He thought that was voodoo. He
did raise taxes, and then he lost his own reelection
bid to Bill Clinton. Vance admits he did not always
agree with Trump years ago. He said terrible things about him.
But remember Trump himself didn't agree with Trump years ago.

(01:24:22):
He used to be a Democrat then, as Reagan said,
I did not leave the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party
left me. And now that party runs to the left
of Karl Marx, who, with his co author Frederick Engels,
hoped their future communist government would one day wither away. Well,

(01:24:44):
today's Democrats want government to keep growing and growing until
it's Overwellinggan, governments of the elites, buy the elites for
the elites. Everybody else censored. And JD was terrific about censorship.

Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
I gat it in real quickly here since Iranians, the
Iranian just launched missiles directly at Israel. Fortunately, Israel was
successful in knocking most of them out. Last night, Vance
said it's up to Israel to choose what it needs
to do to defend itself in the US ought to
support that decision. I thought that was a great pivot,
and certainly Israel does have a right to defend itself.
I think what people wanted to hear that didn't, you know,

(01:25:22):
pledge any military involvement by the United States in that conflict.
But obviously let Israel do what it wants to do.
What is your take on the United States involvement? Very briefly, Jack,
because you are a lawyer, and I'm puzzled about this.
Do we not need it maybe a declaration of war
or perhaps an authorization of use of military force to

(01:25:45):
get involved in any wartime situation with Iran to bomb Iranians?
I guess I'm wondering from where the authority for Biden
or Harris or whoever the public masters are is going
to come to engage Iran directly.

Speaker 1 (01:26:00):
That's a decision that has made.

Speaker 9 (01:26:02):
Or Donald Trump. But of course Donald Trump make sure
that these situations never come to fruition because he uses
peace through strength to keep everybody in Bay. But yes,
this is a fraud situation. How many seconds do we
have to discuss this? It's a huge issue. All I
can tell you is hours after the original Hamas attack

(01:26:26):
on Israel, Tony blink our Secretary of State, who was Jewish,
was immediately calling for a ceasefire. There had been a
ceasefire in place on October seventh that was violated. Tony
Blinkin though, said what we need is another ceasefire, and
Biden and Harris have said so repeatedly ever since then.

(01:26:47):
The Israelis immediately made it clear that what they wanted
to do was to obliterate the leadership of Hamas and
also has Beli on the hoofs. And look what they've
been doing as far as the US get getting a
bob militarily, I'm as conflicted as you are, But I
think that we can continue giving Israel the arms they
need as we've done. You know, the policy of the

(01:27:10):
Biden administration is to give you just enough arms to
keep a conflict going, not to ever win anything. Yeah,
of course, the United States itself never wins anything. We're
lucky if we can get out with our tail between
our legs without getting a bunch of Americans killed as
we did in Afghanistan. It's very dangerous time, Brian, There's

(01:27:32):
no question about it. And does anybody want Kamala Harris
to be in charge of what may be coming next?
I can't imagine it. Jdvans did not come across as
the giant that Donald Trump is. That's why Donald Trump
is indispensable. But Jdvans, my goodness, he's going to be
a terrific VP.

Speaker 2 (01:27:52):
I agree with you heartily. Jack added him, always a
wonderful thing having on the morning show. I'm looking forward
to further conversations with you. In the regular segment. We're
gonna call the Big Picture with Jack add and Jack.
Until our next conversation, best to health, to you and
your better half. Love you, brother, we'll talk soon.

Speaker 9 (01:28:06):
Thanks love well.

Speaker 2 (01:28:07):
Seven nineteen fifty five KR see the talk station. I've
been reminding folks more today than I've ever reminded folks
about listener lunch. I'm just really excited about it. Last
one for the elections. Sit down and enjoy some fellowship
and some company and hoyster beer and enjoy Berger in studio.
We're taking them a little bit earlier because why do
local news when Steve Velso from the Clermont County Veteran

(01:28:28):
Services and is in the house and we have all
this great information to pass along to our veteran friends. Steve,
always a pleasure seeing you, my friend. Thank you for
your service to our country and for your ongoing service
to the veteran community with your work with the Clermont
County Veteran Services.

Speaker 8 (01:28:42):
Brian, I can sum that up with ditto same to you. Oh,
thanks for supporting us.

Speaker 2 (01:28:47):
Support is what I do because I did not actually
sign on the dotted line. I have so much respect
for the people who have done that and in the
past and have are currently serving. So this is my
opportunity to help out and I love being in a
position to do so. So back to the Kliment Kenny
Veteran Services and what they're doing for the veteran community.
Find them online, folks, It's Claremont County Veterans dot Com.

(01:29:09):
A wealth of resources. It's one stop shopping. In many cases,
they'll take care of the of the laboring or on
any work. You just got to reach out to them
and let them help you. So help them help you.
Ste you here to talk about the ways in which
they're helping, including the Packed Act and Compact Act. Now
we've talked about this before, but it's worthy of bringing

(01:29:30):
it back up to the top because this is some
great stuff we've got going on here. So you picked
the place where you want to start, Steve.

Speaker 8 (01:29:36):
Thank you, Brian. There is a lot of confusion when
we start talking about these two acts, specifically Packed Act
Compact Act. What's a compact? Is that the Pact Act
compacted It is a smaller segment of the Packed Act.
And how does this apply to me?

Speaker 1 (01:29:54):
Right? Good point.

Speaker 8 (01:29:55):
So it's there's definitions between the two. The Pact Act
is a Sergeant first class Heath Robinson, honoring our promise
to address comprehensive toxics. Only the government could come up
with the title. So long, just make it the sergeant
first class Heath Robinson.

Speaker 10 (01:30:12):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:30:12):
I agree.

Speaker 8 (01:30:13):
He's an Ohioan died because of his contact with toxins
on active duty service, and we're finally starting to recognize
even going back to Vietnam, how long have our Vietnam
brothers and sisters been denied agent orange impact on their bodies?

Speaker 1 (01:30:30):
For years? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:30:31):
I mean any other work related chemical exposure would expose
that employer to liability. I mean, subject to all kinds
of crazy laws and rules. But you know, if you're
exposed to chemicals in the workplace, then you're entitled to
be made whole or otherwise compensated for your injuries. You're
entitled to get some medical help and things like that.
This is the same thing. It just took a long

(01:30:51):
time to get it to come around.

Speaker 1 (01:30:53):
Absolutely well.

Speaker 8 (01:30:54):
And you know, considering back in the sixties and seventies,
how strong was OSHA? Did we have an MDS of sheets?
What you're dealing with with these serviceides.

Speaker 2 (01:31:04):
Not to discount what they have been through, what they've
been exposed to. You know, I look back, the world's
a different place. I remember my mom. If there was
anything wrong with any tree plants rub in the yard,
you got the ortho chemical product that and you knew
the crap out of it.

Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
God knows what was in those chemicals. And you don't
do that anymore.

Speaker 8 (01:31:22):
No, you were glowing at night, you became the house
and like, no mosquito spray? Right, how many of us
followed the mosquito truck because it was foggy?

Speaker 1 (01:31:31):
Right? Oh wow? Yeah? Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:31:33):
Anyways, so the packed Act, the packed Act. There the
VA is attempting or has expanded the left and right
lateral limits the spectrum of what's involved in the packed Act.
We've already covered the Vietnam era, especially Asian orange, but
there were many different agents colors as well. We just

(01:31:55):
happened to know Asian orange because it was the most populous.
But even when they recognized this, it was for in
theater only. But not what they've done is they've expanded it.
There were people down in Gotamoo Bay that were mixing
these chemicals, not in theater, but you could imagine if
you're mixing these chemicals, you have the same impact, if
not more, of the density of the chemicals compared to

(01:32:16):
those in theater walking by the bushes inhaling it.

Speaker 2 (01:32:20):
Right, that seems to be an unusually odd limitation. I mean,
were you or were you not exposed? Why should it
matter whether it was in a field of battle or not.
It's where it was typically used. But I say, typically,
do we really have the records of everywhere they used agents?
We have test areas, we have plantations where they would

(01:32:40):
have tested it before they took it to Vietnam. Oh,
good point, right, So no, animals were hurt though I
don't know, just a crazy statement. However, the Pact Actor
has really expanded beyond the agents that were used to
kill the vegetation to where toxic we use in the
Middle military to clean military equipment. There, if I start

(01:33:04):
PD six eighty trichlora triflora ethane called free on, we
would use this stuff without gloves, without mask, proper protection.

Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
We didn't know.

Speaker 2 (01:33:14):
Well, benzene was a big one as a solvent to
clean things, correct, Just Mike, I had a friend that
you used to talk about dipping his hands at a
can of benzene at work and when they get all greasy,
just dip your hands in it and wash it off
as because it would dissolve it, right right, benzene right,
highly carcinogenic.

Speaker 8 (01:33:30):
The human sponge. Right, yeah, yeah, thank you.

Speaker 1 (01:33:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:33:34):
So what this the Pact Act has done is has
expanded not just the type of chemicals, but locations and
eras of service, but to include where before we would
look at Title ten for reservists guard to be considered
a veteran in the VA's perspective is you had to

(01:33:56):
have been activated under Title ten for an act of
war by Congress. Otherwise, in the VA's nine you were
a reservist or national artist. There is no particularly benefits
for you. But if you had that title ten and
you were activated, it brings in a new sculpe. Now
it doesn't there's no title ten to it. It's active
reserve and guard for toxic chemicals that the DoD had

(01:34:20):
you working with.

Speaker 2 (01:34:21):
All right now, the lawyer in me, because I know
there was agent orange litigation back in the I guess
early eighties or something, and they found that there was
no causal connection between the injuries and the Agent Orange,
at least that I believe was the civil verdict or reality.
I don't remember enough to know whether I'm right on that,
but moving away from that just as sort of a
springboard from my point here. Causation. You know, people know

(01:34:47):
that I have cancer. I don't know how I got it,
but you know, throughout my life, going back to my
mom with the Ortho products, I have been exposed to
nine jillion different things. You know, they'll tell you breathe
in the air is going to give you cancer. So
how do you connect the injury, the the illness that
the veteran is suffering and struggling with with the specific
exposure out in this they're in a period of time

(01:35:09):
of service.

Speaker 8 (01:35:11):
Great question, Great question. I'm sure there have been panels
of physicians, doctors, specialists looking at these chemicals and the
impact they would have on a human body to the
point now where they have presumptive designs, meaning that if
you have this typical type of cancer, it is presumed

(01:35:34):
to have been created.

Speaker 2 (01:35:35):
So by this action, they don't need to establish like
you would if you were suing a manufacture of a chemical,
established that there was a direct correlation between that chemical
and the exposure. And that's where I got my fill
in the blank disease.

Speaker 1 (01:35:49):
Correct. So they've been relieved of that burden. It's assumed
correct if it's a specific.

Speaker 2 (01:35:53):
Injury or illness that it's directed to, it's related to
the service.

Speaker 1 (01:35:57):
That's right. Fair enough, will pause, We'll bring back.

Speaker 2 (01:35:58):
We've got more talk about the and Compact Act with
Steve Bozo from the Klamat County Veteran Services again online
Claremont County Veterans dot Com seven forty here fifty five
KRSE you talks today, Shan, A very happy Wednesday to you.
Got Congressman Thomas Massey after the top of the air
News follow by Judge Enna Paulatano.

Speaker 1 (01:36:15):
I love that one too, Libertaring and punch.

Speaker 2 (01:36:18):
Meantime, talking with the Claremont County Veteran Services Steve Bosco
Balso in studio Packed Act and Compact Act. Let's stick
with the Packed Act in spite of the odd name
of it. It's to deal with veterans and those who
serve who have been exposed to toxic toxic exposure, whatever
it happens to be.

Speaker 1 (01:36:35):
They have illness.

Speaker 2 (01:36:36):
This will presumptively or presume that your illness is a
consequence of exposure to toxins. But what then does it
do once you qualify under the Pactact? What additional resources Steve,
are available to our veterans out there?

Speaker 8 (01:36:52):
Great question, Brian one. First of all, what it does.
It has the potential or health care and benefits impact
so much so that veterans coming to the VA dependent
on their conditions are put into priority groups. With the
priority groups that are lower, you typically have a col

(01:37:16):
pay with the VA. As you rise up your priority groups,
at a point you eliminate col pays. There's focus treatment
if it's a presumptive condition so that if I'm a
lower priority group and I have a cold pay, if
i just go to the VA for health care, because
I've been connected with the presumptive and the condition, I

(01:37:40):
now eliminate the cold pay and I have that healthcare
for that condition free of charge to the VA. So
it's establishing that connection between the lower priority groups and
the condition they're carrying if they're not at a a
fifty percent above where healthcare is free at the VA hospital.

Speaker 2 (01:37:59):
I know there are some limitations for who is who
gets free medical care and who does not. That's of
course the Climate County Veterans Services can explain all that
to you.

Speaker 8 (01:38:08):
But here's the kicker, Brian, when when you think of
the enormity of the Packed Act and all the veterans
that this would cover from Vietnam to today after oif
OEF listen to this. During a recent live virtual event
performed by the Cincinnati VA here in town with approximately
fifteen hundred veterans in attendance, participants were polled about their

(01:38:32):
knowledge of the Packed Act and the Compact Act. The
results of the poll are quite noteworthy. Just over fifty
percent of responding veterans indicated that they had not seen
any advertisement of either act.

Speaker 1 (01:38:50):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:38:51):
Well, I'm glad you're here on the fifty five KC
Morning Show again to talk about this because we've talked
about it quite a few times since we have it
came down, so we have.

Speaker 8 (01:39:00):
This is the footstomp, right, this is your sixth grade
teachers stomping and foot saying this might be on the test. Jimmy,
I mean, this is that impactful too. It's not just
to pack that. That's also impactful to the localized family.
And if your veteran has passed because of one of
these conditions, come to the office. Really there could be yes,

(01:39:23):
could be supported.

Speaker 2 (01:39:24):
So that's why I work there, even though the service
member has gone on to the next chapter. Oh wow, correct,
Well that's a helpful information for family members.

Speaker 1 (01:39:32):
It is. It is.

Speaker 8 (01:39:34):
It's not oh sorry, too late, Yeah, not at all,
not at all. Come see the office schedule an appointment
Clarmont County Veterans dot Com to help.

Speaker 1 (01:39:41):
You move ahead in this. Now, does the veteran have
to fill out a form? Apply? What's the process to
start to get this going? Right?

Speaker 8 (01:39:50):
That's gonna come with the service officers making the appointment.
As they make the appointment, They're gonna ask why why
are you making this? Right, just like when you go
to the dentist. Okay, you're making the dentist appointment. What's
going on, Well, my tooth fallout or my tooth is aching,
or I've got this whatever it might be, right, So
they need to detail what you may need to bring
to the office to substantiate that which is going on

(01:40:13):
in life to help you apply for your benefits or
your health care.

Speaker 2 (01:40:16):
Okay, So for those who are not getting their care
at a VA facility, they got their own primary care physician,
they're insured through their employer whatever. They get a diagnosis
like sorry, I hate to report this, but you've got cancer,
then they need to go over to the VA to say,
here's what I was told, So how does this pack
that thing work?

Speaker 1 (01:40:35):
Right?

Speaker 8 (01:40:36):
So then what coming to my office? There's paperwork that
the Veteran Service officer is going to fill out for
you for free file with the VA, and then they're
going to start up there. Really their appointment process sure
to validate what you're saying, the records from the doctor,
and then it goes into a sort of an adjudication

(01:40:58):
process to say yep, quantum presumptive.

Speaker 1 (01:41:01):
Here you go.

Speaker 8 (01:41:01):
It's a way to really quicken the results of what
you're applying to the VA. Then years past when there
were no presumptives and you had to you had to
softshoo the whole.

Speaker 2 (01:41:11):
Thing, right, yeah, And I can only imagine that being
had the challenge of the veterans face to try to
prove that no, no, I swear my cancers because I
was breathing in age in orange or whatever. Right, sure, great,
All right, well we'll pause and we'll talk about the
Compact Act when we return. Steve Belso from Claremont County
Veteran Services seven fifty to fifty five care CD talk station.

(01:41:32):
One more segment here the Climont County Veteran Services Steve
Belso going through the Compact Act and pack deck. We
got through the pack Deac, and uh, I know we've
talked about the Compact Act mental Health services and like
you can address that, but I know you have some
other maybe exciting news to let my listeners know about.

Speaker 8 (01:41:49):
Thanks, Brian, I do I do? I do so, that's
the Compact Act. Sounds like the pac Act, but this
is specifically mental health. We talked about suicide prevention last
week with you, with you, Brian, and had a great
discussion with the VA that was here with us. The
Compact Act. What it has done, it is has opened

(01:42:10):
up the aperture for a veteran who needs help. I
need somewhere to call. I'm not feeling well, I'm in
a dark corner. But it also enables family to call
on behalf of the veteran as well.

Speaker 1 (01:42:23):
And that's really important because I think that's usually the
first line of defense for anybody struggling.

Speaker 8 (01:42:28):
It's it's family, right. I know you're not acting the
same thing, right?

Speaker 9 (01:42:32):
Why?

Speaker 4 (01:42:33):
Right?

Speaker 8 (01:42:33):
And I don't have to pin down Billy and tell
me about this because he doesn't want to talk about it.
But if I can get him on simple nine to
eight eight press one. They used to have a ten
digit number you had to call for support and they
would flash it on the TV. And if I was
somebody suffering, was suicidal ideations or PTSD. The last thing

(01:42:55):
I'm going to memorize is a ten digit number to
call you for help. And I'm going to get frustrated
with my phone out the window.

Speaker 1 (01:43:01):
Right.

Speaker 8 (01:43:02):
Finally we have condensed this eight press one. You need help,
they'll pick up hit one boom. You're right there with someone.

Speaker 1 (01:43:12):
With a veteran counselor a veteran understands.

Speaker 2 (01:43:15):
All right, well, yeah, that makes it very simple get
the mental health, access to the mental health resources that
are available to you. And it's good that family members
can call on the veterans behalf as well.

Speaker 1 (01:43:25):
Now you have some new information to pass along.

Speaker 8 (01:43:29):
Let's yeah, let's talk about the second footstomp in the room.
Many of the veterans who are already enrolled with the
VA and receive healthcare through the VA know a website
called my Healthy Vt. My Healthy Vt is where they
can go in and make their appointments with their doctors,
apply for subscription prescriptions, receive a refill of their prescriptions.

(01:43:52):
But what's happening is the VA is streamlining their their
presence on the web, so everything is going to come
under VA dot gov. My Healthy Vet will be under
VA dot gov. Now what this means is, come January
thirty first, for those of twenty twenty five, for those
who currently have a my Healthy Vt account, your log

(01:44:14):
in will no longer work and you won't be able
to go straight to my Healthy Vet. You have to
establish a VA dot gov account and not with the
old measures of logging in. Now there's going to be
two measures of logging in, and one is id ME
and the other ones log in dot gov. Both of

(01:44:34):
those measures are what we call a multi factor authenticator.
Oh okay, okay, So it's the beginning of So it's
it's the first it's the first step.

Speaker 2 (01:44:45):
You log in and they send a text to your
phone to make sure it's actually you that's logging in.

Speaker 8 (01:44:49):
Beyond that, it'd be nice if all as they sent
was Uncle Joe attaxt saying put these six numbers in there.
Now you need an authenticator app on your phone. Lord
that and what it does is as an MFA as
we call it, or multi factor authentication is it's a
six digit number that's rolling. Every thirty seconds or every

(01:45:10):
sixty seconds, the number changes. So it makes it harder
for someone trying to infiltrate into your account because your
password with the multi factor extender is constantly changing. Your
password stays the same. But then on your cell phone,
you're going to need to open up the app and
find the Multi Factory Authenticator app, which then starts rolling

(01:45:31):
and there's a sign in process to this. Think of
Uncle Joe at eighty ninety years old who gets his
meds from the VA, He's probably still using cricket on
a flip phone. He's not going to be able to
navigate what my office is done. Over in Clairemont County
is I have a gentleman who's certified.

Speaker 9 (01:45:49):
With the VALL.

Speaker 8 (01:45:51):
If you make an appointment with my office, he will
sit down with you, help you create your login ID
and password, and set up up the multi factor authenticator
on your cell phone. Secondary to that, Brian is he
has authentication effort or responsibilities with the VA. Sitting right
next to you, he can authenticate your application right there,

(01:46:14):
so that when you leave the office, you're walking away
with your login ID, you're walking away with your password
and the app on your phone that gives you your
multi factor authenticator. But remember this goes dead healthy VET
January thirty first. Do not come flying in my office
between November fifteenth and December thirty first, because you know

(01:46:36):
the holidays are wrecking everything.

Speaker 1 (01:46:38):
So the rattle cry.

Speaker 8 (01:46:40):
Right now is getting the office make the changes now.

Speaker 2 (01:46:47):
I understand that this is all done with the best intentions,
in other words, making sure someone can't steal the veterans
information otherwise access the information through the credit system. But
it sounds complicated. And then you go back to the
eighty year old veteran who's been dealing with who was
able to figure out that current website absolutely, and now

(01:47:08):
it's got to go a completely different direction. I mean,
I know what my mom's reaction will be at age
eighty five.

Speaker 1 (01:47:13):
I'm not doing it. Well, that's what I'm worried about, right, Well,
is that why you're there?

Speaker 2 (01:47:17):
And I get that all day long, and and I'm
not to steal the Clermont County Veterans Services thunder, but
Hamilton County Veteran Services, but the County Veterans Services, all
of these will be doing the same thing on behalf
of the veterans they serve.

Speaker 8 (01:47:30):
Now, I don't know, I can't. This is beyond a
veteran service officers role.

Speaker 1 (01:47:37):
Okay.

Speaker 8 (01:47:37):
I have a gentleman that is aside from a veteran
service officer that does this on our behalf in Clarmont.

Speaker 2 (01:47:43):
Okay, So you may be unique. Well, this is a
plead to all the other Veteran services commissions to do
the same thing, because I can num more on some confusion.
All right, pay attention. It's been a pleasure talking with you, Steve.
Thank God for all that you do on behalf of
American Veterans and everyone at the Clermont County Veteran Services
Claremont County Veterans dot Com. Take care of mist You've
always great having you on. Congressman Thomas Massey coming up

(01:48:03):
next October.

Speaker 4 (01:48:06):
A threat to democracy is sounding off he could have
destroyed us in his first term. Buddy Daddy fifty.

Speaker 2 (01:48:12):
Five KRC, the talk station, This Briefty anywhere anytime, take your.

Speaker 4 (01:48:19):
Infote to go.

Speaker 10 (01:48:20):
I'm listening through powered.

Speaker 5 (01:48:22):
By fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 2 (01:48:28):
Eight oh five fifty five krs The talk Station Hour
of Power.

Speaker 1 (01:48:33):
I love when I come into the studio in the
morning and I.

Speaker 2 (01:48:36):
See Congressman Thomas Massey follow by Judge Anapolitano. Welcome back,
Congressman Massy. It's always a distinct pleasure to have you
on my program.

Speaker 4 (01:48:43):
Oh, it's great to be on your program.

Speaker 2 (01:48:46):
Well, I know you want to talk about national debt
and continuing continuing resolutions and elect You have to ask
you at the outset, considering we are going to be
hearing from Judgment Politano not necessarily on this topic, but
I am going to approach the subject with him. Obviously,
Iran launched missiles at Israel. Now there's all this talk
about whether Israel is going to basically enter into, you know,
a shooting war with the Iranians, go after the nuclear bases, whatever,

(01:49:09):
whatever the military strategy happens to be. But Iran did
go after Israel directly. So if the United States were
to somehow become a part of this shooting war, would
they not need maybe a declaration of war or an
authorization at least an authorization for use of military force?
Are they going to dust that one off from back
in ninety one?

Speaker 4 (01:49:28):
What are we playing t ball here?

Speaker 9 (01:49:29):
This?

Speaker 1 (01:49:30):
Yes we are.

Speaker 4 (01:49:31):
Okay, I'm going to hit that one on.

Speaker 1 (01:49:32):
I know you will.

Speaker 4 (01:49:34):
Listen, the Administration said, and this is Sullivan. He said,
We've made it clear there will be consequences, severe consequences
for this attack on Israel, and we will work with
Israel to make that case. What the heck work with Israel?
Excuse me? The Constitution requires the Administration to work with Congress. Yeah, Like,

(01:49:57):
you can't just launch an attack on a sovereign country.
That's an act of war. Now, some people say, oh, well,
they can do whatever they want as long as they
don't declare war. No, that's an act of war and
we haven't been attacked there. You know, there are accommodations
in the nineteen seventy three War Powers Act to respond

(01:50:19):
to a direct attack on America if they can't get
a hold of Congress in that period of time. But
there is no and some people wonder if that's even.

Speaker 1 (01:50:28):
Concert I know I was going to interject, but go ahead,
I need to cover it.

Speaker 4 (01:50:31):
I'm I'm in the same spot there on that one,
and probably judge to Politano is well, but we're.

Speaker 1 (01:50:37):
Of like mind on this subject matter.

Speaker 4 (01:50:39):
But let's say you go along with the premise of
the of the seventy three or seventy four War Powers Act.
It's even that acknowledges you can't respond to this with
an act of war from the United States. So, and
here's the thing. Congress is on recess right now. Yeah,
everybody knows Congress gets an August recess. About to tell

(01:51:00):
you a dirty little secret, every other year we get
an August recess and an October recess. And we're not
supposed to call it recess. We're supposed to call it
district work period.

Speaker 12 (01:51:12):
Let's face it, it's October recess. And the reason you
get it every other year is the incumbents don't want
to be stuck in Washington, d C. While the challengers
are running against them in the election. True, so it's
part of the incumbent protection package that everybody gets in Washington,
DC as you get October off.

Speaker 4 (01:51:32):
To go campaign, and of course we still get paid
for October.

Speaker 2 (01:51:36):
Well, I mean, having even on our books whether or
not it's constitutional that Warpowers Act allows us to immediately
respond to attack on us. Doesn't that sort of support
exactly what Israel's doing, which is defending itself immediately when
they get attacked. I mean that you're supposed to be
able to do that.

Speaker 4 (01:51:52):
Right, They're able to do that, and they need to
judge whether or not they need to get into some
kind of diplomacy with their neighbors. I mean, but here's
the thing. We don't need to be sending soldiers over there.
We don't need to be launching an attack on a
sovereign country if we're not attacked, and we don't need

(01:52:13):
to be spending money over there either. We're co combatants
honestly right now in a war with Russia from Ukraine,
if any other country, for instance, had supported let's say
al Qaeda to the extent, Well, al Qaeda is not
a good example, but I'll use it. If any other
country supported a country that attacks the United States, we

(01:52:34):
would call them co combatants. And we are by that measure.
We are co combatants right now in a war with Russia,
Yes we are. And we should not become co combatants
in a war with Iran, either through financial and military
support or through boots on the ground.

Speaker 2 (01:52:52):
Fair enough, And that idea of funding leads us over
to the national debt and the continuing resolutions. You had
a brilliant plan to deal with this, just do a
one year continuing resolution which would result in an automatic
one percent across the board cut come April. I thought
it was a brilliant strategy. Obviously they didn't go down
that road.

Speaker 4 (01:53:10):
Yeah, it's not only a strategy, it's signed into law. Yes, Yeah,
I got them to put in law that if we
go past April thirtieth with a CR and I got
them put that in last year when they weren't thinking
about this year, then you get a one percent cut
to every discretionary program in the United States. So instead
of having a shutdown fight, you have a cut down fight,

(01:53:32):
a one percent cut down fight. On April thirtieth, well,
the Speaker of the House proposed, no, let's go to
March thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:53:42):
Right.

Speaker 4 (01:53:42):
The reason they chose March is they didn't want to
go past the Massy cut and his little clever little thing.
They do this every year, Brian. They were going to
attach this bright shiny object to get conservatives excited so
they could get their hands dirty and vote for this thing,
and then they were going to take the bright shiny
object off. Light shiny object was something called the Save Act.

(01:54:03):
And I've voted for the Save Act. By the way,
the House has already voted for the Save Act. It's
sitting over the Senate. It keeps illegals from registering to
vote and voting. It's got strict penalties if they try
to vote. Okay, well, it's already illegal form to vote.
But this is sort of a belts and suspender's approach
and nothing wrong with it. But they were going to

(01:54:23):
attach that to the cr which is all twelve appropriations
bills and one steaming pile of pooh. They were going
to attach it to that and make the steaming pile
of pooh a good pile of pooh. Well, the problem
is they had no intention to ever fight. And I
called them out on it about a month ago in
a speech in Congress, and I said, I refuse to

(01:54:44):
be a Thespian in this failure theater because they planned
to fail, and there were even conservatives going along with
this plan that knew it was going to fail. They
there are rumors that Mike Johnson had already told the
Senators the Republicans that they could strip off the Save
Act when it got over there, and that was their

(01:55:05):
plan all along. I called him out on it. They
still tried to snap the ball and run the play.
But after I had called him out on it enough,
other Republicans joined me to say we're not going to
be actors in this political theater. And so that failed,
and then what happened is exactly what I predicted would happen.
By the way, Elon Musk retweeted or reposted my speech,

(01:55:26):
calling this all theater in my predictions, and he said,
I hope you're not right. So to respond to Elon Musk,
I went to Grock, which is his AI system, And
I said, is Thomas Massey wright about the save act
on the CR? And Grok gives like a five paragraph
dissertation on why Thomas Massey is probably going to be

(01:55:49):
right about this theater. And so I put that on
my reply to Elon. Well at what's happened. As I
turned out to be right. We got a clean cry
by the way that I made another prediction that it
would end right before Christmas, that it wouldn't go till
next spring. Because we've talked about this on your show, Brian,
for as long as I've been coming on your show,

(01:56:10):
which is at least twelve years.

Speaker 1 (01:56:12):
You'd come a mile away.

Speaker 4 (01:56:13):
God every year, every year, every year they do the
same play Christmas, Christmas, Christmas Eves, shut down Panic because
here's what they're doing. They're taking our family's hostage, the
hot of the families of congressmen congressmen in Washington, d C.
On December twentieth, which is when this CR expires, and

(01:56:34):
they're going to either put another worst CR that's probably
gonna have Ukraine and everything else attached to it, or
they're going to do the full on omnibus, depending on
how the election comes out. They're going to do that
on December twentieth, and the congressmen, they're going to smell
that those jet fumes from DCA, the Ronald Bergen Airport
and the combination of the fumes from those airplanes wafting

(01:56:56):
over to the Capitol and this are expiring. Then they're
going to start chanting vote, vote, vote, and they will
vote for anything you put in front of them, because
the speaker always comes and says, doesn't matter who the
speaker is, they always say, if you vote for this,
you can go home and open presence with your family.
And if you don't vote for this, we're going to

(01:57:18):
be here over Christmas because the optics are bad. And
just go ahead and tell your families pack up those
presents and bring in Washington, d C. If they want
to be with you at Christmas. No, nobody's going to
bring their family to DC over Christmas. So there, you're
basically they're like the Grinch.

Speaker 1 (01:57:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:57:34):
Well, when I read that, the first person I thought
it was you. I saw that, Oh no, late December
cut off that. You gotta be kidding me. This is
so obvious. It's a setup for the inevitable.

Speaker 4 (01:57:47):
Some people call me, Yeah, some people call me no
stratomis for predicting this, but the reality is, Brian, we
could go back. It's a lot of work. God, yeah,
we could go back on your radio show. We could
find clips of me predicting this every year. It's not
a prediction, it's just how the swamp works and the
uniparty works.

Speaker 2 (01:58:05):
And guess what they'll have twelve spending bills to do
next year with a deadline in the fall, and they
know that now, but they'll kick it around until late
September and then push back for a cr again.

Speaker 4 (01:58:15):
Listen, Congress being surprised by the fiscal deadline of September
thirtieth is like a florist being surprised by Valentine's Day.
It happens every year. Prepare for it.

Speaker 1 (01:58:26):
Wait for it.

Speaker 2 (01:58:27):
College will bring Congressmanassy back. Apparently he has some insight
into the Fed's role in January sixth as well as
a well at astute observation and easy observation. John Carrey
hates the First Amendment more. We have Congressman Massi after
I mentioned my friends at twenty two three on Route
forty two between Mason and eleven, and you know the
world is a dangerous place, seems like it's getting worse.
So every single day at twenty two to three firearms

(01:58:49):
range of gun store, they're going to help you safely
protect yourself and the ones you love. They won't you
have peace of mind and these uncertain times goes way
beyond the products and services they provided.

Speaker 1 (01:58:57):
Twenty two to three. They are committed to you.

Speaker 2 (01:59:00):
Experience you get from this local, family owned small business
is absolutely amazing at every level. I've shopped there, I've
shot on their indoor range. It's amazing. Take some classes,
learn how to competently use that firearm so you can
protect yourself. That's what it's all about. Huge selection of firearms,
all types. They have ammunition, they have accessories. Their staff
are wonderful, knowledgeable folks. They'll treat you like family. Tell

(01:59:22):
Wendy and Jeff, the owners. Brian said high when you
stop in membership options and things going on throughout the week.
So just go to twenty two three dot com the
number twenty two followed by the word three spelled out
twenty two three dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:59:33):
To learn more.

Speaker 4 (01:59:34):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 2 (01:59:38):
Brian Thomas with Nostra Thomas. That'd be Congressman Thomas Messy.
I just love that. That is so funny. Anyway, probably
not funny, but here's the information, or provide the information
to my listeners and me. Congressman Massy, what were the
FEDS role in the January sixth drunken fraternity party?

Speaker 4 (01:59:56):
Huh, Well, there were a lot of FEDS there on
January six and they and they're call them confidential human sources.
I think we should call some of them agent provocateurs.
The Inspector General Horowitz, we had him in front of
our Judiciary Committee and I asked him when this report
was going to come out, because it was three and
a half years ago. He announced he was going to

(02:00:18):
do a report on the DOJ slash FBI's role at
January six, preparing for it, and the day of it's
been three and a half years. It's become obvious they
are slow walking this whole report until after the election.
He admitted as much in the questioning. And if you know,
I didn't say this in the hearing, but I'm going
to say this now. I think they're probably about two

(02:00:41):
hundred FEDS there on January sixth. Oh my word, Now
there's two ways to get at that estimate. Representative Clay
Higgins agrees with me, he got to that estimate from
a different direction. There. You know, there's a lot of trials,
a lot of cases where people are being tried and
put in prison for protests that day and maybe going
into the Capitol will in their sealed cases. But you

(02:01:04):
can know some of this stuff sort of in in
each little vignette they have to disclose how many of
those people were FEDS. Well, you can take, let's say,
if there's an incident that involves thirty people and three
of them are FEDS, you can extrapolate from the entire
crowd to get to two hundred people.

Speaker 1 (02:01:21):
Right.

Speaker 4 (02:01:22):
The other way you get to a large number is
every every field office, every FBI field office in the
United States had people in chat rooms in every region
of the country trying to infiltrate and in some cases,
like if you follow what happened with the governor Whitmer kidnapping,
fed napping, let's call it, where they there were more

(02:01:45):
there were more FBI people than there were actual you know, defendants.

Speaker 1 (02:01:50):
Like engaging in entrapment effort correct entrapment.

Speaker 4 (02:01:53):
Half of the people in the Governor Whitmer case got
off for entrapment, and I think I think that should
be that should be of defense for some of these
people in January sixth. But every field office had people
already in you know, November December working on this, and
they sent those people to DC. So every field office
sent somebody.

Speaker 2 (02:02:14):
So this was a coordinated effort to create the response
that they obviously got. That's what they wanted to happen.

Speaker 4 (02:02:20):
I believe so. And then here's the thing. I was
trying to get Inspector General in the hearing to admit
that his report is going to show there are quite
a few of these folks. And so one of the
questions I asked him was what's the total amount of
travel reimbursement for these informants that showed up? Now the answer,

(02:02:43):
I think he was a little off guard when I
asked that. He said, I don't know the exact number.
I don't have it.

Speaker 2 (02:02:49):
Yeah, but yes, there was reimbursements that I just don't
have to figure with.

Speaker 1 (02:02:53):
Right.

Speaker 4 (02:02:53):
So for him to admit there were travel reimbursements for
those people tells you two things. Number One, they were there, yes,
But number two, the defense that some people have put
out there that oh, of course there were informants, but
they were turned after the event, like after the event
in order to do a plea deal, they became informants, right,

(02:03:15):
But no, you don't if you're paying their travel to
get there. These are not people that did a plea deal,
a plea.

Speaker 1 (02:03:23):
Bargain pre existing relationships.

Speaker 4 (02:03:26):
Yes they were. They were full in the employee of
the government. Now the question is is who is slow
walking this thing until after the election. And you know,
I believe that Attorney General Garland has a hand in this,
and I'm going to you know, we're pushing him. There's
no there's no way they're going to release this before

(02:03:48):
the election. Yet, you know, I know certain things, and
I tried to elucidate that in this hearing to get
it in a formal setting. And people are starting to
see that that's what that's what's going on. Now. If
Kamala wins the election, I don't know if this report
ever comes.

Speaker 2 (02:04:06):
Out, I don't think we'll see it'll ever see the
light of day if that scenario unfolds.

Speaker 4 (02:04:09):
And by the way, why does why do inspectors General
they're about I think they are about sixty of them.
There's one for every department. There's one for the Post Office,
for instance. We're trying to get one for Ukraine, but
there was one for Afghanistan. Why do they do these
reports so you can learn and you can do things
differently next time. But I pointed out to Inspector General Horwitz,

(02:04:32):
it's one inauguration ago. It's been four years, and he's
not even going to have this out before the election,
and possibly not before the inauguration. So even in the
most benign uh, you know, a charitable interpretation of what
the FEDS were doing, they messed up, and we need
to know how to do something better because you could
have something similar going on this next January. Well, it's

(02:04:54):
coming jam.

Speaker 2 (02:04:55):
You're responsible to hold them accountable. You're our representative. You're
one of the people's representatives. And they refuse to give
information to the people who are responsible for oversight is
just to me baffling angering. I don't know what FCC
compliant way I can put it pretty pretty damn frustrating.
And it happens time and time again. And the other
component of this was like the attempted assassination hearings. You're

(02:05:18):
talking with someone who's got information. He has information. I'm sorry,
but it's just not in a final report yet. Well,
how about just giving us what you got subject to
revision when the damn report comes out?

Speaker 4 (02:05:29):
I just m says. He says he's still waiting to
see what can be declassified and what can't. But the
reality is probably he already knows ninety five percent of
his report can be published in its form. So we
should get that information now, but we're not getting.

Speaker 2 (02:05:45):
It well for obvious political reasons. I will conclude, and
here's the answer. Here's how you would cut through all
of this. We have the power of the purse. I
have said time and again.

Speaker 4 (02:05:55):
If we would just withhold funding for one toner cartridge
at the FBI, if one of their copiers went down
because we cut the funding for that copier, they would
come to heal. But instead we're building a brand new building.
Why would they answer us if we just keep funding
them and they can with impunity, you know, thumb their
nose at us.

Speaker 1 (02:06:16):
Yep, there's no repercussions.

Speaker 2 (02:06:17):
Why would they give you the information if it's bad
for their political side of the Ledger Congressman Thomas Massey,
Judge and apoloitan Is probably listening right now.

Speaker 1 (02:06:24):
Joe gave me advance notes. You be on.

Speaker 2 (02:06:26):
You know he's a big fan of yours. I know
you're a big fan of his. He'll be on next.
Thank you so much for what you do. Hey, thanks
to the judge. Look forward to him coming on.

Speaker 4 (02:06:38):
I am going to do a tea party meeting tonight
and I'm going to a place called Bob's Service Center.
These people in Florence, Kentucky today. Just I'm visiting a
little business. It's going to be fun. They've been in
business forever. They're in Florence.

Speaker 2 (02:06:50):
Well, I hope you have a nice time there and
give them all my best and all right, what is
it again?

Speaker 1 (02:06:55):
Master Thomas Nostra Thomas Noster.

Speaker 2 (02:06:58):
Thomas, Well, there's two slicing it on that one until
we talk again.

Speaker 1 (02:07:02):
It's been great talking. Keep up the great work, my friend.
All right, thanks, let's stick around. Jessee POLTONA next fifty
five KRC.

Speaker 2 (02:07:12):
Here is your channel nine, first onrning with a forecast.
Is going to start out cloud he going to end
up sunny somewhere along the way. Seventy six will be
the high over nineteen to forty nine. But it's a
few clouds, sunny and seventy eight tomorrow, clear of a
night fifty six and a sunny Friday with a high
of eighty two fifty three degrees.

Speaker 1 (02:07:25):
Right now traffic time, Chuck.

Speaker 15 (02:07:27):
Ingram from the UCL Traffic Center as the only Level
one trauma center in the region. You see Health is
setting the national standard for emergency care with new additions
to the ER twos. You see Health when you need
expert care. East Spend two seventy five continues to struggle
with an accident before seventy five on the right hand side,
the backups to Hamilton Avenue and now a wreck just

(02:07:50):
before you get to win and end that backup. Better
news westbound two seventy five. All travel lanes are now open.
With the accident before seventy one, what's left is we're
on the right shoulder. Well, now that the Reds have
been eliminated from postseason play, there's simply no debate. Reds
fans have to find a way to support baseball, and

(02:08:11):
you can adopt a Yankees fan. Oddly enough, there's one
coming up next. My name is Chuck and I'm a
Yankees fan, and the judge has paid for this message
Chuck ing ramon fifty five KARC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:08:26):
Oh that was beautiful.

Speaker 2 (02:08:28):
It's a thirty fifty five KRCD talks dayson employment. Listening
time with Judge added Apolitano every Wednesday on the fifty
five CARC Morning Show. Fifty five cars dot Com for
the podcast. After we're done, welcome back your honor. Always
my favorite time of week.

Speaker 3 (02:08:42):
Thank you, Brian, And what a pleasant comment from Chuck Ingram.

Speaker 1 (02:08:48):
Very much appreciated.

Speaker 3 (02:08:49):
Then we'll see where the We'll see where the Yankees go.

Speaker 1 (02:08:52):
Well, are you optimistic at least?

Speaker 4 (02:08:54):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (02:08:55):
Yes, so optimistic? My goodness, Aaron Judge almost broke his
own home run record, their pitching staff finally came around
in the last third of the season.

Speaker 2 (02:09:07):
I'm quite optimistic, yes, well, and of course that you
shot me a comic yesterday about resting peace. Pete Rose.
Of course, one of the greatest baseball players to ever live.
Controversial man he was in his life, in his post
baseball hours, but you cannot deny that man played a
great game.

Speaker 3 (02:09:25):
Oh god, he might be the best all round. Now
that Joe DiMaggio fans are not going to like this.

Speaker 1 (02:09:31):
He might be the.

Speaker 3 (02:09:31):
Best all round. Baseball player or ever, certainly in the
modern era, not one of those people who believes that
somebody like Pete Rose should be kept out of the
Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame measures a person's
skill in the game, not their personal morality. If you
looked at the personal lives of many of the people,

(02:09:53):
find a lot of things objectaable. But that's not why
they're there.

Speaker 1 (02:09:57):
They're there because they excelled at the recording in progress.

Speaker 2 (02:10:02):
Fair enough, all right, moving over to matters political before
we dive into your column, which I am always pleased
to receive in advance, comes out tonight, deal or no deal.
More on GITMO and the plea agreement that didn't happen,
I have to ask you, as I started off with
Congressman Thomas Massey, given that the Iranians launched missile strikes
directly into Israel and the idea that somehow we the

(02:10:23):
United States might be engaged in a direct military conflict
with the Iranians. We got two carrier groups in the region,
are going to be soon in the region. We helped
shoot down some of the incoming missiles from Iran into Israel.
Question marks about whether the United States is going to
be embroiled in a military with conflict with Iran War
Powers Act. You and I have discussed that before authorization

(02:10:45):
for use of military force. We've talked about that before
actual constitutional declaration of war. If we're going to start
bombing Iran, it seems to me that we need to
declare a war against them.

Speaker 1 (02:10:57):
Well, I agree with you fully.

Speaker 3 (02:10:59):
By the way, I listened to the entire interview you
did because Joe Strucker was kind enough to let me
know that Congressman Massey would be on, And you know what,
He's enough to make me want to move to Kentucky
just so that I can say my congressman, not just
my friend, but also my congressman, is Thomas Massey. I

(02:11:21):
can't even think of anything that we disagree on, and
I can't even think of anything that he does or
says that doesn't have me beaming and my heart swelling
with joy for his for his personal courage. So I
had to comment on January sixth, The federal law enforcement

(02:11:41):
is utterly and totally corrupt. They always charge people with
more crimes than they think they can they can convict of,
just to flip them by scaring them with jail time
so that they will become witnesses for the government. They've
been doing this, probably for forty or fifty years now,
since the Supreme Court green lighted it. It's a form

(02:12:02):
of bribery, absolute bribery. Say what we want you to
say in the witness stand and we'll give you this benefits.
If Defense Council did that, Defense Council would be in jail.
But prosecutors get away with it, and Congressman Massey is
courageous enough.

Speaker 1 (02:12:18):
To expose it.

Speaker 3 (02:12:19):
He's also courageous enough to argue, now back to your question,
that Iran poses zero threat to American national security. Hesbola
in Lebanon poses zero threat to American national security. We
have signed two treaties that say we can only declare

(02:12:42):
war on a country that poses a grave threat to
American national security. You think Congress will abide those treaties.
Probably not, because Thomas Massey and another a group of
libertarians and a group of progressives of the exception. But
most of Congress is bought and paid for by the

(02:13:04):
donor class. Witness the fifty eight standing ovations that Prime
Minister Netsan Yahoo received more than FDR more than Ronald
Reagan more than Douglas MacArthur, more than Winston Churchill. It's
a charade, and it's only a matter of time before
some president Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump brings us

(02:13:29):
into a war with Israel to satisfy the donor class
that we helped Israel expand their borders. You won't see
a declaration of war because Congress doesn't want to embarrass itself.
It'll just look the other way while the President does
whatever the hell he or she wants.

Speaker 2 (02:13:47):
Well, and that's to me just frightening. I mean, in essence,
we were under the leadership of a king in that regard,
no accountability, no representation by our elected officials, no say
in the matter.

Speaker 1 (02:14:00):
We're gonna drop bombs, gonna drop bombs.

Speaker 2 (02:14:01):
This has come up in the context of us doing
just random missile strikes and any given land we find
somebody that we don't like.

Speaker 3 (02:14:08):
Correct I forget which Supreme Court justice. It might have
been Robert Jackson who said, without the declaration of war
requirement in the Constitution, the president has a loaded gun
in his death drawer, and he can take it out
and shoot it at any time he wants a bit
of a hyperbole, but the point is clear. Madison wrote

(02:14:28):
the Constitution said, if we don't separate the war making
from the war waging, then we haven't created a presidency.
We're back to having a monarchy if the king can
choose the target and wage the war. But that's what
we've had since World War Two. The President chooses the target,
Congress pace for it. The only time they gave him

(02:14:50):
a hard time was LBJ in Vietnam, a horribly useless, destructive.

Speaker 4 (02:14:55):
Immoral or.

Speaker 3 (02:14:57):
And then he faked the Gulf of time Kin incident
and got the Gulf of ton Kin resolution, and then
he sold Fannie May and Freddie Mack and used that
money and his legacy suffers because of it. But fifty
two thousand American boys.

Speaker 1 (02:15:15):
Are dead, that's true.

Speaker 2 (02:15:16):
And then there's of course the weapons of mass destruction
used as a pretext to well start a war with
a country that we didn't have an immediate challenge with.

Speaker 1 (02:15:25):
Correct.

Speaker 3 (02:15:26):
I know of two former FBI agents who were asked
to leave the White House because they told President Bush
that Saddam Hussein did not have weapons of mass destruction,
and then both resigned from the CIA after he announced
that they did, and used it as the pretext for

(02:15:48):
an invasion that was a disaster. It ended up slaughtering
Iraqi peasants and destroying what remained of that society.

Speaker 2 (02:16:00):
Well, would you like to talk about your column? Deal
or no deal, or maybe we'll have a go at
John Kerry in his disdain for the First Amendment.

Speaker 3 (02:16:09):
You know, there's a lot of disdaining for the Bill
of Rights lately, and I've never I don't recall hearing
this in my adult lifetime. I remember reading incidents during
World War One. Woodrow Wilson disdained the First Amendment. Kerrie
disdains the First Amendment because he believes, somehow, some way,

(02:16:32):
there should be a law against misinformation. Donald Trump wants
to amend the First Amendment so as to allow Congress
to criminalize flag burning. We're not talking about burning your
neighbor's flag or burning the government's flag. We're talking about
burning your own flag, which, just a Scalier wrote, the
flag stands for your right to burn it. It is

(02:16:54):
just a piece of cloth and just a symbol, and
you can express your opinion of that symbol. Donald Trump
will also wants to amend the Fifth Amendment to remove
due process for criminals who are caught in the act,
saying the police should administer the whatever punishment they choose
right there at the scene of the crime. That always
gets a round of applause until they catch the wrong person. Yes,

(02:17:19):
and that's your nephew. That's why we have these protections
in the Bill of Rights.

Speaker 2 (02:17:25):
Well, going back to the FEDS baiting people and in
trapping them, if you're going to meet out justice on
the in the moment once the you know, the federal
jug the agents ague you on to sort of commit
some trumped up crime, and what meet out justice right
then and there when the individual really wasn't largely responsible
for his or her actions.

Speaker 1 (02:17:42):
Correct? Correct?

Speaker 3 (02:17:44):
That allows the Feds not only to create crime and
punish the crime they've created, and prosecute the crime they've created,
but punish the crime that they created. A Congressman Massey
or you, I forget which one of you mentioned, Governor Whitmer.
I'm not a fan of Governor Whitmer at all, but

(02:18:04):
the plot against her was totally and completely concocted by
the FBI. That's what the first jury found. Then, of
course they tweeked the case and tried it a second time,
and those guys got convicted all because of this opinion
by Chief Justice Renquist that allows allows these allows government stings.

(02:18:31):
And of course, once the Feds are allowed to do this,
the states pick up on it as well. My column one,
a lot of people couldn't care less about to get
I do. Whenever the government is trampling due process rights
of a hated and reviled defendant, it is time to

(02:18:51):
watch out what's happening. Because if they can do it
to a hated and reviled defendant, they can make a
defendant hated and filed and make it easier to persecute
that person. And the politics that has reached deep into
the trial in Guantanamo Bay is unforgivable.

Speaker 2 (02:19:12):
I will strongly encourage my listeners to get a copy
of this deal or no deal comes out tonight. O.
What a tangled web we weave, Judge freedom We always
end on that. I did want to draw your attention.
I intentionally wore this shirt. I try to wear a
nicer shirt. I don't speak with you because we're on
video make or well fiction again. My mom bought me
this shirt for Christmas a couple of years ago, so.

Speaker 3 (02:19:33):
That is a fabulous T shirt. If you have any yours,
send me one please.

Speaker 14 (02:19:38):
I love it.

Speaker 3 (02:19:38):
I'll wear it everywhere. I'll wear it on on set.
I have the Great Colonel Douglas McGregor coming on the level.

Speaker 1 (02:19:46):
Sorry about Christmas squirrel outside.

Speaker 3 (02:19:49):
I have the Great Colonel Douglas McGregor at eleven Aaron Mate.
At one thirty. Phil Raldy, one of the two CIA
agents thrown out of the Oval office. He told George
w there are no weapons of mass destruction. At two
thirty this afternoon.

Speaker 2 (02:20:05):
Outstanding lineup. It always is Judging. Freedom find on my line.
It's easy to do. Judge entered a platino. We'll talk
next Wednesday. Best of health, my friend. Thank you, Brian,
all the best and to you. Eight forty almost two
eight forty two, fifty five krs. The talk stations stick around,
got a little time to talk. Maybe kick a couple
of phone calls, Joe, open up the phone lines. Maybe
someone has a comment or two. We'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (02:20:26):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 4 (02:20:28):
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