Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Five o five.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
At fifty five k rc DE talk station every Wednesday, says.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Will a vacation and that's the way.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
The news going. Yes, Indeed, Brian Thomas here and uh
someone the wake trying to wake up working on it anyway,
Joe Strecker's where he belongs right there in the executive
production bruth and got a good show lined up. Thank
you as always Joe Strecker for putting the guests down
on the rundown. It's Wednesday, seven o five. Every Wednesday
we are blessed by Jack Eviden coming on the fifty
(00:52):
five Garacy Morning. Sure, at least I feel that way.
Big Picture with Jack Etherton is what we call it today.
Headlining er topic Democrats face the Guillotine, you know, the
French Revolution discussion today, Joe, you think maybe Donald and
Neil Americans for Prosperity. On Wednesdays following Jack Evidan in
seven thirty for Donovan, we'll talk about education opportunities in
(01:15):
Ohio with AFPs Donovan and Neil. Congressman Warren Davidson coming
up at eighty oh five, apparently he's back from DC
working in the district. This month, we'll talk about town
hall meetings, we'll talk about how the you know, everything's going.
Generally speaking. The National Guard in Washington, DC apparently working,
although they did have their first murder in fifteen days.
I think it wasn't a win. Wasn't a record streak,
(01:38):
I don't believe, but pretty long time since considering Washington,
d C. As a murder every thirty six hours. So
how's that working? And does Cincinnati need it? I'm not
quite sure we're there yet. Since that, he's certainly in
a position to ask for help. Donald Trump's issued the
charge across this great line of ours. Listen, if you've
got crime problems in your city, asked me to bring
(02:00):
in the National Guard, I'll help you out. Not forcing
people to do it become a real political liability for
the Democrats because they run around it sounds like they're
happy about crime. Ask the people who are in the
most crime written neighborhoods if they're happy about the situation
in which they live, and that those are areas politicians
typically don't reside in borders. Success with Congressman Davidson, yes,
(02:21):
there has been a demonstrable success. It's amazing what a
new administration can do in terms of shutting down the
wide open border situation. Finally, no on central bank digital currency.
That's Congressman Warren Davidson's position, and we'll talk to him
about that. Eight thirty with James Stitt Warbirds at Lunkin Airport.
Days this weekends, we've got something going on, and George
(02:44):
Brenneman would like you to know that they're having a
Restore Liberty meeting. Now I know he's doing the wellness
Restore Wellness campaign with Keith Tennantfeld. He's been on the
program quite a few times, but George primarily the Liberty
and you can find him online Restore Liberty got us.
He's going to be having a meeting with Todd Zenzer
(03:07):
and special guest Christopher Smitheman and Corey Bauman. So it's
going to be a big meeting tonight at the Farm
beginning at six thirty, So little heads up on that.
If you're not doing anything, head on over to the
Legendary Farm at six thirty and congratulate Corey Bauman. That's right,
he got the FOP endorsement yesterday five one, three, seven,
(03:28):
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to
three talk pound five fifty on AT and T phone. Yeah,
on the heels of the no confidence vote against mayor
f Tab Purval and uh. We heard from the FOB
president on the program yesterday talking about the no confidence
vote and his off ed piece. Ah, well, I'll tell
you what he said. He was gonna they were gonna
(03:49):
do their indorsements. He he didn't want announce him on
the fifty five Carcening Morning Show because it would have
been a little premature. They had a formal announcement and
there it is right at the top. Mayor endorsed by
the Fraternal Order Police, Queen City Lodge number sixty nine.
Corey Bowman jocking no one. I suppose they didn't have
to endorse him. They could have just let it go.
But they certainly are not fans of have to have
(04:10):
Purvall for a variety of reasons. Ah As for Cincinnati
City Council, who are they endorsing? Mark Jeffries, Jeff Cramerding,
Christopher Smitherman. Congratulations, Aaron Weiner, Steve Gooden, Glad to see
Steve on the list, Gary Favors, Seth Walsh, Liz Keating
(04:33):
not shocking, Lynda Matthews and Ryan James those are your
endorse council candidates. And finally they actually endorsed judges too,
And I was glad to see this, because, let's face it,
who knows more about what judges are soft on crime
and hard on crime than the Sincinni Police Department regularly
goes into court in order to testify against the perps.
(04:53):
Josh Berkowitz for District four, Check District five, Betsy Sunderman,
Great District six, Michael Pack Great District seven, Gwyn Bender.
So there's all of your judicial endorsements there, and thank
you to the Sin Saint Police Department. Chapter sixty nine
FOP for let us know and Sharon Love on that one. Ah,
(05:17):
let us move around here. Oh, there was a little
more information about the FOP no confidence vote the other
day Fox nineteen Mike Schell reporting saying a former FOP
president Dan Hills was there. Dan's been on the program
a whole bunch of times. So they unanimously voted to
I guess rebuke the mayor. And of course ken Kober
(05:46):
when he discussed this, I asked him how long it took?
How long did the jury deliberate? I think was the
way I phraised it before they know voted like five seconds.
Dan Hills was there. He described he said when they
asked for anybody that disagreed, there was not a peep.
In other words, disagreed with the the no confidence vote,
no one, No one disagreed, not a single peep. He said,
(06:07):
there was nobody in that hall that disagreed no confidence
in mayor. Per of all, Hill said pur of Ball
should have said something sooner about the fight. That was
one of the criticisms that was outlined. He was missing
in action for three days. We had this national news
breaking across the country making Cincinnati look terrible. It looks like,
you know, we've just come on flown off the handle.
(06:28):
Crime wise. Silence is deafening from the mayor's office. Three
days later, he finally makes a statement which didn't amount
too much. So Hill suggested, you know, par of Ball,
come said something sooner when your city is bleeding, said,
you have to be the one to run there and
to stop that wound in. That's the exact opposite of
what we see out of Aftab. Mayor's inability to address
(06:52):
situations quickly demonstrated by his three day delay and commenting
commenting on the Elm Street riot, leaving officers in the
community in Limbo. He's not really concerned about getting engaged
when he's needed. Dan said that he just takes everything
in his own little stride. Five minutes what I'm doing
here right now, five minutes could have meant so much,
(07:13):
but he absolutely hid from leadership. It's a profoundly decent
point there. How much does it take for the mayor
of the city to come out and say something, at
least let the people know that you're around you, at
least have the appearance of being on the job. That
it's a real terrible optic from a politician standpoint, Usually
(07:35):
they gravitate toward this, even tough issues. Anyway, Stuart, people
were asking about the Sentinel Police Association, including me, Well,
you know, because there's about one hundred black officers that
are represented or at least part of the Sentinel Police
Association group, and the president of the Centinel Police Association,
(07:57):
guy named Stuart Isaac's just call this whole thing politics.
And I suppose on some level it is because we're
talking about who's going to be the next mayor of
the city of Cincinnati. So he said the city has
more important things to focus on. Than what he called
political games. So I guess the no confidence vote Stewart
Isaac's fleete to be political. That's what I'm reading into this,
(08:19):
because apparently the Sentinel Police Association is not going to
do this. He said, you know, we have a lot
of work to do in the city. You know, it's
a great city, regardless of how you're coming with your
political spectrum. Is this is what we've got to do.
Not sure what I understand. I understand that anyway as
an officer, whether here or Sentinel FOP, Well, at the
end of the day, we will report to the citizens
(08:40):
of Cincinnati. So we've got a job to do to
make sure they're to protect them the best way that
we can. A bit of a jumble statement, but it
is a quote. So I guess we're not going to
be hearing from the sentinels independent of the GOP or
the FOP vote, which the other component of this is, uh,
there were ninety people there to vote. If you want
(09:03):
to gauge what the FOP means or the fop's position
is relative to the vote about Mary have to have
provol I guess you'd have to ask all of the
members roughly nine hundred police officers who are part of
the union, but every police officer is a member of
the union. Department has about nine hundred offices currently, and
(09:26):
Dani Hills pointed out that there are over six hundred
retired officers who remain union members. That said, there were
ninety nine zero roughly union members in attendance, half of
which were active and the other half retired. So again,
I just bring that up in the interest of fairness.
(09:48):
Does the vote represent all of the FOP members? I
suppose the answer is no. Statistical sampling, maybe ninety is
enough to give you a clear picture of what the
other FOP members might say or how they would have voted,
But we don't have that. We just have the ninety
that were there unanimously voting. So for what that's worth,
(10:11):
all right, eight hundred and eight two three TALKO A
pound five fifty on AT and T phone plenty to
talk about coming up, whole bunch of different stories and
different topics, and you can feel free to steer the
direction of the conversation. Call me up otherwise I'll decide
which direction I'm going to go during the break and
be right back.
Speaker 4 (10:30):
Fifty five the talk station five.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Nineteen took about tir CB talk station. I had asked
Joe for an interpretation. I looked up, saw Joe at
a post on Facebook hitting snooze for thirty days on
those who post about the marriage is so satisfying. My
feed has definitely cleaned up. So asked Joe for a
reading on that one flying low on my radar because
I don't pay attention to stuff like that. Tailor siff
(11:00):
with Travis Kelsey engagement announcement and he has like nine
gazillion articles. You think that was like the piece between
Russian Ukraine have been negotiated as much press as it's gidding.
So Joe said, no, Moss, how many fewer friends do
you have now? Joe? Play okay? And the other one?
(11:23):
This guy really a viral and I you a fan
of Cracker Barrel. No really, I honestly, I don't know
that I've ever set foot in one. Used to be good,
but it's changed. Oh it's deteriorated like frish as you're saying, well,
I know they got a bit of a hot water
(11:44):
jam over changing the traditional logo, which has been the
old Timer logos has been described. They changed some really
generic kind of letters, and they got rid of the
old guys sitting next to the cracker barrel, and that
insulted a lot of people, and of course, since we
have nothing else in the world to talk about, the
whole whole thing went viral. Apparently this was viewed as
a sign of maybe Dei and wokeness going on a
(12:06):
cracker barrel, and so they're stock tanked and people were outraged,
inspecting all kinds of concern on social media. Uncle Herschel
is the name of the character depicted in the logo,
as if that really matters. Trump even weighed in on
it m although he did make a good point on this,
(12:27):
considering how viral this whole thing's gone. He said yesterday
morning cracker Bell should revert to its old logo because
of customer's response, saying they got a billion dollars worth
of free publicity if they play their cards right. Very
tricky to do, but at great, great opportunity. It's like
new coke. People think the old Coca Cola formulas disappeared forever.
People raided the stores getting the old coke off the
(12:50):
shelves before it disappeared for new coke, only for Coca
Cola to backpedal to say, oh, yeah, we're gonna go
back with the original formulas and no one liked the
new coke. Well maybe there you go. And then you
get a whole bunch of people to go in the
restaurant because well, you've capitulated him, You've stood up to
the woke folks out in the world, I guess anyway,
And after I was trading, the stock jump more than
(13:11):
nine percent after the announcement after dropping twelve percent last week.
So there, there you have that. I don't know where
where does that come into hierarchy with Taylor Swift and
Travis Kelsey, Which which which one's gotten gone more viral?
Joe sadly, Taylor sent, oh and why not since I
(13:39):
don't feel like talking about politics right now orcan Yes?
The pest control company released the latest bedrug report and
there was at one point in time, ifire I recall correctly,
Cincinnati was on it. Thankfully we are not on the list.
Speaker 5 (13:53):
Yay.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
I hate bad bugs. Oh god. The concept of bed
bugs or entomologists and from Atlanta Ben Hotels quoted as
saying bedbugs as some of the most resilient pests in
the world, makes them extremely difficult to control if brought
into a home or hotel. I have experienced bedbugs in
a hotel. Was always check the bed first. You know,
(14:17):
you put your bags in the corner. Don't let them
touch anything. Go over, pull the sheet up, look in
the corner of the bed and the mattress and see
what you see was the red roof in where my
uncle and I were getting ready and we were checking in.
And the first thing we did go over there and
check out the beds and gross one time in my
entire life, and that was satisfying me for my entire life.
(14:38):
I never want to experience that again. I felt creepy
the whole rest of the trip. But congratulations making the
News of La Chicago Chicago for the fifth year in
the role Numero una for the most bug infested city.
Congratulations Chicago. In addition to a crime problem, you've got
a bedbug problem. Second place, congratulations. A little close to home.
(14:59):
Don't like that, Cleveland, Ohio coming in at number two, Detroit,
Michigan coming at number three, Los Angeles, California, followed by Indianapolis, Indiana.
That's a shame. Apparrely Orkan gave Hartford, Connecticut a notable
(15:22):
mention for the biggest leap in the list, debuting at
number thirty five after jumping an unprecedented forty eight spots,
which indicates a significant increase in bedbug activity. Honorable mention
going to Charlotte, North Carolina, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, New York City,
who all saw significant drops in the amount of bedbugs,
(15:43):
but bottom on the list of fifty. The least bedbug
infested large city in the United States of America Houston, Texas.
So in terms of bedbugs, how to keep them at
bay if you've got them, Search the room for signs
of infestation, looking for bedbugg which are small, flat, ovo
shape insects that are brown and about the size of
(16:03):
an apple seed or maybe smaller. Lift sheets, curtains, and
cushions to check for bed bugs or signs of them.
Elevate your luggage under racks, keeping them away from the
bed and other furniture. Examine your luggage carefully when repacking,
and again when you return home. Place a place all
(16:24):
dryer safe clothing from your luggage in the dryer for
thirty to forty five minutes. Always do that, yes at
the highest heat setting. Upon returning home, the bed bugs.
All right, Oh, I have avoided talking about politics for
one segment. There, It's got that out of my system
and we can move on. Got local stories coming up.
(16:44):
Your phone calls are always preferable five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty five, eight hundred eighty two to three talker go
with pound five fifty on AT and T phones. I
also got the Stack and Stupid coming up after local stories.
Speaker 6 (16:54):
I'll be right back fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Tight on a Wednesday, happy one to listener lunch two
weeks for today Anderson Pub and Grow. We're skipping next
Wednesday because of the holiday next Monday, and so kick
it a week and look forward to the fellowship. We
always have it. Listener to Lunch, marking on your calendar.
Roughly eleven thirty Anderson Pub and Grow. Over to the phones,
will go, Tom, Welcome back, my friends. Always good to
hear from you.
Speaker 7 (17:21):
Hey, good morning, and i'd like to personally thank you
on me halving probably at least half the listeners now
we're going to be hitching most of the morning.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
Yeah, I know, I'm sorry that you're right and include
me in the group.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
Oh that's it getting shutters thinking about it.
Speaker 8 (17:40):
I know.
Speaker 7 (17:42):
I got a few questions based on some observations that
I've had recently. So why do people feel the need
to read their very loud vehicle engines at two thirty
in the morning in a residential neighborhood. Why why is
that a thing? Don't I don't woke me up? Woke
(18:04):
me up this morning? That's you know, come on, I mean,
my beautious lee.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
So well, I did go through my I don't know,
i'll call a redneck period. I had a two thousand
and one Ford cover and I did all kinds of
work on it. Got a Magni flow exhaust system, I
got midlengked headers and high flow cats and it made
quite a rumble. But I always tried to mind my
p's and q's in the morning because you know, I
had to zip off for the morning show and go
(18:29):
really really slow and keep the idol really really down.
So I was trying to be at least respectful. But
you know, you get out of the open road, that
thing was loud. At a Harley that was loud too.
Speaker 7 (18:38):
So somebody, somebody's knuckleheads, They just feel like it's their
god given right to wake up the entire left side
of the city or whatever.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
I don't have.
Speaker 7 (18:48):
Yeah, it's ridiculous. The next observation I have, what Why
do Canadian geese walk across the street walking traffic way?
Makin's why? I don't get it. You got wings? If
I had wings, my feet would never touch the ground.
But whatever, I get it. When they got like little babies,
(19:10):
okay they can't fly yet, but like ten or twelve
of them, and they're all grown adults, and they got
a walk across a four lane highway, that's that. Come
on that we should support them immediately, just for that reason.
Next question, why in the world do people continue to
(19:30):
vote Democrat after all of the stuff that has been
exposed and pointed out? Why why do these people still
support these idiots who are in favor of, oh, I
don't know, letting people come into this country illegally and
use all of our resources that are intended for our citizens.
(19:51):
Or maybe they want to let men play in women's
sports or women's sororities, or what all of the stupid
ridiculous stuff the Democrats stand for and support. Why would
you vote for that? Why would you support that? It
doesn't take any six. Don't vote Democrat? Have a great day, Ryan.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
Thank you Tom for the stream of consciousness. You can
join in the fund if I went three seven, four, nine,
fifty eight two to three talk or pound five fifty
on AT and T phones, and since I did that
quick mention for fifty five carsee dot com. If you
didn't get a chance to listen to the Daniel Davis
deep dive with the Inside Scoop yesterday with John Bender
or FOP President Ken Coober on the no confidence vote.
(20:32):
It's all right there, including my conversation with the wonderful
Kentucky State Senator Shelley Franky foe Meyer. Shelley for Kentucky
dot COM's or website. She's outstanding. Anyhow, it's all right there.
Fifty five karsee dot com. You tryheart media so you
can stream the content from your smart device anywhere you're
happy to be. Oh, look, this never happens. Headline. Police
(20:53):
investigating a West End shooting that injured one. Shooting at
the West End happened Monday evening. Corner Police, twelve hundred
block of Lynn Street, six pm. Seventy one year old
victim condition currently unknown, unclear what led to the shooting.
(21:13):
Incident is under investigation, so that would be Channel five
reporting on that one. Thank you, but very little information
for a crime that happened on Monday night, West End
though there it is. Carver Company laying off nearly one
(21:35):
thousand corporate workers. Courting announcement yesterday said the layoffs will
include only corporate administrative staff. Folks working in stores, manufacturing
facilities or distribution centers are not affected. Of the nearly
one thousand laid off, two hundred of them roughly working
Cincinnati here locally corner to the spokesperson. Internal letter of
the employees, company said it was looking to ways to
(21:56):
simplify the organization, shift resources closer to our customers, and
focus on work that creates the most value. Beyond that,
company said it has also halted projects that weren't helping
run great stores. With the administrative layoffs, Kruger says in
the internal letter that it can focus on lower prices,
(22:16):
new store growth, and more jobs in stores. That's a
few months these layoffs a few months after the company
laid off about two hundred employees from the downtown data
analytics unit called eighty four point fifty one. Early February,
Kroger spokesperson acknowledged an initial round of roughly two hundred
job reductions. Unclear if the eighty four to fifty one
(22:37):
layoffs were included in that, though in June, company also
announced that it planned to close sixty stores in the
next eighteen months. Didn't identify which stores were going to close, apparently,
but a spokesperson said that we do not we do
not expect any store closures in Cincinnati at this time.
They have about twenty seven hundre stores nation twenty seven
hundred stores nationwide. They rarely happened in large numbers these closures,
(23:01):
though it's noted. Thank you to Molly Shram at CPO
for reporting on that bad. Finally, one of the downtown
beating victims now charged with misdemeanor disorderly conduct because some
solicitor ordered the police department to issue us a citation
even though they didn't believe there was probable cause. The
issue one you know, the story Alex Schirvinsky formerly unnamed.
(23:26):
Marcy's Law was in play, apparently, but the guy who
issued the slap he waived his appearance in court and
his attorneys showed up. Doug Brandon quote, he's being victimized
for a second time. He was not only brutally beaten
and robbed during the assault. He's now being prosecuted when
he was attempting to defend himself and his friends. Chervinsky,
(23:48):
the guy who got the beat down with Fox nineteen, said,
hitting the head twenty eight times as well as rob
His attorney pointed out something that seems obvious he was
acting in self defense at all times, although State Representative
Cecil Thomas doesn't view it that way. Defended himself from
what well, if you look at all the video footage, Cecil,
you'll see pretty quer clearly that he was involved in
(24:10):
an altercation and getting pounded on before the slap was issued.
Ken Cober, president of the union represented the Sin Sant Police,
said the city Solicitor Emily smart Warner quote bowed to
political pressure and order the cincinnat Police Department to file
misdemeanor disorderly conduct charges against the man who was the
victim of a serious foiling assault during the twenty sixth violence.
(24:32):
In the July twenty six violence in downtown Cincinnati. He
said this blatantly political order came after both the Cincinnati
Law Enforcement and Hamilton County prosecutors had concluded proving any
sort of crime against the victims would be extremely difficult.
Now Fox nineteen asked for the citation, and they've been
(24:54):
denied it. Why can't we have the citation? This man
has been outed? According to the statement, an effort to
comply with Marcy's law, the city filed in motion with
the court to have the court way in on what
should be made public and what should not. Well, I
think we the citizens Cincinnati, deserve to be able to
see the records as well as all the video that
(25:16):
they have. The attorney brand is that we have opposed
that motion. We're seeking the court to make this available
to everybody so they know what's exactly going on in
this courthouse. As for Cecil Thomas, you think he'd be
on the other side of that. He's like, no, we
want this information as well, So how about we get it? Okay,
five point thirty seven right now, fifty five KR sit
the talk station. Stack is stupid? Coming up? Be right back,
(25:37):
fifty five KRC the talk station. It's five forty one,
fifty five car see the talk station. Happy Wednesday. Good
Every once in a while I'll get here here and
I give Joe Strecker credit for putting together the vast
majority of the stack of stupid stories. I do bring
in some of my own, you know, the news. I
(25:58):
tend to bring up the majority of the news that
I read from what I find and online and what
I review. So Joe, one of Joe's primary tasks in
the morning is to make sure that I have a
stack is stupid. So props the Joe's Trekker for keeping
me cracking up every every day at five o'clock hour,
but every once in a while as a story in there,
(26:18):
and I kind of think to myself, I think he's
testing me. He accuses me of being ron burguney. You know,
he put anything in front of me, I'll read it.
And so we do have the FCC obligations. We do have,
you know, general principles of ethics, morality, and decency to
contend with here, and it is the five o'clock hour
where the rules are slightly more lax whatever. So maybe
(26:43):
I can just read the headline, which I don't think
oversteps any of the boundaries that we have established here.
Woman found with quote king cucumber plus quote inside her
after extreme love making. What you ready for the subheading
(27:10):
twenty one year old woman in her male friend attended
a hospital in Russia after the vegetable became stuck inside
her and they had been unable to pull it out.
So I know, we lack the ability to have visuals
here on the fifty five KRSE Morning Show. That is
one huge cucumber. There's no flag for us, No, there isn't.
(27:34):
And the most curious element of it, at least for
the physicians someone it looks as though, and I think
it's pretty definitively looks like someone had bit the end
of this cucumber off. It's like there's this big bite
mark out of the end of it. There's no end there.
It's the cucumber looks like I had a chunk chewed
off of it. So I'll leave it to you, your
your imagination and to you know, sort of speculate and
(27:56):
wonder where it got stuck and how it got stuck
and the fact that she had to go to the
hospital to have them get it unstuck. There you go,
We're just going to stay out of this way. Yeah,
that's right. Danced around that one a little bit. You
can search for it if you want. It's on Dailystar
(28:17):
dot co dot uk UK reporting on that one. This
is great. A North Liberty, Iowa, a woman now facing
multiple charges dealing with ov I. Officers of North Liberty
Police Department dispatched to a Quickstar convenience store where there
was a report of a woman asking people to blow
(28:38):
into her interlock device that's on her car. Now, of
course judges will order those for people who have OVIS.
You have to have the interlock device which requires you
to blow into a tube to determine whether or not
you have any alcohol on your system, and that is
needed in order to start the car. Obviously, Kristin State
was not able to do that. Police found the thirty
(28:58):
four year old Kristen State sitting in the driver's seat
and actually the vehicle was running when they got there.
Court to the criminal complaint, she was the only one
in the car. Officers made contact with her noticed a
strong smell of alcohol. Police also state that she had
water and bloodshot eyes and slurred had slurred and delayed speech.
(29:19):
She said she had not been drinking right. Well, how
about a standardized feel sobriety test? Then, MS State Criminal
Complaints said she failed two of the sobriety tests and
showed signs of impairment during the ones that she was
able to complete, and ultimately testing revealed her blood alcohol
(29:40):
content to be zero point three five one What geez?
That is drunk? Charged with operating a vehicle out of
the influence, while driving while licenses denied or revoked, and
tampering with or circumventing an ignition interlock device. Shockingly, she
has three prior OVI convictions within the past twelve years.
(30:07):
Counseling five forty five fifty five k S Detalk station.
You own a firearm, you want to go out to
the range twenty two three Route forty two between Mason
eleven and that's the place to go. The indoor range
there is absolutely sparkling clean, the air is circulated every
four seconds or something, and they have training classes there.
(30:28):
They have the range officers there to make sure everybody's
keeping things safe and well. It's an inviting, friendly range
to shoot on. So you know, some people are a
little reluctant, they don't want to know you. You're great
at twenty two three. The people will treat you wonderfully.
The service there is superior. The folks that work there
know everything there is to know about what they're selling.
(30:49):
Massive selection of handguns and long guns and everything in between,
including accessories ammunition. Of course, you got friends in the
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Speaker 6 (31:20):
Fifty five KRC. We all remember that one teacher by fifty.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
Happy Wednesday five one three seven hundred two three talk.
We'll give you stacked DUI. You've got a couple of
callers online order in which they receive, which means Jeff
is first my hold on, Jeff, welcome to the show.
Happy day.
Speaker 9 (31:39):
Okay, here's something visual for you or just bed bog inspections.
Speaker 3 (31:46):
First thing I do is get my UV light out.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Yeah that'll work. Yeah, I get it, I get it.
See you're adding on, You're you're piling on to this point.
I was little lu think to read the bed Bugs
Store because it is creepy to a lot of people.
It makes me feel creepy. But you know that one
that makes me feel a lot more creepy there, Jeff,
thank you. Yes, I've seen too many YouTube videos on
(32:11):
what people do at two hotel rooms in the name
of just being generally obnoxious jerks. And then there's that
the black light curbbage. Mike, my submariner friend, welcome back.
Good to hear from you this morning.
Speaker 3 (32:25):
Good morning, Brian.
Speaker 10 (32:26):
Hey, I just told Joe next time in Crowger, I'll
never be able to look at a cucumber again the
same way.
Speaker 2 (32:31):
Yeah, it's yeah, well, especially if you saw the picture
Lord almighty oo. Yeah. Yeah. You ever find a cucumber
that it's been covered up, and you finally make it
to the garden, You're like, wait a second, there's a
cumber undneath here. You pull the leaves back and it's like,
I don't know, a foot and a half long and
about five six seven inches in diameter. That's the cue carver.
Speaker 10 (32:51):
I've seen an animal house regarding that, Yeah, actually.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
Animal house, animal house pales in comparison.
Speaker 10 (33:03):
Hey, before my comment about AFTAB, I heard on the
news last night out here in wonderful Claremont County. Remember
that miscreant last month that represented himself for the sexual
assaults that he that he performed on that poor young woman,
and he cross examined her throughout the whole trial. Well,
yesterday was yesterday was sentencing day. He's going to do
(33:25):
two hundred while he's not going to do it, but
he was sentenced at two hundred and forty years.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
And I think Joe's.
Speaker 10 (33:30):
Probably got a sound effect for that too.
Speaker 3 (33:32):
I something tell me Lucky if he starts one.
Speaker 2 (33:35):
Wow. Well good and justice got directly.
Speaker 10 (33:41):
Yeah, And mister Takoby does a great job down there,
him and his staff as followers, holding people accountable. And finally,
do you think it was a coincidence that right after
the FOP no confidence vote that AFTAB went to Columbus
and will accept all of Governor the Wine's assistance. Now
(34:03):
that's been out there for a month.
Speaker 2 (34:05):
I know. That's good. That's good. Yeah. Now there's no
no coincidence, no connection there, Mike. It was all planned
from the get guy. He was always going to go
to Columbus Dads for that assistance. Yesterday, that that was
a day he had planned. Ah, that's that's funny. Well,
at least he's doing something, Mike, appreciate the call, my friend,
(34:25):
have a wonderful week uh Portland as in Oregon, women
say facing several criminal charges after the police say she
fired shots into a Portland home. No, this is not
the West End, this is Portland, court to court documents,
police showed up at a four thousand block in North
Heat Avenue after a man called nine one report hearing
(34:48):
clanging noises in the sound of glass breaking. Guy told
dispatches he heard a woman yelling mikey, followed by a
brick being thrown through the kitchen window and he ducked
a cover in the bathroom room. This officer showed up
and approached the home. They heard two gunshots and then
saw a woman walking away from the home. She ignored
orders to stop and was taken to the ground by police.
(35:09):
Courting to the prosecutor's body cam video shows the woman
dropping a forty four caliber revolver on the ground, had
three live rounds left in a two spent shell casings.
Officers later discovered that the home was being rented out
as an Airbnb found two bullet holes in the home,
one on the door, second in the wall. Official say
a cement squirrel statue who appeared to be thrown through
(35:32):
the window not a.
Speaker 6 (35:33):
Brick do what the hell.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
A garden squirrel? According to court documents, a woman later
identified as Ray McGinnis thirty eight, told police the duplex
owner was quote a Galactic spy, close court, drugs or
the overnight show Lizard people. She had cuts on her
shoulder consistent with entering the dwpen duplex basement. Broken window
(35:59):
nothing told police they were on their deck when they
saw the woman next door and hurd a loud bang
and the side of breaking glass. Letters said they saw
her walking around with a smirk, carrying a handgun. Arranged
on six counts of burglary, three counts are reckless endangerment,
four other charges. Held on a one hundred thousand dollars bail.
Should be back in court at the beginning of September.
(36:21):
Galactic Spy five five fifty five krc DE talk station Dave,
I see here on the phone, but we're out of
time in the segment, I'll be more than pleased to
take a call when we return. I'll be back after
the news, Today's top stories at the top of the hour.
Speaker 6 (36:38):
It's information that matters to me.
Speaker 2 (36:40):
Fifty five krs D talk station.
Speaker 11 (36:45):
With the iHeartRadio appur taking you back to school all summer.
Speaker 5 (36:49):
It sounds like a high school turnpaper.
Speaker 4 (36:52):
That got a little more fifty five krc D Talk
Station at six oh five five kr CEV Talk Station
half d Wednesday, One hour from now The Big Picture
with Jack Adan. In today's topic, Democrats face the Guillotine.
I'm thinking he might bring in the French Revolution on
that one. Sounds proper appropriate. Mister history historian, he is
(37:16):
and always incorporating history with modern day issues. So love
having Jack on the show. Jack, if you're awaken her
out there, looking forward to the next hour by Donovaniel,
also looking forward to him in seven thirty Education opportunities
in Ohio, Americans for Prosperity, Donovan Neil, let us know
what those are.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
Fast forward to eight oh five. Congressman Warren Davidson. He's
home work in the district this month, town hall meetings.
Maybe we'll ask National Guard in d C. How does
he like that? Does he think since then he needs it?
Borders success across the board, and he's a no on
Central Bank digital currency. I applaud him being a no
on that, followed by James Stitt. James joins the program
(37:53):
at eight thirty to thinking about the lunkin airport days
this weekend war birds so and another shout out to
George Brenneman. Restore Liberty dot Us is his website. George
also interested in restoring your health. He's been in the
studio talk about that a lot. But there's a meeting
tonight six point thirty. You are invited to go to
the farm where George will be joined by Todd Zenzer,
(38:16):
our citizen watchdog and former vice mayor of the City
of Cincinnati and council candidate Christopher Smitheman and Mayril candidate
Corey Bowman, who again secured the FOP endorsement yesterday. Since
Saint Police going full on Corey Bowman on the heels
of well verbally slapping, have to have bur Ball in
(38:37):
the face with the no confidence vote. Over to the
phones we go. Who is first? That'd be Fred? Fred,
welcome back, man. It's always good hearing from you. Yeah,
you two, good morning.
Speaker 12 (38:48):
He let me presence by saying that I have no
problem with exective order.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
I just have a problem with how it's being used.
Speaker 2 (38:54):
Which executive order the DC police one.
Speaker 3 (38:58):
Uh, somewhat somewhat.
Speaker 2 (39:01):
I'm gonna go back to come forward real quick.
Speaker 3 (39:02):
Then you understand why I'm saying.
Speaker 12 (39:04):
Okay, yeah, context, okay, okay, okay, Now who who I'm
mad at?
Speaker 3 (39:08):
I'm mad at.
Speaker 12 (39:09):
Let me go back from Ford, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, uh
Bush all the way up to Obama. And because my
whole thing is this, and the person really really, really
really mad at is Schoolhouse Walk because I listen, I
look at it every Saturday morning about the law. They
(39:32):
told me about everything else, but they never told.
Speaker 3 (39:34):
Me about the executive orders.
Speaker 12 (39:36):
I need to go back and find this because I
have a problem with Schoolhouse Rock.
Speaker 3 (39:40):
Now, that's definitely.
Speaker 7 (39:45):
So that's all I wanted.
Speaker 2 (39:48):
I just want to call give you a laugh.
Speaker 12 (39:50):
This morning, and I'll tell you I hope everything is
good for you and your family, and I'll be talking
to you again.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
Fred. I'll enjoy hearing from you. Thank you so much
that I did. Obviously I'm laughing Frock cutting secutive conjunction, junction.
Let's your function, Jay, Welcome back, Jay, Welcome to the
Morning Show. Happy Wednesday. Hey, thank you, Brian.
Speaker 8 (40:15):
Hey calling in East of the Rockies on the you
know galactic spirrel, galactic spy. Yeah, it's a real it's
it's a real thing.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
But anyways, I'll leave that absolutely and they're dream walkers.
Speaker 8 (40:34):
But hey, I am calling in because I read an
article about RFK Junior Mike might shut down the COVID
vaccine within a couple of months, and I'm reading that thinking,
so a couple of months might put us close to
the Trump administration's first year. And to me that they
(40:56):
went in with Operation Warp speed. It got turned on
in a hurry, and I don't think anybody on the
right would be had been satisfied if during the campaign
jump Donald Trump said, look, here's the plan with the
COVID vaccine. We're going to put an environmental leftists involved
and maybe in the first year of my administration we
might get this thing removed, especially in light of the
(41:18):
good data and and that that you had one of
your guests who wrote the book about COVID and talking
about all of the damage that it's done to pregnant
women and their children. This thing needed to be shut down,
like right after he was the inauguration, was was was complete.
I find it absurd that we can spend all the
(41:39):
money and all the time and the first Rap administration
to do Operation Warp speed and not know and I
can people can say, well, you can't blame him because
we didn't know what we're up against. Well, now we
do know, and we're dragging our feet at a glacial speed.
We can shut this thing down. And the second thing
that kind of ties into the that is, you know,
(42:01):
the Director of National Intelligence, the head.
Speaker 9 (42:04):
Of the FBI, CIA and all.
Speaker 8 (42:05):
Intelligence communities shared that there was a coup attempt from
the Democrat Party to Donald Trump and they've got the
documents to prove it. That's been hanging out there for
a month and a half. Two months now, has that
all been forgiven again? Republicans of Republican Party has moved on. It's,
you know, for the sake of the nation and the
(42:26):
sake of harmony, where we're.
Speaker 9 (42:28):
Going to let it go.
Speaker 10 (42:30):
I haven't heard a thing about that.
Speaker 8 (42:33):
I would think a coop attempt being proven and coming
from the head of National Security. We get a little
bit of attention and some headlines and Republicans talking about
it and a plan to say who's going to be
prosecuted first, but it seems like it fizzled out.
Speaker 2 (42:48):
Well, that's because we all have to talk about Taylor
Swift and Travis Kelsey and the cracker barrel logo.
Speaker 8 (42:54):
Absolutely, yeah, I saw Trump got involved in now yeah, yeah,
bar this morning, he's he's focused on the right things
versus shut down COVID And let's talk more about this
coup attempt and what are we going to do about
You mentioned you have a guest coming on later today
talking about the French guillotine that they're going to be
a revolution. Well, why would we think there isn't if
everything that they do right now to proven facts from
(43:17):
the Director of National Security said there was a coup
attempt and again no repercussion, no consequences, Hillary Server, no consequences,
on and on and on and on and on and there.
Now they've gotten dead to Rice again with the documentation
and it's just drifting over again. Well, of course they're
going to it's going to continue, it's going to continue
(43:37):
to get worse.
Speaker 2 (43:39):
Yes, it will. And I can't deny your observations, but
I think insofar as you pulling the COVID nineteen vaccine
with the change of administration, Trump Trump comes into office
as a flory of activity. Most of it are a
lot of which related to the border that was successful,
but to just flip the switch and go immediately from
Biden to Trump and Trump pulling the vaccine immediately. I
(44:00):
think there would have been a heapload of backlash because
so many people don't know about the information out there
about how bad these things can be, about the damages
done to women, mental cycles, babies being lost, some of
the other cardiac issues, and I mean, there's a whole
litany of things that isn't widely reported much in the way,
and I was going to do a pivot over there
(44:20):
the coup attempt. Now you read that on Fox, you
read it on Breitbart, You'll read it on Gateway, Punded,
or you read it on Epic Times, and we can
go on and on. The conservative leading news sites were
all reporting heavily on all that information that was coming out.
Silence was deafening from the vast majority of the mainstream media,
the legacy media. So a lot of people are not
(44:40):
really familiar with that. But you see these other stories
tend to dominate because we live in this, you know,
knee jerk reaction. Whatever is the dangling object of the
moment is what we talk about. And maybe we forget
about issues, or we don't go back and try to
look into what happened. Was there any follow up that's
still going on? Those investigations are still going on. It
ain't over. The Fat Lady hasn't sung, so we might
(45:01):
see some prosecutions and more information coming out about the
coup attempt. Let's look, I mean, let's face it, Hillary
clinton email server probably would have gotten more attention but
for the creation of the fake Russia collusion hoax, which
dominated the news because the news is left wing and
they chose to grab that one and just plaster it
everywhere to the exclusion of reporting on the shenanigans Hillary
(45:24):
Clinton was involved with. So you know, we are being
manipulated and we are you know, we're as bad as
anybody for this sort of like it's not an immediate
gratification concept, but just you know, grabbing onto the most
recent thing and talking about it, it goes viral and
then it disappears, like so many other stories, doesn't really disappear,
(45:44):
but people just no longer talk about it because their
attention has been taken away by something else.
Speaker 3 (45:50):
Yeah, well, I guess we'll see.
Speaker 8 (45:52):
But it's just you know, we can move fast on
getting Red Die forty out of food, but we can't
what it's going to take us a.
Speaker 2 (45:57):
While to get the COVID poison out of your walk. Yeah,
and I hear you, Jay, I doubt the food lobby
is so wed to red dye number four or whatever
that they that they would engage in lobbying exercises and
an effort to keep it there. Oh no, no, we
can't get rid of this. It's already banned in Europe.
It's been banned. There's no reason to put it in food.
They can't defend the use of it because it's not
(46:19):
offers no nutritional value, maybe even be dangerous, unlike the
COVID vaccines. And you know the pharmacy lobby, Jay, do
they have any money? Do they have invested interest in
keeping that thing on the market. I would think yes,
So public perception, lobbying, money threats, maybe from the fart
pharmaceutical company. The fact that all of the negative information
(46:39):
about the COVID nineteen came out in slow drips a
little bit here, a little bit there. People who said
it was dangerous were I mean, were accused of being
loons and had their medical practices threatened and that kind
of thing. So there was a just a this overwhelming effort.
It's like getting people to believe in global warming. If
you pound it, say it over and over and over again,
(47:00):
times people believe it. And you come in and you
say something completely contrary, you are looking like a bad, crap,
insane individual. And I think that's probably the political decision
making that went on as far as pulling COVID. Let's
get the information out there, Let's let RFK do his work,
Let's let him talk about vaccines in the downside. Let's
publish some more of this information, and then we'll pull it.
Speaker 3 (47:21):
My theory, Yeah, I hope you're right.
Speaker 8 (47:26):
But if that's the case, then what we're saying is
we'll put politics ahead of Yeah. Absolutely, yes, even during
the Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (47:37):
Well, wasn't that the whole Vietnam War?
Speaker 5 (47:39):
Jay?
Speaker 9 (47:40):
Oh, well sure, but I think we had higher hopes
for Trump.
Speaker 8 (47:43):
But maybe that was maybe that was.
Speaker 2 (47:48):
Let's look at it more positively. You had no hope
under the Biden administration that that would happen. This COVID
ninety is dangerous. Potentially COVID nineteen vaccine will be pulled.
You at least have hope that's going to happen. Now
talking about it, may not be as quickly as you want,
but if it were pulled in the first term of
the Trump administration, that's actually, you know, pretty efficient in
terms of how slowly government works along these lines, and
(48:11):
noting that there are is a lot of well political
risk involved with doing that because all the brainwashed people
out in the world who think that they're pulling something
that's life saving off of the market.
Speaker 7 (48:22):
Real quick. Lastly, don't vote Democrat.
Speaker 3 (48:25):
That is exactly the.
Speaker 8 (48:26):
Megandetto's idea that I had when I started saying don't
vote Democrat when you said yesterday, let's make this viral. Yeah,
the old Rushling law show. That's exactly what I want
to do for Tom. I'm gonna be his wingman on it.
Speaker 3 (48:36):
So don't vote Democrat.
Speaker 2 (48:37):
I have a good day, Brian, You're in good company. Jay,
thank you very much. Five one, three, seven, four nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
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(50:02):
three eighty four seven zero zero. I'll go one to
nine that time.
Speaker 7 (50:07):
This is fifty five karc an iHeartRadio Station, Our Iheartradios.
Speaker 2 (50:12):
Twenty two and Happy Wednesday too. You looking for to
Jack added and joining the program at the top of
the our News. How about one hour from Donovan and
Neil on the education opportunities in Ohio Americans for Prosperity.
On that and over to the funds we go. Let's
what Mississippi James has got today. James, welcome back to
the Morning Show. Good to hear from you today.
Speaker 13 (50:28):
Hey, good morning doctor Brian. I come in peace, love everybody,
and there's nothing you can.
Speaker 2 (50:33):
Do about it. Awesome message, James.
Speaker 13 (50:36):
All right, my topic this morning, it's a constitution. You're
hearing so much talk on both sides that's unconstitutional. That's constitutional.
Now we know the constitution was the man made documents
from the seventeen hundred that was probably made by a
bunch of them that were slave owner. There was no
(50:58):
diversity being people of colors females, and this document has
floated out there like it's higher than the Bible. I
don't know whether the Bible was included in it or not,
but I'm just trying to wreck, you know, reconcize as
to you know, we're controlled by this and plus it
(51:22):
was well developed on some lands that was overtaken and
then okay.
Speaker 2 (51:26):
Here's the law we're gonna live by.
Speaker 3 (51:30):
So I'll leave it at that.
Speaker 2 (51:31):
Yeah. Well, I mean that's the way society existed back then.
It was a patriarchy, a male dominated society. There's nothing
you can do about the reality of that. And that's
the way it was. And like all over the world,
for the most part, wars were won and fought and
lost and fought or fought in one and fought and lost.
And you know, the evolution of society generally speaking, is
on full display here because you know, yes, these settlers
(51:54):
came and settled the land and had to resolve their
disputes with the native culture. That's I mean, yeah, you
can call you can say there's fault in that, and
you say that we're evil we as you know, European descendants.
But what about you know, the other folks that get
involved in settling. I mean, this is just the way
the world works. I mean they're still going on to
(52:14):
this day. Russia is busy trying to take over what
it perceives to be its land in Ukraine. So this
is a constant, ever evolving reality. Israel didn't exist before
nineteen forty eight. And lo and behold, you flip a
switch and there it is. Borders created, wars. One war's
loss to the victor go the spoils. Sometimes land's divided up.
(52:34):
Sometimes people are upset about that, but we move on.
But to criticize the document for lack of having a
woman or a person of color there sitting at the
table writing it, I think ignores the overall value and
that we're not supposed to be controlled by the federal government.
The Tenth Amendment says, all you know, specifically rights not
(52:55):
specifically reserved in this document belonging to the states, And
how broad has the federal reach got over years because
people have interpreted the Constitution in ways that I think
the founding fathers never contemplated. If the Founding fathers ever
believe that you, as a farmer in the middle of
the state of Ohio growing wheat on your own property,
are engaged in interstate commerce. You're not trading with another state,
(53:18):
you're not crossing boundaries or borders. And yet there in
the thirties the Supreme Court said, well, because your product,
the wheat that you eat yourself and don't sell in
the world, impacts these total overall supply of what's out there,
you're engaged in interstate commerce. Welcome to the unleashing of
the federal regulatory nightmare that you and I are dealing with. See,
(53:40):
that's a court interpreting the Constitution to be something that
it's not. At least that's my perception of it. Yeah,
the world changes, Factual circumstances change, and social norms change.
There's an interesting debate going on the DNC about whether
they continue their embrace of DEI, which they did vote
(54:00):
to do. But someone made a religious argument that DEI
is Christian, and I went and I looked at that.
They were talking about transgenderism and things like that, and
I get the impression based upon my Internet search and
no biblical scholar am I. But the Bible just pretty
much suggests that there's just men and there's just women.
And I believe one chapter of Deuteronomy even suggests that
(54:21):
dressing like the opposite sex is verboden. So that's the
way it was at least in those times. Have we
evolved in a society where we should accept it and
is Christianity and should in Christianity embrace transgenderism. That's a
question of interpretation if you believe in allowing the Bible
and your interpretation of it to evolve to deal with
(54:43):
societal changes that might have flown in the face of
what was the norm back when the Bible chapters were written.
It's kind of like the Bruin decision when the Founding
Fathers established the Second Amendment. What laws were on the books?
What did they understand and contemplate in giving us or
allowing us to keep our Second Amendment right to defend ourselves?
What was contemplated at that moment. And if you take
(55:06):
that interpretation and you apply it to modern theory in
modern times and transgenderism and these evolutions of society and
what they view is normal and acceptable and not, then
it wouldn't be normal and acceptable because you're looking at
an interpretation of the Bible that what they at the
time perceived the world to be and what the appropriate
norms were. But we live in a world that's not static.
(55:30):
We live in a world that ever changes, And I
really disagree with people whose perception of what's right and
what's wrong springs from some modern day norm and modern
day acceptable conduct. You can't project that backward onto people
who did not feel or believe that way, as wrong
as they were along the lines, and long as they were,
(55:52):
as wrong as they were in their perceptions of things.
Back then, people hadn't evolved yet. There were people that
believed black people weren't even human. Look how far we've come.
We've come that far under a document that allows for that,
then under a document that was written in ways that
(56:13):
include all people. Maybe they anticipated in their drafting of
the Constitution that someday we will be free of slavery.
I don't know, but you can impose modern viewpoints on
historical periods of time. They didn't carry that perception, and
they weren't viewing it through that lens six twenty eight
to fifty five KRCD Talk Station five point three, seven
(56:34):
four nine fifty five hundred and eight hundred eight two
to three talks chime in on the topic. You've got
a different view of it'd love to hear from you
don't mind that at all. And I want to recommend
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Speaker 6 (57:36):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (57:38):
We all remember that one teacher Chentlemene Mother Vocass. Mostly
sunny today, a beautiful day, low humidity seventy five for
the high fifty five overnight with clear sky seventy seven
to high Tomorrow with partly sunny sky fifty seven overnight
with a few clouds. Partly sunny Friday with the highest
seventy eight fifty two degrees. Now time for traffic from
the UC on tramping Senter.
Speaker 14 (58:00):
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Speaker 14 (58:09):
Broken down semi southbound seventy five Hens the right lane
blocked above seventy four triumphik is a slogo coming out
of sing Bernard. They had the right two lines blocked off,
but he just gave you back that right center lane.
Highway traffic elsewhere is doing fine. Chuck Ingbram fifty Todd
KRC the Talk Station.
Speaker 2 (58:34):
Six thirty three fifty five KRC The Talk Station TU
the phones. He's got a couple of dollars online. Starting
with Leslie Wesley, Thanks for calling this morning. Welcome to
the Morning Show.
Speaker 9 (58:47):
Hey Brian, good morning.
Speaker 15 (58:50):
To follow up Mississippi James. The Constitution is based on
the Bible. It just doesn't quote versus. The Declaration of
Independence says on and are created equal, endowed by their
creator right. And it's not a controlling document. It's a
document that guarantees if it's followed by all men who
(59:11):
are educated in it, then everybody can help everybody in
their pursuit of happiness. It's when people think that they
know better or determine how someone else should live. You know,
where they should live, how they should live, what they
should drive, et cetera. Yes, God, God respects all men
(59:38):
the same way. Men are the ones who do not
respect men the same way. So that's something that you on.
Speaker 2 (59:47):
Yeah, well, I mean this way have a bill of rights.
That's why they discussed inalienable rights. These are God given rights.
You're right, they don't say that. You know, spring Spheny
specific set of doctrinal dogmatic principles. But you just move
over to the kind except of the state of nature.
If you can imagine yourself born in the middle of
a field, out in the middle of nowhere, where there's
no political structure at all, what do you have by
(01:00:08):
way of rights. Literally everything. No one's telling you what
you can or cannot do. You can hunt, you can gather,
you can eat, you can defend yourself, you can do
whatever you want. The minute a second person plops down
in that field, they have rights too. So you can
enjoy your rights and freedoms and liberties as long as
you're not interfering with theirs. That's the principle of the country.
(01:00:28):
The problem is, yes, the overreach this. I go back
to that Wickered versus Philburn case, which really opened up
the entire Pandora's box of federal regulations because if you
just breathe, basically under that court decision, the federal government
can regulate you. Was that what our founders contemplated. No
men disrespect your rights. People disrespect your ability to make
(01:00:49):
your own choices and your own decisions. That's what's the
little l libertarian in me. You know, I trust you
with your Zipra, I trust you with your Walt. I
don't want your money. I don't want to take you
how to live your life. I think that's a concept
that's embodied in the Constitution itself six point thirty six. Smarrine,
I can't wait to talk to you, but amount of
time in the segment, but I will take your call
(01:01:11):
right out of the gate soon as speaking of gay
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beautiful trees, wonderful walking plaths, making it a perfect place
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Heaven dot org. For all the information. Gate of Heaven
dot org.
Speaker 6 (01:02:05):
Fifty five krc but.
Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
All is spattered fifty five KRCD talk station if you
have been a good Wednesday. It'll be a good Wednesday
when Jack Adam joins a program at the top of
the our news. And it's always good to hear from Maureen.
So let's jump over to the phone. She was kind
enough to stay on hold over the break. Maureen, Welcome
back to the Morning Show.
Speaker 5 (01:02:22):
Well, good morning, Brian, thanks for taking my call.
Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
Always happy.
Speaker 5 (01:02:27):
I wanted to address some love Jay's concerns regarding feeling
that things are getting stagnant and may not be addressed
and dealt with. I have an opposite theory on that.
I feel like I'm not sure if you saw the
article the other day you probably did where it's had
Tulsey Gabbert uncovered burn bags of documents. I took a
twenty twenty election corruption, yes, and then she came out.
(01:02:48):
And yet President Trump addressed that in his administration, meaning
now that's yesterday, I believe, or the day before. But anyway,
he said. There's a couple quotes I just want to
read his real quick see. He says, we've found many
bags and information. I think they call them burned bags.
They're supposed to be burned, and they didn't get burned,
and they have to do with the twenty twenty election fraud.
(01:03:10):
And then Telsea Gabbett responded, and she says, I will
be the first to brief you once we have that
information collected. But you're right, we are finding documents literally
tucked away in the back of safes and random offices
and in these bags in other areas, which again speaks
to the intent of those who are trying to hide
the truth from the American people, trying to cover it
up and politicize this. And she said Brennan and Cook
(01:03:32):
Clapper will be dealt with, along with many others, and
there's a measurable harm to the American people and it
will be dealt with. I feel like what's happening is,
you know, Trump has said all along, we've got them all,
we caught them all, We've got it all on tape.
He's known that. But you pointed out to me when
I brought that up to you over four years ago,
that this election is going to be overturned because there's
(01:03:53):
stuff in the election brought and you said to me,
but how can that happen? There's going to be major
civil unrest, war, And I had to think about that.
I was like, yeah, you're right, and that's why I
lost the bet you won because I put a time
limit on it. I never for once thought that it
wasn't going to be a returned and dealt with. But
my timing was off, and you were right about the
(01:04:14):
civil unrest. And that's why it's taken so long, because
they were in the midst of a strategic military operation.
And there's the biggest thing operation you've seen in the
history of this country. And it's going on right now,
and it has been going on, but it's coming to
a head. And what they have to do is they
have to much like the fires that the control burns
they do in the Everglades where I live in Florida.
(01:04:36):
They do control burns because when the conditions are ripe
for a fire, when there's a trout and the sun's
beating down and there's potential for huge fires, you got
to do the control burns before that happens. And that's
why these wire troops or National Guard are going into
these various cities, and they're strategic in that too. They're
(01:04:57):
going to be We got seventeen hundred National Guard troops
that are going into nineteen states. I don't know the
specific cities, but you think that they're going to be
blue and governors run on them. But I do feel
like Ohio is going to be one of those states.
There's a map of those nineteen states, and coincidentally, they
overlay a map of where the underground tunnels are in
(01:05:19):
this country. That's where the drug trafficking has happened and
the children trafficking has happened. I had a chance to
talk with Catherine Herritch. I don't remember. She's an Emmy
Award winning journalist. She was at an event that I
attended recently, and I ran a lot of my so
cult conspiracy theories with her. You agree with me? She
(01:05:41):
confirmed so much of what I ffelt has been going on.
She's been in Getmo, she's been broadcasting from there, and
she said there are going to be military trials there
in tribunals. They have rebuilt it. They've added another wing
to one time obey in Camp Justice, and they even
(01:06:01):
made a media room. So it's potential that we are
going to be able to see things broadcast from there.
But we're going to the whole thing. The Epstein files
are going to be addressed. It just wasn't the time
they have to draw things out so that people can
get it and understand it, because we do need the
people on our side.
Speaker 2 (01:06:19):
Well, and that was what the point was I was
going to make about the burn bags. Isn't it interesting
that those burn bags weren't burned, which sort of makes
me think that perhaps someone that was involved in that
decided to hide them so the Trump administration could find them. Right, Yes,
isn't that possible that everybody wasn't you know, tainted and
anti Trump and they saw what was going on, so like, well,
(01:06:39):
we're not going to burn them, We're going to hide them.
This will allow them to build a solid case. What
we've got so far that seeped out to the public
is pretty damning. I mean, you know that, and I
know that. And we've seen the alignment of the of
the conspiracy charges against Donald Trump and when it started
and how it evolved, and the motives behind it obviously
to protect Hillary Clie and keep away from the email
(01:07:01):
server issue that she was facing. So all that's there,
But a good prosecutor builds a solid case, exactly to
the point you were making, so the American people can
understand it. And it's not just discount of it's some
Donald Trump political stunt exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:07:16):
And the things you're going to see are going to
be unbelievable. We're going to find out about the Ebstein.
It's going to come in its time and its place.
It's not it's time right now. You've got to build
on it, and it's going to come out. The Clinton
Foundation ties to Haiti, and things are going to come
out about the child trafficking. And we're not talking about
just the blackmail and the leverage that they've used that
(01:07:37):
for the things they've done to those children, it's unbelievable.
You aren't going to even you can't even imagine it,
and it's so horrific. But it's all going to That's
what's going to congel the American people because nobody can
nobody can fathom what they're doing to these children. That's
going to come out, and that's what's going to unite
people against these evil democrats.
Speaker 2 (01:07:58):
Well, Marie, you know me, PERPETUALI is sitting with my
popcorn out waiting for the facts to show up. And
they are coming, and I have the confidence that what
you were saying will be revealed and that they will
do a good job of tying it all up in
a nice package for us to consume. But that is
those I mean, listen, just as from my perspection, my
(01:08:18):
experience as a litigation attorney. You know, you get a
case to try out, you're looking like five years down
the road, and why well, it's all that prep work,
all the depositions, the interrogatory, the gathering of documents, the
making sense of it, the putting it together in a timeline.
So it is understandable for a jury, right, people who
don't know anything about the facts, when they walk in
and become and they're sworn in as a jur you've
(01:08:39):
got to make a very clear case for them or
now are you going to lose? That's what needs to
be done here, and I have the high level of
confidence that that's why it's taking some time. Going back
to the COVID information, Yes they could pull the virus
right now, but they want to prevent a paint a
very clear peer picture for us to understand why in
the aftermath of you know, five six solid years of
us being told this is the end all, be all
(01:09:01):
of vaccines and you have to get it or you're
all gonna die. To overcome that constant pounding that message
over and over again. You better have a pretty damn
solid case or people are gonna think you're crazy. So yeah,
there's a lot out there, A lot of work needs
to be done to put that package together. Maureen, I
always love your calls. Thank you much. Six forty eight
(01:09:22):
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Speaker 6 (01:10:30):
Fifty five krc six fifty two.
Speaker 2 (01:10:33):
To fifty five KRCD talk station Happy Wednesday. Jack added
in at top of the our news, Yeah, part of
why Donald Trump is doing this DC crackdown, And of
course say he has backed off his efforts to go
into Chicago or Los Angeles and New York because frankly,
I don't think he has the authority to do it
on like Washington, DC, but he does offer offers the assistance.
(01:10:55):
But see him going through the motions on this is
highlighting the prime it's shining a light on the problem
of crime. In these cities, and it was an interesting
I can dive into the middle of the op ed
piece by Jason Riley. You can read the whole thing
for yourself, and I'll encourage you to do that. Trump's
crime crackdown is a political winner. And see this is
the political effort that I think he's engaged in. He's
(01:11:17):
trying to illustrate the problem for people who are living
with it real time, showing them that there is a
solution if their local officials are willing to take the
solution and the offer from the president or an appeal
to their governor. Hey, I have to have pearl Ball
went and had a conversation with DeWine, taking him up
of his offer for assistance. That happened yesterday. Gee, I
wonder why, but he writes. Earlier this month, President Trump
(01:11:42):
anounced federal takeover law enforcement in the District of Columbia,
citing it's persistently elevated island crime rate. National Guard troops
deployed to the capital of support police. Trump indicated the
Chicago and other urban areas maybe next, and on Monday,
he signed an executive order aimed at forcing cities to
end the use of cash list bail, which allows suspects
to be released from custody without putting up any money
to when sure that they'll show up at trial. Now,
(01:12:04):
to Fred's point early in the program, he's a little
upset with Schoolhouse Rock, which never did a Schoolhouse Rock
episode on the executive order a nod to Fret on
that one, Yes, fast and loose. Maybe I don't believe
Trump has the authority to force cities to end cashless bail.
But by doing this, it'll end up in courts, it'll
end up being a subject matter of the left will
(01:12:24):
pull their hair out over and say you can't do that.
But it'll elevate the conversation to maybe extend down to
people who are living in bad neighborhoods that don't understand
the connection between cashless bail and why their neighborhoods have
gone to hell in a hand basket and businesses have
packed up and moved off. So it brings to focus
the issue. He writes, most violent crime is committed by
previous offenders, and limiting the discretion of judges and prosecutors
(01:12:47):
to detain suspects until their court dates can make streets
less safe. Of course, here's an opportunity to make the
streets more safe? Do you want a safer neighborhood? Trump
is sort of behind the veil of this asking back
to Riley Trump's DETACS detractors note that crime is down
since spiking during COVID and George Floyd protests. On average.
That true, but it doesn't necessarily apply to the hardest
(01:13:09):
hit communities in every jurisdiction, nor were pre pandemic crimemates
in many big cities. Anything to brag about. Whether the
president's actions can withstand legal challenges remains to be seen.
Washington is a federal district where law grants presidents the
authority that, with some exceptions, only governors have in the
respective states. Trump seemed to acknowledge that this week when
(01:13:31):
he said he hadn't received a request from help from Illinois.
Quote and I think until I get that request, he said,
I'm not going to do anything about it. Right, So
Trump can point to the elected local officials who don't
want to do anything about crime, offering being offered assistance
yet rejecting it score points for the Trump administration. So
(01:13:52):
what we do we know? For certain Trump's law and
order offensive is upsetting all the right people, from liberal
activists to progressive elected officials to the mainstream media. The
political left has been in near complete control of large
urban areas where high violent crime rates have been tolerated
for decades. Trump's loudest critics tend to not live in
neighborhoods where gunfire is so common. You turn up the
(01:14:13):
television volume down to drown up the noise, and you
sleep on the floor at night in the summer because
bullets sometimes come to the walls, which reminded me of
my conversation with Sarah Herringer. Trump obviously believes public safety
is an issue that helps him politically. He also knows
that time spent talking about crime is time not spent
discussing Jeffrey Epstein or public skepticism about tariffs. Going to
(01:14:36):
our earlier conversation about being drawn away from one topic
onto another one. Nevertheless, for millions of families who live
into press communities because they can't afford to move, violent
crime isn't an abstraction. Personal safety is something they must
think about daily, and Trump deserves credit for highlighting their plight.
The liberal response to crime has been to pamper law
(01:14:57):
breakers and crack down on law enforcement. Even while residents
of dangerous, low income neighborhoods have consistently demanded more and
better policing. They finally have someone in the White House
who's listening. There you go, one of those eighty twenty issues.
Most people want a safe neighborhood. Trump scores a victory
politically on this across the board, and even more so
(01:15:18):
for the blue cities that refuse any assistance whatsoever to
deal with their terrible crime situation. Jack Addan at the
top of the our news that we can stick around
today's top stories at the top of the hour.
Speaker 8 (01:15:31):
You just got to know what's happening in your world.
Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
Fifty five TRC D talkstations. This report is just shau.
I have seven oh six here fiftybouve Kara CD talkstation.
(01:15:56):
Happy Wednesday made always extra special time of the week.
Seven oh five is when we talked to Jack Adda,
did and get the big picture? Jack Adad and my
friend welcome back to the Morning show. It's a real
pleasure having you on.
Speaker 1 (01:16:08):
Thanks for having me back, pal. We always sprinkle our
talks with famous quotations because they're so much better than anything.
Speaker 2 (01:16:16):
I have to say.
Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
One of the most powerful quotes in history explains a
lot about today's Democrats. This prediction came from a French king,
or maybe it was his mistress. We're not sure which,
because she was the power behind the throne. That king
was Francis Louis the fifteenth. His mistress was the beautiful
(01:16:38):
Madame de Pompadour. She inspired young Elvis's Pompadour hairstyle, Thank you,
thank you very much. Madame de Papadour also triggered two
centuries of wars between France and Germany. But even la
Pompadour realized where her hunger for power would end the
famous quote after me the deluge, folks. Do democrats realize
(01:17:04):
that their big government socialism will also end in a
deluge of failure for America and the rest of the world.
Do they even care?
Speaker 2 (01:17:14):
Brian?
Speaker 1 (01:17:15):
The French aristocrats did not care till it was too late.
Louis predecessor, the Sun King, Louis the fourteenth, had turned
France into Europe's first fully centralized state. His famous quote
was leta said, la I am the state. Before the
Sun King, French dukes and counts had ruled their own
(01:17:38):
territories and more or less cared about them. To increase
his own power, Louis the fourteenth persuaded them to all
come and live in Louis's vast new palace, Versailles. That
cut the nobility off from contact with their own people.
It's like today's Washington elites, who claim their primary residences
(01:17:58):
are around the capitol as well as back home occasionally,
and they take tax breaks on both of them. French
nobles also didn't have to pay taxes. They dressed differently
from ordinary people. For instance, only noble men could wear
red high heels, and they did. Brian take that route, Paul.
(01:18:19):
The nobility talked differently, they thought differently, and ultimately they
died differently, because Madame de Pompadour was right, that deluge
did come. Thirteen years after our American Revolution, the French
Revolution brought a reign of terror, and thousands of French
aristocrats had their heads lopped off by the new guillotines,
(01:18:43):
including the pretty head of the Queen, Marie Antoinette, who,
being told that poor people couldn't afford bread, had replied,
and I think everybody knows this one, let them eat cake. Still,
it was actually a French aristocrat who explained better than
anyone why the French Revolution led to terror, why while
(01:19:04):
the American Revolution brought democracy. Alexis to Tokeville, a great
hero of us pointed out that starting with the Pilgrims,
American settlers pretty much had governed themselves, from New England
town halls to colonial legislatures. It was only after England's
King George the Third imposed taxation without giving the colonists
(01:19:27):
representation in parliament back in England, that they rebelled, and
the American Revolution brought not terror but more democracy, a constitutional, decentralized,
bottom up democracy. America's constitution preserved local and state governments
and too late, but eventually gave men and women of
(01:19:49):
all races and creeds equal rights. By contrast, Brian, Today's
democrats are following in the red, high heeled footsteps of
the French aristocrats, following them in political terms, to the guillotine,
and for the same reasons. Democrats since the Marxist youth
movement of the nineteen sixties have made America more and
(01:20:12):
more centralized, more and more dependent on big government, Democrats
in power and in rich hand picked elites, while handing
out crumbs to everybody else. Ruining the character of their
followers so they're incapable of running their own lives. Democrats,
for instance, have condemned poor children to schools with outstandards.
(01:20:34):
Democrats let them commit crimes without punishment and deterrence. Also,
those Democrats can expand their base of helpless, hopeless government dependence,
a base that now includes tens of millions of illegal
immigrants like Madame de Pompadour. Democrats with half a brain
no where this is heading to a beheading. They just
(01:20:58):
hope it'll be the next Democrats whose heads will be
cut off. Remember the quote after me the deluge. It's
what my late father in law, a banker and a
very wise man, used to call next quarter thinking, knowing,
knowing that your policies will lead to ruin, but hoping
(01:21:18):
you can rake in a next quarter profit and then
cash out, leaving the house of cards to collapse. I'm
the next sucker, Brian.
Speaker 2 (01:21:27):
I'll end with this.
Speaker 1 (01:21:29):
Democrats accused Donald Trump of being the real son King,
and it's true. Louis the fourteenth lived like a pauper
compared with the King of mar A Lago. But Trump
did not make his fortune stealing from taxpayers, taking bribes
from foreign countries. The guy doesn't even take a salary,
and his policies in power every American by bringing back
(01:21:52):
good middle class shops. Although I was so sorry to
wake up and hear on your news this morning about
our friends at Kroger lose jobs, hundreds of them here
in town. But Trump is making sure a criminal migrants
are depoted, deported. That's going to help the jobs, while
legal immigrants pay their own way. He is seeking peace
around the world so that America and the rest of
(01:22:13):
the world can enjoy the blessings of liberty. Donald Trump
does not say, after me, the deluge. Trump says, after me,
the Golden Age.
Speaker 2 (01:22:24):
So what do you say, brother, Well, I can tie
it into an article that I saw earlier in the
week about a comment that Germany's Friedrich Mert said while
he was at the Christian Democratic Union conference over the weekend. Quote,
the welfare state that we have today can no longer
be financed with what we produce in the economy, pointing
out that nations have built welfare and entitlement states so
(01:22:45):
largely outstripped the ability of slow growing even economy is
as big as ours to pay for them. But noting
that the entitlement class cushion is so broad it goes
into that middle class that you talked about, which makes
it Any entitlement program, anything coming from government by way
of you know, support or payments or you know, softening
the blow of reality, is never ever going to go away.
(01:23:07):
Politicians of both sides, Republicans and Democrats, won't take away.
There's no entitlement reform. One of the more depressing elements
of the first Trump administration was that we wrecked up
an additional five trillion dollars in debt. Where's the fiscal responsibility?
You know, Social Security is on a train wreck. It's
going to run out of money. We all know about it.
Politicians of both stripes, left and right have all acknowledged
(01:23:27):
that fact, but they have done nothing about it. Medicaid,
same kind of problem going on. All these big government
programs have begun so big they're all third rails of politics,
and so nothing is done, and we are headlong into
that deluge that you're talking about. If we're going to
go bankrupt, we're going to not be able to pay
our debt service. The rest of the world won't rely
on our fiat currency. The fiat currency collapses. I mean,
(01:23:48):
can you see anything but absolute utter chaos and maybe
even the guillotines being dusted off and brought out in
that circumstance. And what's the aftermath of that, all the
folks that rely on these programs. Do you take away
the economy that we have, which can barely keep up
with what we are paying for, all that disappears, there
won't be any money left going into government because of
(01:24:10):
the collapsed economy to fund these social welfare programs. It's
going to be devastating.
Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
You're, of course absolutely right. We've been talking about this
for years, and we hear about it now from mirths
of Germany, which ironically started the welfare state back in
the nineteenth century under the Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. He
was the first one to come up with social security,
but at that time actuarily it worked. In nineteen thirty
(01:24:37):
three in America it worked because the kindage off age
of sixty five was an older age than most people
lived at that time. Yeah, but you know, more importantly,
we're just not discussing the biggest issues Republicans, but especially Democrats.
Democrats are like the French aristocrats, in this way too.
The French nobility refused to even discuss issues with the
(01:24:59):
French people. They wouldn't come to the Assembly and sit
down with them, much less past any reforms. Today, when
you listen to Democrats and Democrat media, you think their
only problem is messaging.
Speaker 2 (01:25:10):
Yeah, having cool.
Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Candidates, candidates who communicate they wish like Trump, Kevin NOUSKMB
my god. But from the moment he and Malani has
stepped off his golden escalator. In twenty fifteen, Trump talked
to anyone and everyone, without consultants, without polls, without a prompter,
about issues affecting real people, including entitlements. He wants to
(01:25:33):
get to them. He feels the best first step is
to at least get the country growing again. And by
the way, if you want some proof of what he's doing,
don't listen to the few soundbites that they put on
the news yesterday, including the Fox channels. If c SPAN
is indispensable and I was able to watch the full
three and a half hours, it sounds like a long time.
It went by like nothing because Trump talked at great length,
(01:25:56):
But so did each member of the cabinet. Yes, and
they explained what really is going on. I would urge
everybody to go to YouTube or wherever else you can
find it. You only have to listen in segments well
worth your time. You'll feel a lot more optimistic.
Speaker 2 (01:26:12):
That's wonderful. Real quick here, I'm not the only one
to have the observation about what Trump's doing in terms
of dealing with crime. Obviously has some leeway in Washington, DC,
at least for thirty days, He's made demonstrable improvements in
the crime rates in DC. Lots and lots of arrests,
outstanding warrants are being served, people are being liberated of
their guns. They caught rapists and murderers, so it's working now.
(01:26:34):
He had suggested going into other cities, and you got
this revolt from the left saying, oh my god, he's
got coming in and taking over you know, jack booted
thugs and this is you know, But don't you think
that this is a political genius pardon on behalf of
Donald Trump? Since crime, everyone hates crime. And regardless of
the percentage of people who think all police department officials
(01:26:56):
are inherently racist or evil, that's only a small slice
of the Democrat Party. People living in these cities and
experiencing crime every day. I think they might like some
safe streets. He can bring that about. And he's offered
this solution for other terribly crime ridden cities. When those
elected officials say no, doesn't that inure to Trump's benefit.
(01:27:18):
He's the guy who's willing to help with crime, and
the folks on the left side of the ledger are
refusing that help even though we desperately need it. This
is this is great politics for Trump. I hate that
phrase jack booted. Yeah, why I have we're wearing nice boots.
But yes, it's the Trump two step, you know, right,
he gets everybody's attention, right, gets up the hackles of
(01:27:41):
the Democrats and make it look as though they are
in favor of crime by saying, you know, now, it's Washington,
d C. Where, of course he has the power to
bring in troops. It's federal, even though that there was
a law pass that gave them a certain measure of
self government. Still Trump could bring the National Guard into Washington,
d C. But then he said, and I'm going to
do this thing in Chicago and New York and everyboace
(01:28:01):
else in the country went crazy. But the two step
is on the second step, he makes it voluntary. He says, Look,
why not pick up the phone and ask me for
some help, you know, or at least consulting with the
experts that I have, And that that's what he did yesterday.
Speaker 1 (01:28:17):
Again listen to that. Yeah, having a beating and press conference,
and maybe some people will take him up on it,
because as you mentioned last hour, our mayor in Cincinnati,
you know he's gotten in his talk with Governor Dway's.
The next step could be that they'll consult with the Feds.
Speaker 2 (01:28:33):
Could be I have my popcorn out, jack Athden, and
I always enjoy our you're our conversation to your unbelievable
insight each and every week. Already looking forward to next
Wednesday at seven oh five for another edition of the
Big Picture with you, jack Athan. God bless you, sir,
and best of health. Loved you in your better half.
Speaker 1 (01:28:50):
Can't tell you how much I appreciate it, Brian.
Speaker 2 (01:28:53):
I appreciate it more than you I think. Take care, man.
I know my listeners love hearing from me here from
I get emails all the time. Love you brother, Take care.
Seven nineteen here's your channeline first warning the weather or
for hash We've got a sunny day for the most
part seventy five for the high with low humidity, nice
fifty five overnight, mostly clear, Tomorrow mostly to partly sunny
(01:29:15):
with a highest seventy seven. Got a few clouds over
Thursday night with a low of fifty seven, and Friday
it's going to be a partly sunny day going up
to seventy eight fifty Right now, time for a traffic update,
Chuck Ingram from the u See.
Speaker 14 (01:29:26):
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Speaker 2 (01:29:38):
Loading up quickly now on the highways.
Speaker 14 (01:29:40):
Northbound fourth seventy one, packing up pants Memorial in bound
seventy four heavy from Montana northbound seventy five. Break brights,
buttomilk Kyle's and pass the lateral Chuck Ingram on fifty
five krs the talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:29:58):
Seven two or a fifty five garac De talk station
Americans for Prosperities, Donald and Eliez guess there's some education
opportunities out in the world, and Donovan's gonna be talking
about those coming up next Congressman Warren Davidson. Fast forward
to eight oh five. Ooh, get the cough button before
the sneeze just barely made it. Excuse me on that,
(01:30:22):
Congressman David's gonna be talking about working in the district
this month, town hall meetings, that kind of thing. He
is back out of DC, and I'm sure he's happy
about that. National Guard in DC seems to be working.
Does Cincinnati need it? We'll ask Congressman Davidson about that.
We'll talk about the border and the success the Trump
administration has had and literally shutting it down. I think
BONDI came out the other day and said, not a
single human being it's gotten into the country illegally over
(01:30:44):
the past couple of months. I think I'm recalling that correctly,
but obviously demonstrably successful. And of course the deportation efforts
are bearing fruit, assuming you believe that mostly criminal illegal
aliens shouldn't be allowed to stay in our country. And
no one on central he's a no on Central bank.
Digital currency. Will get his thoughts and comments on that. Finally,
(01:31:07):
at eight thirty, James Stitt coming up in an hour.
At a little more than an hour, Warbirds Lunkin Airport
Days are taking place this weekend, so we all got
something wonderful to do this weekend. And one more mention
for George Brenneman Restore Liberty dot Us as his political
web page. Awesome it is. George Brenneman is putting together
a meeting tonight at the Farm. Everyone's invited starts at
(01:31:30):
six thirty West Side Institution. The farm is in addition
to George being there, Todd Zinzer, our citizen watchdog, will
be there with special guests Christopher Smithman and Corey Bowman.
So good lineup tonight at the farm so you have
an opportunity to meet those folks and hear what they
have to say. And I strongly encourage you to check
out Restore Liberty dot Us what George is talking about
(01:31:54):
at a regular basis. Ah, what do we got left here?
Real quick? You can find it on Fox News. I
just wanted to interject something very, very positive in the
face of the global warming nutcases who think that we
need to kill cows because they emit flatulence and because
meat is so bad for you ain't wrong. New research
(01:32:15):
out from Canada's McMaster University Animal sourced Foods are not
linked to a higher risk of death. The study actually
said animal proteins could offer a protective benefit against cancer
related mortality. Huh. Sixteen thousand adults analyzed nineteen and older,
considering how much animal and plant protein they typically consume.
(01:32:36):
They examine whether the diet patterns associated with the risk
of dying from causes such as heart disease and cancer.
Results no increase of death in association with eating more
animal protein meat, Get a steak, Enjoy it. Data also
showed a modest but significant reduction in cancer related mortality.
(01:33:00):
How about that come by with decades of clinical trial
and evidence to findings support the inclusion of animal proteins
as part of a healthy dietary pattern, said the press
release on this study. Study adds clarity, which is important
for anyone trying to make an informed, evidence based decision
about what they eat. It's imperative that our analysis use
(01:33:21):
the most rigorous, gold standard methods to assess usual intake
and mortality risk. Congratulations, you can eat meat. If you
want to see the original journal release, it's in Applied Physiology, Nutrition,
and Metabolism. Just recker gets the ecopy of that. In
the name of saving the Planet. He no longer gets
the paper version Applied Physiology, Nutrition and metabolism. Donald and
(01:33:43):
Neil up next, so you can stick around for that
job opportunities rather education opportunities, which usually lead to job opportunities.
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tight fifty five car the tox t Hey and a
happy one to you. Brian Thomas. Welcoming back to the
(01:34:46):
Frety five care Ce Morning Show, Americans for Prosperities Donovan
and Neil Donovan. Always good to have you on the show, my.
Speaker 3 (01:34:52):
Friend, Brian. It's a good Wednesday morning.
Speaker 2 (01:34:56):
Always with you on, of course, on the heels of
Jack Avenue, we've got Congressman Day. It's been coming up.
I love my Wednesdays. Here miss Judgement Paulatana for folks
wondering why I have n't mentioning the judge. He's on
vacation this week. So pivoting over to Donovan and Neil,
let's talk about education opportunities in Ohio. What's this all about, Donovan.
Speaker 11 (01:35:15):
Well, it's one of our favorite topics, of course, and
in one of our top priorities in our Buckeye Blueprint.
And just because the Columbus is sort of on summer recess,
we're still keeping the pressure up talking about the Big
Bowl ideas, what we've got to do to move Ohio
forward when it comes to educational opportunities. We had a
big event in Central Ohio last week with a number
(01:35:38):
of guests, keynote from the Veig Kwamaswami and it was
a great time. Brian, I know this issue is really
important to you as well.
Speaker 2 (01:35:48):
Well, it's a huge issue I guess in Ohio is
improving in terms of educational opportunities. I mean the idea
of being stuck in an underperforming, terrible public school. At
least parents have some options now, more than they used to.
And that's a direction we're going here in Ohio. Is
that part of the focus of this to get people
out of the traditional you know, public school education get
(01:36:10):
into something I don't know, more classical education wise.
Speaker 11 (01:36:15):
Well, I think part of it is making recognizing that
we don't exist within a vacuum. Right here in Ohio.
Speaker 2 (01:36:20):
We have done some really good work.
Speaker 11 (01:36:21):
We've made some leaps and bounds in folks. Yes, here
in Ohio can access You know, if your your parent,
you're looking at your kids report card or you're thinking
about their how their education's going, and you say this
doesn't work it for me. You have the opportunity to
take them to schools for programs like the Edge Choice voucher.
But as I said, we don't exist within a vacuum, Brian,
and there are other states that are working aggressively to
(01:36:43):
be even more competitive and create more opportunity. And so
there are a few things we need to do here
in the buck Eyed State. And that's part of what
we're trying to begin to lay that foundation for and
talk about in what we got to do to sort
of keep the ball moving and make sure that Ohio
doesn't fall behind while you know, states like Texas, Tennessee
and Florida and others try to try to lap us
(01:37:06):
in this education race.
Speaker 2 (01:37:08):
Well, when you had this meaning what did the educators
and the parents and the leaders who all attended this
advanced education meaning what areas did they identify? They say, well,
I is behind and here are illustrations. Here's what Texas
has done and they're better than us or more appealing
for folks in terms of a destination to move and
settle than Ohio because fill in the blank.
Speaker 11 (01:37:31):
Yeah, well, I think there are a couple of different things.
One is, at first and foremost, making education opportunity through
school choice programs easier to access. So you know, there
still are some income verification things you need to do
if you're you know you're the proverbial single mama three
who's maybe just trying to figure out how to navigate
the bureaucracy. There could be some challenges there.
Speaker 3 (01:37:51):
Well, ultimately, we want folks to be able to do.
Speaker 11 (01:37:53):
Is very easily have that money follow the child backpack
bill type stuff here, right.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:37:59):
The other thing that we're finding is we need to
be empowering the teachers and rewarding the best. This is
something that they talks quite a bit about and I
think is critical. I've got my wife actually as a teacher,
my sister, I've got a family of teachers. They're all
around me, Brian, and you can see over the years
the way that the unions sort of grind these folks down.
(01:38:20):
My wife's a private school teacher, so she's fortunately I'm
experienced that, but you know, the unions grind these folks
down and lock our public school districts into contracts that
eliminate the ability for administrators to reward the great and
good teachers at a compensation level they are deserving of.
And then finally, we need to also figure out how
(01:38:41):
to improve our existing government funded schools. We spend insane
amounts of money to get abysmal results, and that's part
of at the heart of this property tax issue that's
got so many folks riled up and looking to eliminate
the tax the ability to levy those outright. It's from
strengthening and making educate school choice easier for folks to
(01:39:04):
access who want it, to empowering teachers, to strengthening our
existing public school infrastructure. That's how we unleash education opportunity
here in the state. And that's the future of education
and what our great panel was able to sort of
dial in on last week.
Speaker 2 (01:39:18):
I'll bring you back down on. You know, we have
a couple of questions here, most notably about objective evaluation
of teachers and how we bring that about so that
we do know who the good ones are and the
bad ones aren't. And also a question or two maybe
be property tax. Hold on more with Americans for Prosperities,
Donald and Neil on education here in Ohio. It's seven
thirty five right now. If you have KCD talk station
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Nine fifty five KRC dot com.
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Fine weather, not bad, sunny sky is for the most part,
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Time for a traffic update.
Speaker 14 (01:40:59):
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in beund seventy four now backing up to North Bend.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc Detalk Station.
Speaker 2 (01:41:28):
Seven forty here fifty five KRCD Talk station. Very Happy
Wednesday to you, Bry the time. It's Donovan and Neil
from Americans for Prospered. Of course, AFP is always looking
for ways to make Ohio a magnet state for business
and residents to move in. Lowering the taxes helps. Of course,
education and education opportunity is a key component. If you can,
(01:41:48):
you know, advertise yourself as a state with flexibility and
choice and maybe like the backpack bill estate where the
money follows the child, giving you and every other family
greater flexibility to choose the education opera tunities. That to
me sounds like a wonderful marketing scheme you mentioned in
the context of this Donovan, and I've also talked with
Vivak Ramaswami about it. This idea of rewarding the good
(01:42:11):
teachers perfect. You know, if you do great in a
private business, you might be eligible for a bonus, and
how well you do might increase the bonus, may lower it,
but you're evaluated on it. And I think teachers are
worthy of that type of thing. We should, you know,
demonstrate and highlight the ones that are doing a great
job and reward them financially with that so they're happy
with their job fine, and also to penalize those that
(01:42:32):
are underperforming or are bad teachers. Question though, how does
one do an objective evaluation determine who's a good teacher?
You mentioned the words great and good teachers. Well, if
I'm some leftist idiot and I'm a DEI person, I
believe in woke and the whole idea that men can
be women and participate in women in sports, and I'm
of that ilk, then I'm going to think that the
(01:42:55):
teacher who is of that mindset is a great and
good teacher who gets the vote on who's great and
good and doesn't this end up getting involved with subjective
issues of politics and other more sticky wicket issues that
might water down the ability to rely on any evaluation
that we have in place. Long Wood, you question Donovan,
but I guess I presume you get where I'm coming from.
Speaker 11 (01:43:17):
Yeah, No, I think, and I think those are all
part of the conversation we need to be having. I mean,
at the end of the day, moving to a more
subjective based system I think is better. Right, It's how
the free market works. It's in the eye of the beholder.
And then I think the accountability mechanisms that you begin
to have at play here are a couple of things.
(01:43:38):
One I think you I think you do allow the
local school districts to sort of decide some of this
some of this stuff, right, and so you know, in
a community they might say they like the woke teacher
and some of this, some of this stuff, But I
think it's also why you didn't need a robust school
choice system. Right at the end of the day, we
(01:43:58):
can't have parents and families trapped in school districts that
aren't getting the education outcomes or aligning with the values
of that particular family. And so you apply another market force, right,
so you could have that go woke, go broke school
board that takes that approach. I think Brian, though, they're
going to see their pop student population declined dramatically, and
(01:44:19):
voters will will impose a whiplash on them that will bring,
you know, will write the ship, giving them and giving
them an option of a school system that has a
board of education that does not follow woke ideology, maybe
like the since any classical academy, there's a parent out
there that says that is for me, I want a
classical education for my child.
Speaker 2 (01:44:39):
They are not woke, they are not ideologically confused. I'm
going there rather than the school which has out loud
said and embraces these you know, sort of leftist philosophies.
Got to be a choice though, To make that work,
and up until fairly recently in history, there has been
no option other than the public school. Absolutely, absolutely so.
Speaker 11 (01:44:58):
And I think those all come together because we would
still you still have the opportunity then elect that school board.
Speaker 2 (01:45:04):
Right, So if yeah, yeah, we.
Speaker 11 (01:45:05):
Aren't getting the right outcomes. And so it's not one
silver bullet, right that solves this problem, Brian, But it's
having a multiple layer of mechanisms that allow the consumer
at the end of the day, the family, the parent,
the student to exert market forces in the education system.
We're on the customer, right, but everything we've got to
(01:45:25):
do those couple of things to really take the system
to the next level and achieve what ultimately the outcome
is here a better quality education for all the students
here in Ohio.
Speaker 2 (01:45:35):
All right, Now, the unbelievably sticky wicket property taxes and
how you end up distributing the money to backpack bill. However,
the money is going to end up in the hands
of the child or the family, It's got to come
from somewhere, and currently that is coming from the property
taxes that we all pay. Obviously, a big impediment for
many people, most notably seniors, are on fixed incomes. They
(01:45:56):
had an opportunity to make some changes in Ohio, Governor
Mike de wine well Ie item vetoed them out, and
now it's in the hands of some committee behind the scenes.
I mean, we're running headlong into this repeal property taxes
by way of constitutional amendment. I have struggled to figure
out what I will characterize, perhaps a bit blue Charlie
(01:46:18):
Fox trot of a reality if we eliminate property taxes,
and how Columbus is going to deal with the allocation
of whatever funds are going to go to fund public
schools or parks or anything else for that matter. Where
is Americans for a Prosperity have a position on that
amendment or how to fix the property tax issue, since
this is all wrapped up in school and education.
Speaker 11 (01:46:40):
Yeah, So the answer I give because we've got a
number of activists and supporters who are circulating that petition,
Folks you know, who work with us on a number
of different issues, right, you know, we're an organizations. That's
number one issue is actually eliminating the income tax of
the state. So we are fans of eliminating taxes. So
the short answer I give brain is yes, supportive. The
long answer though, is much more complicated because you know,
(01:47:02):
you can eliminate that form of taxation in the state
and the constitution, and based on some recent pulling, sixty
one percent of Ohioans would do that if given the
opportunity today. The challenge, though, is right and the sobering
reality is you have there are a number of services
people expect, right police, fire, roads, bridges, schools, all of this.
(01:47:26):
Most a lot of this is funded through property taxes,
and so the answer to what you do when it
goes away, I don't think anybody's been given a sufficient answer,
and so what you would presumably see happen is they're
going to collect those taxes through other ways. So in
a lot of ways, we're not really eliminating a tax,
we're shifting a burden. At the core the problem here, Brian,
(01:47:46):
is the amount of local government political subdivisions. More accurately,
Ohio has. We have the fifth most political subdivisions in
the country. We're in the company of California, Illinois, and
New York on this sort of stuff, Brian. You never
want to be close to those states on anything, especially
as a red states like Ohio. Our problem is we
(01:48:07):
have too much duplicated services overlapping layers of government. It
doesn't have to be this way.
Speaker 3 (01:48:13):
I think that is.
Speaker 11 (01:48:14):
Something that we really need to take a stronger look.
I mean, we've been looking at this for a while.
That's at the core of the problem. You can eliminate
a form of taxation, but if you aren't also shrinking
the size of government to go along with it, we're
just moving the We're just moving the pieces around on
the board. Another point here, real quick. Kansas, when they
eliminated their income tax overnight, they were applauded for it,
(01:48:36):
but because they didn't also make subsequent changes to the
amount of government and spending they were doing, it was
a disaster.
Speaker 2 (01:48:43):
And the problem that see, that's my real that's the
reality that I see. But I hate property taxes done
and they'll get me wrong, I'd love to get rid
of them. So you absolutely outright own your home after
you pay it off. Good, that's wonderful. It's private property
and it's all yours now. But it's so damn complicated
once you move beyond that general concept or a general
concept which I think most of my listeners probably embraced,
(01:49:05):
because it is, you know, private property, it's ownership it's
it's it's a foundation of our country. But who's gonna dell,
where's the where are these charges gonna come from? Are
we gonna you know, that little tax here and extra
sales tax there. I just really don't know how it's
going to work out down and that's the complicating thing
for me.
Speaker 11 (01:49:27):
See, I mean, the way we've eliminated begun to get
we've gotten to a flat tax and are on the
path to eliminate in the income tax here in the
state of Ohio has actually been to to restrain spending
growth year over year and put triggers in that as
tax revenues increase, which they do right the Laugher curve
in full force here.
Speaker 3 (01:49:47):
It allows us to lower that that that amount.
Speaker 11 (01:49:49):
You may you don't get there overnight, but over five
or ten years you're you will see states that are
actually your percent income taxes because they've not increased their
they just slow the rate of growth at local government level,
though they're on the ballot year after year after year
unvoted tax increases. Those are the kinds of reforms though,
that the legislature is working to put into place that
(01:50:12):
would limit the ability to decrease on unvoted tax increases
that would tap the growth you know in these high
inflationary years that caused us to experience the crisis, where
in today I think tapping property taxes and in slowing
that growth, folks can absorb it. Coupled with lowering the
amount of government we have in the same they are
(01:50:33):
those couple of things together will get us where we
want to be.
Speaker 2 (01:50:36):
Well, if you don't feed the government, and you cut
off the government, it necessarily will have to contract or
we're all going to go bankrupt. So I guess the
point is, you know, forcing them to do what we
want them to do, which is reduce the size and
scope of government always a good thing. AFPs, what go ahead?
Speaker 13 (01:50:53):
Nope?
Speaker 2 (01:50:54):
Absolutely amen? All right, cat A little amen from God
to the tail a recers prosperity ant. I appreciate what
you're doing. Is there a call to action you're looking
for for my listener's website they need to go to
or is there a call they need to make to
help the speed this process alone? Well, always go to
Buckeye Blueprint dot com.
Speaker 11 (01:51:11):
We're going to be out on tour all fall into
the winter on our Buckeye Blitz. Well, Hopefully we'll see
folks out it stops across the state.
Speaker 2 (01:51:17):
Fantastic, and I'll encourage my listeners to make it stop
and participate. Thanks again, Donovan for rallying the troops and
doing all this great work for us in the state
of Ohio. We'll talk again next week.
Speaker 3 (01:51:28):
Thanks Brian.
Speaker 2 (01:51:28):
My pleasure seven to fifty right now, but if I
have kre see the talk stage, remember Congressman Davidson's going
to join the program at from the top of the
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children's life, life's milestones, and of course passing into eternal life.
Many people optimistic about that reality, but Gate of Heaven
recognizes and revers the sacredness of every phase of human journey.
And that's why the place is so beautiful. They want
it to be a magnet for folks to pray and
(01:52:10):
reflect and remember. So they create this beautiful, comforting experience
for visitors with the beautiful landscaping, the wonderful walking paths,
gorgeous trees. So contemplate life, pray and enjoy it. It's
Gate of Heaven dot org. Find more information. There's all
Montgomery Road real close to two seventy five of Montgomery Road.
Gate of Heaven dot org. Fifty five KRC the talk station.
Speaker 6 (01:52:34):
Make this your summer of energy, a big pocket.
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Knife of information.
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That's the only way to stay for fifty five KRC
The talk station.
Speaker 2 (01:52:45):
Potato six here if if you have kr CD talk station,
A very happy Wednesday, TA extra special. Although we are
not going to get judged into Polton. At the bottom
of this hour, we are going to talk about the
war Birds with James Stick from the Flunking Airport Days
going on this weekend, Bud, We're happy to have Congressman
Davidson representing proudly and successfully Ohio's eighth district. Welcome back,
(01:53:06):
Congressman Davidson, love him and you on the program.
Speaker 3 (01:53:09):
Always an honor to join you, thank you, But it's
an honor.
Speaker 2 (01:53:11):
To not be in Washington, d C. Right now, I
get a little reprieve and go back home and see
what sanity's all about.
Speaker 3 (01:53:18):
Yeah, I mean, look, it's been awesome to be home
in Ohio. You know, I live here on purpose, but
you know, it's been a good year in DC. We've
gotten you know, some productive things done, not all the
things we should have got done. And I think that's
part of part of the semon I heard from people
as I went all around the district is what are
you doing here? You got stuff to get done there?
And that's exactly right. We're going to get into town
(01:53:40):
and people are going to be like, oh, yeah, we
have that stuff due.
Speaker 2 (01:53:44):
Well, let me ask you this, since you're having a
town hall tonight. We'll talk about that in a moment here.
But when you're out and about in the you know,
walking around the eighth District or hearing from your constituents,
what are they concerned about? What do they say you
need to get on? What are the highlights of those conversations.
I'm kind of curious, know.
Speaker 3 (01:54:01):
Well, one of the biggest things is there's just a
lot of confusion about the big beautiful bill. You know,
there's all these myths like, oh, all these people are
going to lose Medicaid, and you clarify like, well, the
only people losing Medicaid are legal aliens who aren't even
supposed to be in the country and hopefully soon won't be,
but they're not supposed to be unmedicaid. And some states
found ways to add illegal immigrants to Medicaid working loopholes.
(01:54:24):
Ohio didn't do that, so it isn't really going to
affect Ohio much. But then you have you know, able bodied,
working age adults, which if that was your friend or family,
you'd probably help somebody out at a time of need,
but you wouldn't help them out forever. You would say, well,
you're going to get a job, right, You're going to
do something productive. And that was bipartisan. When Bill Clinton
was president, it kind of went away, and somehow in
(01:54:44):
DC became partisan. But when I talked to people in
our district, you know, overwhelmingly people are like, yeah, that's
just common sense. Well that's the only people that are
losing in a Medicaid So when I went out to
rural hospitals. There was this myth that, oh, this change
is going to really hurt rural hospitals, Like now, not really.
I mean there's like fifty billion dollars worth of additional
funding for rural hospitals in the Big Beautiful Bill, So
(01:55:08):
they're kind of excited about it. So, you know, just
correcting myths. And you know, some people talked a lot
of waitresses waiters that we're confused about the no tax
on tips, like, well, how does that work? Like well,
for all of them, they had heard that it was
just on cash tips. And so just correcting a lot
of myths about the Big Beautiful Bill on the one hand,
(01:55:28):
and on the other hand, people that are really paying attention,
they're like, well, look, things are going great under Donald Trump,
but like, where are you guys on this? Where are
you guys on that? And you're like, well, you're right,
I mean, we haven't passed a law. There's a lot
of things that are going great right now. But the
only way they're going to stay that way keep electing
people that are going to keep the make America Great
Again movement going, or if somebody else is there, they're
(01:55:48):
just going to be like a ping pong and go
back to an open border. I mean, look how secure
the border is under President Trump. Somebody else comes in
and with executive action they can undo it, just like
that happened last time.
Speaker 2 (01:55:59):
One thing it's fruit is Donald Trump's crack down on
the border is obviously stop the hemorrhaging of the of
the illegal immigrants pouring into our country. Obviously, Congressman Davidson,
the word has gotten out. There's a new sheriff in town.
And don't bother making the trip.
Speaker 3 (01:56:13):
Yeah, I mean, very clearly huge change. Now on the
other side, look, the money is still flowing because when
the cartels put all these people in, they owe money.
They didn't have money, but they owed, you know, five
to ten thousand dollars each, and they still have their
kind of extortion racket going on. There's not like there's
no black market. And that's where President Trump is going
(01:56:36):
hard on cracking down on crime. And when you look
at where is he cracking down on crime, well, big cities,
big Democrat controlled cities who also happened to be overwhelmingly
sanctuary cities where you had a lot of the illegals
fled to pirt sanctuary because there's no enforcement action against them.
They didn't go to places like Butler County where Sheriff
Jones is going to put people in jail who are illegal.
(01:56:58):
Even he got frustrated though, because they'd get these people,
they try to give them to Ice, and Ice wouldn't
take them. They would just release them right away. Well,
why not skip the step and release them unless we
can hold them on a clear crime and convictim beyond
illegal entry into the United States. So kudos to the
Attorney General for clarifying that, frankly, but you know, that
(01:57:18):
message is out and it's out strongly, so hopefully it'll
become clear even in the sanctuary cities.
Speaker 2 (01:57:24):
Well, I think Donald Trump's made a political coup in
terms of his dealing with crime. There is no question
in anyone's mind. I don't think that crime is out
of control in a lot of cities. I don't care.
You know, if you're looking at the figures today three
years ago, pre COVID, there's a lot of terrible crime
going on. I lived in Chicago in the height of
crime back in the between ninety and ninety eight. Congressman Davidson,
(01:57:46):
and I think it was worse back then than it
even is now. But just because it was maybe worse
at some earlier point in time doesn't mean there are
a lot of people out there that are There aren't
a lot of people out there that are struggling and
they are. So Donald Trump all offers this National Guard
form of assistance. He said he was going to go
ahead and do it unilaterally, but the cities like Chicago
and New York and other high crime cities, he doesn't
(01:58:08):
have the authority that he has that in d C.
There's some flexibility in d C. So he just offered
the opportunity. I thought that was brilliant crime fighting, you know,
Congressman Davis and going back to Bill Clinton, he's the
guy that gave money, federal money to hire additional one
hundred thousand police officers, and every thought that was great.
Whatever happened to Democrats being in favor of law and order,
it just it seems to have disappeared at some point.
Speaker 3 (01:58:31):
Well, look that's the crazy thing. You got like the
mayor of Chicago out there saying, oh, well, you know,
unforcing the law isn't what restores law and order. More
cops wouldn't help, and they want to live that way.
They didn't accidentally implement these policies. I mean, you look
at New York. I mean when I was going to
college at West Point, you know, we're an hour north
of the city, but it might have been as twelve
(01:58:52):
ten hours. I mean, it feels pretty remote when right
at West Point, especially as a cadet, but we could
ride the train down into the city, and as tourists,
you could know, well, here's where this kind of crime's
going on, and here's where that kind of crime is,
and it's like a sight seeing adventure. You're just like, wow,
this is crazy. And if we could know that, well,
obviously the police know that, but they weren't enforcing the law.
(01:59:14):
And then right after that Mayor Rudy Giuliani takes over
restores law and order in New York City. Tourism is flourishing,
things are booming, and in one generation they've basically just
gone back to all the stupid things. They're about to
elect an actual communist. So look, Donald Trump isn't making
these people make these decisions. He's offering help. But it
kind of highlights the Trump Arrangement Center. Well, Trump's for it,
(01:59:36):
it must be bad. We don't want that.
Speaker 2 (01:59:39):
Yeah, and it really does highlight the Trump Arrangement Center,
because I know we're already's walking around talking about these
eighty twenty issues. Eighty percent of American public is on
one side and twenty percent of the American publics on
the other side. I get the impression crime is one
of those. Maybe not statistically eighty twenty, but a vast
majority of people of all political stripes reject this anti
(01:59:59):
place police sentiment and this rethink police sentiment and just
want their neighborhood's safe again, Which is why I pivot
over to Trump saying, listen, I'm here, I'm offering the help.
I demonstrated with Washington, d C. That you know, a
significant infusion of additional police officers and resources does result
in a drop in crime and increase result in arrests,
including outstanding warrants, gun charges, rapists, murderers. I mean, they're
(02:00:22):
showing success for all the world to see, or all
the rest of these cities to see. And I don't know,
I think this is going to come back to haunt
the Democrats who run the cities who are outright rejecting
the whole concept.
Speaker 3 (02:00:33):
Well, you're right, and look once you cross from the
city limits into the west side into the eighth district,
you know, it's not really part of Some people want
safe communities. They support their police, although I do hope
that Cole Rain passes a stronger police levy. You know,
they got to fund their police. They're short staffed there
in Cole Rain Township. But if you look on Dallas,
(02:00:57):
it's just mind blowing what's going on in Cincinnati where
they're basically, like some of these other big cities, rejecting
support for law and order, and they basically are choosing, hey,
we want to live this way. We're electing judges that
are not supporting the law. And I will say be
kind of pleasantly surprised our prosecutor, who kind of seem
pretty soft on crime as at least said yeah, we're
going to prosecute things at the county level. So hopefully
(02:01:20):
that trend continues. Because when the police go out and
do the right things, and this is what the FOPS
statement was about the leadership there in the city, when
they go out and do things, that's the basis for it.
But if they know that the prosecutors aren't going to
bring charges or serious charges and if they know the
judges aren't going to give out serious sentences. Eventually, even
(02:01:41):
the policing isn't as effective.
Speaker 2 (02:01:43):
Right And I was going to say, do you think
the City of since Ay needs to take Trump up
on his offer or at least raise the hand and
suggests maybe we could use some help, I know, provolt
In the aftermath of the riots and the criticism and
the condemnation from the FOP the other day, I guess
you finally reached out to governor to Wine and agreed
to take the Wine offer of assistance up. So we're
moving the right direction on that. But I don't know.
(02:02:05):
I'm I'm just baffled by all of this. Congressman Davidson,
and I you know, I just have to conclude, and
I hate saying it out loud. It's like, you know,
you want to knock wood when you make a statement
like I think this is going to be wonderful, and
then you're to the Republican or the conservative side of
the ledger because again, law and order is what it's
all about. And the Democrats are standing like deer in
the headlights right now trying to defend this this ongoing
(02:02:26):
defund the police mentality. I think it's it's failing them
and kudos to Trump for forcing them into this corner.
Speaker 3 (02:02:33):
Yeah, and look easy uniting even people who are reluctant
to say, oh, well, we need more policing because the
results are there and it hasn't been this oh giant
power thing. It's really like about accomplishing the mission. And
as I say, like, even in the most basic libertarian
framing of a government, the basic rule is don't hurt
people that don't take their stuff. Right, somebody's got it.
(02:02:55):
Someplace got to djudicate who is right and wrong, because
going back to Canaan Able, eventually somebody is going to
hurt somebody else. Somebody is going to take somebody's stuff.
Somebody's going to be wrong, and you need justice, which
is the job of judges. And you see judges just
not delivering that over and over again in Hamilton County.
I got to say, we don't see that problem at
(02:03:15):
the kind of level that we do in Hamilton County.
We don't see that problem in Butler County, Preble County,
Dark County, Miami County. So there's a recipe here, and
Donald Trump's trying to deliver it to places that prankby
haven't seen it.
Speaker 2 (02:03:31):
That's the great thing about the message. It reaches more people,
the more controversial these actions are perceived, and the more
screaming the left it does in opposition to what Trump
is doing. The more people report on it, the more
people understand the reality is what's going on and realize it. No,
it looks like Donald Trump just wants to help us out.
It's like him trying to stop wars. He seems to
have a care and concern over humanity generally. Connors Warren
(02:03:53):
Davidson pause. I want to bring it back to talk
about central bank digital currency, which scares the hell out
of me. We'll get your thoughts and insights on and that.
Since you're well, man's going to be voting on one
way or the other. More with Congressman Warren Davidson at
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Speaker 6 (02:04:59):
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Heavy traffic on the highways this morning, north found seventy five.
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approaching the Brand Spence Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC
the talk station.
Speaker 2 (02:05:53):
A twenty to fifty five krcity talk station, Bright Times,
the Congress and Warren Davidson going through the issues here
he's in town. Go to the town hall that's taken
place six pm tonight at Edgewood Middle School in Trenton,
where Congressman David's will be hosting that town hall, asking
questions and let them know what your concerns are. In
the meantime, concern I have always had when it comes
to Central Bank digital currency. It's like big Brother watching you,
(02:06:16):
you know, Congressman David's I'm a huge fan of cash.
I try to use my credit cards as little as possible.
Of course, with online shopping, you know, I have to.
But if I'm out and about, I have money in
my pocket, I pay with cash. And one of the
reasons is it's sort of it's a fundamental principle to me.
I don't like the idea that credit cards are keeping
a tab of literally everything I buy and what I
(02:06:36):
buy and where I buy it. I don't like that
big brother thing kind of looming over my head. And
that's just I'm not paranoid. It's just the point of
principle for me. But with a central bank digital currency,
I mean, they know everything you're doing, do they not
They the folks in government that might want to do
a social credit score for example.
Speaker 3 (02:06:55):
Yeah, I mean, look, if you look at credit cards,
I mean I use them for a lot of transaction.
Is they What they do the credit card companies do
is kind of amazing. They make sure, hey, you are
who you say you are. The retailer that you're trying
to buy something from is real and legit, and you
do have the credit available to pay for what you're
(02:07:16):
going to pay, and it makes decisions pretty quick if
the transaction was fraudulent. There's some coverage there on credit cards,
that is in some other forms of payment, you knowing
they're nice, they have a role.
Speaker 2 (02:07:28):
I use them.
Speaker 3 (02:07:29):
But even in a credit card, the federal government has
to get a warner or subpoena to get your information.
And in a central bank digital currency, literally you don't
even have access to your money except by the condition
set by the government. Fundamentally, some people call it programmable money.
I mean they can design it. They see it as
a feature. Some of these people, theorists, they are like, well, like,
(02:07:50):
if you did a stimulus, you could say that the
money could be spent on these things, but not those things.
You could deposit money that expires by this date it
has to be spent, so you could do all these
great things for monetary policy. And you know, some of
the environmentalists are like, you could make it so that
if you drive this kind of vehicle in your gas
is more expensive, and if you drive you know, the
(02:08:13):
favored kinds of vehicles, your gas there's less expensive. And
think of the dystopian surveillance state that's creating China's actually
creating this. You don't even have to keep theorizing. It's
already there. The technology is there, and the scary thing
is our Federal Reserve is actively building it. They they're
hiring programmers who are writing code to develop it, and
(02:08:33):
we haven't authorized it. And when they come they'll say, well,
we know that if we wanted to do a retail CBDC,
we would have to get congressional approval. That's the qualifier.
That's the front end towards customers. So if they wanted
to do banking direct with customers, they would have to
get congressional approval. The kind of line they're skirting is saying, well,
(02:08:55):
but we could do it on the back end, so
it's kind of concealed. So in a way, it's even
more dishonest where they're creating this network on the back end,
and that's part of where Congress needs to take action
and just you know, kill this. I don't want It's
sort of like from the Star Wars fans of the day,
if you watch the Death Star being built, you know
(02:09:16):
they were going to get permission before they turned it on.
The reality is, once you have the power.
Speaker 16 (02:09:21):
You have the power.
Speaker 3 (02:09:22):
So I don't want them to design it. I don't
want them to build it. I don't want them to
test it. I do not want central banking digital currency
to exist, you know, improving how fast payments work. Yeah,
that's great, and that's kind of the goal of some
of the things unfed now that skirt up to that,
but keeping it so that you have your own custody,
whether that's physical cash or in a digital asset world
(02:09:45):
where you personally can go to another person and pay them,
because all those things credit cards do, you are doing
yourself between you and like if you and I agreed
on a transaction, you know, here's you know, two hundred
bucks for this you know, cool jacket or something, and
you're all right, cool, here's the money. We agree. There's
(02:10:06):
no third party that can come between us to do
that transaction. But when you're account based, it can be
filtered and bright as I was were talking about this
one time, Justin Trudeau was using the current banking system
in Canada to basically limit the ability for these truckers
to even get access to their bank account. Yeah, so
that was his way of trying to shut down the
(02:10:27):
trucker protest.
Speaker 2 (02:10:28):
Well, we have D banking here that swat.
Speaker 3 (02:10:30):
Teams outside the door. It's the power of money to course.
Speaker 2 (02:10:33):
Yeah, we have D banking here. You know, if you're
you're you're you're in a non favored business like for
you know, firearm manufacturing or paid ay loan. They just
shut your bank account out. We don't want to do
business with you anymore. We got a memo from someone
in Washington and said we shouldn't be doing business with you.
We your bank will no longer conduct business with you.
So you're cut out of the world completely with that
kind of action. So a little tip of the Iceberger
(02:10:55):
what it might be like with the central bank digital currency.
I guess I just wonder are they talking about Do
you think this is a step toward getting rid of
our fiat currency, moving over to a digital currency as
opposed to even having the dollar?
Speaker 3 (02:11:10):
Yeah, I mean, look, I think that's the end goal.
They don't really like cash. Christine Leguard, who's the sort
of the equivalent of Jerome Powell in the US Federal
Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. They have European Central Bank Chair
Christine Leguard. She's been very clear she basically doesn't like cash.
She wants to limit it. They've passed laws in Europe
(02:11:30):
so that you can't pay cash for something more than
one thousand dollars, that it costs more than thousands, you
can't pay cash for it. And if you think in
the US we've got this sort of surveillance thing when
you have more than ten thousand dollars in cash, well,
that seems like a lot now because we don't generally
carry a lot of cash around. But if when they
put ten thousand in in nineteen seventy seventy one, if
(02:11:52):
you adjusted for inflation, that'd be like eighty thousand dollars today.
So you're like, yeah, I mean I get it. If
somebody's buying UF one fifty with cash, you'd go, that's
a lot of cash. But they haven't adjusted it for inflation.
They want to ratchet it down. And if you remember,
you know, Biden tried to put surveillance on your bank
account if you had six hundred dollars or more going
through your bank account. Yeah, which is pretty much everybody,
(02:12:15):
so you know, and how do they get the banks
to do all this on their behalf? Well, if you
don't spy on your customer. You don't filter transactions like
you're supposed to, you don't get to keep operating a bank.
They shut down Signature Bank in New York City and
they said, oh, it's because they're banking crypto and they're insolvent. Well,
Barney Frank of the Dodd Frank Act, a very far
left Democrat, used to be a chairman of the House
(02:12:39):
Financial Services Committee that I serve on. Now he's since retired,
and you know that, he said he was on the
board a Signature bank. He's like, they weren't insolvent, they
were just banking crypto and they don't want to bank
crypto companies right now. So that war on crypto was
sort of a Biden war against political enemies. And that's
the kind of tool that was being used. It is
(02:13:00):
called Operation choke point two point yeah. Yeah, and Biden
just copied what Obama had done, or basically Obama did
what he was doing in his first two administrations, right,
whichever way you look at that, But either way, a
choke point came back and they were using banks to
target political enemies.
Speaker 2 (02:13:16):
Yeah, that's the threat of a regulatory compliance on It
is quite often enough for a bank to capitulate to
some government demand because of the hours and the legal
fees and everything else associated with it. Plus the banking
regulations is so damn complicated. It's pretty much assumed that
the government is going to find some irregularity and hold
you accountable for it. So to avoid that you just capitulate.
(02:13:37):
It's terrible and well that's what you're trying to avoid
with the Central Bank digital currency position. Congressman Warren Davidson,
always a pleasure to have you on the fifty five
Karose Morning Show. Keep up the great work, and again
I'll encourage my listeners to show up at six pm
at Edgwood Middle School this evening for the town hall.
Speaker 3 (02:13:53):
Sounds great. Thanks Brian, God bless you and all your listeners.
Speaker 2 (02:13:55):
Thank you, my friend, and God bless you to a
twenty eight fifty five KRS. The talk station got a
great event coming up this weekend. It's time for the
LUNC and Airport Days. James Stitt from the war Birds
going to join us in the next segment. Hope you
can stick around.
Speaker 6 (02:14:06):
Fifty five KRC.
Speaker 2 (02:14:09):
Don't let it in. Hey thirty two the fifty five
KRC DE Talks Nation. As we wind up summertime. Got
some great things going on this weekend, including the Lunkin
Airport Days. Welcome back to the fifty five KRC Morning
Show from the CINCINNTI Warbirds. James Stitt, Great to have
you on this morning. Good morning, Brian, great to be here.
(02:14:32):
So it is the return of the Lunkann Airport Days.
What how many years have you been doing this?
Speaker 9 (02:14:39):
Oh, it's over over twenty years. It's become quite a
Cincinnati tradition. We're very proud of it.
Speaker 2 (02:14:45):
It sure has, and it's such such a neat event
to see these historic aircraft. Cincinnati Warbirds dot Org is
the website where you can find the Warbirds. Generally speaking,
just remind my listeners what the who the war Birds
are and what you do, and whether it's an opportunity
for feeble people who are interested in historic aircraft and
militaries and things like that, if there's an opportunity for
them to maybe join in the fund with the war Birds.
Speaker 9 (02:15:08):
Absolutely well, our longan Airport Days event is certainly a
great way for patriotic families and aviation history bus to
spend Labor Day weekend. This year, we're going to be
featuring several historic World War Two military aircraft, including a
B twenty five bomber, which was the same type used
in the Doolittle Raids at the beginning of the war.
(02:15:30):
Also the B twenty nine doc one of only two
still flying in the world, the same type of aircraft.
Speaker 2 (02:15:37):
That was used to bring an end to World War Two.
Speaker 9 (02:15:40):
We'll have a P fifty one Mustang Gunfighter, pre eminent
fighter in the European theater, and T six Texan that
trained all World War Two pilots. They'll all be offering
right experiences and ground tours from Thursday through Monday.
Speaker 2 (02:15:56):
That's wonderful. Where do you acquire these aircraft?
Speaker 9 (02:16:00):
Well, there are groups that preserve and restore these aircraft
essentially flying museums, and then tour around the country to
raise money to keep them flying and preserve them. So
I make arrangements with the owners and operators of those aircraft.
Plus we have some some here in Cincinnati from the
(02:16:21):
Tri State Warbird.
Speaker 2 (02:16:22):
Museum that will also be on tap. Right, and that's
opened throughout the year.
Speaker 9 (02:16:26):
Right the Warbird Museum, Yes, yes, they're open on Saturdays
and Wednesdays for the public, and they'll have some aircraft
on display specifically when the big open house is going
on Saturday and Sunday, we'll have lots of other aircraft
on display, along with helicopter rides, classic cars, military vehicles, exhibits,
(02:16:49):
food trucks, and color guard ceremony at noon on each day.
Speaker 2 (02:16:53):
That's wonderful. I just think you're gonn be doing a
flyover on Sunday afternoon.
Speaker 9 (02:16:58):
Absolutely, that's how we camp this off. Sunday afternoon and
early evening, the Cincinnti Warbirds will be doing formation flyovers
of Riverfest, entertaining all the crowds that are waiting for
the WEBN fireworks.
Speaker 2 (02:17:11):
That's got to be really cool. I love watching them
fly over. I'm up in Simms Township, so when you're
doing these events, I quite often see the historic aircraft
fly over our neighborhood because of're doing loops in and
at Lunk and it's just the neatest thing, and it's
such a distinctive sound compared to modern aircraft, Like, oh
my god, I know the World War two B twenty
nine is out there because you can hear the rumble
of those of those prop engines. So now people are
(02:17:34):
going to get a ride on these I know that
you mentioned the B twenty nine Doctors two left. Is
that one of the airplane that people can purchase an
opportunity to ride on?
Speaker 13 (02:17:43):
Absolutely?
Speaker 9 (02:17:44):
Absolutely, The B twenty nine, B twenty five, fifty one,
and T six all will be offering rides. And if
you go to our website SINCINNTI warbirds dot org, you'll
find links there where you can go online and sign
up in advance, because the booking fill up pretty fast.
I imagine when they're not flying, and when they're not
flying you can also see them the insides when they're
(02:18:08):
on ground display.
Speaker 2 (02:18:09):
Well, the one that's intrigues me is this the Piece
fifty one gunfighter. How any is that like two seats?
Speaker 9 (02:18:16):
Yes, yes, it's a little tight for the second seat
because it was designed to be a single seat fighter.
But yes, it has two seats and it's this fantastic
experience I can't imagine.
Speaker 2 (02:18:29):
So, presumably fewer spots for the Piece fifty one Gunfighter
than the B twenty nine bomber, because I presume you
put more than just one passenger on the B twenty
nine when it goes out.
Speaker 9 (02:18:41):
Yes, B twenty nine I think has ten or eleven
seats and the B twenty five is six I believe, all.
Speaker 2 (02:18:50):
Right, So what time do we need to be there,
what time do the gates open, what time does the
events start, and what do we need to know about
by way of specific times.
Speaker 9 (02:19:01):
Well, Thursday through Monday the rides will be taking place.
The first one will be at nine o'clock in the morning,
and depending on how many flights are booked throughout the day,
they're generally not flying in the afternoon. So between nine
and five Thursday through Monday, the airport open house will
(02:19:21):
be ten am to four pm on Saturday.
Speaker 2 (02:19:24):
And Sunday ten am to four pm Saturday and Sunday
Lunkin Airport's place be for the Cincinna war Birds. Lunkin
Airport days sounds like a great time again. Helicopter rides
got the vintage aircraft on display. Classic Cars. I'm a
car guy. I don't have a classic car, but I
love cars. Maybe some of my listeners are out there going, Oh,
I'd love to participate in the classic car rally. Is
(02:19:45):
it still open for people to show up or how
does the classic car thing work?
Speaker 9 (02:19:51):
Well, Saturday, we're pretty much booked up. We've got space
for about twenty five cars. They're booked up. On Sunday,
we still have some openings, so if you want to
bring your classic car down on Sunday, just be there
at nine o'clock and we'd be glad to have you.
By the way, there's free admission to the public, no
charge for parking. And it looks like we've got a
(02:20:13):
great weather forecast.
Speaker 2 (02:20:14):
All week in long termer. Oh yes, Jim, we're we're
in my wheelhouse when it comes to weather this time.
So Jim Stitt for the Cincinni Warbirds online Cincinntiwarbirds dot org.
I'm Jim. Joe Tracker is going to add the link
to my blog page fifty five Casey dot com with
all the information so my listeners can either go there
or directly to your site. Hey, thanks for what you
do throughout the year, and we're putting on this wonderful
event every year. I know it means a whole lot
(02:20:36):
to my listening audience considering the military connection, but just
what a cool thing to be able to check out
these old aircraft and everything else you got going on there.
James Stitt, it's been great having you on the show.
I wish you all the success in the world on
the event this weekend.
Speaker 9 (02:20:49):
Thank you, Brian, appreciate the opportunity. We're very passionate about this. Appreciated.
Speaker 2 (02:20:53):
I know you are, and I truly appreciate that passion.
Speaker 16 (02:20:55):
Man.
Speaker 2 (02:20:55):
Happy to have you on the show anything. Anytime you've
got something going on with the Cincinny Warbirds, you got
an open spot here in the morning show to spread
the information around. Have a great weekend and a successful one, sir.
It's good having you on eight thirty nine. Right now,
fifty five KRCD Talk Station. Stick around, joking up with
the phone lines. You've opened up the phone lines. If
you have something to say before the end of the show, regardless,
I'll be right.
Speaker 6 (02:21:15):
Back fifty five krc WOULD and limping a.
Speaker 2 (02:21:21):
Eight forty six Here fifty five KRCD Talk Station. Hope
you're having a happy Wednesday. Invitational listener lunch. Not next Wednesday.
Woul normally do it on the first Wednesday of the month,
because of Labor Day on Monday, We're going to kick
it to the following week, so two weeks from today,
gonna be at Anderson Pub and Grill. Looking forward to
going back to Anderson Pub and grill. They do treat
us really well, and I certainly enjoy the fellowship. I
(02:21:43):
enjoy a listener lunch, and you might want to experience yourself.
It's a nice time. I can say that it's not
and it's never, ever, ever, ever, ever about me. It's
got nothing to do with me. It's about getting out
of the house enjoying some friendship. That's the only reason
I do listener to lunch. So enjoy the time you
get spoll with some of the fifty five KRC listeners,
even make some friends. And I love the long term
(02:22:03):
friendships from some of the regulars that have been established
over the years. So put it on your calendar. Anderson
pub in two weeks over the phones five one, three, seven,
four nine, fifty eight hundred eight two three talk. Let's
see what Tony's got this morning. Tony, thanks for calling.
Welcome to the show.
Speaker 16 (02:22:17):
Oh, thank you, Brian. We were in class together with
doctor Buller at you see.
Speaker 2 (02:22:21):
Oh my god, I loved that guy.
Speaker 16 (02:22:25):
Yeah, and a bushie, doctor Boushi.
Speaker 2 (02:22:27):
Yeah, I mean he taught we being a bushie. Didn't
he teach Middle Eastern studies?
Speaker 16 (02:22:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:22:33):
I remember him.
Speaker 16 (02:22:35):
Hey, Palestinians Palestinian.
Speaker 2 (02:22:37):
That's right, that's right. Remember, oh, Tony, you're gonna have
to let me just interject this and nobody cares. But
doctor Boushie's class, I was a little worried because we're
coming up to final exam and we took a midterm
and he came into class and final exam and I'm
sweating bullets because I feel like I'm gonna do really,
really poorly on it. And Aboushie says, all right, anyone
here who's happy with their midterm grade and wants to
(02:22:59):
have that their final grade, you can leave. And I
think I actually had a C on my mid term,
and I went ahead and took the Sea for fear
that I would do worse on the final. Yeah, he
was very biased, pro Palestinian biased. But Abraham Miller, I
don't know where he is, but I took every single
class he offered. It was all about terrorism and just
I found him fascinating. Thank you for the walkdown memory lane,
(02:23:22):
Tony appreciate that.
Speaker 16 (02:23:23):
Yeah, but we were in class together, we were at
the same time, so I think that's pretty cool.
Speaker 2 (02:23:27):
That is cool.
Speaker 16 (02:23:29):
Yeah, So my question is a legal question. If Governor
Cook is being accused of committing mortgage fraud. Why has
she not been charged?
Speaker 2 (02:23:38):
Okay, gonna have to sort of leave that out there, Tony,
I have no idea none.
Speaker 16 (02:23:45):
I mean, they're accusing her of doing this. It's on paper.
I mean if she wrote that down that she has
two residents. Yeah, they charged you with a crime.
Speaker 2 (02:23:53):
Well, there's quite a few of them that's got that.
They have that problem on their plate, isn't Doesn't Adam
Schiff also have that problem?
Speaker 9 (02:23:59):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:24:00):
He hasn't been charged yet either, has he?
Speaker 5 (02:24:03):
No?
Speaker 16 (02:24:04):
I don't understand you and I we've been jail.
Speaker 2 (02:24:08):
Yeah you can. You can hang your hat on that one, Tony.
So yeah, I just well, like some of the other
things we were talking about earlier today, the investigation of
the the the Coody toad that some are calling it
against Trump, that has not yet been completed. It's ongoing.
We've got twenty more burn bags that were found. Those
are going to be going through. Keep your popcorn out
wait for it. You're going to find out eventually. People
(02:24:31):
will get eventually prosecuted, So, you know, the wheels of justice.
Quite often it's been rather slowly, and of course, if
you're a well connected elected official like Adam Schiff. It's
going to be even slower because you have, of course
a lot of connections that might be able to, you know,
stave off any prosecution. But it'll happen. It'll happen. I hope, Tony.
Good to hear from you, man. Thanks again for the
(02:24:51):
reminder about my my professors in college. Really enjoyed my
time in college. Uh started out the morning show on
the heels of the no confidence vote that the FOP
unanimously approved in a moment's time against They have to
have parvall. Apparently purvol has now reached out to Governor
to Win to take him up on his offer of
assistance to help us with crime in downtown SINCINNY, which
(02:25:12):
genuinely exists in spite of the denials. There's a parallel
that can be drawn with DC kep to say, oh
my god, the crime's not as bad, the crime's not
as bad, the crime's not as bad. That this is insane.
Donald Trump shouldn't be able to do what he's doing well. Yesterday,
in the Oval Office, Chief of Staff Stephen Miller gave
some inditional details about the DC Metropolitan Police departments cooking
(02:25:33):
the books huh, actually doing it in order to make
the argument that the crime is going down. He said,
when we share the results, it will stun you. There
are even accusations that murders and homicides were reported as accidents,
not murders. This is how severe the manipulation of the
crime data has been in the city. It will all
(02:25:54):
be uncovered and it will all be brought to light again,
keep your popcorn out. Air's the statement. You know, he's
got something to hang his hat on. Why don't we
have the information now? Damn it? Well, but is it
kind of funny murders and homicides reported his accidents and
not murders. That remind anybody of anything. COVID nineteen statistics. Huh.
(02:26:21):
You could be in a motorcycle accident and have your
head decapitated, run into a guard rail, and if you
had COVID they would report it as a COVID death.
So yeah, whoever's in charge of the statistics tends to
have a big sway over our hearts and minds in
this country. Anyhow, back over the FOP, they have endorsed
Cory Bowman for mayor.
Speaker 8 (02:26:41):
Yay.
Speaker 2 (02:26:44):
Also in city council, the Fraternal Order Police Chapter sixty nine,
representing the CINCINNTI Police Department, active and retired officers, Mark Jefferies,
Jeff Cramerton, Christopher Smitheman, Yay, Aaron Weiner, Steve Gooden, Gary Favors,
(02:27:04):
Seth Walsh, Liz Keating, Lynda Matthews, and Ryan James. Now
Christopher Smithing will tell you do not vote for all
nine slots. Pick the top two, three four candidates you
absolutely want, so you don't water down the vote for
everybody else. But you do your own voting. But there's
your FOP selected candidates. I presume they've been adequately vetted
and it is a nice healthy mix of different political ideologies.
(02:27:28):
As far as judges go, we know that's the weak
link in the chain here in Hamilton County. I mean,
even Connie Pillach sounds like she wants to prosecute crime.
But if you have officers out there arresting folks and
a prosecutor willing to take him to court, and you
have a judge that doesn't want to enforce the law,
is soft on crime, doesn't believe in cash bail, then
you're going to have a problem on your hand. So,
(02:27:50):
and I trust the FOP has done an adequate job
vetting the judges that they endorsed. They're in front of
them all the time. They know the good ones and
they know the bad ones. So getting an endorsement District
four Josh Berkowitz, District five, Betsy Sunderman, District six Michael
Peck and District seven Gwen Bender. So thank you to
(02:28:12):
the FOP for offering their endorsements on that, and I'll
back them on that. And the suspect who is the
victim has pled not guilty his name Alex Tchirvinsky, in
spite of Marcy's Law, which apparently the City of Cincinnati
is still saying is out there so they won't release
a bunch of documents that both the defense and the
prosecution once or at least Representative Cecil Thomas, he's on
(02:28:35):
the charge, Alex Tchrevinsky for a crime side of the ledger,
but he'd like all the information as well, and I
think we're all deserving of it. So I don't know
why they're still asserting this Marcy's Law in connection with
access to the even the citation that was issued to him. Remember,
Travinsky only got the citation because the city solicitor ordered
the police to charge him, even though the prosecutor's office
(02:28:57):
in the police department didn't think there's any way in
hell he could be convinced of a crime. Oh well,
bowing to political pressure, the police department cited him for
or for a misdemeanor. Now in front of the court,
plaidnock guilty. You mentioned he got hit in the head
twenty eight times and was robbed. His attorney asserted that
he did, in fact acting self defense at all times.
Cecil Thomas has a different spin on that defending himself
(02:29:19):
from what saying, all I saw prior to the slap
was two individuals being held apart by other members of
the community, and he took it upon himself to reach
past those individuals and slap another individual. Well, I think
Cecil Thomas is missing some of the information, which is
one of the reasons he's asking for the release of everything,
as is the defendant now, Alex Stravinsky. It'll have to
(02:29:41):
be released at some point, but it's to the political sacrifice,
sacrificial lamb to appease the well the louder voices in
the community who are demanding that somebody be charged on
it because well, the people who actually issued the beat
(02:30:03):
down happen to be all black. Could there be have
been some white people in there? Yep. Would I perceive
the situation any differently, Nope. I don't think this is
a question of color. I think this is a question
of whether people engage in just absolutely inexcusable behavior by
just beating the living tar out of a guy, among
(02:30:25):
other things. Well, my popcorns out for that one as well.
It'll make its way through the legal system. And something
tells me, in spite of the fact that Alex Trevinsky
was charged, that that one's going to go the way
of the Dodo. He'll either win and what I perceive
will be a bench trial or they'll dismiss it. Just
don't plea out to a lesser charge, please eight fifty
(02:30:46):
five fifty five KR City Talk station iHeart Media aviation
expert Jay Ratlift. Tomorrow tonight show up at the Farm
six point thirty for George Brenneman's Restore Liberty dot Us
meeting who which is going to be attended by Todd
zenz Er Our Citizen Watchdog, Christopher Smithman, and Corey Bowman.
Should be a great event again Tonight at the farm
and of course you get that Congressman Davidson town hall
(02:31:07):
going taking place tonight as well. Lots of options for you.
Just Trecker, executive producer, Thank you for what you do,
appreciate it and I'll look forward tomorrow with Jay Ratliffe.
Have a great day, folks, stick around Glenbex up next.
Speaker 1 (02:31:19):
President Trump made clear that a peaceful resolution was possible
if I Ran agreed to give up its nuclear weapons ambitions.
Speaker 4 (02:31:25):
Another update at the top of the hour fifty five
krs the talk station.
Speaker 6 (02:31:30):
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