All Episodes

November 1, 2024 • 40 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
So six PIPIC five kir CV talk station. Very happy Friday.
So yeah, I hope you can make it a good Friday.
It's happier for me because man, I've gotten it really
well over the past oh years. So Adam Taylor's in
studios running for Hamlm County Commissioner. You can find Adam online,
get his website Adam K E h l E R
Adam Taylor dot com. There's all the information. A fiscally
responsible guy he is, and man with a plan on

(00:36):
open door policy. Could you have you back in the studio, Yeah, Brian,
thanks again, it was a pleasure. We're talking about that
Brent span or the Dan Beard Bridge fire going on. Wow.
Yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Now the park down there, which is a really nice
park for the kids there, Yeah, now it's it's cinders.
But you've got that same problem happened on seventy five
and I remember that being closed down for a long
time while they inspected it, and you know when.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
That kind of structural issues.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Yeah, the medal and yeah, it gets kind of wild.
So I won't be taking four seventy one.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
I don't think anyone's going to be taking for seventy
one for a while, maybe down for a long time.
Again you got the Brentspnce illustration as a suggested guide
post on how long it could take. Anyway, he didn't
call him come in to talk about fires on bridges,
came in and talk about the commissioner's race. So how
are you feeling about it as we fast approached it?

Speaker 2 (01:25):
I guess we could say dumpster fires, I mean the
presidential election. Yeah, but there's I'm feeling really good. I
think a lot of these Hamilton County down ballot candidates.
What happens nationally is you're going to see that reflected
in a lot of our races. And right now things
are looking really good. Atlas Intel, which was the most

(01:47):
accurate polster in twenty twenty, right now they have Trump
up five in Arizona, up for North Carolina, up four, Nevada,
up two in Georgia, up one point one in Pennsylvania,
one point two in Mission again and just barely a
point three in Wisconsin. They are the most accurate polster.
If you go look at the chart, they were at

(02:07):
the top and they they were more accurate by far
than most of the other posters. And then CNN comes
out with some crazy poll yesterday.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
Oh, I know, they've always got one or two polls
out there. They've sort of you know, flipped the narrative
on a pulled it. Of course you might deem more accurate.
So we don't trust the folks. That's seen in a whole.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Way, even Fox, I mean Fox sometimes lean's left a
little bit, which is wild. But they you know, they've
got Trump winning. Most polls have Trump winning the popular vote,
which hasn't happened in a long time, I think since
the eighties. So if he wins the popular vote, I
mean it's gonna be a landslide. I mean most things.
I mean I see conservative, not conservative as you know,

(02:47):
conservative politically, but conservative. Pollsters have him winning two hundred
ninety six electoral votes and some of the more you
know right leaning or up into like the three twenties.
But I would say they average out about three twelve.
I say the cons is about three twelve. Wow, I
mean they almost went in Vermont. I mean, Virginia's in play,
for God's sake. The only places I think he's solid

(03:09):
are you know, the West coast. You've got Washington, Oregon, California,
New Mexico. He's got in and then all the states
along the East coast obviously, but I mean you've seen
New Jersey early voting has been positive for Trump and
it's it's wild. But we got to get out and vote.
We got to remember to vote down ballot. That's one
problem we've always had is you can get Republicans out,

(03:31):
but they'll vote for the president and then off they go.
You got to get Melissa Powers in there. Oh, you
got to get Tom Brinkman in there.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Guys.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
If we're gonna do anything about property taxes in this county,
you got to get Tom Brinckman in there. And Tom's
been busy, you know, his wife unfortunately, you know, with
her stroke and stuff. He's had to you know, he's
spent a lot of time bringing her places every day.
He's got to take her somewhere. So it's been a
real challenge for him to get out there. So he
needs folks like us to get out there and talk
and tell people. You know, Tom Brinkman guys well, and.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
That demonstrates good quality of character. He knows where his
priorities are, and his priorities are to his wife and
not a political campaign.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
I see it all the time. He's a good man.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
Yeah, he is a good man. And of course I'll
throw a good word in for Jim Neil. I think
he can do a much better job as he did
before than the current sheriff McGuffey. So that's gotten very political.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
Well, we need Jim in there too, I mean, if
I'm going to do anything. You know, the vast majority
of the budget for him on county goes to not
just the Sheriff's department, but criminal justice in particular, like
over half of our budgets going to criminal justice. And
you could blame that on the schools. There's not much
we could do about that, you know, the pipeline to prison.
But you got to get a guy like Jim in
there who's open minded about bringing new technologies and making

(04:43):
the Sheriff's department more proactive versus reactive. And I think
if you could get Jim in there, I could work
with a guy like Jim. Oh yeah, because Jim, he's
West Side guy. He's you know, he's not a guy
who's going to waste money, and he understands that, you know,
taxpayers don't want to be front this money for unnecessary
stuff clearly.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
And the other thing that it's a very appealing about
Jim Neil, and he brought it up the other day
when he was here on the fifty five KCY Morning Show.
He's just he's really sort of a political he knows
the sheriff. He knows the sheriff's office is not a
political entity. And he's not going to go around attending
all kinds of crazy, you know, left wing or right
wing causes or events. He's going to be busy fighting

(05:25):
crime in Hamilton County.

Speaker 4 (05:27):
That's one true.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
And Jim's been around, I mean, he grew up around it.
You know, he's he's already done the job. And like
I said, it's wild to me. Now a lot of
your your best Democrats have become Republican. I mean, look
at this, Elon Musk, Tulsey, Gabbard, Kennedy. Now we got
a Kennedy on our side. Yeah, no, amazing, Jim Neil.

(05:49):
I mean, it's it's it's wild. But the left is
not what we used what the left used to be.
So you've got a lot of the moderate Democrats moving
over to our side. And I hope guys, if you're
out there and you're a moderate Democrat or you're you're undecided.
I mean, look at the policies go down there. If
you're Christian, look at what Kamala said about you know,
Christian's not being welcome at her at her rallies.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
I know.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
I mean, it's the stuff that's coming out. You know,
they're garbage people, is what Joe Biden said. I mean,
this is it's getting crazy. And you know, we're coming
down to the to the wire here, so you're gonna
hear a lot of crazy stuff coming out of candidates.
But it seems like the Trump campaign is winning and
they're hitting on everything in komologies keeps keep falling apart.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
Well, I think just keep simply name calling.

Speaker 4 (06:33):
That's all they got.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
They got the hate Trump, abortion and hate Trump.

Speaker 4 (06:36):
That's it.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
And abortion isn't the federal issues. We all know, it's
already been resolved in Ohio, much to many of my
listener's chagrin, but vote everybody did and that was the outcome.
But it's no longer a national issues, so that shouldn't
even be in the discussion point right now for federal office.
And yet they keep bringing it up all these crazy
you know, like like I don't know anybody who's I

(06:57):
have a very traditional marriage. What My wife loves her
role wife. You know, she's a traditionalist woman. She's terrific.
She works though full time. She makes more than me. Yeah.
But this idea that somehow I could control her decision making,
that men are telling their wives what they must do,
and that this ad campaign, like, for example, with a

(07:17):
Julia Roberts is secretly voting in favor of Kamala Harris.
Really yeah, and their husband, well, did you vote the
right wayh? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (07:26):
Yeah itsh don't tell him, you know, come on, man, Yeah, Julie,
are you paying for the groceries? Because that's what people
were worried about. They're worried about kitchen table issues. They're
worried about things that are affecting them right now. They're
not worried about this theoretical stuff and the lies the
left tells us about eptopic pregnancies and things like that.
Those are extreme talking points that they use, but people

(07:49):
don't necessarily care about that right now. Is abortion affecting
your life today?

Speaker 1 (07:53):
No?

Speaker 2 (07:54):
But you know what is going up to the grocery
store and buying two bags of grocery are costing one
hundred fifty dollars, Like that's effect me right now, you know.
And you notice gas prices are coming down a little
bit right before the election movies. Yeah, but how many
years what three and a half years we've had to
you know, high gas prices that people have been dealing with.
I mean, folks are having to every day decide what
they're going to buy and what they're going to forego,

(08:17):
and that that's not the American way. The middle class
is getting eroded in this country every day. The middle
class is getting hurt. You've got the extremes now. I
mean even the wage gap has gotten even worse, not
the male female wage gap, but the wealth gap between
the poor and the rich has expanded since Biden Harris
took over. I mean, guys, we can't do another four

(08:40):
years this, Like, we gotta get folks out there. You
got to go knock on doors, talk to your friends,
get people out there. There's people Andrew Pappas on the
East side, you know, our boy west side, Jim Keefer,
he's out there every day. Todd Zenzer, he's out here working.
You saw that thing that Cherry Coolidge came out with,
how they wasted eleven thousand dollars on those bid big
Biden Harris infrastructure signs. It's just insane. I was literally

(09:03):
one of my clients is a big sign maker. They
do all my signs, and I'm on the zoom call
with him yesterday. We're talking about a project and I'm like,
he hadn't seen the article, and I'm like, you should
write a blog post about this, because there's no way
you guys would have charged eleven thousand, five hundred dollars
for this kind of nonsense. What five or six signs?
Eleven thousand dollars? Guys, this is your tax money. And

(09:24):
then the crazy thing is our mayor gets invited to
the DNC to speak. One of the city council members
goes on to Hud like, are those things tied together?

Speaker 4 (09:34):
Are we doing? Like is this a quid pro quo?

Speaker 3 (09:37):
Now?

Speaker 2 (09:37):
Are we doing favors for the federal government? And I
keep saying this monopoly we have on city council and
county commission He got nine city council members, guys, all Democrats.
He got three count of commissioners, all Democrats. This is
the kind of stuff that happens. These are the decisions
that they make when you live under a one part monopoly.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
We'll continue with Adam Keaylor again. You can find them
online at Adam Kayler dot com on cut and his
you know, county commissioner issues when we're talking a little
bit more broad based politics generally speaking, but very important
to do so as we fast approach Tuesday seven sixteen
right now, and a very important thing to do is
you fast approached chimney and fireplace season. With the warmth
and the awesome glow of a fireplace, maybe the free

(10:23):
standing stove getting heat to heat your home. Take care
of your safety. Please call the Chimneycare fireplace and stove
and get an inspection. It surely saved me. I mean,
I don't know if my house would have burned down,
but that was certainly a possibility. After the inspection I
got many years ago, ended up having to replace the
old fireplace builder special insert because it was a fire hazard.
It's gas. I mean, I've been thinking about that. I mean,

(10:45):
I don't have to worry about kreosode build up right now,
but you do have to worry about things like that.
Is it flowing properly? Do you have a potential carbon
monoxide problem? Get a carbon monoxide detector. But maybe you
have water damage in there. Gas and wood burners can
all have that problem, and a video camera inspection will
take care of that. If it needs to be swept certified,
Chimney sweeps will do the job. Maybe they'll discovery needs

(11:05):
some tuck pointy work cap and damper replacement, that kind
of thing. They literally do it all. Showroom chalk full
of all kinds of things like fireplace inserts and free
standing stoves and self feeding wood waste spell at stoves.
Get it installed again before the heating season shows up.
To get in touch with them, go to chimneycareco dot
com chock full of information. That place chimneycareco dot com

(11:27):
showroom located at four thirteen Wards Corner Road. The phone
number please tell them, Brian said, HI five one three
two four eight ninety six hundred eight plus the Better
Business Bureau five one three two four eight ninety six hundred.

Speaker 5 (11:39):
Fifty five krc Iheartradios.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
Here's your Channel nine first warning weather forecasts, plenty of
sunshine says it right there on the rundown hi A
sixty one today over night Litte thirty five with clear
sky sixty five under sunny skies tomorrow overnight little forty
four the few clouds, but sunny again on Sunday with
a high f seventy two forty five degrees. Right now
it's going an update on that fire situation.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
From the UCL Tramphings Center.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
Count on the expert team at you see health Orthphedix
and sports Medicine no matter the injury. Same day appointments
available schedule online.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
Au see health dot com.

Speaker 6 (12:13):
North and southbound four seventy one shut down due to
the fire underneath the bridge at the park and this
is now blocking northbound four seventy one at two seventy five.
That traffic, it's very heavy. Then to the Double A Highway.
Shot ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
Seven twenty here fifty five KERCD talk station, A very
happy Friday to Adam Kala run for him and County
Commissioner in the studio and he heard my conversation from
yesterday regarding the Shenanigans declaration onund An East tree house
and some campaign contributions from Rumkey. That's interesting because as
I understand it, she's a Democrat and she's really out

(12:54):
there raising three forms of holy hell against an East treehouse.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
Yeah yeah, And you know I've I've I've gotten messages
from a lot of people, mostly Democrats, about issues that
they've had with candidates that they trusted to do a
good job on things like the environment, you know, typical
Democrat issues.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
But again, a lot of this stuff goes back to
checks and balances.

Speaker 4 (13:18):
Brian.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
You just if you've got a monopoly, a one party
monopoly running city Council and County Commission, DC policy is
going to run Cincinnati. And this is one thing I
keep pushing on. You've got, you know, things that are
coming down from on high you know, at the DNC
that get pushed down to Cincinnati. And those things aren't
always right for Cincinnati. But when it comes to environmental issues,

(13:42):
I mean that's one thing Hamilton County Commission does have
some control over. And when you aren't doing what the
people who put you in power expect you to do,
then that's a problem. And this this whole monopoly thing,
people just sleepwalk through their entire their entire term.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
I mean, yet no one is there, you know, like
capacity to call them out.

Speaker 4 (14:01):
Nobody.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
It's a protectionist environment. I'm not calling out a fellow
Democrat because I don't want to be smirge the Democrat
party name or have a shot at my fellow Democrat.
So yeah, even if they're doing something that I don't
necessarily believe and we're just gonna let it fly into
the radar.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
Just let it fly.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
And this is the problem too, because a lot of
them have their sights set on just like our County Commission.
Next thing you know, they're in DC doing things with
the Obama administration or the Harris administration or whatever. That's
what they have their sit set on. These are career
politicians a lot of times we're dealing with and some
of the people we've elected here aren't even from Cincinnati.

(14:38):
They're not even from the area really, So you've got
people coming in here that don't do they really care
about say say, like, I've been here my entire life,
Yes this is I will go to war for Cincinnati.
Oh I know I'm running. Because you can't just let
people walk into office. It's just not good. And when
they feel like they don't have any competition, that's when

(14:58):
they get lazy. That's when they stop working for the people.
That's when they just collect their check. What is it
over a little over one hundred thousand dollars a year
or something, these county commissioners are making. And if you
have you don't have to worry ever about anyone even
coming close to beating you. Then you know, you just
you don't go talk to the people, You don't spend
any money, and they were just gonna walk into office.

(15:20):
That's one of the reasons John Pearson, who's running against Reese, Me,
who's running against Streetthouse. That's why we're spending this kind
of time and this kind of personal money to go.
And I got ads running on Facebook now, I've got
ads running on another ad network. I've got ads running
on Twitter right now. I mean, this is all mostly
coming out of my pocket, thinks.

Speaker 4 (15:39):
You know.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
I've had some some donors, friends and family and some
of your listeners actually, But we're putting our money out there,
in our time out there to fight this stuff because
we care about Hamilton County, we care about the city
of Cincinnati, and we're sick and tired of seeing these
things like this assigned situation and this styrene leak and
all these situations that come up that they are a

(16:01):
symptom of lazy management. Is what that is. And if
this was a business, a lot of these people would
be fired. If this was an actual business, if this
wasn't a government type thing, management would be gone.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
Yeah, and you know, you and I don't want to
focus just on the City of Cincinnati since you're running
for a county wide office, but of course the City
of Cincinnati is the you know, the hub of the
entire multi county region year and if the city fails,
the everybody tends to fail. But in terms of you know,
in terms of one thing that comes to my mind,

(16:34):
that the failure to keep up with the road and
infrastructure maintenance. They're so far behind. They have allocated money
every year and every year it falls behind. They don't
even complete what their scheduled to do in the calendar year.
So the number of projects just keeps piling up and
piling up, and the number of roads that are deteriorated
to the point where you can't drive and without getting
an alignment at the end of the road, it's they're

(16:54):
just multiplying. That is an epic sign of incompetence. Infrastructure
and public safe You bring those out and you know,
of course, low taxes, it's going to be a magnet
for everydon want to move in. You don't take care
of what you got, you don't keep on the projects
you're responsible.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
For, you just start slipping. They just start slipping.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
And I've got a friend in budgeting down at the
city and he's been in different departments, and one time
he told me that there was so the police officers
have to rotate their guns every several years.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
Oh yeah, yeah, have you heard about this signific west
and buy back? Yeah, they got rid of that. The
city returns the used firearms to Smith and Wesson and
in return, Smith gives them new ones.

Speaker 4 (17:35):
Half a million dollars is what we were getting from it.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
But because Democrats have this thing with guns, now they
have to destroy them all. Yeah, so now we're out
five hundred thousand dollars, right.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
And of course that really has a profound impact on
the number of firearms.

Speaker 5 (17:47):
In the world.

Speaker 2 (17:48):
Yeah, no, they were I think Smith and Wesson. What
they were doing is that we're selling them back to
police forces in Europe and different countries. But they were
going from police to other police.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
So, and those are just the weird decisions that get
made across the board that are just like, what are
you doing.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
They're symbolic and they cost the taxpayers money.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
And what's talp with the roads? You mentioned the roads,
but it's insane. What's going on right now?

Speaker 1 (18:11):
All right, we'll pause, will bring Adam Kayler back. It's
six twenty six right now. If you five Kcity Talk station. Hey,
great time and anytime. It's a great time for me
to remind you that there's a great plumbing outfit out
there that'll help you out from northern Kentucky all the
way up to Dayton and all parts in between. That
and my friends at Plumb Tight Plumbing living by the
motto plumbing done right it always is. I'm a great
example of that. All the plumbing projects that I've had

(18:33):
for him over the years have worked out right. The
price has always been right, their customer service is superior,
and they're great about letting you know where they are
in process. I love getting the phone call in advance
telling you exactly listen, GPS says I'm fifteen minutes away.
So the window you have given up front is updated
by the folks a Plumb Tight. You're not just hanging
around tapping your toes waiting. They're gonna let you know

(18:54):
you get a picture of the plumberor too, and then
contact you electronically give you peace of mind. I know
that really gave my mom piece of mine. Drain cleaning,
of course, pressure issues absolutely, the some pump went bad,
your basement being flooded. Of course, plum type plumbing for
all residential plumbing needs their best, A plus for the
better business. Brill that' says, this is a great illustration
to my point here. So call them up with confidence.

(19:17):
Plumtight dot coms where you'll find them online, plumtightt te
dot com five one three seven two seven tight that's
five one three seven two seven eighty four eighty three.

Speaker 5 (19:27):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (19:29):
A minute of hope is Channeline says, we've got a
sunny day in our hands today, sixty one to be
the high driving to thirty five overnight with clear skies,
sunny again, the Morus sixty five overnight down to forty
four partly clotty and a partly or rather a partly
sunny day on Sunday with the highest seventy two forty
four degrees. Right now, let's find out about the traffic update.

Speaker 6 (19:50):
Chuck from the UCUF Tramfic Center Ken on the expert team,
and you see health Orthopedic Sands supports medicine no matter
the injury, same day at point.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
That's our available schedule online.

Speaker 6 (20:01):
At you see how dot com westbound two seventy five
slow from four to seventy one to the double A.
That's because northbound fourth seventy one is now shut down
at two seventy five from problems earlier. Southbound fourth seventy
one shutdown as well due to that fire underneath the bridge.
There's some broken down on forty two's ramp in Florence

(20:22):
just south seventy five.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
The rampan is blocked.

Speaker 6 (20:24):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Seven thirty to fifty five KRCD talk station. We're now
from now the other Republican running for county Commissioner, Jonathan
Pearson joins a program at A thirty preceded by Matt
Damaris vets Anne Bruce. An opportunity for us to pay
back the American veteran and show appreciation for their service
to our country by buying them a beer. It's easy concept,
and they do a brew bus. So we're talking about

(20:51):
that at top of this hour. In the meantime in studio.
Adam Kaylor Adam Kaylor dot com, koe e h l
e R running for County Commissioner on a well, really contemplative,
minding the economic shop kind of platform. He wants to
ensure that we get every the value for every dollar
that's taken in. He's all about fiscal responsibility, he's all

(21:13):
about open door policies. He's got some great ideas for
the county, starting with transparency, which goes back to this,
you know unit party we've got in county commissioners right now.
You don't get transparency when the whole thing's run by
one party. And I would probably say that about the
Republicans as well. We have number of illustrations Republicans not
playing nicely and that's not me and that's not what

(21:34):
I'm about, and I know that's not what Adam's about,
which is why I really like and trust him and
encourage you to vote for him or at least look
into him as a consideration. So, without further ado, I
know this is not a county issue, but it is
a county issue because it impacts everybody in the state
of Ohio. You and I were talking about issue one,
and you know, by all accounts, it looks like it's
probably going to pass, and that is a terrible, terrible thing.

(21:56):
And I believe you had one statistic that said if
it pass, it's gonna flip four congressional seat.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
Through that coming from the party here in Hamilton County.
So I was over at the East Side Republican Club
speaking the other day and I was told that it's
actually from Ohio, from the state of Ohio. This is
coming down from the state of Ohio that it is
currently the yes votes are leading the no votes right now.
So but it's within the margin verra I mean, which

(22:23):
is probably a lot of times two to four points, right.
So if we don't want it to pass, which we
should not want Issue one to pass, you guys, you
need to vote no on Issue one. This is a
hail Mary by the Democrats. And not just Ohio Democrats.
I'm talking about California Democrats, New York Democrats and Illinois
Agassis leftists, Swiss leftists that are are bringing money in

(22:46):
here and throwing tons of money. Guys, You've got to
go look up the numbers on this money that they're
they've put into this Issue one. They have lost Ohio,
and they've lost Ohio because Ohio voters are reasonable people
and they see what's going on with the Democratic Party.
They see how it's moving further and further left, and
Ohio is moved and voted more right. And this year,

(23:09):
I mean you, the polling is shown Republicans are up eight,
seven or eight points in Ohio already. When you look
at the polling well in twenty twenty, they actually had
Trump only up like half a point or something in Ohio.
He ended up winning Ohio by eight. That's how big
the polling era was. I mean, you've got a seven
to eight point gap in the polling era in twenty twenty.

(23:32):
So if you apply that Trump could be up in
Ohio right now twelve to fifteen points, that would mean
they have completely lost Ohio in this issue. One situation
is a hail mary by the Democrats and their big
donors to have any bit of control and any hope
at controlling what happens in Ohio.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
And which really really puzzles me when you see some
you know and say what you want about them or
their character or what wing within the Republican Party they
happen to be. If they want Republicans to continue to
succeed and win in Ohio, yet they're still out there
campaigning in favor of voting yes on one. I just
don't understand that at all.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
Well, to me, guys like this is going to be
a group of fifteen unelected people that are you know
by that are that are appointed by unelected people that
can only get rid of each other. This is adding
more bureaucracy. I mean, this is it's crazy. Guys like

(24:28):
you don't vote for any of these people. At least
people you vote for, you can vote them out.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
Exactly.

Speaker 4 (24:34):
We have no control over this group.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
And we have the opportunity to take them to court
if they screw up a jerrymandering. This is still jerrymandering.
Jerry mandering. Yeah, it's just moving in from you know,
elected officials over to this unelected committee. Only individuals on
the committee can oust a fellow member, even for malfeasance.
It's crazy. I you, an elected official can't sue them
for not doing their job or doing their job inappropriately,

(24:59):
which means they're well but could become extremely political within
their discussions about jerry mandering.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Yeah, and Brian's an attorney, so Brian, Brian can tell you.
I mean, I'm sure you've read through the language and
a lot.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
Of it's insanity.

Speaker 4 (25:12):
It's insanity, And this is this is.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
The most comp ridiculously complex process I think I've ever encountered.
And I've encountered a lot of crazy.

Speaker 4 (25:20):
I'm sure you have.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
Yeah, and I mean, guys, most of you aren't going
to read through the language the way a guy like
Brian knows how to read.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Through the language. You'll fall asleep.

Speaker 4 (25:28):
Yeah, you'll fall asleep exactly.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
Part of being an attorney is being able to stay
awake while you're reading this stuff. But you know the
way they word things and the way when you go
to the polls or when you go and you go
to vote, you're going to read this thing and it's
going to seem super complicated. Just remember, vote no. That's
all you got to do. Just go in there, vote no,
because this is insane.

Speaker 4 (25:49):
Guys.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
The last set of maps were approved by Democrats. I mean,
that's how we get them through. Yeah, it's it's not
like this wasn't a unanimously decided map. And the way
the maps get drawn up, like you kind of got
to keep each district the population. You got to think
about the culture there and all that. That's the way
they have to do these maps.

Speaker 4 (26:08):
Now.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
So what's different about the way they're going to draw
these maps? Well, what's different is is you've got unelected
people doing it this time. Unelected people who knows what
the Republicans that are going to get elected are those
rhino guys. I mean, if you're a hardcore Republican, you
should be concerned about the Republicans that are going to
be on that group representing you.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
You're like the Blue twenty two.

Speaker 4 (26:29):
Oh yeah, like the Blue twenty two guys.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
Great illustration of that one. Thanks for me coming up
with it, Adam Kahler. Don't go away. We're going to
continue here in a minute. First, a very very strong
recommendation to call Fasten pro roofing for all roofing and
a lot of exterior project needs. These are the folks, man,
I'm telling you, they are craftsmen. At the work that
they do, you know, custom metalwork like over a bay
window for example, they do it. And they do gutters

(26:52):
of all types, including box gutters, gutter guards. If you
want to keep the leaves out of your gutters, great idea,
of that, and I got my gutters replaced with the
gutter guards. When I had my roof replaced by Fast
and Pro, I paid for an upgrade to the fifty
year warranted shingle. They're going to give that one to you,
that upgrade for free. So if you need a new
shingle roof, you're well covered with the Certainty Landmark Pro

(27:13):
fifty year shingle. But maybe you want a metal roof
to substitute after the shingle. They do that. Maybe you
need repairs on your slate, your air terra cotta. They
do it. If it's roofing, they do it both residential
and commercial. And trust me, they are trust worthy, unlike
so many roofing companies there and they rip you off business.
Fast and Pro deserves your trust because they will not
why to you. You don't have any concern about that,

(27:35):
So call them. The inspection is free and they may
come off your roof and say you're in good shape.
Wouldn't that be wonderful news, give you peace of mind,
give you an idea about how much life your roof
has left in it, or in my case, hail damage
may end your roof's life. But that's what the inspection
uncovers a plus all the better business peer solid folks.
I know them all very very well. Five one three

(27:56):
seven seven, four ninety four ninety five, five one, three,
seven and four ninety four ninety five Online it's fastened
fast em fastenproroofing dot.

Speaker 5 (28:04):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 4 (28:07):
What's the best place to reach new customer?

Speaker 1 (28:11):
Time for the nine first warning weather forecast. Plenty of
sunshine today highest sixty one, clear skies over night thirty five.
It will be sunny again. I'm all with the high
sixty five, a few clouds over Saturday nine and a
partly sunny Sunday with the highest seventy two. Think it
is forty five degrees Right now, it's time for traffic Chuck.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
From the UCUP Tramphic Center.

Speaker 6 (28:31):
Count on the expert team you see health, orthopedics and
sports medicine, no matter the injury, Same day appointments are
available schedule online at u sehealth dot com. North and
southbound four seventy one shutdown. That is due to an
early morning fire underneath the bridge and they need to
do an inspection before anything can reopen. Westbound two seventy
five is heavy because that's where they're blocking off northbound

(28:53):
four seventy one, and that's the traffic continues to THEAA Highway.

Speaker 3 (28:57):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the Talk State.

Speaker 1 (29:03):
Seven one cod UND seven forty two fifty five cares
the talk station enjoying my wide range of topic conversation
with Adam Kaylor, who's running for Hamilton County Commissioner. And
the big emphasis of course all morning throughout his campaign
is he needs some diversity of opinion there. If for
no other reason, then an alternative point of view might
cause us when we read about it, to engage in

(29:23):
a little more discussion and debate about any given issue.
It's really critically important. And you can trust Adam. He's
not some wing nut, you know, He's actually got this
wonderful background, proven businessman. He understands things like, you know,
crypto and technology, and he's used that even in didn't
you use that over some measure at this a creative

(29:45):
a school of creative and performing arts here at your
alma mater.

Speaker 4 (29:47):
Oh well we did.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
I mean we've done tons of stuff, like in twenty seventeen,
I brought the first ever crypto conference to the Midwest.
So and that was actually over at the Coming to
Convention Center if you want to call that the Midwest,
but that was the That was the affordable convention center
where you can bring it to. But we had two
hundred people showed. It was twohundred bucks a ticket. Most
of the big co's in Cincinnati, Kroger, P and G
sent representatives there to understand, you know what, how crypto

(30:11):
is what a digital dollar looks like.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
God forbid we ever get one of those here.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
Oh yeah, I talked about that with Warren Davidson today.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
Man, I'm telling you Warren davids and one is one
of the OG's, Bernie Marino, one of the ogs. He
actually actually went to one of his blockchain conferences up
in Cleveland, was called block Land, and I wanted to
do here in Cincinnati. I want to probably bring another
one of these back maybe next year. We'll see how
it goes. But I'm gonna call ours block Toberfest. I

(30:38):
love it. But AI blockchain, I mean you there's a
push by and I don't know what it is on
the left, but they are they are very hesitant to
adopt new technology. I mean even crypto blockchain stuff. I
mean I was buying bitcoin was four hundred bucks.

Speaker 6 (30:51):
You know.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Now it's trading into a little over seventy thousand dollars.
And even even though you have the evidence, it's still like, oh,
that's not good. That's not good.

Speaker 4 (30:59):
AI.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
I use AI every single day to write proposals to
change things. I mean, to write copy, adjust copy. I mean,
these are technologies that could save tons of time. Think
about the county. These county workers. Every day they do
these monotonous tasks that are boring. Why not get them
out of that kind of stuff. Incorporate something it's going

(31:20):
to save them time, make their jobs more efficient, and
make them happier.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Well sounds like a good idea to me. So this
is the type of technology that you could bring to
Hamilton County as a commissioner. Yeah, money saving, time saving technology.

Speaker 4 (31:36):
Make make the workers happy.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
I mean, my mom worked at the IRS, that sweatshop
they had over their college for years. Hated it, right,
pushing paper all day. I mean this was obviously the
eighties and nineties. But these government workers, I mean their jobs,
they are just the same thing over and over again.
I imagine that life coming in every single day, Like,
you can't have an efficient county, and you can't find

(31:58):
savings if your worker are miserable every day they hate
coming into their jobs.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
That creates great inefficiency.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
Great inefficiency, and we have to fix that. I bet
you if we just fix that and we have happier
workers at the county that are doing things that they
like to do that they actually thought they'd be doing
when they came and worked at that job, I bet
you we can find money savings just right there.

Speaker 1 (32:17):
All right, one more time with Adam Kaylor again, Adam
Kayler dot com. Time to take a break at seven
forty five right now and remind you that medical imaging
can in fact be affordable. I mean you won't find
affordability at the hospital imaging department where they'll charge of
I don't know, probably no less than two thousand dollars
for any given image, whether it's an MRI, CT scan,
echo cardiogram, ultrasound, lung scoring, lung screening rather cardiac scoring,

(32:42):
all of these images are done at affordable imaging services
at a mere fraction. So an MRI at the hospital
thirty five hundred dollars separate bill for the board certified
radiologist report which your doctor will need. That's where the
interpretation comes from. You get a separate bill for that.
So maybe you're out of pocket four thousand dollars, or
you have to pay a sizeable fraction of that because

(33:02):
maybe you haven't exhausted, you're out of pocket, liability, you
have a co pay, whatever the case may be. I
bet you're out of pocket. It's going to be more
expensive than the entire MRI, which is four hundred and
ninety five bucks. You need a contrast, it's going to
be a little bit more, but everything comes with a
board certified radiologist report CT scan five grand at a
hospital four fifty. I had my last CT scan at

(33:23):
Affordable Imaging Services where the overhead is extraordinarily low. I'm
not going to tell you anything different, but it's the
same equipment. It's smart people who've been at this for
like forty years doing the imaging. Did my doctor look
at the image and say this isn't good or not understand?
The radiologist sport No, it was all fine. I told
her ahead of time I wasn't going to go to
the imaging department at the hospital. She said fine, And

(33:44):
everything turned out great, including my bottom line, which was
vastly improved over what I would abaate at the imaging department,
So don't do that. You have a choice when it
comes to your medical care. You can go to Affordable
Imaging Services for your imaging and save heap loads of
money five one three seven, five three eight thousand in
five one three seventy five three eight thousand and tell them,
Brian said, how can you get in touch with them?

(34:04):
Go online check it all out Affordable Medimaging dot.

Speaker 5 (34:08):
Com, fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Here's your weather forecast and channel nine sunny day to
day with the highest sixty one down to thirty five
overnight clear skies, sunny Tomorrow sixty five overnight partly fotty
with a low forty four. Sunday is going to be
a partly sunny day, said, chance of showers is on there.
Seventy two is going to be died right now forty
five degrees. Time for traffic update Chuck.

Speaker 6 (34:34):
From the UC Health Traffic Center found on the expert
team at you see Health Orphoenix in sports medicine, no
matter the injury, same thing, appointments are available schedule.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
Online at do seehealth dot com.

Speaker 6 (34:44):
North and southbound four to seventy one shut down due
to problems underneath the bridge, and there has to be
an inspection before any lanes can reopen. They've mocked off
northbound four seventy one at two seventy five, and that
is slowing traffic over to the double A high by
way north pound seventy five now up to a twenty
minute delay between Buttermilk and downtown. Chatt Fingermant fifty five

(35:06):
KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
Seven fifty here fifty five KRC detalk station grabbing up
this hour with one more SEGM with Adam kahl Or
last opportunity to speak to they five KRC morning show
listeners in advance a Tuesday. And I think he's making
a good case across the board for his understanding of
matters political. Obviously, he is a broad level of intelligence
when it comes to, you know, things technical like cryptocurrency,

(35:32):
and even figured out a way that the city of
Cincinnati could make heaploads of money using their solar panels
to just mine crypto. And I thought, I don't know
that they can engage in private money making enterprises like that,
but he said, you really literally could make money if
you harness that electricity source and applied it solely to
mining crypto, and I don't want to go down a

(35:54):
whole road on that because to me, that whole thing,
that mining aspect, is like the peace of God. It
passes all human understanding. But you get the last final
words here, Adam. Let my listeners know why it's important
to vote for you. And maybe you know you got
a pet project you plan on kicking off once you're elected.
Let us know about it. Well.

Speaker 2 (36:10):
The big thing is is I'd love to audit the county.
I'd love to find out exactly where all of our
money's going. I'd love for taxpayers to be able to
go on log in see a pie chart of every
bit of tax are Say you paid you know, ten
thousand dollars in taxes last year. I want to see
a pie chart, and I want to see a breakdown
of where what every department got of my ten thousand dollars.

(36:33):
Then I want to be able to click into each
one of those and I want to be able to
find out what that department does. But more importantly, I
want to find out if they're hitting their goals. Do
they even have goals? Does the park system have goals?
Does the Sheriff's department have goals? What are your goals?
Are we going to set goals that say, hey, figure
out how to save us ten percent more money this

(36:54):
year that we can reallocate into something else that's going to.

Speaker 4 (36:59):
Right go Ina.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
I love that because going back to your efficiency and
your happy worker, you are more productive kind of concept.
We do have a tendency to just say, oh, we
love the parks, let's go vote for the levee. We
don't know what's happening. We can see that, you know,
I guess they're well maintained or everything. But is there
a can you have the same level of maintenance and
upkey for less money?

Speaker 4 (37:21):
Are they sure you can?

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Be's the price? I know, well, it's government, of course
there is.

Speaker 4 (37:25):
I mean in business, you you're always trying to say happen.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
You have to, right, because you've got to make your
money as opposed to take it from someone.

Speaker 2 (37:32):
Yeah, I need to hire more people, So why am
I wasting money in this category? Because more people are
going to produce more things for me. Right, So in
the county, you've got the same issue. It's it's let's
use the sign thing. For example, eleven thousand dollars for
five or six signs and you go look at those
chintzy signs. I mean, there's no way that should cost
eleven thousand dollars. Why is that eleven thousand dollars? Those

(37:55):
are the types of things that people that are in
power just kind of let it go. Well, it's a government,
it should cost a lot of money. Like it's crazy
because you've got people grifting off of that.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
Or if I'm connected with someone in government and I
happen to be a sign maker, you know, maybe they're
gonna call me. I didn't solicit him necessarily, but like, oh,
I know, Brian, he makes signs. Let me just give
him a ring and see what it's gonna cost. And
in my head, I'm going, they don't care how much
it costs. It's government. They get the money from the taxpayers.
Eleven thousand, Sure you got the contract. Let's move on, Brian.

(38:26):
My four foot by foot signs cost me sixty bucks.
Sixty bucks.

Speaker 2 (38:31):
They're bigger than the signs that they put out there
and in their core plast and they're not going anywhere.
He just you know, it would have been four hundred
bucks to print up six of those signs.

Speaker 1 (38:39):
But see just one small item in a vastly larger
pile of money, and multiple individual areas within the government
entity that's Hamilton County, like the parks and like the sewers,
and you know, all of these. I am certain if
you did a full audit of them, if you've had
a you know, entity, come out and do a walk

(39:01):
through of their practices and come up with greater efficiencies.
I mean, there are companies out there that do that
exact kind of thing I need to advertise for Lean Arrow.
I mean business consultants. They look at your you know, practices,
and they find areas where you have inefficiencies, and they
create new processes for them that can be done in government.
The only problem is that usually results in, well, you
know what, we really don't need the extra ten people

(39:22):
that we got here. We're going to have to let
them go because they're not doing anything. Well, that's what
the government loves. Well, Democrats love bigger government because then
they've got people tied their careers are tied to voting Democrat. Yep,
you haven't the city, you haven't the county. But you know,
people always say, oh, well, you know, I want to
vote for the nice person.

Speaker 2 (39:40):
I want to get them. No, we don't need nice people.
We need boodogs. We need people that are not afraid
to say no to some of this stuff. And right
now you got you know, you got rubber stamps. That's
what we got.

Speaker 1 (39:50):
Well, at least as far as we can tell, because
not a whole lot of information coming out of the
Commissioner's office. No, where's your money going? Guys? Amen Adam
Kalor dot com he's a good man. I think you
should vote from That's my opinion. Anyway. I know who's
getting my vote when it comes to election day, and
Adam is the man as well as bottom of the hour,
next hour, Jonathan Pearson, he's running for county commissioner. We'll

(40:11):
hear from him in studio. Sandwiched in between, we're going
to give some love to the American veteran thanks to Matt, Damaris,
Vets and Bruce. We got another bus tour coming up
and more information about that. It's an outstanding organization and
Matt's a really good guy. He'll be on after the news.
I sure hope you can stick around your voice. I
drive around and talk to a lot of people your vote,
trying to do my part to get Donald D. Trump

(40:32):
reelected on fifty five KR, the talk station

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.