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December 6, 2024 • 42 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
Seven o six at fifty five KRSD talk station and
Brian Thomas here with in studio, which is a great
thing because I certainly enjoy talking to folks face to face.
Adam Keller, you may recall he ran for Hamilon County
Commission and, of course, along with every other single human
being who ran on a conservative platform, went down in flames.
What the hell happened to Hamilton County? The Hamilton County
that I grew up in and knew and used to

(00:35):
love has become this bastion of blue nonsense. Adam Keyler,
welcome back to the fifty five KRC Morning Show to
solve our problems.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Thank you, my American loving friend, Brian Thomas.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
I really love freedom and America, at least the concept
of freedom that once existed in this great land of ours,
only to be completely upended by idiots that we elect
into public office. And somebody had called earlier to complain about, oh,
the Hemmelon kind of Republican party or their the Republican
Party at large in the state doesn't fund they don't
back their candidates, And I said, wait a second, look

(01:06):
at Melissa Powers signs everywhere a demonstrably awesome career, all
the accomplishments that you can document. Look what she actually did. Yeah,
she had a well oiled campaign. She was she was
willing to talk to anybody. Where was who is Connie Pilach?

(01:27):
And where now?

Speaker 3 (01:28):
Was she?

Speaker 1 (01:28):
The whole time? Not a dime I didn't. I saw
like three signs. You know, I'm obviously exaggerating to a
certain degree. But she wasn't out there doing town hall.
She wasn't debating Melissa Powers she had. She kept her
mouth shut and in her home and with the door
closed up until the very last minute, and then maybe
made a few statements, ended up walking away with it.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
That's that's how my opponent did it toomanly. But you know,
a Denise street House, great name recognition. Republicans on the
West Side still vote for her, which we got to
stop doing that. But you've also got Connie Pilach on
the other end of that, so Denise tree House, everybody
knows the Dreehouse name right on the other end of
that pillage hasn't prosecuted a case since the crack epidemic.

(02:11):
People just don't do their research on some of these candidates.
And we had a great slate I would say, I
mean I met most of the Republican candidates, and Chris
Lips he had signs everywhere. How does he not win?
I mean he worked harder than any candidate. I'd argue
he probably worked harder than Powers and everybody else. And

(02:32):
he's out there at everything. He's standing on corners, he's
got his signs. You go over the west side, his
signs are everywhere, and somehow he loses. It's just crazy
to me that this is happening. But Democrats have built
their little they're hunkered down in the cities right now,
they're hunkered down in the county. We have them surrounded.
I mean, on a positive note, we won all three

(02:53):
branches of government. The MAGA movement is what, from what
I can tell, is just somebody who likes to connect
the It's an entrepreneurial movement. It's a movement of former Democrats,
even people that they're sick of big government. They see
the problem, they're sick of politicians in a traditional sense.

(03:13):
You've got guys like Elon Veck, Joe Rogan, all probably
former Democrats. I don't know about Vek, but the other
two Trump, Donald Trump, former Democrat Taulcy Gabbard, former Democrat.
We've got a Kennedy in the Maga Maha movement. Now
it is becoming the party of common sense. There are
and I almost feel like the Maga Party is kind

(03:35):
of in a way a third party.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Now.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yeah, we couldn't get a third party built up from
scratching to get people to vote for it. So it
almost went through the Republican Party. And you're you're adopting
new people, You're adopting Fetterman, for God's sake, in Pennsylvania's
making sense now all the time.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
I can't believe that, And you're right, and I'm you know,
I almost part of these wants to be reluctant to
acknowledge the he does make sense now because he's always
proven him himself to be such a moron. Oh oh
my gosh. I mean even he can't abide. That's I mean,
he's reached the point where he can't abide. And dare
I say out loud, I mean my dream all along,

(04:14):
I mean I ended up my eighteenth year radio here
this month. My dream has always been that the Republican
Party would wake the hell up and become more a
libertarian party, which it started took the MAGA movement seems
to be less government intrusion, pairing back the reach and
the scope. And you know, as I read this morning

(04:36):
on Kimberly Strassel's brilliant article, doge mission is the opposite
of mission creep, she points out. And I've been screaming
out loud for years, but most recently in light of
this mission to doge to Paaraback government. You know, Republicans
have their own little fiefdoms. If it's a stupid project,
but it's in a Republican state, they'll do everything they

(04:56):
can defend it. I love Thomas Massey. I love him.
And I mentioned him about being maybe the agricultural secretary,
and he's on the program, and I said, maybe if
you were secretary of Agriculture, we can get rid of
the stupid idea of put in ethanol in a day
on gas tanks. He didn't agree with me, he didn't
staunchly defend it, but he did say something to the

(05:19):
effect in a passing way, and then moved onto a
different subject matter, something about well, you know, there's a
lot of farmers that really get a lot of benefit
out of that. I mean, I don't know. Again, I
don't want to put words in this about the podcast
is right there on my blog page. You got to
go back a little bit, but it's there. Yeah, but
that mentality, the idea that you know, the predicate for

(05:41):
us burning food in our gas tank is this global
warming nonsense. We've got an unlimited supply of available petroleum products,
and we can refine gasoline to meet our domestic needs.
We don't need corn in our gas tanks. Well but
the farmer, Yeah, well, now don't give me that crap.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
Well, it's awesome to me too, because I mean, and
you know what the repercussions are of when she either
we need fossil fuels. It's just what it is right now.
I mean, there is no better alternative right now. And
you saw what happened when Biden came in and he
wanted to appease the mob. What did he do?

Speaker 1 (06:16):
Tap the strategic petroleum oil reserve?

Speaker 2 (06:19):
Yep, and then we ran out of oil. And Trump
before that had mentioned purchasing getting more oil at what
twenty or forty dollars a barrel? And then Biden ends
up buying it back of what one hundred dollars a
barrel or ninety dollars a barrel or something like that.
So it's just it's wasteful spending. It's a lack of vision.
And you see this with the Democrats. And you know what,
I love, Brian. You got Ron Paul. Ron Paul is

(06:41):
going to see his day finally after all these years.
Now you got him in this whole Doge movement. And
Doge is a cryptocurrency. I don't know if you guys
know that, but the whole Doge thing, I think is
named after the fact that you know, which is kind
of a you know, cryptocurrency in general, and bitcoin everything.
I've been telling people about it for years and it
just hit one hundred thousand dollars. I could not believe
that libertarian thing, right, because what happens with money over time,

(07:04):
the supply of money increases, Right. You got fixed asset
like a bitcoin, which has twenty one million bitcoin that
will ever exist, and there's only nineteen million something of
them that exists right now. But the idea is is
that the reason bitcoin's price goes up over time is
because it's not the bitcoin's gaining value, it's that the
dollar is losing values. So now you need more dollars
inflationary dollars to pay for something that is consistent as

(07:28):
a consistent supply. And that's why you want to own
assets and things like that. And this is the point
I want to bring up is Republicans. This whole movement
has become this entrepreneurial movement, and I think in Hamilton
County the Republican voice has been suppressed the media, even
the business career since they inquire these publications. Most of

(07:51):
the articles you read, they're written by progressives. Yes they
are not just Democrats, progressive democrats. And you see this
stuff all the time. I mean you saw it on
Twitter before Trump or before Elon took over Twitter. What
we need to do and one of the things I
want to help with is marketing. This is what I do.
I own an ad agency, and after running a couple campaigns,

(08:12):
I'm starting to see where the where the problems are,
where the gaps are. The Democrats have been telling our
story for us in the cities in Hamilton County. There's
this idea. And as a former Democrat, I used to
believe this too, because that's what I was told. I
was told in schools. Who runs the schools? The Democrats,
they're in doctrination camps. But then after that, now you've

(08:35):
got DEI programs, ESG programs in the companies and all
these big companies in Cincinnati that people come and work at.
Then they're indoctrinated in these companies. Right, So where do
where's our voice coming from?

Speaker 1 (08:48):
Who?

Speaker 2 (08:48):
How are we getting to the people of Hamilton County
and Cincinnati? There is no voice, right So I built
a website, the Cincinnati Exchange dot com. It's just kind
of a demo right now. But the ideas is to
bring on people, volunteers, folks that I've met while campaigning,
and bring them on and have them write for us.
Have guys like Todd Zinzer, former US Inspector General, who

(09:11):
writes for The Inquirer all the time. Op Ed's right.
That guy will investigate everything. He's brilliant, Oh, unbelievable, and
he tells the truth, Yes he does. I mean, look
at this bridge situation we got going on right now.
All we can do is speculate that was that was Halloween.
It takes this long to investigate what happened. Most people

(09:31):
know probably what happened, right, And and you've got all
this speculation somebody actually got on my Twitter the other day.
It was like, uh with fourteen followers, by the way,
a new account, right, Uh, what's speculation gonna do? What's
gonna help? I'm like, why do you want me to
shut up? Is that what you want? Who sent you here?

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Right?

Speaker 2 (09:49):
Because I mean that's what it is. The powers that be,
they know they're guilty of this stuff, and they want
to get rid of qualified immunity for police officer. Well,
what about qualified immunity for these politicians that we.

Speaker 1 (09:59):
Oh, oh, it's a nerve on that one.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
What about that?

Speaker 1 (10:03):
Let's pause. We'll bring Ton to He'll be in the
studio the entire hour here Adam Keller, and we're gonna
identify more areas where perhaps we can make some inroads
in spite of the fact that Hamilton County has gone
completely blue. Seven sixteen fifty five KRC detalk station. Let
me save you money, and we're talking real, genuine, fat money.
That is, if you think three thousand dollars, for example,

(10:24):
is a giant chunk of money, I personally will always
believe that's a lot of money. And if I can
save that much, I'm gonna take that into consideration. For example,
with medical imaging MRI, CT scans, echo cartogram's, ultrasounds, lung screenings,
and cardiac scorings, you will pay literally thousands of dollars
and your insurance company may at the hospital imaging department
cover some of this. What you're out of pocket gonna

(10:45):
be what's your percentage your copay and how many bills
will you get from the hospital. One for the MRI,
two for the contrast, three separate one for the board
certified radiologists report everything. One price, and that is affordable
imaging services, where an MRI without a contrast is only
four hundred and ninety five bucks. Compare that to the
hospital work could be thirty five hundred at a contrast,

(11:08):
at affordable imaging it's six hundred and forty five bucks.
Small increase in price in that contrast could probably cost
you more than the entire scan with a contrast. When
you're going to affordable imaging services, maybe a little bit
out of the way for you, and don't expect a
lot of bells and whistles. It's low overhead, but the
same hospital type equipment is used. The CT scans, the MRIs,
et cetera. Professionals have been doing this for decades, and

(11:30):
you get a board certified radiologist report you and your
doctor within forty eight hours of the imaging. And it's
all at unbelievably low prices. So get in touch with me.
You have a choice when it comes to your medical care.
Ask the imaging department at the hospital what it's going
to cost you out of pocket and then go wow,
let me call that number. Thomas gave me five one
three seven five three eight thousand, five one three seven,

(11:51):
five three eight thousand. Check them out online. Go ahead,
It's affordable Medimaging dot.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
Com, fifty five car the talk station ready.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Tip of the nine first one one forecast part of
plenty of sunshine today, we're going to say partly that
word is plenty high a thirty four overnight down to
nineteen clear skies, forty two Tomorrow's high sunny skies, thirty
overnight with partly cloudy skies. Then we get to partly
cloudy Sunday with a chance rain showing up after one pm,
going up to fifty two degrees. Right now, it's sixteen.

Speaker 4 (12:25):
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(12:45):
in and around in Cincinnati.

Speaker 5 (12:47):
Traffic volumes, though, are.

Speaker 4 (12:48):
Building and of course you may find some on and
off slowdowns for seventy one southbounds flock to the Big
Mack Bridge. I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC to talk.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
Station set Drive Carencity Talk Station lively on and off
air conversation between Adam Kayler is in studio and me
and Brian Thomas as to the Drive Carecy morning show course.
Adam had an unsuccessful campaign for Hamilton County Commissioner, but
he's run a couple of campaigns. He's seen the warts

(13:17):
and the problems, and he knows what we're dealing with
here in Hamilton County. And I think these problems transcend
Hamilton County. So if you're not in Hamilton County, you're
going why do I care about this? It's a problem
that's going on tround This entire country is Outam pointed
out in the last segment, these enclaves of Democrats like
in the city of Cincinnati, have an overwhelming impact on

(13:37):
broader areas. But the question is what we can do
about it, and throwing money at it isn't always necessarily
the answer. We need coordination. We need to have a more,
a better, more well oiled machine. And the question is
what does that machine look like and how does it

(13:57):
bring about positive change? And what you when I would
call positive changes. Of course, this broader concept of less
government completely across the board.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Oh yeah, I'd love that. But here locally in Himill County,
I could go over some basic tactics, like I mean,
one thing is you know, having a voice, having somewhere
where the Republican voice can be heard, and that's one
of the reasons I put the Cincinnati Exchange website up.
Then on top of that pairing that was something like
a podcast, like a conservative podcast that we can put
on the website. And me personally, I'm just gonna throw

(14:30):
some money at it. I'll put my SEO team on it.
We'll get some good on page search going hopefully boost
that in the rankings. So people outside of my group
and the people your listeners can actually go to the website,
dig in and find information.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
Well real quick on that point, because I'm certain there's
someone out there going, eyes rolling, going, ah jeez, another podcast.
There are literally hundreds of thousands of them. And how
does you know in at Blue City, how are you
going to elevate that conservative message to get people to
actually listen to it even though it's out there? Because
I know where you can go, and I know where
I go and can go. There are places where conservative

(15:07):
messages is spelled out and very very done, very well.
But you're here in Hamilton County. So the answer to
that question is again.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
Aggregate it all, right, We need to be aggregating things
in one place. It needs to be easy for people
to find a lot of that information, right, and it
doesn't have to be a competition. Right. This could be hey,
whatever's good, whatever, people like, come on and talk about it, right.
I mean, they've got the Cincinnati a Facebook page. Since
Saint Politics Facebook's page. I mean, it is a cesspool
of Democrats and they make you absolutely no sense.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
When you go on to some of the comments.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
It's just it's just crazy, I know. So we need
a space and that's one thing. Then on top of that,
what I want to do is we build a lot
of WordPress websites. So what I want to do is
build a WordPress multi site, a new site for the
Hamilton County GOP. And what a word Press multi site
allows you to do is take that website, spin out
other websites. As long as you got based on the server,

(16:00):
which we do, you could always pop new sites up
for these candidates. One of the things is is candidates
they struggle to find resources. So you may not be
able to raise a bunch of money. But what we
can do is help you save money. So instead of
going out and paying five ten thousand dollars for a website,
you go to the GOP. We have a tool available
to you spin out a website right, pop you up

(16:21):
a new website. You go in there, change your content,
add your logo, do whatever you want. And I would
voluntarily offer my services to candidates, and I did this
whole entire election cycle. Give you a new logo, help
you design out your banners, help you design your yard signs,
help you design postcards. I help Mary Hill, I help
Jonathan Peerson. I did it for myself. There's a couple
other candidates we helped out, but all of those resources

(16:44):
right now, you struggle when you're a candidate to find
everyone costs money? What printer should I use? Where's the
cheapest place to get signs? Where should I do postcards?
At all? That information needs to be consolidated and aggregated
together in one place. And what about raising money? Why
can't they sell swag on their websites? Right we could

(17:04):
have a store so that their friends, their supporters can
easily go on their website, order some swag, donate to
their campaign. Another thing we could do with these websites
is we could give every Republican club in Cincinnati a
brand new website. They could all be branded consistently. Can
and I'm actually doing this for west Side Jim Jim Keefer,
if anybody knows him, I'm piloting this with his club

(17:26):
right now. I redid their logo. We're gonna work with
them on building out a new website. And then instead
of his little ten dollars, he might be charging people
to be part of the group, maybe charges them one
hundred bucks, but it comes with a T shirt, a mug,
maybe a hat or something like that, which we can
get super cheap, and then all the profits go into
a pool that ends up supporting candidates.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Yeah, sounds like you've thought it out a lot. And
again over to campaigns. I'm certain that these ideas are
all stellar and you face these uphill challenges and again
going back to the early A Color earlier talking about
well that Hamilton County GOP or the GOP just doesn't
support meaning money the candidates. Well maybe, but do we

(18:10):
have to look to just them to have that accomplished?
And the answer is clearly no. Independent individuals like yourself
creating these opportunities and greasing the skids and making it
so much easier for any given candidate that we support
to help their campaign. I love the concept. We'll continue
with Adam Keayler seven twenty six fifty out Care CD
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Tomorrow a sunny day with a high of forty two

(20:21):
thirty degrees overnight with partly cloudy skies and a partly
cloudy Sunday chance rain showing up after one rainy night
as well. Sundays high is going to be fifty two.
It's sixteen right now.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
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It's pretty quiet on your main roads and freeways for
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one at Casino. They're looking good either way. I'm Heather
Pasco on fifty five KRC, the talk station.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
Seven thirty one fifty five KRE City Talks Station by Thomas.
When Adam Caller in studio talking in politics, a better way,
a better path for getting perhaps say a wiser, more
conservative Dare I even say a little libertarian message out there?
Government is broke? The city of Cincinnati is I think
we can say literally broke. I mean we talk about
Todd Zinder pension program alone, six hundred and ninety million

(21:26):
dollars unfunded or underfunded. They want to try to pass
it off to o pers which I'm thinking about if
I'm in Columbus. I'm laughing even at the idea if
they got themselves enough money back into the pension program
that would qualify them for even consideration. If I'm a
representative in Columbus. I got one finger raised, and you

(21:47):
know which one it is. I got two words for him,
and it ain't happy Birthday. You dug this hole. You
dig yourself out of it. But this is what liberal
government does. They keep throwing money. It's stupid things like
street cars, and they don't pay attention to the roads.
They've got the infrastructure that they're supposed to be taken
care of, the stuff that they're already responsible for. And
they hardly have enough money, if if they even have

(22:10):
enough money to deal with that. So none of it
makes sense. And yet when you try to telegraph that
message out, for example, on social media, which you and
I've been talking about, you are immediately just inundated with
all of this anger and vile and and and if
you're like me, it's like, screw it. I'm not even

(22:31):
gonna get engaged. I don't do social media for that reason. Listen,
I do it for a living here for four hours
a day.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
You got a job, Brian. These people are unemployed.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
And I know that. And I have no idea whatsoever
what people out in the world say about Brian Thomas.
You know why. I don't look but I but why
would I want to throw myself into that. Like that
Cincinnati politics site you mentioned earlier, I've seen the posts
on Facebook from them. They're crazy.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
They're crazy people.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
I could write a book in response to this stupidity
comes out on there, and I could post it. I
could have facts and footnotes and a bibliography citing you know,
research studies and you know prior history and all of
that to defeat and refute any stupid thing that they're saying.
And they wouldn't listen to it all, and they would
just pile on and call me names, and I'd be like,

(23:16):
this isn't worth my time. So how do you overcome that?
If Brian Thomas can't be convinced to get in there
and make his point, how can we get other people
to actually engage to overwhelm their seemingly overwhelming.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Unified Well, they pile on as so as soon as
the conservative comes on there, they send a message, they
send a message out to all their people, and next thing,
you know, all of their friends who are socialists that
don't work, have nothing better to do, they get on
and then they'll pile on. And the problem is with that,
they seem like they're right, They seem right well their
own echo chamber, and other people that come on there

(23:53):
they look at that and they assume that that narrative
is correct because more people did it right, Like, if
a bunch of people start buying bitcoin today, right, you think, oh,
well the masses like this, people go along with the masses, right,
They don't. They don't. They're not really contrary in most cases,
which is a lot of times what you should be. Right.
If PNG stocks down today, it's probably going to be
up later on. But nobody wants to buy it when

(24:14):
it's low. They want to buy it when it's high, right,
Buy high, sell low is what a lot of people do.
So and you just came up with a business idea.
By the way, you need to go on the Sinsai
politics page, take screenshots of all their things and write
a book. Call it Stupid Things Progressive Say and just
it's just a book of quotes. It would be a
best seller.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
Brian Peter Bronson, are you out there, Peter Broun's and
Chili Dog Press? That's you know what somebody out there
will do that? And I go ahead, knock yourself out.
It's a million I don't know if it's a million
dollar idea or whether you actually ultimately be profitable one,
but it sure would be funny. A condensed one stop

(24:53):
shop to look at all of the inane comments written
by folks on that one single website brilliant, insane them.
You might want to take on that these.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
Are insane people, But I mean one problem is is
we need a unified effort.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Right.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
They have a unified effort, certainly, and that's the point.
And that one thing on social media just illustrates the
coordination they have and the with the DNC and with
Democrats and progressives in Cincinnati. If you think about it,
their jobs are on the line. A lot of these
people work in the government. They if they have jobs, right,
the either work in the government or on the dole. Right,
that's who a lot of city Democrats and city progressives are.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
Right, a vested interest in the system. Right.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
We're entrepreneurs. If we say something on Facebook, it could
affect our businesses, right, So they know that. And these
people they have nothing to lose, so they get on
there and talk all kinds of crazy stuff and nobody
holds them accountable because half of them don't work, right,
So I mean, this is the truth. So I mean
what we need to do is we need to get
our message out there, particularly to young people. Right, what

(25:53):
do democrats offer? They offer, you know, basic living for
people who can't figure out life. Essentially, that's who their
target market is.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
You mean, products of a public education system that's completely broken.
It does not teach children to you to meet minimum
standards of education at any given level, and then churned
out into society supposed to be left to their own
devices to make a living when they can't because they
lack the function and this basic knowledge base to live,
thrive and survive on their own. Oh look, gee, hey,

(26:26):
we've found the problem in the system.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
Poor.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
We're gonna talk more with Adam Keayler after I mention
foreign Exchange Westchester location is the foreign exchange location. I
will strongly recommend Austin and his ASE certified Master technicians
taking care of your imported you know, traditionally imported cars,
whether it's from Europe or Asia, giving you a full
warranty on parts and service for everything that they do
for you, and you not paying nearly as much as

(26:49):
you'd pay it. The deal, or the bottom line, as
I like to point out, always is the bottom line.
It's saving you money. Why would you pay more? I
don't understand, and you probably I don't know what your
personal dealership customer service like at your dealership's service department.
But I know you're gonna be treated very very well

(27:09):
at Foreign Exchange, like family folks up there, their smiles
and they're accommodating, and you need a rental. That got
one there for you, So call them up and schedule
your appointment. Tylersville exit off seventy five. Head east. When
you're on seventy five Tylersville Exit east, two streets, hang
a right on Kinglin and you'll run right into Foreign
Exchange Westchester location. And please give them my regards when

(27:30):
you do. Also when you give them a call to
schedule the appointment. It's five one three six four four
twenty six twenty six five one three six four four
twenty six twenty six online Foreign X form, the letter X.

Speaker 3 (27:40):
Dot com, fifty five KRC the talk station home values
in city or.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
There is your nine first warning weather forecast. Sun signed
today with a high thirty Ford and then nineteen overnight
clar skuys forty two are high tomorrow again. Sunny clouds
roll in over a Saturday night, driving to thirty two.
It's going to go up to fifty two on Sunday,
but you're gonna have to deal with clouds. And at
chance of rain after one pm fifteen degrees right now.
Traffic time from.

Speaker 5 (28:09):
The UC Health Traffic Center.

Speaker 4 (28:10):
U see Health's the weight loss center of first comprehensive
obesity care in advanced surgical expertise. Call five one three
nine three nine two two sixty three. That's nine three
nine two two sixty three.

Speaker 5 (28:21):
Traffic is a little slow.

Speaker 4 (28:23):
Seventy five southbound Galberth Road to Town Street also planned
for having slow traffic on four seventy one North found
between Grand Avenue and seventy one.

Speaker 5 (28:32):
I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Seven forty one fifty five KR City Talk Station, enjoining
our lively discussion here this morning. Adam Callern Studio. Of
course Branford County Commissioner unsuccessfully, but we are in Hamilton County,
which is the reason Madam is here. He's got a
lot of experience in the tech world and got a
lot of experience with running campaigns. He knows where the
problems in the pitfalls lie. So the idea is to
come up with a more well oiled machine to facilitate

(29:02):
any candidate running on a more conservative, logical, reasonable platform
and needs to counter this dominant, dominant, loud, angry, left
wing narrative, and anybody of logic and reason can step
back from and look at the aftermath of their policies.
I mean, we're just talking about the pension system, that

(29:23):
the roads, the infrastructure of the city of Cincinnati is
literally falling apart. But who's been running it now for
the last forty years? Yeah, you have to go back
to Ken Blackwell for the last Republican mayor. I mean,
I can't remember, but that's been decades, that's right. Yeah,
and it's only gotten worse over time.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
And I just Cincinnati has become just nobody thinks about
Cincinnati around the country. I mean I go, I travel
a lot of places, and you know, they think they
think we're in Iowa half the time. Right, they don't
even know Ohio. They don't even know where ohioa is, right,
And I think they confuse us with Cleveland. Please don't
confuse us with Cleveland, for God's say, Really, but I mean,

(30:01):
what's happened in Cleveland, and what's happened in a lot
of these ultra progressive cities is start going to start
happening here. I mean, we have a Democrat monopoly in
this city. And what do Democrats offer the average person? Nothing,
nothing at all nothing. These are politicians. These people haven't
been successful in their lives. And if you look at
people like Elon, if you look at people like Vivek Ramaswami,

(30:21):
if you look at people like Joe Rogan, the Democrats
hate them because they're successful, because they offer society something
that the Democrats can't offer. What the Democrats are good
at is thievery. They're good at stealing from you and
I from regular citizens, the class warfare thing they're good
at at digging into people's anger. Right, Yes, I'm not

(30:45):
successful at life, So instead of blaming myself and my
own decisions, I can blame Vivek Ramaswami and Elon Musk
and these other successful people that are hoarding all the money.
But what people don't understand is Molle, he's not finite.
They're printing money every single day, and even if it
was finite, it exchanges hands an infinite amount of times.

(31:07):
They just found a way to create more value than
you did. You create zero values sitting in your mom's
basement playing video games every day, getting drunk and smoking weed.
That's just not productive. But Democrats have found a way
to turn those people into victims and find these little groups,
these little voter bases that they can dig in and
get those emotions. But what Republicans are good at are

(31:28):
building businesses, are networking. We know a lot of people.
Why aren't we reaching out to the young Republicans in
at University of Cincinnati.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
Well, isn't the answer to it as simple as well,
it's just easier to hook myself up to the abilical
court of government than have to act supply myself.

Speaker 2 (31:47):
That's right, that's right. But I wouldn't be in college
getting indoctrinated by the Democratic Party into Marxism if I
wasn't looking for a job. The problem is a majority
of these students are going to school for nonsense degrees
underwater basket weaving. What are you going to do with that? Well,
you know what you're going to do with that. One
of the Democrats who's on on on, you know, they
went for the school for the same thing. They're going

(32:07):
to create a program or you're going to come and
create a nonprofit and they're going to find a way to
fund that with the extra money they have. Right, the
Todds ends a wrote about it. They've got all this
extra money, what'd they do with it? Did they put
it in a pinch of program? No? Did they? Did
they figure out a way to get these homeless people
off the streets and out of these tents and potentially
burning down our bridges? No, they didn't do that.

Speaker 5 (32:26):
What did they do?

Speaker 2 (32:27):
They gave it to their friends. They're friends who went
to school for nonsense degrees. DEI is just a way
to give people who job get it, It's just a
way to get them a job.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
It's a fake market.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
You're creating cancer in your company.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
Well, and I think that's the dirty secret of government.
I've joked about that for years and years. You have
mister Smith goes to Washington, bright eyed, well you know, bushytailed,
optimistic that I'm going to go there to fix things
and I'm gonna I'm going to solve these problems. And
they take you into the back room and close the
door and they say you know that, No you're not.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
That's why you got to tear it down.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
We are here to create fake economies. For example, next year,
we're gonna rull out this thing. We're gonna call DEI
and all those people that went to college to get
degrees and in social fill in the blank, that don't
have a job. We're going to create opportunities for them.
And every company in the planet is going to then
have to have its own DEI department. They're gonna have

(33:20):
to hire them, and then those people will end up
having jobs and paying taxes from their salaries to help
fund this nonsense that we create fake economies. I swear,
I think that's where the whole idea of of of
climate change came from. Yeah, we need to we need
to create fake jobs. We need a green economy. Why
are the regular economies? Were can fine? Because you're exhaling

(33:43):
us into oblivion. That's right, gonna die, yep. So welcome
to a brand new market plea.

Speaker 2 (33:47):
That's what it is. And I think there are plenty
of students that go to UC and I actually mentor
some students there at the Lenner School, and those kids
actually want real jobs, They want to create companies. They
want to be the future entrepreneurs of America. Well, where's
the Republican Party. Where are the Republican people who are
successful with business like me, who are willing to go

(34:07):
in there and talk to these kids and be like, hey, look,
I'm a Republican. I'm a nice guy. The narrative right
now is that Republicans are these mean, old people, stodgy,
stuck in our ways. We're greedy, we don't give back.
We need to. We need to get rid of that narrative.
And that's what the Democrats say about us. I'm telling

(34:28):
you that they're thieves. That's my narrative, right And that's
the way I see it as someone who was a
former Democrat and grew up in poverty and used to
see them as my savior, and then I realized I'm
my own savior, Brian. We need to tell other people.
We need to show people by example, I'm one of you.
I was where you were. I was eating Ramen noodles, right,

(34:50):
I was eating cereal water. You know, I was drinking
kool A with no sugar in it, right, and now
here I am. I could do whatever I want. Honestly,
I could run campaigns and then I'm probably gonna lose.
But it doesn't matter if I was go back to
winning a life, but.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
At least you get your message out while you're doing that.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
I need a platform that's right well.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
And that's fundamentally the change that needs to be brought about,
which you're helping to facilitate, and we're hoping well, works
quite well. We'll bring out them back for a few
more minutes. Here, take a break right now. Mention my
friends at Zimmer Heating and air Conditioning, and right now
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Zimmer Heating and air Conditioning, get that system replaced. Save
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(36:12):
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Speaker 5 (36:26):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (36:30):
Channel nine says, today's going to be a sunny day.
Got that going for you? Thirty four degrees for a
high down a nineteen overnight with Claire sky. Sunny again
tomorrow forty two thirty overnight with some clouds. Got a
cloudy Sunday, partly anyway, rains showing up after one pm.
Fifty two for the high right now fifteen degrees and
time for.

Speaker 5 (36:47):
Traffic from the UCE Health Traffic Center.

Speaker 4 (36:50):
You see Health's Weight Loss Center offers comprehensive obesity care
and advanced surgical expertise. Call five one three nine three
nine two two sixty three. That's nine three nine two
two sixty three. Traffic slows on I seventy four eastbound
between Montana Avenue and Spring Grove Avenue.

Speaker 5 (37:07):
Also watch for traffic.

Speaker 4 (37:08):
Solving things a bit on seventy five northbound Bottomill Pike
two twelfth Street. I'm Heather Pasco in fifty five krc
the talk station.

Speaker 1 (37:18):
Seven fifty two here fifty five KERRCD Talk Station. I
feel like we barely scratched the surface solving problems here,
at least theoretically so with Adam Keller identifying problems and
appreciating the fact that, you know, a little tough love
might be the right direction to go with a lot
of people, not hooking them up to the umbilical court
of government for the entirety of their lives. But that's

(37:39):
how these coalitions are built, and that's how these you know,
left wing I will call them radicals take over and
they get people hooked. And once you're hooked, you're going
to continue to vote money into your pocket, which is
in essence what happened. So you've, you know, got this
mechanism to get to facilitate better candidate, get them the

(38:01):
help they need to start their campaigns, to run their campaigns,
one stop shopping. Here's all the resources we got, Here's
how to get the T shirts out there, Here's how
to get the mugs out there, the signs, and also
the message. Yeah, sadly, we got to get the message
in front of people who otherwise would not bother to

(38:22):
even look at it, and are surrounded by a well
oiled machine of constant left wing messaging.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
That's right, that's right, And you've whenever you're doing a campaign,
whenever you have a brand, all of your messaging needs
to ladder up to some sort of concept. Right, and
the concept for me, as someone who was a Democrat
grew up poor built companies, is successful and is now
a Republican. What I see the difference between the Democrat

(38:51):
and Republican parties is they are the party of dependency. Yes,
we are the party of taking your God given talents
and doing the best you possibly can in this country,
which you're in the easiest country in the world to
start a business and be successful, which is why we
got people banging down our doors to get in here.
Why are you doing nothing with your life? As Republicans,

(39:14):
I have a network. I know a lot of people.
I can connect young people to the resources that they need.
If do you need an internship, I can almost guarantee
you I can find you an internship. If it's in
business doing something, if you need a leg up, if
you need help doing something, if you need advice, I
can help you. Like I've been through it. I've started
stuff from scratch, from nothing. You need to learn how

(39:34):
to raise money. I've raised money before. So we've got
to get out there as Republicans. It's not just on
the Hamilton County GOP, It's on us. But the problem
is we're so downtrodden right now. We got decimated in
this election. So what's second Hamilton County? In Hamilton County.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
But the hope and the bright light in all of
this is that America woke up to the things that
we're talking about, at least on a national scale. And
Donald Trump and these maybe call them independent minded folks again,
this coalition that he is putting together and that we
saw coming has been so appealing to so many people.

(40:12):
I mean, I never thought i'd say I'm happy about
RFK Junior being a part of this process. I disagree
with him on a lot of topics, but you know what,
we need someone who's gonna be slap everybody in this
country about our diet and our consumption and all the
bad things that are going on in the world. We
need to focus on that. He's going to be a
great messenger for a better way of life, at least

(40:33):
in terms of one's health. That's his area. Now he's
got a bully pulpit. He doesn't have the quote unquote
baggage of being the hardcore right wing conservative demonized from
the get go. Like pick a guy like Ted Cruz
or something. There's a built in demonization. So if he
was in charge of it, I screw that guy. I'm
going to McDonald rfkjing. They might listen to him. Well,

(40:57):
the guys what sixty something years older, he's great. Yeah,
the guy's doing push ups. You know, I saw him
bench pressing.

Speaker 2 (41:04):
I'm gonna put a picture of him in my refrigerator
so when I go down there at two o'clock in
the morning, his face is right there. But I mean,
there's a lot of stuff we have to do, and
that is really becoming the big Tent Party. And I think,
you know a lot of Democrats hate trickle down economics,
but I think trickle down policy is gonna work in
our favor because I think they are going to deliver.
And I'm I'm actually positive that they're gonna deliver. And
I'm going to DC on the twentieth to go to

(41:25):
go to the inauguration and celebrate. But I think now
that we have all three branches of government, people are
gonna start seeing in this economy turn. They're gonna start
seeing things change. They're gonna see the government shrink, they're
gonna see the deficit shrink. And if we can actually
deliver on those things, it's gonna come down to Hamilton County,
which everybody knows everything comes to Cincinnati ten years late,

(41:45):
right Mark Twain's old quote. Yeah, but if that starts
to happen, we need to be in a position to
take advantage of it.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
Right now's the time to start. It has been a
real pleasure, Adam, having you in the studio. I always
enjoy our conversations. Keep up the great work. I know
you and I'll be talking again in the future about
the progress you're making on behalf of everybody in Hamilton County,
and that means everybody, because this path is a much
better one for everyone. Seventy seven five KRC Talk Station.

(42:12):
Have a happy holidays, brother, and you and your family
stick around speaking holidays, holiday wine pairings with Keegan Corcoran,
my somolier friend. He's gonna help us all out. We're
gonna have a little bit of fun at the eight
o'clock hour, which is always my pleasure to do. Be
right back there, we got again another news updates.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
We're gonna get all the facts, an ear full of
information at the top of the hour and they'll break
it down fast.

Speaker 1 (42:34):
Fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 2 (42:37):
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