Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
There's your channeline weather fore CASCO your partly thirty day
to day. Around noontime, we have the opportunity for some
isolated storms. They say to expect downpours. Today's high eighty
five down to sixty seven overnight, the rain will move out,
and they say it'll be a bit sticky overnight eighty
six to high tomorrow with partly tooty skies and the
rain predicted a few clouds over night sixty seven and
an eighty eight high on Friday with partly totty skies
(00:23):
and dry conditions sixty nine degrees.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Right now, it's time for traffic from the u See
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Speaker 3 (00:29):
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health dot com slash transplant. Highway traffic not all that
bad at the moment. I was seeing things start to
build a bit southbound seventy five through Lackland, but still
(00:49):
not a whole lot of extra time needed. Same for
northbound Forest seventy one across the bridge chuck Ingramont fifty
five KRZE Deep Talk Station.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Seven thirty on a Wednesday listener lunch Wednesday. Everybody's invited
Weedam and Brewery up to see you there, Saint Bernard
for that one. Hey, without further ado, it is this
time a week we get to talk with Americans for
Prosperities Donovan and Neil Donovan, welcome back to the morning show.
Always good talking with.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
You, Brian, Always great to be with you.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
So usually you're talking about what we need to do
and get in touch with our elected officials to tell
them to do something like, you know some program you're
working on in the state of Ohio, something to deal
with property taxes, whatever case may be. You're always got
some project that Americans for a Prosperity that you are
always encouraging folks to get engaged, you know, the one
(01:37):
step at a time program we can all get involved
in do something. But I guess when they do the
right thing, we need to let them know that we're
thankful for it.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
Well, that's right, you know, it's a mixture of caro
and a stick, if you will, Right, Brian, we've got
to Well, so we're kicking off this summer here in August. Right,
they've got what they call August district work periods.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
So all the folks in Washington.
Speaker 4 (02:01):
Leave the swamp, come back, tour to town Hall's various
events to connect with their constituents, talk about the things
we've done, and we're gonna we're capitalizing on that right
now by talking about the passage of the Trump middle
class tax cuts, the one big beautiful bill, and engaging
folks crossreets activists to thank the members like Warren Davidson
(02:24):
or David Taylor down in southwest Ohio who voted yes
to make these Trump tax cuts permanent. But also, Brian,
we're gonna be out there reminding folks who wasn't who
weren't who wasn't standing with them, Folks like Great Landsman
Marcy Captor in northwest Ohio who consistently vote no on
these pro growth policies.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Well, we got to keep Congress from Thomas Massey in there.
My listening audience loves Congressman Massey. He's a principled man.
Speaker 4 (02:48):
Donovan, Well, absolutely, I totally understand where other Matthew's coming
from and his no vote.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
That's our friends in Kentucky. Here in Ohio.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
I know, I know you got a state line to
keep you out of trouble there, Donovan. I'm just pulling
your chain a little bit because I'm a huge fan.
I get why Massy voted no, but I do admit
I think that, inspite of the fact that I hate
the name of it, the One Big Beautiful Bill does
lock in the twenty seventeen tax cuts. And what a
great thing. Loveby listening, audience, know how much money those
(03:20):
who voted in favor of the One Big Beautiful Bill
saved ohioans on an annual basis.
Speaker 4 (03:26):
Well, it's on average about fifteen hundred dollars for a
family of four making seventy five thousand dollars right, seventy
five thousand dollars family and family for fifteen hundred dollars
off your federal tax bill just by locking those rates in.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
That's meaningful, Monchy.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
It is It covers the increase, It covers the increase
to the property tax bill here at Ohio.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
Donovan, Why now you sound like somebody in Columbus just
shifting the burden around.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Thank your chain a little bit there, Brian.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
I know, I know, I know, I mean all I
hear they're running to try to run on the left
is a well organized campaign to criticize the one big,
beautiful bill because people are going to die in the
streets or something like that. But they do overlook the
benefit to the middle class, which you just illustrated right there.
I mean, you know, fifteen hundred dollars means a lot
when it comes to somebody's making a family off. It's
seventy five thousand dollars. I mean it's a month worth
(04:20):
of groceries. So I mean that's something we all can enjoy.
But the criticism seems to be levy at the corporate
tax rate, which is lower. But I keep defaulting back
to the idea, Well you don't. I mean, corporations really
ultimately don't pay taxes. They pass them along with increases
or decreases to the goods and services that they sell
to us.
Speaker 4 (04:41):
Totally, we've got we got a lot of challenges in
this country. But when it comes to our fiscal house
in Washington, in our country two, there's there's two sides
of the same coin. On one side, we need to
lock in pro growth economic policies. Right, We're not going
to tax our way out of the problems we find
ourselves as a nation.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
Right, we need.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
To make sure that we've got pro growth policies that
keep taxes low for individuals and families, but also help
stimulate economic growth, not by printing new money and handing
it out to special interests like the green Energy New Deals,
but by ensuring that folks can businesses can keep their
money and use it to reinvest in a business. The
(05:22):
other thing we got to do is that start to
rein in the spending. We've grown our national debts since
two thousand and one. Our spending has merely tripled, yeah,
about one point eight trillion dollars to over six point
seven five trillion in federal spending in twenty twenty four.
And so we've got but you know what they've done
(05:43):
on this piece, right, is they've locked in the pro
growth policies we made these Trump taxes. That's permanent, something
just eight months ago Brian Folks said might not even
be possible. We may have to let a few folks
pay more taxes, or we may we may only be
able to kick the can down the road.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
A few more years to make this work.
Speaker 4 (05:58):
They locked this stuff in informational it's monumental, and we're
going to let folks know why it matters for them
in their pocketbook.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
Well, and you know what else is going to really matter,
and it's unrelated to one big beautiful bill are least
tangentially unrelated this removal of declaration as carbon dioxide as
a pollutant. All the trillions of dollars that we have
to ultimately pay to capture carbon or to create products
that don't produce as much carbon dioxide, that ends up
(06:27):
costing us a lot more in the form of more
expensive appliances, more expensive electricity. I mean, the list is
just endless. It's a needless increase, sort of a nefarious
removal of money from our pocketbooks to pay for these projects.
Is again they pass along these costs to us, either
because we're paying federal tax dollars and they have to
give incentives, or because the projects are expensive, and you know,
(06:49):
creating electricity with windmills and solar panels costs a lot more,
gives us less product, and we end up getting to
cost pass along to us. So I think that's going to,
assuming that is removed and it's no longer the focus
of so much effort, that that's going to give us
more flexibility in terms of what we buy. It's going
to lower the prices of a lot of things we buy,
including electricity. So there's going to be a benefit with
(07:11):
in that area of the Trump administration as well.
Speaker 4 (07:15):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
Absolutely.
Speaker 4 (07:16):
It's a demonstration, right that the executive branch, while it
holds it holds a lot of power and probably in
many cases thinks that it has more power than it
has AKA Rainsact.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
Come back and talk about that another day.
Speaker 4 (07:27):
But you know, the executive sets the agena and the
vision for the country, right, and so when you have
a president who is looking at this stuff from more
of a pro prosperity, pro growth, pro opportunity, you know,
we end a war on coal, we start directing the
regulators and the energy sector to embrace small, modular nuclear
(07:48):
right that we also hesitant for God knows what reason
to do.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Oh Donovan, I read an article this morning. NASA is
going to be trying to build a nuclear reactor on
the moon.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
The moon.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Awesome, I know, I wait a minute, we can't get
one here in Ohio. But uh but but a Duffy,
Uh Sean Duffy, the acting administrator from NASA. So they've
been spending they spent literally hunt he said, hundreds of
millions of dollars has been spent studying the idea of
how to accomplish building a nuclear base on the Moon.
Now they're moving forward with actually doing it. He said,
(08:23):
r But we.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Can't have a line two.
Speaker 4 (08:26):
But we can't get one here in Ohio to power
tens of thousands of homes. Yeah, now, were But I
think that's changing, right, That's part of what's changing, whether
it's the laws in Columbus like House Bold fifteen that
streamlined our permitting process here in the state, and to
the work that the Trump administration is doing on a
federal level to begin to get this going in the
right direction. To what you're talking about there, right with
(08:48):
the various regulatory EPA or other you know, handcuffs we
put on ourselves as a nation that others aren't you know,
beholden to, like China. This is the kind of stuff
the Trump administration has been doing. Congress is doing right
now with the new Republican majority, to unleash prosperity, onleash opportunity.
And I think it's why we find so many Americans
are finding that the distresses and burdens of the last
(09:10):
couple of years of Bidenomics going away because there's confidence
in the market, there's opportunity in the economy.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Amen, brother, he if Americans for Prosperities DONOVD and Neil,
where do we go to send a thank you letter
to our elected officials?
Speaker 4 (09:25):
Protect Prosperity dot com. Protect Prosperity dot com.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
Click the link send a letter to your member of Congress.
They make it very very easy to do just that,
as well as make it really easy and by providing
thoughts and ideas about you and what you and I
can do, like the one step program to better the
situation we have here in Ohio. Americans for Prosperity Donovan,
and they'll appreciate all that you do and your willingness
to come on the program every week and spread the word.
Speaker 4 (09:50):
Always appreciate sharing the megaphone with you, Brian, Thanks for
having me.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
Thanks brother, we'll talk next week. It's seven thirty nine
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