Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Check you in off for what's developing.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Is it just developing out of the Middle East now?
Right now, it's developing.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Fifty five KRC the Talk station to Shuy seven six
(00:28):
here fifty five KR City Talk Station, looking forward to
this segment all morning. Always enjoy hearing from our favorite
Ken Blackwell. He really needs no introduction from my listening audience.
By by way of background, former mayor of the City
of Cincinnati, Ohio State Treasurer and Hio Secretary of State.
He's an activist, he's an author, and he's with the
American First Policy Institute as the chair of the Center
(00:49):
for Election Integrity. He is Ken Blackwell. Ken, thank you
so much for green to spend some time with my
listeners and me this morning.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Brian, it's always good to be with you.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Always a pleasure having you on and right out of
the gate. Of course, you know what happened on early
Saturday morning here in the city of Cincinnati, the beatdown
experienced by two people. We don't know what led to
the beatdown, but no one can justify it, and it
doesn't seem to be that many people are trying to
justify it, although some are how it could be justified.
I have no idea. No one is deserving of that
(01:20):
kind of treatment, most notably the woman who got punched
Kolcock right in the face by some guy. Your response,
your reaction, and I know you've digested mayor aftab provols
very late in the game, reaction to the incident. What's
your take on this, Ken Blackwell, what my take is.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
At the first obligation of local governments is to provide
safe neighborhoods and safe streets. And it doesn't take a
rocket scientist to know that Cincinnati is experiencing a rise
(01:56):
in street crime. Now there are those who would say, well,
it's not valent crime. But one of the things that you,
you know, if you've been around on the basis a
little bit, is that if you reward or ignore bad behavior,
or you're going to get this more bad behavior and
the escalation. So the first thing is that we we
(02:19):
have to admit that we have a problem in terms
of the situation itself. You know, no matter how you explain,
if it started out as a fight between two people,
that to fight between two people, but you know, unless
you're going to us not to believe our lion eyes,
(02:41):
what we what we saw is that what might have
started us a fight between two people escalated into a
mob action, a beatdown which can never be which can
never be justified. And the and the and the reality
is is that if you start to excuse this, uh,
it means that you ignore the fact that Cincinnati has
(03:06):
a problem. And the first I mean local leaders should inspire, hope,
create the opportunity, and bring people together. And there's been
a failure in bringing people together in terms of respecting
each other's human human dignity. We have a challenge, and
(03:29):
if we try to downsize it in terms of how
we define it and misdefine it, the problem is just
going to get worse. As I've told you on a
number of casions, Brian, great cities are not the products
(03:50):
of great governments, but rather the products of good people
doing great things together. And that's a challenge in Cincinnati right.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Now well, and it seems to be driven at least
over the last i'd say maybe ten years or so,
the politics of division. Everyone. You're divided, you're divided. You're
not in this group, you're not part of my group.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
I hate you.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
You you must agree with me.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
Or you're not.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
I mean that it's it's as if there is this
concerted effort and I'm going to point to the left
hand side of the ledger for stirring the pot of division.
It doesn't matter on what subject matter. LGBTQ plus division. Division,
you know, Donald Trump, evil Orange Man division, division, it's
just division. And then of course there's this racial elements
that stirred in there. Police are inherently racist. Division. You
(04:38):
like the police, then you're a racist. I mean, that's
the mantra we've been hearing now for a long time.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Ken. It's it's it's it's a real problem, and it
starts to reveal itself in numbers. I mean, there is
a decline in our recruits of folks to serve as
officers of the piece of of of police officers on
(05:04):
on our on our street. Uh. There is a real
declinient in the morale of those who are on board. Uh.
How how many times can you here, you know, uh,
kill the pigs, you know, defund the police. Uh and
uh and time after time you you watch a judicial
(05:26):
system that is divided. Half of the judges, you know,
use our apprehensions of criminals and our criminal justice system
as a revolving door. Uh. Mechanism and and and so
folks are arrested and put right back on a street,
cause problems, human misery. Uh and you and you only
(05:47):
have half of our judges that understand that it is
in the in keeping with their responsibility to provide safe
streets and safe neighborhoods.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
And that seems to be where the biggest breakdown is
and that results, you know, going back to law enforcement.
If the police on the streets are the ones that
you know, pick up the bad guys, whether they witness
the crime or not. They're there to find the suspects.
They present them to the prosecutor's office. And if you
have a zealous prosecutor, that only goes so far. If
they end up in front of a liberal judge, they're
(06:23):
out on no bond. And then of course if they
get sentenced because they're convicted or and are a plea deal,
they're let out on the streets with little or no
penalty to pay. There's the bottom line. It's the judicial system.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
Right and and it has a compounding effect. You know,
I've worked with some of the nation's leading economic thinkers,
and one of the simple things that you understand as
a local leader that's concerned with the economic prosperity uh
(06:58):
and the safety of your community. Is that capital seeks
the path of lease, resistance and greatest opportunity, and capital
hates crime, yes, uh And so so what what happens
is that when you have a lots of days ago
left leaning, stupid approach to crime fighting and the creation
(07:22):
of safe communities, there's no way that you're going to
get the uh investment of capital uh to expand your economy,
create jobs, put your people uh to work uh And
and as a consequence, you just see things, you know,
getting worse and worse, and populations. You know, when you
(07:46):
when you are at a time when you want to
just arrest the client and and and uh outward flow
of population uh, you find yourself being uh stuck with
that that that's sort of that sort of decline and
that's you know, that's what's so distressing about people who
(08:08):
want to put on blinders uh and and and not
tell people the challenge that we face when we see
this sort of the vision uh and destructive uh, destructive
attitudes in play. You know, bring inspire hope, create opportunity,
(08:33):
bring people together and understand the first responsibility of local
government is to make sure that the people are safe.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Amen, Ken Blackwell, you know, and I've been struggling to
understand why it is the city leaders. And this is
something that Christopher smithm brings up regularly when he comes
on my program, which is the deafening silence from the
council members as well as the mayor about supporting outlaud
out and advocating working with the police, not against them.
That flies in the face of the whole police are terrible,
(09:06):
defund the police movement. So that's a very far left attitude.
But they don't say anything. And I think one of
the reasons is because they're trying to downplay the reality
of crime in downtown Cincinnati for the reasons you point out.
If you talk about crime, then people are going to
get the perception of there's crime, and people are not
going to want to move into or otherwise invest in
the city of Cincinnati. But that just ignores the fact
that the crime is there.
Speaker 3 (09:27):
So stands Yeah, and and and you you try to
spin when when people can see the sort of division
is sort of mob action that we experienced this past weekend. Yeah,
that that just creates a frustration of people who have
(09:50):
a capability a movie.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
Yes, sir, movie moving or not considering. I mean we've
made national actually, we a global head lines with this.
I mean I saw there's an article on there's violence
in the Hindu Times of all places, so Fox News headlines,
it's on CNN. Everybody's talking about it. You know, Dan
Well Ken Blackwell that there's maybe a business or some
person out there that might have been considering Cincinnati as
(10:15):
an option for investment or to move and they looked
at that and it's like, no, I'm taking them off
my list.
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Yeah, and right, I'm seventy seven years old. I've lived
in Cincinnati all of my life. I've just I've been
a homeowner, a political leader, you know, you name it.
But I realize that people vote with their feet. We
(10:42):
are highly mobile. And what happens is that your city
becomes poor and poor, smaller and smaller, you know, And
that's the challenge of local leadership. And they cannot forget
the capital seeks the path of least existence and greatest opportunity,
(11:04):
and capital hates crime.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
Well, it's pause. Bring Ken Ken Blackwell back. Got some
of the topics to go over with Ken. It's seven
sixteen right now fifty five KCD talk says real quick
here USA insallation. If you had it in your home already,
you would not be dealing with the struggles that your
HVAC system is dealing with right now, which is that
impossible sisyphian like challenge to keep your temperature where you
want it in the face of one hundred plus degree
(11:30):
heat index and the humidity out there. USA Phone, the
rest of you high star value on the market. If
you're under insulated or uninsulated, you are going to experience
a dramatic improvement in the comfort of your home. And
then come the energy bills, which are going to be
a lot lower because you got the great highest our
value phone in the market in the walls of your home.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
Call them up.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
It's a free quote and free inspection. You don't know
if you're under insulated, call them up. They'll tell you
right or wrong. If you don't need it, they'll be
honest with you. Nope, you can't help you. You're as
good as you can be. That's fine. But if you
need it, you're gonna love getting it installed. Because it's
only ninety nine dollars a month, you may very well
save more than that on the energy savings excellent product.
So you'll't regret you're gonna have is you didn't do
(12:10):
it sooner, So make the phone call five one three
three eight one three six two six three eight one
foam find them online USA insallation dot net. This is
fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio stage heat index in effectual
tomorrow evening eight pm. So you got a hot day
in our hands. A day humid and ninety one with
a low one hundred heat index clear overnight, muggy though
(12:30):
seventy three. Another day of heats ninety two with a
heat index lowe hundreds, maybe a storm popping in there
most mostly partly cloudy skyes uh, mostly cloudy overnight with
a low of sixty eight, and on Thursday a little
reprieve with a high of eighty two and mostly clotty
skies seventy five. Now, let's get a traffic update.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
From the UCL Traumsics Center, UC Healthweight While Center All
for Surgical and Medical Obcdkaren expertise called five one three,
nine three nine two two sixty three. It's nine three
nine twenty two sixty three northbound seventy five. Break bikes
out of Burrowlin Greene to the cut. You're going add
nextra three to four minutes there, so I've ben seventy
five heaviest approaching the Brince Spence Chuck Ingram on fifty five.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
K see the talk station seven twenty here fifty five
K see the talk station Brian Thomas with the incomparable
Ken Blackwell commenting on some of the issues, of course,
went over the violence downtown. You mentioned capital seeking, the
path of lease resistance. Ken, I couldn't agree with you
more on that, and someone who knows all about that.
A wildly successful entrepreneur and the next governor of the
state of Ohio. I understand you were as much of
(13:34):
a fan, perhaps as I am, of V. V Ramaswami,
according to polling and everything else I can see. I've
talked to him many times. I've been impressed with him
since I interviewed him after he wrote Woke Incorporated. A
brilliant man he is. I think he's going to make
an outstanding governor. He seems to have great ideas. Your
comments on VV.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
Let me tell you I've watched since he was a
high schooler at the same Xavier uh only regretted that
we couldn't get him over to Xavier University. Uh. Yeah, Uh,
he will make a great governor. And his his his
not only his worldview, but his understanding of the basics
(14:19):
is is phenomenal. You know, he and I have talked
on occasion in the past, Uh a basic understanding about
the economic situation uh in Ohio. He he understands, as
I've preached for a long time, that if you tax something,
you get less of it. If you, you know, subsidize something,
(14:40):
you get more of it. The problem in America and
and and the challenge in Ohio today is that we're
taxing work, savings investment. Uh and and as a consequence, Uh,
he understands the challenge. And I think he has a
set of proposals that we will unleash, uh the talent
(15:00):
in Ohio get us back on a on a path
of rapid growth. And I've been up on his response,
uh and his comments on the sort of division and
the sort of the crime that he saw on the
streets of Cincinnati, and Uh, I think he's he's well
(15:21):
positioned as a fundamental understanding of how to put us
on a accelerate track of economic growth, prosperity, safety. Uh
and and and he has a vision, uh to to
to make Ohio not just one of the best states
in the United States, but the premier state. Uh and
(15:45):
and I tell our buddy down in Florida, watch out,
you know that is coming. That's great.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
One of the things I'm really excited about. As a
magnet for business and industry from the four corners of
the world. We can make Ohio the leading power generator
by greasing the skids and moving forward with the concept
that I've been pushing for now for years, embracing the
small modular nuclear reactors. They're small, tiny footprint, don't generate
(16:16):
the ways they can make create massive amounts of power.
If you build it, they will come. And he is
all about.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
That, Oh he really is. And one of the things
I just I shad again. He has to he has
to inspire hope uh and and and and he's and
he's good at that. You know. He has to make
people feel that no one is too small of an
(16:45):
entity to be part not to be part of of
this Ohio uh boom yeah and and and so I
tell people you know who might think, you know, they're
too small or they can't have impact because they are
(17:06):
individual I tell them all the time, Brian. You know,
if you think you're too small to be effective, you've
never been in the dark and dark room with a mosquito.
That's good. Yeah, that that sort of inspiration I think
(17:26):
is important. But again, it starts with having a vision
of Ohio being not one of.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
The best, but the best, the best, and that's what
he is. He is aspiring to bring about from the
state of Ohio. And you know, you can't say enough
about that man, at least as far as you can't.
You can't hear VV speak and not be enthused. He
is one of those people that makes you feel uplifted,
like you do have a possible future, like there is
going to be something better down the road, and I
(17:56):
think he's the man to deliver on it. I'm just
going to encourage my listeners to follow you on Facebook,
Ken Blackwell. You make some outstanding comments, You do some
terrific posts, stay on top of the issues, and I
wish I could talk with you for the next three hours,
but sadly, sadly, we're out of time. Can you know
you are always welcome on my program. I appreciate what
you do each and every day and God bless you.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Sir, right back gets you gotta bless you.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
Buy take care Ken Blackwell seven twenty five. Coming up
next to man, I think you're all gonna love Andre Ewing,
another man you should be following on Facebook. Outspoken former
retired police officer. He'll give you a word or two
of his perception what's going on downtown. And I don't
think he's gonna pull any punches. Stick around for him. Next,
Chimneycare Fireplace and Stove, woodburning fireplace. Folks out there are
(18:40):
free standing stoves. You burning wood? You got Kreoso build
up or you will get Creoso build up. What is
the status of your chimney right now? When's the last
time you had a swept by a certified chimney sweep.
You know that can catch on fire. Yeah, you can
have your house burned down because of a chimney fire.
So don't let that happen. Call my friends of the
Chimneycare Fireplace and Stove and take advantage of the wood
burning sweep evaluation. They send one of their certified chimney
(19:02):
sweeps out. They do a video camera inspection of your
whole chimney. Find out if you had a prior chimney
fire which you probably wouldn't even know about, and you
don't want the one that burns your house down to
bring it to your attention, So have him sweep it out.
You'll be safe. You'd be ready to use it when
the temperatures drop, which I'm actually very much looking forward to,
so it's great time to take carey safety. You give
them a call five one three, two four eight ninety
(19:22):
six hundred. It's only one hundred and sixty nine ninety
nine plus tax. A great way to keep yourself well.
Three of the chimney fires five one, three, two four
eight ninety six hundred eight plus with the BBB been
locally owned and operated since nineteen eighty eight. Online you
can book an appointment there and learn more about what they
can do for you and what's on the showroom for
Go to Chimneycareco dot com fifty five KRC