Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Jennin first one of weather worcass two day and tomorrow
both gonna be sunny, both gonna be humid, and both
are gonna go up eighty seven tonight down to sixty
six and clear skies. We'll have the same overnight tomorrow
night and then Independence Day of mostly sunny day ninety
one fry. It's sixty nine degrees. Now it is time
for traffic chuck.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
King group from the UCLP Tramfics Center. The University of
Cincinnati Cancer Center has the most comprehensive blood cancer center
in the nation. The future of cancer care is here
called five one, three, five eight five. UCCC northbound seventy
five continues to run an extra twenty minutes out of
Florence into downtown. With an accident on the Rampton Donaldson.
(00:37):
The right lane remains blocked westbound two seventy five. That's
a broken down blocking the right lane that banks traffic
into Milford. Crews are also working to clear a broken
down inbound Columbia Parkway near Torrence. Coming up next. It's
time to sit back, relax and celebrate our Independence Day.
So what better way to do that than shooting off fireworks,
(01:01):
grilling the hot dogs eating apple pie. You know the drill.
And if you happen to be near the Judge's house, yes,
the inflatable Constitution is up in the front yard. And
if you're there between four and six on the fourth,
there's going to be a reenactment of the Spirit of
seventy six with the Judge on lead fife playing patriotic tunes.
(01:24):
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRS, the talk station fifty
five car Seed talk station Lead five. I don't know
who's covering the drum kit, Judge Endedapolitano. It's always a
pleasure to have you on the fifty five KRC.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Morning you at this time.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
Thank you, Brian. Did you send a copy of my
column to Ingram? Does he read these things now?
Speaker 1 (01:43):
But you know you would think he did. Excellent column.
By the way, I am a lucky man because I
get a copy of it early. It does come out tonight.
Independence Day twenty twenty five, and you post some very
good rhetorical questions out front and your honor if they.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Really read those first two or.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
Three, Yeah, were independentive London? But are we independent of Washington?
Is there more freedom when governed by one tyrant?
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Three?
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Thousand miles away by three thousand tyrants a few miles away.
Does government today remotely resemble the values articulated on July fourth,
seventeen seventy six.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Nobody wants to answer those questions, you know, taxation with
that representation as tyranny was their mantra in seventeen seventy six.
If you add up all the taxes, the maximum individual
tax imposed on any one person three percent. Today in
(02:35):
some parts of the country it's fifty nine percent. Three
percent was enough for a bloody revolution. Fifty nine percent
isn't even enough for Republicans to come to their senses.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Well, you know, and I go back to the Constitutional Amendment,
A longing for taxation of income tax that is legalized slavery.
I always express taxation is the form of stealing my labor.
I have no say over it. I work and then
and they take a chunk of my money, that is
my labor being taken from me in the form of
dollars and shipped off to the federal government to do
(03:07):
god knows what with.
Speaker 3 (03:08):
So Jefferson argued that the only moral commercial transaction is
one that is consensual. So if I want to purchase
a service from the federal government, like importing goods to
a port owned by the federal government, sometimes called a tariff. Okay,
(03:29):
that's a good for service. If I need some other
service from the federal government, I can pay for it.
But the idea of the federal government just glombing money,
reaching into our pockets and redistributing wealth is antithetical to
the values of the Constitution. I don't know how that's
going to change without some kind of a revolution. You know,
(03:50):
this legislation that Trump wants with a very childlike name,
a big beautiful bill, yeah, which pass the Senate by
one vote thanks to an Ohioan who's the Vice president.
I honestly think if he were still the junior senator
from Ohio, he would have voted against it because it's
against something the things he believes in. But of course
(04:11):
he now is the president's guy, and he'd have serious
problems if he had broken the tie the other way
because he doesn't believe in increasing the debt. He doesn't
believe in adding one hundred I'm speaking of Vice President Vance,
of course, formerly Senator Vans from Ohio. He doesn't believe
in a trillion dollar defense budget to finance seven hundred
(04:36):
and fifty military installations in eighty foreign countries. Come on,
nobody could even name the eighty countries, much less than
seven hundred and fifty installations or what the hell they're doing.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
It really is an amazing military footprint that we have
out in the world. Of course, the Chinese Communist Party,
envious of it, would like to substitute the United States president,
but then they would have the same financial problems on
their hands as we have currently. A trillion dollars is
an outrageous amount, and I always predicate that on qualifying
and my listening audience knows. I am a fan and
a assistant, and I try to help the American veterans
(05:10):
whenever I can. I appreciate the fact that we have
a US military, and I appreciate there are people willing
to sign on the dotted line and lists for service
when they have god knows no idea where they're going
to be going. I consider them brave and patriotic. That said,
the federal budget for military spending and the military spending itself,
they can't even pass an audit. They've tried eight times
(05:31):
and they can't. They don't have the documents or information
to qualify for an audit. And I see all the fraud,
waste and abuse that's going on, whether it's been identified
specifically or not. We got Medicaid fraud, We got Medicare fraud.
We got every giant government program fraud, all those COVID
nineteen programs that went out there, fraud, fraud, fraud, fraud, fraud.
You know, damn well, there's all kinds of fraud, waste
and abuse in that trillion dollar annual military budget in the.
Speaker 3 (05:55):
Government Madison and Jefferson gave us. There would have been
no place this. We wouldn't have had a standing army,
we wouldn't have a Department of Health and Human Services.
That wouldn't be Medicaid or Medicare. There would be private
insurance or charitable institutions as there was before Social Security
and then Medicare and Medicaid came along. But now this
(06:18):
is why I ask, we are no longer dependent on London,
but we are dependent on Washington. Half the country is
dependent on the government, either receiving government benefits, getting bills
paid by the government, selling something to the government, or
working for it. That is inconceivable to the founders that
(06:43):
the federal government would become so big, so fat, so
antithetical to the small government Maximum Individual Values of July fourth,
seventeen seventy six.
Speaker 1 (06:55):
It really is, and you know, so much of it's
built on this sort of I think Judeo Christian notion
that we need to help our suffering brothers and sisters
out of the world. But that's the obligation of someone
with faith, that's the obligation of the individual, that's the
obligation of you and I, and that helps limit the
number of people who actually are looking for a handout.
(07:16):
But when you go ahead and the government takes over
that role in the name of doing something right for humanity,
more and more people will hook themselves up to that
just because it's convenient and easy to do so. And
the government is a terrible overseer of whether someone is
really truly deserving a needing of these various services. They
just become well people hooking up their umbilical court to
(07:37):
government and just calling to day on their own person responsibility.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
Look charity. The word charity comes from the Latin caratas,
which means your heart. It is impossible to be charitable
with someone else's money. You can only be charitable with
your own This is not charity. This is government force
taking money out of our pockets and redistristing it to
(08:00):
the less fortunate. Do we have a moral obligation to
help the less fortunate individuals who embrace the judaeo Christian
morality do, But the government doesn't have the right to
take that money from us and give it away. This
is almost an insoluble problem without the concept of repudiation.
(08:22):
Repudiation means repudiating the nation's dead. How the hell are
we going to pay back thirty seven trillion dollars? Well,
this so called big beautiful bill. If I were on
the floor of the House standing next to Congress and Massey,
I would look at my colleagues and say, you must
hate your grandchildren, hate them because you just raised their
(08:42):
taxes by fifteen or twenty percent in order to pay
back the money that you're borrowing to spend today. Now,
what is repudiation. Repudiation happens when the borrower can no
longer pay back the debt because the borrower is a
known bankrupt to which the creditor should never have loan
(09:08):
his money. So all those people in entities that buy
federal government bonds are lending money to a known bankrupt
that does not have the ability to pay them back,
that has to borrow money in order to pay back
the interest on borrowed money. That is a recipe for repudiation.
(09:28):
And of course the outcome for repudiation would be nobody
would ever lend the federal governor nickel again. Good, the
Feds would have to live within their budget. Good.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
Yes, you're making perfect sense. And maybe that's exactly what
they're setting themselves up for, because at some point, you know,
the US fiat currency is not going to be the
number one, most reliable, most countable on currency out in
the world. Something can rise to take its place, crypto
or otherwise, and they'll quit borrowing money and putting in
a US Treasury bonds.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
Correct, So that is going to happen in your and
my lifetime. I don't know that this repudiation is but
the collapse of the dollar I think will happen quickly.
It'll either be crypto or it'll be bricks. I mean bricks.
Right now is a far larger economy than what the
dollar funds. And you may not like those countries Brazil, Russia, Iran, China,
(10:26):
South Africa, they are as financially they are more financially
stable than the United States, with far less debt.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
Well, that makes their currency a little bit more reliable
as far as I'm concerned, because we're on a train wreck.
And you know, Senator Paul makes a great point, five
trillion dollars, you're increasing debt, sealing five trillion dollars. They're
just going to go on autopilot and dig us five
more trillion dollars into the whole to guarantee at this point, correct, correct.
Speaker 3 (10:53):
Right now, the government collects about five to six trillion
in income taxes and other fees. More than a trillion
of that right off the top interest.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
Pay that service, You get more than a.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
Trillion of that right off the top Defense Department, more
than a trillion of that right off the top Wealth distribution.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
Well, and the unknown CIA budget, which may very well
be in and of itself a trillion dollars, we just
don't know.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
Unknown. Brian, What about that clause in the Constitution that
little Jimmy put in there, no money shall be taken
from the Federal Treasury but that which is recorded in
a public journal.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Well, well, you didn't you didn't see the asterisk there.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
Except for Langley, Virginia.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
Except for what goes on it Langley Judge Edopolitano. A
delightful conversation, and of course one little. It's one that
makes people think about it, pause and think, hmm, maybe
he has a great point there.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
He does.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
Check it out Tonight, Independence Day twenty twenty five. Are
you going to be talking to today on judging freedom?
Speaker 3 (12:04):
I have Aaron Mante, Phil Giraldi, and Max Blomenthal, all
equally hot as you and I about what we've just
been discussing. It's a pleasure, Brian. I look forward to
the three day weekend. I hope you do as well,
and see you next week.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
Aymen, brother, stay well. It's a forty right now. Fifty
five k SE the talk station. Don't go away. I
be right back.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
Fifty five KRC texting enrolls you wing to reoccur.