All Episodes

March 25, 2025 • 157 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Bye BO five. I think you. I have k r
C the talk station, Happy Tuesday s vation. Well, No,

(00:29):
Ja's in a good mood this morning. How you feeling huh?
Brian Thomas glad to be here. Feeling a little bit
better mood myself today. Thank you very much for indulging
me and dealing with my I don't know what state
of mind I had in over the weekend through yesterday,
but appreciate you tolerating me, and I feel slightly better today.
Don't know what the reason is for the blue funk,

(00:51):
That's what I would like to call blue funk. And
this kind of things can hit you, I mean related
to absolutely nothing. So uh. Anyway, I was really excited
to see this morning. Enjoying talking to guests as much
as I do, rather than hearing the sound of my
own voice. Brad Wedstrip joseahs civilian Brad Webster, brother than
retired Congressman Brad Wedstrip, So Brad Winster with a civilian

(01:14):
cap on. He'll be in studio. We're talking all the
issues I thought. I mean, I enjoy his thoughts and
insights on what's going on in the world. So we'll
do that at seven oh five Inside scoop with bright
Bart News. It is Tuesday. We do it every Tuesday
at eight oh five. Today the Tech editor returns Colin
Maydine talk about musk derangement syndrome. The Daniel Davis Steve

(01:36):
Dive every Tuesday at eight thirty with the retired Lieutenant
Colonel the latest of course on Russia and Ukraine and
doctor Meghan Frew are asked the expert from the Clinic
of Doctors Peck and Frew outstanding dynasty. Is you gotta
love having her as your dentist. Nothing to say anything
wrong with doctor Pack because of course he's a genius
when it comes to cosmetic dentistry and she's working on
that and working with the genius and honing her costhmetic

(02:00):
denneries dentistry skills as well. So wonderful dynamic duo of
dentistry as I like to refer to them. And she
is a just a charming, charming, charming lady. So eight
to fifty with her, anytime with you if you want
to call five one, three, seven, four nine fifty five hundred,
Joe open the phone lines up so we can take
callers if they want to call eight hundred eighty two
to three talk pound five to fifty on AT and
T phones. Remember Joe started the program with that SoundBite,

(02:27):
so be nice to Joe. You might want to plan
on doing that for the next several days, if not
weeks anyhow, Uh And I guess I'll start with this
as I was looking at, you know, all the wonderful
I love that that Elon Musk is exposing all this fraud,

(02:47):
waste and abuse. Now, obviously that's got people's dander up,
and for ire for reasons that I don't understand. Maybe
it's just this you know, existential threat that democrats have
or these left wing you know, non governmental organizations have
that their funding is drying up. But this whole burning
of Teslas is in just absolute backcrap in sanity, It
doesn't make any sense. Apparently they found some incendiary devices

(03:09):
in an Austin dealership Tesla dealership. So far, the Department
of Homeland Security has concluded that our Attorney General Pambody
anyway looking into these that is not coordinated. At least,
they haven't discovered a coordinated effort so far, which I
keep saying, if people are out there coordinating the destruction

(03:32):
of Teslas, engaging in criminal activity. It is that you're
going to get well charged. And she is promising to
charge folks and go after them, and also Pambondi threatening
to prosecute those out there committing fraud by stealing government dollars.
And it's gaining some bipartisan effort. There's a new bipartisan

(03:54):
proposal that well, going after medicare fraud. A Republican and
a Democrat have got to get out to propose a
bill the mandate state government see if Social Security death
master files and share them with the physicians who are
providing medicare to people, and to not provide it to
dead people because there's all kinds of fraud about that.
So bipartis an efforts to do that. There's a theater

(04:16):
are Dari Drymple I think is his last name, Daryl Limple. Anyway,
he's a doctor, but he is a brilliant man in
the sense that he wrote this opinion piece about smashing tessels.
I know it's not going to say the planet approve
a point, and it was just a brilliant analysis commentary.

(04:37):
It's one of the characteristics of our age is both
the intensity and the shallowness in with which people hold
their opinions and likewise experience their emotions. They are inclined
to believe that the more vehemently they express themselves, the
more strongly and sincerely they believe, or deeply they feel.
When the opposite is often nearer the truth, it's not
surprising then, that gestures take the place of thought. The

(05:00):
reaction against Tesla cars is a case in point. Not
very long ago, they were considered a powerful tool in
saving the planet from the ravages of climate change, which
was believed by many to be the greatest threat facing humanity,
indeed threatening with total extinction. Now, a few months later,
they're the symbols of absolute evil because of their connection

(05:22):
with Elon Musk, and the people who a few months
ago were helping to save the planet are now trading
them in, refusing to buy another, or even vandalizing them
wherever they find them. First, let me say I have
no shares in the companies, so I have no personal actrogrind. Second,
admit that a certain skepticism about the supposed benefits with
the switch to electric vehicles, even if the theory of

(05:45):
anthropogenic global warming caused by carbon dioxide emission were wholly correct,
I'm not sure that the balance would be entirely in
favor of electric vehicles, though I admit to not having
studied the question closely or having the technical combinence to
do so. But where is all the electricity to power
them to come from? And what is the cost and
pollution of ensuring sufficient outlets for recharging? Are not the

(06:08):
batteries produced with the mineral's mind, often in abominable and
highly polluting conditions, and largely fabricated In a country China
that is building coal fired power stations in order to
keep up with demand, Our electric figles not extremely heavy,
possibly to the detriment of infrastructure. How will the batteries
be recycled? And so on and so forth? No doubt

(06:30):
there will be technical solutions of these problems. And let
us assume, as until very recently it was assumed that
the purchase of a Tesla car was virtuous from the
point of view of saving the biosphere of the planet
from further degradation. What sense would it then make to
trade in such a car already in your possession because

(06:51):
of a fit of rage or discussed against the chief
executive of the company that made it. The argument in
favor electric cars is that we humans face and excess
central crisis. The seas arise and the glaciers and ice
caps are melting. Insect born diseases are spreading, islands are sinking.
Species are going extinct, the polar bears are sweltering, heat
stroke is becoming epidemic, and New York will soon be underwater.

(07:14):
This is surely not a time for empty gestures, let
alone for harmful ones. What does trading in a tesla
do for the health of the planet, which only a
short time ago needed you to purchase such a car
in order to save it from the harms done by
the internal combustion engine. Seems to me unlikely that those
who trade in their teslas, which is still in perfect

(07:34):
working order, will go without a personal vehicle for very long.
They will have to buy another, and after all, conditions
of modern life make the possession of such a vehicle
essential for the majority of the population, the replacement vehicle
will come at considerable cost to the environment, which shortly
before was cherished, at least in theory, like a newborn

(07:54):
infant in intensive care. Meanwhile, the traded in vehicle, though
perfectly usable, might very well remain unsold, given the sentiment
against Tesla that is now commonplace. If it's not sold,
it'll eventually have to be scrapped, which is not the
best outcome for the planet. The difficulty of selling it
will be all the greater because of the fear of
vandalism or social disapprobation that any purchasers will now have.

(08:19):
And in any case, sales of secondhand electric cars were
already plummeing before the turn against Tesla, they were not
as easy to shift because of increasing consumer skepticism. As
for the vandalism itself, it is a manifestation but growing
lack as self control when it comes to expression of disapproval,
statutes are pulled down, paintings to face chief executives, menace,

(08:41):
death threats posted, all in the name of a supposed
moral purification. But a Tesla car is someone's property. He
or she might be very proud of it, or have
gone to some sacrifice to buy it. For the vandal
none of this isn't any importance. Most tests slowers are
comparatively well Often the well off are legitimate targets of

(09:03):
hatred even without their Teslas. Now, if anyone really believe
that humanity faced an existential environmental crisis, arguments against destroying
or trading in Tesla cars would prevail over distaste for
Elon Musk, however strong it might be. After all, he
is but a temporary phenomenon, and all that he does
may be reverse given the nature of political life in America.

(09:25):
But the supposed existential threat he is much larger than
that posed by any one man, and we must all
do our little bit to prevent the catastrophe that will
otherwise overwhelm us. That is the reason, or one of
the reasons, that people bought Tesla cars in the first place.
The sell off of Tesla cars demonstrates how shallow is

(09:46):
this belief in the so called climate emergency. However shrill
and emotional many people pronouncements on it, they are soon
enough distracted by something else that catches their attention, and
that is not untypical of modern life. There are gusts
of moral enthusiasms, soon followed by counter blasts of some
other enthusiasm. In essence, this is frivolous. But such frivolity

(10:11):
is not good fun, as some frivolity is when frivolity
is combined with earnestness, which is the appearance of seriousness.
Without the substance of seriousness, it can do great harm,
among other things, moral frivolity can tear it the fabric
of a tear the fabric of a country apart. There
are no doubt arguments both in favor of and against

(10:32):
electric vehicles, but fear of vandalism should not enter them.
No wonderful point, isn't it the truth? And you know
my takeaway on all this vandalism in Teslas is they
don't really believe the earth is being heated up by
your exhalation. It's all a big grand scam, and I
would argue perpetuated by our enemies in the world, most

(10:55):
notably the Chinese Communist Party, who is the one that
is the greatest recipient of MONE money for manufacturing electric
vehicles in the first place. They perpetuate that you're going
to die abs an electric vehicle, and his points about
these electric vehicles not being environmentally healthy is a valid
one for a multitude of reasons. And hope to God

(11:16):
it doesn't catch on fire, and that you breathe in
the toxic, deadly smoke from a battery fire in one
of those things coming from five to seventeen fifty five
k see DE talk station. All because Elon Musk is
finding fraud, waste and abuse in government drable connect the
dots on that one. If you can, don't go away,

(11:38):
be right back. Here's your channel nine. First morning one.
The forecast, Scott, let us see here hit or miss
light showers later today, mostly cloudy sky's in a high
fifty one, light rain overnight, possibly late evening, mostly cloudy,
thirty five tomorrow, partly cloudie. They say it'll be dry
for most of the day. Fifty four for the high,
thirty three over night with clouds and a little bit

(11:58):
of evening rain. Opening day looking like dry conditions and
a beautiful sixty two degree high with mostly cloudy skies.
That sounds like a good day. Forty three right now
for the five KRCD talk station, and then the return
of baseball season that is five pointy. If it's a
five KRCD talk station, I feel free to call five one, three,

(12:20):
seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty three
talk time five fifty on ET and T phones. Got
that empower you Similar tonight with Scott's Zermon talking about
LED lighting and human health apparently not good for us
at least the deprivation of red hue light and UV
ultra violet rays. We were built over time, with the
course of our evolution to need that and it's a

(12:41):
healthy part of our body. And since we're all under
led lights and incandescent bulbs all the time, you said,
there's lots of studies that show that's really bad for you.
So more information on that tonight beginning at seven pm
and Poweroamerica dot org. Register when you're over at the
website and log in from the convenience of your own home.
It's the easiest way to do it. Christopher Smithaman and
educators be part of the answer or get out of

(13:01):
the way the boiled down point that Christopher may during
his Smith event yesterday fifty five KRSE dot com for
that podcast. Over the phones we go. See what Bobby's
got this morning. Bobby, Happy Tuesday to.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
You, Happy Tuesday, my brother, Faith Flag family, and think out.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Of the box. Okay.

Speaker 3 (13:19):
We want to do the most amount of damage and
disarray to the left without any effort. That's what they
train you to do. And one thing that would work
more than anything is I believe in ad women with
all the DEI.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
Taken out of the government and everything. We need to
help these women and we need to add them to
a lot of different things. One of them is SSS
Selective Service system from the ages of eighteen to twenty six.
We need to register women per selective service. That doesn't

(13:58):
mean military, Sir, this out with firearms. There's all different
kind of branches of selective service. They can help this
country all times. Medical trades. Put them right there registring. Well,
are you blow the top of their heads off? Are
you suggesting we bring back the draft?

Speaker 3 (14:21):
Selective service is not part of the draft. We don't
have the drafts now. But legally all eighteen to twenty
six yearl males are supposed to register.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
Registering is not obligating one to serve. It is only
registering any event they are called up to service, which
was my comment about the draft. Are you suggesting that
they start calling people up to report for active duty,
whether in the military or other area of selective service.
That's my question.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
No, just registering. And when you read the SSAS it
says men and put in their and women, well they
need to be registered also.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
I have no with that whatsoever. But well, I mean
if it's part, if it's a legal obligation, then them
having a problem with it is not going to have
any impact. It's just going to rub them the wrong way.
Give them something else to complain about. There you go. Well,
I'm not sure what impact it would have. Listen, I
registered for service and they never called me Bobby. It

(15:21):
didn't impact my life one I owed. I just filled
out a form when I was eighteen years old. So
I add women and women. Yeah, I have no problem
with women serving whatsoever. There are many women who have
voluntarily signed up and enlisted for a military duty. I
think it's a wonderful thing. Many of them profoundly patriotic

(15:44):
and have signed up because they are now eligible to.
There are jobs that women can perform in the military,
and I presume that they do a decent job at it,
or they wouldn't be like, for example, behind the stick
of a helicopter or engagement. I agree, yeah, yeah, yeah,
they do a great job and they serve the country. Well.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
The one thing I'm saying is these left wing democrats
do not want their daughters registered. And all you got
to do is register their name, and that way you
would be able to find out a lot of.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Things about people like what, Well.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
For example, the parents, most women that are them that
to come out of college that have degrees.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
Vote Democrat. Yeah, they don't want their daughters and stuff regiments. Well,
I'll get into the top of their heads off.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
Well, so you just want to crawl inside their head.
That's the only your only point on all this. It
wouldn't have any impact whatsoever. They wouldn't be called up
for the draft unless the draft was re implemented. So
you're just saying the idea of them having to register
for selective service would would get into their head and
cause them to freak out and otherwise act like crazy
fools and protesters something correct. All right, Well, you know,

(17:03):
stir the pot if you want, Bobby, I don't know
that it's a worthy exercise. But in the final analysis,
you know, I don't have any problem with people with
men and women both serving in the American military or
have being having the same obligation. I mean, if we're
living in this equal society where men and women are
exactly equal and can play sports against each other, why
wouldn't they be required to join to sign up for

(17:24):
selective service? I mean, seriously, love should be making that argument, right,
how come you aren't making women to sign up? We're equal.
Flip that point on its head, Appreciate it. Bobby five
one three seven, dred and two three Taco Tom five
fifty on AT and T funds to do have local
stories coming up? Alternatively your phone calls. Either way, we go,

(17:45):
will go as soon as I get back. Here's you
your channeline first one and one to forecasts hit or
miss light showers today is what they're saying. Mostly cloudy
sky is fifty one over night low thirty five with
a little rain possible late this evening, body all night,
partly claude Toamar as well, dry though, fifty four for
the high clouds every night, just a slight chance of

(18:05):
late evening rain. Wednesday and opening day looking great. Sixty
two for the high mostly cloudy skies and dry conditions.
Forty four. Right now, I think about KRECD talk station
five nine Happy Tuesday five one three seven four nine
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two to three
Talk found Fight fifty on AT and T phones. If

(18:26):
you'd like to comment, love to hear from you. Beyond that,
we'll jump over to local stories got few here to
go through uh Covington, Kentucky. Wcpo's Bette Brett Braganski, thank
you BRED for reporting and letting us know what's going
on about this story. A family who filed a wrongful
death lawsuit against the Covington daycare where their infant child
died claims the facilities employee may have been under the

(18:47):
influence of marijuana in their the day their four month
old was found unresponsive. Lawsuit claims the Little Treehouse Learning
Center was negligent, alleging some employees lack CPR and First
Aid training, also a history of safety violations going back years.
Allegations point to a traffic stop from earlier that day,
which makes the family believe that even more of the

(19:09):
faculty that was responsible for their child's death. According to
Brandon Vulker, attorney for the family, one of the most
difficult calls I had to make to advise my clients
of what we had discovered on February seventh, coming to
police responded to the Little Treehouse Learning Center for a
report of an unresponsive infant. Calls obtained by a WCPO

(19:29):
show an employee called nine to one one, telling dispatchers
she discovered the child was not breathing while checking on
him while he was sleeping. In the family's amended lawsuit,
it says that earlier that morning, one of the daycares
employees was pulled over for speeding and marijuana possession. For
Thomas Police report says the officer quote detected the smell

(19:50):
of burnt marijuana clothes quote coming from the car and
saw a plastic package of THHC gummies in the woman's purse.
Court documents say the officer searched the car and found
seven small burnt marijuana roaches in the ashtray. Officer decided
and released the woman. Lawsuit said the woman making the
nine one one call was the same woman pulled over
that day to leaset. HEPO News obtained that call and

(20:15):
one of the exchanges with the operator nine one one operator,
is there someone else in there helping you? The woman responds, no,
I didn't want to freak anybody out. Losson claims the
woman was under the influence of marijuana, arguing her actions
were a negligent, wanton and or reckless. Said if this
came after the child was not properly placed down for

(20:36):
a nap and aspirated and ultimately choked. Timeline of the
lawsuit says two PM employees gave the infinite bottle to
twenty eight they laid him down for a nap. Three
thirty nine employees called nine one one because the baby
was unresponsive. Nine one one operator, How long do you
think he's not been breathing for woman? Maybe thirty minutes? Operator,

(20:56):
thirty minutes no breathing woman, Yeah, Tony said, how in
the world is there thirty minutes have elapsed before a
call is being made to nine to one one. I
think it's just my client. Big concern is what in
the world was going on? Well, that's disturbing. A driver

(21:24):
expected to recover after his car crashed into a train
and burst into flames early yesterday morning and corning to
Fairfield police and fire officials just before six am the
railroad crossing in North Gilmore Road in North Busway Lane.
Police of the train was stopped on the track and
the driver of the car did not see the train
since it was dark and the train was a flat

(21:46):
car driver tried to go around the crossing arms and
then hit the train. Driver, able to get out of
the vehicle on his own, was transported by ambulance to
a hospital with minor injuries. No other injuries reported. Car
are still involved fully involved when the fire crews arrived
and quickly knocked down the flames. Training its cars, not damage,

(22:07):
and there was no derailment, spill or a threat to
the public, according to Deputy Chief Cohn. Car driver cited
for fairey to obey a crossing device. According to police, yeah,
driving around the device, It's usually a bad idea. I
actually saw that happen in Chicago. Guy and ignored the advice.
The train had gone through going like westbound, but the

(22:30):
rails remained down, so he thought it was smart to
go around the rails, and as he did, a train
going eastbound comes zooming through. The guy's life was I
mean an inch. If he had delayed, like one little inch,
he would have been nailed by that train. Just I'll
never forget that. It's like, oh my god. Anyhow, three

(22:53):
of the former three or four Claremont County teens who
admitted to robbing multiple gun stores in court yesterday for
their disposition. Hearings The street took place in Miami and
Union townships during the summer of twenty four. Most recent
began in the early morning hours of August twenty fifth,
last year, court of the juvenile complained from the Claremont
County Quarter Common Police. They admitted to multiple charges during

(23:13):
the previous court hearing. Two of the three juveniles will
spend at least one year in the custody of the
High Department of Youth Services. Judge James shrevers so that
they will have to be released by the age of
twenty one, but how long they stayed in custody is
dependent upon each juvenile's behavior. Judge says he looked at
each of the team's histories individually. One team given serious
youthful offender disposition, which means that if the team causes

(23:35):
problems in the juvenile detention, he could be moved to
an adult detention center after turning twenty one. Judge Shriver's
state of the other team will be held in custody,
being taken to a facility, and when he's released and
will not be returning home to his family. In court,
Judge Drivers said, should they decide to release him at
some point, that he'd be released to a residential facility

(23:58):
or foster care facility because convinced from what I've read
that you are in any position to care for this child.
Wow as a tongue lashing. Third juvenile found not found
competent to stand trial instead of sending him to Jewey
Detention Center. He's under community control for four years and
able to live at home. According to the judge, juvenile
psychological of evaluation played a role in this, as it

(24:20):
was determined that he is not considered a criminally minded youth.
Fourth juvenile charging the break in did not appear in court.
Judge says restitutions owed to the business that we're broken into.
The juveniles stole total more than thirteen thousand dollars. Each
is responsible for making sure the full amount is paid,
even if the other juveniles failed to pay back their share.

(24:41):
Guess they're going to have to get jobs when they
get out. Five point thirty six fifty five k City
Talk Stations Stack is stupid. Come in up. I hope
you can stick around for that or call me either
way we want to go. It's okay with me. Just
give me a couple of minutes here.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeart Radio station.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
Channel nine. Weather forecast little light showers to see hit
or miss light showers a day, clouds all day, fifty one,
overnight mostly cloudy with another wave of light rain that'll
be late this evening. Partly cloudy on Wednesday, dry though
fifty four clouds over night as well, just a slight
chance of late evening rain. Wednesday a little thirty three,
then a high of sixty two for opening day, dry

(25:25):
and cloudy, forty forty degrees. Right now, it's time for
first traffic.

Speaker 5 (25:31):
Probably you see how traffic center for NASA Doctor's Day.
We honor the U see health positions who are leading
breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more at uce health dot com.
Highway traffic and pretty good shape this morning. No accidents
to deal with the weather issues inside the two seventy
five loop. Most of the rain I'm seen is far

(25:51):
south on Cincinnati and belot to seventy five near dry Ridge,
Kingram on fifty five k R see Deep talks facial.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
It's five forty fifty five Garcie detalk station. I've one
three seven four nine to fifty five hundred, eight hundred
and eight to two three talk five fifty on eight
andd F phone. So forget fifty five cars dot com.
When you're checking out the podcast blog page, getting a book,
or listening to the Smith event kind of thing. Make
sure you get your iHeart media app. It makes it
very convenient to stream all the iHeart content incling the
fifty five Carsite morning show, which I truly appreciate and

(26:24):
thanks to everybody, I most notably, I just get such
a big kick of those folks who listened from out
of town. Just warms my heart. You know, I've had
like New Hampshire, Gary, or the folks down in Florida.
I got quite a few Florida listeners tuning in, got
Mississippi James. And anyway, I'm old school man. I think
our radio is just computerly local. And I know that
I am like an old person when I say something

(26:47):
like that, But anyway, it warms my heart.

Speaker 6 (26:51):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
Let us see here over to the stack of stupid.
We've got a Pennsylvania city employee and now I've been
arrested after a month's long investigation after she claimed falsely
that's someone to placed a noose on her desk. During
a news conference, Allentown Police Department announced the arrest of
city employee la Tarsha Brown, who police say made a

(27:12):
report January tenth, that she reported finding a news on
her desk when she showed up her work at City Hall.
Criminal investigation was launched following her report to identify the
person responsible for placing the news on her desk. During
the investigation, please said, uh oh. Surveillance video and building
access control records reviewed to identify the city employees present
on the third floor of City Hall between the time

(27:35):
Brown left work and her arrival the following morning. Officials
in Allentown announced Monday yesterday that a city employee has
been charged. After each employee was interviewed and was asked
if they would provide a boogle swab for DNA testing
if necessary, please said, Every city employee agreed, except for Brown, who, well,

(27:59):
it's doing it because there it is, yeah, who, officers said,
was initially cooperative, but later requested that the investigation be discontinued.
Days later, her DNA sample was obtained through a search
warrant after the news was submitted to the Pennsylvania State
Police Crime Lab for DNA testing. Police determine that her DNA,
of course, matched the DNA found on the news. Accord

(28:21):
to the forensic report. Police and the release said no
other person's DNA profile was found on the evidentiary items
involved in this investigation found not facing charges in connection
with the news investigation, including tampering with or fabricating physical evidence,
and false reports to law enforcement authorities. I guess you
can't find racism, you just make it up. Joe, get

(28:53):
your ward out. We gave one for abuse of a
dog the other day. A woman took a dog into
the bathroom at the air and drowned it because she
didn't do the paperwork to get the dog on the plane.
In order to bring your dog in a flight, airlines
require the dog meet certain requirements. This is the news story,

(29:13):
like its breed, size and weight, and your dog has
to comfortably fit in a carrier under the seat in
front of you. Well, recent TikTok video going around showing
a woman arguing that her dog can fit into the
way too small carrier, indicating that she was following protocol
so the two of them could board on their flight.

(29:35):
Video with hundreds of thousands of views, it shows the
woman sitting in her flight's gate waiting to board, with
her dog freely walking around while its owner is sitting
The airport employee approached the dog owner and told her
that she had to have the car that had to
have a carrier that the dog can comfortably fit in
if they wanted to get on the plane. And that's
when the woman unzipped the small pink carrier, stuffs her

(29:58):
dog into it is clearly too big to fit into it,
and then shoves his head down in order to successfully
zip it. Closed. Employee herd to be singing the video,
you can't fly like that. The dog has to be
able to move in a full circle, which she cannot
do in that carrier. They argued back and forth. Apparently
it's easy to see in the video the dog is

(30:20):
struggling to move, let alone get comfortable and the very
small carrier video ends there, But seems like the employee
wasn't having it with this woman Shenanigans, and of course
the world in the comments section let her have it,
and of course she is now the winner of the award.

Speaker 7 (30:38):
This morning, Perio is the biggest douche of the universe,
in all the galaxies.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
There's no bigger douche than you.

Speaker 7 (30:49):
You've reached the top the pinnacle of douche dum, good
going due.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
Your dreams have come true. Five forty five and five
KRC DE Talk station. More of that well, different stories
coming up after this break. Fifty five KRC the tox.

Speaker 8 (31:11):
There's your weather forecast in channel nine. You got some
light showers. They're saying hit or miss. I guess that's
the occasional shower. Cloudy today, fifty one, cloudy overnight. They'll
rain late tonight as we late evening rather over.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
Night lower thirty five, fifty four to the high tomorrow
and partly cloudy skies but dry clouds every night. Is
a slight chance of late day rain. Thirty three for
the low opening day looking like dry conditions with clotty skies,
and sixty two for the high. Very comfortable day forty
five Right now traffic time from the uc UP Traffic Center.

Speaker 5 (31:39):
For National Doctor's Day Sunday, we honor the UCE Health
physicians who are leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more
right you see help dot com. Highway traffic looking pretty
good this morning with no accidents to deal with. North
Bend seventy five. Do we find out a barrow linger
into downtown that's under seven minutes? In Ben seventy four
problem free at cold Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs

(32:02):
neat talk station.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
Five p fifty fifty five KRCIT the talk station Happy Tuesday,
Full hour with civilian bradwins So we're get to kick
out of that. Tail wrote that that on the rundown
Gus retired former Congressman Brad Winsrip not really retired though,
he's moved on to other things, So we're gonna call
him a civilian. Still has got good political observations, and
I enjoy the conversations we have and I hope you

(32:27):
do too, So stick around for that abstinent phone calls,
which we're absent right now. Teacher in Phoenix area elementary
schools now facing charges after he urinated in a can
in front of his class, exposing himself in the process.

Speaker 9 (32:41):
Do what the hell?

Speaker 1 (32:44):
Sixth grade teacher Kurt Hint And according to authorities, he's
fifty two facing four counts of indecent exposure related to
the incident that happened in Wilson Elementary School. This is
in Phoenix. Core to the paperwork, three of Hinton's students
went to the principal's officer report what they saw, well
specific their teacher urinating in class. Student told principal and
the police that they heard what sounded like falling water,

(33:05):
looked over the shoulder, and saw him urinating into a
container and seeing his genitalia in the process. Detectives noted
that the desk where Hinton was sat was not enclosed,
and someone in the class would be able to see
his legs and see the legs of anyone seated at
the teacher's desk. Taking into custody and brought to the
Phoenix Police headquarters and being interviewed, allegedly told police a

(33:26):
while in class he did in fact on zip his
pants and urinate into a white can, but did not
think any students could see what he was doing, while
he claimed he was also covering himself. Idiots doing idiot
things because they're idiots waiting for that one, Thorty said.
Hinton told police that he was new to the school
and did not know of a way for someone else
to watch his class so they could use the restroom,

(33:48):
reportedly telling investigators he decided to urinate in the can
like he used to do in the military when he
was unable to leave his post. Thority shared that Hinton
had also acknowledged it was an error in judgment and
not something he had done before, So he's not a
recidibus in class urinator. There's no flag for us. Thank you.

(34:12):
Joe Livingston, Tennessee couple complained about finding hair in their
meal and requested a refund. Hey, look, there were security
cameras there which showed that they had actually put the
hair in the food themselves in an effort to save money.
What why are people going to wake up to the
reality that their video cameras literally everywhere. Patrick Jones, manager

(34:39):
at the Steel coop, was apologetic and surprised when a
customer complained about a large chunk of hair that he
found in his food. After the couple complained about finding
hair in their meal and requests the refund, security cameras
did show that they had planted the hair themselves to
save the money. Accorded to Jones in his reaction to
local news there at WSMV, it looked like somebody pulled

(35:00):
a wat of hair out of their head and placed
it right on your plate. That's awful. Jones took the
meal of the couple off the couple's bill and apologized,
but nearby customer let them know exactly what happened. As
the restaurant's security cameras confirmed the woman seemed to pull
a chunk of hair from the back of her head
and handed it to the man, who then placed the
hair on the meal while ensuring nobody around was around

(35:22):
to see except the Big Brother video camera that was
looming over their head. Once he realized. Once Jones realized
what happened, he ran out the front door to try
to catch the couple, but turned the corner to see
what is described as a surprising sight. The guilty man
was on one knee proposing to the woman do what

(35:44):
the hell? Okay, After getting over the reality of that,
Jones told the couple they were not welcome back in
the restaurant again. Owner the restaurant, a woman named Cindy Cooper,
decided to post the security camera video online to prove
the restaurant isn't always at fault in situations like that,
and other businesses should be careful and vigilant about similar claims. Okay,

(36:11):
you may be aware of this when I made the
news about a week or so ago, but let's go
ahead and have another go at the idiots who are
burning up Tesla's arsonists who tried to burn down a
Tesla charging station and a protest of President Trump and
Elon Musk set himself on fire. Instant karma for Daniel

(36:32):
Clark Pounder burned down three EV charges in a South
Carolina parking lot last Friday, and he scrawled f Trump.
Of course he used the elongated full word FCC non compliant.
It is as well as long live the Ukraine. What
are we now burning Tesla's in the name of Ukraine? Joe?

(36:58):
He was seen throwing five I have Molotov cocktails, one
of which set him on fire, according to witnesses who
saw him running away from the North Charleston Lot. Idiots
doing idiot things because their idiot Instant karma. Witnesses said
quote that the suspect had accidentally caught their own back
on fire while throwing the device. Clark Pounder, mechanic from

(37:25):
Jones Island, was arrested later in the day after police
issued a public appeal to help find him. Not clear
how badly he was burned by the fire. He was
a reigned in federal court that afternoon, facing a maximum
year of twenty years in prison. Yep Arsenal, do that
for you? Fifty five? Was it worth it?

Speaker 10 (37:48):
You?

Speaker 1 (37:48):
Trump haters and musketers out there of the world. Is
it worth it stick around? Plan more to talk about.
Apparently the tariffs are working much of the cagrita of
the Trump haters. And I'm not a huge fan of tariffs,
but apparently the barns some good fruit for us. We've
got some of the stories to talk about as well
as other things. And your phone calls are always welcome.
Five one, three, seven, four ninety two to three Talk

(38:11):
Pound Fight fifty on a T and T phones. I'll
be back after the news covering Trump's first one hundred days.
Every day promises made, the promises kept. Fifty five krs
the talk Station.

Speaker 3 (38:23):
It's a voice in the dark, heard daily exactly the
things that need to be said.

Speaker 1 (38:28):
Fifty five kr Seed the Talk Station. Six fifty five
gar Seed the talk Station. Happy Tuesday. Trian Thomas wishing
that we had a live feed of Joe Strekker's facial
expressions when we have glitches like that, Poor Joe. You

(38:49):
cracked me up, though, brother, that was not Joe's fault.
That's where the that's funny facial spre expressions come from.
Coming top One hour from now. Brad Winster returns in studio,
former congressman, now civilian. We'll get his thoughts and commentaries
on things that are going on in the news inside
Scoop the Bright Part News Fast forward a couple of
hours eight oh five for that. Tech editor Colin Maidin
returns of the program to talk about musk derangement syndrome. Yeah,

(39:13):
there's a lot of that going on out there. Daniel
Davis Deep Dive you always hear from the retired Lieutenant
colonel Tuesdays at eight thirty with the latest on Russia
and Ukraine and the wonderful and incomparable doctor Megan Fru,
one of the dynamic duo of Dynasty Dentistry doctors Peck
and Freu. She's joined the program to talk about the
latest and cosmetic dentistry dentistry. Generally speaking, she is a terrific,

(39:33):
terrific dentist. You'd be in great hands with doctor Freu,
that's for sure. And doctor Peck of course. You know
I love doctor Packs, a great guy. Doctor Freu a
lot easier on the eyes though. Anyway, Yeah, sometimes my
internal monologue does creep out. That's me anyway. You know,

(39:54):
I've said it before, I'll say it again, no huge
fan of tariffs, but I do understand reciprocal tariffs. If
somebody else is tariffing our goods, why wouldn't we tariff theirs?
Why are they penalizing American goods coming into their country
when we don't penalize theirs. It creates an equal playing field,
and at least I understand the logic of that. Now.
It does have an economic impact on us. Of course,

(40:16):
the goods that formerly came in without tariffs are going
to cost more, but it does it can bring about
some significant behavioral changes, and there is a whole lot
of that going on right now. Get a load of
the litany of companies that are promising to invest in
the United States. Hyundai Car Company announced a twenty billion

(40:37):
dollar investment in the United States, one of a multitude
of companies that have out expressed desire to now invest
in the United States. Their executive chairman of the guy
named Chung Lee Sun, with Donald Trump by his side
along with Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, discuss this unsuring plan
at the White House the other day. The investment will

(40:58):
include a five point only eight billion dollars steel plant
in Louisiana. That facility will hire about fourteen hundred employees
manufacturing next generation steel that'll be used in the two
factories here in the United States to make their electric vehicles.
Explained by Chong, the largest US investment Hyundai's ever made,

(41:21):
He said, all of these efforts will accelerate the localization
of our supply chain in the United States to expand
our operations and grow our American workforce. With your leadership,
mister President, Hyundai Motor Group is proud to be a
strong partner in America's industrial future. How about that. They'll

(41:41):
also enhance their automobile manufacturing in Georgia. They will also
be investing in advanced artificial intelligence technology companies. Trump, of course,
point of the triff tariffs is the cheap factor of
factor in the investment. This investment is a clear demonstration
that tariffs very strongly work. I hope other things also,

(42:01):
but the tariffs are bringing them in at levels that
have not been witnessed. Landry, for his part, standing there
with the two, said the projects returning to the United
States because the President is basically opening up America to
fair trade. The reciprocal tariffs, in my opinion, are absolutely
genius Landry said, we had a sixty six billion dollar

(42:28):
trade deficit with South Korea that was up twenty nine
percent from twenty twenty three, so one year increase of
twenty nine percent. Last time we had a trade surplus
with South Korea nineteen ninety seven. And of course, if
you know the stock market, it responded favorably because Trump
said he might be adjusting and not implementing some of
the tariffs he'd been promising. Moving over to additional investments, Stilantis,

(42:51):
which owns Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and ram Brands, reiterated the
company's efforts to increase American car manufacturing, reopening a shuttered
Illinois plant as soon as twenty twenty seven, Volvo suggesting
it may shift production of some of its models into
the United States the States because of tariffs, accord to
their CEO Jim Rowans, talking with Rowan, Reuter's Rowan said

(43:14):
that if the tariff's on export of automobiles from Europe
rise to twenty five percent, which is what Trump promised,
then in his words, it's a hell of a lot
more difficult from a profit perspective. But they pointed out
they have plenty of capacity here in the United States
that their assembly plants. He said, we have space, paint shops,
the building, all of that's there. We just need to
make a final decision on which models and which platforms

(43:37):
that we would move to the United States. Honda. Honda
also claims to be considering producing its next generation Civic
Hybrid in Indiana rather than Mexico in order to yes
avoid tariffs. White House recently implemented a twenty five percent
tariff on all steel and aluminum, and of course President's

(44:01):
levies on autobiles from Asia and Europe scheduled to go
in effect in April. Maybe, but with the move from
some of these companies, maybe it won't be on all
of the companies. Various other corporations and foreign governments have
also been pledging approximately three trillion dollars in investments here
in the United States. Apple, for its part, confirmed last

(44:23):
month it will be investing five hundred billion over four
years to increase their facilities, poost manufacturing and initiate projects.
Navidia and Taiwan Semiconductor manufacturing Company vowed one hundred billion
dollars in investments here in the United States. Open Ai,
Oracle and japan SoftBank also announced what they call the

(44:44):
Stargate Project in January, a one hundred billion dollar investment
here in the United States for data centers. And just
recently the other day, United Arab Emirates in Saudi Arabia
have pledged one point four trillion. That will be the
United Arab Emirates on its own and Saudi Arabia six

(45:06):
hundred billion dollars in United States investments. Isn't that a
wonderful and healthy shift from the prior administration. It's interesting,
isn't it. Trump said just the other day that he
may soften these reciprocal tariffs, saying I may give a

(45:27):
lot of countries breaks. He said the reciprocal tariffs could
stop short of his initial pledge to equalize duties with
rates on the other nations charge. He said, I'm embarrassed
to charge them what they've charged us. These comments came
hours after he said the US would impose a twenty
five percent tariff on any country buying oil or gas

(45:49):
from Venezuela, and that particular tariff relates to well them
importing the trade. De Aragua gangs as well as their
failure to hold law elections. Said yesterday he would impose
a twenty five percent tariff on any country buying oil
gas from Venezuela, saying Venezuela has been a very hostile
to the United States and the freedoms which we espouse. Therefore,

(46:12):
any country the purchases oil and or gas from Venezuela
venezuel will be forced to pay a tariff at twenty
five percent of the United States on any trade they
do with our country. All documentation will be signed and registered,
and the terra will take place on April second, twenty
twenty five, which he is calling Liberation Day in America.
Apparently that would really impact China and India, which are

(46:33):
Venezuela's top oil customers. Chinese private refiners have remained among
the most resilient buyers of Venezuelan crew because they take
advantage of discounted barrels that are subject to global sanctions.
So Venezuela, in its desperation, has to sell them at
a discount rate, and China takes advantage of that. They've

(46:54):
also been selling here to the United States. Under weird reality,
we do in can produce our own oil in this country.
And of course Donald Trump's all the above strategy and
drill baby drill policies mean that we're going to be
producing more. But they've been supplying in a major way
oil to the United States. The Venezuelans exports, apparently of

(47:16):
their crew, reached a new high before the Trump administration
ended the joint vengers between Venezuela's state owned Petro Lois
and Chevron. Back in February, Trump said he was revoking
a license that gave Chevron permission to pump and export
Venezuela and oil, arguing that Maduro's government failed to meet
the electoral conditions set in the July twenty twenty four

(47:40):
Biden administration agreement, which Biden East sanctions back in twenty
twenty two, giving Chevron permission to resume operations in exchange
for Madua's pledge to work with the opposition parties on
democratic reforms, and Trump pointed out back and it's like, no,
they didn't do that. According to Trump's statement, then I'm

(48:02):
therefore ordering that in the effect I'm sorry, the ineffective
and unmet Biden concession agreement be terminated as of March first,
with an option to renew. So I just have to
ask out low, why is it we would buy Venezuela
and oil when we've got our own in Venezuela is
a corrupt country. But note that Venezuela has agreed to

(48:26):
take back its trade de Uragua gang members as a
consequence of the tariff. So the tariffs have worked to
some degree interesting reality, which gives Trump the flexibility to
soften the tariff's up if he gets what he wants

(48:46):
in exchange, he imposes the tariffs, or at least he
threatens them, and he makes a list of demands. I'll
lease them if you stop doing this to us, quit
exporting your gang members and emptying your prisons and sending
them to the United States of America. Oh and by
the way, if we catch them, find them in the
country illegally and they are criminals, we're going to send
them back to your country. Accept them, Okay, concession made.

(49:11):
I wouldn't hold by breath waiting for madure. I'd hold
fair elections. Though we'll see what how that goes. Six
sixteen fifty five KRC Detalk Station five one three seven
four nine fifty five hundred eight hundred two three talk
TIWN five fifty on eighteen to Fune'll give you one
more phone over here. One you're gonna want if you
need a service upgrade or any any any electrical work
for your home. It's Cullen Electric. They've been around since

(49:32):
locally owned and operated, Andrew Cullen's great team has been
around since nineteen ninety nine doing all kinds of wonderful
services for residential customers in the Greater Cincinnati area. And
right now, because of new code changes that went to
effect last spring, apparently it's driven the cost of a
service upgrade that he says, it's his words through the roof.
So it's a perfect time to take advantage of the

(49:53):
spring special they've got right now, a twenty percent discount
on new service installation for your home. That's twenty percent
and off the total job cost, which can save you
a heap load of money. Power up your home. Sale
means great savings on the service upgrade, and it's applicable
to above or below ground residential single family services four
hundred amps or less, and it extends the breaker panel

(50:14):
and main service upgrades only. You'll get the famous Cullen
ten year electric wiring warranty on the installation, but you
get that for anything Cullen does for you. Customer service
outstanding and it comes at a great discount for that
service installation. So if you got yourself one of those
used teslas that people are selling out there, and you
want to get a charging station in your home, call
Andrew Cullen and the team. Here's the number five one

(50:36):
three two two seven four one one two five one
three two two seven four one one two Online It's
Cullen spelled c U L L E N. Cullen Electriccincinnati dot.

Speaker 9 (50:45):
Com, fifty five KRC power.

Speaker 1 (50:51):
Six. It's about KRCD talk stations. It will tribute Thank
Beck in twenty twenty two. This is the day that
the Foo Fighters drummer died. Trust tracker this black armband
on real quick before I go to the phone. Just
to remind everybody. Todd Zenzen joins of the program, former
Inspector General. He is all over the craziness going on

(51:11):
with the greater Cincinnati area, Hamilton County as well as
City of Cincinnati. Another appointment you should make is to
listen to Citizen Watchdog, which you can find on the
iHeartMedia Apple on YouTube, and this most recent episode exposes
what they described as clandestine forces at play in the
heart of local governance, where sales tax dollars intended for
public landmarks were described as ominously repurposed by shadowy five

(51:35):
oh one C four groups insights from Hamilton County Commission
to niche Street House. He said they peel back the
layers of abfuse skations surrounding the new controversial arena proposal,
also draw parallels to Norfolk Southern's murky railways sell off
and scrutinize aftab pur balls entanglements in this political quagmire. Wow,

(51:56):
very illiterative, he is, So there you have it, but
a citizen watchdog. And props to Todd Zenzer for being
the man who's all over this and the man with
the enough skills being the former Inspector General to understand
the lunacy Mississippi. James, welcome back to the morning show.
He Joe's warnings.

Speaker 11 (52:14):
Oh yes, I will. I'll revisit two of the things
I tried to express yesterday and lead the third went
off okay, And I was only trying to say that
Musk will be better served if he served if he
brought out assault approach. Now I'm all fuck cut and

(52:36):
finding fraud and reversing stuff that's been going out that
should not have been going out. But I still say
for his image with that change, So that was harsh
to a person that don't like him, whereas if he
came out with a surgical knife, that would have went
over better. Just to suggest it. Okay, same way, same

(52:59):
way with the word a Ponzi scheme, if he'd just
changed it to peer med.

Speaker 12 (53:05):
I think that would have went over better to people
that don't like him for whatever reason.

Speaker 1 (53:10):
But see they're different. We went over that yesterday. Ponzi
scheme is what the social security is. Pyramid scheme is
like Amway, where you sell products and then you get
people to sell products below you. They work and report
to you and give you part of their profits, and
then they go out and get other people to work
for them and then they take some of the profits
and pass on the profits to you. That's a pyramid

(53:31):
scheme and that's not social security. So if he called
it a pyramid scheme, he will be definitionally inaccurate and
it would make him look ignorant. Ponzi scheme is where
the dollars coming in go to the prior investors immediately
out the door and leaving no money left for the
investors that have just come in, that's a ponzi scheme.

Speaker 12 (53:52):
Maybe a third word needs to come in then, is
the ponzi scheme is illegal. So are we saying social
Security is illegal?

Speaker 1 (53:59):
No, it's it's formed by law. It is a it
is actually a legal Ponzi scheme. And when it was
set up, it wasn't a ponzi scheme. You got to remember,
there were sixteen workers for every single individual taking social
Security when it first started, and people died on average
like by age sixty six or sixty seven. Guess what
modern medicine kicked in and we live a hell of

(54:22):
a lot longer than we used to. So people are
drawing off social Security well into their eighties now when
that wasn't under the original design, and there are only
about three or four workers for every person drawing social Security.
So it became a ponzi scheme over time, coupled with
the fact that the government has borrowed against what is
quote unquote you know, the Social Security Trust Fund, you know,

(54:44):
and so there's nothing there to draw benefits from except
a paltry amount which they say would only last a
couple of years if they had to start drawing into it.
So you know, you may be offended by the boldness
of his statement, but definitionally he is accurate in calling
it a Ponzi scheme. It's legal, it's set up by Congress.

(55:04):
We have to pay into it by law. But if
someone set it up now the way it currently operates,
they'd be subject to the Justice Department investigation and probably
would be prosecuted for it. If you set it up
as a non governmental plan, it would be a Ponzi scheme.
So there and as far as they as far as

(55:24):
the chainsaw versus scalpel goes, maybe he needs a new
marketing person. Maybe he should hire you, because you know what,
it might have been a better visual for him to
come in with a scalpel, because people are accusing him
of taking too much of a hammer and tong approach
to the cutbacks, and some of them they had to
walk back. Others courts have overruled, and that's still subject
to litigation. But you know, hey, he's part of the

(55:46):
Trump administration. You know, Trump would never come out with
a scalpel. He'd come out with a chainsaw. He probably
come out with the two chainsaws, one in each ten
But see that's Donald Trump, and you and I would
both agree that would be something that wouldn't be visually
appealing to many people and not as saleable. Had something more,
you know, appealing to the eye been used as a prop,

(56:06):
but fair enough appreciate it, Mississippi James six twenty seven
Right now fIF five KRCY the talk station. Feel free
to call off of your thoughts and comments five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two
to three talk TUND five fifty on AT and T phones.
Another call. Peter Shabria Keloorwiam seven Hill is the only
real estate agent I would ever consider hiring buyer's agent

(56:27):
sellers agent. He's got the best team in the Tri
State and offering plans and programs that nobody ever, ever
else offers. So it's a Sabri group finding the perfect
dream home. That takes energy, that takes time. You get
that energy and time from the agents of the Sabri Group.
They go out of their way to make sure you
have a five star experience, so much so that if

(56:48):
they find you a home and you buy it, they
guarantee that you'll love it because if you're there within
the first year and you say I don't love this home,
I want to get rid of it. They'll sell it
for free. That's a guarantee from Peter Shabria Keller Williams
seven Hills. Love It or Leave It guarantee is what
they call that one. They offer other programs as well.
I recommend you check them out on the line at

(57:09):
seven zero eight three thousand dot com seven zero eight
three thousand dot com. Call them up today five one
three seven zero eight three thousand Shabrie spelled C H
A b R I S Chivary group in your search engine.
You'll find them that way too, and tell them Brian said,
Hi when you do get in touch.

Speaker 9 (57:26):
Fifty five KRC wake it.

Speaker 1 (57:33):
Chat and nine weather four ks on and off showers,
light showers. They say it'll be clydy today fifty one
for the high Claudi overnight as well, light rain possible
late this evening, partly Claude tomorrow but dry fifty four.
It'll be mostly cloudy overnight, possible rain late in the
day tomorrow, evening overnight low at thirty three for opening day,

(57:54):
smile sixty two with mostly cloudy sky's dry conditions. Right now,
it's forty five degrees and sign for traffic update from
Chuck from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 5 (58:05):
Financial Doctor's Day Sunday, we honor the UCE health physicians
who are leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more and
you see health dot com. Highways not bad this morning.
Southbound seventy five continues with no delays through Westchester. I
am seeing just a bit of heavier traffic southbound two
seventy five to get across the Carrol Cropper Bridge. Not

(58:26):
a whole lot of extra time needed. Yep, Chuck Ingram
on fifty five K see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (58:42):
Six thirty two at fifty five car see talks station.
I'm sorry, as responding to uh Marcia who said, just
reminded the chainsaw wasn't planned, it was a gift. It
just happened. Let me finish up my thoughts here. True,
but one doesn't have to use a prop just because
one is handed it close enough dramatically. Thank you, Marsha.

(59:06):
Though point well taken. Dred Andy two to three talk
if you want to call police, feel free. Otherwise, let
us take a look at some local stories. Don't ignore
crossing gates at where the trains go. Driver expected to
recover after his car crashed into a train and then

(59:27):
burst into flames. Happened about six am yesterday morning, court
of the Fairfield Police and fire officials right there at
North Gilmore Road and North Busway Lane, train stopped on
the track. According to the cops, the driver of the
car didn't see the train since it was dark and
the train was a flat car. Nonetheless, the driver tried
to go around the crossing arms and that's when he

(59:49):
hit the train. He fortunately was able to scramble out
of the vehicle on his own and was taken to ambulance.
Taken by ambulance to a hospital with minor injuries. Thankfully,
no other injuries reported. Car fully in inflamed when the
fire crews showed up, but they were able to put
it out rather quickly. Training its cars were not damage
and there was no derailan spill, or threat to the public,
according to the fire chief. Cohn driver cited for favor

(01:00:13):
to obey a crossing device. According to the police, this
is just I imagine it's a struggle taking your child
off the Daycaren wondering what goes on during the day,
And here's a great illustration of why I imagine there's
a lot of families out there that have concern of
that going on. Family who filed a wrongfull death lawsuit
against Covington Daycare where their infant died now is claiming

(01:00:35):
the facilities employee may have been under the influence of
marijuana the day they're four month old was found unresponsive.
Lawsuit against Little Treehouse Learning Center claims it was negligent
a lodging, some employees lacked CPR and first aid training,
also a history of safety violations going back here, as
are cited new allegations of appoint to a traffic stop

(01:00:56):
from earlier that day, which suggested the family may the
facility was responsible for the child's death. Even more so,
according to the lawyer, Brandon Bolker, being interviewed by a WCPO,
one of the most difficult calls I had to make
was to advise my clients of what we discovered. February seventh,
coming to police responded the Little Treehouse Learning Center for
a report of an unresponsive infant. Calls say an employee

(01:01:20):
called nine one one, telling dispatchers she discovered the child
was not breathing while checking on him as he slept
in The amended lawsuit. It says earlier that morning, one
of the daycarees employees pulled over for speeding as well
as marijuana possession. Fort Thomas Police reports that an officer
detected the smell of burnt marijuana coming from the car,
found a plastic package of THHC gummies and the woman's purse.

(01:01:42):
Officer searched the car and found several small burnt marijuana
roaches in the astray, sighted and released the woman officer did.
Lawsuit says the woman making the nine to one one
call was that same woman that got pulled over for
the moving violation and the weed possession, and apparently she
had an exchange with the nine to one one officer.

(01:02:05):
Lawsuit climbsed woman was under the influence of marijuana, arguing
her actions were negligent, wanton, and or reckless. Said this
came after the child was not properly placed down for
a nap and aspirated and ultimately choked. Court of the lawsuit,
employees gave the infinite bottle at two pm two twenty eight,
they laid them down for a nap. At three point
thirty nine, the employees called nine one one because the

(01:02:26):
baby was unresponsive in exchange of the nine one one
operator who asked, how long do you think he's not
been breathing? For woman? Maybe thirty minutes, to which the
operator responded thirty minutes no breathing. The woman's response, yeah.
In the attorney's words, how in the world is there
thirty minutes that have elapsed before a call is being

(01:02:48):
made to nine one one? I just I just my
client big concern is what in the world's going on? Yeah,
I'd have that same concern. So other authorities are investigating
as well well. Six point thirty sixty five KR see
detalk station Lawrence. I will be happy to take your
call if you can just hang on a minute oount

(01:03:08):
of time in this particular segment. And I have to
mention chimneycare, fireplace in stove because it's all about your safety,
and what a great time to have your chimney checked out.
You're not I presume, maybe it's too much of a presumption,
but I presume that you're not using your fireplace, your
free standing stove. And if you've got a wood burner,
go ahead and take care of your safety before it's
time to use it again. No time is a bad
time to take to get your chimney taken care of

(01:03:29):
by the Chimneycare, Fireplace and Stove Expert's been around since
nineteen eighty eight, a plus with a Better Business Bureau
and their Spring special is a wood burning sweep and evaluation.
You get the video camera inspection along with a sweep
and it's only one sixty nine to ninety nine plus tax.
It's a good savings off the regular price. So get
that done during this perfect time. To get it done,

(01:03:50):
call two four eight ninety six hundred book your appoinment.
You can do it also on their website Chimneycare Co.
And if you don't have a wood burner, but you
want to make sure you don't have any water damage,
get this Spring special which chimneys is free exterior evaluation
and protect your chimney from water damage. Book your Appointment'll
be happy to come out to your place and check
it all out, and I suppose with the wood burning
sweeping evaluation they'll do that as well. It is a

(01:04:11):
free inspection and they're great about doing a comprehensive inspection,
but why not have it checked out. Water damage may
not be known to you the homeowner. That appointment also
can schedule can be scheduled online at chimneycarec dot com.
Again the number five, one, three, two four eight ninety
six hundred.

Speaker 4 (01:04:27):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:04:31):
This is Jeff for Tri State Men's Health. We're out.
The channel nine says a hit, hit or miss light
showers their words. Most of the cloud all day high
have fifty one, more clouds overnight. It's a little bit
of rain late late this evening thirty five. The overnight
low fifty four. Are high Tomorrow clouds but dry except
late late in the day. Might get a little bit

(01:04:51):
of rain. Overnight low of thirty three with clouds again
and then a cloudy opening day but dry in a
high sixty two. Sounds like great baseball weather forty five degrees.
Right now, it's time for traffic.

Speaker 5 (01:05:00):
From the ucl Tramfics Center for National Doctor's Day Sunday,
we honor the UCEE Health physicians who are leading breakthroughs
from better Tomorrow's learn More right you seehealth dot Com.
Highway traffic is doing just fine at the moment. I'm
not seeing any huge time delays northbound seventy five just
beginning to build at Kyle's southbound two seventy five. Slow's

(01:05:22):
just submit at the Carrol Cropper Bridge. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:05:30):
Thanks forty two. I any have a FERCB talk station.
It's Tuesday, our former Congress on Wednesday after the tab
of thereon news for an hour in studio. Love that
he comes in. We'll have a whole variety of topics
to talk about and I want to talk to Lawrence.
Who's the kind enough to hold over the break? Laurence,
thanks for holding. Welcome to the show.

Speaker 6 (01:05:45):
Thanks Brian.

Speaker 1 (01:05:46):
Good to be with you.

Speaker 6 (01:05:48):
I just wanted to encourage everybody in the city today
to come out to Covedale at forty nine to ninety
Glenway Avenue and check out the mailal at debate tonight
between the candidates.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
Oh yeah, important that we hear from them. Yeah, excellent reminder.
And I'm glad you called Lawrence. That's that's it. What
is the address or location? And it's doesn't it start
at seven the mayor ol debate.

Speaker 6 (01:06:13):
That's correct, right, it starts at seven pm. It's going
to be at the cove Deal Center of the Foreign
Arts forty nine to ninety Glenway Avenue. I'm encouraging everybody
to come out and listen to what these candidates have
to say. In addition, yeah, edition is that viy. I
want to make sure that people know that if you didn't,

(01:06:34):
early voting has already begun as the Friday for voters
who live overseas in for military personnel. So we are
in that time now where it's almost time to activate.
Oh yeah, and we want to make sure that we
turn the vote out because traditionally, as you know, when
this will election, turnout is extremely low.

Speaker 1 (01:06:57):
It's sad. It's sad, Low Lawrence. I'm doubling down on that,
and it's just sad how few people come out for
these these primaries. It's terrible.

Speaker 6 (01:07:07):
But we do have hope because on April they eight,
early voting will begin and also you can start requesting
your ask a t dial it now and they'll mail
it out to you as just a giteral citizen on
dead day if you bring your application. We have to
turn Cincinnati around. We see new leadership at the federal level.
We still have good leadership at the state level. We

(01:07:28):
have to make sure we have good leadership on the
municipal level because by now, I'm not competent in the
city hall.

Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
Lawrence. God bless you for reminding my listeners and including
me about the debate tonight and the coming like a
freight train attus early voting beginning. Yeah, I agree, really
important to get the candidate's ideas and thoughts on the issues.
And yes, regardless of who you're thinking about voting for,
the Cincinnati does need a change of direction. The financial

(01:07:56):
shenanigans that are going on there that of course Todd
Zenz tells us about all the time, needs to stop
and needs to be more responsible leadership. Lawrence. I imagine
you've got a couple of roads in mind that you
would probably like to get fixed as well before we
start buying new stuff and things. So thank you, absolutely,
thank you very much for making that call today, my friend.
I really appreciate it, and I'm sure my listeners do

(01:08:17):
as well. Get out to the debate, and you know,
I think we got you know, I like Corey Corey Bowman.
I think he's a good guy, and I do believe
he's got a big of a big challenge on his plate.
He's not a seasoned politician, and you know, he's got
some really good ideas though. You can check him out
at Coreybowman dot com. But you know, we've seen what

(01:08:38):
I have to have purvoll is all about. We had
that railroad sale that I think many people are now regretting,
backed by big fat outside money, and I'm now scratching
my head wondering where that money came from in light
of everything that we've been revealed with Elon musk Doge
investigation to us AID for example. Yeah, I'm sure there

(01:08:59):
may be a paper trail from some of those allocations
to NGOs back into trying to influence the voter's hearts
and minds for that railroad sale. How's that working out
for you? Sunset hasn't been paved yet six forty five
fifty five care see the talk stations. I can't ever
pass up an opportunity to talk about that one. Someday

(01:09:22):
they'll fix it. It'illprive me of my favorite talking point
on the deteriorating roads in this city. Affordable medical imaging.
Nothing can determined from reminding you that you can save
literally literally thousands of dollars by getting your echo cardiogram
mri CT scan, ultrascoun lung screening cardiac scoring at Affordable
Imaging Services because the hospital charges you a heap load
of money. It's almost like they think they've got you.

(01:09:44):
You know, your doctor's going to recommend you go to
the imaging department at the hospital, the hospital system that
probably owns your physician's practice. When you have a choice,
and you can go to Affordable Imaging Services and get
right in for that echo cardiogram and not pay thirty
five hundred dollars or maybe more, not pay an extra
bill for the radiologist report. Just pay five hundred dollars

(01:10:04):
without an enhancement or eight hundred dollars with an enhancement.
That's an echo cardiogram. It's that affordable. At Affordable Imaging Services,
you and your doctor will both get that radiologist report
within forty eight hours. I've had like this is my
third scan at Affordable Imaging Services in April, keeping my
fingers crossed and is very low overhead. So I'm just
telling you ahead of time, don't expect bells and whistles,
But look at the same equipment the hospitals use right there,

(01:10:27):
and medical professionals that operate they've been doing it for
more than well decades. They've been doing it, and my
doctor the images I've got there perfectly fine, not a
thing wrong with them. So I save heaploads of money.
My friend Chef save three thousand dollars getting a CT
scan at Affordable Imaging Services save that much. You got
a choice, exercise it. It's your money. Five one three seven,

(01:10:51):
five three eight thousand. Five one three seven five three
eight thousand. For all the pricing and other information, check
them out online. Go to Affordable Medimaging dot com KRC.
Getting ready as iHeart channel and I Weather forecasts calling
it hit or miss. Light showers today at clouds all
day fifty one, little rain late late today as well,

(01:11:13):
mostly clouds over night time in thirty five, drive a
partly cloude in tomorrow fifty four late late in the day,
maybe a chance of rain overnight lie thirty three, and
come Opening Day, we're gonna have a dry day. It'll
be mostly cloudy. It'll be a highest sixty two. Look
at forty fort degrees. Right now, it is time for
a traffic update. Chuck Broum the uc UP Traffic Center.

Speaker 5 (01:11:33):
For National Doctor's Day Sunday, we honor the u SEE
Health physicians who are leading breakthroughs from better Tomorrow's learn
More A. You see howp dot com highway traffic is
doing just fine at the moment. I'm not seeing any
huge time delays northbound seventy five, just beginning to build
at Kyle's southbound two seventy five. Slow's just submit at

(01:11:54):
the Carrol Cropper Bridge. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC,
the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:12:00):
Six fifty one afterty five ker CD talk station. Fred
Winster from the top of the our news in studio,
looking forward to that. Always enjoy those conversations. I sure
hope you do as well. Just an eclectic stack of weirdness.
And you know, Democrats may be struggling to figure out
why it is that Donald Trump got elected and they
are performing very poorly in the polls. They're just incapable of,

(01:12:23):
I guess, being introspective or at least objective about the
direction their party has gone and realize that maybe what
they're advocating for very strongly in the hill upon which
they want to die is rejected by the perhaps the
vast majority of Americans. I'm a fan of school choice,
and I'm a fan of knowing, well, what's going on
with my children, fortunately adults, and they made it through

(01:12:45):
K through twelve and college without incident, at least not
major incident. Although my daughter get robbed, did get robbed
at gunpoint at Ohio State twice. Thank god God was
looking out for her during those things. But don't you
think it is an appropriate thing for a school to

(01:13:07):
communicate with you about your child wanting to transition claiming
to be another gender? Well, the Fifth Circuit US Court
of Appeals, I'm sorry, the US Court of Appeals for
the Eleventh Circuit determined that efforts by a Florida middle
school to help a minor child socially transition to a
different gender behind her parents' backs, we're not sufficiently agreedious

(01:13:33):
to shock the conscience allowing the parents claim to proceed.
So it was dismissed. Granted a school officials motion to
dismiss the case Little John versus Leon County. I don't
want to go into an exercise of constitutional law, but
there's a strict scrutiny standard, and that's when a fundamental
right is at stake, and there's a lesser standard of scrutiny,
which they the administration in this particular case, just have

(01:13:55):
to prove that what they're doing, you know, comports and
meets with the goals that they want to achieve. Now,
with strict scrutiny standard, it's very, very difficult to meet
that burden. But the court determined that no, this was
not a fundamental right, even though there have been prior
court decisions establishing that, yes, parenthood is in fact an
extraordinarily important fundamental right. In twenty twenty, January and Jeffrey

(01:14:22):
Little John's thirteen year old daughter told her mom January
that she no longer felt like a girl, same time
that three of her daughter's friends at her local middle
school also suddenly declared their transgender identity. Well, their daughter
was in fact struggling also with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder,
making online learning a little bit challenging, but of course

(01:14:43):
influenced by her friends as well, I'm sure. Over the
next couple of years, the parents claimed that the identity
change that she claimed to her parents identity changed four times,
saying out loud that she wanted to be another sex.
Also then revealed to mom and dad she had met
with school administrators and was requesting that her teachers referred
to her by a different name. And they them pronouns,

(01:15:08):
and under the school board's gender support guideline, school officials
had developed a gender identity related student support plan that's
all in caps for and with a little John's daughter,
without her parents' involvement, and contrary to their express wishes.
So off the court they went. And the court determined

(01:15:28):
this was a legislative issue, a policy or regulation applicable
to a larger segment of society, rather than executive issue,
a specific active governmental officer application to only one person
in nature. And that was the hinge upon which this
decision made not a strict scrutiny standard. Therefore, anything the
school did, as long as it was reasonable, was deemed AOK.

(01:15:49):
So they were cut out of the picture, completely cut
out of the picture. And I can't imagine any parent
wanting to be cut out of the picture. You get
a very open minded parents out there that do believe
a child can change his or her sex. I find
that fundamentally against the principles of science, logic, and reason.

(01:16:11):
But you know they're out there, But don't you think
they too want to be involved with this sort of
transition program. How's this school in the best position for
this transition program, this student support plan. Do they have
psychologists working there with the psychologists retained by the parents,
where they properly vetted? Are they properly trained? Do they
have biases against the idea that maybe this isn't a
good idea. You wouldn't know you've been cut out of

(01:16:34):
the equation. And it seems to me this is the
kind of thing that pisses off logical and reasonable people
and makes them want to run away from the Democrat
Party because the Democrats are the one that support this
kind of nonsense. Have at it, keep going down that road,
go ahead and die on that hill. Maybe one of
the reasons Donald Trump won the election these crazy social
issues that just fly in the face of your logic,

(01:16:56):
your reason, and your fundamental rights as a parent. Six
fifty six fifty five KRCD talk station. I'm looking at him.
Brad Winstrop in studio. He'll be on after the top
of the our news covering Trump's first one hundred days.
Every day we stand on the verge of the four
greatest years in American history. Fifty five krc D talk station.

(01:17:16):
This reporter is sponsored by the Dwire Company. It's seven
oh six were fifty five KRCD talk station, not accounting

(01:17:38):
for the four and a half minute delay we've got
here on the fifty five years. We're sure with tell
me four cars and brad Winstrip not retired, but showe's
gout you labeled as civilian brad Winstrop on the rundowns there,
gill mean brad Winstrip. Good to have you back in
the show, my dear friend. Always a pleasure. I certainly
appreciate you taking the effort to sit across from in
the studio as opposed to converse on the telephone. It

(01:17:59):
does make it more interesting and more engaging. And yes
we have this sound by Arnold Chorzenegger. Nobody cares if
you smoke a joint, unless, of course, you're in charge
of daycare facilities where you are caring for infants. It's
a sad, sad story. I know you heard it when
you were coming in here.

Speaker 13 (01:18:15):
Yeah, you know, Brian. What was amazing is the traffic stop. Yes,
you know where there's the gummy bears, there's the roach
clips or whatever. You could smell the marijuana, but it's
just a traffic stop. What are we doing?

Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
Well, apparently she was engaging in some sort of you know,
speeding or weaving, or it was a traffic violation that
led to the discovery of the various marijuana products in
her possession, and presumably I don't know if the cop
let her go or maybe I don't know if she
was displaying signs of impairment. But anyway, we'll let the

(01:18:52):
lawsuit play out. But I know you had mentioned that
coming in. It's like, man, you put so much faith in,
so much confidence in the daycare workers that are looking
after your children, and your left with this giant looming
question mark hanging in over you. Yeah you really are anyhow,
Yeah sad. Well, let's start with how you've been, how

(01:19:14):
things going in your life before we dive onto topics.
I know you wanted to talk about the late congresswoman
you know, I love, I know you had a lot
of respect for her. But just give us quick oversight
of how things are going in your world. They're going okay.

Speaker 7 (01:19:27):
You know.

Speaker 13 (01:19:27):
I got appointed to the President's Intelligence Advisory Board, and
as the President said, our role is to restore the
integrity of the intelligence community. Along with some of the
people I think he's appointed to lead the intelligence agencies
like CASHPTEL and John Radcliffe, who I am friends with
and so grateful to see them in these positions. So

(01:19:50):
that we've had our first meeting, and that's about all
we can say.

Speaker 1 (01:19:54):
About what we do. I understand security clearance. I did
get my security back, so.

Speaker 13 (01:20:01):
Yeah, back from the congressional security clearance, which is of
course interesting. I think I think even getting clearance through
Congress there should be some bedding, as we learned with
some people on the Intelligence Committee over the years, such
as Eric Swallwell perhaps, but that isn't the case.

Speaker 1 (01:20:20):
But for this we go through the whole thing.

Speaker 13 (01:20:22):
What was what was helpful to me is a lot
of the information was still in there from when I
got my military clearance. So you know, they ask everything.
You know, who knew you when you lived at the
house when you were five years old. Fortunately some of
those friends are still alive, right.

Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
And they do interview them. Yeah, they contact them, and
you spend a lot of time with wind Strip and
what's he like and you know, is he easy nour?
Has he ever been a member of the Communist Party?

Speaker 13 (01:20:47):
That kind of well that that question isn't in there
should be, but it probably did used to be. So
I'm doing that in some consulting, and I haven't really
even put anything out, but I've had some things come
my way, and you know, plan to be working in
things national security, bioscience, biotech, biothreats, things along that line,

(01:21:13):
and then obviously health supply chain and injury energy. Those
are the things I want to do, Brian, because the
things I was working on in Congress.

Speaker 1 (01:21:22):
And I think it'll be fun to do it on
the outside. Well, it'd mean nice to make more money
doing the same thing and setting your own agenda in
hours and see exactly as schedule is. I'm with the
family is important. I know that's one of the reasons
why you didn't run for reelection. Just kids get old quickly,
don't they They do. And I love waking up at home.
I like that I can put my suitcase away once

(01:21:42):
in a while, which I didn't do for twelve years,
and I listen. I have no regrets in serving in Congress.
People say, was it the chaos. It's like I've been
to war. I can handle chaos. You know, let it
roll off of you. Just how do you manage it
and move on? You engage in it sometimes, but don't
let it bring you down. Every second of every day. Well,

(01:22:04):
real quick, you don't have to elaborator, because I know
again you wanted to talk about me a lot. But
having that security clearance revoked, Donald Trump's revoked a lot
of security clearances, What does that mean for Like Hillary
Clinton's had her security clearance revoked, she had it up
until yesterday or whatever. What did it mean for her
to have it? And what is she now deprived of
that she otherwise would have had access too? Yeah, you know,

(01:22:25):
that's that's interesting. I guess that you don't just get
cut off or because maybe it's another thing that reminds
people that they are to adhere to the rules of
having a clearance about things that you know, et cetera.
But in the privilege, there's no doubt about it. And
so a lot of people that have been at high levels,
I think formally, what you what you wanted to have

(01:22:46):
happen is someone who was the head of the CIA
and you get a new administration, a new head of
the CIA in a happier time. Couldn't the former CIA
director want to win get age with the current CIA
director on issues that would only make sense right transition? Yeah,

(01:23:07):
and I noticed that I don't think the Director Burns
of the CIA was on that list, and if you
remember you saw him in the transition with John Ratcliffe, say,
for example, with COVID, he said, actually, John Ratcliffe, we
have more information and we are leaning towards the lab

(01:23:27):
link theory. That is good to have that kind of
a baton a handoff in that regard. My personal feeling
is that Director Burns wanted to do it sooner, but
I think it would have been frowned upon by his boss.
How about that. I never have understood the desire to
hide that information from American the American public. It just

(01:23:48):
sort of suggests something nefarious. The relationship between the powers
that be and the Chinese Communist Party officials who unleashed
this horror upon the world. Why would you want to
protect them if all the evidence points a little ab
What possible gain can you get from giving the public
the truth? I mean, more scrutiny should be brought to
bear on these types of lads. More scrutiny should be

(01:24:08):
brought to bear on the type of research that was
being done. More questions need to be asked about why
are we doing this in the first place, when certainly
it is conceivable and oh look it happened that these
things might be unleashed on the world, and something even
far more deadly could be unleashed.

Speaker 13 (01:24:24):
Well, I think the Biden administration, for a variety of reasons,
felt that it would be bad diplomacy to be going
after China and blaming them for bad diplomacy. Yeah, yeah,
great or hard on diplomacy, I don't know. And I
did read an article recently where it's a precedent that

(01:24:46):
had been set maybe about one hundred years ago, but
it had been set well maybe fifty years ago, where
that was the attitude. It's like, well, don't go after
him on this because we got to talk to him
about that.

Speaker 1 (01:24:58):
Okay, all fine, But it also leads to wild speculation that,
you know, maybe China's got the goods on people and
that they are being threatened, like we're going to release
this information of the world, like, for example, hunter Biden's
ties to the Chinese Communist Party and some of those
other shenanigans. We the Chinese intelligence operations know exactly what
he was doing here as well as in Ukraine. And

(01:25:19):
I'm going to hold this out over a threat to you.
If you tell anybody that we invented this virus in
the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Then we're going to let
the world know about what's been going on behind the
scenes with your family, your family members, all the LLCs
and the layers of corruption and all those suspicious activity
reports that the IRS didn't bother investigating, even though the
average American would have been investigated. How's that for a threat. Well,

(01:25:39):
I think that's a reasonable thing to make. That's that's
called being compromised. Yeah, and look, we certainly saw many
things with Hunter, for sure. Clearly, you know, when the
President made his final speech, he said Donald Trump is
going to be strapped and the country is going to
be run by oligarchs. Well, that may be that he's
engaging with old oligarchs, if you will, but they're American

(01:26:02):
oligarchs as opposed to some of the oligarchs that the
Biden family seemed to have relationships with. Yeah. Well, we
pick and choose the oligarchs that we're willing to work
with and the ones that we condemn. Russia oligarch's bad,
Chinese oligarchs good apparently, and we can go around the world.
Nobody has a regime or the freedom and liberty as
the way of the United States has, so you're always
having to compromise with your the American core values. When

(01:26:25):
you are engaging in trade and relationships with other countries,
we just pick and choose the winners and losers. I've
been mentioning this a lot of late. How is it
if the and the fall of the Soviet Union, we
didn't just engage Russia and try to establish, you know,
trade relations with them. They got stuff we want. I'm
sure we had stuff that they want, like blue jeans
for example. You know, we could have had a good

(01:26:47):
relationship with them which was stabilized and the concerns for
the European Union that Russia was trying to would overrun
them down the road. Instead, we turned it into another
Cold War. Now, look what's going on. Why when we
embrace since then and you know, engaged in in normalization
to trade with China. We embraced the ultimate enemy of
the United States of America, the Chinese Communist Party, and

(01:27:08):
we continue to embrace them to prop up their business
and their industry. And they have grown.

Speaker 13 (01:27:12):
I mean there certainly have changed because even where they
change the rules kind of like Russia did, where you
can stay in charge for longer, and President Chi gets
yet another term and probably another term, and so it
becomes an entirely different situation than what it was in
what nineteen seventy two with Nixon. Maybe that was a mistake.

(01:27:33):
I think people can look back on that and say,
maybe we went a little too far. I think I
think we have and we have gone too far. We
certainly have gone too far from the standpoint of turning
so much manufacturing over to China, because we used to
complain that, well, they're doing slave labor, we can't do
business with them. Exactly Now we just opened it up
and that's okay. Why because of the almighty dollar, and

(01:27:56):
they're still doing slave labor. But the reason is multinational
corporations can get cheap labor, not have to worry about
OSHA pollution, environmental studies, and pay people ten cents an
hour to get products manufactured. When we have to, okay,
pay union wages, deal with collective bargaining agreements, deal with OSHA,
deal with environmental regulations. It just makes it too expensive
to do business here, so go to China. And the

(01:28:16):
threat is great on America. The fact that we rely
on China for our pharmaceuticals, even our battlefield medicines. How
did we get here? And I think that this administration
is obviously looking at all of that. So we got
to turn this around because we got to be the
United States of America. We got to have manufacturing here.
The Biden administration was talking about increase in corporate Texas.

(01:28:39):
That is what sends people over to you very much.
We'll just use that as an exclamation point as we
end this segment and move on. We will get his
thoughts and comments about the late Utah Representative Meal Love
apparently an outstanding woman in her own right. Congressman weinstor
was able to work with her. But we'll also talk
about tariffs.

Speaker 1 (01:28:56):
Hey, Johnson and Johnson look like they're going to be
moving some manufacturing facilities here in the United States. One
of the victories of the Trump administration so far as
first up Zimmer Heating and air Conditioning for all your
heating and air conditioning needs. And I suppose we've moved
on into more focus on air conditioning, but regardless, a
cool carrier comfort system is the thing to go with.
They make an outstanding unit. Zimmer, of course, is an

(01:29:18):
authorized seller of an installer of carrier systems as well
as you know repair for literally any kind of HVAC system,
whatever you've got, they're going to take great carry customer
services outstanding been around more than three general or three
generations and well over seventy five years. But the cool
Carrier Comfort Rebate save up to fifteen hundred and fifty

(01:29:39):
bucks on a new carrier comfort system from Zimmer Heating
and Cooling. Great opportunity to save some money on an
standing unit, so take advantage of it while it lasts
up to fifteen hundred and fifty bucks. Give Chris Zimmer
a call five one three five one ninety eight ninety three.
That's five to two one ninety eight ninety three. You
can schedule appointment online. Learn more about the company and
all of the things that they can do for your home.

(01:30:01):
Go Zimmer dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:30:04):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:30:08):
Pickleball is on the run. Johnnie Weather forecast just going
to be a cloudy day to day hit or miss
light showers fifty one, the high overnightdle of thirty five.
Tomorrow partley, cloudy, dry fifty four, Get a little rain
late late in the day Wednesday, with a high a
lot thirty three. Overnight opening day looking great, dry conditions
mostly clouds with a highest sixty two forty four out

(01:30:28):
time for traffic from the UCL tram Think Center.

Speaker 5 (01:30:32):
For National Doctor's Day, we honor you see health physicians
who are leading breakthroughs from Better Tomorrow's learn more at
u S health dot com. Sap Bend seventy one continues
to look good for your Tuesday morning commute. Currently under
twenty minutes between Field Zirerle and downtown North Bend fourth
seventy one. Not all that bad either. John's beginning to

(01:30:52):
get a little bit heavier right side of the bridge.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
Seven fifty five KRCD Talk Station Brent Thomas with brad Winstrip.
Civilian brad Winstrip, but given his years in Congress and
has accessed all kinds of fun information that he can't
even say out loud. Let's pivot over to Congressman Mia
Love who recently passed away. Geoblastoma and just a horrific

(01:31:22):
form of cancer, very very aggressive. And that's one of
the reasons that I helped the cure starts now because
they focus on pediatric brain cancer, and they've been working
on that for years and it's just a fantastic organization.
And you know, people are getting they're living a lot
longer based upon some of the advancements in cancer treatments.
Just really exciting cancer treatments out there. And sadly she

(01:31:45):
succumbed to geoblastema the other day, But you worked with her.

Speaker 13 (01:31:48):
I did work with her in Congress, and she was
an amazing lady in many many ways. Her life story
is amazing and should be recognized for what it is
and what she felt about America. So her family their
Haitian immigrants. She grew up in New York and then
moved to Utah, and there she became part of the

(01:32:08):
Moon Mormon Church. But in two thousand and three in Saratoga,
Saratoga Springs, I believe it is she became a councilwoman,
then became mayor in twenty ten. But in twenty twelve
is when she became noticed nationally because she spoke at
the Republican Convention and her speech. I remember sitting at
home watching this thing, and I thought, who is this lady?

(01:32:30):
She was dynamic, She's got all the right ideas, about
America and what America can be and is. Then she
runs for Congress and she won two terms in a
very tough, tough district. She was the first black Republican
woman in Congress.

Speaker 1 (01:32:46):
And you know what, there would have been a black
Republican woman elected in Congress a long long time ago.
Ex Sadly, there just aren't enough Black Republican women. I
believe that's changed her. Been black women elected to Congress
on the Democrats side for a long time, had black senators,
We've had black mayors, and it's just maybe down the

(01:33:07):
road this would be a more common occurrence. We need
more black people in the Republican Party because it's going
to better serve the black community. I'm convinced. Yeah, and
there's no doubt about it. I like her.

Speaker 13 (01:33:18):
I think it's happening. I mean I see it locally here, Yes,
in Hamilton County, I definitely do. And I think throughout
there's a lot of more people that are just like
enough already. Quit telling me I'm a victim of something.
And that was her approach, that America is the place
for opportunity, and she talks about this. She wrote a

(01:33:38):
wonderful piece in her dying days. And she said, it's
not to say goodbye, but to say thank you. To
say thank you to America. She said her parents came
here with ten dollars in their pocket and they learned
on They learned to be self reliant. That was the
way to go, and not sit back and say I'm
deserving of something just because I am were because of

(01:34:00):
how I look. And she was taught early early age
to love this country. And she says it, I loved
it warts and all, and that she had a role
to play in the nature's nation's future. And you know
what she did that, Brian, She did it.

Speaker 1 (01:34:15):
She said.

Speaker 13 (01:34:16):
You know, when tough times came, her family didn't look
to Washington. They looked within and drove on self alliance
and just she said, the America that she knows deserves
trusted leaders. And that is where we are today, and
we need more of that. And I believe we have many.
We really do have many, and that's my personal experience

(01:34:37):
in Congress, but not enough. And that's the problem. And
not only elected trusted leaders, that's the problem too. We
can get into what's going on in the agencies, and
I am so glad with what's happening with dose because
there are just so many people doing the fariest things
all the time, and they probably have gotten away with
it for decades. And we saw a lot of that

(01:34:59):
when we did our COVID report. You just look at
what was going on in the agencies where hey, well
we're going to take things off our official email and
put them over here so that the public can't know
about it. But guess what we found it anyway. But
this stuff has probably been going on for a long time.
So when we get into what she talks about having
trusted leadership, in my mind, it's beyond the elected officials.

(01:35:23):
It's all of those that are serving in government. And
I think that mea love would agree that our agencies
need to be constructed like the military. And in the military,
you either get promoted or you're out. And guess who's
term limited the people in the military. You know, you
reach a point where there's a mandatory retirement.

Speaker 1 (01:35:43):
That's it. You don't get to be there forever and
ever and ever. Yeah, well, and you also have to
reenlist if you plan on sticking around more with Congressman Winster,
we'll dive into some of the dough issues after this
book work for QC Kinetics. If you're dealing with pain,
the knee pain, joint pain, hit pain, the Arthur is,
you've been going to the doctor, your doctor's talking about surgery.
You don't want to do surgery. However, you got your

(01:36:06):
life being impacted by the chronic pain. You can't sleep
very well, you walk it out of bed in the morning, stuff,
day to day movements, average kind of run of the
mill stuff. Then there's that surgery, the uncertainty that goes
along with it, and the pain that goes along with it,
and well maybe just doing things you miss. You just
miss picking up your grandkids, walking around, golfing, jogging. If
any of that sounds familiar to you, and you have

(01:36:27):
talked to your doctor about maybe going through surgery, you
probably should call he actually should call QC Kinetics because
there may be relief for you, and they will explain
the treatment process to you, and you'll be able to
determine whether or not you're a good candidate for this
regenerative medicine taking the natural healing product prettise from your
body and putting them exactly where the pain is, providing
tens of thousands of people across this country, lasting pain

(01:36:49):
relief with no drugs, no surgery, and really no downtime.
So it's a free consultation. Why not find out if
it's right for you? Five one three, eight four seven
zeros zero one nine five one three eighty four seven
zero zero one nine one more time five one three
eight four seven zero.

Speaker 9 (01:37:06):
Zero one nine fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:37:08):
What's up everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, JN and I says.
Today described as hit or miss, light showers, clouds and
high fifty one overable with thirty five with clouds partly
cloud Tomorrow with the highest fifty four but dry late
late bring possible. Otherwise it's mostly cloudy over night down
of thirty three in an opening day dry yay, mostly
cloudy and highest sixty two perfect for baseball forty four

(01:37:31):
right now. Traffic time.

Speaker 5 (01:37:34):
From the u S Health Triumphic Center from nasal Doctors
Day Sunday, we honor the UCE health physicians who are
leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more at u sehealth
dot com. North Pound seventy five brink mikes just before
buttermilk towards Dixie. I'm looking for a problem in between
that slow traffic usually goes to Kyle's South Pound seventy

(01:37:55):
five that's doing fine through Lachlan, same for southbound seventy one.
Fighter schack Ingram on fifty five KRC, the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:38:07):
About their CD talk station in studio. Brad Winstrom, someone
who is that many familiar with the of course the COVID.
You were on that COVID committee who released that amazing
paper that revealed the truth about it. But also you're
eminently familiar with the World Health Organization, and I know
you knew quite a few things about it, which my
understanding is it they support support terrorist organizations like a moss. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:38:31):
You know, here's an organization that ideally, and I've said
this now for the last several years, especially since COVID,
it's an organization that should be there for the benefit
all of humankind, you know, apolitical, just there to benefit
people everywhere. Well, you know what we're seeing recently is
they're now coming out with statements really condemning Israel for

(01:38:54):
there are attacks on so called hospitals. And I'm putting
my quotes up because what's happened with these hospitals, which
you mean.

Speaker 1 (01:39:02):
The terrorists headquarters? Yeah, in Gaza, exactly calling it a hospital.
You know, if it walks like a duck and it
talks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck,
it's a duck. It's not a hospital. It's a headquarters
for terrorists.

Speaker 13 (01:39:16):
Yeah, they may be saying, you know, you can take
care of some patients on the upper floor, but we've
got everything else. Yeah, you know, we've got everything else,
and we're in charge. And they're using it for their
command and control. And it's pretty well documented that's taking place.
And for the World Health Organization to come out and
really give condemnation to this, you know, I understand we
don't bomb hospitals. We should not be bombing hospitals. Russia

(01:39:39):
has in Ukraine and you know, and that's a problem.
But here the Israel's using it, or the Hamas people
are using this in Gaza for their command and control
and to launch their attacks and to house soldiers and
ammunition and everything else. What do you do in war,
You go after their ammunition, the enemy's ammunition, that where

(01:40:00):
they're putting it. So what's to be expected. That's what
the WHO should say. They should be condemning Hamas using
using hospitals in this way. But see that this is
the whole problem, you know, with the WHO. We revealed
it during during COVID. As long as they're under control
of the UN, and the UN has people countries like

(01:40:24):
China having great control over the narrative, we have a
problem here. And if the WHO were to separate themselves
from the UN, they might have a chance. And so,
of course Trump wins the election. And you know, as
I was telling you off air, I went over and
met with Ted Rose to discuss the role of the
WHO during COVID and what actually happened. And you know,

(01:40:47):
I told him the Chinese are saying the WHO reports
said this came from nature, and he said, no, we
did not. They put our name to it because they
let us in finally at the end. But that's not
our report, that's their reporter said, you need to be
saying that more publicly. But they don't do it because
China is controlling the narrative. They contribute a lot of

(01:41:08):
money so that they can control the narrative. And that's
that's the problem. And I agree with Donald Trump. If
that's going to be the way it operates, we're out
of here. And he did it before. But if Joe
Biden put it right back, put us right back in
the game. And honestly, if the WHO can contribute to
what we do, what we do as a country as

(01:41:32):
far as data and surveillance and things like that around
the world, then fantastic. But what I told doctor Ted Rose,
because he came to me right before Trump went back
in and he's like, what's going to happen. I said, well,
he's probably going to cut the funding to WHO again
and we're going to get out. And I said, look,
my responsibility is to the American people. What we were

(01:41:54):
doing with our pandemic was not just to look for
bad things that were done, but what was done right
and what can be on better in the future. And
aligning ourselves and relying or depending on the WHO is
not the way to go. We have to do things ourselves.
We have to be able to manage things ourselves. My
responsibilities protect the American people from the next pandemic. And

(01:42:16):
if China is controlling what we're counting on, then that's
not good for us.

Speaker 1 (01:42:22):
Amen, let's pause, We'll bring Congress once or back. First
call on Electric twenty percent off this service upgrade. It's
a great opportunity to save a lot of money on
a service upgrade. Lets keep using the electric vehicle charger
in your home as an illustration of why you might
need one, But there are other reasons you need a
service upgrade, and call on recognizing that the code change
is last spring have dramatically increased the price of a

(01:42:45):
service upgrade, Well, they're going to knock twenty percent off.
This is the power up your home sale. All the
way through the end of April. You have an opportunity
to save twenty percent off the service upgrade. And that's
up to four hundred amps above or below ground residential
single family service extending to break our panel and main
service upgrades only, so just in time for uh, well

(01:43:05):
the upgrade and tax season. If it matters. I love
saving money and I love Colin Electric. They've done great
work at my home. So if you don't need the
service upgrade, but you do need a great group of electricians,
Andrew Cullen has that assembled. That team. They have an
A plus with a better business bureau locally unoperated since
nineteen ninety nine. So now until the end of April,

(01:43:26):
twenty percent off the service upgrade. Take advantage of that
twive one three two two seven four one one two
five one three two two seven four to one one
two Cullenelectric Cincinnati dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:43:36):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:43:41):
Jenna I first win to weather forecasts. What they're calling
well hitter miss rain today, mostly clotty day fifty one,
overnight low of thirty five, clouds thotty tomorrow, but dry
and a high a fifty four, A little bit of
rain over Wednesday night thirty three and opening day, It's
going to be a dry day, mostly cloudy with a
highest sixty two forty five right now. Traffic time from
the UC.

Speaker 5 (01:44:00):
Health Trampling Center, friend National Doctors State Sunday, we honor
the u See Health physicians who are leading breakthrews for
better Tomorrow's learn more at u See help dot com.
Northbound seventy five break bights just before Button Milk towards Dixie.
I'm looking for a problem in between that fload traffic
usually goes to Kyles southbound seventy five. That's doing fine

(01:44:23):
through Lachlan saing for southbound seventy one. Had Feiffer chuck
ingram Hunt fifty five KRC the Talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:44:33):
Seven forty if about PERCD talk station. Brian Thomas was
come of former Congressman Prefensor in studio. Keep wanting to
call you congressman.

Speaker 13 (01:44:40):
I think people still do, Brian. It's like when you
were a secretary. People still refer you to it, well,
secretary judge the Paul President. Yeah, he's on the program
every Wednesday. He hasn't been a judge for decades. I
think you still call a judge. You still call former
president's president. So Congressman uh, anyhow, moved on to other
things in life. You have, I real quick your observations
of the cur state of politics. I regularly refer to

(01:45:02):
the Democrats running around defending the indefensible. They're burning up
teslas because Elon Musk is cutting fraud, waste and abuse
out of government. I'm sorry, my mind cannot undergrasp and
understand that, you know, the destruction of something that they
used to embrace, this whole thing that's going to save
the globe.

Speaker 1 (01:45:19):
There's no emissions. You need to buy a tesla, thank
god for Elon Musk immediately turns into this is an
object of disdain. It's a Nazi mobile and you're destroying
private property because you don't like what Elon Musk is
doing when he's only trying to save so many programs
from themselves, that if you work for a living and
your taxpayer dollars are being used to fund outlandish and

(01:45:42):
outrageous programs through us AID or maybe even democratic causes,
funding non governmental organizations that are operating and working against you.
That's not why I'm working. That's not something that's good
for the entire American people. So he's exposing it. He's
revealing the incompetence of the people at SO Security, for example,
for not getting rid of all of these but will

(01:46:02):
be dead people from the ranks. That seems like an
easy job. Listen, if you're over one hundred and twenty
years old and you're on the rolls, No, you're not
on the rolls anymore. Clip up a switch. It's done
and over with well, and yet AOC and Bernie Sanders
seem to be the voice of the party now.

Speaker 13 (01:46:18):
Yeah, they're out caravanning and I guess getting large crowds.
I don't know you mentioned Social Security. I love the
President Trump and the irs just promoted the two gentlemen
that were the whistleblowers on Hunter Biden's irs tax problems
and who stood by it but were dragged through the
mud by the Democrat Party and the media. And now

(01:46:42):
they've been promoted appropriately because you know why, they know
how to do their job. They did the right thing.
They did the right thing. That's how you should get
promoted integrity, not by carrying the weight of a political
party so that you can drown illegal behavior by someone
in that party. But you know, you talk about AOC

(01:47:04):
and Bernie Sanders out there, you are.

Speaker 1 (01:47:08):
We dreaming this? Brian?

Speaker 13 (01:47:09):
I mean, I know, you know, people our age are like,
what in the world that this is. These are leading
voices in America in any of our political parties except
for the Communist Party or a socialist party. But now
they really represent the Democrat Party. They're not flag waivers.

Speaker 1 (01:47:26):
And I will tell you this.

Speaker 13 (01:47:27):
I have a neighbor, very friendly lady, and I know
she's a Democrat, and she's always kind to me. She said,
she told me one day, thank you for being normal.
But you know, she's got the Harris sign in her
yard and still had her American flag flying. And I
told her, you know, I said, you know what, I
have a flag that I got from Pelosi during the inauguration.

(01:47:49):
I'm gonna give that to you because you still fly
the American flag, but most of the party doesn't anymore.
That was the only home that I can recall seeing,
and I was looking for anyone who had a herisign
and the American flag.

Speaker 1 (01:48:04):
Well, the left so thoroughly demonized the American flag as
some symbol of right wing conservatism. No, it stands for
the freedoms and liberties that this country, you know, was
founded upon. It stands for the Bill of Rights and
the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. It stands for
your ability to be a democrat. You're right, you can
be a communist if you want. In a free country,

(01:48:25):
you can exercise those rights, you can speak out loud
about them. It's a unifying symbol of freedom, freedoms for
all people, of all stripes and characters and sexualities.

Speaker 13 (01:48:36):
It's never stood for one political party. It has stood
for our constitution and the values in virtues that come
within that constitution.

Speaker 1 (01:48:45):
Well, something really sinister going on in the world of
social media, and that made this observation many times even
common to toy off air. You know, it's easy for
outside forces that want to undermine the unifying reality that
a flag should be. That we all used to be
able to proudly stand beneath the flag and salute it,
regardless of our political stripe, because we were allowed to

(01:49:08):
be who we want to be and exercise our political rights.
That's been eradicated to a large degree. And I think
it's easy for outside influencers like TikTok, Chinese Communist Party,
North Korea, any of our other enemies to stir that
potted division and create in the hearts and minds of
at least in this particular case, the left, that the

(01:49:29):
American flag is somehow in some way evil and.

Speaker 13 (01:49:32):
Within our educational system, oh god, you know, it was
standard protocol, understood, no problem. Everyone in America would agree
that it's a good thing for the kids in school
to stand up and recite the pledge of allegiance as
you begin each day in the classroom. Things things have
gone in the wrong direction. I hope we can start
bringing it back because people need to understand more and

(01:49:54):
more the benefits of America. We were talking about with
mea Love talked about the great America is based on
what that flag stands for.

Speaker 1 (01:50:03):
Liberty for all, operative word liberty, operative words, liberty and all,
not just me, not just that person over there, Liberty
for all. That was the point of salute in the
American flag and saying the pledge. We'll got one more
with Congressman Windsor and then we'll get the insights scoop
of Bright Partners. Today Tech Editor column made on Referns
to talk about musk derangement syndrome. He's living rent free

(01:50:27):
and everybody's head now too, and the Daniel Davis deep
dives stick around. First word for my friend Peter Sheba
Kellerwilliams seven Hills again the only real estate agent and
team I would ever consider hiring if I was buying
or selling a home. And it is a competitive market
out there, and they want to ensure that you land
your dream home. So when you're working with the Sabri
Group as a buyer, qualified clients can leverage what they

(01:50:48):
call the cash to Keys program, which will allow you
to write a cash offer which will often does lead
to a lower price. In better terms. Sellers love cash aweer.
As you walk in with the bag of cash, effectively
they're like, I don't have to wait around, no financing contingencies, nothing,
like that, No you don't. That's what it's all about
with Peter Schreber, Keller Williams. Seven Hills guarantee you that

(01:51:10):
five star experience that they are known for in providing
great value as your real estate agent. So to learn
more about the Saber Group, go to seven zero eight
three thousand dot com, google the Shabri Group or search
engines Shubbery c chab r I s if you can't
remember the website, the phone number, of course the same
as the website five one three seven zero eight three.

Speaker 9 (01:51:30):
Thousand, fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:51:33):
Are you the bread Winner? John nine says We're gonna
have some hit and miss rain today, light rain though
clouds all day fifty one, cloudy overnight as well, just
a little chance to rain thirty five for the low,
partly cloudy, dry, and fifty four. Tomorrow's light chance of
overnight rain Wednesday thirty three in their for opening Day,
beautiful day highest sixty two, cloudy sky and dry conditions

(01:51:54):
forty five Right now traffic.

Speaker 5 (01:51:55):
Tides from the UCL Transing Center. Financial Doctor's Day Sunday,
we honor the u SEE health physicians who are leading
breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more at you see how
dot com. Quite a few slow spots on the highways
now northbound fourth seventy one, backing up past Grand southbound
seventy one break lights above two seventy five towards Feiffer
southbound seventy five, So nextra three to four minutes through

(01:52:18):
walk on the northbound seventy five the heaviest with break
bikes from turf Fight to town Chuck ingram on fifty
five kar seed the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:52:28):
Seven fifty fifty five PERCD talk station one more segment
here with Brad Leinster. I enjoying it. Have all over
the field today. Where you want to go? You want
to go? Does you want to go? Immigration? I got
Maduro caving on taking some of the trade d Baragua
gang members back. How do they get here in the
first place? Good question, I mean, the Biden administration just
facilitated this. They did. And you know, have you ever

(01:52:50):
come up with a conclusion as to why they would
welcome and encourage gang members to come into the United
States of America.

Speaker 13 (01:52:57):
Well, they haven't had a problem with it at the
border for a long time. Well, I know because new
administration when Maduro he when he didn't win, but then
won his election. You know what I'm talking about, stole it.

Speaker 1 (01:53:10):
He stole it.

Speaker 13 (01:53:11):
Then obviously that upset the Venezuelan voters, and I don't
blame them when you have an election stolen from you.
But anyway, what Biden did was is a reaction. Gave
them temporary protected status so they could come to the
United States by the thousands. And so some of those
were gang members and it's the gang they call it
td TDA Trend de Ragua. And so they're here, and

(01:53:36):
you know, they've had an effect in this city too,
you know, breaking the homes. They're pretty organized, but a
lot of it is a drug traffic too, is one
of the bigger parts of it. And so now now
Donald Trump is trying to get them out, and he's
using the Alien Enemy Act of seventeen ninety eight. We
got dig for that one, don't you. But anyway, you know,

(01:53:59):
good for him. But that only refers to wartime conditions.
So are we at war in some way, shape or form.
I mean, we have been at war since World War two, Brad,
I mean, we've been in wars since World War Two,
but we have not been in a declared war since
we So if this was in Vietnam and we were
having Vietnam gang members come in, would they argue that
we're not at war? If this was the war between

(01:54:20):
North and South Korea and North Korean gang members are
coming in with they argue that we're not at war? Well, Afghanistan, Iran,
I mean, how long do we have to go along
with this nonsense that we're you know, we're either at
war we're not at war. But there's never been a
declaration of war since World War Two. No argument here,
opinions off, you can tell, I can't tell, but we
can't agree that there's no declared war against Venezuela as

(01:54:42):
Marxist regime.

Speaker 1 (01:54:43):
Right, So are there things that Congress can do.

Speaker 13 (01:54:48):
To up the ante if you will, because you know,
they could pass some types of resolution, They could enaccess
a statue about the hostility of the Maduro regime towards
the United States. But the good news is is what
you just touted at the beginning of this conversation is
that Maduro is starting to take some of them back.

(01:55:09):
But still in all, we're still in the courts here
in the United States about whether this can even be done.

Speaker 1 (01:55:15):
Well Okay, let's assume you get around the whole idea
that you can eject members of the TDA whatever gang,
the trade in to Agua gang. Then you're going to
have to have a due process finding that they're members
in this country. That's what a court's already already ruled.
And I get that on a due process level, that

(01:55:36):
just because you say somebody is a member of a gang.
If someone accused me of being a gang member and
then trying to throw me out of the country, I'd
be screaming all day long about my due process. Right,
what do you mean I'm a gang member? Look at me.
I don't even have a tattoo. I mean, right, well,
you know, but I got a job.

Speaker 13 (01:55:51):
I think we need to Congress needs to step up
in some way, shape or form and talk about how
this they pose the security risk. But the problem is
they came here legally because of what Joe Biden did.
I know, I know that's the problem is they came
here legally and now we're stuck with this and due process.
I never felt that people that are here illegally deserve

(01:56:12):
the same due process. You know, we had this argument
about the Chinese companies that are setting up that are
harboring our DNA and all this, And one of the
Democrats said, well, they deserve due process before you put
this Biosecure Act in place and tell them, you know
that they can't do this.

Speaker 1 (01:56:29):
They they slap rules and rags on us all day long,
key business and industry, all day long. We don't get
any due process. It goes through some sort of legislative
procedure and they hand it off to some administrative agency
who churns out rules and regulations that we have no
control over. Where's our due process?

Speaker 13 (01:56:46):
The CCP does not deserve due process in the United
States of America. I agree, And that's really what we're
talking about, because it's law in China that every company
must turn over any or all of their information upon
request to the CCP.

Speaker 1 (01:56:59):
Yeah, so there you have it, There you have. It's
all a tool. How about a reciprocal rule. We've got
reciprocal tariffs going on. They see to be bearing fruit.
Have you seen the trillions of dollars so far the
companies have promised to invest United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabians
to the tune of almost two trillion dollars in promised investments,
Johnson and Johnson planning on building making pharmaceuticals. Here again,

(01:57:23):
you've got multiple automobile companies, Honda and Hyundai and Stillanis
all promised to build factories here. One's going to build
a steel plant here. I mean this is literally billions
and billions and it comes in, at least in the
case of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi's trillions of
dollars promised investment.

Speaker 13 (01:57:40):
And they'll use American workers, which is yes, they will
know where's where's the Chinese. They go into other countries
to start mining and doing all this stuff. They don't
let the locals, they don't train the locals how to
do this work. They got one point six billion people
that got to deal with. They just pack them up
in a in a shipping crate and send them over there.
You know, Italy was having problem with workers, and that's

(01:58:03):
why so many workers in Italy were Chinese. And that's
why Italy got hit so hard by COVID early on,
because they had so many people going back and forth
to work in Italy.

Speaker 1 (01:58:15):
He still look out for some of that kind of
stuff back in the old days, Yeap Brad Weinster. But
it has been a histing pleasure having you in the studio.
Help my listeners enjoyed it as much as I did.
You know you always got a welcome spot here in
the morning show. And good luck with your endeavors. Enjoy
your family time how you can, I know you do.
And best of luck in your future business enterprise. Yeah,

(01:58:36):
we're we're still going to try and do good things
for the country. Let's put that way. I'm glad to
hear that. Yeah, folks, stick around after the news, We're
going to get the inside scoop with breitbarton News tech
editor Colin Maynine, who will break down it's now musk
derangement syndrome, plus the Daniel Davis deep dive latest on
Russia and Ukraine at eight thirty, and then the incomparable
doctor Megan Frew at eight fifty. Best dentis around well.

(01:58:58):
Props to doctor Fred as well should be out at
eight fifty. Right back covering Trump's first one hundred days.
Every day America's deadline is over fifty five KRC the
talk station. This report is sponsored by Stories historye Here
History another historic Good. It's a pivot moment write a

(01:59:19):
final chapter. The story is being told fifty five KRC
The Talk Station. Coming up on a new six to
fifty five KRC The Talk Station. Happy Tuesday, I always
made extra special with always a beginning reminder. Bookmark the
website Breitbart b R E I T B A RT
dot com. You're glad to get great information, great reporting

(01:59:41):
there and the stuff that we read from tech editor
Colin Maydin, who's returned today to do the inside scoop
with bright Bart News. Welcome back, Colin. It's always a
pleasure having on the fifty five KRC Morning Show. Happy
to be with you, Brian. So we got a new
psychological phenomenon going on in the world. We substitute Trump
arrangement syndrome. Donald Trump been living in the minds of

(02:00:02):
the left now for years and years rent free, and
now they've pivoted over to make Elon Musk the ultimate
force of evil. And no one can answer my question
how it is that they run around screaming about Elon
Musk burning up Tesla's defending the indefensible. I mean, he's
trying to save programs that are destined to completely fail.
So security is a great example of it. We've been

(02:00:24):
here from the CBO for years and years, decades, if
not about the eminent failure of Social Security, because well,
there ain't enough people working to fund it, and people
are living far beyond the original proposed years that Social
Security was supposed to cover. I mean, when it started,
there were sixteen workers to one recipient, and that recipient
normally died by age sixty eight. It's not that way anymore,

(02:00:46):
and there's no money to be had.

Speaker 3 (02:00:51):
Well, you're absolutely right, Brian, And you know, I think
what we're really seeing here is everything was fine until
the Trump's administration and Elon by extension, started talking about
cutting off the gravy train, you know, cutting off the fraud, waste,
and abuse. The left seems to love those three things, right, Yeah,

(02:01:15):
And so you start talking about doing that, and they
go from zero to Molotov cocktail faster than the Tesla
can go zero to sixty. And electric cars have a
lot of pickups.

Speaker 1 (02:01:26):
They're sorry fast. Yeah. And you know, five minutes ago,
Elon Musk was the darling of the climate change folks.
Oh my god, he's got the best evy around. And
look at the performance, look at the features. It doesn't
emit any pollutants, even though it makes it admits tons
of pollutants to create the car. Let's ignore that fact.
But just because he's the face of cutting out fraud, waste,

(02:01:49):
and abuse, those things are this private property that people
spent their private money on in an effort to try
to save the planet. They're now targets for an unhinged
bunch of folks molotov cocktails, firearms and spray pey cans.
You just can't justify that kind of behavior, and I
really question whether I mean, I don't think it's doing

(02:02:09):
them a wits worth of good. And your thoughts and
comments on that, Colin, but that's this is it's childish,
it's vandalism. It's it doesn't help support a worthy cause
to the extent they think they have one. It's just
unhinged violence.

Speaker 3 (02:02:25):
Well, Brian, there's kind of two phenomenons going on, and
let's split them up. The first is a vandalism and
you know, sort of threats, et cetera against people who
bought Tesla's. Now, the interesting part about that is that
is the definition of left on left violence. Because you know,

(02:02:46):
you know this as well as I do, Brian, Who's
who are the people who owned Tesla's out.

Speaker 1 (02:02:51):
There, usually leftist global warming alarmist types of people who've
been listening to Greta Thunberg too long.

Speaker 3 (02:02:58):
Right people who believe they have to show the world
I want to save the world. So I'm driving a Tesla. Now,
you know that's simplifying. There's a lot of other groups,
but certainly no conservatives do. So when these people key cars,
when they threaten people at red lights, they're threatening people
who voted for.

Speaker 1 (02:03:15):
Kamala just like they did, right Yeah, and.

Speaker 3 (02:03:19):
They're not you know, so like the average left is
driving a Tesla out there right now, is on Amazon
this second, buying stickers that say, hey, I bought this
car before you on when crazy don't attack me. You know,
they're they're in shock, and to a certain extent, that's
what makes that sort of violence and domestic terrorism effective

(02:03:41):
because those are the people who are buying Tesla's. So
if you're if you're your average leftist right now, you know,
let's say you're drying your eyes from your daily Donald
Trump cry and you're going to go to the Tesla dealership,
you may not buy that car today because you know
your friends and neighbors will hate you and try to
kill you where damage your car because they don't like

(02:04:03):
Elon and they don't like Trump. So that's that's one
side of the equation. The other side is flat out
domestic terrorism where they're hitting the Tesla facilities, car dealerships,
and you know, the cars that are not yet sold.
That's where it gets really interesting because that's where you're
seeing the molotov cocktails and the firebomch brine and they're

(02:04:25):
specifically setting out the cause HASMAD incidents. They're trying to
get the batteries to light off. You know, because one
of the you and I have talked about this several
times over the years. One of the big problems with
Tesla's and all evs is you're riding around on a
bomb made out of coalbalt and other nasty chemicals. So
you know when those when you get in an accident,

(02:04:47):
those things laid up, you're a krispy critter. Same thing
happens here, so that you know you already hit on this.
This is where the Left is terribly ironic because they've
been saying for a decade, by a Tesla because regular
cars destroy the environment. If you went out and bought
a Honda building Marysville and drove it for thirty years.

(02:05:07):
You would harm the environment much much, much less than
one Tesla lit on fire because of that, the hazmat
situation where you're really letting out terrible chemicals, right, Yeah,
they're destroying the environment, these eco hit these as Jeremy
Carson calls them, you know, these people who believe you
have to drive an electric car and we must ban.

Speaker 1 (02:05:27):
Gas cars to save the world.

Speaker 3 (02:05:29):
They're actively destroying the environment.

Speaker 1 (02:05:31):
Yeah. And the toxic fumes that those fires release are
absolutely horrific. I'm sure you read about it. The battery
storage facility out in California that caught fire and then
caught fire again, and then caught fire again. And they
were doing a terrible job about monitoring air. They were
only looking for very specific particulates. But the description of
the chemicals and the toxins that were released in that,

(02:05:55):
and the fact that it went all over farmland, and
that they had all kinds of problems with, you know,
with cows having miscarriages and the and and and the
fact that these do not degrade, These chemicals do not degrade.
They're absorbed into the earth. And then that plants will
draw these chemicals up into the plants themselves. It's an
ecological nightmare. And you think, of all the states in

(02:06:17):
the world, California would actually care about that. And they
seem to have overlooked more all the environmental studies that
brought this stuff to light. They let they fast tracked
the approval of those facilities. But that was a massive
battery plant filled with what are basically the equivalent of
a whole bunch of teslas. Hey, every little tesla that
gets lit on fire is releasing these toxic chemicals into

(02:06:39):
the environment.

Speaker 3 (02:06:40):
It's just insane, right, So you know, now we have
the important question and you're you know, you're actually a
great legal mind, Brian. So the question is are we
going to see law enforcement act like law enforcement or
are they going to look the other way?

Speaker 1 (02:06:59):
Well, according to she's looking into this and as of
right now, they have not determined that this has been
a coordinated effort. But I've been saying for the last
several weeks Colin Rico, because if someone out there is
organizing criminal activity and lighting a tesla on fire or
attacking dealership or a charging station is criminal activity, check
your local laws and if it's organized by any single group,

(02:07:23):
coordinated efforts by groups of people, that falls right into rico.
You know, it's a criminal.

Speaker 3 (02:07:27):
Actletely does I agree with I agree with that, Brian.
And and this is something we've learned when you look
at the creative world, you know, film writing, etc. Yes,
it's leftist dominans dominated, but leftists are not very creative people.
I strongly doubt a whole bunch of leftists woke up

(02:07:48):
one morning and said, you know what, Gee, I better
built some Malotov cocktails and fire bomb touglos. It doesn't
work that way. I believe there is a level of
coordination here. We know, and we've ported at Brightbart about
a website created called dosee quests. Oh yeah, list the
exact address of every registered Tesla owner in America. And

(02:08:11):
the cursor of that website is a Molotov cocktail. So
what's the implication there. You don't have to be a
genius to understand they're saying, threaten these people and attempt
to murder them.

Speaker 1 (02:08:22):
Yeah, there will be others on the opposite side, go, well,
that's just a you know, it's just an image, and
we are not asking people to coordinate the reforts. We're
just telling the world where these evil Nazi mobile drivers live.
But further to your point, all they've done is reveal
all the leftists and where they live because they previously
bought They bought all these cars before Trump was reelected

(02:08:42):
as precedent until just created. So they're eating themselves.

Speaker 3 (02:08:48):
So you know what happens, Brian, is we quickly get
into these rabbit holes there. There's lots of rabbit holes
around this story. One rabbit hole. A very high percentage
of the people who have actually been arrested for serious crimes.
We're not talking about like keying cars here, We're talking
about like the firebombs and stuff. A very high percentage
of these people are identify as transgenders. They're men who

(02:09:12):
claim to be women. You know, are these going to
be the new foot soldiers of left as violence, because
that's what seems to be emerging, much like we're seeing,
you know, school shootings being transgender people. On the law
enforcement front. I think this is a big test of
Bondy and the FBI because we're going to be publishing

(02:09:34):
a story this morning. The FBI says they're starting a
task force.

Speaker 1 (02:09:38):
You know, so i'd be.

Speaker 3 (02:09:39):
You know, when I consider the FBI, I'm certainly not
a fan of the FBI.

Speaker 1 (02:09:44):
I doubt who you are, right.

Speaker 3 (02:09:46):
So, you know, for the last four years, let's let's
picture ourselves in the Cincinnati Field office of the FBI,
I think they were more concerned with the Brian Thomas
audience than with arsenals, right, So has that changed? Are
the folks in the Cincinnati field office, the Columbus field office,
et cetera. Are they going to be looking for people planning,

(02:10:07):
are some attacks to make a political point which is
domestic terrorism? Or are they still busy, you know, trying
to nail Trump supporters.

Speaker 1 (02:10:17):
Well you'll find this interesting. Colin are recently elected Democrat
protest prosecutor and she she won over a far far superior,
demonstrably superior former prosecutor here in Hamilton County. And that's
one of the most sorest spots of the November election
from my standpoint. But this is local politics. I'll try

(02:10:38):
not to bore you, but Democrat County village actually was
at a Tesla dealer protest recently. So what does that
tell you about this city?

Speaker 6 (02:10:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:10:50):
And you know, hey, I.

Speaker 3 (02:10:53):
And I say, you feel the same way. I absolutely
support people's right to go out. If you want to
hold a sign saying swashed the cars and nazimobiles, go ahead.
You live in America. But what we find is these protesters,
and by the way, they're planning a massive protest for
this Saturday, so maybe your prosecutor will be back out there.

(02:11:15):
These people are right on the edge of aiding in
a bed in the Ferris You know that the line
gets very blurry. So I think it's important, especially for
elected officials, to stay on the right side of that line,
because you know, mainstream media, for example, considers vandalism and terrorism.

Speaker 1 (02:11:36):
To be protesting. That's what they're calling it.

Speaker 3 (02:11:39):
Protests at Tesla, you know, fiery protests. What was it
they said during George Ford? Mostly peaceful fires. Mostly we're
seeing a reboot of that right now. It's aimed at Tesla,
it's aimed at de Elon Musk, but we know it's
really aimed at Trump. I think some of these people,
those few brain cells they have left, they know if

(02:11:59):
they go at Trump, you know they're going to get
mo essentially, right Curtis of the Secret Service. They think
they cannot suffer that consequence with Elon Musk.

Speaker 1 (02:12:09):
Yeah, and you know, ultimately the harm that has caused
hurts Elon Musk's factory workers because they end up at
risk of losing their job because people are afraid to
buy a Tesla, whether they love the car or not.
And I've got friends that drive them, and actually have
conservative friends that drive them because they love the product.

(02:12:29):
They didn't buy it because they wanted to save the planet.
They bought it because of the performance. I got a
friend of mine owns a plaid zero to sixty and
one point nine seconds plus all the features that has
on it. That's why he bought it, and he loves it.
I've got another doctor friend who's very conservative. He loves
his Tesla because he likes the auto drive feature, something
that I detest. But whatever, it's his choice. He had
a choice in the matter and he exercised it. And

(02:12:50):
so they are valuable products to a lot of people
out there, and a lot of people want them and
have demonstrated how much they want them because it's such
a wildly successful product. Now, if they succeed in their
efforts and put Elon Musk out of business, I think Colin,
you and I both know Elon's not gonna have a problem.
He has enough money stocked away in enough intelligence that
he'll land on his feet without problem. But the one

(02:13:11):
hundred thousand workers at the Tesla plans, they're going to
be the ones that suffer. I think you're.

Speaker 3 (02:13:16):
Absolutely right, Brian. And then you know, there's still the
deeper issue we've got to figure out.

Speaker 1 (02:13:21):
I love Bipe, our commenters. Our commenters are some of
the smartest people on earth. Yes they are.

Speaker 3 (02:13:26):
Their comment on this issue is this. Do you remember
when the Conservatives were burning down the Budweiser breweries and ships.
But no, that didn't happen. There's only one side in America.
When they lose a political fight, they flick their lighters.
We have to solve that.

Speaker 1 (02:13:45):
Yeah, this seems to be just a larger extension of
the previously existing antifag groups, the Black Lives Matter Marxist groups,
and now we have this new evolution. It's the next
thing to engage in violence and protest and division, and
of course engage in burning things down to the ground.

Speaker 3 (02:14:06):
Well, I think you name the right suspects, Brian. And
my fear is there's one more party, which is you know,
their allies in government and law enforcements. So you know,
this is our government's chance to prove something that shouldn't
be that controversial. Don't burn down buildings and cars that
you disagree with. I want to see that happen.

Speaker 1 (02:14:27):
Colin made, I said a. Colin is the tech let
editor at Breitbartnews Breitbart dot com, where you find all
the good stuff and the writing from Colin and so
many great others. Colin, keep up the great work, my friend.
I'll look forward to having you back on the Morning
show real soon. Thanks, Brian, have a great day, you too.
Say twenty one to fifty five Casey the Talk Station,
Daniel Davis Deep Dive fast approaching up. You can stick
around fifty five Car the talk Station all R iHeartRadio

(02:14:51):
music work. Hey, twenty four to fifty five carcy De
Talk Station and we're gonna get the Daniel Davis Deep
Dive coming next. Just in the remaining minute, we've gotten
this fun fact. Joe and I reminiscing about old times
and feeling old and I found out something today. The

(02:15:12):
first cassette slash album slash recording that Joe Strecker bought
from a professional recording artist came out thirty nine years
ago today today was the release date of Van Halen's
fifty one fifty and now I feel really old. I
remember listening to that, going out to a little five

(02:15:35):
hundred at the University of Indiana with some friends of mine.
We spent the weekend out there, had a fantastic time,
so fond memories indeed. But yeah, feeling a little bit old. Okay,
that's ay. I'm old enough to be a grandpa, but
I'm not one yet. I'll welcome the day that I
get grandchildren and hope that day does come, but I'm

(02:15:57):
not yet. It's eight twenty five right now. There see
talk station. We'll hear from Daniel Davis coming up next.
I hope you can stick around. Fifty five KRC dot
Com Day twenty nine, Happy Tuesday to you. A great
time to be tuned into the fifty five KRC Morning
Show at this time every Tuesday, would get the pleasure
of welcoming retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis. To get a

(02:16:17):
Daniel Davis deep dive. We're gonna continue our ongoing discussion
over the status of the Russian Ukraine War. Excuse me, Daniel,
and what appeared to be I don't know what's going
on with these talks. I know Ukraine's wanting a ceasefire,
and Russia says the terms to bring about a ceasefire
that Ukrainians demanding are a little bit too onerous. They

(02:16:39):
aren't going to concede to that, so they continue to
fight while at the same time talking about ceasefire. I
guess overnight Russia filed one hundred and thirty nine more
drones into Ukraine, and Ukraine's response to these actions by
Russia seemed to be rather anemic by comparison, and of
course Russia has been much more successful. It's shooting down

(02:17:00):
drones and other missiles that have gone into Russia or
into the Russian occupied spaces and no end in sight.
Maybe you can make some sense out of this for
my listener's day, I certainly can't. Yeah, well, I think
I can make sense of it.

Speaker 10 (02:17:18):
Actually, just what the sense is is not really good
for the Ukraine side though, And I think that Russia
is saying, hey, I'm in no rush.

Speaker 1 (02:17:26):
Everything's on the advantage for me.

Speaker 10 (02:17:28):
If I can get a deal that's going to help
me out, I'll do that, but only if it's going
to work out.

Speaker 1 (02:17:33):
The way I want.

Speaker 10 (02:17:34):
If not, we'll just keep fighting. Whereas it kind of
what I've been saying for a long time. Russia does
not need a negotiated settlement, Ukraine does. And so once
you're on that side of the negotiation, then all the
leverage continues to accrue on the more powerful side with
the Russians. So, for example, over Notched, you had, I
guess last night before I went to bed, the comment

(02:17:55):
coming out of Riod after the meetings was that that
the Russians in the US side were kind of close
to some kind of an agreement that they expected to
have a joint statement published today this morning, the Russian said, yeah,
we're not going to publish any statement, but we're still
talking about stuff. The only thing that the Russian media
is talking about is a Black Sea deal to open

(02:18:16):
the sea back up for Russian grain and fertilizers, something
that's really important to the Russian side. They didn't even
talk at all about the ceasefire on the energy system, etc.
So that tells where the Russian mind is that they're
like not in a hurry on this, and of course
that's aggravating both the US and the Ukraine side because

(02:18:37):
they're still getting attacked every night. As you mentioned, they're
still getting attacked on the ground every single day, twenty
four to seven non stop. So they're getting a little
bit antsy, But I think that's part of the Russia's
negotiating strategy is to make them antsy.

Speaker 6 (02:18:50):
Well.

Speaker 1 (02:18:51):
Clearly, if you have the upper hand and the longer
it drags on, the better your hand becomes. There doesn't
seem to be a whole lot of incentive to sit
down and stop it unless you think about the loss
of life and the ultimate goal and purpose of what
you're trying to accomplish in your war with Ukraine. So
the way I understand it is these negotiations are not

(02:19:14):
in a group where you have Ukrainians sead at the
table with Russians in the United States or any other
neutral country trying to act as a mediator between this.
It's sort of the United States talking with Russia and
hoping to come up with a package of of proposals
from Russia that will satisfy Russia to enter into the ceasefire.
And then when Ukraine finds out about some of the

(02:19:35):
terms of conditions that are leaked out or otherwise presented
they're like no, So I guess is it the Trump
administrations hope that they can sort of convince Ukraine, Dude,
you're gonna have to accept this. There is no other path.

Speaker 3 (02:19:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (02:19:50):
I think that's exactly what they're doing, or more than asking,
I think probably telling. And so I think the United
States wants to first of all, come with the joint
situation that they're willing to or that we're willing to support,
that the Russians can agree to, and then they'll have
a separate negotiation with Ukraine and say here's what we're
willing to do, are you Because I suspect that we're

(02:20:12):
going to get to the point of where the Trump
administration finally comes up with something that's agreeable with the
Russian side, it's going to be small, and then he's
going to tell the Ukraine side basically take it or
leave it.

Speaker 1 (02:20:25):
This is what we're willing to do.

Speaker 10 (02:20:26):
I'm not willing to do anything else. And if you
don't get on board with this, you and the Europeans
can figure this out, because we're going to walk. I mean,
I think that that's what the situation set up for.
There was a twelve hour talk yesterday between Russia and
the United States, And then today there's talks with the
Ukraine side that are scheduled, and so far every time
there's been joint talks from back to backside, the US

(02:20:48):
Ukraine side is always much shorter than the Russian side.
So that tells you a little bit about where America's
heads at. Well, you use the word small and describing
this this present negotiations. Is this negotiating over a cease
fire of some length of time or is are they
really truly negotiating an end to this conflict? Or is

(02:21:08):
it somewhere gray area in between?

Speaker 1 (02:21:10):
Yeah, it's it's.

Speaker 10 (02:21:11):
Definitely including both the Russian side this morning did say
that that that that's one of the things they're looking
at as a part of this. They say, look, we
can talk about the near term, which is, you know,
some kind of a very limited cease fire. That's why
I keep saying it's a small dealer even talking about
right now. But then they're also saying, look, and here's
the bigger issues that you can't take these off the

(02:21:31):
table because this is where I'm going. The only reason
we want to have is theease fire is to get
to right here.

Speaker 1 (02:21:36):
And I think that there was a.

Speaker 10 (02:21:38):
Real message sent yesterday by Saragi Lavrov. He was addressing
an economic forum in Russia, and in the towards the
end of the conversation he said, and I know kind
of by the way, we're gonna still insist upon the
denoxification of the Ukrainian government. We're not going to allow
you know, that to continue on which so he clearly saying,

(02:22:01):
we're not just negotiating an endo the conflict. We still
expect all of our objectives to be met. One of
the big oneses, which is their definition of denocification, which
either means the replacement of the Zelensky regime through elections
or through military means.

Speaker 1 (02:22:16):
I think that that's where they're at well. And what
of this request by some to have a certain amount
of peacekeepers placed in Ukraine. I've seen the number ten
thousand just recently, and I think it's been widely observed
that ten thousand soldiers in Ukraine it could no way
shape or form fendoffs seven hundred thousand Russian soldiers or

(02:22:38):
troops should they decide they want to make a move forward,
And that seems obvious to me. But the idea of
placing NATO aligned countries, United States soldiers, European Union aligned forces.
That just invites this thing to escalate into a broader war, which, frankly,
Daniel Davis scares the hell out of me.

Speaker 10 (02:22:59):
You know, in a certain sense, it's kind of embarrassing
for our side because you may recall, I think it
was toward the first of February, maybe the end of January,
Zelenski said he wanted a two hundred thousand person peacekeeping force,
and then several weeks later it was like, all right, well,
one hundred thousand, and then Kier, Starbar and Macron we're

(02:23:20):
talking our well, maybe forty thousand, and now then somebody's
talking about ten thousand, and then Russia the whole time
that he's never changed and said there won't be one
NATO soldier on the territory of Ukraine.

Speaker 1 (02:23:32):
Will never agree to that.

Speaker 10 (02:23:33):
Apparently they will consider non NATO forces to patrol and monitor.
But you know, we're talking a two thousand kilometer front here. Yeah,
so and you know ten thousand. I mean, if you
put one guy over ten thousand spread over that period
of time, you wouldn't even be able to You might
be in a cell phone, right, So that's not enough

(02:23:54):
to do anything. So it just shows that frankly, the
West side is just not serious about this because they
just don't have the resources.

Speaker 3 (02:24:01):
To do it.

Speaker 1 (02:24:01):
So is our negotiating position or are we sort of
negotiating on behalf of the entire European Union? Are our
NATO countries? I mean we are we the ones in
that role? Because I don't see McCrone sitting at the table.
I mean he's over in France making grandom comments about
what he might want, and Germany's making comments about what

(02:24:23):
they might want, et cetera, et cetera. But the only
people at the table are you know, the moderators from
Saudi Arabia, the United States, and then of course Ukraine
and Russia.

Speaker 10 (02:24:34):
You may recall there was an interesting engagement between General
Keith Kellogg, who's the Trump's envoy to the Russia Ukraine War,
or he was at first.

Speaker 1 (02:24:42):
Now he's just to the Ukraine side.

Speaker 10 (02:24:44):
But at the Munich Security Conference he was part of
a roundtable panel and the European moderator was asking him,
you know, we're about to get into these negotiations and
it's multi party and he said and Kellock said, well,
actually No, it's two two antagonists. It's the United States
in Russia and it's she said incredulously, well, so what
you're talking to Russia or Europe won't even be at
the table initially, And he's like, yeah, that's what I'm

(02:25:06):
telling you. So they're not at the table, and we
haven't been shy about telling them. And look, and why
would they because the West side itself is so far
apart on what the European Union wants. With this Coalition
of the Willing, which is still born, it's not even
going to have a chance. And then where the US is,
So why would we want people at a table with
Russia when we're all over the map.

Speaker 1 (02:25:28):
So I think that Trump is calculated.

Speaker 10 (02:25:30):
We're going to see what I'll agree to, and then
you guys can figure out if you're going to agree
accept what I have up there.

Speaker 1 (02:25:35):
So I think that's kind of where we really are. Well,
in a traditional negotiation, you know my litigation days when
I was practicing law, actively, you make a big ask
up front. You know, you want everything and the sun
and the moon, and you're willing to back off of
that and concede some points in your demands just to
you know, become a little bit more reasonable, but you

(02:25:56):
can secure the vast majority of what you want. Is
that what the Russians are doing right now? Are they
going to? Are they willing to if if Ukraine starts
to entertain some sort of proposal, listen, we'll say okay
to a cease fire, We'll say okay to the resolution
of the war. But you've got to back off X, Y,
and Z or is Russia just like no, this is it?

Speaker 3 (02:26:17):
Well?

Speaker 10 (02:26:17):
I would wager, probably from your litigation experience, if one
party has all the cards and all the leverage, they're
ask is not negotiable. Yeah, this is what we're gonna get.
You can either agree to it or we'll take it
in open court.

Speaker 1 (02:26:32):
I think.

Speaker 10 (02:26:33):
Is that think that's closer to where we're at, because
too many people in the West don't have an appreciation
for the existential nature of this. For the Russian side,
when they say the denocification, they are connecting this to
World War Two, and they said, this is what the
previous generation did. We're not going to allow this to
still exist. We're not going to just stop the fighting
and let the same what they view as the cause

(02:26:55):
of all this stuff continue to perpetuate because they think
it'll just come back later. And the other the issue
that's unappreciated is that the Russian speaking and Russian ethnic
people in Ukraine are a non negotiable issue to protect
right the Russians, and that means the ones on the
Ukraine side of the current lote of contact.

Speaker 1 (02:27:14):
Complicated it is and it doesn't seem to get any better.
Every week we talk Daniel Davis Steve Daie. I find
his podcast online and tune in every Tuesday at eight
thirty for this always interesting, if not frightening conversation that
we have. Daniel, love having you on the show, my friend,
See you next Tuesday. Have a great week. It's a
forty couple to eight forty one fifty. I have care
see de talk station. The incomparable doctor Meghan Frew part

(02:27:37):
of the dental practice of Peck and Freu dynamic duel
of dentistry. They are She'll be on next hope you
can stick around. Thank you for taking me one more
time for the nine cham nine weather hitting this rain today,
light rain only though mostly cloudy all day with the
high fifty one, the little tiny chance of rain every
night down to thirty five tomorrow dry partly Claudie in

(02:27:59):
fifty four the chance Raine late Wednesday in the afternoon
evening hours thirty three for the overnight low and for
opening day dry yay, mostly clouds in a highest sixty two.
That sounds great for baseball forty six. Right now, it's
time for final traffick Chuck Ingram from the uc L
Traumphing Center.

Speaker 5 (02:28:14):
For National Doctor's Day, we honor the u SEE Health
physicians who are leading breakthroughs for Beta. Tomorrow's learn more
at you see health dot com. Step bend seventy five
dots so slow go through Walkland Cruise are working with
an accident above westbound on the Reagan Highway at seventy
five right lanes blocked. Cruise are also working with the
water main break but has industrial blocked off in Dixie

(02:28:37):
and Florence. Chuck Ingram on fifty five krs NEED talk station, Hey, forty.

Speaker 1 (02:28:43):
Eight fifty five KRCD talk station in a very happy
Tuesday to you. Tune in tomorrow for Joe Jenna Politano
every Wednesday at a thirty and you'd be glad you
tuned in right now because everyone needs a great dentist
and there are dentists, and there are a great dentists
and I am pleased to have in studio. It's good
to be Brian Thomas, doctor Meghan Freu from the practice
of Peck and Freu. I's been speaking for doctor Fred

(02:29:04):
Peck Wow for about a decade or so, and he
has been my general, my entire family's general dentist for
that long and with the last couple of years. Two
years ago roughly, doctor Meghan Freu joined the practice and
doctor Frew, it's really wonderful having you in studio. It's
great to see you too. And let me start by
just thanking you because I know I've got a lot

(02:29:25):
of listeners that have consulted with doctor Fred Peck because
he's a renowned cosmetic dentist. Yeah, every time someone gets
in touch with me, they just say, oh my god,
I love Doctor Frus is the most wonderful dentist. She's
got this I call it chair side manner. Yeah, you
make people feel really comfortable, especially folks who really aren't
keen on going to the dentist. I love going to

(02:29:45):
the dentists.

Speaker 14 (02:29:46):
Well, we love hearing that.

Speaker 1 (02:29:47):
Yeah, you know, thank you for taking great care of
my listeners. I've never been wonderful hands because of course
you met the high bar. Doctor Fred Peck would not
have just invited anyone to join in his practice if
they weren't outstanding. He has the highest bar around.

Speaker 14 (02:30:03):
Yeah, and he actually him and I connected maybe four
or five years before I ever even joined the practice,
and he said, I was really young, early in dentistry
and kind of trying to figure out my path and
what courses I should be taking, and you know, figure
out how to get to the level of dentistry wanted
to get to. And he said, you know, I don't
think you're ready quite yet, but you know, here's some

(02:30:25):
things we should do, some courses you should take. And
we kind of kept in touch, and then two years
ago he reached out to me and said, are you ready.

Speaker 1 (02:30:32):
So he was mentoring you ahead of time for sure.

Speaker 14 (02:30:34):
Yeah, there was I had some really great mentors along
the way that kind of set me on the right path.
And yeah, just allowed me to figure out how to
be able to do the dentistry that I like doing.

Speaker 1 (02:30:47):
And you have a passion for cosmonic dentistry, this is
what you wanted to pursue, because that's what Fred Peck
what one of three fellows in the entire state of
Ohio that apaks the status of fellowship with the American
Academy and Cosmanic Dentistry. That's a tough thing to accomplish.

Speaker 14 (02:31:01):
Yeah, the ACD accreditation process is very intense. I'm going
through it right now or starting to go through it anyways.
But yeah, his accomplishments through the ACD is the goal.
And it really kind of puts the stamp behind your name,
saying like, Hey, I really mean it when I say
I'm a cosmetic dentist. I know what I'm doing, I

(02:31:22):
know how to manage these complex cases. And you know,
you can trust me with your smile, because that's a
big thing to entrust somebody with. I mean, it's a huge,
a huge deal for people.

Speaker 1 (02:31:34):
Well, and you know it's your practice. And I've talked
to Fred Peck so many times over the years, and
you know, I've experienced talking with people who are not
comfortable with their smile. You know who they are right away.
They'll put their hand up in front of their mouth
when they're talking. They won't smile, obviously reflecting a lack
of are there self conscious about it and a lot

(02:31:56):
of confidence that's brought about because of that concern about
their smile, and that can be radically transformed the work
that that man has done over the years, and he's
got that hard bound book every time. I've seen that
so many things like this can't be the same person.

Speaker 14 (02:32:12):
Yeah, my favorite sort of transformation is, you know, we
start every initial new patient exam with a ton of
photos to kind of know where we're starting, where we're headed,
so that we have all the information we need to
do a comprehensive treatment plan. My favorite transformation is we see,
you know, I struggle to get those pictures at the
beginning because people won't smile, and then by the end
it's like you can't get them stop smiling, and it's awesome.

(02:32:34):
I've seen that happen with you know, patients in their fifties, seventies,
patients that are in their teens. I mean, you see
it all across the board. It does make a huge difference.

Speaker 1 (02:32:44):
Yeah, it's confidence boosting. People have greater confidence themselves or
happy to talk or happy to smile. Being able to
smile I think changes your personality for the better. Because
you are happy to be able to smile, makes you
happier being with the confidence you bring in the cosmetic dentistry.
That's got to certainly be a rewarding element about your

(02:33:04):
job too.

Speaker 11 (02:33:05):
It is.

Speaker 14 (02:33:06):
I've I've worked in a few different offices where dentistry
has not been something people have been excited about, and
that's always hard, just you know, as a provider. But
when you can provide something that people get excited about,
even if the process to get through it is hard, yeah,
it's super rewarding. It's I love what I do and

(02:33:28):
when when it pays off for a patient you can
kind of see that, it's it's it's really rewarding.

Speaker 1 (02:33:33):
Now can when the patients are looking to get some
cosmetic dentistry, I think, if there's bonding procedures out there,
does this have to be an all both feet jump
in at the same time or can you have this
become a gradual, overtime process.

Speaker 14 (02:33:46):
It totally depends on the patient in the case. I
think when people think about like a smile redesign, people
limit themselves because they think it has to be this ginormous,
Hollywood huge case and it doesn't always have to be that.
Sometimes it's as simple as fixing one or two teeth it,
it can make a huge difference. Sometimes it is more involved,

(02:34:08):
but it really depends on the person, and we do
try to kind of cater each treatment plan custom to
what fits with that person, with what their smile goals are,
with what their financial goals are. You know, we try
to fit it to be something that is attainable for
every person in whatever phase of life they're in. So
it doesn't need to be, you know, a full set

(02:34:32):
of veneers for every single person, because it's not a
one side. It shouldn't be a one size fits all procedure.

Speaker 1 (02:34:38):
Ever.

Speaker 14 (02:34:38):
It should be what's the best treatment plan for you
and in your life to match your goals, and how
are we going to get there together?

Speaker 1 (02:34:45):
Yeah? So great, So you manage expectations, you give them
their options, you talk about you know, we can try
this and do that and maybe get rid of the
biggest problem there that one kind of tooth, and then
if you want to move forward with something else, then
we can do that.

Speaker 14 (02:34:59):
So yeah, And I think the biggest thing too with
dentistry is starting with function first, because the cosmetic stuff
is great and fun, but if it's not work, that lasts.

Speaker 9 (02:35:08):
What's the point.

Speaker 14 (02:35:09):
Why are we going to gear all of this, so,
you know, we really take an approach of let's start
with the foundation. Get everything healthy, get your bite stabilized,
get everything where we need it to be so that
it lasts you for a long long time, so that
when we do these cosmetic things. Sometimes that's just the
cherry on top. Sometimes patients don't care about the cosmetic stuff.

(02:35:31):
They're like, I just want my teeth to not break,
and that's all we're going for, and then surprise, your
smile looks way better.

Speaker 1 (02:35:37):
There you go, and you can do that, yeah, exactly
from breaking. That's a great thing to know. So and
people can find out about this. You offer a no
obligation complementary consultation, don't you.

Speaker 3 (02:35:49):
I do.

Speaker 14 (02:35:50):
I'm going through that ACD accreditation process and going through
that process, you have to submit five very specific smile
case types and there's very specific criteria that it has
to meet free for it to be even a case
that's worth worth submitting. So in conjunction with that, we
are doing complementary smile consultations where you can come in,

(02:36:13):
we'll take a few photos, we'll just talk about your goals,
what we think we can do for you. And then
if you happen to be an accreditation case, we may
be able to offer some complimentary things.

Speaker 1 (02:36:25):
Oh well, that sounds to me like it's worth taking
advantage of the free no obligation. I love that word, free,
no obligation, complimentary smile consultation. To do that, just give
the clinic a call. It's five one three six one
seventy six sixty six. Tell them you'd like to take
advantage of the doctor Fru's complimentary consultation. Find them online
at pexsmiles dot com. I'll tell you, folks, very very

(02:36:48):
close to Montgomery Road two seventy five and you're just
you're like half a mile at that that exit, so
really easy to get to again online pec pec k
pex smiles dot com. Doctor Freu, it's always a pleasure
scene and thanks again for taking great care of my patience.
And for general dentistry, folks, they are the best. Their
staff is so nice and so just very friendly. And

(02:37:11):
if you don't like dentistry, trust me, you'll be in
the best possible hands with doctors Peck and Frew and
maybe you'll be a person that gets transformed and look
forward to going to the dentist like I do, Pecksmiles
dot com, Doctor Frew, have a great day. Thank you
so much. It's been a pleasure seeing you folks. I
you didn't get a chance to listen to Congressman or
former Congressman Brad Weinsterbin Studio in the seven o'clock hour,
and a whole host of topics. The Inside Scoop with

(02:37:33):
tech editor Colin Maydine talking about musk derangement syndrome and
the Daniel Davis Deep Die fifty five cars dot Com
for the podcast, Thank you, Joe Strekker for what you do, folks,
stick around, Gleunbeck's next a full rundown, and the biggest
headlines just minutes away. At the top of the hour,
I'm giving you a fact now Americans should know fifty
five Cars the talk station.

Speaker 9 (02:37:54):
This report is sponsored by

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

The Breakfast Club
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Decisions, Decisions

Decisions, Decisions

Welcome to "Decisions, Decisions," the podcast where boundaries are pushed, and conversations get candid! Join your favorite hosts, Mandii B and WeezyWTF, as they dive deep into the world of non-traditional relationships and explore the often-taboo topics surrounding dating, sex, and love. Every Monday, Mandii and Weezy invite you to unlearn the outdated narratives dictated by traditional patriarchal norms. With a blend of humor, vulnerability, and authenticity, they share their personal journeys navigating their 30s, tackling the complexities of modern relationships, and engaging in thought-provoking discussions that challenge societal expectations. From groundbreaking interviews with diverse guests to relatable stories that resonate with your experiences, "Decisions, Decisions" is your go-to source for open dialogue about what it truly means to love and connect in today's world. Get ready to reshape your understanding of relationships and embrace the freedom of authentic connections—tune in and join the conversation!

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.