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August 6, 2024 • 150 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Five O five a fifty five k r C DE
talk station. Happy legal weed Days. No one cares if

(00:28):
you smoke a joint or not, not in state of
Ohio anymore. Welcome to uh well legal weed Day. Happy
Tuesday folks. Brian Thomas here host at THEFTY five Casey
Morning Show. Joe Struckers that could produce from lining up
guests and exhaling some hydroponic chronic get it out of
your system and hit it again.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
Well, let's start on a light note here this morning
in this state of Ohio. Todd Ends is going to
join the program coming up at seven o five. Got
an inquire bed piece regarding raising taxes amid high inflation.
Of course, bad idea. Tell that to the mayor. I
got inside Scoop Bright Bart News. It is Tuesday eight,
Every Tuesday eight to a five. Today the return of
Political Editor Emma Joe Morris is going to be talking

(01:14):
about Kamala Harrison, her career and the big Duck Dodge
Dip Duck dive and Dodge five d's Dodgeball going on,
of course, with the Kamala Harris campaign focusing exclusively on
everything that while walking away from all of her policies
over the past, you know, couple of decades, and I
was listening to the Guttfeld coming in they rerun Guttfeld.

(01:36):
I guess it runs after I go to bed. At
any event, made an interesting point when Trump was at
the that convention of Black reporters that he spoke at
and they launched into an immediate attack on him being
a racist right out of the gate. He kind of
took the bait and the point being he got into

(01:58):
this discussion of whether Kamala Harris as black or Indian,
and that's a diversion. This is something that they're trying
to use to justify her candidacy, the first black or Indian,
whatever you want to say, female president of the United
States of America. And you know, this is just a

(02:19):
huge distraction. Her race, It's unimportant, it's immaterial. It's who
she is and what she is going to be voting
for and what is she I'm not voting for, but
what is she going to be pushing by way of policy?
And she is as far left as a human being
could possibly be in the world of US politics. And

(02:39):
they're I mean, we got this short term window obviously,
you know, set up and arranged by the Democrat Party.
Joe Biden's out. They knew he was out, they knew
what he was. They lied to us over and over
and over again. They were backed into a corner, stuck
with Kamala Harris, worried the polling numbers for Kamala Harris
are worse than Joe Biden's, even though we're all aware
of his cognitive decline. They needed to get Joe Biden out.

(03:02):
They were stuck with Kamala Harrison. There was multitude of,
I mean, even mainstream media articles talking about that sorry
state of affairs that Democrats found themselves in, and yet
they couldn't get rid of the person who met the
appropriate checkboxes. So here we find ourselves and now she's
the greatest thing since slice spread, walking back every single

(03:27):
policy position that she has been parroting for years and
years and years. Not her self, mind, you are surrogates.
More to talk about on that later in the program,
but it's just can this work? Are we this collectively? Stupid?
Is evil? Orange Man so baked into the cake that
people would vote for someone who is obviously demonstratively an extension,

(03:52):
if not doubling down on the past three and a
half plus years of the Biden administration, that we're going
to go down that road, just dismayed at where we
find ourselves today. Anyway, Emma, Joe Morris can be talking
about Kamala Harris's actual career compared to what they're trying
to sell us. A five Daniel Davis Deep Dive. It

(04:14):
is t Tuesday, eight thirty. We get Daniel Davis. Today.
We'll be talking about the war in Israel and giving
warplanes to Ukraine, which I've been kind of just I
had talked to Congress and Warren Davidson about that the
other day. They've been at war for what now, coming
on in three years or so plus minus. I can't
remember how long this has. They've been at it. Ukraine's
been asking for planes since day one, and now after

(04:36):
all of this time and all the loss the Ukrainians
have suffered, land losses, defeats in battle, the loss of
human life which can't be understated. I mean, they're running
out of people to fight the war. Now they get
the planes, Russia is going to shoot him down at
which they promised to shoot them down. It wouldn't surprise
me a bit if they do. Anyway, asked the expert. Hopefully,

(05:01):
just still trying to get fun number. It's a struggle
to be executive, reduced to the thinking about Cassey Morning
Show from time to time. Some people just don't play
along nicely. We'll find out you see Hell's doctor here,
latis supposed to join the program talking about you see
Blood Cancer Healing Center, and I'll keep my fingers crossed
it that it does happen at the end of the
program and an introduction tomorrow. Oh my god, I am

(05:24):
so pleased. It's been too long. In God bless them.
The prayers and thoughts go out to the Massi family
for the loss of Congressman Thomas Massey's wife. He will
return to the program tomorrow along with is it gonna be?
Along with Judge of Poulatano now back to back though
at some point, as promised, everyone's agreed to do a
three way conversation, me sort of facilitating a conversation among

(05:45):
Congressman Massy and Judge and Polatana. That will happen someday,
but it's not gonna be tomorrow, but we will get
the ultimate hour and radio. As far as I'm concerned
from a libertarian perspective, Congressman Massy, followed by Judge Nita Polatana.
That's tomorrow, all right, so let us start with something
a little bit lighter and no pun intended on that one.
Today's day. Get ready for it. Recreationable recreational cannabis is

(06:07):
now for sale for the first time since the voter's
approved it last November. High Department of Commerce Division of
Cannabis Control yesterday said ninety eight dispensary is set to
be issued dual use certificates for operation statewide this morning,

(06:28):
nineteen in the Cincinnati region. I bet there's a bunch
of people out there, Joe that already know which night
where these nineteen ones are right here in the greater
Cincinnati area, staked out which one they're going to this morning,
and they're expecting crowds. According to the statement from the agency,
the issuance of certificates is based on roughly the order

(06:49):
in which completed applications were received by the Division and
which compliance asks were fulfilled to help ensure a fair
and oh there's that word, and equitable roll out of
the non medical cannabis market and Ohio Division intensive awards
to do against you all remaining eligible dispensaries later this week.

(07:10):
So if you know where your medical marijuana dispensary is,
that's where you're going to be able to buy recreational weed.
Let us see here. Tough to know what kind of
turnout to expect, they're saying, but they expect quite a
bit of volume. There could be lines when some of

(07:32):
the stores opened. One store owner was interviewed about that,
which he predicts lines when history opens at nine am.
Some locations open as early as seven am in the
Cincinnati area. You check your local distributor for these specifics
on when they open and hours of operations. And they
expect people from maybe Kentucky and Indiana to come, making

(07:54):
it our state for the purpose of buying recreational marijuana.
How much can you buy? Twenty one year old and above.
You gotta be an adult twenty one. They're going to
card you to up to two and a half ounces
of weed, fifteen grams of extracts or edibles maximum purchase amount,

(08:20):
and it's one transaction. They weigh or assess the volume
you're buying at any given time, So recreational consumers can
purchase no more than one ounce of dried weed aka
flour ten units each containing five hundred and ninety milligrams

(08:42):
of THHC, ten units of oil for the purposes of vaping,
ten packets of edibles totally no more than eleven hundred
milligrams of THHC. It sounds like a lot, and the
caps are combined across all types of products, meaning you
can't purchase the maximum amount of flour, vapes, and cartridges
and edibles all in one sitting, so you have to
come back the next day. This is a daily limitation

(09:05):
division of Cannabis Control spokesperson Jamie Crawford speaking with I
think this is yeah, since any inquires that the Women's
aim to ensure that there's enough in stock for medical
marijuana patients. Those are the ones who came up with
a justification to smoke weed before it became well legal
recreationally speaking. Anybody who know anybody with a medical marijuana license,

(09:29):
do they really have a condition that they're treating or
they just getting high. It's illegal for dispensaries to sell
to people under the age of twenty one. You will
be carted. Also note that if you're going in to
buy weed, many of them only except cash.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
I love this.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
And having ATM on site for customers who don't have
any cash. Well, how convenient is that? It's like a
casino walk of shame, isn't it not?

Speaker 2 (09:55):
Damn it?

Speaker 1 (09:56):
I ran out of money button on Blackjack. I'll head
over to the ATM and get more. Make it really
convenient for you right there, and online orders. You can
place online orders at dispensaries, but you have to pay
in the store, so call ahead and reserve your weed.

(10:16):
They say the Vision of Cannabis Control proposes rules for
online payments down the road, so maybe you can pay
in advance at some point too. They're also crafting rules
for home delivery, currently not available. So I suppose if
you're you know, maybe subject to an OVI limit and
you're out of weed, at some point, you just call

(10:38):
the weed distributor up and say, hey, can you bring
me some over to my house? Make it really easy
for you, And again that's down the road. At point,
they say, the dispensers will be showing a wide range
of products flower bape cartridges, edibles, beverages, and topical creams.
Package requiring The state requires packaging flower in two point

(10:58):
eighty three gram amounts, which is known as the Ohio tenth.
I see, you don't walk into a dispensary and see
jars of loose weed. It's all going to be individually packaged,
which is a requirement of Ohio law. Only products allowed
under the medical marijuana program are going to be available
for adult use consumers. So apparently there aren't going to

(11:19):
be they say, pre rolled joints or concentrates with more
than seventy percent THCHC on the shelves, but they could
become available later this summer. They think around September seventy percent. Yeah, Ever,
as statistics, you know, this isn't your father's weed or
your grandfather's weed. You know, the Mexican dirt weed that

(11:40):
the hippies were smoking back in the sixties and seventies,
which contained like five percent THCHC or something really small
in amounts. Now, the THHC limits in these, you know,
commercially grown marijuana operations are north of thirty percent. And
then of course, when you concentrated, you're talking about some serious,
serious concentrations of THHC, which is why I have so

(12:01):
many great stories in the stack. Is stupid every morning?
Or that idiot on the airplane that took what how
many how many milligrams of THC that guy consume? He
ate like twenty edibles or something like that, And he
said after he got arrested, I had no idea what
the THHC level is in the marriage. So you know,
this is the kind of thing you're gonna have to
pay attention to and be careful of, and of course

(12:22):
mind your p's and q's and you're out driving around
the road, because thus far, the police find it very
difficult to figure out who is really intoxicated on weed
versus someone who might just have been smoking and joined
a couple of weeks ago, but still has traces of
the after product floating around on their blood, which is
sufficient in Ohio to that you would DUI or an
OVII even if you're not high. That is, if they

(12:45):
get a blood test to check and see. Anyhow, Welcome
to the world to legalize weed here in the state
of Ohio. It is five eighteen right now. If I've
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(13:06):
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Speaker 3 (14:10):
Fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station, the exclusive audio home
on NBC's coverage of the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics.

Speaker 1 (14:25):
Here it is, and my first warning weather forecast. Let
us see here. We've got a sunny day to day,
hot and humid high ninety four overnight mostly flatty isolated
chance of rain with a low of seventy one. Tomorrow
mostly cloudy though not as hot, little isolated rain, possible
high of eighty five, flouty overnight sixty seven and on
Thursday at mostly sunny day going up to eighty seventy.

(14:45):
Right now we're looking at seventy two degrees here fifty
five KRC Detalk station now five twenty two on a
Tuesday five one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred
eight hundred dy two three talk ToIP FI fifty one
eighteen t phones and don't forget if you can be
smoking weed, remember that FFL form yep, that could prevent

(15:07):
you from well purchasing a firearm if you're honest and
always said for everybody out there with a medical marijuana card,
I think that's an admission that you're smoking weed in
ergo that you wouldn't be able to say you're not
a user of marijuana when you fill out your license
to acquire a firearm. Speaking of firearms, just fun little
fact here for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, They announced

(15:29):
yesterday that the month of July this year marked the
wow sixtieth consecutive month of more than one million background
checks for gun sales and retail locations. A number of
national Instant criminal background checks conducted for gun sales in
July one, sixty seven, and ninety. According to the NSF statement,

(15:54):
the last time monthly background checks was associated with the
sale of firearm at retail were below million was July
twenty nineteen, when eight hundred and thirty five hundred and
seventy nine background checks were for firearm purchases were recorded.
So all people are buying up their firearms, there's no
question about it, man. That's the think about that sixty

(16:15):
million additional guns since July twenty nineteen, as a well
proud support of the Second Amendment and happy to enjoy
my rights under the Second Amendment. I find no problem
with that, quite honestly, And consider this people running around,
you know, I know there's a lot of gun violence
out there, and I think that's more of a societal
breakdown issue than the actual implement used to commit a crime.

(16:38):
See Europe and the stabbings that go on where they
can't buy firearms, they find some other mechanism to harm people,
getting all stabby on people. But if you consider the
number of guns that are in the United States of America,
more guns than people, and the fact that they're all
out there and yet there's not more gun violence there

(16:58):
is illustrative of the fact that the vast, vast, vast
majority of firearms owners are indeed responsible owners. So I
find no problem with that. And I know all of
the firearms owners that I am friends with, that I
have shot with, and that I know they are responsible.
There are people I trust all day long, and I
certainly trust them as I do trust you with your

(17:21):
right to keep in bare arms. So there's a lot
of them out there. Soon enough world to get out
on the street for criminal elements out there that you
shouldn't go picking on folks given the likelihood that they
own a firearm or have one on their person, has
increased rather dramatically about twenty five fifty five ks detoxtation,
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Speaker 3 (18:50):
Dot Com fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
There we go little theme song music for our legalized
weed there in the state of Aisle. It's past I'm
thinking things at dot com fine.

Speaker 4 (19:10):
Business to watch.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
Oh I don't have my hash pipe? Okay? So local
stories include recreational marijuana will be legally for s on
Ohio beginning today. All right, we went through that as
the outset of the program. Moving on to other local stories.
You can call though five went three, seven, four nine,
fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eighty two three talk
at a reminder, head on over to fifty five care
Sea dot com. Listen to what Congressman Warren Davids had

(19:43):
Davidson had to say yesterday Christopher Smith aman with the
Smith Vent and Monday, Monday, I'll be at the Congressman
Davidson town hall Wednesday evening. Details there at fifty five
care Sea dot com, so maybe you'll be there. Ask
him questions, be more than happy to answer him to
the extent he can't get through all the questions during
the town hall event, and he promised the questions will
be answered electronically. So No. Five d's of dodgeball when

(20:05):
it comes to Congressman Warren Davidson. He's a good guy.
I really like Congressman Davidson. So that's Wednesday night, and again,
get your iHeartMedia app while you're at fifty five karosee
dot com so you can stream the audio. And thank
you very much the listeners who are streaming. I got
the streaming numbers and the fifty five Karosee Morning Show
number two in the entire iHeartMedia cluster here in the city.

(20:27):
Huh did you hear about that?

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Joe?

Speaker 1 (20:30):
I could show you the numbers I got him from
Rhino number two. I'll let you decide who's number one.
But we don't have the reach of our sister station.
But I truly appreciate folks listening and streaming through the
through the app since I please say, one man is
dead after a double shooting on Bishop Street happened yesterday.

(20:51):
Dispatcher said the shooting happened in the thirty two hundred
block of something.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
This stops.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
It's Bishop Street. University of Cincinnati sent a campus alert
about the shooting about five pm. They sent an all
clear message five thirty pm. I don't have any additional
information beyond that double shooting on Bishop Street. Seventeen year
old shot late last night and over the rune. According
to CINCINNT Police, It happened about eleven pm in Grant

(21:19):
Park on mcmickon Avenue. Police said the teen had hopped
onto a metro bus and was found by officers in
downtown Cincinnati near Walnut Street in Central Parkway. Teen shot
in the lower back. Police said he was taking the
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. They don't have any suspects
yet in the shooting. Suppose if you have any information
about that, the police would love to hear from me.
Feel free to give him a call or call crime

(21:41):
stoffers that default number three five two thirty forty. I
think that number works in all cases, even if they
don't specifically identify it as a number to call. Forty
eight year woman under arrest for oh Joe, may I
have an award to give out animal cruelty charges. LaVette

(22:02):
LaVette Doherty hit a dog with a bat on Friday.
Corner of the dog warden and the criminal complaint filed
in Hamilton County Municipal Court. There's video footage from the
deputy dog warden corner of the court records. She's from
bond Hill's schedule appearing court. I guess yesterday and she
was booked into the jail at eleven thirty two pm
on Saturday. Corner of the jail records. She hit him

(22:24):
with a baseball bat. I'm a dog lover, so Eeries.

Speaker 5 (22:31):
The biggest douche of the universe, in all the galaxies,
there's no bigger douche than you. You've reached the top,
the pinnacle of douche. Dum good goingduce. Your dreams have
come true.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Yeah, let's see here. Sixteen year old boy has been
arrested for shooting and killing a fifteen year old boy
in Corraine Township. Happened on Sunday night. It's the gun's fault.
Coraine Township Police Department, reporting on this one corner identified
the teenager as Damarian Palmisano. Shooting happened about nine pm

(23:16):
in the three thousand block of Laverne Drive. Pau Masinod
taken a ec arm Sorry University since a Children's hospital
medical center with serious injuries. Please said, a sixteen year
old boy was erected arrested for reckless homicide. During a
subsequent investigation, that teenager taken to the Hamlin County Juvenile
Detention Facility and so far not clear what led to

(23:37):
the shooting. No other injuries were reported at this time.
Please say that people involved with the shooting are cooperating
with the investigation. You rarely read that these days, but
anyone with information about the shooting police can get in
touch with the Cole Raine Police Department. Five one three
three to two to one cops. Five one three three
two one cops. All right, that's what we got this

(23:59):
morning by way of local stories. Coming up with five
thirty five, I got stack of stupid to dive on into,
or alternatively, love to hear from you if you've got
a comment about something going on in the world. Feel
free to call the Morning show and get in touch
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Speaker 6 (25:24):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
From there, here's your nine first one to wet forecast.
A sunny day to day helid though ninety four for
the high, over nine clowns, isolated rain as possible, seventy
one for the low eighty five tomorrow's high.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Maybe it's a.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Little bit of rain, not much though mostly cloudy overnight,
milder sixty seven for the overnight low, and then a
high at eighty seven on Thursday with mostly sunny skies
seventy two degrees. Right now, it's time for first Traffics.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
Frindly U se up Tramfics Center here.

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Speaker 2 (26:02):
Hi, wait, traffick not all that pad this morning.

Speaker 7 (26:04):
No overnight work crew slowing things down northbound seventy five.
There's a broken down semi over on the right shoulder
and buttermilk, but that's not causing a problem. Traffic continues
in great shape into downtown Chuck Ingram on fifty five.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
K R see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
Five forty eight fifty five k see talk station halfy Tuesday.
Whether or not it's because you're smoking legal weed in
the state of Ohio. You can feel free to call
if you'd like five went three seven eight hundred eight
two three talk. Otherwise, let's get in the stack of
stupid Sunday night spaghetti and returned violent, of course it did.

(26:43):
When a forty one year old man threw pasta at
his mom, hitting her in the head and leaving her
splatter with sauce. Court of the police, they say Anthony
Fiaco close enough had a verbal argument with the victim
to turn physical in the Florida home where the victim,

(27:03):
sixty one, resides with the accused. According to the cops report,
the spaghetti made contact with the victim, who had spaghetti
sauce in her hair the things police have to deal with.
He allegedly fled the home and officers showed up after
being spotted hiding behind a bush in the backyard. He
sought to run away, but it was quickly corrowed by

(27:25):
the police. Charged with domestic battery for the spaghetti incident,
as well as resisting an officer, booked into the county
jail on misdemeanor counts. No weapon seized by police. Not
clear how long they see the Sunday gravy had been simmering.
A man Joe Judge Ordan have no contact with his mom.
It's going to be allowed a one time visit in

(27:46):
the presence of law enforcement to retrieve personal belongings. As
prior convictions for battery, trespass, violenting probation, throwing a deadly
missile into a building.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
What I know that really?

Speaker 1 (28:02):
If that causes me to ask a whole bunch of
questions anyway, the missile the missile, as they report, was
a Heineken bottle he threw at an apartment window after
being asked to leave a party. Apparently hit several individuals,
obviously resulting in the charge. He's got anger management problems,
I think argument early Saturday between began over doctor Asha Persad,

(28:29):
a thirty four year old dentist, getting her husband Taco
Bell and McDonald's for his birthday. That led to an argument,
landing him on I know, isn't that the truth?

Speaker 2 (28:41):
Joe.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
During the fight, which happened at twenty minutes after twelve,
a m forsawd allegedly threw a soft shell taco at
the thirty five year old birthday boy. It hit him
in why are you doing on the right side of
the face. When if patrolman responded to the couple Saint
Petersburg as this tradition residence, the burrito was still on
the victim's face. Now of course that I know, I

(29:07):
mean image of a full burrito stuck to this guy's face.
Not clear why in arrest report alternatively refers to the
Mexican missile as a taco and a burrito. They suggest
perhaps the investigator was actually referring to a tortilla. Details

(29:30):
a bit sketchy at this moment in time. Victim has
been married to Persad for five years, said he was
not injured by the Taco Bell menu item after being
read or right, she reportedly said she threw a burrito
at the victim after he threw a bag at her.
She was arrested for domestic battery misdemeanor, booked into the
county jail, from which she was later released on her

(29:51):
own recognizance. She and her spouse last year purchased their
Florida home. I don't know why this is in here
for half a million dollars. She grew up in Bangladore, Indy.
A whole licenses in Florida and South Carolina, where the
couple previously resided. I don't know how this helps her
dental practice, and I imagine it doesn't. And you can

(30:14):
probably fit this one in. Wait for it. Wait there
it is. I can see you through my little video thing.
I was waiting for him. He was distracted by work
he's doing online. It's like, wait a second, where's that
phrasing button? Anyway, scam began with a spoof phone call,

(30:37):
ended with the Ohio woman being swindled out of six
thousand dollars and then tricked into disrobing so that she
could verify her identity via FaceTime with the fraudster. Victim
told police in Mayfield Heights, Cleveland suburb, that she received
a call on Tuesday from a number that appeared to
be customer service line from Huntington Bank. Feels like a

(30:59):
story from Tech Friday. Dave had her mail caller spoke
with an accent. I don't know if that's important, but
maybe a red flag told the woman that there was
a potential fraudulent charge pending on her account. To safeguard
her money to purported bank employees, that she would have
to move her funds into a different account to avoid
her money being stolen. While this guy was still on

(31:22):
the phone with her, the woman sent went to a
local Huntington Bank branch withdrew six thousand dollars. She was
then directed to a nearby Chase Bank ATM where she
deposited the cash into a Chase debit card through her
phone's Apple Pay feature. After spending two hours on the
phone with the man, the woman, whose name has been

(31:42):
redacted from the police report, returned home and got another
call from the fraudster who wanted FaceTime with her. A
man who did not have his camera on asked the
woman to provide them with a full body scan to
verify her ID identity due to a failed transaction. Woman
told police that she undressed and spun in circles on
FaceTime to confirm her identity. The voice on the other

(32:05):
end began to laugh. The woman realized that she'd been scammed.
Police of subpoena various bank records, likelihood of identifying the perp,
probably working from a call center somewhere out there outside
of the United States, they suggest India. In the article
part of the one being Defrauded US, the local sheriff
had warned the area residents that they had been receiving

(32:25):
scam phone calls from the same spoofed Hunting ten bank number.
Got to pee on your toes out there in the world, folks,
five forty six fifty five K see talk station and
step back from your reality of what's going on in
your world right now. Can you imagine, under any circumstance,

(32:46):
a true bank employee asking you to get on FaceTime
and disrobe And I feel sorry for this woman, obviously
extraordinarily gullible. Common sense isn't anymore. Jimmycare fireplace and stove.
It's an awesome time. Take care of your safety, and
that's what it's all about this time of year. Safety

(33:09):
because you're not using your fireplace at least most people
aren't when it's ninety plus degrees out one hundred percent humidity.
That's my view of life. But now it's a great
time take care of safety. Have your chimney flu inspected,
have the chimney inspected. Generally speaking, they'll check the venting
and chimneycare, fireplace and stove. Aplus of a better business bureau.
They know how to do literally everything. They could start
from scratch and build you a brand new chimney and

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fireplace if you want. They take care of water issues.
They do waterproofing, cap and damper replacement, chimney re lining.
You could have had a chimney fire which would crack
the lining. That is a dangerous situation. So take care
of the safety or alternatively, upgrade have that new fireplace
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a whole bunch of them at four thirteen Wards Corner Road,

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him a call. Tom Bryan said, I've been around locally
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Speaker 6 (34:11):
Dot Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 7 (34:13):
In Today's Marketers Report, Erica Taylor, chief marketing officer of
jen Intech, weighs in on Audio's.

Speaker 1 (34:19):
Boot nine first warning weather forecast Today, hot and even
ninety four, overnight, mostly cloudy, maybe isolated rain popping in
there somewhere seventy one. The overnight low uh again, isolated
rain during the day. Tomorrow high of eighty five, mostly cloudy,
overnight partley cloudie in sixty seven, and he mostly sunny
Thursday with a high of eighty seven seventy two. Right now,
let's get an update on traffic from the.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
UCL Traumphate Center.

Speaker 7 (34:43):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transaplanna
from multicultural communities give the Gift of life. Sign up
today to be an organ donor clean slate on the
highways with the exception of a broken down northbound seventy
five at Pottermilk. But he's over on the right shoulder
and out of the way. I'm seeing no lady's out
of Burlbanger into downtown in Bend, seventy fourst wide open pants,

(35:04):
Montana Chucking Vermont, fifty five KRC deep talk station.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
It is five fifty two fifty five KRCD talk station.
Dack O stupid or you can call back to Florida
Crust View, Florida, specifically where a woman was arrested after
allegedly killing her roommate's pet spider. What July fifteenth, roomate

(35:33):
came home to discover that a pet spider was missing
from its enclosure. According to local news, the roommate reached
out to forty three year old Elena Rasmussen about the
missing spider. She allegedly admitted to officials that she had
drowned the spider. It was a jumping spider in ginger Ale.

Speaker 8 (35:49):
Do work that out.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
Motive remains unknown.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
She's facing misdemeanor animal cruelty charges over the death of
the well. It was described as a pet worth seventy dollars. Joe,
we pulled the room. Hey, would you spend seventy dollars
on a spider? Now they do have the pet stores though, yes,

(36:13):
I will acknowledge that. Chicago police looking for a man
who said they attacked three people with a hatchet, life
like object after he was denied free food by McDonald's cashier.

Speaker 2 (36:26):
Just away.

Speaker 1 (36:28):
Happen at eight twenty nine Sunday morning in a restaurant
the seventy hundred block in Southwestern Avenue. Accord to Chicago Police,
one customer there named Moe Cannon, speaking with CBS News Chicago. Man,
this messed up, I'm reading that's that's the quote. Man,
this messed up. They don't mess with nobody. We go

(36:48):
to this McDonald's every day and they all cool people
there close quote.

Speaker 9 (36:54):
Now, who can argue with that?

Speaker 1 (36:57):
Obviously did not receive the classical education from a Hillsdale
College affiliated school. Viol He said, he asked me for
a dollar for some coffee. I ended up giving him
a dollar and I gave him a Newport cigarette. He
had an axe on him. I didn't know what he

(37:19):
was going to do. Soon after, Cannon said he saw
the suspect walk out of McDonald's. He said, I saw
a little blood on the axe and he was smiling.
He was smiling and walking with the axe like he
was like this and eating a cookie. Old girl had
a hole in her head and one lad was cut
right here and one boy. He was cut in his face.
I think again, a direct quote from the witness. Local

(37:40):
media reported the drive through remained open, with the restaurant
lobby was closed. Victims reportedly an eighteen year old man,
two forty five year old, two forty five year old women,
and McDonald's owner and operator Vincent Hale confirmed in a
statement to local news there all are employees of the restaurant.
He said, We're deeply upset by the violent attack that
took place in a row yesterday morning, harming three of

(38:02):
our own team members. Nothing is more important the safety
of the employees and the customers. We offer full support
for them as they recover. Three victims taking a local
area hospitals. Eighteen year old and the forty five year
old will listening in good condition, the other forty five
year old in serious condition. Hours after this violent attack,
people call police to report the suspect had returned to
this scene. They are offered paid time off to recover.

(38:29):
Isn't that nice? No offender in custody, but Chicago police
told Local News the detectives are questioning an individual while
the investigation continues. Joe, you noticed a precipitous increase in
violent attacks and the stack is stupid at fast food
restaurants or involving fast food. Thank you brother.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Sticking out.

Speaker 1 (38:53):
Lots more to talk about in the six o'clock hour,
including the reinvention of Kamala Harris. Yes, they are hard
at work trying to convince you she is someone that
she is not. Are they going to be able to
do that? Are you that ignorant? Stick around? We'll talk
about that, take phone calls as well. A whole lot
on the list of topics to handle before we get
to Todd Zenzer about raising taxes in this unbelievably inflationary

(39:15):
period being a really bad idea, and I share his
thoughts on that way. Have him at seven oh five.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
It's what motivates your vote the Democrats now and they
were the racist back then.

Speaker 10 (39:28):
Fifty five KRS the talk station, five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (39:33):
Bryan Thomas here, wishing you a very happy Tuesday, confining
me to stick around all morning. You're gonna hear from
Todd Zen's are coming up in a one hour. He
wrote an enquire op ed discussing U gee, is it
a good idea to raise taxes given the high inflation?
And of course the property tax situation we're all facing here.
Probably not. I'm going to go with a big hard
no on that one. Todd Zends are coming up a

(39:54):
one hour on that eight oh five, Fast forward two hours.
Get the inside Scoop with Bright Bart News every Tuesday
at eight oh five. Today the return of Emma Joe Morris,
the political editor editor at Breitbart. We're gon be talking
about Kamala Harrison, her career subject matter that I'll dive
into here momentarily. Daniel Davis Deep dive every Tuesday at
eight thirty Today, the war in Israel as well as
the United States. Finally after multiple years giving F sixteen

(40:18):
to Ukraine. Still wonder why what the Hell's going on
with that one? Maybe Daniel Davis will be able to
answer those questions. Three, because I'm puzzled, and hopefully the
I ask the expert from UCE Health on uc Blood
Cancer Healing Center. So that will take place at eight fifty.
In the meantime, you can feel free to call five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty two to

(40:39):
three talk pound five fifty on AT and T phones
and of course that iHeart Media app available on my
blog page fifty five care Sea dot com. You can
get that as well as a podcast. Listen to Congressman
Warren Davidson who's doing a town hall on Wednesday evening
Monday Monday with Brian James and Christopher Smitheman with the
Smither event. All there at fifty five careseea dot com
in the podcast. Let's forre we get to the uh

(41:01):
the remaking or reinvention of Kamala Harris, which everybody's in
the mainstream media is endeavoring to do. Let's see what
Bobby's got this morning. Bobby, Happy Tuesday to you.

Speaker 11 (41:10):
Happy Tuesday, my brother. Thanks for taking my call on
such a beautiful, hot summer day.

Speaker 1 (41:15):
It is a sticky one.

Speaker 11 (41:18):
What what's the problem with miss Kamala. I don't understand
what everybody's complaining about. Well, is it a because because
they're flip flopping and taking different positions or something. I
don't understand why she does it? Morning Janna Jameson does,
so we shouldn't be a problem with it. She's had
a lot of practice. Any woman that's got a union

(41:40):
book down the painters unions, you see more ceilings than
Michael Angelo. So I don't know what the problems are.

Speaker 1 (41:47):
Wow, And you know you threw me a real curveball
on that one, Bobby. I'm not even quite sure how
to respond to those statements. I'm just gonna let them
float out there for our listeners to absorb and they
can take it for whatever it's worth. On that one,
I'm gonna Okay, you have a good one, Bobby, And

(42:15):
thanks for the laugh this morning, my brother.

Speaker 2 (42:18):
I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (42:19):
Yes, Kamala Harris has formally secured the coup de tah,
getting the Democratic presidential nomination virtually. D NC announced yesterday
after the conclusion of a five day virtual roll call
of pledged delegates, that she has won the nomination. Of course,
she was the only one under consideration given the coup

(42:39):
a taf. They had no place else to turn. They
were stuck with her. And with that I turned to
Gerard Baker. Wonderful, wonderful analysis by Gerard Baker, the reinvention
of Kamala Harris. Democrats stuck with Biden because they thought
she was even weaker? Has that changed? God? Bless Youerard

(43:01):
Baker for this one. The only real question for the
ninety days remaining in this presidential campaign. Can Operation Transfiguration succeed?
Can the Democrats in collaborative media pull off their recasting
of Vice President Kamala Harris from the verbally maladroit, politically
inept ruinous policy espousing electoral dud we have all seen

(43:23):
over the past five years into the holy trinity of
Joan of Arc, Harriet Tubman and Margaret Thatcher we have
been presented with in the past two weeks brilliant, Can
shall we say, the protective phalanx of Democrat aids, strategists, fundraisers, reporters, editors,
influencers and Taylor Swift persuade enough voters to imagine a

(43:46):
presidential future of what can be unburdened by the reality
of the vice president, presidential candidate, senator and state attorney
general that has been to or the lack of it,
is the key to the operation's success. I say ninety days,
but in practice they will need to keep the hype

(44:08):
show on the road for just two months after the
August of Jubilees. This week, the hosannas will ring anew
when Miss Harris announces her vice presidential nominee. It's a
sure bet that when the man is unveiled, we will
be treated to a week of gauzy newspaper accounts of
his genius and kindliness. Television pundits will explain another pair

(44:31):
on the ticket represent the perfect distillation of American diversity.
They will take their campaign on the road, Miss Harris,
never more than a few feet away of her truly independent,
indispensable companion, the teleprompter, and a much safer distance from
any enterprising reporter who may ask a difficult question. Then

(44:53):
we'll have a week of democratic convention like no other.
It will open with bridget with Biden. Night only one,
when the withered man in the party has just knife
will be hoisted alof before adoring delegates and media panegyrists
and hailed as Mount Rushmore Ready, that was awesome. Then

(45:13):
three nights of tribute to the pantsuit pericles bidding around
the country for the next four years, culinating in a
peroration that will leave White House correspondents weeping. Operation Transfiguration
may be the most audacious plan of political party has
ever undertaken. It requires the effective deployment of the full

(45:33):
two toolkit of press and social media deception, selective editorial amnesia,
gas lighting, memory, holding the whole campaign is the political
and a media equivalent of answering every questions voters may
have about the pre July twenty one Miss Harris with

(45:55):
four h four error page not found. He's brilliant. If
you think I'm overstating this, as Gerard Baker again, if
you think I'm overstating the extent to which Miss Harris
is being reclothed casture behind back. Oh so many weeks ago,
before President Biden's self immolated at the presidential debate, before

(46:16):
a would be assassin nearly took down Donald Trump, before
mister Biden was bundled out of the race till late June,
a political epoch way when polling, punditry, and political logic
all told us the same thing. Miss Harris was a loser.

(46:36):
Her approval rating had been lower than even mister Biden's.
For most of the past few years, many Democrats were
saying privately and some publicly, that mister Biden were jettison
from the ticket. There should be an accelerated primary contest
because they couldn't risk letting the vice presidents simply ascend
to the job.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
We're all familiar with why that was.

Speaker 1 (46:56):
Memories of Miss harris political identity as the most liberal
member of a Senate that included Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren,
a presidential campaign five years ago in which she pledged
to eliminate private health insurance, ban fracking, give benefits to
illegal immigrants, and force gun owners to sell certain firearms
to the government. More recent recollections over San Francisco bred extremism,

(47:20):
such as when she helped raise money for the legal
defense of rioters and looters in the summer of twenty twenty,
and her role in helping mister Biden deliver a long
list of economic, social, and national security failures for the country,
most obviously at the border. All this is why so
many Democrats were alarmed at the thought of a Harris nomination,

(47:42):
the same nomination they now trumpet as triumphant. Only two
things can derail Operation Transfiguration. The first is a focused,
discipline of relentless Republican campaign that raises the debate above
the vacuity of social media means and reminds voters that
the Democratic candidate is the same person and her party

(48:04):
is the same party that she was two weeks ago.
The election has decided on the issues on voters' perceptions
of the state of the country. Miss Harris is surely
in as much trouble as mister Biden was. If the
campaign is dominated by pointless assertions about Miss Harris's racial identity,

(48:26):
or her maternal status or all the other entertaining little diversions.
Miss Trump, mister Trump likes to indulge see Bobby's previous
phone call. She may get away with skating past the
realities of her past. The other is the media. Are

(48:46):
they really going to guide this campaign gently across the
finish line? Is there anyone left beyond hostile outlets with
a modicum of journalistic dignity who's prepared to ask serious questions?
Do serious reporting demand a press conference or two? Or
are they all intent on doing what they nearly got

(49:08):
away with doing for mister Biden for the last few
years and cover for someone evidently incapable of holding office. Ouch.
But that's the point, isn't it. You can't polish excrement.
And if you don't like the current administration's policies, and

(49:30):
you are in favor of, say, fracking or the secure border,
or some sort of fiscal responsibility or literally anything that
Kamala Harris is against then you're in bad hands here.
Even though they're trying to paint her into something like
a moderate, This orchestrated lying that's going on, it's just unbelievable,

(49:53):
you know. I mean, the internet's great, the Internet's terrible,
but we do have an internet that allows us to
search and find out literally cheap in verse what she
has said and stood for for decades as one of
the most liberal people elected to hire office, most notably
while she was in the Senate. Her record's there for
all to look at and enjoy and consume. You think

(50:14):
she's really changed over the last two weeks, of course
she hasn't. But evil Orange Man six seventeen fifty five
kres to de Talk Stations five seventeen, Era six seventeen.
Feel free to call if i've wing three seven four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and two to three
talk And if you want to get your kitchen roomodeled,

(50:34):
give John Ryan a call Prestige Interiors. That is a
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than anybody else, because John Ryan's basically been doing a
kitchen for the last thirty five years, and really, you know,
I remember the talking to him when he was doing
our kitchen. Ward of mouth. He did one kitchen in
one neighborhood, and basically everyone who walked into the house
and saw the kitchen, like I want my kitchen done

(50:56):
by that guy, ended up doing five kitchens in one neighborhood.
That's you know that word of mouth because he does
wonderful work, and I'm here to pass along that word
to you. We love the kitchen that John did for us.
We gutted the whole thing, started from scratch, took him
up on his suggestions with some great ideas about flow
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we wanted. You don't have to do a whole gut
you can just do cabinets and countertops. He still be

(51:17):
your true partner with your kitchen remodeling project from initial
design to final installation, helping you mind your budget as well.
Scall the man with the most experienced John Ryan, a
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him online and check out some of the work he's
done in the past. Prestige one two three dot com
Prestige one two three dot com. The number is five

(51:38):
one three two four seven zero two two nine five
one three two four seven zero two.

Speaker 6 (51:42):
Two nine fifty five krc iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (51:49):
Here's your nine first warning weather forecast.

Speaker 1 (51:51):
Sunny, hot Humaniday, high ninety four uh, mostly clouds every night,
maybe a little bit of rain. Seventy one for the low,
Tamora eighty five for the high. Mostly bottyl had rained overnight.
I am mild sixty seven with partly cloudy skies, and
Thursday is going to be a sunny day for the
most part, high of eighty seven. Right now it's seventy
two degrees. Let's see what Chuck has to say about traffic.

Speaker 2 (52:11):
From the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 7 (52:13):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplanter
from multicultural communities give the Gift of Life.

Speaker 2 (52:18):
Sign up to day to be an organ donor.

Speaker 7 (52:20):
Chris continue to work with an accident in Eastpound two
to seventy five. After mostellar, they're over on the right
hand side. Elsewhere traffic doing fine now southbound seventy five
right lanes open again at Kyle's after being blocked up
for a very short time by a work crew Chuck
Ingram on fifty five KR see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (52:41):
Six fifty five kerc DE talk station. Speaking of Kamala
Harris's record, here we have an interim staff report from
the House Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Immigration, Integrity, Security and
Enforcement with some pretty troubling news the staff report Interim

(53:03):
Staff Report I supposedly is gonna be a final one
at sub some point.

Speaker 12 (53:06):
Though.

Speaker 1 (53:06):
The Subcommittee's interim staff report shows how the Department of
Health and or DHS I should say between twenty twenty
one and twenty twenty three released migrants on the federal
government's terrorist watch list into the United States. Folks on
the watch list were nonetheless allowed into the United States,
accord to the report, under the Biden Harris administration, of

(53:28):
more than two hundred and fifty illegal aliens on the
terrorist watch lists who were encountered by border patrol of
the Southwest border between fiscal years twenty one and twenty three,
DHS has released into American communities at least ninety nine
with at least thirty four others in DHS custody but
not yet removed. It went on between fiscal years twenty

(53:49):
one and twenty three. Border patrol of the Southwest border
encountered aliens on the terrorist watch list from thirty six
different countries, including places within active terrorist presence. Oh, let's
run down on the Shalli, Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Kurjikstan, Mauritania, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, Tajikistan, Turkey,

(54:11):
Huzbekistan and Yemen. You know when I read a list
like that and I think, you know, I mean, Mauritania
is in Africa, for God's sake, How in the hell
did they get all the way from Africa down to
the southern border. So far, the port said during fiscal
year twenty twenty four, border patrol has encountered at tens
of thousands of illegal aliens nationwide from countries that could

(54:33):
present national security risk. Note FBI Director Rays assertions last
month that we are like on the like a moment
in time away from some terrible, horrific terrorist act here
in this country. Gee, I wonder how or where those
folks might have come from. Two and thirty four Afghan nationals. Again,

(54:53):
this is just this year. Thirty three thousand, three hundred
and forty seven Chinese nation, five hundred and forty one Iranians,
five hundred and twenty Syrian nationals, three thousand, one hundred
and four Uzbek nationals. The junior report circulated that federal
agents had arrested eight Tagi Stan migrants linked to the

(55:16):
Islamic State. I remember reading about that one not too
long ago, after they crossed the southern border. Cord of
the sub Commitee Interim Staff report. Three of those Isis
linked migrants had been released in the US Interior after
using the Biden Harris Administration CBP one app to schedule
appointments for release at the southern border. Oh yeah, I
am a member of terrorist organization. How am I going

(55:38):
to get in the United States and safely secure my
position there? Blending into the community for god knows how
long before my hearing? Oh, here's the CBP one app.
Get a load of this report details one case Mohammed Karwin,
forty eight year old Afghan national member of the terrorists

(55:59):
group has E Islami splitter, whom federal agents arrested in
April after he had been twice released into the United States,
first crossing the southern border in March of twenty three.
Released that month into the US Interior, by the Dear
of DHS March twenty four, after having been taken into
federal custody, he was allowed to bond out of detention,

(56:23):
not until reports exposed the case the following month was
he finally arrested court to the report, in three and
a half years, the Biden Harris administration has released more
than five point four million illegal aliens into the United States,
with an additional at least one point nine million known
got aways escaping into the country. Among those more than

(56:43):
seven point three million illegal aliens are three hundred and
seventy five illegal aliens on the US government terrorist watch
lists who've been apprehended by border patrol under Biden and
Harris watch That's a more than three thousand percent increase
of watch listed alien encounters compared to all four years
of the Trump administration. She got a run on that record.

(57:04):
Are they going to gaslight you in to believe that
she's the best borders are we've ever had? Six twenty
six fifty five KOC the talk station. You know I
do not want and I told you so moment, folks.
The last thing I want is a terrorist attack on
American soil. I don't ever want to see that. I
don't want people to die. I don't want anything to happen.
I don't want to a society diserupted. I don't want

(57:24):
to go into martial law. But you know, if it happens,
I think it will be and I told you so
moment six twenty seven Cover since he a great phone
call to make is to cover Sincy. There is no
obligation to you beyond just initiating a communication with John

(57:47):
Rowman and the team at Cover Sincy. You can do
it one of two ways, a number I'll give you
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a moment. Just ask to start the conversation about your
current medical insurance situation. You probably have a massive out
of pocket responsibility before the insurance kicks in limited networks.
That's a real problem. You know, travel outside of just

(58:07):
this sort of general area of living, like even to
another county, you're not going to have coverage. That's a
real problem. Traveling, planning, on going on vacation, you're not
gonna have any medical coverage. Potentially, well, you know, John
Roman can solve all these problems and so much more,
like the cost the out of plocket responsibility. You can
get dollar one coverage for you know, regular medical checkups
and things like that, dollar one with less money monthly

(58:31):
for the premium. He works with hundreds of insurance companies,
access to thousands of healthcare plans, and he and his
team look at each person individually. So like if you
walked in and say I need to insure my family
afford each person in the four member family is going
to be looked at. You may have different insurance policies,
but they address specifically your current needs. The goal to
save you a lot of money and of course get

(58:52):
get better medical coverage happens every single day. It's amazing
what they can do for you. Cover since dot com
even with wireeye covers, since he dot com comms the website,
there's a form right there to initiate the conversation five
one three eight hundred calls the number five one three
eight hundred two two five five fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (59:11):
The truth and nothing. But this is a Sean Hannity
Morning Minutes.

Speaker 13 (59:17):
You want to buy chicken breast by the pound. It's
up twenty four point two percent, butter is up twenty
four point one percent. You like soft drinks they're up
twenty percent. You like flour, you want to bake something
twenty six point seven percent. You want sugar, it's up
forty seven point one percent, baking up twenty percent. Uncooked
white rice that's up thirty percent. For crying out loud,

(59:38):
you know people would think, all right, well you can
eat fairly cheaply I did when I was poor. Beans
and rice. Well it's not so cheap anymore. God forbid.
If you want steak, it's up thirty percent. You want coffee,
God forbid, you want a cup of coffee in the morning,
that's up thirty six percent.

Speaker 2 (59:52):
And I can go on and on and on.

Speaker 13 (59:54):
Essentials bottom line are up three to five times more.
It's more expensive under Biden.

Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
Harris keeping you on the straight path.

Speaker 14 (01:00:04):
Later today it's a Sean Hannity show.

Speaker 8 (01:00:10):
You know this is getting out of control.

Speaker 15 (01:00:12):
Our government is sinking one trillion in debt every one
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Do you want to bail the government out of debt?

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I didn't think so. I know, I sure don't.

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Speaker 4 (01:01:11):
You'll bring us burn one from them to legal weed sale, music.

Speaker 8 (01:01:17):
Over to live.

Speaker 2 (01:01:25):
To light up before.

Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
Light mob five Well, Ben Harper burned one down in
honor of recreational marijuana which is now legal legally for sale.
Ohio Division of Cannabis Control announce on the sixth August
sixth and today and the seventh the official days for
businesses with dual licenses to start selling. So if you
know where your medical marijuana dispensary is that is now
going to be a recreational one as well. According to

(01:01:51):
Michael Wells, director of revenue at Standard Wellness, I guess
that's a clinic. It's amazing. It was announced five days ago.
There's been a lot of work over the weekend, a
lot of work on the months preceding this, said, Standard
Wellness already sold medical marijuana. Now in business. He said,
business was successful and now it's going to be even
more so. I presume with legalized weed here in the
state of Ohio, dispensaries expected to be flooded this week,

(01:02:16):
so I expect folks from our neighboring states to come
on into Ohio and frequent their local previously medical marijuana
to get some legalized weed. Sixteen year old boy was
arrested for reckless homicide. During a subsequent investigation, the teenager
taking her to Hamilton kind of juvenile detention facility. Shooting
and killing a fifteen year old boy in Colrain Township

(01:02:37):
happened on Sunday night. Cording the Corraine Township Police Department
Corner identified the teenager as Demari and Paul Messano. Shooting
happened at nine pm roughly in the three thousand block
a love Burne Drive. Paumasan had taken into the University
of Sin Saint Children's Hospital Medical Center with serious injuries.
Police said the sixteen year old boy was arrested for
reckless homicide during a subsequent investigation. As I mentioned a

(01:03:00):
moment ago teenager taking the Hamlin County Juvenile Detention facility.
Not clear what led to the shooting. No other injuries
report of this time. People said, people said, I'm sorry.
Polease said people involved with the shooting are cooperating with
the investigation, which I love reading that. Do you have
any information? Corey and police would love to hear from me?
Five one three, three to two to one. Cops our
award winner from this morning a woman who beat a

(01:03:22):
dog with a baseball bat. Forty eight women under arrest
on an animal cruelty charges. Her name Lavett Doherty hit
a dog with a baseball bat on Friday court to
the dog warden in the criminal complaint fouled in Hamlin
County Municipal Court. There is video footage from the deputy
dog warden corner to the court records. Doherty a Bonnhills
scheduled appear in court yesterday. No idea what happened. She

(01:03:42):
was booked into the jail at eleven thirty on Saturday evening.
Seventeen year old was shot late last night and over
the Ryne Corny, Sincint Police about eleven pm Grant Park
on mcmickon Avenue. Police said the team hopped into a
metro bus. Was found by officers in downtown Cincinnati near
Walnut Street in Central Parkway. Team shot in the lower back.

(01:04:04):
Police said he was taking a CINCINNT Children's Hospital Medical Center.
They don't have any information on the suspects in this shooting.
Oh maybe we can get one more shooting in since
I please say one man dad. After a double shooting
on Bishop Street happened at thirty two Hunred Blog. University
of Cincinnati had to send a campus alert about this

(01:04:25):
shooting at five pm. The school sent an all clear
message a half hour later. No additional information available on that.
Thanks to Fox nineteen reporting five one, three, seven, four
nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred and eight to two
three talk found five fifty on AT and T phones
six to thirty five Here fifty five KCD talk station.
Time for you to mention Suzette lows Camp mortgagees. That's
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(01:04:46):
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Speaker 2 (01:06:10):
Marty bren I'm in here for.

Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
Try for the weather. Hot and human Today, high ninety
four overnight isolated rain as possible, to drop to seventy
one tomorrow eighty five. Isolated rain possible and are mostly
cloudy skies partly cloud eumy night down to sixty seven
and a high of eighty seven Thursday, with mostly sunny skies.
See here's seventy two degrees at fifty five k City

(01:06:32):
talk station. We'll see what Chuck has on.

Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
Traffic from the UCL Tramphics Center.

Speaker 7 (01:06:36):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
from multicultural communities give the gift of Fife. Signed up
today to be an organ donor. Problems northbound seventy five
a car fire completely ngulfed in flames on the left
hand side at mitchell Is Banking traffic towards seventy four.

Speaker 2 (01:06:52):
All clear.

Speaker 7 (01:06:53):
Eastbound two seventy five now at Osteller from an earlier wreck.
Chucking ramonth fifty five ker see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
Six forty fifty KCD talk station Happy Well legalized weed day.
Just director City was watching local news. There's a distributor
called Sunnyside Joe. Is that the name of it? This now,
so I legalized weed. They open at seven am, and
apparently there's a couple of dozen people already standing waiting
to get in the front door. Let's go to the phones.
We'll start win the order which they received which means

(01:07:25):
west side.

Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
Jim.

Speaker 1 (01:07:27):
Looking forward to seeing you Marrow listener, Lunch of Jim
and Jacks. Jim, Welcome to the program, my friend.

Speaker 16 (01:07:32):
Hello Brian Tomas. Yeah, as Christopher Smithman announced yesterday, we
kind of broke it in last Friday. They have a
couple before we have it this Wednesday. So that was
a nice little meeting with Christopher always is he's coming
down in his second office.

Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
I should say, yeah, I got to kick on.

Speaker 16 (01:07:52):
Got three quick points here, Brian. The speed hump call
mean capital of the world, the West side of Cincinnati.
Nobody's ever talked, nobody's ever talked about this. But I
can't wait for about eight inches of snow coming down
and the these snowplows hitting these things, and if it'll
tear up the blades or tear up the cal mean,

(01:08:14):
or how that's gonna work. I don't think anybody's ever
addressed that. But way do you drive over here, buddy?
I mean Glenway Avenue and and del High Pike, and.

Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
Well they got speed bumps on Glenway Avenue.

Speaker 16 (01:08:26):
Oh gosh, yes, up there by Phillil Swim Club. They
sure do, they sure do. I know, you know what
I'm talking about and you hit the first ones. Now
I've learned you got to maneuver around these things. If
you hit both speed humps in the outside, it isn't
so bad if you if you hit one, then your
rattles your fillings. But if you hit them at the

(01:08:47):
same time, as long as nobody's next to you, uh,
it's kind of a minor bump. But yeah, I can't
wait for winter when there's like like I said, with snow,
how they gonna tell there's there's no marque for these
things and those plotles are going to plow into these babies.

Speaker 17 (01:09:03):
Yeah, you'll see.

Speaker 16 (01:09:04):
I mean they're all over the place over here, chiot.

Speaker 1 (01:09:08):
Not that anybody cares about people who own sports cars,
but they typically are lower slung. Is there a possibility
of those cars bottoming out? And you know if hitting
them okay, good, at least that's nice.

Speaker 16 (01:09:21):
I hit them with the Mustang and it isn't very nice.
But there's a lot of cars over here that have
mufflers hanging down, So yeah, I don't know how that's
gonna work. But my second point is that remember back
in the day, I'm a little older than you, when
we couldn't buy beer legally at age fifteen or sixteen,

(01:09:41):
And not that I ever did that, but you would
wait for somebody to come in and.

Speaker 14 (01:09:45):
Say, hey man, can you get me a six pack?

Speaker 16 (01:09:47):
We'll wait for these fourteen and fifteen year old kids
at want quality weed? Know, be standing there going hey man,
can you pick me up a little bit of the
good cannabis in there?

Speaker 1 (01:09:56):
Well, don't you think that. I mean, you can grow
it yourself. I mean under Ohio, Lana, you're allowed to
grow your own weed. So I got to imagine some
enterprising young people just start growing their own plants at
home for purposes of selling it to their friends. Not
that that would illegal, but I mean it's not hard
to grow a weed plant.

Speaker 16 (01:10:17):
No, no, I can imagine. I've never tried myself. But
you just don't know if anybody else wants the top
quality without the growing.

Speaker 2 (01:10:27):
But now my third point.

Speaker 16 (01:10:28):
Because I know I'm pushing it, but when Todd comes
on this morning, there was no mention of the article
that was in last week about Charlie Lucan dropping off
the railroad board and I'm kind of curious why he
dropped off.

Speaker 2 (01:10:43):
Well that was, yeah, you're the little bird.

Speaker 1 (01:10:44):
I got that information from the first the first time
you found out about it, you let me know, and
I was more curious as to why he dropped out
as compared to the fact that he had dropped out
come he was something political, some infighting, because he was
always labeled as one of the more, you know, real
liable members in spite of his political affiliation. I mean, Charlie,
I think is a respected guy and I certainly would

(01:11:05):
trust his opinion over some of the others.

Speaker 2 (01:11:09):
Purval.

Speaker 16 (01:11:10):
I think he actually got tired of seeing city Council
and the mayor going to be spending this money. Todd
will go into it if you ask him. But my
question is is I wonder if our good friend Amy
will be the next one to drop off because of
her morals about the fact that she was wrong on
this deal and all the people had voted for this
thing that didn't know what the particulars were, and I'm

(01:11:33):
kind of sorry they voted for it.

Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
Now, well, it's a legitimate question. I haven't talked with
Amy Murray in a long long time. I don't know
if I haven't either, Brian, all Right, it makes me
feel better because I thought maybe I had alienated her
for some reason.

Speaker 16 (01:11:46):
No, she called me four or five times before this,
trying to convince me that I was in the wrong,
and I haven't heard a word since the voting. So
I'd be kind of curious to see if she'll follow
Charlie because she stood in our meeting up here and
said she would never ever vote to for the sale,
and then she changed her mind. So I'm just kind
of curious if she'll be the next one. But yeah,

(01:12:07):
it'd be nice for Joe if he could possibly get
Charlie on. I doubt it, but to see why he
did that.

Speaker 1 (01:12:14):
Yeah, I mean, you'd think inquiring minds of want to know.
Maybe the inquirer with an inquiring mind might ask that question,
do a little reporting on it. Maybe WCPO or Channel
twelve or Channel five. And we do have Fox nineteen.
A lot of local news outlets still exist. I'm surprised
now be followed through with the inquiry on what Charlie's
deal is with the board.

Speaker 16 (01:12:33):
Anyway, Well, I will see you tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:12:35):
I'm looking forward to it.

Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
Jim as always, Jim and Jackson the River about eleven
thirty for the listener launching. Yeah, Smithman will be there,
but more important, west Side Jim will be there six
forty six this morning.

Speaker 12 (01:12:46):
R J.

Speaker 1 (01:12:46):
If you don't mind, I promise I'll take your call
right out of the gate. Used up all the time
with west Side Jim there. And I got to mention
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Speaker 6 (01:13:49):
Dot com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
Hey, guys, Donald, try for the weather, hot and human
today with sunny skies on high ninety four overnight maybe
isolated rain clouds and seventy one for the low eighty
five tomorrows high with mostly cloudy's skies and I meydia
chance of rain, milder sixty seven low Wednesday night and
a mostly sunny Thursday with high eighty seven seventy two degrees.

(01:14:13):
Right now, let's hear about traffic from Chuck.

Speaker 2 (01:14:15):
Ingram from the UCL Tramthic Center.

Speaker 7 (01:14:18):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplanner
from multicultural communities give the Gift of life. Sign up
today to be an organ donor. Problems Northbound seventy five
in Sant Crenard left two lanes are currently blocked off
thanks to a vehicle fire. That fire is now out,
but plenty of emergency crews on the scene. Traffic banking
up towards seventy four. All clear, he's found two seventy

(01:14:40):
five at mostellar from an earlier wreck. Chucking ram on
fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
Six fifty to fifty fou KRCD talk station Todds insert,
why would we raise taxes when you're the current inflationary
situation the city of Cincinnati. Have we be talking about
the top of the our news and the meantimes go
to the phones. RJ, thank you so much for holding
over the break, welcome the program, Hello here and the okay, yes, sir,
A loud and clear coming in great.

Speaker 14 (01:15:06):
It didn't sound like it clicked out or anything.

Speaker 12 (01:15:09):
Anyway.

Speaker 14 (01:15:11):
I was wondering about House Bill sixty eight. I understand
that they passed at Mike de Wine vetoed it in December.
They overrode its veto. And now there's a case out here,
and I've heard it on the news and I'm looking
at the details of it here on the Internet that

(01:15:33):
there's a case here where they've they've had an injunction
for it because somebody, I guess the a c LU
got involved and they want this particular individual to get
hormone therapy, and maybe it's even more aggressive than that.

(01:15:55):
I think it's because the parents said they're gonna, they're
very said they may they may commit suicide. It's not
like child abuse to me, but that's what they're doing.
I'm just wondering what's the status of uh of these
uh uh these rulings doesn't mean that everything else is

(01:16:15):
on a hold and other cases can go forward as well?
Or is it or what does it mean?

Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:16:23):
I think it's still uh a bogged down in court proceedings,
if I recall correctly, it's been a while. Uh huh.
Let's see. After reviewing attorney generally submergency request, House Supreme
Court rejected the state's attempt to narrow the scope of
the t r O. There's a temporary restraining order on it,
so I I understand. I guess it's in litigation. I

(01:16:43):
mean my understanding and my recollection, and please do not
hold me to this because I haven't paid much attention
to that one for a while. It is the idea
of protecting adolescents from irreversible decisions about their gender and
to ensure fair competition in sports, in other words, keeping
men from competing against women. So that's the basis of
the bill. I think it was put on hold by

(01:17:03):
a court, so it's currently in litigation. I guess it's
on hold pending outcome of litigation. That's the best I
can do for you right now on the fly, quick
internet search after you called. So if that's the case,
an injunction, putting an on hold means of course that
it has no impact until after the case is over.

(01:17:24):
So I'll let you know when I get any more
information on that one. Apologies, I am caught slightly off
guard by that, but I can't be on top of
all things at all times. Real quick. Going back to
the border, this is insanity going on. And you know
the Chinese Communist Party is responsible for our fentanyl problem.
I hope everyone is painfully aware of that. That is
an easy, easy, easy one. They can wage war without
directly waging war just by selling the precursor chemicals and

(01:17:47):
letting these labs in Mexico and elsewhere manufactured. It's not
that difficult to do it. Just recent article I read
on that Gosh, I wish I could give credit where
credit is due. I think it was four Forbes, but
they went out and they bottle the precursor chemicals on
the Internet. You can use dark web or regular web.
They'll ship it either to Mexico or here to the

(01:18:07):
United States, sometimes labeled in packages which mislabel it anyway.
It's a very porous situation which allows the Chinese Communist
Party to yes flood US with fentanyl and get a
load of this one. US Customs and Border Protection officers
there at Lukeville, Arizona made one of the largest caesars
of fentanyl ever. Officers there at that port of entry

(01:18:32):
discovered approximately four million fentanyl pills more than one thousand
pounds two hundred and thirty four packages hidden in the
frame of a trailer truck that was trying to cross
the across the border cord of the Customs of Patrol.
Officers at the same port reported about two hundred and

(01:18:53):
seventy pounds of methamphetamine were seized the last several days.
Second seizure occurred July twelfth, when a forty five year
old Mexicans citizen in a Ford toting utility trailer sought
to enter the United States, and inspection using an X
ray device and a canine inspection team led officers to
thirty nine packages of methnfetamine with two hundred and seventy
two pounds total and additional five pounds of cocaine street

(01:19:16):
value for those two seizures alone, more than twelve point
six million dollars. Where is the demand coming from? And
we already they killed one hundred and seven thousand and
nine and forty one Americans and one year alone, that
was twenty twenty two, and I bet there were more
last year. And of course, be prepared and be worried,

(01:19:36):
and don't go out into the world to buy drugs.
You think you're going out and buying fill in the blank,
whatever pill that's not supposed to be fentanyl. According to
the deea one pill can kill. Warning out to the public,
they say one in seven counterfeit pills marketed by Mexican
drug cartels contained ventanyl and a deadly dose of it.

(01:20:00):
Warn your young people about that they're out there buying
adderall folks, whether they're cramming for exams or want to
stay up late and party or whatever reason. That adderall
you'll find on the street very well could contain fentanyl.
That's just one of a multitude of drugs out there
on the street. Street drugs that are tainted with fentanyl
in a deadly dose. Six fifty six. Let's talk taxes.

(01:20:20):
Todd Zenzer joins a program off the top of the
our news. Why would you raise taxes under these current
inflationary times we live in? Coupled with the crazy property
taxes we're all paying, sounds like a recipe for disaster
for the city. Todd will comment on that after the news.

Speaker 16 (01:20:35):
I don't care about anybody else.

Speaker 2 (01:20:36):
It's what motivates your vote.

Speaker 11 (01:20:38):
There's evil for Verden and they're trying to destore.

Speaker 2 (01:20:41):
Or fifty five KRC the talk station. This report is sponsored.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
Here picked about Kars de top station Brian Thomas rashin
a very happy Tuesday. I hope you can have on anyway,
and looking forward to one hour from now inside Scoop
with bright Bart News, we return of Emma. Joe Morris,
the political editor, talk about Kamala Harris and her career
versus what they're trying to shove down our throat and
how they're trying to reframe her. Follow by Daniel David
Steve De Wei'll talk to war in Israel and giving

(01:21:21):
warplanes to Ukraine. In the meantime, I am so pleased
to have in studio a friend of the City of Cincinnati.
He is an astute observer of matters relating to the
city financing and what they're doing and what they're not doing.
Todd Zenzer. He resides in West Price Hill. He retired
as an Inspector General of the US Department of Commerce
after thirty one years of conducting audits and investigations of

(01:21:41):
federal officials, programs and operations. He's a certified fraud examiner,
which makes him ideally suited to take a look at
this ridiculous reality we're facing right now on the heels
of selling the railroad, which was going to solve all
our problems in Todd Zinzer, I'm glad to see in studio.
Welcome them back, my friend, Thank you, Brian. No new taxes,

(01:22:03):
No new taxes. Wait, that's why we sold the railroad, right,
no new taxes.

Speaker 9 (01:22:06):
That's right. Our mailboxes were flooded with flyers and very
boldly stated, and all those flyers was no new taxes.

Speaker 1 (01:22:14):
Were any of those statements attributed to specific public officials, like,
for example, the mayor or? Was this just like a
political action committee bought and paid for by the Railroad
to sell this to us, making statements without having elected
officials back them up.

Speaker 9 (01:22:30):
Right, It was basically the political action committee. But you know,
the mayor did star in a number of TV commercials,
and I think we need to go back and look
at those commercials and see if he promised no new
taxes over the television.

Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
Well, let us be honest with our souls. Even if
he didn't personally say that, I think he owed the
City of Cincinnati's residents and obligation to say, hey, hey, hey,
they're telling you no new taxes. But that is not
necessarily the case. We may indeed look at new taxes,
so we're hoping we don't need to raise them. However,

(01:23:03):
I have never said that I will not raise taxes.
We heard none of that.

Speaker 9 (01:23:06):
I agree with you, Brian. We did not hear any
of that.

Speaker 2 (01:23:08):
Hmm.

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
Typical politicians. Anyway, you reade a great op ed piece.
Of course, raising Cincinnati's earnings tax a bad idea on
the record inflation, I would just put a period after
raising Cincinnai's earnings tax a bad idea.

Speaker 9 (01:23:21):
Yes, there's there's uh, there's a one point three billion
dollar budget that the city operates that is a lot
of money, and the idea that we want to raise
the earnings tax zero point one point five or whatever
the proposal is. But they don't tell you how much
that's going to raise, and they don't tell you what
we need it for. They're just going to either sprinkle

(01:23:43):
it along around the budget or they have some purpose
that they want a fund that they're not telling us about.
They really kind of treat us like children.

Speaker 1 (01:23:51):
They do. And then when they do say why they
want it, they use, you know, broad, nebulous, undefinable terms,
like to bring investment into the community or something, and
we have no idea what that means.

Speaker 9 (01:24:03):
Right, They're claiming that part of it's going to go
to increase their work on economic development, so they're going
to spend more money on economic development. And they claim
that a piece of it is going to go to
public safety, A very small.

Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
Piece, very small piece public safety.

Speaker 9 (01:24:18):
But one of the things that I was looking at
was over the next five to eight years, the city
is going to have an income or there's four hundred
million dollars that are going to go into the Western
Hills Whydock, there's two billion dollars that are going to
go into the Brent Spence Bridge.

Speaker 2 (01:24:38):
Right, there's two.

Speaker 9 (01:24:40):
Hundred million dollars going into the Convention Center renovation, and
all of that is going to bring in earnings taxes.

Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
That's true all the construction workers that's working in the
city limits.

Speaker 9 (01:24:51):
Right, and in just emotionally, there's about twenty to forty percent.
It's a wide range, but twenty to forty percent of
that money spent on construction is going to be for salaries.
And it would be somewhat easy to give the citizens
an estimate about how much money we're going to bring
in based on all this construction. And that's just the

(01:25:13):
major construction project.

Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
Good point.

Speaker 9 (01:25:15):
You see they've got a couple of major projects up there.
You can have other development across the city. What's that
going to bring in? And if that brings in a
certain amount of money, do we really need a tax increase?

Speaker 1 (01:25:28):
Well, I'm certain that we don't. If they just allocated
funds properly and you stuck with core, good, core services
like roads, bridges, infrastructure, public safety, we'd be fine with
the money we've got. And you know, I'm on a
quest to get Fred's road fixed. I don't know if
you've heard him Fred called it several weeks ago, self
identified black man lives in the city of Cincinnati. We
were talking on a national level politics. He said, you

(01:25:49):
know what, I just want my street fixed. I just
want my street fixed. It was like, you know, damn it.
There you go. That's the failure of local government. They've
got more potholes and more decrepit, broken down roads and
bridges and infrastructure they have neglected for years and years
and years, all in favor of throwing money in some
sort of feel good nonsense while everything around us falls apart.

(01:26:11):
You've got to service and repair and maintain what you
already have in your possession.

Speaker 9 (01:26:16):
Right So they're going to go around and campaign for
reelections saying that they have fixed the infrastructure project when
not a single pothole has been filled with that railroad money.
And they're going to go around and say we fixed
the housing issue because we passed connected communities and not
a single development has been built based on the rezoning
or the rezoning reform, and it's all ten years down

(01:26:40):
the road. The benefit of the railway sale is going
to be ten years down the road. Connected community is
going to be ten years down the road. But they're
going to campaign like they have fixed these problems.

Speaker 1 (01:26:51):
Well, real quickly here revisiting the point of selling the railroad. Now,
we were getting a very comfortable annual lease payment from
the railroad that we own, leasing it to Norfolk, Southern Netting,
the City of Cincinnati. What was it, twenty five to
thirty five million dollars annually.

Speaker 9 (01:27:07):
Yeah, it was it was gonna be. Under a new lease,
they could have gone up to thirty five or even
forty million dollars.

Speaker 1 (01:27:13):
Okay, and that's guaranteed regardless of where the market goes.

Speaker 9 (01:27:16):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:17):
So we sell the railroad, we get one point six
billion dollars and they put it into a managed fund
and the railroad board manages it right.

Speaker 9 (01:27:24):
Well, they hire a financial outfit to manage the money.
I'm not exactly sure what the board does at this point.

Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
Yeah, they have some sort of you know, full oversight
role and responsibility with managing the financial managers, in other words,
oversight of the firm that they chose to manage the money.

Speaker 9 (01:27:42):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
Charlie Lucan quit. He was one of the more reliable
folks that was on the railroad board. At least I
believe that maybe an overstatement. But I've seen the list
of folks that are on the board other than Amy Murray.
I'm not sure I get a whole lot of comfort
from them. But he quit and what one day later?
The market tanks?

Speaker 9 (01:27:59):
Yes day later, and it's a serious crash. It was
a serious crash and it affected just about every stock
that is out there.

Speaker 1 (01:28:07):
Yeah, if you got a four h one k, go
ahead and check your balance, right, And you don't want
to do that necessarily because you're supposed to just let
it go in long term it but in terms of
what the city might potentially earn, this is not shaping
up to be a real great banner year for the
one point six billion dollar investment, Isn't it right?

Speaker 9 (01:28:23):
They had a good first quarter and they crowed about that.
But I would like to see somebody come out and
say how much the portfolio lost based on the crash
this week?

Speaker 4 (01:28:32):
And if we continue in many many, many people and
financial planners and investors lots smarter than I am, were
talking about potential recession.

Speaker 9 (01:28:40):
Now that's right, That would not be good.

Speaker 1 (01:28:44):
So is it possible? And you're a numbers crunching kind
of guy, is it possible? The city will take in
less than what the least payment was that we were
getting under the prior arrangement.

Speaker 9 (01:28:53):
Well, I hope not. There are controls that were put
into the statute that limits how much the fund has
to disperse to the city based on the performance of
the portfolio. They are guaranteed a minimum of twenty five
million dollars even if they have to.

Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
Dip into principle. The principle great. Can you imagine this year,
the first year that the funds are supposed to generate revenue,
that they actually have to dip into principle right out
of the gate?

Speaker 9 (01:29:21):
I hope not.

Speaker 1 (01:29:22):
You me both will continue with Todd Zen's or more
analysis of this and the situation since say and let
me ask out loud, sort of a segue into the
next segment, what does economic development mean? Anyway?

Speaker 2 (01:29:34):
Pause?

Speaker 1 (01:29:34):
Todd Zens will be back after I mentioned Color Electric
the great Electricians at Culin Family on an operator and
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for more than twenty years. She's a well oiled machine

(01:29:57):
when it comes to running a team. And I watched
her at work on the can line and all the
work that they were doing with that.

Speaker 5 (01:30:02):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:30:02):
They also install my whole home generator. Of done other
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(01:30:24):
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Speaker 3 (01:30:36):
Fifty five KRC and iHeart Radio Station, the exclusive audio
home of NBC's coverage of the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics.

Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
iHeart of Your nine first forty one four cast sunny
day to day, hot human ninety four for the high
night of seventy one overnight, maybe some rain isolated tomorrow
high eighty five. Isolator rains possible, mostly clotty skies, milder
at overnight to sixty seven and sunny on Thursday with
a high eighty seven seventy two degrees. Right now, and
see what Chuck Ingram has on traffic.

Speaker 2 (01:31:06):
Conditions from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 7 (01:31:09):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
from multicultural communities give the gift of life. Sign up
today to be an organ donor. Northbound seventy five starting
to move a little bit better through Saint Bernard. Only
the left lane remains blocked from the earlier car fire
at Mitchell. Traffic continues heavy from before seventy four, and
inbound seventy four packs past Montana. Southbound seventy five. There's

(01:31:32):
brink lights in and out of Lachlan. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:31:39):
Sevent nineteen fifty five KR Seed Talks station, Very Happy
Tuesday to in studio Todd Zenzer. Of course he knows
all there is about auditing investigations of Officials and Programs
and Operations certified fraud examiner, he is. And we're talking
about the connected communities as well as the sale of
the railroad, and of course economic development, which is apparently

(01:32:01):
the default words used to describe what they're going to
use the additional property tax money for economic development. Now
that the citizens of the City of Cincinnati are going
to be able to vote on this, this earnings tax increase.

Speaker 9 (01:32:17):
Yes, it requires a change to the Cincinnati Charter and
that requires a vote of the public.

Speaker 1 (01:32:22):
Okay, Now, the city did just recently got that listed
twenty five or so items that they need to be
done to address the global problems in the City of Cincinnati,
point A to point B. Correct, And among all of
the recommendations in there, one of them was raising the

(01:32:42):
city earnings tax.

Speaker 9 (01:32:43):
That's correct.

Speaker 1 (01:32:44):
And that's the only one that the mayor and others
on council have advanced in order to bring about and
write the ship of the City of Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (01:32:51):
Right.

Speaker 9 (01:32:52):
Sharon Coolidge interviewed the mayor the other day, and that
was the one recommendation that he has weighed in on.
The kind of how do you refer to.

Speaker 2 (01:33:01):
A dodged and yeah, the five d's of dodgeball.

Speaker 1 (01:33:04):
Yeah, dodge, dip, duck, dive, and dodge, And you're right,
I read that and it was indeed. Yeah, all right. Now,
let's assume for the sake of discussion here that he
gets his way to mayor does and those who are
seeking to increase taxes. How could that possibly result in
economic development? You know what happens if the business is

(01:33:25):
already in the city of Cincinnati and they have opportunities
outside of maybe even the county where the tax environment
and the commute environment and the parking situation and the
overall ability to do business for less money exists. See
Claremont County, Butler County, Warren County. That's where they go.
We just saw that happen. What was it with P
and G or no gege and.

Speaker 9 (01:33:47):
Don't forget about Newport and Covington and northern Kentucky.

Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
Oh sorry to my friends in the Commonwealth. Yes, yeah,
hangar open for business starts up. They're booming over there.

Speaker 2 (01:33:57):
They are.

Speaker 1 (01:34:00):
So you're advertising to the world that it's going to
be more expensive to do business in the city of Cincinnati.
You're going to raise earning tax How could that possibly
be a magnet, and what would you do with the
money that could sort of transform that obvious problem into
a plus. How do you spend money to get people
to come into the city of Cincinnati.

Speaker 9 (01:34:18):
Well, it's a good question because one of the other
recommendations of the Cincinnati Futures Commission was to establish an
Office of Strategic Growth and Development, I think was the
name of it, and to fund it at ten million dollars. Meanwhile,
they have a Department of Economic Development that gets five
million dollars, and it's I think what they think is

(01:34:41):
that they if they hire people to go out and
attract businesses and work with businesses directly to kind of
navigate through all the permits and requirements and things like that,
that people or that businesses will come to the city.
Housing developers will develop houses. And they all think that

(01:35:03):
government is the key to economic development. Government is not
the key to economic development. It's it's the private sector
that's the key to economic development. Government spending is why
we have inflation, it's not it's not the key to
economic development.

Speaker 1 (01:35:20):
Well, in a deteriorating infrastructure and a deteriorating crime situation,
those are two things that are within the ability of
the City of Cincinnati to fix Yes, six Threads Street, that's.

Speaker 9 (01:35:31):
Right, that's right. You have to go out and give
the people the infrastructure they need for their quality of life.
And if you establish a safe city, if you invest
in public safety, fire police, uh, and you build the infrastructure,
it makes the city more attractive. That that's what they

(01:35:51):
should be working on. And one of the one of
the good things that the Cincinnati Futures Commission reported it's
a it's a very difficult report to reach, is the
horrendous morass of processes for developers to go through in
the city.

Speaker 1 (01:36:09):
The bureaucracy is the killer.

Speaker 9 (01:36:11):
That's correct, and for example on connected communities. The big
justification for that was that the variance process that the
city has is a detriment to development. So we're going
to get rid of the variance process. We're just going
to rezone across the board and that way housing developers
will not have to come in and deal with the

(01:36:32):
variance process. Well, that's exactly what the Cincinnati's Future Commission
was criticizing the city for was their processes. Why not
fix your processes instead of rezoning fifty percent of the city.

Speaker 1 (01:36:45):
You know, it just reminds me of Elmer hens Or,
God love Elmer hens Or, owner Queen City Sausage. And
he's retired now, but he's still alive and kicking. But
he expanded Queen City Sausage. It's an industrial area of town.
There was nothing around other than that type of business.
And all he wanted to do was keep the same area,

(01:37:05):
just build on and expand his facilities so he could
what maybe hire more people and sell more product and yes,
make more taxable income for the City of Cincinnati. It
took him forever. He wanted to invest, and he got
roadblock after roadblock after roadblock. People did no, no, no, And
I just, for the life you, I don't know why.
This isn't like he was building a new sausage factory

(01:37:27):
in a residential community or something. All he was was
expanding where he was already and it took him forever.
He had to do it call in special favors from
like Amy Murray or other council people that he had
access to to like greased skids. It should never have
had to have been greased.

Speaker 9 (01:37:41):
That's exhibit one, Brian, that is exhibit one. And if
the city could just take an issue like that, the
internal processes and focus on that and fix it. That's
probably better than the other twenty four recommendations that the
Cincinnata Futures Commission came up with.

Speaker 1 (01:37:57):
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Speaker 6 (01:39:15):
Today fifty five KRC.

Speaker 2 (01:39:19):
Here's your nine first one to weather forecast.

Speaker 1 (01:39:21):
Sunny, hot, humid day today I in ninety four is
going to be isolated rain over night under mostly cloudy
sky's seventy one Mars high eighty five, mostly cloudy with
isolated rain possible, partly cloudy night with low sixty seven,
then a mostly sunny Thursday with a high of eighty
seven seventy two. Right now, let's hear about traffic Chuck Ingram.

Speaker 2 (01:39:41):
From the UCL Train tingk Center.

Speaker 7 (01:39:42):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplanner
from multicultural communities give the Gift of life. Sign up
today to be an organ donor. North Bend seventy five
is now slowing between Buttermilk and Kyle's. Then very heavy
above hoppoled towards Mitchell, where crews continue to work in
that lane. From the Girl your Car fire in Bend
seventy four backs above Montana. There's an accident blocking the

(01:40:05):
right lane eastbound on the Reagan Highway at seventy one
Chuck ing ramon fifty five care see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:40:13):
At seven thirty on a Tuesday, and a happy one
for you when are from now Daniel Davis de die
of the war in Israel and giving war planes to Ukraine.
Preceded by the inside scoop of bright Bart News. Emma
Joe Morris, the political editor, is gonna be talking abou
Kamala Harris and her career compared to what the mainstream
media is telling us. Her career was like rewriting history
and in studio fraud expert Todd Zenzer who was all

(01:40:34):
over the railroad sale. Todd regularly appeared in the Morning Show.
He had done so many numbers crunching and breakdowns of
why selling the road was a bad idea. We were
all sold to bill of goods, and voters of the
city of Cincinnati obviously fell for because they practiced. They
promised no new taxes. And meanwhile, of all the things
that the of all the recommendations from the sinceinne Futures Commission,

(01:40:54):
the one thing they've latched onto is raising property tax
or raising the earnings tax, which Todd and I are
have been agreeing together all morning is a really atrocious
bad idea, most notably given the current state of the
economy and the fact that the city's residents have all
struggled with property tax increases too. Todd, that's one of
the elements of the inflationary realities we're all dealing with.

Speaker 9 (01:41:14):
Well, one of the things, Brian, that they stuck into
the budget that they haven't really talked about is that
the city also increased the millage on property taxes. They
were holding to four point one millage and they have
and the charter allows them to go up to six
point one, and they went ahead and they've gone up
to six point one on the millage. So they've also

(01:41:36):
raised property taxes.

Speaker 1 (01:41:37):
Now, was that increase reflected in the most recent property
tax bills? We got the first ones post triennial or
whatever audit.

Speaker 9 (01:41:47):
As far as I know, because it's in the twenty
four to twenty five budget for the city, so there
was a property tax increase at the city and put
in as.

Speaker 1 (01:41:57):
Well, there's just never enough money for them, and no.

Speaker 2 (01:42:00):
There isn't.

Speaker 9 (01:42:01):
And instead it would just be prudent for them to
start looking for ways to save money. For example, the
city has a green plan. Well, first of all, the
city has plans coming out their ears. Yes, they plan everything,
and they have a green plan that they have a
budget for five million dollars a year. Now, say what

(01:42:24):
you will about climate change and saving the planet and
things like that, but should we be raising taxes now,
during inflation and impending recession in order to save the planet,
or should we go ahead and take care of things
now and put money into saving the planet down the road.

(01:42:44):
I think that that's five million dollars just sitting there
for the taking in my opinion.

Speaker 1 (01:42:49):
Well, and no one yet has addressed the question those
who think that, you know, any given city should be,
you know, taking efforts to save the planet. You can't
fight the uphill battle. That is China and India and
other major global polluters who continue to rapaciously soak up
all the fossil fuels and coal and use them and
expand their use of those fuels, belching this allegedly evil

(01:43:13):
carbon into the atmosphere which we all share globally.

Speaker 9 (01:43:16):
That's right, and I think there are people in the
city or residents that are conscientious about recycling and.

Speaker 2 (01:43:23):
That's me saving energy, that's me.

Speaker 9 (01:43:25):
And all the rest of that, and that's what we
should be promoting, not building ev charging stations and all
the other green plan elements that they have come up with.
And the planning staff costs one point three million dollars
a year. Oh great, and I don't know what we

(01:43:46):
do with all these plans. So there's a lot that
could be done with the budget where you could shave
off and save some money. And the idea is to
start saving money now, because the worst thing you could
do in a public budget is start and off employees.
We do not want to lay off employees. So they
should have some plan for a buyouts or not backfilling positions.

(01:44:10):
They should be prepared when the recession hits that they
don't lay off our employees because that is not a
good good thing.

Speaker 1 (01:44:18):
Well, and doing a planning strategy along those lines. I'm
gonna give credit to, let's say, Dusty Rhoades he gets
into the auditor's office, and rather than replace the employees
as attrition goes along, he doesn't. He creates a leaner,
better way which requires fewer employees to do the same
amount of work. That's the future. Let's get to that point.
And like you said, don't backfill the employees just because

(01:44:40):
the space opens up. Evaluate whether the position is really
necessary or not. What kind of value you getting out
of that particular job.

Speaker 9 (01:44:47):
So maybe they're doing that, but you know what, if
they're doing it, they're not really telling people they're doing.

Speaker 1 (01:44:52):
Well, that's the kind of thing they need to telegraph
to the constituents because that is what we want to hear.

Speaker 9 (01:44:57):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:44:57):
Voters need to see efficiency in governm, especially when they
got their hand out to ask for more money.

Speaker 9 (01:45:02):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (01:45:03):
More Todd Zinzer at seven thirty five to fifty five
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Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
I mean, I bet my house.

Speaker 1 (01:45:14):
Could be LEAD certified over the years, you know, because
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the old windows were bad. We got triple pain windows.
Those are energy efficient, right, got a geothermal system far
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(01:46:19):
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Speaker 2 (01:46:55):
Steve perrins coordinated Financial.

Speaker 1 (01:47:00):
Sunny, hot and human Today, I going up for ninety four,
down to seventy one overnight maybe some isolated rain eighty five,
with maybe some isolated rain tomorrow, mostly clotty, a partly
cloudy over night, down to sixty seven and mostly sunny
Thursday eighty seven. It's seventy two. Now let's hear about traffic.

Speaker 2 (01:47:15):
From the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 7 (01:47:17):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
from multicultural communities get the Gift of life. Sign up
today to be an organ donor. Traffic continues to build
northbound seventy five out of Arrow Langer into Downtown close
to a ten minute delay over a five minute delay
northbound four seventy one from Grand northbound seventy five through
Saint Bernard. That's getting better. The earlier car fire has

(01:47:38):
been clear, left lanes open again. Chuck Ingram on fifty
five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:47:48):
Seven fifty five KERR cd coalk station Happy Tuesday. Brian
Thomas with certified fraud examiner, among a back additional background
points to make him eminently qualified to talk about the
cities Cincinnati, Shenanigan's going on here and I am making
a Shenanigan's declaration. Todd Zenzer and Studio. You make a
great point in your op ed piece which served as

(01:48:10):
the springboard for this conversation, raising Cincinnti's earnings tax a
bad idea mid record inflation passum. Let me interject real
quick here, how likely is it the vote which the
citizens will get on a tax increase. How likely is
it that is eminent? Is it going to be on
the November ballot?

Speaker 9 (01:48:27):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:48:28):
Okay, it's too late. It's too late, and it's almost
like getting rid of Joe Biden. I think they saw
the writing on the wall. If they're going to ask
for an increase in taxes during this outrageously inflationary period
of time, as we may be going into a recession
given what happened in the market the other day, the
likelihood of success is very limited. So let's let's wait,

(01:48:48):
keep our powder dry, and try at some other future point.

Speaker 9 (01:48:51):
I think that's correct.

Speaker 1 (01:48:52):
Will it be a special ballot like and be a
march kind of like a special kind of thing where
people rarely go and vote so they can get the
or just their supporters to the polls.

Speaker 9 (01:49:02):
That's possible.

Speaker 1 (01:49:04):
Yeah, great, and that'd be expected, wouldn't it well? Consistent
with their lack of community engagement, which you and I
were talking about off air Hea before the mic came on.

Speaker 9 (01:49:12):
Yeah, the problem with the community engagement in connected communities
for example.

Speaker 1 (01:49:17):
That's where they changed the zoning laws.

Speaker 9 (01:49:19):
Yes, it came across as very manipulative because they had
community engagement sessions where people would go and they didn't
talk about rezoning. They talked about what kind of housing
do we want in Cincinnati? Is middle housing which is
the four and six unit apartment buildings? Is that good?

(01:49:40):
And people say, yeah, that's good. But they didn't talk
about the zoning plan specifically. So people came out of
the community engagement sessions and the city used the information
that they gathered during those sessions to justify the zoning
reform the ordinance itself. And if you went to the
the public hearing or the public meetings at city Council

(01:50:03):
or the Planning Commission or the City Committee, the city
council committees, there were people saying, we didn't know we
were talking about a zoning reform. We thought you were
asking us about housing and what kind of housing we like.
And it was just very very manipulative, and they published
of survey results for example, Well, people would go to

(01:50:23):
the meetings and they'd say, hey, listen, I went to
four of those planning sessions, so my voice was counted
four times on those surveys. So the whole thing was
all very kind of superficial. It helped their narrative, but
it wasn't really community engagement, and that's what we really
need on any kind of earning SAX increase. We need

(01:50:44):
to know what the numbers are, what they're going to
do with the money, and why we can't find savings
and other parts of the cities one point three billion
dollar budget.

Speaker 1 (01:50:52):
One point three billion dollar budget, which is eighty four
million dollars more than it was a year ago.

Speaker 9 (01:50:57):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:50:58):
We had to tell a great point you made in
your op ed piece.

Speaker 9 (01:51:01):
That's right. We were we have to tighten our belts
during this period of time because of inflation, and we
don't see the city tightening their ELTs. That's right. They
get more money to cover their inflationary costs, and it's
just it's just not fair.

Speaker 1 (01:51:19):
Yeah, we don't get that.

Speaker 9 (01:51:21):
No, we don't.

Speaker 1 (01:51:24):
How much of this budget related stuff, I'm gonna use
that word has a connection to the ending of COVID
nineteen money.

Speaker 9 (01:51:34):
Well, the city I think that the last amount of
that money is called the American Rescue Plan. The last
of that money I think was in the twenty three
or twenty four budget.

Speaker 1 (01:51:47):
And so we got used to that money, didn't we.

Speaker 9 (01:51:49):
Yes, And you know that's a problem. When I went
to NKU and got my degree in political science at NKU,
and this was the late seventies. One of my assignments
was to go out and interview a city official about
revenue sharing. Remember revenue sharing. It was a Nixon thing
where they were just making these block grants the cities,

(01:52:12):
and so I went out and interviewed the mayor of Chiviot,
and the mayor of Chiviot said, I'm not taking that
revenue sharing because when that ends, I'm going to be
stuck holding the bag to fund these programs that I
funded with revenue sharing.

Speaker 1 (01:52:25):
Great point. That's the same thing that happened with Clinton.
Member he one hundred thousand police officers we paid for well,
you paid for him for the first payment, but they
were stuck with the price of paying the officer's salary
every year thereafter. That's it's the reality. You've taken it.

Speaker 9 (01:52:40):
So the city has a what they call leverage support
where they have dozens and they spend millions and millions
of dollars on it. And these are a nonprofits in
the city or other community development organizations where the city
gives them money. It's like grants. And if you remember,

(01:53:01):
mister Jeffries at some point was suggesting that members of
city council go and sit on the boards of these
organizations to provide some direction or oversight or whatever was
his His idea was, but that's a terrible idea. You
don't take elected officials and put them on these boards.

Speaker 1 (01:53:17):
Especially when the boards have their handout. Their existence depends
upon the vote of that very elected.

Speaker 9 (01:53:22):
That's exactly right, Brian. And so I don't know if
he's going to pursue that, but that's a terrible idea
as well.

Speaker 1 (01:53:28):
They said, that's sort of I mean a legitimate direct
conflict of interest with the council member. Well, they couldn't
vote on anything related to funding for an organization on
which they in which they sit on the board. I
just find that to be an ethical violation.

Speaker 9 (01:53:40):
That would be my That would be my view as well, Brian.
That and not only that, but when the member of
council sits on the board, the board's going to do
whatever that member of council wants. It's not it's no
longer an independent board. So there's lots of lots of
problems with that suggestion. But these these leverage support organizations,

(01:54:01):
they come to rely on that city money. Also, so
when this if the city has to cut their budget
and these leverage support organizations get cut it, it's also
detrimental to what their missions are. They're they're relying on
that money.

Speaker 1 (01:54:18):
Now, well, who said that government money is a sure thing.
If you're in the business in an NGO and your
business model is to rely on a grant from government,
then I would say you have a poor business model.
You're not providing a good or service that people out
in the world are willing to pay for. You exist
on stealing taxpayer dollars from a labor in order for

(01:54:40):
you to continue with your well probably very very handsomely
paid nonprofit organization salary.

Speaker 2 (01:54:47):
Right.

Speaker 9 (01:54:47):
Well, the benefit to the city of these leverage support
groups is that they it's not a city function anymore,
it's not a function of the city government. They pawn
that off to these NGOs, these nonprofits, and theoretically it
should make it easier to cut them off if they
run in if they run into budget problems, they cut

(01:55:09):
that off. But the way it works locally in politics
is that if they cut these organizations off, now that's
gonna hurt them politically.

Speaker 1 (01:55:19):
Yes, they're going to be fighting against the reelection of
whoever was responsible for cutting off that funding.

Speaker 9 (01:55:26):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (01:55:27):
Their political lives depend upon these ngs. Yes, geez, Louise,
what a colossally colossally and I'll be delicate here in
the light of the FCC screwed up arrangement. One more
of Todd's ends. I got a few minutes left with
them close out the hour before we get to the
insights scoop of bright Bart News, and let me mention
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Speaker 2 (01:56:29):
Lender fifty five car the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:56:36):
Sunny, hot and humid today, high of ninety four, down
to seventy one overnight with an isolated chance of rain
eighty five with clouds tomorrow. Possible isolated rain, just partly cloudy.
Skuy's every night going down to sixty seven, and Thursday
is going to be mostly a Sunday day with a
high of eighty seven seventy two degrees.

Speaker 2 (01:56:51):
Right now, it's time for traffic from the UCU tram
Thing Center.

Speaker 7 (01:56:55):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplanter
from multicultural communities give the Gift of life. Sign up
today to be an organ donor. North Bend seventy five
continues an extra ten out of arrow Anger into downtown
Seth Bend seventy five close to that out of Evendale
through Lackland.

Speaker 2 (01:57:12):
He spent two seventy five.

Speaker 7 (01:57:13):
I'm seeing a bit of heavy traffic between Coal Ring
and Hamilton Avenue and in Bend seventy four backs above
Montana Chuck Ingramont fifty five KRC Detalk station.

Speaker 1 (01:57:27):
Seven fifty one coming up with some fifty two f
fifty five KR city talk station. We really appreciate Tod's
inster being in studio certified fraud examiner. He is we're
talking about and again at Shenanigan's in the City of
cincinnatiy got a commission report, a whole bunch of things
to do, twenty five things. They went with a one
thing that is probably the worst idea, and that's increasing
the earnings tax. You're not going to be voting on

(01:57:47):
it anytime soon because, as we've discussed, timing couldn't be
worse for that. But questions swirling around, as we've talked
about with Todd his op ed piece, what are they
gonna use the money for? We don't know what is
economic development? Don't now and is there any oversight with
the money. We're just talking about all this money flowing
out the non governmental organizations and are we really getting
a return on investment for those Todd you mentioned connected

(01:58:09):
communities as well, and before we part company. I guess
the fat Lady hasn't sung when it comes to even
though it's past connected communities and the changing of the zoning,
you said, there's an opposition for us growing out there.

Speaker 9 (01:58:22):
Right there's a group called the Coalition for Better Cincinnati.
Their website is since he.

Speaker 2 (01:58:32):
Be uh.

Speaker 9 (01:58:34):
Sorry, I'm not sure, it's Coalition for Better for Better
Cincinnati dot org, and it's it's got some legs. It's
got people on the coalition from all over the city
and a number of different neighborhoods, and they're looking at
what their options are. It basically comes down to a

(01:58:57):
couple of different options. They're looking at legal options as
well as a ballot issue option, and they're just forming
right now and they've had an organizational meeting. They have
another one planned, and I think that they're going to
go around to the community councils, which were kind of
given the big middle finger.

Speaker 1 (01:59:17):
During also, yeah, they definitely were.

Speaker 9 (01:59:20):
And we'll see, we'll see what happens.

Speaker 1 (01:59:21):
But well, that was our when we were talking about
that before it went through some community councils, like, yes,
this is something we would like to do here. Let
us be a test market to see if it works,
and others were saying, no, we don't want to change
the dynamic of our community. And have you know six
flat units, you know, popping up next to residential homes
and single family homes. So I get the arguments on
the back and back and forth, but they were left

(01:59:43):
out of the process.

Speaker 9 (01:59:44):
Yeah, I'm sorry for screwing up the website at Cbsinc.

Speaker 1 (01:59:47):
Dot org cbsinc dot org. Yeah, well, you've raised a
lot of interesting points here and I appreciate you doing
the op ed and of course I appreciate you trying
to mind the store on behalf of well you're fellow Cincinnatians,
because not a whole lot of reporting on it, not
a lot of elected officials that want to come out
on the record, and you know, hiding the ball from

(02:00:08):
us regularly time and time again. When the railroad sale,
the connected communities, just seems to me that the idea
of well, doing a Joe Biden height in the basement
kind of strategy for all of these is the norm.

Speaker 9 (02:00:20):
Yeah, I hope they understand that the the opposition to
the railway sale, the opposition to connected communities. There's a
lot of concern in the city about the way this
city council is operating, and the idea of putting an
earning sax on the ballot at that time, I think
they've got an uphill battle there, Todd.

Speaker 1 (02:00:43):
I'll leave you with this one final thought you want.
I think they should do the best thing they could
do for the city that fixed Fred's Road. There you go,
gam It, Let bread serve as an illustration. You got
a job to do, damn it. Let's keep the infrastructure
from completely collapsing before we get to the next leg
of the street car toddsz ins Or. I look forward
to having you back in the studio anytime. You got
some additional analysis on the shenanigans going on in the city.

(02:01:06):
God bless you for what you do and keeping your
eye out. Man, somebody's got to do it. Thank you, Brian,
Thank you, my friend. Stick around inside Scoop with the
bright bart News political editor Emma Joe Morris on the
Kamala Harris career review, Tell him the Truth and Daniel
Davis Deep Dive. Come up at eight thirty. I'll be
right back.

Speaker 3 (02:01:24):
You're just minutes away from refreshing your news feed at
the top of the hour.

Speaker 8 (02:01:28):
I have never seen anything.

Speaker 2 (02:01:29):
Like this exclusively. Fifty five krs the talk station. This
really twenty four election headquarters.

Speaker 14 (02:01:37):
One person, one vote, It's gotta be verified.

Speaker 10 (02:01:41):
Fifty five krs the talk station Ato six at fifty
five krs the talk station. It's Tuesday, which means it's
time for the inside scoop, the bright Bart News And
as I always start out the segment, strongly encourage my
listeners to book mark Breitbart. It's great information, great news
stuff you're not going to see out of the mainstream media,
of course, and they're not going to try to put

(02:02:01):
a spin on Kamala Harris's record over at Breitbart b
R E I t b a art where you can
read the reporting from my next guest. And welcome back
to the fifty five Carsey Morning Show. Politics editor at
breit Bart, Emma Joe Morris. Great to have you on
the program again, Emma welcome.

Speaker 17 (02:02:15):
Hey, thank you so much for having me on.

Speaker 1 (02:02:18):
So you know where Kamala Harris came from.

Speaker 2 (02:02:22):
This is an interesting piece.

Speaker 4 (02:02:23):
I ever, Yeah, it's an interesting piece you wrote and
you can find it.

Speaker 1 (02:02:27):
Morris a Kamala of Canada. How Harris uses a fake
persona and cultural appropriation to advance her career. So we're
I guess, has she been leading people to believe that
she somehow grew up in an oppressed, a racially divisive,
alienated life as a child in some impoverished neighborhood, like,
in other words, came from the streets, like so many

(02:02:48):
rappers claim to have come from.

Speaker 17 (02:02:51):
Well, that's it seems to be what she's implying.

Speaker 12 (02:02:54):
I mean, I watched her quite closely, obviously because of work, unfortunately,
and and it's always this thing about her race and
she's and it obviously implies that that she has some
sort of identification with marginalized groups in the country. I
would imagine that's why they bring it up, let alone,

(02:03:15):
make it a centerpiece of the campaign and of her
public persona.

Speaker 17 (02:03:20):
But that is total nonsense.

Speaker 12 (02:03:22):
And I'm not saying that her race is nonsense, God forbid, obviously,
But what I'm saying is she is not marginalized. And
I know that because she grew up in my neighborhood
in Montreal, Canada, from the time she was twelve till
she was eighteen, and that neighborhood happens to be the
richest one. I mean at the time it was the
richest one in Canada that's been bumped down her number two.

Speaker 2 (02:03:45):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (02:03:46):
So yeah, this is like Martha's Vineyard or locally here
in the city of Cincinnati, like Indian Hill. You know,
you find the mansions and the massive you know, five
plus acre yards minimum and where only the healthiest can live.

Speaker 2 (02:04:00):
That is where she grew up exactly.

Speaker 17 (02:04:04):
I don't know that specific.

Speaker 12 (02:04:05):
Neighborhood, but yeah, I mean you're not setting foot in
that neighborhood if you're not spending I mean.

Speaker 17 (02:04:11):
For the smallest house a million dollars.

Speaker 12 (02:04:14):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (02:04:15):
And her mom was a physician at one of the
local hospitals there correct.

Speaker 17 (02:04:19):
Well, so her mother was a researcher for breast cancer.
So her mother.

Speaker 12 (02:04:25):
Was was recruited to work with McGill University in Montreal
to do breast cancer research. And apparently she was a
very skilled researcher and scientist.

Speaker 17 (02:04:36):
When I was.

Speaker 12 (02:04:36):
Reading up researching for this column, there were tons of
local doctors in Montreal and and by the way Montreal
is is it has very nice facilities despite the socialism.

Speaker 17 (02:04:50):
When you can get when you can get a doctor.

Speaker 12 (02:04:52):
But in any event, yeah, like McGill is a world
renowned University, and these doctors are praising her as a
pioneer in the industry, saying that they still use her
research today. She was obviously a very influential research or
something to be proud of if you're Kamala Harris. Actually,
but she's pandering, so she kind of conceals that part

(02:05:12):
of her identity and that part of her adolescence. But yeah,
so her mother was working at McGill. I have no
idea how much she was earning. But they lived on
a street called Grosvenor, which is just eight blocks away
from where I grew up on Redfern.

Speaker 1 (02:05:25):
Wow, how about that someone absolutely actually in the know.

Speaker 12 (02:05:32):
To have grown up in this obscure neighborhood that also
is the home of the politics editor at right.

Speaker 1 (02:05:38):
Bart Okay, But you know this this element, and you know,
I'm one of the folks that I agree with a
lot of the punnitary that says just don't touch the
whole race thing. You know that that is exactly It
doesn't matter at all. I agree. I'm a post Martin
Luther doctor Martin Luther King junior kind of guy. Content
of character, not color of skin. And this is exactly

(02:05:59):
what the left in the mainstream media trying to cover
up the content of her character. You know, prior to
late June, the everyone political punditry, all the polls, everything said,
you know, Harris is unelectable. She pulls lower than the
cognitively impaired Joe Biden, who people do not trust with
the economy, or did not trust with the economy, did

(02:06:20):
not trust with the border, all the critical issues that
were so important in the American people. Biden was behind Trump.
We got a problem on her hands, and oh my god,
we're stuck with Kamala Harris, woman of color. We can't
get rid of her. So they do a coup Atah
admitting finally after three years that Biden does not know
how to even tie his shoes. They chuck him out

(02:06:42):
in favor of Kamala Harris, with giving no Democrats the
opportunity to vote. And now they're trying to paint her
as some sort of moderate who's come to Jesus and
is now in favor of fracking. He no longer wants
to defund the police. She's got one of the most
left wing atrocious records that anybody could hope to run on.

Speaker 17 (02:06:58):
Well, I mean record it's her record is just what
she said.

Speaker 12 (02:07:02):
And yes, in the twenty twenty campaign, she went like
maximum woke and psycho. Honestly, the things she was saying
were insane and those things had nothing to do with
the things that she had done when she had her
career in California as AG.

Speaker 17 (02:07:15):
So she has a very confusing character.

Speaker 12 (02:07:18):
And just by the way, I don't want to make
out like I think that coming from this neighborhood is
somehow a test of it to her character, because I
come from.

Speaker 17 (02:07:25):
The same neighborhood.

Speaker 12 (02:07:25):
But the difference between me and Kamala Harris, which is
why I thought it was relevant enough to write about,
is that I never lied about where I came from.
I never tried to misrepresent who I am. I never
tried to say that I'm actually from coal country. That
would be insane. I never changed the way I talk.
I never changed the way I, like, you know, portray myself.
And this woman comes out of westmunt which is the

(02:07:47):
name of the neighborhood, and I encourage everybody to go
google it next time she tries to say twenty twenty foe,
and you'll see that this is a complete fabrication it's
a total smoke screen. Her whole person as a total
smoke screen. The accent is a smoke screen. It's all fake.
She would have never ever heard a Southern accent from
the time that she was an entire the entire time

(02:08:10):
that she was an adolescent, she would have never even
heard that, let alone she lived in California, which I
don't know how many Southern accents you hear there.

Speaker 1 (02:08:16):
Well, she never takes on a French persona, does she.

Speaker 12 (02:08:21):
That would be more legit, I know, would be totally
more legit. You know, it's this Montreal, its Si But
and so that's so, you know, getting to what you
were saying, it's like, well, she would have actually spoke French,
that's right, But getting to what you were actually saying,
it's like the thing is like, we don't know. Again,
it's relevant because we don't know where she stands on anything.

(02:08:42):
We don't know because when she was California a g
she was locking people up on minor gun charges, which
say what you want about that, but that's what she
was doing. And then she in twenty twenty, which is
like three years later, she's talking about having Felon's vote
defunding the police. And then she's obviously on all of
these you know, bailing out rioters for from the George

(02:09:05):
Floyd riots, and and just this total opposite, total point
eighty from the way that she actually acted when she
had some power. And then now, I mean, we don't
know what to think because she spent the last four
years kind of going around on yachts and private jets.
She was apparently border Czar, although god knows what that
even means because they.

Speaker 17 (02:09:25):
Defined it as finding the root causes.

Speaker 12 (02:09:28):
So she's supposed to like basically like cure the Third World,
I suppose in that role, which shockingly didn't go very well.
We don't really know what she did other than I
think it was getting micro investments like into like like
forest communities in the Amazon or something with something absurd
like that. And she was supposed to solve the Third

(02:09:49):
world's problems in South America in her four years as
vice president.

Speaker 1 (02:09:53):
Well, and the problems that happened. The problems are economic.
The problems are economic, correct, I mean, poor economies, terrible
you know, employment opportunities. People leave because they want a
better life economically, which is not a justification to come
to the United States of America and are.

Speaker 12 (02:10:08):
Illegally that's correct. And when you're there, you're so close,
you're so close to saying the buzz, the magic word,
which is that they are economic migrants.

Speaker 4 (02:10:19):
Literally, they're not legitimate asylum seekers. And it interviewed on
the border of just a huge amount. We'll admit they're
coming here for a better economic opportunity and have nothing
to do with oppression or being you know, targeted for
political positions or anything like that.

Speaker 12 (02:10:36):
Come on, of course, not yes, of course they're coming
here to work, work, quote unquote whatever. But yeah, I mean,
she's a mess, and it would be one thing. You know,
Donald Trump brant for president in twenty sixteen having no
experience in politics.

Speaker 17 (02:10:52):
I mean, he had a huge business portfolio to show
for himself.

Speaker 12 (02:10:56):
But granted still we didn't know how he was going
to govern, and we were kind of going on face
based on what he said. But the way that you
were able to do that was because he was clearly
talking straight to you, and there was, for better or worse,
no doubt about what he was saying. There was no
two ways to interpret what he was saying. And with her,

(02:11:17):
it's like she's talking out of both sides of her mouth,
and both sides are fabrications, and both sides are lies.

Speaker 17 (02:11:22):
And this representations about.

Speaker 12 (02:11:24):
Her, about her career, about what she believes, about what
she does and did.

Speaker 17 (02:11:28):
It's all just stake.

Speaker 2 (02:11:30):
Well, and she's hiding.

Speaker 12 (02:11:32):
How are the American people supposed to gauge this person?

Speaker 2 (02:11:35):
Yeah, and she's hiding. She's pulling.

Speaker 1 (02:11:37):
She's pulling a Biden campaign from the basement right now.
It's been what more than two weeks, and she's uh,
had any you know, come out of her hole or
whatever wherever she's hiding to answer questions, straightforward questions by
someone maybe Breitbart, who would literally ask direct questions about, well,
you were for defunding the police, you were for an
open border. You literally said we have to stay woke.

(02:11:57):
Everyone needs to be woke. I mean, and those are
words directly out of her mouth. I need to ask
her questions about that. But if she hides and she
lets her surrogates do the talking, her surrogates are going
around just completely transforming her record, which is literally on
the record for all to see.

Speaker 12 (02:12:14):
Oh yeah, this is like the weirdest thing. It's like
a mirage campaign. Like, for instance, there was a pivot
on it on a pretty major issue, i'd say, which
was her position on energy.

Speaker 17 (02:12:22):
Yes, there was a clip going around about fracking and.

Speaker 12 (02:12:26):
She had and the reporting on it was like.

Speaker 17 (02:12:28):
Exclusive colon, scoop colon.

Speaker 12 (02:12:31):
You know, someone who represents Harris uh says that she
no longer believes that, And it's like, how is that spoke?
Like it was portrayed as like privileged information that came
from someone inside the campaign.

Speaker 17 (02:12:45):
It's like, wait a second, that's a huge reversal of
your stens How is it not you coming out and
explaining how you got from here to here.

Speaker 12 (02:12:54):
It's a very strange thing. But I think that the
people around her are quite clever. Yeah, because the thing
about her is that she is obnoxious and without a
teleprompter especially but even with a teleprompter, but without a teleprompter,
especially when she's just talking, she.

Speaker 17 (02:13:10):
Barely makes sense.

Speaker 12 (02:13:11):
I like this coconut tree stuff. It it does not
make sense. It's ridiculous. She sounds like an astrologer or something.
And so so the people around her obviously know this.
So they're like, get this woman inside away from the
cameras for as long as possible. And that's clearly what's
going on because I'm sorry, like if she was, if

(02:13:33):
she if she was strong, wouldn't she be out there
being strong? I mean, the numbers that you're seeing right
now are complete media.

Speaker 17 (02:13:41):
Creation.

Speaker 2 (02:13:42):
Yeah, it flipped overnight.

Speaker 1 (02:13:45):
I mean again, before Biden drops out, I'm sorry, before
the coup Atah, she couldn't register on poles, she registered
lower than Biden, and then magically you're talking to me.
Within a one week timeframe, she goes from being way
underwater to now even with Trump across the board in
all these various polls and including swing states. Are people's

(02:14:06):
memories that short or are we witnessing the successful demonization
of Donald Trump which has been going on for geez
how many years? This the media lockstep demonizing this man
as the devil incarnate? Are there that many people who
hate Trump so much that they would ignore their own
their own perceptions of Kamala Harris and ignore her record
which clearly wasn't was too liberal for even the Democrats.

Speaker 12 (02:14:30):
Well, here's the thing is is this is like the
part that we sound like the dumb ones because she
isn't even trying, Like the Democrats don't care, they don't
care about what her policy is.

Speaker 17 (02:14:42):
They don't care about who she is.

Speaker 12 (02:14:44):
This is one of the things that like, this is
like a trap that we're falling into.

Speaker 17 (02:14:48):
Go and come out.

Speaker 12 (02:14:49):
I encourage every single person listening to this right now,
go on Kamala Harris's website right now, and I challenge
you to find the section that says her policies, like
as in what she believed. Try you can't. Her website
doesn't even have policies listed. We're all the dumb ones
for trying to, you know, pontificate about what she might

(02:15:10):
believe and then own the libs on you know, her
having bad positions on things, because.

Speaker 17 (02:15:15):
She doesn't even have any positions. They're not voting based
on positions.

Speaker 12 (02:15:17):
They're votes but voting based on apparently like vibes or something,
because she does not have any positions on her website.
She will not come out and say anything she believes
in person, in front of a camera, on TV, on
a podcast, whatever.

Speaker 17 (02:15:31):
They're not voting based on policy.

Speaker 12 (02:15:33):
If you ask me what they're voting on, I'm not
really sure because I'm clearly not voting for Kamala Harris.
But she's not even under any like, you know, pretense
of being a real candidate.

Speaker 1 (02:15:45):
It's just simply that she's not Donald Trump.

Speaker 12 (02:15:48):
She's exactly, it's just a Democrat. It's a Democrat whatever.

Speaker 1 (02:15:52):
Well, and we all know how the puppet master works.
It doesn't matter who the puppet is as long as
the people behind the scenes are pulling the strings. And
this clearly looks like it said.

Speaker 12 (02:16:00):
It's like saying that explicitly, like it's crazy.

Speaker 17 (02:16:04):
I've never seen it, Like I've never seen.

Speaker 12 (02:16:06):
A candidate enter the race without even the pretense of
being a candidate.

Speaker 17 (02:16:11):
It's insane.

Speaker 12 (02:16:12):
Like she gets installed by the donors and like the
elites and the party, and then after being installed, she
doesn't even make an effort to try to, you know,
persuade people on any particular position. The only thing I
think that they're kind of doing is like we like abortions,

(02:16:33):
but in terms of energy policy, in termsy we saynomic policy,
foreign policy, her positions on you know, major current events
like the war in Ukraine or the war in Israel,
there's nothing, not a.

Speaker 17 (02:16:45):
Word, not a word in writing, not a word in voice.

Speaker 1 (02:16:48):
And she doesn't even have a record on foreign policy,
although she does have a record on police defunding, woke ideology, diversity, equity,
and enjoy a record.

Speaker 17 (02:16:56):
On foreign policy is she went to Munich.

Speaker 12 (02:17:00):
It's literally forty eight hours before Russia and data Ukraine.

Speaker 17 (02:17:04):
That's a record on foreign.

Speaker 2 (02:17:05):
Policy and let's leave it on that.

Speaker 1 (02:17:08):
No Political editor Emma Joe Morris from Breitbart Bookmarket, Bridbart
dot Com. Always a great time talking with the Ma Joe.
Keep up the great work. I'll look forward to having
you back on the morning show.

Speaker 12 (02:17:16):
Soony, I didn't knowize that you're for Comedy Hour.

Speaker 2 (02:17:20):
Thank you so much. It is you can't escape.

Speaker 1 (02:17:22):
It is sad, empathetic as it is, there is an
element of comedy built into all of this. Take care
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Speaker 1 (02:19:39):
The talk station. It is that time a week. Always
look forward to it. It's time for the Daniel Davis
Deep dive. Retired Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis offering his thoughts
and comments about global conflict and gee, Daniel Davis, welcome back.

Speaker 15 (02:19:51):
Man.

Speaker 1 (02:19:51):
It's too bad we have nothing to talk about today
along those lines.

Speaker 2 (02:19:55):
Yeah, just just kind of.

Speaker 18 (02:19:56):
A boring day and nothing. A lot of death and destruction.
But I mean, other than that, there's nothing you want
on at all.

Speaker 1 (02:20:01):
Oh, they may be World War three perhaps, I mean,
Lord Almighty, I mean, we've got our own folks saying,
you know that the attack is eminent. Israel's going to
get attacked any moment in time. We're sitting here in
the war room. We're talking about strategy. Israel's basically surrounded
right now. They're getting hit from Syria, they get hit
by the Huthies, they get hit by the the Hamas
folks in Gaza. It's just one you know, they it

(02:20:23):
really is kind of a circular attack going on, limited
as it may be, and terrorist organizations funded by Iran,
but you know, Ron's a big elephant in the room,
the the ones behind all this. And now we're talking
about maybe Iran directly striking Israel itself, adding a whole
new element and dynamic to this. Well.

Speaker 18 (02:20:42):
You know, I think it's important though to look at
the context, because these things don't come out of nowhere.
They come out of very specific things, and just prior
to this, well, actually this back up a little bit.

Speaker 2 (02:20:51):
Because it's important.

Speaker 18 (02:20:52):
You had back in April, you had Iran had this big,
unprecedented three hundred and fifty drone missile trike against Israel
that the United States, let's see several other countries use
their air force to actually knock down most of them.
The Iron Dome did its work, but all of that
came as a result of what Israel destroyed an Iranian
embassy building in another capital city of Syria, and that

(02:21:16):
prompted the response. This time, Israel assassinated the lead negotiator
for Hamas, who they were trying to negotiate a ceasefire
with which the United States was strongly behind, right, And
now then they did it in Tehran, and now then
there's a risk that Iran's going to retaliate. Now, I
personally think that the fact that it didn't come last
night is indications that maybe our diplomacy which has been

(02:21:40):
like twenty four to seven right now, starting from the
top on down, may have had a possible success at
pushing this off. I don't know what kind of deal
could be struck. It's going to satisfy Iran in this case.
But that's the part of the problem, is that if
you take an action, you can expect to counteraction, So

(02:22:01):
these things don't come cost free.

Speaker 1 (02:22:02):
And we'll see how it plays out well. And I
hope diplomacy works. Lord knows we don't need a global
conflict breaking out, do we have? And I guess I've
always been operating and perhaps the mistake in presumption, and
this is why we have you, Daniel Davis. Do we
have a defense agreement with Israel? I know we have
pledged to help defend them. We've offered them arms and
support and diplomacy and whatever else is in our arsenal.

(02:22:24):
But if they were to be attacked nation state with
a flag and an army attacking Israel, that could be
considered a war, a declaration of war, much in the
same way Israel hitting Iranian territory which an embassy is
considered and of course in Tehran that could be viewed
by the Irans as an act of war. Ergo, if

(02:22:44):
they end up in a shooting war between the two countries,
are we going to have boots on the ground in
Israel or anyplace else in the region.

Speaker 18 (02:22:51):
Now, that is the absolute number one question for the
United States right now, and just taking this thing on
the substance of it undeniably an active war. Whether the
Iranians choose to act on that and to launch into
a war is a separate question because they have to
do their own calculations of cost benefit And if we
respond to this, what would you know, what would be

(02:23:13):
the consequence? Would we win, would we lose, would we
would it cost us even more to try, et cetera.
But part of this is their deterrent calculation, because they
think that, Okay, if we don't do something, then Israel
is going to keep on hitting this. I mean, just
imagine if any nation on the planet took out somebody
in Washington, d c. With the missile and blew it up.

(02:23:35):
I mean, we would lose our minds. We would be
ready to go to war later that afternoon. Uh well,
we're allowed to do that, but nobody else can do
it to us, right, And to answer the second part
of your question. We do have a I'm not sure
exactly what's your at started, but we have a ten
year agreement to give three point eight billion in military
aid to Israel every year. It is not a mutual

(02:23:57):
defense treaty. There's no Article five type like there is.
Didn't tackle on one's attack, on both, etc. There's none
of that. It does not go to that level. We
just said we will help them defend themselves. And listen,
the reason why we give them that money is so
that they can protect themselves, and they can they have
the capacity to protect themselves to fight their own war

(02:24:19):
should they get into one, as happened in nineteen sixty
seven nineteen seventy three. We didn't fight for them on
those cases. They fought from themselves. Now then we've given
a lot more support than they had prior to those wars.
So it is vital, in my view, vital that the
United States not get dragged into a war, because if
we get involved with something like that, it can have
all kinds of unintended consequences, not the least of which

(02:24:41):
is it could cause casualties to the United States and
no apparent benefit if Israel gets into a war especially
because it takes provocative action in the capital city or
against another nation state. That's something I'm up forra AID
they need to handle.

Speaker 1 (02:24:55):
Well as we pivot over to Ukraine, and you'll be
able to answer a question that I've been puzzled by
regard to these F sixteens. That's a proxy war that
is being weighed. Ukrainians are getting funding from all kinds
of countries to fight against the Russians, and of course
the Russians would probably have a much larger advantage but
for our munitions and our arms and everything. But if

(02:25:15):
you look at it as a situation involving Israel, if
Israel's left to defend itself, it's certainly going to be
a proxy war with the Russians and maybe the Chinese
and the Iranians funding the weapons and the supplies to
the fighters, as well as the Huthis and the other
terrorist organizations who would similarly be attacking Israel. Right Well, now,

(02:25:36):
I'll tell you it gets even more complicated than that.
I'm glad you brought this up because I think it's.

Speaker 18 (02:25:39):
Really important here in that our bad policies in the
Russia Ukraine War, and especially with the change we had
a couple of months back where Biden said, you know what,
you guys, Ukraine, you can use our weapons to strike
into Russia, right and on Russian territory.

Speaker 2 (02:25:55):
Putin then said, then, since you're willing to do that.

Speaker 18 (02:25:58):
Then we'll do a mirror idge, a tit for tat
kind of thing, and we'll give weapons and aimations to
your enemies elsewhere in the globe.

Speaker 2 (02:26:05):
He was unspecific.

Speaker 18 (02:26:06):
Now, just imagine if Iran, who's getting weapons to Russia
that they need for their drones, goes to war with Israel.

Speaker 2 (02:26:12):
What are the chances that.

Speaker 18 (02:26:13):
Oh, by the way, the former Minister of Defense from
Russia's Sergei Shoigu is in Tehran right now making military
deals that Russia wouldn't give them weapons to potentially use
against the United States exactly in the area. So this
web keeps getting minded because our policies remain stupid.

Speaker 1 (02:26:30):
Okay, and pivoting over to stupid policies. The whole situation
in Ukraine. I talked with Congressman Warren Davison just yesterday
and he is against continuing and funding this. He says
he has been from the outset. But this whole situation
Ukraine has been clamoring for and asking for F sixteens
now since the whole situation unfolded. And here we are
fast forward, is it has been three full years of war.

(02:26:52):
We're roughly give or take six eight months whatever, now
we're giving them F sixteens.

Speaker 2 (02:26:58):
Can you explain, Well.

Speaker 18 (02:26:59):
See here's the pro number one, let's look at the
tactical possibility. F sixteens are going to give the ukrains
a little more capacity.

Speaker 2 (02:27:06):
It will not change anything.

Speaker 18 (02:27:08):
But secondly, these things, it's not like, okay, well, when
Russia invaded, we should have given it them F sixteens.
You see, it took almost a full year to even
get them to the point to where they can use
these things. So it's a long lead time. And I
assure you that these things in the United States, we
spent about two years training our pilots before we let
them go into combat. Now, then these guys have had

(02:27:29):
one and even though you can say yes, but they
were already trained pilots in the mid twenty nine, et cetera.

Speaker 2 (02:27:34):
It's a very different aircraft and it fights different.

Speaker 18 (02:27:37):
We use the system the air sixteens differently than they
do use theirs. So it's a whole system of systems
that have to be created on the fly. And listen
when you talk about aircraft, even if we gave them
ninety over the next year and a half, assuming the
war could last that long, which is apparently the plan,
Russia has up at one thousand fourth and fifth generation fighters,

(02:27:57):
So you're never going to close that gap, and so
anybody who thinks that's going to make a difference is
fooling themselves.

Speaker 1 (02:28:04):
Well, and going back to the training, if the pilots
of the ex F sixteens we give the Ukraine have
only a year of training, I have to imagine that
the Russian pilots have a lot more training than that,
and the F sixteens might not be around very long.

Speaker 18 (02:28:18):
Well, there's two things, the Russian F thirty five's and
the Russian air defense system, especially the S three S
four hundred. Apparents some new S five hundreds that are
coming online now, are very very potent systems, and the
Ukraine side is just not going to be able to
stand up to that. There have actually been very very
few air to air engagements as far as I know,
there may not have been any, but if there was,

(02:28:39):
there's some rumors there was one.

Speaker 2 (02:28:41):
That's it. So this is mainly an air defense system.

Speaker 18 (02:28:44):
And so when you get the F sixteens in the air,
the Russian S three four five hundreds are almost certainly
going to take that out or air to air missiles
from the F thirty of the S thirty five.

Speaker 1 (02:28:54):
Well, you got any good news for us today, Daniel these.

Speaker 18 (02:28:57):
Well, we didn't get into war last night, so that's
a good news in the Middle East, and let's let's
pray that that continues.

Speaker 1 (02:29:04):
We will end on that positive note. Search for them online.
Just search Daniel Davis deep Dive. You find his podcast
and these types of conversations. Always enjoy the discussion, Daniel,
we'll talk next Tuesday. Stay well, my friend, always want pleasure.
Thanks coming up on eight forty or fifty five car
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