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June 13, 2025 150 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Five O five. If it's O k r C detalk
Jason at the Friday say it is a vacation. Well,

(00:30):
who for Friday? Even though World War three is breaking out,
some may say that anyway, try to have a happy Friday.
It's about what's going on in the world. Yeah, Israel's
launching an attack against the Iranian nuclear facilities. Got some
details on that we can go over, But first, it's
Friday the thirteenth. For the suspicious out there. Uh, don't
count me among them. Anyway. Tech Friday a day hatter

(00:51):
every Friday six thirty. We got meta planning to replace
humans with AI to assess privacy and scietal risks. Just
wondering how humans assess societal risks anyway, Guilty by algorithm,

(01:11):
a secret algorithm, and zero transparency. Welcome to artificial intelligence justice.
I'm curious about that one. Plus Apple paying customers ninety
five million dollars in series spying settlement, and information on
how you can get your probably tiny fraction of the payout.
Adam Kaylor returns to the studio. Adam's going to be

(01:32):
talking about an event that's coming to Cincinnati AT's American
Truth Summit. You think artificial intelligence is of alved with that,
Joe Ken Williamson, that'd be Joe Streker, execut producer the
fIF five Gades of Morning Show and the guy who
lines up the guests. Appreciate what you do every day,
Joe Strecker. Let's see here. Ken Williamson, good man veteran.

(01:54):
Ken Williamson always invites me to say a few words
of the flag retirement ceremony in Union Township, which I
will be doing tomorrow. We'll talk about the flag retirement ceremony.
You are welcome to go. Pretty nice event. It's it's
always you know, it's a small gathering of folks, so
there's boy Scouts there and we learn the steps and
appropriate processes to properly retire a flag respectfully and properly.

(02:20):
Also learn what the flag means, you know, the blue
section WANs, what each of the stripes means. It's it's
It's a nice solemn ceremony and I enjoy participating in
that every year. Fills me with patriotism and filling me
with beer and awesome food. The Culping Society which shots
infests this weekend another alternative to going out and protesting

(02:41):
in the streets so there's all kinds of events going
on this week, and I just I love the local
German societies are just wonderful. People. Give me to the kite,
which we will all experience together at least get a
taste At eight oh five. Feel free to call five
one three seven hundred two three tako with time five
five on AT and T phones. Details are still coming

(03:02):
in about this Israel strike in Iran, but Israel did
attack the Iran's capital today, actually targeting nuclear program, and
they actually killed a couple of the top military officials
in Iran, and the Iranian news even reported that, so

(03:25):
there seems to be no doubt that these guys are dead.
Israel military also said it completed widespread attack on air
defenses in western Iran, destroying dozens of radar installations and
service to air missile launchers. Appeared certain to trigger a reprisal,
and in fact it did, Supreme Leader Ayatola Ali Kamani
warning that severe punishment would be directed at Israel, and

(03:47):
that's when the Iranians began firing drones into Israel. Rak
said more than one hundred drones had crossed over its airspace,
and later Jordan said its Air Force and Defense system
had started intercepting and shooting down some drones that had
entered its air space because they feared that they would
fall into their territory. The little cooperation there around the fringes. Apparently,

(04:11):
the Israeli attacks hit several sites, including the country's main
nuclear enrichment facility. Reports of black smoke seen rising in
the air. Leader of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, General Hossain Salami,
is no longer with us, one of the ones the
Iranian state television report had had in fact then killed
probably targeted. I heard some reports this morning in the

(04:34):
news there were some live news going on. Gottfeld preempted
during my morning drive to report on the live activities
going on in this conflict that the Iranian IDF or
the Israeli Defense Forces had embedted some folks within or
very close to Iran in order to launch some closer attacks.

(04:55):
So it may be that they targeted these folks. Chief
of Staff of Iranian Armed Forces, General Mohamed Bagari, also
no longer with us, as confirmed by Iranian state television.
Others said that some top scientists as well as other
top military officials believed to have been killed in the attacks.
If you're bombing a nuclear facility, presumably there are scientists there.

(05:17):
So part of the casualties in Washington, the Trump administration,
they had been cautioning Israel about, you know, maybe not
doing an attack because we had been negotiating with Iran
over the nuclear and Richmond program. Things not going swimmingly.
I might add one of the articles over this morning
had a detailed account of each of the different times

(05:38):
we sat down with the Iranians, and obviously nothing was
really accomplished, but I think everyone can draw a conclusion.
I didn't mention it. The other day it was reported
widely that Washington had pulled American diplomats from Iraq's capital
as well as some other countries around the Middle East,

(05:59):
and issued some warnings about non essential personnel and recommending
that they leave red flag Maybe perhaps so. I'm sure
Washington was alerted to this. Israel, for its part, says

(06:19):
these preemptive assaults a fight for Israel's survival and necessary
to head off what they proceed to be the imminent threat.
Rom was going to be building a nuclear bomb, and
there's all kinds of speculation about when that might have happened.
We all know that they were enriching uranium to military levels,
and there was some concern that they might even have

(06:40):
a nuclear weapon within a month, others saying it was
a year or maybe perhaps even more off. So depending
on where you look you get the news that you read.
Benjaminett and Yahoo for his part on that topic, it
could be a year, could no. This is in with
regard to how long it was necessary to remove the
perceived threat from Iran. It could be a year, it

(07:02):
could be a few months. So they're in for the
long haul. And he warned the citizens that there would
be reprisals, obviously in the form of drone strikes, but
he said it was a clear and present danger to
Israel's very survival Iran. A couple of hundred Israeli aircraft
were part of this mission, took off this morning or

(07:23):
today anyway, hitting one hundred targets or roughly one hundred
targets that according to the information from Brigadier General Fi Deferent.
In a statement noting that the attacks were ongoing in
the aftermath, he said Iran had launched more than one
hundred drones toward Israel. And again, depending on where you
read I've heard as many as two hundred the threats

(07:46):
in terms of drones ongoing, and you know this is
going to continue for a while, that air defense systems
are acting to intercept those threats. According to the general
airspace shut down, as one might imagine, Israel, rock, Iran,
and Jordan all shutting down their airspace. It was weird.
I saw a graphic. It looked like one of those

(08:06):
real time where the aircraft were in the region, and
after these Israeli attacks happen, you could see all these
aircraft just moving out of the general area. It's kind
of creating this hole where aircraft otherwise would have been
flying around. Netanyau expressed hope that the attacks would trigger
the downfall The'ron's theocracy, saying in a message directed to

(08:29):
the Iranian people that the fight was not with them,
but with the in his words, brutal dictatorship that has
oppressed you for forty six years, saying, I believe that
the day of your liberation is near. Well, perhaps these
kind of things tend to unify people. We have a
lot of political division in our country if you haven't noticed,

(08:50):
but and that existed prior to nine to eleven. I
know it's gotten a lot worse since then, but after
nine to eleven, the American people tended to unify and
gather together in opposition to the terrorist attack that got
launched on our country. One never knows what the Iranian
people will say. Maybe they don't like the theocracy, maybe
they don't like laws requiring them to wear burkinis and

(09:12):
oppressing people for their if they're not fundamentalist Muslims. But
generally speaking, I think it's safe to say that the
Iranian people generally not fans of Israel. So we'll keep
our popcorn out and witness what happens to unfold in
the aftermath of this attack. They say multiple sites in
the Iranian capital hitting the attack Netanya, who said triggered

(09:34):
both nuclear and they targeted both military and nuclear sites
also targeted where officials leading around the nuclear program and
the ballistic missile Arsenal are. The International Atomic Energy Confirmed
Agency rather confirm that in Israeli strike hit Iran's uranium
Enrichmond facility and that TANS and they were closely monitoring it.

(09:57):
And according to all reports, at least as of my
reading of the news, moments before the microphone came on
the Atomic Energy Agency said there was no reports or
detection of any nuclear fallout leaking out, which you got
you have to worry about that. That's you know, I'm
a big fan of these modular nuclear plans. But you're
in a live in a world where you can launch

(10:18):
a drone strike from a garage pretty close to any facility.
You got to wonder if there's any concern over nuclear
fallout or leaking radiation. You can't deny it's a concern.
And I always wonder that about attacking nuclear And these
are enrichment facilities and somewhere someplace, you know, enriched uranium

(10:40):
is being stored. How does one deal with that? If
a bomb blows up in a room filled with enriched uranium,
doesn't that suggest that that is going to leak out
or somehow enter the atmosphere? So far, reports say it
has not.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Now.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
Earlier Thursday, Trump said he didn't believe an attack was eminent,
but also acknowledged that quote, it could happen. It could
very well happen. Close quote going back to the earlier
in the week recommendation that US personnel vacate the area.
So I think he covered himself with it could very
well happen. US Embassy in Jerusalem issued alert telling American

(11:24):
government workers and their families to shelter in place until
further notice. Secretary of State Mark or Rubius said Israel
took unilateral action against Iran, that we didn't have anything
to do with it, but that Israel advised the United
States that had believed the strikes were necessary for self defense,
saying quote, we are not involved in strikes against Iran,
and our top priority is protecting American forces in the region.

(11:49):
Of course it is Trump is scheduled a meeting with
the National Security Council today in the situation room. Of course,
he will be going over this with his advisors. Not
clear right now if he plans to make any remarks
on the strikes, although knowing Donald Trump being Donald Trump,
I suspect he probably will. Israel's main airport also closed.

(12:14):
Not checking anyone, and here's how it affects you and me,
at least in the short term. Brent crude has spiked
on the news of the attack, jumping eight percent, and
some projections that oil could go way north of one
hundred dollars if the situation gets really out of control.

(12:37):
So there it is let you know if I hear
anything more this morning, if you've got something to say
about it. Good idea, bad idea. I don't know. You
could see this coming a mile away. Just really was
kind of a question of when not if, Well, that
question has been answered five seventeen right now if you

(12:58):
if I have KRE see the talk station.

Speaker 3 (13:01):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Happy Friday. I always enjoyed a few suiting words from
Lemmian or Friday about Garsee dot com. You try herd
media so you can extream the audio from your smart device. Uh,
listen to Jay Ratliffe and Scott Wharton from the Cincinnion

(13:34):
Inquirer had quite a few issues locally to talk about,
including my recommendation you speak with Connie Pillach, who did
have a press conference yesterday but did not address the
issue of her statements about the rallies tomorrow, which, interestingly enough,
her post which was without mentioning it was obviously directed

(13:55):
to Donald Trump and his administration, vile and evil as
it was, and unnecessary and unseemly for a prosecutor. As
far as I'm concerned, she's entitled her political opinion. It's
been in so far as being a prosecutor, and I
had a couple of people mentioned to me, thank you
Kevin for the barbecue yesterday. Kevin among them dropped off
some by his famous barbecuter house. Yesterday I paid a
visit good Man.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
He is.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
She's going to be responsible for prosecuting anyone who commits
criminal acts during these protests rallies, the No King's protest
rallies tomorrow. Question will she after her statement out loud
about the Trump administration, the reason for the rally, which
is basically I guess to protest all things Trump and
Trump administration, will she follow through and do her job?

(14:43):
Wellt you speculate on that. But the very controversial post
which I did talk about read yesterday on the morning
show has since been deleted. It was on her personal page.
It wasn't issued from the Hamilton County Prosecutor's office. It
was on County Pillage's personal Facebook page. But you know,
deleting a post, you know it's the Internet. You can't

(15:05):
unring the bell. How are we to perceive a deleted post?

Speaker 5 (15:10):
Is that one?

Speaker 1 (15:11):
Is that someone saying, oops, I screwed up here. Let
me endeavor to erase the record that we all know
about Since it was widely circulated and reported, many people
printed it off me included because I rely on print
form to do the morning show rather than you know,
looking at tabs on a video screen. You do things

(15:32):
your oadway, but you know it's out there. You can't
unring the bell. You're on record. It was widely reported,
it was printed in the news media. But deleting a post,
I think that's an admission of stupidity, isn't it? How
else is one to perceive that? Anyway? I heard media
aviation extort Jay Ralo of every Thursday. I enjoyed talking
with Jay in the timing was good because the Air

(15:52):
India crash, which was horrific, hundreds of people dead. I
think we are now going to prefer the emergency exit
aisle seat. One person actually survived. Two hundred and twenty
nine passes or twelve crew members were killed in that crash. Yesterday,
one person lived, British national vishwash Kumar Ramesh, the sole

(16:16):
known survivor of the Air India crash. According to the
sen police official there on site at the crash scene, Ramesh,
near the emergency exit door, managed to escape by jumping
out the emergency door and I thought this was a
rather interesting statement to police. It wasn't clear whether he
jumped before or after the plane made impact. Okay, I

(16:45):
mean the plane just went down and blew up. Did
he jump out while it was right before it hit
the ground? Is that what that suggestion is? I was
really puzzled by that statement in the reporting. Anyway, he
was taken to a hospital, spoke with a media outlet
there thirty seconds after takeoff. He said, there was a
loud noise and then the plane crash. It all happened
so quickly, so they show him walking away from the crash,

(17:11):
according to news footage from the area, and again he
was taken to the hospital. Medical help Care Form said
the survivor told him that the plane had began to
descend immediately after takeoff and then split in two. Reported
he still had his boarding pass when he made it
to the hospital, and that he reported seeing body parts
and plane parts strewn all around the crash site as

(17:32):
he made his way away from the plane, telling the
newspaper when I got up, there were bodies all around me.
I was scared. I stood up and ran. Someone grabbed
a hold of me and put me in an ambulance
and brought me to the hospital. That is truly a
miracle that anyone was able to survive. That local story

(17:53):
is coming up. You can feel free to call though,
you know I love to hear from folks five on
three seven four nine hundred eight two three Talk Pound
five fifty eight and g phones. I think I may
request that emergency exit row if I ever fly again,
although given the news of late, I really don't feel
like flying. Don't go away, be right back, Steve, Channel
nine and wether. Forecast to day mostly cloudy day, afternoon

(18:15):
showers of storms with a high of eighty two, clouds
over night muggy is along with a storm chance sixty
nine for the low Tomorrow at cloudy day muggy with
scattered showers and storms on a high of eighty a
cloudy night and a slight chance arranged Saturday sixty eighty
overnight low Father's Day, Happy father S did all the
dad's out there. Eighty one for the high with scattered
showers and storms right now seventy one degrees but above

(18:36):
kersee talk station about thirty on a Friday. We're gonna
get to the phones here just real quick. Thanks to Cribbage,
Mike Submarine or Mike, my dear friend. Thank you for
your service for our country, he said. Trisha Mackie from
Channel nineteen had a one on one with Collie Pillage.
Just tried to press Connie Pillage on that Facebook post
in which I mentioned, and which Connie Pillage had removed

(18:59):
jargon coclllusions, he said. Pillage took her microphone off and
walked off. Pillage's staff member intervened and said the interview
was over.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
Now.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Mike's concluded she's a coward. I conclude that her post
reveals her as a demonstrable idiot. Also some reporting from
Tricia Mackey and others at Fox nineteen on that very meeting,
although they didn't report about that specifically in the Fox
nineteen article, which I thought was rather interesting. She mainly
wanted to focus on the neo Nazi issue. Remember the

(19:33):
neo Nazis that gathered on the bridge February seventh and Evendale.
No prosecutable crimes, That's what they concluded. So for everybody
out there screaming at yelling about why no one was arrested,
apparently there was no basis for an arrest. Twenty one
CP Solutions was an independent group hired by the police
department sided with the police. So and Pillage's announcement that

(19:57):
there were no prosecutable crimes committed by the neon Nazis
comes two weeks after an independent group released its findings,
even though a police department's response to the neo Nazi
demonstration on I seventy five. Again, that was the twenty
one CP Solution, So apparently nothing to see there. Let's
go to the phones order which they received, which means
Tom is up first. Tom, welcome back to the fifty

(20:19):
five case mornings you and a happy Friday to you brother.

Speaker 6 (20:22):
Yeah, Happy Friday, Happy early Father's Day. I am sure
this is one of the many occasions just like me
where I remember my father. Oh yeah, missing so much
I did. I forgot to mention the other morning we
were wishing happy birthday to your mother. The day that

(20:42):
I met her is I had like four times celebrity meeting.
That's the first time I met you over at Price
so Chile. That was one of your December.

Speaker 5 (20:55):
Meeting.

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Greats there the listener lunch.

Speaker 6 (20:58):
Yeah, got to meet your mom and dad and I
got to meet Christopher Smithman.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
So that was a that was kind of a big day.

Speaker 6 (21:06):
As far as celebrity meetings, I know you'll want to
put yourself at the bottom of that list, and mom
is obviously at the top. So yeah, your your dad
would have definitely agreed with that.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
Oh, yes, absolutely.

Speaker 6 (21:22):
I didn't want to mention real quick. I just went
through College Hill into north into Northside, and at the
corner of Ashtree and Hamilton there is an accident. You
can scoot through, but be careful.

Speaker 5 (21:34):
Going through there.

Speaker 6 (21:35):
It looks like somebody t bone somebody didn't look like
it was too serious. Everybody was out, but there's definitely
an accident block in the most of the intersections, so
Hamilton and Ashtree, just north of north Side. As far
as this cowered Kanye pillage, I just I just want
to remind everybody. Now, I've been living here in Hamilety

(21:55):
County for thirty five years now, and I know that
this county has pretty much been democrat uh pretty much
most of the time, especially city of Cincinnati has been
deep blue. But we always had one person there that
was that was a good check against this liberal bs

(22:19):
and that was Joe Jeters and the handle of the
county prosecutor's office for a long time. Was uh was
it was definitely a solid uh and I don't want
to call it republican, just common sense and would prosecute
based on the law. And you always had confidence that
Joe Dieters was gonna make sure that things were done right.

Speaker 4 (22:41):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (22:42):
And he didn't take any crap from anybody. He was
no bs and it was it was very comforting to
know that that was there in spite of all the
ridiculous Democrat craft going on in other departments and councils
and whatever around it. But but ever since he's been gone,
and especially since this cower Tony Pillach has gotten in there,

(23:04):
it's it's it's one last thing in this in this
area that that is gonna help us live better lives.
It's just it's going downhill. It's ridiculous, but it's but
you know what, you know, who's whose fault it is
is the voters of Hamlet County. For some reason, you
all decided that you wanted a Democrat in here. Well, congratulations,

(23:26):
here's what you get. So, uh, you know, live with it,
and maybe the next time we have an election, you'll
follow my advice and don't vote Democrat.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
Have a great weekend, Brian, you too, Tom, and happy
Father's Day to you brother. Wow, New Hampshire Gary's on
the line. You can have to hold on New Hampshire
Garre if you don't mind, just a couple of minutes
five thirty five right now, if you five Curiosity Talk station,
be right back there you go. Jeffrey, one of my
listeners always instant message me about John the Fisherman, apparently

(23:58):
a fellow Primus fan. He is, Joe. Here you go.
God does play a wicked bass. I will admit, get

(24:19):
to the phone. We've got a couple of collars online.
Thank you for holding New Hampshire Gary. Welcome back to
the morning showing a happy Friday to you, Happy Father's sake. Roan, Well,
thank you and you assuming it applies.

Speaker 5 (24:29):
It does. Looking from this military perspective, looks like Iran
is so in that they can't. They've been absolutely so
far devastated in a conventional form of attack on the
drones and being shot down and whatnot. It looks like

(24:51):
that they're going to have to go to a second
tier attack, which would be small terrorist attacks, cyber attacks
or any which way they can because apparently they can't
get through militarily because it looks like they've been devastated

(25:13):
pretty bad, with the structure of the command structure being
rotten the way you know, they're playing who wants to
be in command?

Speaker 7 (25:21):
Now?

Speaker 5 (25:21):
Who's next? You know, Yeah, and so you know, maybe
even stopping you know, oil flow through the canals, you know,
any which way they can do that. And I'm just
going to have fun watching this on TV play out.
I don't think it's really going to have much to
do with us, unless I hope you have a cyber

(25:42):
attack or something.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
Well, a cyber attack or something that's been looming in
the back of my mind after I woke up to
the reality is it is there a head indeed attack
Iran and its nuclear facilities and other bases, and the
potential that there are cells here in the United States
sympathetic to the Iranian terrorists or otherwise, whether they be

(26:06):
Iranians or sympathizers. You know, we got two million known
god aways, and Lord knows what they're doing and what
nefarious purposes they might accomplish here in the United States.
And given how easy it is to attack something that's
been demonstrated over and over again, most notably in the
last several weeks of the news. So I'm a little
concerned for you know, United States territory being attacked by

(26:27):
some sort of terrorist action, perhaps related to or otherwise period,
I mean, across the board for any reason whatsoever. But
this may prompt something like that, And that's what's concerning
me this morning.

Speaker 5 (26:38):
Wasn't it just last week that the Taliban leader in
Afghanistan put a futtlaw on all the congressional leadership and
said that there's four million Muslims now in the United
States that it's open season on our leadership. JD.

Speaker 1 (26:56):
Vans were named specifically any of the cabinet members. Yeah,
they got rattled on basically anyone in the Trump administration. Yeah,
that was the that was the edach.

Speaker 5 (27:05):
So something like that could cause somebody to go a
little tilt.

Speaker 2 (27:08):
You know.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Yeah, it doesn't seem to take much these days to
get someone to go over the edge. Hell, we got
congressional members going over the edge and doing crazy, crazy
things and senators that we had want to have be
forcibly removed after crashing the Department of Homeland Security Secretary
of NOMES press conference the other day. So Yeah, people
are becoming unhinged. And the other trend that I noticed

(27:29):
and sort of unrelated but related at the same time,
what is this, What is the story between all of
our elected officials dropping F bombs regularly? You know, it
seems to me that that's the kind of thing that
the only dude to offer to get the click bait.
No one will listen to their message unless it's filled
and laced with profanities. You're like, wait a minute, a
senator was using F bombs in their statement. Yeah, it's

(27:51):
happening more and more all the time. I mean I
listened to Gutfield coming in in his commentary and all that,
and they drop them all the time on his show
as well. That's a very conservative leaning program that they run.
So I'm not happy with the direction of the country
in that regard. But something's got to get clicks, and
we're in a downward spiral on that. But yeah, in

(28:11):
terms of the insanity out there and people doing crazy things,
it seems to be more than norm these days. Let's
see what Mary's got. Mary, thanks for calling this morning,
and a happy Friday to you.

Speaker 4 (28:22):
Good morning, Brian. Hey, I just wondered I was going
to actually call you about that County pillage interview. And
at six minutes and twenty five seconds, well worth the
watch and the unnamed county employee that came and swooped her.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
Out of there was none other than Sharon Coole.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
Our west thing go kind of.

Speaker 4 (28:44):
I mean, it's really like Brian, like, you don't see
any of this, you know, Trisia Mackie. The majority of
it is all about the you know, those idiots and
Nazis or whoever those guys were.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
And then at the end, I mean the.

Speaker 4 (28:57):
Setup was you already knew that she wasn't going to
take it because Tricia Mackie.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
Had already prefaced it prior.

Speaker 4 (29:03):
But you know, you watch this unedited six minute and
twenty five second video of it, and when she starts
pressing her, the camera winds out and here comes Sharon Cooley.
You know, like I've met Sharon a number of times
over the years, being politically active over in Westwood.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
Always you know, she's probably biased, but like I always
thought she did a fair job at.

Speaker 4 (29:24):
Reporting the city you know, news and city hall and
all that stuff. So I mean I just thought she
was a good person and you know, did a good.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
Job with with what she did.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
But that's not her job anymore though, Yeah, to defend
and how.

Speaker 4 (29:40):
Pathetic, But but the thing is, that's right, that'sitely her
job and I understand that. But what type of lack
of integrity or pathetic that you had to change careers
in midstream to be a shill and cover for that
pig that is Connie Pillage, not only about what she
wrote on social media and all her nonsense there. But

(30:00):
here we are, how many weeks after that police officer
has still not been cleared by that woman in her office.
That guy's hanging out to dry what she went on vacation.
She's posting crap on social media, But here we are
that police officer still has not been cleared of that
Ryan Ryan hitting shooting.

Speaker 8 (30:21):
Yeah, value waiting.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
Work, Yeah involved shooting. I hear you a lot and clear.
I will defend Sharon Coolidge on one level, though if
you look at the direction, and it breaks my heart
that the Inquirer is spiraling out of control. They're losing people,
Their staff is now limited, they don't do as much
reporting as they used to. They reprint things from USA today. Obviously,
the number of subscribers and people who receive the inquirer

(30:45):
for home delivery has gone downhill dramatically. So I think
maybe sharon'saw the writing on the wall, and if you
get a career opportunity that's going to maybe pay you
more money, and you see what's going on around you,
you kind of the fools, the one that's not looking
up for his own best interests, as I point out out.
And maybe this was a career change that benefited Sharon Coolidge,
even though she's got to be biased politically now in

(31:08):
defending Connie Pillage.

Speaker 8 (31:10):
So but how do that?

Speaker 5 (31:12):
Well do why?

Speaker 1 (31:15):
You know, we have certain integrity when it comes to
our politics, and we wouldn't accept a job like that.
So maybe it's a little revealing about Sharon coolidge inner
politics as well. But well timed intervention. And I know
they talked about it. They had to have talked about
it ahead of time. Listen, if this social media post
gets brought up and someone pesters me about it, then
you need to come in here and say the meeting
is over. And Tricia Mackie did that, and she's apparently

(31:37):
according to Jos Schreker who just watched the video, Tristia said,
wait a second, you promised us ten minutes, and as
you said, there's only six minutes and thirty seconds worth
worth of Q and A before that question pops in
enters Sharon Coolidge to end the interview, depriving us of
three minutes a potentially valuable information. Thanks Mary. It's five
forty seven fifty five garous, the dog station, don't go

(31:59):
away and maybe we'll get it. Stacker stupid in on
the heels.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
Of Trump's tariff policy. Down's across five fifty.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
Two the fifty five krest talk station or a Happy
Friday at Tech Friday with Dave hat or coming up
every Friday at six point thirty h O Stacker stupid
and yes it does include naked people, but no, sorry, Jeffrey,
don't have Florida in front of me. We start with Mobile, Alabama.
Some families described as on edge after a naked guy
is caught on multiple cameras multiple nights in a row
in a Tilman's Corner neighborhood. Hmmm. Well. Neighbor described it

(32:28):
as alarming when seeing a naked man show up on
her ring camera videos, saying I just went and looked
at my cameras. I was looking for my cat. Instead,
I see a completely nude except for socks man walk by.
Then he goes in our backyard. He walks around the cars.
She said he was holding something in his hand, phrasing

(32:49):
even more disturbing. Accord to the reporting, this guy had
something in his hand. I don't know what it was.
I don't know if it was a lawnmow blade or
something like that. Oh, is that what they're calling it
these days, joe phrasing. Other niators also say the report
of the scene a naked guy wandering around the area.
One mom, of course very worried for her children, describing

(33:11):
it as very scary. Residence. Neighborhood said they've seen him
multiple nights in a row, walking in and out of
the woods in the area, others taking extra precaution and
encouraging others to do the same, putting surveillance cameras in
once said they put flashlights around so wherever people walk by,
the lights automatically turn on, saying, get cameras, get surveillance cameras.

(33:34):
Put them on every single angle. Yeah, I took care
of that. Years ago to Thomas House, video of a
naked guy dancing on top of a moving police car
in the Greater San Francisco area, specifically Antioch. Of course,
going viral, Jose Garrido captured the video Thursday morning after
he saw a man in the neighborhood. He said, it

(33:55):
isn't just I just turned around. I wasn't expecting to
see a naked man on the street. So an officer
was in the area responded to the scene. As soon
as the officer stopped, naked guy jumped on top of
the police vehicle as a tradition is it Apparently The
officer then slowly drove to a nearby parking a lot
of a car dealership before calling for backup. Police Chief

(34:22):
Joe Vigil Clearly this guy is having some type of
mental episode. They talked the man down off of the
police car, then took detained him and took him to
until the ambulance had arrived, saying they thought it was
better to take him to the hospital. No excessive force
head to be used. Now here's an interesting twist on

(34:42):
the Friday Naked Guys we go to Ypsilata Township, Michigan.
Twenty year old man from Jackson arrested for a hit
and run that killed a naked pedestrian in the Ipsilonti
township Haven't Mad I ninety four near the US twelve bypass.
Authorities police received reports of naked guy walking eastbound in

(35:04):
the westbound lanes of I ninety four. Ambulance from here
On Valley Ambulance arrived on the scene, but before they
could get to the guy, he was hit by a
dark colored sedan that didn't stop. First responders able to
give the man some aid, identified as a fifty two
year old man from Warren, but he did die at
the scene. That's when police received a phone call the

(35:24):
following or actually on June sixth, from someone who said
they believe they knew who struck the pedestrian. Twenty year
old man from Jackson reportedly confided in the caller that
he was involved in the crash in the area. When
trippers interviewed the suspect, they found it damaged twenty eighteen
Chevy Malibu that they impounded. Twenty year old reportedly told
police he didn't stop because he had been drinking while

(35:46):
under age. Investigation has strived his ongoing charges expected to
be requested from the local prosecutor's office. Again, interesting twist
on naked guy five fiveifty six kar City Talk Station,
Tech Friday come up at sixth third. We've got plenty
to talk about between now and then. You can feel
free to call love to hear from you. I'll be

(36:07):
right back after the top of the hour. News news
happens fast, stay up to date at the top of
the hour, not gonna be complicated, and it's going to
go very fast. Fifty five krz the talk station planning
at six oh five right now tik about kar City
Talk Station and Mary Thomas swishing everyone hate very happy Friday.
I gets a good plan Flag Day tomorrow. If you

(36:28):
talking with Ken Williams in a seven forty about the
flag retirement ceremony and Union Township, do that every year.
I'll say a few words there and learn how to
properly retire a flag. That'll be a seven forty. Preceded
by Adam Keeler, who's going to join the program in
seven o five in studio teasing an event that's coming
to the city of Cincinnati. Will learn all about it together,
American Truth Summit, and of course preceded by Tech Friday's

(36:50):
Dave Hatter at the bottom of this hour. Got several
topics you talk about with him, and then finally eight o'clock,
get your gimmuity the kite on Culpling Society shoots and
fests this weekend. Yet something else to do to celebrate
Father's Day before I jump back into the news five
on three D eight two three top pound, five fifty
on EIGHTE and T phones. Mike, thanks for calling this morning.
Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 8 (37:12):
Hey, I got a good one foray. I'll give you
a down home one. Okay. I was working the north
end of District four in the early nineties and we
got this. I got dispatched to a naked guy running
around I think it was sixty eighth Street up in
Heartwell and I get there. I'm looking around and this
dude jumps on my car, my police car. He starts
jumping up and down on it.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
I'm like, that's like the last story.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
I'm like you you got to be kidding me.

Speaker 8 (37:40):
I was like, and I get out of the car
and say, get off my car, man, and he's like
growling at me, sorry, you just chemical iriton on ing,
which I've had absolutely no effect. And then he uh
he went over to Hardware Elementary and started knocking out
all the windows.

Speaker 9 (37:56):
Oh my god, I sorr.

Speaker 8 (37:58):
I tried to. So I just so you know, I
retired the same rank as your sister.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
Correct, thank you for your to the community. That's awesome.

Speaker 8 (38:10):
Thirty years So anyway, anyway, I'm sitting here, I'm uh spraying,
and we're rolling around the ground and my backup comes
to his officer, Neil's owner, and we're hitting this guy
with our PR twenty fours.

Speaker 1 (38:27):
The old days, Yes, the PR twenty four.

Speaker 8 (38:31):
Well, I'm i'm because he's trying to fight us and
punch us, so I'm hitting him. Neil hits him, He
runs back towards Neil. I hit him, and it wasn't
until a third officer got there and swung him around
and he went head on into a steel pole, and
he was like, well that one hurt. And then of
course face first into a steel pole.

Speaker 5 (38:51):
What happens?

Speaker 8 (38:53):
Blood all over the place. Now, that just makes it
worse because it's slippery trying to put handcuffs on people.
Oh ye okay, yeah nowhere.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Go ahead, go say the joys of being in law enforcement.

Speaker 5 (39:09):
Right.

Speaker 8 (39:09):
So, well, there's blood all over us, and when the
sergeants get there, and this is right after the thing
in district three where you have western water and whatever,
a pistol with somebody, and we finally get this guy
he totally knew, finally get him handcuffed. Okay, so I mean,
and the sergeants show up and their eyes are like,

(39:35):
you got to be kidding me. And then the night
chief shows up and it was Ronald McDonald. I think
he's the Steve so I I'll tell you his name,
and he goes, well, here's their story and if anything changes,
love us.

Speaker 5 (39:45):
No.

Speaker 8 (39:46):
So when we get to the hospital, this guy did
not have just PR twenty four marks on him. He
had welch. You could see we were hitting the sky
hard and it had no effect on him. Finally that
the UC Medical Center physicians came. He said, this guy's
junk full of PCP.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
That's what you guys know. I was waiting for it.
Did you ever find out what kind of drugs he
was on? Because it's the drugs, right, which is.

Speaker 8 (40:14):
Quite common because you get you get really hot that
and that's why it causes you to take the clothes off.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
So yeah, well so yeah, the guy pled guilty to.

Speaker 8 (40:25):
Foresaults on the police officer resisting arrest, and unfortunately for him,
he had one of the best judges for police officers
in Hamilton County, which I believe Hangham. Harry mcawain is
deceased as well, but he was the best because he
was like, oh, you hit one of my police officers.
He was like, well, I shouldn't shoot a six months

(40:47):
in hell? Oh I went scoose me. I mean, I
can't say that, I mean jail, but it should be.
He should be like hell. And that's that's how Harry was.
Here's just so to tell you the same thing.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Oh, she's got tons of stories, Mike, And that was
just what was gonna say. I like you hanging out
with members of law enforcement, whether they're still active or retired.
You guys are the best to hang out with because
you got like a million stories like that. You can
go on for hours and hours and hours. Thanks for
your service, Mike. I appreciate you calling in a little
more levity on a Friday and another illustration of the

(41:17):
of the crap that our police officers have to go
through on a day to day basis to keep our
community safe. Aman Joey two three talk anyway a summary.
Israel launched a huge attack on Iron's nuclear program it
happened this morning today. They killed the commander Hossan sal

(41:41):
Salami to find an interesting name. Two other generals were
killed Netan Yahoo Prime ministers of the military. Operations would
last as long as it takes. They've been shooting down
drones that Iran launched in retaliation, more than one hundred
so far, and you know that's going to continue. And
according to the reporting, this is the second time I've

(42:02):
read it or heard it. I heard it this morning
on the Live news as I was coming in, and
now I've actually read it in the Wall Street Journal,
who's doing updates real time. Long before Israel's attack, agents
smuggled explosive drones and other guided weapons into Iran, so
much like the Ukraine strike on the Russian Air Force

(42:25):
base that blew up billions of dollars worth of equipment,
they were able to get up and close. And you
think of that, that's rather interesting. So Iran not as secure.
And then I double back and go to all of
the unknown godaways that got into our country. And hell,
we had open borders, we weren't even on the lookout
necessarily for folks letting literally every human being into the country.

(42:48):
So I'm just praying and praying and praying that something
like this doesn't happen here. Not a launch on nuclear
sites necessarily, but that some cell organization, maybe someone who's
sympathetic to Iran or hates Israel, decides that since we're
friends with Israel and we play nicely with him, that
we're deserving of some sort of domestic attack here. Anyway,

(43:12):
they did talk about Netanyahu said the possibility strikes, he's
discussed with Trump on Monday, and that's why, of course,
the United States began moving our diplomats and military dependents
out of the Middle East. That was widely reported earlier
in the week. It's like a giant red flag waving.
Then something was going to happen, although Secretary of State
Rubio emphasized that we were not involved in the strikes,

(43:35):
and then of course warned Iran not to target our courses.
Impact on the markets stal Jones futures down one point two,
s and P down one point two, Nasdaq down one
point five, obviously in anticipation of where the market's going
to go in light of the war that's being waged
right now between Iran and Israel. See here. In other news,

(44:05):
the House passed. The DOGE cuts was a narrow vote,
and you kind of wonder why it's narrow illustrating. I
guess that the Democrats don't want to touch literally anything
in terms of government waste and spending. So the vote
two fourteen to two twelve, after some wrangling between GE
GOP leadership, nine point four billion dollars in recision cutting

(44:28):
foreign aid and the entity that funds National Public Radio
and the public Broadcasting Service. You know, in an Internet age,
you know, I don't think any population or any area
of the country is going to be left without access
to the news. So those entities have become so left
wing that why are we, the American people funding it?

(44:49):
You know, if all these tax payer dollars, if you
left us out there that think this is, oh my god,
oh my god, what are we gonna do with NBR,
They're gonna still survive. Most of their funding comes from
private donations anyway, so not going to go anywhere. But
if your tax payer dollars are funding something like Fox
News or some conservative outlet like that that you know,
regularly emphasized conservative mindsets and conservative politics, you'd be pissed

(45:14):
off and you'd want the funding cut two. So and
it's just a tiny tiny sliver of what Doge identified
in terms of fraud wasted abuse. So I'm a little
disappointed that it isn't, you know, forty billion or one
hundred billion or something like that. But at least it's
a step in the right direction from my perspective. So
you can cut nine point four heading over to the
Senate where you know it's it's its future is uncertain,

(45:38):
and the fact that it is uncertain is also for
me a problem considering you don't need an overwhelming super
majority in the Senate to get this done. You just
need fifty one votes six point fifteen. Right now, if
you five KCD talk station, Colin Electric, Andrew Culling and
his team of amazing licensed of course electricians the well
oiled machine of electric electrical repairs for your home, so

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The customer service is outstanding, the price is always right,
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And if for some unlikely emphasized reason it's not, they'll
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(46:43):
Online you'll find them at Cullen spelled c U l
l E N Culin Electric Cincinnati dot com. This is
Ted Cruz.

Speaker 10 (46:50):
Join me Sunday night at seven pm on fifty five
KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (46:56):
I'm gonna WIX fifty five KARS the talk dation looking
forward to Father's Day, David, and in other areas of fraud,
waste and abuse. And again, I don't think the DOGE

(47:16):
cuts were sufficient. The recision bill was not large enough.
And I can reconcile my love for the American military,
my support for the American military and veterans as well.
Thank you for your service to our country and with
my criticism of military spending. If you can't pass a
damn audit, I don't think you're worthy of getting a
trillion dollars in American taxpayer money. What are they spending

(47:40):
the money on? Legitimate question? A revelation by Secretary of
Defense Pete Hegsath testifying for the Senate a Senate hearing
on the Department of Defense the Appropriation Subcommittee on Defense
earlier this week. On Wednesday, providing testimony living up to

(48:02):
his name, Democrat Senator Dick Durbin grilled Hegzeth about his
administration ending what he described many wasteful research grants, saying,
give me an example of a boondoggle in medical research
and defense health. Pete Heggzath in response, I mean we're
talking about some stuff I shouldn't say in public. You know,

(48:25):
marbles in the rear, ends of cats, tens of millions
of dollars, things that don't have a connection to what
you're talking about. And then Durbin responds, well, was this
like three hundred and fifty year old social Security check
the President told us about and I didn't even remember

(48:46):
that one. But sometime a couple months ago, Donald Trump
they were talking about when they ferreted out the idea
that there were hundreds and thousands of people over the
age of one hundred years old still with active Social
Security numbers, many of whom were still being issued checks,
and at one point Donald Trump said something the effect
of a three hundred and sixty year old person was
receiving a check that turned out did not be true.

(49:07):
Don't overstate your case, you know, hang your hat on
the stuff that you really know is to be true.
But beyond that, that's kind of what the reference was.
Hegzeth response, I respect completely the issue you're speaking with,
and this department couldn't be more sympathetic to that and
ensure that it's funded. Referring I believe to Social Security
generally speaking, but he went on the department Defense Department
has been a place where organizations, entities, and companies know

(49:29):
that they can get money almost unchecked to whether or
not it actually applies to things that happen on the battlefield.
Ran Paul chimed in thanking Hegzeth for working with white
Coast waste or whitecoat waste to expose the taxpayer funded
animal testing that has been going on that White Coast

(49:50):
Coat Waste organization issued freedom of Information Act request discovered
ten million dollars in a Department of Defense contract funded
through the Navy Defense Advance Research Project Agency DARPA for
experiments on cats at the University of Pittsburgh involving tests
that inserted marbles and balloons into the rectum of cats

(50:14):
and subjecting them to electro shock treatments for the purpose
of studying constipation and erectile dysfunction. Yep, you're working today
for this kind of stuff, folks, they say. The contract
was originally said to expire in May of this year,
but had been extended to twenty twenty seven, which Whitecoat

(50:35):
Waste found out about that resulted in others finding out
about it. Laura Lumer, who apparently loves animals and is
involved in animal rescue, on her show Lumer Unleashed, talking
with Whitecoat Waste Vice president Justin Goodman, she highlighted the

(50:55):
organization's Freedom of Information Act discoveries, describing the test as
horrifically disturbing and calling for immediate action from the Department
of Defense. Less than two weeks later, ah the Navy
announced the ending of all testing on dogs and cats.
Whitecoat Waste. President issued to statement, We're thrilled the ten
days after the Trump DoD canceled cruel cat tests exposed

(51:16):
by US, the US Navy now cutting all wasteful experiments
on dogs and cats following our investigation in campaign. Taxpayers
shouldn't be forced to pay for pet abuse in Navy
funded labs, and now, thanks to Whitecoat Waste campaign, including
powerful advocacy from Elon Musk, Laura Lumer, Representative Nancy Mace,
military veterans, and others, they won't have to. They went

(51:41):
on to applaud Secretary Fail and Secretary Head Zetha and
President Trump for first slashing US government's largest dog lab
and now setting the Pentagon's cat and dog abuse in
what they described to the litter box of history. Defunding
dog and cat labs has been our top priority for Trump.
Forour solution is simple, stop the money, stop the madness now,

(52:04):
they were referencing. Back in April, the FDA announced plans
to phase out all animal testing requirements, dating with dealing
with antibodies and expanding other drugs after pressure from this
White Coat Waste organization. Back in May Secretary of Veterans
Affairs Doug Collins, also confirmed the Department was ending at
least some of its primate testing in advance of the

(52:26):
previously set twenty twenty six deadline to stop doing that.
Marbles in cats rectums ten million dollars and you know,
you know weird who thought that one up? Just we

(52:49):
could go on for days talking about this kind of stuff,
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dot com five one three seven two eighty four eighty three.
That's five one three seven two seven tight fifty five.
The talk STATIONEE on a Friday employment listening thanks to
intrust it. If I'm on an interest it dot com
Dave Hatter's company, they'll fix your computer problems at work

(54:14):
or keep you out of trouble. Best practices are important.
He talks about that all the time here on the
on the Tech Friday segment. And of course, anytime your
computers go down interest it is therefore you. Welcome back
Dave Hatter and a happy Friday to you, my friend.
Thanks Brian, always happy to be here. Thanks for sponsoring
the segment. Man, I appreciate what you do every week
trying to keep us out of trouble. If we would

(54:35):
only take your advice. Hey, well, I'm not going to
disagree with you, Brian.

Speaker 11 (54:40):
I wish more people would listen and take this stuff
seriously before they become a victim of some type of fraud.
And sadly it's rampant and everywhere and increasing.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
Well, it keeps interrust it in business. Well, there is
there is that there is that. I'm not knocking that
angle of it, but yeah, I've said it. But we
want to be helpful. If all the problems of the
world disappeared and I had nothing to talk about, I'd
be happy to go find something else to do for
a living in reward for not having problems in the world.
And yet, so while you benefit from people ignoring your advice,

(55:12):
which works to your advantage, you wish people would listen
to you to stay out of trouble. Let's pivot over
at Meta. But now the headlinerer the topic I have
here is described as metaplans to replace humans with AI
to assess privacy and social risks. What is this all about?

Speaker 11 (55:29):
Yeah, this is an interesting story, and you know, this
whole AI space, it's so hyperbolic at this point. You know,
you've got people on one hand saying half of white
collar jobs.

Speaker 1 (55:41):
Are going to be gone in five years.

Speaker 11 (55:43):
You've got you know, Apple just recently, and this is interesting,
and I've seen some people take have an interesting take
on Apple's take. Apple just recently did some research that
said that you know, these large language model based ais,
the chat GPTs of the world and so forth, all apart,
once you hit a certain amount of complexity, they just
can't handle it. One of the things they mentioned, and

(56:05):
I could understand where this would be problematic, is if
you have a code based software that's ten million lines
of code or more, it's just it can't understand the
context of it.

Speaker 1 (56:14):
It's too much.

Speaker 11 (56:16):
So then on the other hand, again you've got all
these people making these predictions that you know, this stuff
is going to be so powerful, and Meta has made
a huge investment or planning to make a huge investment anyway,
and some AI. But basically, they've had teams of people
inside that when new features are launched on meta platforms,
and as a reminder, Meta is Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, and

(56:37):
other platforms, they had human beings that would view these
things and try to determine, you know, is this good
or bad? Is going to have a big societal impact?
Is it going to potentially harm children? Those sorts of things. Right, So,
they had human beings reviewing these things and trying to
make a determination about what is the impact and now
apparently they are doing that.

Speaker 1 (56:58):
Now apparently they are going to AI doing it.

Speaker 11 (57:01):
And you know, Brian, now again it doesn't from the
reporting I've seen, it doesn't go into what type of AI,
and I would rely folks, you know, there's more than
generative AI out there. It's not just chat, GPT and
rock and that sort of thing. It doesn't go into that.
But according to this article documents obtained by NPR, up
to ninety percent of all risk assessments will soon be automated,

(57:23):
and both current and former employees of Facebook.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
Have raised some concern about this.

Speaker 11 (57:27):
You know, I think it's a little concerning because when
you look at the AI that's out there, while you know,
we've seen huge progress, we've seen it can excel at
certain things. You know, anyone that knows anything about this
at all is familiar with the term hallucinations sometimes called confabulations.
With these things just literally make things up and if
you can't trust the output one hundred percent of the time,

(57:49):
how could you feel confident that if you're using it
in these ways, it's going to make the right decision
on these sorts of important topics. And when I say
important topics, here's an example. Just yesterday, Time had an
exclusive article with a psychiatry or psychologists rather a child
psychologist who went on to ten different AI based chatbot

(58:11):
sites pretended to be a troubled team.

Speaker 1 (58:14):
And I think you will find maybe we'll talk about
this next week.

Speaker 11 (58:17):
I think you will find some of the things these
chatbots told him quite alarming. So no, you know, in
my mind, none of this stuff is ready for any
kind of real primetime use if you can even have
a one percent chance of a critical system that can
hallucinate and just make something up now.

Speaker 1 (58:38):
And I get people arguing, well, Dave, you know software
goes bad. You were a software engineer.

Speaker 11 (58:42):
You read software that had bugs, that didn't always do
what you wanted, and all those things are true.

Speaker 1 (58:47):
That's all absolutely true.

Speaker 11 (58:49):
But you know my intention was never for it to misperform,
produce incorrect results, have bugs. And also you could easily
get into the code and see what it was doing.
Most of these AI things are a black box. You
can't even always predict how they came to a certain conclusion. So,
you know, I encourage people go read this article for themselves.

(59:10):
I don't think this is a good thing. I'm sure
it's because and purportedly in the article, it's because they
want to be able to move faster, less people, obviously
less costs if you have the machines doing this sort
of thing. But again there are people raising alarm about this.
I don't I don't think it's a good thing at
this point.

Speaker 1 (59:30):
And we'll see and the day artificial intelligence becomes self aware,
you won't be able to rely on it to critically
analyze itself.

Speaker 11 (59:40):
Yeah, it's it's it's interesting conundrum.

Speaker 5 (59:45):
Again.

Speaker 11 (59:45):
Apple just recently put out a study. I kind of
got sidetracked there and didn't really finish my thought on that,
and they they mentioned the complexities. But there are people saying, well,
this is coming from Apple, the people who have the
least skin in the AI game. I mean, Apple has
a really been a significant player in this space. They've
done some things, but you know, compared to like open AI,

(01:00:07):
people behind chat, CPT, Rock, Google, others, so you know,
there are some people speculating that, you know, Apple's take
is more of a Sarah Grapes thing. Well, you know, yeah,
we'll see, We'll see.

Speaker 1 (01:00:20):
I don't trust it myself, but you know me, Brian,
I have a tenfol hack guy. Well, I'm good for you.
You should be this day and age coming up next
Guilty by Algorithm? Or or well with Dave atter about
KCV talk Station Tech Friday with Dave Adder or find
Dave and the crew at interest it dot com solve
your business related computer issues and record of the business

(01:00:41):
career are the best in the business. Uh Dave pivoting
over Guilty by Algorithm? What is this one all about?
And already I'm thinking it's not good.

Speaker 11 (01:00:51):
Well, I think you and I are going to agree
that this is not good. And it's a good segue
from the previous segment where I mentioned the black box
idea of these llms and that you know, sometimes even
the researchers building these things can't really predict exactly how
they came to a certain conclusion, which is one of
my concerns with all of these things. But you and

(01:01:11):
I have talked about facial recognition off and on for
the last ten years or so, and you know it
will occasionally hit the news and you know clearly it's
not a new thing. But I guess in my mind, Brian,
so you know, I'm I'm close to sixty. I've been
in this business for more than thirty years, most of
it building software from scratch. And as I said in

(01:01:33):
the last segment, do you know how many mistakes I
made during that time, none of which were intentional. The
software didn't do what it was supposed to do, some
oversight on my part or my team's part, or whatever.
My point is, software is never perfect. I know you
and all of your listeners have experienced imperfections in software before,
whether it's just some irritating thing or it makes your

(01:01:55):
computer crash or whatever, right right, And I would like
to remind you, in the entire history of the world,
you know, human beings have not been on this planet
that long, and of that time, software has only been
in existence frame very very small time a moment, right time.
I mean, think about it, Brian, When you and I
were kids, you know, computers existed. Software was a thing,

(01:02:19):
but generally they were room sized machines that were incredibly expensive,
and the software and the hardware capabilities were very limited, right.
I mean, really, most of this stuff took off during
World War Two to calculate ballistics and things like that.
So let's just say eighty years, and I would say, really,
it's only been in the last forty years, right, that

(01:02:39):
most people have been exposed to this stuff. Consumers are
using it, et cetera. So in forty years time, and
then let's say in twenty years of that. So my
point is, all of this stuff is still incredibly immature
in the grand scheme of things, even though facial recognition
for itself has been around now for ten twenty plus years, right, biometrics,

(01:02:59):
and we just see time and time again problems with
these things. Bias in the algorithms, bias in the training data,
the same things you hear nerds like me say about
AI in general. But so to get to this particular story,
which I personally find extremely disturbing. You know, we've got
more and more cameras everywhere, We've got people with nests,
ring doorbells, CCT. Cameras are everywhere. And the idea that

(01:03:24):
when you read this story, law enforcement would basically have
someone say you're guilty of a crime. They plug a
picture or a couple of pictures of you that perhaps
they found on social media into some tool and it
says you're the guy, and they come arrest you. To
me is very problematic, especially knowing what I know about
this and the fact that these things are not imperfect

(01:03:45):
or these things are imperfect, and that's well documented. But
when you read this story, here's where it really really
gets crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:03:53):
Right.

Speaker 11 (01:03:53):
So this is from the article prosecution assistant has Miles
nail thanks for confidence when forming you claim that quote
fat daddy en quote was the killer. Cops poked around
on Instagram, pulled some photos, fed them into a facial
recognition recognition system, and out pop tie Bar Miles. The
algorithm gave its blessing, the informent noted an agreement, the
case was sealed. Okay, And then here's the scary part.

(01:04:14):
The defense wants to see how the magic sauces was made.
How did this algorithm work? How was it able to
identify this particular person for arrest, And they basically said, Nope,
we can't can't share that with you because that would
compromise law enforcement tactics. How can you, as they point
out in this article, how can you get a fair

(01:04:36):
trial if you don't have a high level of confidence
of how.

Speaker 1 (01:04:39):
The software works and then it accurately hit on this person. Yeah,
that's exactly right. They are absolutely entitled to that in
defense of their client. There's no question in my mind.

Speaker 5 (01:04:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:04:52):
So later in the same article, facial recognition searches involved
multiple components and steps that each introduced the significant possibility
of misidentification. And what might be the most understated way
to say this quote and this is like a Dave
Hatterstoff quote. Here, this stuff screws up a lot, unquote.
And the idea that you know you're going to be arrested,
sit in jail, wait for a crime, and potentially go

(01:05:14):
to prison because of some software algorithm that you can't
even understand how it works or what it's false positive
and false negative rates are to me, is extremely concerning
and disturbing. So again, I always hate to be the
doomsday guy, Brian and some like I'm against this stuff.
My whole career has been in technology, although sometimes I

(01:05:38):
do feel complicit in some of this. I mean, I
haven't made any facial recognition systems, but you know, I've
certainly made a career out of building technology that automates
things and such. And you know, in so many ways
we are headed in the wrong direction with this stuff,
in my opinion, and to me, this is very concerning.
This is something that you know, people should keep an

(01:05:58):
eye on, people should talk to the legislator. Is about
we should not be putting people in jail because some
algorithm that they can't even share that this to me
gets into like election election machines and voting systems and
so forth. Oh well, we can't show you that it's
our proprietary algorithm, Well then how can I trust it?

Speaker 1 (01:06:15):
Kund of the votes right? One hundred percent right? And
then the other component of it is, you know, if
you're a prosecutor, you don't understand how it works. So
you'd have to hire an expert like you to who
could adequately explain it to the jury the complexities of it,
and their eyes would probably gloss over and have no
comprehension of how it works while it's being explained to them.
So multiple layers of it, multiple levels of extra cost

(01:06:38):
and difficulties of the prosecutors would need to overcome in
order to actually present the evidence that is needed. And
it should be disclosed. Kind of crazy to me, This
makes the perfect case. And you know, I'm not an
open source zealot.

Speaker 11 (01:06:52):
And for folks who don't really understand this terminology, open
sources just software in the most layman's terms, it's open.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
You can see them.

Speaker 11 (01:07:00):
You can evaluate the source code and understand what it does.
Versus here's an executable file and you can't see how
it does what it does. And when you get into
these things that as a society we have to rely
on that the results are correct. That's why you need
open source. So experts could go in and look at
the facial facial recognition algorithms or the election machine algorithms

(01:07:23):
or anything that's critical like that and say, yes, we
understand exactly how this works, and we agree that it
works the way they say that it works, and we believe,
you know, as a result of that, that you can
trust the results of this thing. But when you can't
see it, and worse yet, like in this case, no,
we can't give it to you, and we're not going
to give it to you because it's couched under the

(01:07:45):
law enforcement tactics would be reviewed or whatever. That is
extremely disturbing to me, Like something out of a Twilight Zone.

Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
Most Kopka is the trial six forty seven perfect, Thank
you brother and Neel could get that one in there.
Don't go away one more. You're gonna get your check.
I'm reminded of the jerk one dollar nine cents Apple's
paying out for series violations. First word for odo eggs
to get rid of this day. This reminded me of
the scene of the Jerk. He lost his optograb class

(01:08:13):
action lawsuit. Navan Johnson was writing out individual checks to
pay out the plainness one dollar nine cents for each
person who won the suit got a slice of the action.
Is that what this is? Apple paying ninety five million
dollars in serious spying settlement.

Speaker 11 (01:08:28):
I don't know if you heard me laugh when you
said that. Going out of the last segment, your your
analogy for the jerk, there's just absolutely great Navin and
the glasses.

Speaker 1 (01:08:36):
One dollar nine cents.

Speaker 11 (01:08:40):
And also, yeah, the trial reference was beautiful too. People,
everyone listening to you should go read nineteen eighty four Animal.

Speaker 1 (01:08:47):
Farm and the Trial. The trial is great.

Speaker 11 (01:08:50):
I should read that book anyhow. Yeah, that's more or
less what this is. So it's interesting and I know
You've heard me say this many times over the years.
Generally speaking, Apple tends to be more privacy and security
friendly than many of their competitors because their business model
is different. Their business model is not you and your
data like Meta and Google and others. It's selling you

(01:09:13):
hardware and software. Now, I want to be clear, I'm
not saying they don't collect your data. Of course they do,
but that's not their fundamental source of revenue, right, And
so in general they tend to be more privacy and
security friendly.

Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
You know.

Speaker 11 (01:09:26):
I found this a little disturbing and further reinforcing the
thing that people have asked me about and we've talked about,
because we well, are these things actually listening to you?
And my answer is, well, if you can talk to it, yes,
it must be able to you. In other words, how
could it possibly do something when you ask it to?

Speaker 6 (01:09:44):
Right?

Speaker 11 (01:09:45):
And the issue has always been, you know, does it
listen in a more liberal way than when you just
say the talk the wake word, the talk phrase, whatever
they call it on that particular platform. What is it
doing with data that it might have collected when it
wasn't explicitly commanded by you to do something?

Speaker 1 (01:10:05):
You know, all of these things. And we've talked about
this before.

Speaker 11 (01:10:07):
There's but all kinds of studies that show that these
things generally take a very liberal view to the wake
phrase because and this is one of the points I
try to make about IoT all the time. If they
make them too difficult to use well work the pre
the process very rigorous in order for it to do something,
people will get frustrated and they.

Speaker 1 (01:10:27):
Won't use it. Yeah, someone with a speech impediment can't
say alexa clearly enough. If it's very specific on waking
it up, it won't work with someone with a piece
of speech impediment. So this probably has a whole big
range of words that'll make it operate. But the whole
point that I see is it's got to listen to
you all of the time in order to hear the
operation word, which prompts it to do something correct correct.

Speaker 11 (01:10:52):
So then again the question is what is it doing
with anything that is it capturing what you're saying?

Speaker 1 (01:10:58):
Right when you have political comments, your your curse, whatever
you're doing at home, you know, and your intimate moments
and all that kind of stuff. Clearly the problem is evident.

Speaker 11 (01:11:09):
Yeah, and there's a lot of research out there about that.
A study was done years ago where they took a
bunch of so called smart devices, put them in a room,
turned on a TV, and just saw how often they activated.
I encourage people to go find that. I'll post it
in the notes. It I think would be alarming to
most people. But the point here is, you know, Apple,
while they have claimed no wrongdoing, there was a class

(01:11:31):
action lawsuit Lopez versus Apple. Apple chose to settle it
for ninety five million, which is probably like point zero
ninety five cents to you and me, because they're probably
making that much every minute. And you could if you've
had an Apple phone between basically September of twenty fourteen

(01:11:52):
and December of twenty twenty four and you believe that
your phone has ever incorrectly activated, then you are you
can file a claim. You can earn a potentially as
much as twenty dollars up to five devices. So to Apple,
your privacy is worth twenty dollars or less, because depending
on the number of claims, you might get less than

(01:12:13):
twenty dollars.

Speaker 1 (01:12:13):
You get one dollar or nine cents. Yes, yeah, it.

Speaker 11 (01:12:17):
Would be really good if someone in the listening audience
could work up like an AI video of Tim Cook
with the Navan Johnson glasses and writing writing checks for
twenty dollars, you know, for the basically thesic might see
what I could do today in my spare time, Brian
with some a I can do it.

Speaker 5 (01:12:36):
I know you can do it.

Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
If you do, please share it with us, because we
can put it up on this give up heresy dot
com web page. I'll probably get a cease and assist. Yeah,
we're out of time. But where do listeners go that
have a sery and believe that their the rights or
privacy has been violated? Along these lines?

Speaker 11 (01:12:51):
There is a settlement website, Lopez Voice Assistant Settlement.

Speaker 1 (01:12:55):
The deadline is July twentieth. You know that if you
go to that website you can see the particulars of
what you need.

Speaker 11 (01:13:02):
To do to submit your claim. The bigger point to me, though,
is it's not a knock on Apple per se. It's
not a knock on these voice driven things. You know,
I don't use any of this. I have an Apple phone,
I don't use Siri. The bigger point to me is,
even though they claim no wrongdoing, why would they settle
this lawsuit if this?

Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
If it weren't doing what they claim well, because I
get jurys tend to run away and award massive verdicts,
and lawyers are very, very expensive and they make heap
loads of money. As you pointed out, ninety five million
dollars isn't even going to be noticed by Apple, Hence
the reason to get themselves out of a maybe bigger
jam Tech Friday, Dave Hatter interest it dot Com. God

(01:13:42):
bless you, Dave for all you do, and I'll look
forward to talking with you again next Friday, my friend.
If you have a great meeten and happy Father's.

Speaker 11 (01:13:48):
Day, always my pleasure, Brian, Happy Father's Day to you
and all your listeners. And yeah, well maybe we'll tackle
this time thing I make said, it's pretty scary.

Speaker 1 (01:13:57):
Coming up after the top of our news is Adam
Taylor in Studio America Truth Summit. We'll learn about that
with Adam. Stick around. News happens fast, stay up to date.
At the top of the.

Speaker 3 (01:14:08):
Hour, we're moving very quickly at fifty.

Speaker 1 (01:14:10):
Five KRC the talk station. It's seven six as we
head on into a Father's Day weekend, and have you

(01:14:31):
father's date all the father's out there. Brion Thomas Love
when folks come into the studio to talk, and today
the return of Adam Kaylor. It's always great seeing Adam
and hearing what he's been up to and talking about
local politics with Adam Kaylor. Good to see my friend.
Good to see you again. Brian. Crime is down, Brian, Yeah,
oh yeah, I know it's down.

Speaker 10 (01:14:47):
Accepted over the Ryan where it's up. Yeah, apparently it's
It's absolutely wild. We just had someone just gets shot
point blank. And was that the new shake shack up
there in Clifton sadly, I mean it's I was just
up there. I was at the Kroger like thirty minutes
before that happened.

Speaker 1 (01:15:02):
Oh, you're kidding me.

Speaker 10 (01:15:03):
And this guy was Apparently it was a road rage
incident and a guy comes in. Guys sitting there eating
with his family or something.

Speaker 1 (01:15:09):
This is what I heard.

Speaker 10 (01:15:09):
I don't know those complealy details, but apparently guy comes in,
just shoots a guy and jumps back in his car.

Speaker 1 (01:15:15):
They got him. The cops got him right after that.

Speaker 10 (01:15:17):
But situations like that and then what two people did yesterday,
three people shot, I mean, it's it's crazy, like the
amount what's happened with crime, especially downtown and you know
when they say crime is down, always say for who.

Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
That's a great point, you know, for.

Speaker 10 (01:15:32):
Who, maybe it's down, and in Hyde Park, maybe it's
down in some of these, you know, nicer neighborhoods, but
you know places that have always struggled with crime and
places that we're trying to rehab, that we're trying to
bring back. You know, there's a lot of work that
was putting over the right, a lot of people tested money.

Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
Well, see, that's why no one wants to talk about
crime being up in there, and that's why they try to.
When you know, Sarah Heninger or Herringer comes out and
talks about how her husband got stabbed to death in
their home in Over the Rhine by the former Over
the Rhine business owner, five minutes from my house, they
keep down playing the whole idea that crime is a
problem in the city since then because the optics are bad.
No one wants to live in an area with high

(01:16:11):
crime and all of the work that they did and
Over the Rhine, I'm glad you pointed out it's the
point I made the other day. It's like, who'd want
to live there? All the urban hipsters are going to
flee because they're afraid to walk down the street in
their own neighborhood.

Speaker 10 (01:16:22):
That's right, And yeah, that happened just right down the
street from my house. And this is where it's all
kind of located, is that northern portion of Over the Rhine,
kind of in between downtown and Mount Auburn and in
the west end. Unfortunately, a lot of people that purchase
homes over there, you know, they're starting to question their decisions.

(01:16:42):
There's a lot of Corey Bowman's over there, and of
course there with his business. I mean he actually owns
and runs a business in the city, and then he
has the church as well. And I always ask people,
I say, well, well you're you know, your vote left
or whatever, you're voting for a guy who has no
stake in the city, right, I mean, after what does
he own? Is there anything that is there a business

(01:17:03):
that he's you know, blood sweat and tears poured into.
I mean, Corey actually has a business, two businesses. He
has a congregation down there and over the Rhine, and
he's trying to help people. I mean, someone who's actually
invested his family is invested in that community. And now
he's moving down growing to downtown. He just texted me
the other yesterday and he's moving. He's in the middle

(01:17:25):
of moving, but he's going to be closer to downtown
now and closer to his business. So not only is
he personally invested in these businesses, but now he's moving
his family there, and unfortunately he's moving into a region
that's kind of surrounded by crime. So you know, pray
for everybody that lives in that area because it just

(01:17:47):
seems like, you know, the current leadership is completely.

Speaker 1 (01:17:50):
Dismissive of what's happening.

Speaker 10 (01:17:52):
And you know, it took days for the mayor to
say anything about this situation with this man who's just
stabbed in a buddy of mine. He has cameras set
up all over downtown. He's sending me clips of this
guy just walking through downtown. Apparently he goes in a
dumpster and finds a white blouse in the dumpster and
just puts on a block. It was just like completely
crazy and just walking around looking for places to just

(01:18:16):
break into. I mean, this is all alleged. You know,
we don't know if it's him. It was just a
video that he patched together of a guy just walking
around happened to be around the same time.

Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
Yeah, well it was one that showed I think the
actual have to call him a ledged murderer. But this,
this guy named black who they picked up for the murder,
walking with a knife in his hand down the street,
a cake knife. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:18:39):
Yeah, he's telling me about it the day it happened,
actually early that morning. You said, like a video this
and that, and it's just wild and it's sad.

Speaker 12 (01:18:46):
You.

Speaker 10 (01:18:47):
I almost wonder if that video didn't exist, if there
wasn't anything out there, what would happen. I mean, you
got our prosecutor right now, who's promoting this no Kings
thing that's sponsored by Marxists and who knows who pays
them Chinese Communist Party, Chinese Communist Party probably. And you know,

(01:19:10):
why are you supporting criminals who have come into this
country illegally? Their first act was to come into this
country illegally and an adult. Donald Trump is doing something
about it. He's saying, let's deport these people who are
not supposed to be here.

Speaker 8 (01:19:26):
You are a.

Speaker 1 (01:19:26):
Prosecutor, it's called enforcing the law, and that is your job.

Speaker 10 (01:19:32):
How can you be a prosecutor and you know you
as a prosecutor get criticized for the things that you do.
So here you are now criticizing someone else who's doing
their job as the president of the United States. It's
crazy to me, the hypocrisy. And then you wonder why
they have a seventy percent disapproval rating in their party
right now. I mean, it's the insanity that's in that party.

(01:19:57):
Who's left that's a Democrat, Like, honestly, who is left?

Speaker 1 (01:20:02):
Well, the ones that actually raise their voice in opposition
to the lunacy within the party, like Fetterman for example,
And you think that guy was backcrap insane And honestly,
I don't know if he is sane or not, but
at least he is saying things that make sense to
the average human being, Like he resists some of their
positions and their policies, and like, Okay, there's one guy

(01:20:25):
that's within the Democrat Party that's standing up against the
far looney left part of the party which clearly has
taken over, and he gets criticized from his own folks
for that. You know, it's like, oh my god, you
dare not speak about, you know, this particular issue or
that particular issue. You're bucking the system. But he's not.
I think actually he represents the voice of the sane

(01:20:47):
Democrats in the world to the extend any remain right. Well,
I mean Connie Pillage clearly has been brainwashed by the
far left, lunatic friend of the Democrat Party.

Speaker 7 (01:20:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
Yeah, the Secretary of Homeland Security.

Speaker 10 (01:20:58):
No, she was speaking California, what yesterday or two days ago,
and this Democrat congressman comes storming in throws this you know,
just has this big old it's all theater, Brian, is.

Speaker 1 (01:21:09):
What it is? Well, you see, yes, it is designed
to get clicks design. I mentioned that in connection with
all of our elected officials now dropping F bombs. It's
like and then you read a headline, you know, Nancy
Pelosi as he says the F word or something in
like she did, and you click on it. It's it's
to get attention. We're trying to get And the same

(01:21:30):
thing with the protesters. My regular theme for the past
and these protests broke out is to point out that
the greater Los Angeles community is almost thirteen million people,
and there were several thousand individuals which we who are
participating in the so called protest against ice, not all
of them were throwing rocks and bricks, I will admit,
But if thirteen million people are in the general neighborhood

(01:21:53):
and three thousand people show up, that is a tiny
sliver of the broader population in the area. So they
are loud, they scream, they break things, they draw attention
to themselves, and we all think the world's coming to
an end, that revolution is afoot. But no, it's just
because it's so crazy and people click on that kind
of stuff and people's eyes are drawn to it, and

(01:22:14):
maybe you know, the we're being drawn, our attention is
being drawn to that to avoid our attention being drawn
to other areas that are going on. Oh yeah, distract us. Yeah,
there's a war going on right now in Iran, yeah,
by Israel Baum the nuclear facilities. Another war. You know,
it's just it's crazy what's happening.

Speaker 10 (01:22:33):
And then I mean, obviously in you know, there's nine
hundred thousand illegals apparently in California, actually in Los Angeles,
just in Los Angeles. And you know that electoral votes
are tied to the number of people in your state,
not just in Congress and everything else. It's all tied

(01:22:54):
to the number of people and they count illegals in
that number. So one of the reasons Democrats are so
against deporting these illegals is because it's actually going to
hurt them, yes, politically.

Speaker 1 (01:23:07):
It's not that they're compassionate and that they care about people.
It's that the numbers aren't going to work out for them.

Speaker 10 (01:23:12):
The math doesn't math, and it's going to hurt them
so politically, and I think that's one of the main
reasons they're out here doing this kind of stuff. But
it boggles the mind that this kind of stuff can
happen and that people actually support this. I mean, you've
got a congressman running in on the Secretary of Homeland
Security and then claiming to be the victim.

Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
Alex Paedilla, California Senator.

Speaker 10 (01:23:34):
Senator, Senator, you're a senator and you're acting that way
like a child, like a petulant child. This is who's
left in the party. And it's sad what's become of
the party because you know, I was a former Democrat.
I mean, I grew up poor. You know, I thought
this is who I'm supposed to vote for. These are
the kind people, these are the compassionate people. But the
more you learn, and this is I think why a

(01:23:56):
lot of people in Cincinnati still vote Democrat. They don't
have time to actually dig in to what's happening. They
can't wrap their head around. Uh, the party that they
grew up thinking was the Party of compassion is actually
a bunch of conniving weasels.

Speaker 1 (01:24:15):
That's what's That's what's going on right now.

Speaker 10 (01:24:17):
And they're spending twenty million dollars trying to figure out
why aren't young men voting for us? I know, And
they're dropping F bombs now, Like to your point, every
single other word, what is going on? Like that's not cool,
Like people are dropping F bombs. Isn't going to bring
young men back to you? You know what is going
to bring young man back to you? Quit telling them

(01:24:37):
that they're they're they're bad for being masculine, right, you know.
Quit quit calling them say they're man explaining you all
the time. Quit telling them that they're too aggressive.

Speaker 13 (01:24:49):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
You know that's why you.

Speaker 10 (01:24:50):
Got men sitting in the house right now playing video
games instead of out on the dating scene, having kids
getting married. You got women out they clubs apparently right
now by themselves. Oh, guys are just hiding out in
the house because they're afraid of the hold me too situation.

Speaker 1 (01:25:07):
Let's pausoring Adam Keler back, honor ROLLI is having a
good time talking politics and not going over to the
general insanity of the world. We do have an event
to talk about, and he's going to tell us all
about the American Truth Summon. That another conversation topics with
Adam Kaylor we back hold on, got to figure out
which direction I'm going here. After I mentioned Zimmer Zimmer
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(01:26:12):
if you want to call them for an appointment, here's
the number and tell them. Brian said, Hi five one
three five two one ninety eight ninety three five one
three five two one ninety eight ninety.

Speaker 3 (01:26:20):
Three fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:26:25):
Here it is your Channa nine first warning. Weather forecasts
a lot of clouds and a lot of chances of
rain here, cloudy skies today, afternoon showers and storms, eighty
two rain overnight as possible with mostly cloudy skies and
muggy conditions sixty nine for a while, Buggy and Claudie
again tomorrow with some scattered showers and storms in a
high of eighty clouds and a slight chance of rain
over Saturday night with the lowest sixty eight and on

(01:26:45):
Father's Day mostly clouds, scattered showers and storms and any
high of eighty one seventy one degrees. Right now, it's
time for traffic.

Speaker 14 (01:26:54):
From the UC Health Traffic Center from massage therapy to
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Into Downtown. Crews continue to work on coal Raine over
two seventy five, but even there no delay. Kingram On
fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
Seven twenty one Pikbove KRCD talk station and Happy Friday
to you. Ken Williamson on the flag retirement ceremony, He's
gonna join the program at seven forty. I participate in
that every year and a half, I think last decade
in a wonderful little event there to learn how to
properly retire a flag of Reunion township. That'll take place
one of the multitude of things going on and on
our Flag Day tomorrow. And the Colping Society is going

(01:27:47):
to be in for the shoots Infest which is also
this weekend. Many opportunities to do things other than join
Connie Pillach in protests like what everything I don't know,
Adam Taylor in studio. We got a little bit of
our system there in the first segment. Oh yeah, a
little bit. We had to cover a lot well, and
we didn't even scratch the surface. We didn't even scratch
a surface. We had the main topics that are that

(01:28:09):
are flying around on Twitter right now or X I
guess it is now? Yeah, and truth I guess American
Truth Summit. Speaking of which, what is this all about,
Adam Kaylor.

Speaker 10 (01:28:19):
So, we are building some technology now. We have a
company called Content Credits and we're testing it out. We
need to find a partner to test this out with,
hopefully a big, big publishing company. So we go to
this sub summit subscription summit in Dallas.

Speaker 1 (01:28:35):
Last week.

Speaker 10 (01:28:36):
I met with fourteen different publishers New York Times, Washington Post,
and blah blah blah.

Speaker 1 (01:28:41):
Went down a list.

Speaker 10 (01:28:42):
Uh, one of the ones that was really interested in
working with us, and we're going to go meet with
them this upcoming week.

Speaker 1 (01:28:48):
Is the Epic Times. Some people say Epoch Times. I
say Epoch only too specifically because of the spelling. Yeah,
if you say Epic Times, and I know that's the
appropriate pronunciation. If you're English. It's like tomato tomato. Both
are appropriate. But we supposed to hear Europeans say epak yeah, pc.
But if you want to spell it right, say epoch
epoch And so I know how to send people to

(01:29:09):
the website by pronouncing it that way. But anyway I
use that site. I find it to be very very
informative and well truthful as well, very truthful.

Speaker 10 (01:29:17):
Well, we're meeting with We met with the CEO and
went to dinner with her, went to lunch with her,
you know.

Speaker 15 (01:29:23):
Three days.

Speaker 10 (01:29:24):
We pretty much spent with her and we got to
know her pretty well. And she was in a Communist
labor camp under MAO when she was younger. Her both
her parents were engineers. Well, I guess MAO decided they
didn't need engineers anymore, so stuck her whole family in
a labor camp. Eventually made her way to the United States.
One of her employees, we were talking to him during

(01:29:45):
the summit and he made some I guess comments on
a chat group at one point, so they stuck him
in a detention camp for thirty days. Beat him, he said,
on every part of his body for the first three
days he was there. While showing him copies of what
he said on this chat group. So the first chance
he got to come to America, he seek asylum and

(01:30:07):
now he's an American productive citizen.

Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
Chief Technical Officer was he yeah, I think he's he's yeah,
something like that.

Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
So he yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:30:16):
So we had a really good conversation with him, and
I asked her, I said, so, you guys are a
conservative paper. She said, we're not. We don't consider ourselves
a conservative paper. We seek the truth, that's all she said.
She said, we seek the truth. And then that kicked
off something in my head. And while we're sitting there
at dinner with her, I said, would you would you
be interested in coming to Cincinnati? I said, you know

(01:30:36):
what a lot of prominent politicians right now from the Cincinnati.
You got vivek, you got J. D. Thomas Massey, you
know Bayner, former Speaker of the House, was from here.
Mitch McConnell's not you know, Mitch Ronald ran Paul ron Paul.
I said, you know what, we could probably get Warren Davidson.
We can probably get a lot of really good people

(01:30:58):
to come to this summit. So I reached out to
my friend Gabe at turning point.

Speaker 1 (01:31:02):
He came in. You know, you spoke a little bit
about it.

Speaker 10 (01:31:05):
The folks from AFP American Prosperity awesome, Adam Bowling, and
I mentioned Wrightbart to you there on my PROGRAMM.

Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
At right, Bart would be amazing. We also need an
mc bryan. But but we've got uh.

Speaker 10 (01:31:16):
I think we've got something really good going on, and
maybe Jim Jordan, Jim Jordan potentially.

Speaker 1 (01:31:23):
It's it's I don't want to overlook any of them,
you know, I was thinking when Davidson, yeah, he'd be
more at the top of the list if I had
to start writing there, not to overlook at Warren Davidson.
But yeah, I mean we're you're right, You've identified a
whole bunch of solid folks, if I might point out. Yeah,
so I start rattling these people so kind of you said,
I knew that was an error. Yeah, yeah, well yeah,
but he's from you know, prominent, you know person, big

(01:31:45):
name guy.

Speaker 10 (01:31:46):
But you know, I said, hey, look at all these people.
I'm just rattling all these people off. And she's like, wow,
that's you know, that's impressive. So I talked to her,
talked to some folks at the the CEO of The
Washington Examiner. A couple of days ago, I spoke to
him on the phone. Uh, this woman works with him
who's from Louisville, and she recognizes the fact that there's
a lot of people from here. And Scott Jennings is

(01:32:07):
from Louisville, the guy on CNN who's just like ripping
them constantly. So you've got a lot of really big
name people here. I think we get a conference together.
But you know, being in Cincinnati makes sense. You know,
it's a blue city, blue county obviously that I've run
in in bringing these folks here to tell the truth, right,
this is what I want and connecting some of the

(01:32:30):
journalists or some of the prominent journalism groups. VAZ Media
huge in Central and South America. Now they've come up here.
I think they started in America in the United States
in twenty two and now they've grown to be one
of the biggest Spanish speaking channels out there. So possibly
bringing them in as well. But we're thinking about maybe
late September early October. You know, kids are back in school,

(01:32:53):
people have kind of settled back in after the summer,
and maybe doing it up at the Sharonville convention center
because it's more up in that air, and plus you're
not gonna have a you know, downtown would be probably
a protesting.

Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
Pause. We'll bring out them back to talk a little
bit more about this. Sounds like an amazing concept. I
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Speaker 3 (01:34:13):
Com fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:34:16):
Here's the Channine weather forecast. Kind of repetitive. I will
say mostly cloudy afternoon showers and storms today eighty two
for the high overnight mostly cloudy, muggy chances rain sixty nine,
Mostly cloudy. Tomorrow, muggy, scattered showers of storms, high of
eighty mostly cloudy overnight flight chance of rain sixty eight
and finding for Frisday, mostly cloudy's scattered showers and storms.
High of eighty one, seventy two degrees. Right now time

(01:34:37):
for traffic from.

Speaker 15 (01:34:39):
The ucup Transits Center.

Speaker 14 (01:34:40):
From massage therapy to stress relief fan cancer surveillance. The
UC Cancer Center offers the region's largest supportive services program
for cancer patients and survivors, called five one three five
eighty five see C.

Speaker 15 (01:34:54):
It continues to be a very quiet morning on the highways.
No wha accidents to deal with, no delays either.

Speaker 14 (01:35:01):
I found four seventy one under five minutes from to
seventy five southbound, seventy one wide open pans Field zertle
Set kingbram On fifty five KRC, The Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (01:35:13):
Seventh thirty one, fifty five KRC Detok Station, Brian Thomas
Adam Kayler in studio talking about this American truth. Somebody's
putting together some prominent media figures, news news outlets like
Epic Times, and maybe a bunch of others, and maybe
some prominent right proper thinking politicians will show up too.
As you were just rattled off a great, great list

(01:35:35):
of folks that seem to have some clarity when it
comes to the more complicated issues of politics that are
going on in this world.

Speaker 10 (01:35:40):
Adam, Yeah, and you know, I want it to be
about a lot of things. I don't want it to
just be a big conference of complaining, right I you know,
I want it to be faith, family and truth. I
think would be a really good topic. I've got some
people that I think could could speak to that, veterans.
It'd be great to have a guy like Orlando Sonza obviously,
Fernando Cruz, who's helping me put it together, big donor

(01:36:03):
to the party. Uh, he's been great, helped out vivek
a lot with a you know, having people do his
house for a fundraiser. Fernando's awesome. Maybe some folks from
the da V would be great. Uh you know, maybe uh,
you know, some some police officers would be nice to
have up there just talk about what's going on downtown,
talk about what they see every day.

Speaker 1 (01:36:25):
I think that would be interesting. Education.

Speaker 10 (01:36:27):
Uh, the public schools, I mean, those things are a
disaster and what have those become? Just like Marxist training camps. Uh,
maybe we bring somebody in. I've got a friend royal
Mont Academy. He's the president up there and it's a
private school. Have him come in and talk about like
why are why are more and more people sending their
kids to schools like his? And what are they seeing
college Hillsdale College exactly. So You've got a lot of

(01:36:49):
good things out there that we could talk about when
it comes education, media, misinformation, censorship. At the Times, they
told me they were banned from advertising on Facebook, on Google,
they were demonetized on YouTube. So One of the reasons
we're going out there is because I own a digital
ad agencies. We're gonna kind of help them with with
some of that as well. And then policy, you know,

(01:37:10):
what are what's going on the Washington Examiner, the CEO
told me yesterday. The thing that really sets them apart
is they dig into the policy. So they'll look at
the big beautiful bill, for example, and they'll break it
down for individual groups. They'll say, hey, are you a
real estate investor, Here are some things that are going
to make it easier for you to do this. Are
you worried about regulation? Right, here are some of the

(01:37:31):
things that are getting deregulated. Here, you know, whatever it
is in that bill, they'll break it down for people.
So they're in deep in Washington, and they're trusted by
a lot of policymakers, So GOP policymakers, they essentially look
to them for information.

Speaker 1 (01:37:47):
So since they're not reading their own da I mean, yeah,
let's be honest.

Speaker 10 (01:37:51):
Their aids are built reading those so but but yeah,
I mean, I think the second largest conservative news organization
next to Fox The Washington Examiner, Yeah, yeah, and Epic
Times is the fourth largest newspaper in the country, and
they're number one when it comes to actual like paper readership,
which is interesting. Yeah, yeah, tons, I mean they've got

(01:38:11):
I think thirty million, thirty million daily readers of their stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:38:17):
Yeah, that is a tenth of the United States practice.
That's solid. A lot of that is big, bigger than
I ever imagine at them it really. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:38:25):
Yeah, So you get some national attention here, and you
bring in these big media organizations like the Washington Examiner,
like Epic Times, like VOZ Media, and you bring those
folks here, and obviously being the size that they are,
that's going to bring national attention to what's going on
here in Cincinnati. Sure, and you know politicians, they're elections

(01:38:46):
always around the corner, so you know, hopefully we can
get a lot of them to show up. And just
my connections with the GOP and stuff, I don't think
it's going to be very hard to get those folks here.
But I mean there's people out there that I think,
what's want to sponsor something like this. We've already got
a couple of folks lined up, so if anybody's interest,
so you could always find me.

Speaker 1 (01:39:01):
I'm Adam from price Hill on Twitter.

Speaker 10 (01:39:04):
Still underscore hustling if you want to find me on
there and DM me if you're interested in maybe sponsoring,
or if you know somebody, or if you have any
ideas some topics that you'd be interested in hearing about
at a summit like this.

Speaker 1 (01:39:17):
Yeah, putting together the well, the syllabus that's going to
govern the entire seminar should be fun.

Speaker 10 (01:39:23):
Yeah, I'm excited about it. So, I mean, I think
it's just something that needs to happen. I think this
is the right place for it to happen. And I
think a lot of people around here are pretty politically balanced.
I don't think people are too off one end or
the well, there are some folks that are, I think
too far left probably here. Yeah, maybe maybe somebody who's
supposed to represent everybody but is clearly partisan, like extremely partisan.

(01:39:47):
But yeah, I think, you know, Cincinnati in general is
a good place because you could talk to people here, right,
And I can get a little worked up about politics sometimes,
but it's just like I see the problems that are happening.

Speaker 1 (01:39:58):
I pay attention.

Speaker 10 (01:39:59):
I think a lot of a lot of people that
listen to your show pay attention, and they just get
frustrated because they keep seeing the same things happening over
and over again, the same spending, you know, the insane
spending in Washington. You think things are gonna change and
then they don't change, Right, what's going on?

Speaker 1 (01:40:15):
What's in this bill?

Speaker 10 (01:40:16):
You got guys like Warren Davidson and Thomas Massey who
raised their hand and say, hey, wait a minute, I
thought we were cutting spending. Here we are with another
two trillion dollars exactly in spending. And God blessed Trump
and everything he's doing with immigration, and you know, he's
making a lot of moves for one hundred and what
fifty something days or something in office at this point,
I mean, he's accomplished.

Speaker 1 (01:40:37):
A lot more than most doing it a lot more.

Speaker 10 (01:40:39):
And you know how hard it is when you're trying
to pass legislation to get people to sign off on it.
I mean, there's always going to be some pork in
these bills, and they're always going to be massive, And
if you want to get something like the border wall complete,
they're gonna want to throw in some military spending. They're
gonna want to throw in this in that, And you know,
as a libertarian, it's just see that stuff and it

(01:41:01):
just you just throw your hands up.

Speaker 1 (01:41:03):
Yeah. Well my perspective, if you can't pass an audit
Department of Defense, and you shouldn't get any money or
any more money. And that's just some I mean, I
found out hexit pointed out they were funding through the
Department of Defense to study to shove marbles up cat's
rear ends for the purpose of studying erectile dysfunction and
constipation or something like that. I mean, and that was

(01:41:24):
it was documented. This isn't something he made up. He
was testifying in front of the subcommittee the other day.
It's like, wait, how does that happen? That's right? How
is it that I am laboring, I am working, and
you are working, and we were paying federal taxes and
some sliver of that is going to something as preposterous,
so preposterous that I couldn't even make up that kind
of study just randomly, you know, break up some crazy study. Brian, Well,

(01:41:46):
let me see, how about shoving marbles up cats? But
if you'd think I was out of my mind or
some kind of twisted pervert, but lo and behold, ten
million plus dollars going to that insane. It is absolutely insane. Adam,
I love the idea in the concept always enjoy talking
with you. I appreciate the time you spoll my listeners
me today. You and I will talk again online and
of course here in the fifty five KRC Morning Show.

(01:42:07):
As things develop, as you learn more about America Truth Summit,
please pass along the details here in the morning Show.

Speaker 10 (01:42:12):
I will well, we'll get a website set up here
pretty soon, you know, as we start to nail down
some of the speakers, and yeah, we'll just keep it rolling, all.

Speaker 1 (01:42:19):
Right, Adam ko e h l e R. If you're
trying to search for them and give him some help
or advice or recommendations on the American Truth somebody's working on,
get in touch with them online. Have a great day, Adams,
great talking with you. YouTube run seven thirty eight cut
up in seven thirty nine fifty five KRC DE Talk Station.
We'll learning about the flag retirement ceremony taking place in
Union Township tomorrow with Ken Williamson, veteran he is. That'll

(01:42:39):
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(01:43:04):
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Speaker 3 (01:43:41):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:43:44):
Time for the Channel nine weather forecast, A lot of
repetition of this forecast. Mostly cloudy today, afternoon showers and
storms possible eighty two for the high clouds, muggy conditions
with a chance of rain. Overnight sixty nine, clouds, muggy,
scattered showers and storms. Tomorrow eighty oh night sixty eight
with clouds in a slight chanceerrain. Father's Day, clouds gotter shower,

(01:44:05):
showers and storms, and I have eighty one seventy two
right now. Traffic times from.

Speaker 15 (01:44:09):
The UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 14 (01:44:11):
From Besides therapy to stress relief and cancer surveillance, the
u SE Cancer Center offers the region's largest supportive services
program for cancer patients and survivors, called five one, three, five.

Speaker 15 (01:44:22):
Eight five u SE CEE CEE.

Speaker 14 (01:44:25):
Just beginning to see a few break lights sat bound
two seventy five approaching the Carroll Cropper Bridge from the
Lawrenceburg Ramp northbound seventy five spilding through the cutno major
time delay into downtown Chuck kingbra Month fifty five KR.

Speaker 15 (01:44:39):
See the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:44:43):
Seven forty three coles forty four to fifty five KR
City talk station Flag retirement ceremony, Proper respect to the flag,
proper displaying of the flag, what those stars and stripes
on the flag mean, and how you appropriately retire a flag.
All that and so much more come tomorrow. Vietnam Veterans
of America Chapter six forty nine represented by today veteran

(01:45:05):
Ken Williamson. It's pleasure to have you back on.

Speaker 5 (01:45:08):
Ken.

Speaker 1 (01:45:08):
Welcome to the Morning Show, and thanks for your service
to our country.

Speaker 13 (01:45:12):
Good morning, Brian, thanks for having me. I can't believe
it's been fifteen years we've been doing this.

Speaker 1 (01:45:17):
If I've been doing it ever since you started, absolutely,
Oh my god, I've been saying. I know I've been
doing it for like ten years. I couldn't remember specifically,
and I got the materials. I was like, this is
the fifteenth, and I was just wondering. Was I there
at the first one? I guess I was. It's always
a real honor to be invited. Just saying a few words,
and I have an appreciation, you know, for the boy Scouts.
It showed up, I show up, but also what you do.

(01:45:39):
And a salute and thanks to Steve Tam veteran Steve Tam,
founder of the VVA six forty nine flag Retirement Ceremony.
I know Steve has not been in the best of health,
but man, I hope he's there. But he had such
a profound passion for the American flag, and ken I
love telling the story about how Steve tam when he
would see a tattered flag being flown, like at a

(01:46:01):
business or a home, he go up and knock on
the door and tell him about it and say, you
got to take that thing down.

Speaker 13 (01:46:09):
Yes he would, And he was just a tremendous supporter
of this program, having started it back when we did.
And the stories of him going around and collecting flags
are known across the county.

Speaker 1 (01:46:27):
I'm sure they are. And he I mean he would.
He would start out in a gentle fashion, but if
he was met with any pushback, he could be very
defensive about his position on the under respect for the flag.

Speaker 13 (01:46:42):
Oh absolutely, And sometimes he'd even offer to go out
and buy a new flag. Yes he would to the
people if they couldn't afford it.

Speaker 1 (01:46:49):
Well, speaking of that, we'll talk about what we're going
to do there on tomorrow. But it is an opportunity
for folks to get a flag, because you're going to
have some flags to hand out. A three foot by
five foot flag you got first, what the first ten
people who bring a flag to be retired get one.

Speaker 13 (01:47:07):
Yes, that's correct, and we do a little ceremony at
the end where we present them with a new flag.
So we'll gather their flags when they arrive and give
them a coupon. In that coupon they'll present at the
end of the ceremony and receive.

Speaker 5 (01:47:22):
Their free flag.

Speaker 1 (01:47:23):
That's fantastic. And now, folks, if your flag is you know, faded,
if it's tattered and falling apart, the right proper and
respectful thing to do is no longer display it. So
bring that flag to the ceremony tomorrow. We're going to
be the Union Township Civic Center Amphitheater, which is on
I Colts Road. It's forty three fifty I could and

(01:47:44):
if it rains, you've got an indoor area secured, ken.

Speaker 5 (01:47:48):
Yes, we do.

Speaker 13 (01:47:48):
If it rains, we'll be inside the Senior Center, which
is which is part of that building complex. It's on
the far left side. We'll have signs directing people so
you won't get well. But we you know, following the
Boy Scouts a motto always be prepared. We arrange for
an indoor areas because it looks like we are going

(01:48:13):
to get rained out.

Speaker 5 (01:48:15):
It does.

Speaker 1 (01:48:16):
Well, we're all kind of praying for me because of
this ridiculous protests that are going on all around town.
But since you have an indoor space, we can all
pray for rain for that.

Speaker 13 (01:48:25):
But yeah, that's very true.

Speaker 1 (01:48:27):
So you're going to be there. The Boy Scouts are
going to be They're the ones that walk through the
appropriate that describing what each of the individual stripes represents,
and what the color field represents, and the gradual dismantling
of the flag, and then of course burning it.

Speaker 13 (01:48:45):
Yes, yes, exactly because we indoors, most likely we won't
be burning the flag.

Speaker 1 (01:48:50):
Well, that's true that that's the.

Speaker 13 (01:48:52):
Traditional manner of retiring the flag with the Boy Scouts
will explain what each stripe means on the flag. They
will also do a flag folding demonstration and each fold
has a meaning as well, and many people don't don't
know that. And you know, Steve tam is always talking about,

(01:49:14):
you know, bring your children and bring your grandchildren to
find out how to properly display the flag and fold
it and respect it.

Speaker 1 (01:49:25):
Yeah, and I'm sure there's a lot of adults of
a listening audience that don't know the proper and respectful
ray to retire a flag. So show up. It's usually
you know, lightly attended, which I mean, I don't know
why more people don't show up. But if you want
to feel a little patriotism and honor the flag, which
is kind of a rare thing these days, it's a
wonderful opportunity to do. It. Starts at one pm. Ceremony

(01:49:47):
usually lasts a total of what like an hour would
you say, ken, Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:49:51):
It's about an hour long, and it moves very very quickly,
and there's tons of information that the Boy Scouts will
be presenting. And if you you know, if you can't
make it, you just absolutely have to retire a flag.

Speaker 5 (01:50:05):
We have several locations where you can drop those off.

Speaker 1 (01:50:08):
That's right, and you keep those. Those are all year round, correct.

Speaker 13 (01:50:13):
Those are all year round. Union Township Civic Center of course,
is one of them. Everything Bagels an Eastgate, all Union
Township fire stations, and of course the Claremont County Veterans
Service Office in Batavia.

Speaker 1 (01:50:27):
Of course, thee Belzos making sure you have a place
to retire your flag over there.

Speaker 7 (01:50:32):
Yes, can.

Speaker 1 (01:50:33):
I'm looking forward to it as I always do, and
strongly encourage my listeners. Joe Strekro put a link with
the information about my blog page fifty five car seat
dot com. So in case you're like, well, where was
it and what time was it and what's going to
be going on, you get that information there. So easy
to go to fifty five kr seat dot com for
that and you know, choose something to write to do.
It's Flag Day, so let's remember the flag and learn
something at the same time. Tomorrow again. Forty three fifty

(01:50:56):
I Colts Road Union Township Civic Center, either the the
theater if it's not ring, or inside the Senior Center.
That's a beautiful facility you got out there, Ken.

Speaker 5 (01:51:05):
Yes, it really is.

Speaker 13 (01:51:07):
It continues a lot by the public, and that's a
good thing.

Speaker 1 (01:51:10):
I'm glad to hear that. Yeah, I really am, because
it is such a really nicely built facility. It's just
a really great location too, so easy to get to.
Ken Williamson, I will see you tomorrow at least by one,
if not sooner. I know the one year it was
I was a little bit late. Sorry. One out of fifteen.
You know that was a pretty good batting average.

Speaker 13 (01:51:30):
Yeah, yeah, it's not bad.

Speaker 1 (01:51:32):
Take care of brother.

Speaker 13 (01:51:33):
Thanks We're really looking forward to seeing you and having
a great time retiring.

Speaker 1 (01:51:38):
The flag indeed, and we will tomorrow one pm. Hope
you see a lot of listeners there as well. Ken
take care of yourself and thanks as always for your
service to our country. It's seven fifty one here at
fifty five K see the talk station and a great
time to mention twenty two three on Roup forty two
between Mason eleven and my favorite firearms store and indoor
range and my favorite people who own it, Wendy and Jeff.

(01:52:00):
They are just wonderful, wonderful people, and the staff there
are knowledgeable and friendly and man. Since it's Father's Day weekend,
bring dad in. All dads shoot for free as an
extra shooter on the range. So get some quality time
and with dad, squeeze off a few rounds and maybe
get him a gift card. Yeah, or buy him a gift.
If you're out there with them, say hey, dad, what

(01:52:20):
do you want? And get them a firearm. They have
a great selection of firearms. Prices are outstanding at twenty
two three long guns, handguns. They have a huge selection
of pre owned firearms. Save yourself a little bit more money.
The range is unbelievably safety with the range safety officers
and knowledgeable floor staff to help you with your your selections.
Thank you for carrying microtech knives, Wendy. I carry one

(01:52:41):
every day. They have those there and they also have
a gunsmith classes. You can get dad a training class,
So do that. Get the twenty two three on Route
forty two between Mason and Lebanon to learn more. It's
twenty two to three dot com the number twenty two
five by the word three spelled out twenty two three.

Speaker 3 (01:52:56):
Dot com fifty five krs.

Speaker 1 (01:53:00):
Eighth five coming to at oh six. If you have
Greci de talk station Friday and you know when you
hear German music, thank you mister german Man. Joe Strecker,
executive producer. You know you got some kind of festival
going down in the city of Cincinnati at German Festival,
and it's one of the best ones. I know I'm
exhibiting a little bit of bias, but I was previously
the Schutzendmeister, which made me king for a day in studio,

(01:53:20):
the King of these shuts. Infest Scott along with Paul
representatives from the Culping Society is the German Club that
puts on shitts Infest every year. It's got a wild
history behind it, and it happens to be America's oldest
German festival. They've been doing this since eighteen sixty six.
Welcome to the studio, Paul and Scott. Great having you

(01:53:40):
in here, guys im and congratulations Scott. I didn't know
I was told that you are the king and you're
gonna tell the story about how you become king of
the shuts Infest because it evolves shooting, hence the Shutzuen
Shooting Festival, and I've enjoyed it for so many years

(01:54:01):
and have participated in the shooting competition, much by chagrin,
never did win. But there's two sort of separate events.
You have the group shooting event, but then you also
have the opportunity to become the king, which involves this
cool story behind it. So Scott, let's start with you
and explain the origins of shoots Infest before we get
the details about the German festival, which goes on over

(01:54:23):
three today, right today through Sunday. That's right, okay, So
there you have it, generally speaking, and we'll talk about
what happens when it rains. No problem whatsoever at Colping Park.
But tell us the story behind shoots Infestcott Well.

Speaker 7 (01:54:35):
Shoots in Fest is a festival built all the way
around a shooting competition. That's where it started and it's
spread over the course of three days. Now, even though
the shooting competition Sunday and Sunday afternoon, members of the
Culping Society take a shot at a wooden eagle with
twenty two's. Whoever gets the last piece of the eagle
down becomes king for the year, and.

Speaker 1 (01:54:55):
That carries a lot of responsibility among the Colping Society.

Speaker 7 (01:54:58):
Yes, you become a ambassador for Colping throughout the German
community and the community at large for an entire year.
You throw six parties, I believe it is yep.

Speaker 1 (01:55:08):
You personally, yeah, six six weddings.

Speaker 7 (01:55:12):
It is like a lot like weddings over and over again.

Speaker 9 (01:55:15):
And Scott, right now, you're tempting go for doing one
hundred different events in your reign.

Speaker 7 (01:55:21):
As a hundred king. I think this appearance here is
number ninety seven. So tonight it shoots and Fest ninety eight,
tomorrow's ninety nine and Sunday will be one hundred.

Speaker 1 (01:55:30):
Oh, that's unbelievable. Man, that's great. I've always been told
by the colping folks it's one of those you better
understand because if you're a good shot, you know you
might have a chance of hitting that last flake of wood,
but you better be prepared to do a lot of
work because it's not just the joy of being crowned
king and being a good shot, it's just you've got

(01:55:50):
a lot of responsibility on your hands.

Speaker 7 (01:55:51):
It's a lot of work, but it's a lot of
rewarding work.

Speaker 1 (01:55:54):
Yeah. Well, you're hanging out with a bunch of German
people's usually drinking beer, eating great food.

Speaker 7 (01:55:57):
Yeah, most of the time. I've put on a few
pounds this year.

Speaker 1 (01:56:00):
It's easy to do. And thanks for bringing in the
amazing soft pretzels and the strudle.

Speaker 9 (01:56:05):
Yeah, we we have everything at the coping Shots and Fast,
but we're often known for our beer and we have
a variety of different beers, long before craft beers were popular.
We've got Varsteiner, Polana, Cernick, Ludwig Krombacher, got some other
craft beers like Mad Tree. So on the adult beverage
department we're covered. And then for pastries, we've got sabatis

(01:56:31):
and we've allowed you to partake in a few hot,
fresh pretzels that are in the in the room there.
They just took them out of the oven when I
picked them up this morning.

Speaker 1 (01:56:39):
And you don't know that I've been I've been really,
really really trying to be restrictive on my carb intake.
I walk around the corner and there's two six packs
of ice cold beer, a huge a couple of box
of these amazing pretzels and a big giant boxes survives.

Speaker 9 (01:56:55):
So we take care of our good people here. But
again about you, Brian. For the weekend, we've got a
massive beer hall. It never rains in the beer hall, so.

Speaker 1 (01:57:05):
It's comfortable, it's air conditioned. You got you got the
beverages and the food in there. That's where you go
in and get a lot of the food. Anyway, waiting
before we move away from beverages. Obviously you got a
lot of beers, which is great. You'd expect that with
the German Festival. Do you have the shoots and snaps
again this year?

Speaker 9 (01:57:20):
I believe we do. And we also have the wine
that one of the local vineyards provides. Okay, good, so yeah,
we we we have everything on the fan of the
shoots and snops. Yeah, we got the shoots and stops
and the shots and cart that you can. We'll be
rolling it around the electric shops.

Speaker 1 (01:57:39):
Carts are the crazy party people from the Booman folks?

Speaker 9 (01:57:42):
Oh yes, yes, yes, yes, they will be there with
the uh, the appropriate accouterments.

Speaker 7 (01:57:48):
Yeah, so you'll have theger sandwiches.

Speaker 1 (01:57:50):
Oh you know again, they just memories of my father
and my grandfather sit in his basement stinking the entire
room up. And it wasn't a huge room. I mentioned
that to my listeners before. Just Rye bread, Limberger mayonnaise
and red onion slices was how they would eat it. Man,
you could smell that from a mile away. Never been
a huge fan of Limber, but it's there for folks

(01:58:12):
who wanted in terms of the uh, the Keg tappings today, right, that's.

Speaker 7 (01:58:18):
Right, we've got failure from Germany. Felicia Hoffna's she has
seven hundred thousand YouTube followers on her channel, and so
this Keg tapping is going to go global. It will,
Oh that's cool. I'm sure it'll be live broadcast on
the YouTube channel.

Speaker 1 (01:58:34):
Well, we're like sister cities with Munich, aren't we.

Speaker 7 (01:58:37):
There we are FLI is from.

Speaker 1 (01:58:39):
Yeah, yeah, that works out great. Yeah, as luck would
have it, so putting us on the map at least
in the Greater Munich area. And that what times of
keg tapping.

Speaker 7 (01:58:48):
Keg tapping is right at seven pm tonight seven pm
tonight at Colping Park yep. And for those of the
more health conscious, we do have a one k beer run.
It only has two beer stops in the run, so
you know, you get that and then the King will
hear it be there at the end of the of
the one k run for your shot of schnaps of

(01:59:11):
your choice. And then we also have a steinholding contest
on Saturday from a holfper house and then of course
we have the major shooting on Sunday, so lots of
things to do.

Speaker 1 (01:59:22):
And the steineholding, you know, that's when you got a
full stin of beer and you have to hold it
straight out perpendicular to the ground until parallel.

Speaker 9 (01:59:30):
Parallel the ground, last man, last woman standing. And some
people are like they practiced this. There are some crazy people. Look,
they get barbells and they hold they spend all their
days holding a barbell, like a ten pound barbell straight out.
Take some stamina to do that. That's one word for it.
We're actually the prelims to advance all the way to Munich.
If you win Cincinnati, you go to Cleveland and New

(01:59:52):
York the Munich.

Speaker 1 (01:59:53):
Oh this is a global competition is Oh that's wild.
I didn't know that.

Speaker 15 (01:59:58):
Cool.

Speaker 2 (01:59:59):
All right.

Speaker 1 (02:00:01):
Now you always have some all kinds of sort of
events going on. You get the culping dancers or something
like that. Yes, yes, I'm one of them. So we'll
be dancing.

Speaker 9 (02:00:13):
We have the Ensign dancers, we have the donor shop
and dancers, and they happened throughout the weekend as well,
normally twice, like we dance Saturday and Sunday, both at
six o'clock. So it's it's really great to see the
old traditions that you know are from the old country.

Speaker 1 (02:00:29):
Oh yeah, well I've gotten to the dobbin Trobas books.
They were here for Schwabinfest last week, right, and so
we talked last week about how all the German clubs
and they're a whole bunch of them. They give you
guys all play nicely together. Well, absolutely, just the parade
is going to happen as well.

Speaker 7 (02:00:47):
Yeah, yeah, there's the parade today for Friday's parade, it's
the cake tapping parade today at six forty five. That's
a smaller one. On Sunday, two o'clock is the main
parade to open the ceremonies for shooting at five o'clock.
I will join the new King, whoever that may be,
for his parade.

Speaker 1 (02:01:05):
Get your wallet out, buddy.

Speaker 9 (02:01:07):
But it's a great a great honor, it is it
souys great. And then also we've got a lot of
great food. We have Yeager Schnitzel dinners and chicken dinners
made by our coping families.

Speaker 1 (02:01:18):
So you even sell the seasoning too, oh for the chicken,
I could very well be I don't know that. Yeah,
I bought some of them at the festival one year.

Speaker 9 (02:01:28):
It's a great family event. Bring your kids, bring everybody
you know, you'll have a great time. And again we've
got plenty of indoor space under the tent, so you
won't have any problems no matter what the weather is.

Speaker 1 (02:01:40):
Right, well, I'll tell you what. We'll take an early
breaker and bring you guys back and we'll give the
address again. Some of the more details about the time,
the times of the various events, and a little more
information about the food because I had my thoughts and
mind on one particular dish that I love that you
guys always have and I'm sure you got to go
on this weekend. So more on the Culping Society. Awesome
co Colding Society shitts and Fest taking place this weekend.

(02:02:03):
It's a fifteen to fifty five krcy Detalk.

Speaker 3 (02:02:04):
Station Don't Go Away fifty five KRC.

Speaker 8 (02:02:07):
The Capital one cardholders can score their iHeartRadio music Take
nineteen if any above carrisy Detalk Station.

Speaker 1 (02:02:15):
Shuts and Fest begins today. Show up any day either today,
tomorrow or Sunday. Enjoy what we call umutlei Kite, which
is just basically having a great time drinking beer, eating
great food and institutio to talk about all that. Coping
Society members Paul and Scott. The facility is located at
one zero two three five ten two thirty five Mill Road.

(02:02:36):
They've got plenty of parking and of course because it
looks like it's going to rain, no worries there still
show up and enjoy. They have lots of lots of
space indoors and a huge tent that they have they've
erected for the event. But we'll keep our fingers crossed
that at least the rain doesn't land in that greater
area so everyone can enjoy the commutic kite. You've got

(02:02:57):
special Father's Day thing going on. You were talking off air,
and I didn't realize fathers get in on Sunday.

Speaker 7 (02:03:04):
Yeah, fathers are free on Sunday, free admission. And it's
a great place to take dad, to have a couple
of liters of beer.

Speaker 1 (02:03:10):
Oh absolutely, and enjoy some great food, the schnitzel. You're
gonna have the schnitzel this year.

Speaker 9 (02:03:16):
I was thinking about the Jaeger Schnitzel and the chicken
dinners and great home cooked meals. You'll you won't go
away hungry for sure. And also the event is Friday
from six to eleven, Saturday three to eleven, and Sunday
one to nine. And as we mentioned four the admission
is five dollars per person, except that's get in for

(02:03:37):
you on Sunday.

Speaker 1 (02:03:38):
Okay, Now, I mentioned off air about people competing in
the just the shooting contest, the not the contest to
be king, you got to be a Colping Society member
to do that. I get that all day long. But
the teams are filled, but the teams are each comprised
of members of different German clubs, as I understand they are.

Speaker 7 (02:03:57):
We've got an umbrella organization in Cincinnati, the GaCl German
American Citizens League. I believe there's over thirty, maybe forty
member clubs within that umbrella organization. Each of them are
eligible to have a team or two in the club
shooting competition.

Speaker 1 (02:04:13):
Okay, and as of this morning, there was only one
one team space open. But that you said, that's probably yeah,
that's probably sold out by now, that's great. This is
what happens when you wait on Campa Disbey. Get in
line early, right, you can be on to get a
team together next year. I was fortunate enough to be
invited by Jim and Anna Stuttenberg, who Jim wasn't Jim
a prior king as well.

Speaker 9 (02:04:33):
No, but he ran the shot and fest and his
wife for ten years.

Speaker 1 (02:04:38):
Absolutely just absolutely wonderful folks.

Speaker 9 (02:04:40):
We have a deadly gratitude of then, for all the
work they've done last ten years to get us to
where we are now.

Speaker 1 (02:04:45):
Indeed, so we mentioned the dancers.

Speaker 9 (02:04:47):
How about music, Yeah, we have music, German music and
even some rock music. I believe on in the evenings.
But we've got in the pavilion, we have music in
the hall, we have music out in the field. We
have music. So you can find any type of genre
you'll be you'll be good for any of the German music.

Speaker 1 (02:05:07):
Hey, Joe Ramstein is coming. He said, it's about all right.
Some people got that, you know, it's it just depends
on your taste, right. Oh man, So craft work also
the craft works getting back together to uh to show
up at the shoots infest this week as well Altobahn.

(02:05:29):
Some people got that one in that one too. Uh
So what else do we need to know?

Speaker 7 (02:05:33):
Talk about the Grand Raffle?

Speaker 1 (02:05:35):
Oh, the Grand Raffle? How did I overlook that?

Speaker 7 (02:05:37):
Go ahead? We have four tickets to give away for
the Bayron mentioned game on Sunday. That'll be drawn Saturday.

Speaker 1 (02:05:43):
The rest that's the soccer game, the club World Cup,
the World Cup soccer game. See, I'm not a fan
of soccer. I don't follow it, you know. And and
I had forgotten about that because we had talked about
here in the morning show. I don't know a month
or so ago that it was coming. That's a big deal.

Speaker 7 (02:05:58):
It is Cincinnati. The host that that is amazing. Yeah,
a lot of good work done by a lot of people,
I'm sure. Yeah, and problems. I guess FC Cincinnati.

Speaker 1 (02:06:06):
I mean, I'm sure they were heavily involved with that,
and absolutely, you know a little skeptical and jaded and
cynical about it because tax dollars were at work when
they built that place, but not nearly the amount that
went into the pall or the pay Course stadium. But
that's I don't want to go down the political road
while we're talking about heaving fun.

Speaker 7 (02:06:21):
And soccer is not your thing. There's other prizes in
the Grand Raffle, premium seats for the Reds. We got
Bengals versus Steelers tickets oh out of and some FCCT
tickets that includes warm ups at the field level.

Speaker 1 (02:06:34):
Oh wow.

Speaker 7 (02:06:34):
So there's four big prizes in the Grand Raffle, all
sports related.

Speaker 1 (02:06:37):
Well vunderbar and they have items for sale too, usually
like steins and and Durndell's and things. Are you doing
that as well this year? Plenty of merchandise.

Speaker 9 (02:06:47):
Absolutely, And if you need more information on the websites,
there's a couple of different websites. There's www dot Colping,
Cincinnatia dot com and shoots and fests since with a
Y dot com.

Speaker 1 (02:06:59):
Yeah, and from my non German friends sc h U
E t z E n F E s T since
he with a Y dot com. You don't need to
remember that fifty five kr SA dot com English speaking,
Spanish speaking, German speaking you can remember fifty five kr
SA dot com. Joe's got the links right there, of
course he does. So have we left out any details
that my listeners need to know about or other draws

(02:07:21):
for the festival, because right now you got me convinced.

Speaker 7 (02:07:24):
Now, if you like watching kids shoot, shout out to
the junior King, my son Martin Schultz, and the junior Queen,
Vivian DeFranco. The kids shoot at targets also on Sunday
while the adults are shooting to become king.

Speaker 1 (02:07:35):
Oh great, Well, you know the one thing I meant
to have you tell the story about why you shoot
at a wooden eagle. This is like this goes back centuries, correct.

Speaker 7 (02:07:45):
Yeah, fifteen hundreds or fifteenth century, I believe, so they'd
be the fourteen hundreds. Child was in the woods and
an eagle was going to attack the child, and a
marksman hit that eagle with the crossbow.

Speaker 1 (02:07:58):
That's why you have an eagle as a t They.

Speaker 7 (02:08:00):
Made that gentleman the king for the year in the town,
and we've done this every year since the fifteen hundreds.

Speaker 5 (02:08:05):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (02:08:05):
Interesting system of elected officials. It's like the lady of
the leg holding a loft ex caliber, thereby signifying that
you know, Arthur was going to be King of the Britons, right,
Joe seeking his head at me. I'm sorry, it's Friday,
Scott paul Man. It's been great having you in studio.
I hope you have a glorious shits infest. And again,

(02:08:27):
don't worry, folks, if it rains, show up anyway. They
got wonderful indoor space and tent space. You still get
to enjoy all the entertainment and fun and food and
these shooting activities and the crowning of a naming and
crowning of a new king on Sunday. Right, good luck
to whoever that is, and that right on over. You'll
have a great time, a great time, folks, have a
wonderful weekend, and happy Father's Day, to the extent it

(02:08:48):
applies to either of you. I hope you have a
wonderful Father's Day and looking forward to it myself. Eight
and again again real quick as we close out this segment,
fathers are free. You get into the ships infest for
free if you're a dead on Sunday, So take advantage
of that. A twenty six right now. If you have
kc DE talk stations, stick around. We've got more to
talk about, and I will take phone calls if you

(02:09:09):
care to call in.

Speaker 3 (02:09:10):
This is fifty five KARC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 5 (02:09:18):
Here.

Speaker 1 (02:09:18):
It is your channel. Iine first one and one. Forecast
repetitive as it may be. Here you go again. Mostly
cloudy afternoon showers and storms today with a high of
eighty two, got a sixty nine low overnight with mostly
cloudy sky's muggy and a chance of rain. Tomorrow guess,
mostly cloudy, muggy, scattered showers and storms, high of eighty,
mostly Claudi overnight with a slight chance of rain in
the low of sixty eight, and on Father's Day, mostly Claudi,

(02:09:41):
scattered showers and storms. I have eighty one, seventy two
degrees right now. Let's get a traffic update.

Speaker 14 (02:09:47):
From the UCLP Tramphing Center. From Massionce Therapy to stressed
for theaf and cancer surveillment. So you see Cancer Center
offers the region's largest supportive services program for cancer patients
and survivors. Call five one, three, five to eighty five
uc CC getting reports of a new accident. He's found
two seventy five and forty two in Sharonville northbound fourth

(02:10:08):
seventy one.

Speaker 15 (02:10:09):
Had a wreck on the bridge for a very short time.
That's now clear. Chuck ing Ram on fifty five krs
the talk station, Hey.

Speaker 1 (02:10:18):
Thirty on a Friday, and a happy one to you,
and happy Father's Day all the dad's out there, And
a happy Father's Day to my father, looking down hopefully
with a smile on his face. I sure do miss
my dad, and I know a lot of folks out
there that have also lost their fathers. But isn't a
wonderful thing that we had one in the first place.
At least mine was in my life, and I thoroughly

(02:10:41):
appreciate it. And of course I blussed to still have
my mom around. Take a mom out for a birthday
dinner tonight. Let's get to the phones five one, three, seven,
four nine, eight hundred and eight two three talk pound
five fifty on at and t phones. Care to call,
got a comment, love to hear from you. Let's see
what Bobby's got this morning. Bobby, thanks for calling in.

Speaker 5 (02:10:57):
Hey, my brother.

Speaker 12 (02:10:59):
Happy father Day, Happy Flag Day, Happy Trump's Birthday, Happy
military celebration for two hundred and fifty years. Happy Juneteenth
coming up, and especially today, Happy Friday, the thirteenth.

Speaker 1 (02:11:13):
There you got got lots of things to be thankful
and happy for on a Friday. And in advance of
the song and the bumper music I love so much.
What a wonderful world as long as you're looking in
the right places, right, Bobby, that's right.

Speaker 12 (02:11:25):
My friend. Just look forward and stay out of their way.

Speaker 1 (02:11:30):
Stay out of the way. He go ahead.

Speaker 12 (02:11:35):
No, you know, if everybody just mind their own business
and shut their pie hole, wouldn't it be a wonderful world?

Speaker 5 (02:11:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:11:42):
Well, see, that's why I'm a libertarian, Bobby.

Speaker 15 (02:11:44):
You know, I trust you.

Speaker 1 (02:11:45):
I know how I know you can live your life
as you see fit. I trust you to do the
right things, or if you do the wrong things, live
with the aftermath and the repercussions. But I'm not here
to tell you how to live your life. I will
stay out of your way. Bobby, and I hope that
you do have a wonderful life. You know.

Speaker 12 (02:12:02):
It's just that's exactly right, my friend. There are consequences
for persons.

Speaker 1 (02:12:06):
Behavior, Yes there are. Well, we'll see if Connie Pillage
prosecutes people who maybe get out of wine tomorrow at
this uh left wing Chinese Communist Party funded protests rally
that are to rallies that are taking place across the
country that she was widely supporting with her childish, petulant
child tweets and refusal to speak with the media about

(02:12:26):
them the other day.

Speaker 12 (02:12:28):
How I work there, Well, one suggestion I'd like to make,
if there's any patriots like one attendem left wing organizations,
one thing I'll recommend do not take your cell phone.
Leave it at home. They remember the old saying don't
take your gun to town, So leave your gun at home.
That's what they need to do with the cell phones.

(02:12:49):
They're tracking them.

Speaker 1 (02:12:51):
Ah, but yeah, that's something we live with every day. Bobby.

Speaker 12 (02:12:55):
I know people don't realize that.

Speaker 1 (02:12:57):
Well I know, well some people don't realize it. But yeah,
I mean, even if you don't have you know, your
your Google tracker software on which I keep mine off
your phone tracking software. I keep mine up. They still
can triangulate where you are with the cell phone towers.
They know exactly where you are at any given moment
if you own a cell phone, although you can take
one if you get a Faraday bag. But then again,

(02:13:20):
you won't get telephone calls or information coming into your
cell phone that way, but it will prevent them from
tracking you. I personally am not bothered by the reality
of being tracked. I mean, I'm bothered by the fact
that it exists as a concept that it is easy
to be tracked, that our government is actively doing that
at any given time. But you know what, that's the
reality of using cell phones. If you don't want to

(02:13:40):
be tracked, then just don't own one. But a cell
phone might be a valuable thing to have at an
event like that, To the extent someone starts getting in
and engaging in what could be characterized as criminal conduct,
you might want to be able to record that.

Speaker 12 (02:13:55):
Right, That's exactly correct, my friends, all right, be vigilant.

Speaker 1 (02:14:01):
Be vigilant, and since by default they can track you,
if you own a cell phone, then you may as
well bring one. See I'm gonna counter what your recommendation
is and say definitely bring it because you may get
something valuable on video by taking it. Bobby, God bless you, sir.
I have a wonderful weekend, and again, Happy Father's Day
to you. Two five on three seven four nine fifty
eight hundred eight two three talk pound five fifty on

(02:14:22):
AT and T phones. Yeah, and I got a'd make
of it what you want. Connie Pillage stays quiet after
a social media post. We had Tricia Mackie trying to
interview Conni Pillage the other day. She held a press conference.
She offered ten minutes from what I all accounts the
cards on video. Uh, and she was talking about the

(02:14:42):
Nazis that showed up the pro Nazi demonstration, you remember
that and Hamion Canty Prosecutor County. Pillage said there was
no prosecutable crimes committed by the neo Nazi demonstrators on
February seventh and Evendale. So that was the purpose of
her holding a press conference. Came on the heels of
this this horrific post she made on her personal social

(02:15:04):
media page. I'll emphasize that this one didn't come out
of the Hamilton County Prosecutor's office. But it got a
lot of people really angry because of the vile nature
of her comments against the Trump administration, him specifically and
the administration generally. Generally, he's backed up by vile humans
whose accent advice indicate they want to destroy our democracy.

(02:15:25):
Please join me Saturday, No King's Nationwide Day Defiance. So
she's clearly revealing her political stripes. But when asked about
that specific post, she wouldn't answer. Sharon Coolidge, who is
her spokesperson, came running out and ended the confrontator or
the confrontation, I guess one might label it that, but

(02:15:47):
Tricia Mackew's question wasn't answered. She wouldn't address the topic.
And interestingly enough, and what's your thoughts on this? Connie
Pillach deleted the post that got people enraged and outraged.
I know some people agreed with her. Of course, there
are some people that agree with her. But given her

(02:16:07):
capacity as a Hamilton County prosecutor, as so many have observed,
if something were to happen at the No King's Nationwide
Day of Defiance and one of the leftists that shows
up there screaming and yelling and in anger about whether
it's deportation with the LGBTQ movement or anything else people
are angry and divided about and they commit an act
of violence, that person, probably, if it's in Hamilton County,

(02:16:28):
will be dealing with Connie Pillich in the Hamilton County
Prosecutor's office and given her an endorsement of this No
King's nationwide Day of Defense. Her obvious political bias has
revealed on her personal Facebook page. Would she prosecute someone?

(02:16:49):
And I don't necessarily think that she found no prosecutable
crimes committed by the neo Nazi demonstrators to be reflective
of her reaction if we do have actual crimes that
might be committed, because we talked about this a lot
the neo Nazi demonstrators, I mean some were arguing they
should have been arrested for being in the streets and
some are arrested for you know, how could all these

(02:17:10):
people be in a U haul with those seat belts
And isn't that an offense and violation? We speculate all
day long. But according to Connie Pillage, no Also the
twenty one CP Solutions and independent group hired by the
police department also agreed and sided with police for not
arresting anyone. So various different folks from various different political

(02:17:31):
stripes all in full agreement that there was nothing there
in the neo Nazi demonstrators except the exhibition by a
bunch of idiots expousing a ridiculous philosophy of life. But
insofar as Pillage is concerned deletion of her post, I
mean she obviously believed in what she was saying when

(02:17:53):
she posted it. You know what it takes, you know,
a conscious effort to sit down and write a post
that long and go into a rant it's good and
it's a coherent, rant, unhinged message perhaps, and then posting it.
That's intent. You wanted the world to hear what was

(02:18:15):
on your mind. You were in support of this nationwide
day of defiance, and you, using your leverage as an
elected authority, elevated it so that more people would show up.
Why would you delete it? Just a question? Maybe you
have an answer to the question, feel Fred to give
a called me right back. It's eight thirty nine fifty

(02:18:38):
five the talk station.

Speaker 3 (02:18:40):
Hey, can we be real for a time.

Speaker 1 (02:18:46):
Time for another repetitive weather forecast. Let's see today mostly
cloudy with afternoon showers and storms, and I have eighty
two clouds over night, muggy storm chants or rain chance
anyway sixty nine for the low. Tomorrow high eighty scattered
showers and storms with mostly cloudy skies and muggy conditions
again overnight mostly cloudy with a slight chancell rain sixty eight,

(02:19:07):
and another mostly cloudy Father's Day with scattered showers and storms,
high at eighty one seventy four degrees. Right now, let's
get a traffic update. Chuck from the.

Speaker 14 (02:19:16):
UCL Transit Center. From massage therapy to stress relief, fade
and cancer surveillance. The UC Cancer Center offers the region's
largest supportive services program for cancer patients and survivors called
five month three five eighty five U see see he's
found two seventy five slows after you get past Bostellar
to an accident at forty two in Sharonville. Cruiser cleaning

(02:19:38):
up a wreck near Mainville. That's on twenty two, just
above forty eight. Chuck Ingramont aty top kr Seed the
talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:19:51):
Eighty two fifty five kra Se detalk station. Yeah, well
to the news is and there's some developments. I just
wanted to get to of course you probably know by
now if you've listened to any of the news or
read anything anywhere. Israel attacked Iran's nuclear facilities and some
of the weapons systems there. Woke up to that this
morning in an effort to prevent Iran, of course, from

(02:20:14):
well creating nuclear bomb that they probably would use on Israel,
and some serious coordination on this. It reminded me a
lot of the Ukrainian's ability to bring in and hidden
drones into Russia to strike all those air bases and
other military targets from close range. And you think about

(02:20:35):
Russia and how is it that they were able to
do that. I mean, they're at war with Ukraine. You
think they'd be looking out for this, and maybe they were.
This didn't catch it well by all accounts this morning,
at least as is reported, Israel was pretty much able
to do the same thing and getting weapons and drones
into Iran. And here's another interesting, you know, fun fact.

(02:20:58):
I saw this one on Fox News reporting Israel says
he was able to trick the top commanders of Iran's
air force into gathering together for a meeting. This was
how they were able to wipe out so many of
the top officials in Iran's military. According to the official
from Israel, we carried out specific activities to help us

(02:21:22):
learn more about them and then use that information to
influence their behavior. We knew this would lead them to meet,
but more importantly, we knew how to keep them there.
And he put it out that the strikes were more
successful than they hit in Israel it originally anticipated. I
guess they wiped out more of the top military officials
than they were even hoping for, because it was widely

(02:21:42):
reported that. Even Iran confirmed that some of their top
people were killed in the strike, so that's pretty wild. Also,
International Atomic Energy Agency reporting that the facility, the bomb facility,

(02:22:04):
or the enrichment facility, call it what you want, it's
that Nancans facility, Iran's largest uranium in Richmond site, confirming
that it was heavily damaged. So quite successful in the
attack they were. As for his part, President Trump, he's
now calling on Iran to make a deal and warning
that the next attacks are already planned and they would

(02:22:27):
be even more brutal than this opening strike in what
Israel called Operation Rising Lion, he said on truth social
media not that long ago. Excuseually not that long ago.
I gave Iran a chance, after a chance to make
a deal. There has already been a great death and destruction,
but there's still some time to make this slaughter. With

(02:22:48):
the next already planned attacks being even more brutal come
to an end, Iran must make a deal before there
is nothing left and save what was once known as
the Iranian Empire. Close quote. That's a pretty bold statement
from the President of the United States of America. And
I personally and for my partner can draw your own conclusions. Otherwise,
I do not want the United States to be embroiled

(02:23:10):
in a conflict another war anywhere, period, but certainly not
involving the Israelis and the Iranians, it seems to me,
at least I think. And Trump also pointed out something
to the fact that they have out all of our
our great military hardware. He said, Israel has access to

(02:23:33):
lethal military equipment manufactured by the US and that, in
his words, they know how.

Speaker 7 (02:23:37):
To use it.

Speaker 1 (02:23:40):
All, you know, packaged into a broader concern for a
variety of reasons about the known Godaways or anybody else
that came into our country illegally during the Biden administration.
You know there's some crazy people in the world stating
the obvious, and this might serve as an impetus for
one of these looney tunes or even maybe terrorist cell

(02:24:03):
members to launch an attack within the United States of America.
You know it can happen. Look at nine to eleven.
Train pilots are pilots trained right here in the United
States flying jets into our buildings, killing thousands of people. Hey,
we live in a world of drones. It can be
acquired on Amazon, for God's sake. I'm sure it doesn't

(02:24:24):
take much technology, knowledge or information, information and technology that's
widely available out there on the Internet to create a
homemade bomb and blow something up. Hey, haven't talked about
this stuff on Friday, but you know, it's just reality
and reality that we find ourselves in. So at least

(02:24:44):
keep your eyes peeled and be aware. Eight forty seven
to fifty five KC the talk station, be.

Speaker 9 (02:24:48):
Right back, fifty five KRC dot com Man, trouble in
the bedroom not anymore?

Speaker 1 (02:24:54):
Are extra special weekend for all the dads out there.
Joey Gee.

Speaker 15 (02:25:08):
Buses too, Blue Phone.

Speaker 1 (02:25:15):
Sat quote a four old indeed got our Flag Day
retirement celebration tomorrow's Flag Retirement celebration tomorrow or Knowledge and
Information event. Union Cemetery is where that's going to take
our Sorry I Colts Road in Union Township. I'll be
there the information at your five careseea dot com. We

(02:25:37):
had uh Ken Williamson from the Vietnam Veterans Association, which
is behind the flag retirement ceremony. Then on earlier with
the details. You can get them all a fifty five
care Sea dot com got the shoots and Fest going
on this weekend, so put a smile on your face
and enjoy Father's Day as well with free entry for
dads at the shoots in Fest. Let's get Bill's call. Bill,
thanks for calling today, and happy Friday to you.

Speaker 12 (02:25:58):
Happy and happy Father's Day.

Speaker 1 (02:26:01):
Back at you if it applies.

Speaker 6 (02:26:04):
Hey, I real quick. I think I think I know
why pills the whole deal with the post and why
it came down, and the tone of it and everything.
And I speak from experience on them. I think that
sounds has all the earmarks of a late night drunken rage.

Speaker 2 (02:26:22):
It does.

Speaker 6 (02:26:23):
I'm serious. I've done stuff like that when I had
too many beers. It sounds exactly like what happened there,
I'd be willing to bet money on them.

Speaker 1 (02:26:32):
You know, you may be onto something, Bill, because we
all know if you drink, the first thing that gets
shut down is that little voice in your head that
typically pops up when you're sober, that says, you know what,
this is a really bad idea.

Speaker 6 (02:26:46):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, And we.

Speaker 1 (02:26:51):
All have calltless experiences as we reflect back on our life.
When that little voice is shut down, probably write a book.

Speaker 6 (02:27:00):
And over the last few years I've prayed very hard
on that every day and I've pretty much eliminated it
out of my life.

Speaker 1 (02:27:06):
So well, good for you, Good for you, Thank you,
Thank you, Bill, and appreciate your insight and commentary on
that one. You may be right. I don't know. Does
Connie Pillage drink? Joe, do you know? Maybe a little bit?
You don't have any insight information on that though. I
don't want to suggest anything, but we'll talk off air.

(02:27:28):
Oh I think I'm a John Joe Strecker's thoughts on
the situation. Anyway. I won't comment. I just sort of say, listen,
it's a possibility, so don't do that. Trying to make

(02:27:54):
a certain sense of objectivity about what you are doing.
Try to you to step outside of yourself before you
hit enter. Is this gonna haunt me? Is this gonna be?
Is this gonna be something that I'm going to live
with regret over? You can force yourself to ask that question.
You can turn that little voice back on if you
just think about it. It just won't voluntarily pop up

(02:28:16):
if you're in that state. And Joe also recommends deleting
the first draft. Something I learned in when I was
a lawyer, Joe, the FCC non compliant profanity that would
come out in first drafts of letters when I was
reacting to a phone call I just got off with
with opposing counsel, you know, And then my secretary or
my administrative assistant had to type that up, and then

(02:28:39):
I had to clean it out, edit it up, and
make it sound a little more palatable and friendly exactly that.
Get it out of your system first. Just don't fire
off the first draft or sit on it, don't send it,
and then review it the next day see if it's
suitable for posting. Otherwise, like Connie Pillach, you have to
delete it and leaving all of us to speculate why

(02:28:59):
did you posted in the first place? Folks Tech Friday
with Dave. Had a great conversation with Dave, who also
recommends read Franz Kafka's The Trial in addition to nineteen
eighty four. Adam Kaylor and Studio on a political rant
for the first segment, but also this great concept he's got,
the American Truth Summit, putting together news organizations and prominent figures,

(02:29:21):
political and otherwise together to have a summit about truth
and politics and things of that nature. It sounds like
it's going to be a wonderful event. Hoping it comes off.
It's in its infancy right now. So if you've got
some ideas for Adam listening to the podcast and help
him out, he's easy to get in touch. With Ken
Williamson on the aforementioned flag retirement ceremony. I am looking
to being there, looking forward to being there. Fifteen years

(02:29:42):
in a row. I've been able to participate in that.
It's always a distinct pleasure to do so. Plus the
culping shoots infest information for five carese dot Com on
that Joe Strecker, God, bless you, my friend. Thank you
for doing all the work to produce the show. Without you,
it would not go Monday Morning Christopher Smithman and Monday
Monday again, Happy Others Day with all the dad's out there,
and don't go away because Glenn Beck's coming up. Stay

(02:30:04):
on top of the day's biggest stories at the top
of the OLM and.

Speaker 3 (02:30:08):
That's so important.

Speaker 1 (02:30:09):
Another update coming up on fifty five KRC, the talk
station

Brian Thomas News

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