Twenty twenty four Election Headquarters. Our country's just falling apart and we need a major change. Fifty five KRZ the talk station eight five. Here at fifty five KRCD talk station, Happy as I can be. Got it one full hour in studio. Congress and brad Winstrop congresson Winstrip, not at the RNC. He is here. He's got more important things to do. I'm just kidding. I know you've got a whole lot on your plate. We have so much to talk about this morning, including what you have been doing in
lieu of going to the convention. And you've got a lot of great work to let my listeners know about today. But to start off, as you suggested, you might want to hit the ground running with the attemptive assassination of Donald Trump over the weekend and the cold. I mean, every morning I wake up to something that makes it look even worse than the day before, by way of failure of the US United States Secret Service. Oh, the roof had too much of a slope, Congressman, That's why no one was
perched up there? Are you kidding me? Welcome back to my friend. It's always good to see you. Well, it's a good to see you, Brian. It's always good to be here. Yeah, I've spent the last couple of days in DC. I've got this Pandemic Commission, if you will, the Pandemic Committee that I chair, and we've got to get our report done by the end of the year. And so I was up there with staff putting everything together. We've had so many letters and transcribed interviews,
hearings, and it's on everything to do with the pandemic. So we're pulling that together and we can talk about that more late later in the show, if you want to. Yeah, and fair enough, that was what our plan was. But again, you're the one that wanted to start off with comments about the endeavor that crazy kids, the murderer is efforts to kill Trump. Yeah, I thought, I'm eager to talk about this situation. One. We obviously need investigation. I'm an intelligence committee. I tried to give
as much information as I can. We don't really have oversight over the Secret Service, but at the same time, we're getting information about how our agencies responded in the preparation for it. It doesn't make sense to me, Brian, you know, I'm military. I was at a place where we were attacked three four times a week, and there was a lot of sniper fire going on in our region while I was in Iraq, And so you're always
looking to where the possible sites could could be. You know, you should be able to stand where the president is going to be standing and take a look around and say that's a potential site. That's a potential site. The slope of the roof. You know, you that's comical. I mean, if it wasn't so sad, a pathetic, apathetic, we would all it would be like a joke like she was. She was saying that as a joke, but she wasn't right. And why don't we then why don't you
have a drone over? I mean, if something so impossible to position someone there wasn't the kid did it? Yeah? Exactly able to squeeze off around and almost ended Donald Trump's life and did end the life of that very brave firefighter who tried to was there just to save his family. When you read
the accounts of that, it's heartbreaking. What I have been told is a local policeman went up on the ladder yep, and so you may have her yes too, But he had to duck because the guy took a you know, aim at him, and it's just his head exposed at that point. So I can understand that, But why not a more robust response, you know, once that that was seen, I don't know. But then I
guess he turned and fired on Trump right away. Maybe that helped save Trump's life because he didn't have time to maybe aim as well as he would have liked to have aimed. I don't know. Trump turned his head just at the right moment, and tell if you watch that, it's undeniable that he just just the moment he turned his head to look at that that that prompter, that's when that shot rang out and hit him in the ear. Because
I mean, you've seen the graphic. If he had had his head in the position it was in before, the backside of his head wouldn't be there anymore, it wouldn't be and it would have been an incredibly ugly, ugly seeing. I do want to give credit to the to the firefighter who you know, protected his child, and the way the family has responded. You know, the daughter said, you know, I had the best dad in the world, and you know, the wife said, he'd do it all
over again. I mean, pretty impressive, wellpressive display of heroism. I mean, rightfully, so Trump gets credit for standing in defiance after being shot when he still could have been under under fire. I mean, they didn't have that situation secured yet, they didn't know if there were more shooters out there. And maybe some people could say it was a dumb thing for him to stand up, but it was a defiant, very brave act. One could say was uplifting for the crowd. It was a symbol of, you
know, his strength. But then you've got the firefighter who literally lost his life doing exactly what the Secret Service is paid to do in defense of the president or, as this case is, the former president, and the president has recognized that, oh heroism of those that took a hit through all of this, and they're true patriots in my mind for sure. But you know, it's like a lot of things. I had one interview like, you
know, well, what do we do now? This is like right afterwards, I said, we drive on. I said it's the baseball shooting. Yeah, you know, we got together right after that and said, I'll be darned if we're going to be deterred and not play that game. We're playing that game, right, and that's what most Americans would do. Most Americans would do, and that's been the history of America. We don't we take a hit, we get back up, and we're not going to let
evil people dominate us. Yeah. I had one listener, this was day before yesterday, call in and say, these people should all be in like popemobiles, you know, behind bulletproof glass and you know, always surroundings. It's like, no, that is not what you do in response. You don't cower and capitulate to this. You stand up in defiance to it. You prove them that you're stronger, you're a better person than them by not
surrounding yourself with bulletproof glass. Twenty four to seventy What kind of life would that be? Anyway? You don't want to give them that satisfy? No, absolutely not, absolutely not. Well, I just this call for unity when you hear it from the Democrats, and you know, I know Republicans are guilty of divisive comments and statements as well, but it's sort of when you look at the political landscape and the goals of the far left, which
has taken over the Democrat Party, their goal is division. I mean, it's to divide the country on any possible lines, sexuality lines, school choice lines, pro or against police, racial lines, DEI dividing people up into little you know, checkboxes and marks, division division divisions. So to hear a call for unity, especially from anybody on that sort of Alexandria Casio Cortez part of the camp is just nonsensical considering it flies in the face of what
they're looking for, which is to divide us all. Yeah, there really does seem to be the goal of so many. And look, there's a lot of Democrats I work with, especially when we're talking about health and military and veterans and things like that. We can get a lot done in those areas, and then just some common sense things I think. You know, it's easy sometimes to get Democrats on board with some of your bills, because American bills now they are part of conservative values, but I sell them as
this is good for America and here's why. And you can get some people on board. That's a unifying message. And we don't see that from from the left very often, not the ones you see on TV. Yeah, and you know, I got to asked one time, you know, how
do we calm down some of the chaos. And I said, well, and this was with someone in the media, and I said, well, it would be nice if the media paid more attention to those that actually get things done than those that never get anything done but do a lot of talking and spend a lot of time in front of the camera. Yeah, Squeaky Wheel gets agrees, especially in media. The more batcrap and saying your comments or viewpoint, it's more likely it is. It's going to be broadcast over
and over again. I think you're going to get more interviews. Yeah, And but I will say this, you know, Yeah, we've got people on our side with a lot of rhetoric. It's usually not violent in nature. No, it's not. Theirs is violent in nature. You know, you saw get in there. You've seen this for years. Go ahead, get out there, get in their face, go to their homes, interrupt them at dinner exactly. You know, bring a weapon to the home of
a Supreme Court justice. I mean, these are the things you see happening. And you take a young, impressionable kid twenty years old, if what he's hearing is that Donald Trump is a person who's a dictator. Donald Trump is going to end democracy and you may be even getting that in school today. That's the problem. And so what they're not talking about in school is
what's really missing. You know. Do you look at a person's presidency in school and can you teach kids that, you know what, President Trump quit sending money to Iran, leading sponsor of terror in the world. President Trump took out Sulimani, who's responsible for killing so many Americans, especially during our war in Iraq. I saw a firsthand. Do they say that President Trump stood up to President ch and put economic pressure on him. Did they say
that the leader of North Korea quit firing missiles under President Trump's leadership? Do they point out that Putin didn't go into to Ukraine under President Trump but he did under Obama and Biden? Or his Nobel Peace Prize worthy efforts in the Middle East? You got it. That's next done my left, see, and that's the one to me that stands out more than anything. You know, Barack Obama gets elected and he's given the Nobel Peace Prize for what for
being elected? For being elected? And Donald Trump actually sowed the seeds of peace between previously in essence warring countries and solidified some stability for Israel, and nobody gives it. Nobody even mentions that one monumental achievement in the history of negotiating peace to the Middle East. Well, I got another one, the USMCA, the United States Mecvolcano Agreement. Not only was it bipartisan, it had union support. So you tell me who's the uniter. Tell me who
can actually bring everyone together and to the table. But but but but but evil orange man races xenophobe, homophobe, misogynists. But but but but let the pause from it. We'll bring Congressman once for back. He's got some things to talk about, the China information, looking into the COVID. We're going to talk about DEI in medical school, but maybe even more broadly than that, among other conversation topics with Congressman Brad Weinstrip. First, perfect timing,
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Head on over to the website twenty two three. The number twenty two followed by the word three spelled out twenty two to three dot Com fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station, the exclusive audio home on NBC's coverage of the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics intimacy, those special talkstation. Happy Wednesday to you, of course, always happy when Congressman went brad Winstrips in studio for a full hour. And that's what we're doing right now with Congress and winstrip got to
get your thoughts in comments about JD. Vance. Of course, local boy made it big. He's now the vice presidential choice for Donald Trump, which surprised a lot of my lists. I got to be honest with you, Congressman, because, of course, some of the comments he said about Trump going back quite a few years twenty sixteen, you know Nazi and you know
city he'd rather vote for Hillary Clinton or something along those lines. Clearly he has made amends with Donald Trump since Trump selected him, and an amazing opportunity. What a backbench. We laugh at the Democrats and their struggles to find anyone who could substitute Joe Biden out He had probably six really solid potentials for vice presidential choice. And what with Jadvans. What's your reaction to that? Well, I think it's a good choice. I like JD. JD impressed
me before I ever met him. When I read his book He'll Billy Elgy and got to know about his life and then I met him a few times, and then it was obvious he wanted to get involved with politics, and he did, And when he ran for Senate, I wrote a piece about why I was for him and why I thought he can bring so much to the table. You know, at a young age of thirty nine, he's got a lot of depth and breath to him and and the capability of being
compassionate understanding from just about any walk of life. Here's a guy who went from abject poverty, domestic violence, addiction in the family raised by his grandmother to Wall Street. He went from welfare to Wall Street. I mean, with a stop in the military in between, with the deployment and then law school. He used as GI Bill the way you're supposed to to advance yourself. Your military service is patriotic, but it also comes with a benefit that
you've earned. And he's just done all of these things. Those are life experiences. And look, and I've said about going into office, is do something else first before you go to office, exactly, And here's someone who has but he's done a lot by thirty nine years old. Look, I joined the military at thirty nine and just started my twenty five year career in
the military. Then, so it's pretty impressive what he has done, and I think he can reach out to multiple generations because of his experiences and multiple walks of life. Well, and you're right, I mean solid Who can criticize someone who volunteered and served in the America's military honorably, who demonstrated business acumen and was in fact successful, and again coming from that terrible life that
so many will use as an excuse to stay in the same spot. Oh, I grew up in a terrible family and my mom was a drug addict and Helen, Hell, am I supposed to advance in the world when you know I've I've been dealt this terrible hand. It's now Here's Cinderella story right there as you off air, you commented on it. That's really what Jadvans is and a great learning opportunity for people who think they can't get out from
under the weight of that situation. Yeah, exactly. And you know, we have safety nets in our country, and I'm glad that we do. I'm glad to live in a country with safety nets. But they're not supposed to be a hammock, as was one said, Right, and you know, Democrats talk a lot about we got to tax the rich more, but they don't really talk about any success in lifting people up out of poverty with these programs. And that's what we've been trying to change as Republicans all along.
Yes, let's help people in need. Any one of us could be in poverty someday, but let's make it a path to something better. Well, that's that welfare work for welfare program. You know, you have to engage in some effort merely asking you to participate in the workforce for a while
in order to justify the benefits. Hell, you could parley that into a full time, full paying job, which would give you better benefits and give you some honor and dignity rather than being stuck with the ubilical court of work. And yet the Democrats, no, no, we can't have that. That's right. And JD. Vance understands how that can happen. You know, he didn't get where he got by winning a lottery ticket. No, he actually worked his way out of there. He saw an opportunity for a
better life. And I think that that's a great example. And you know, you talk about you know, he said things about Donald Trump. Look I've had the experience, you know, some time times in my medical practice, but definitely within politics where I may have thought one thing about somebody until I got to know them. And that's the key. And I try in Washington to not negotiate and do things through the press, because then you never get to know the person that may be getting in the way of what you're
trying to accomplish. Reach out to them, get to know them. And I think that's what happened with jd. Vance. They got to know each other and realized, hmm, maybe it's not what I thought. And also I think he probably had a chance to take a look at the policies that Donald Trump put in place that were working and making America better. Right. And remember when the most of these comments that people referred to happened was twenty
sixteen, before he had time to prove himself. And Donald Trump did not come into that role with a clean slate. I mean, he was open to criticism from Republicans and Democrats for a variety of different things, one of which is Donald Trump really wasn't a Republican. He was a Donald trumpion, right, right, That's what his life has always been based on. But after four years he demonstrated that he moved away from it's all about me to
it's all about America. And I think that's what appeals most to people about Trump. Well, he certainly isn't in this for him. No, I know his life, and those are the better people in public service that I see are those that don't need to be there. I say that always about Congress. If Congress is the best job you could possibly ever have, you probably shouldn't be there. Bouz, we'll break Congress with Winster back. We
got a few more segments before the close of the show. A twenty six right now, if you have keseit the DOALKX station family owned an operated since nineteen ninety nine, celebrate in twenty five years this year. Cullen Electric, Andrew Cullen, congratulations on the success of your business with an A plus with a BBB and very very satisfied customers for all your residential electric needs. He's
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Cullenelectriccincinnati dot Com fifty five KRC four more tire for your weather. Got the scattered showers and storms today, mostly clouds eighty three. Tonight, things improved partly cloudy, dry, cooler, sixty two for the low, seventy nine the high tomorrow with mostly sunny skies, few clouds over night. Fifty eight for the low, and eighty two are high on Friday with the sunny skies right now seventy six. Time for traffic from the UC Help Traffic Center from
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of the southbound seventy one ramp. Chuck ingramon fifty five krs. The talk station A thirty one fifty five krc DE talk station Brin Thomas wishing a happy Wednesday and turning back to Congressman brad Winstroup is in studio for the full hour, talking about a variety of different topics. Of course, we talked about the assassination attempt got JD. Vans out of the way in terms of you you're astute observations on him. And now we pivot over to Congressman brad Winstrup.
What are you working on? Working on a lot of things, which is in part why I'm not at the convention, because there's the NDAA come up, and I'm working on some amendments that I think are going to be very helpful to military medicine, and not only that, but better for our troops. And some things that are not only better for our troops but for
our for our civilians, which are pretty interesting. But one of them that I want to talk about, especially for our local audience, is an amendment that would provide a starting point a trial to have a working relationship between the military, between military medicine and civil civilian medicine. And so in particular, we want to start with Wright Patterson Air Force Base and their military assets there
and the University of Cincinnati a Level one trauma center. But it's not just trauma, it's an operation for basically what end goal or what endo Okay, So if we were in a situation where you know, are wounded or are ill, if you think about bioweapons, which COVID made us keenly aware of, if you think about those things, you could have so many casualties that the military medical system has overwhelmed. So how can we tie our casualties in
with a civilian center? And you see has already engaged so much with the military, it's a great place to start this kind of trial. And then vice versa. I for our country is under attack and we have some more casualties or more illness than we can handle. Can we engage directly with our military healthcare system? Okay, well you're forward thinking on that. But what frightens me about this is you're talking about right, Patterson Air Force Base,
University of Cincinnati. And I understand you. You see trauma center, they see this kind of thing all the time, but these are domestic locations. These are here. Are you suggesting that we may be facing a situation where we have a whole bunch of casualties civilian or military on our own soil. Well, if you you know, you don't necessarily have to say that COVID was a bio weapon, but it showed what a bio weapon can do, and certainly that was on our own soil, and so you have to be
prepared for that. But on the other front, you know, our casualties don't always stay in theater, right, No, we evacuate them. And so if we're doing evacuations of you know, thousands of troops, Okay, where are we going to put them all? Our military treatment facilities aren't prepared for that large of a number. So let's be prepared. Let's not find ourselves in a situation like we did with COVID, not prepared for a pandemic.
Let's be prepared for a larger scale problem. Well, since, thankfully the wars and conflicts we've been engaged in and thus far not been on our soil other than our American military history, we understand that revolutionary warcutch sector. But you know wounded in the Middle East, wounded that I meanly aren't they taken to hospitals, say in Europe for example, closer venue, closer point of caring for them, right, so we have cooperation agreements with them.
That's part of the step by step process. Well, let me let me tell you we have a good evacuation system. We may need to make sure that it's enhanced for large numbers. So, for example, in Iraq, would get we would get wounded, we would stabilize them as soon as we could travel, have them travel, We'd put them on a bird. They'd go to bogram which then put them that was that was rotary wing. Then
we get them on fixed wing. After they're more stabilized at bogram, then they go off to lown stool and then from lawn stool to Walter Reid place like that, and this all happens within twenty four hours sometimes Brian so and and the SEACAT system Critical Care Transport Team System, which they do some of that training in a simulator at UC and I've been there for it. It's a flying ICU and it's a pretty impressive system. And so we have that
system in place. You know, you want to get him out of theater if their life is threatened, and get him home because part of your recovery sometimes is very much helped if your family can be around them. Yeah, I would imagine congresson winstrip And thanks for putting in the context of something that I wasn't thinking of, which is of course like a pandemic. Well, pause will bring it back and I will ask him with the NDAA because I
know he's outspoken on his anti DEI in medical school. Are we going to get rid of DEI in the American military by way of the Authorization Act? Pause for a moment. Prestigion terriers called John Ryan, that is prestigion tiers. He is one of the same. It's his business and he is a kitchen remodeling specialist. And I don't know if anybody's better than John in terms of kitchens. He's done kitchens almost exclusively for the last thirty five years plus
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nine fifty five KRC one of the best ways to find you. Here's your Werother forecast scatter showers of storms today mostly clowns and eighty three for the high clear up every night, a few clouds sixty two for the low sunny skies Tomorrow seventy nine. Thursday night, it's going to be a low of fifty eight with a few clowns and a sunny Friday with a high of eighty two seventy six. Now time for traffic. Chuck from the UCL Tramfic Center from
every day as to the most complex conditions, the U see Health. We're back Neck and Spine Center redefines some possibilities for every patient. Learn more ad you see health dot com. I continue to see slow traffic northbound fourth seventy one from Grand into town. An extra five there. Northbound seventy five is an extra five out of Errolinger into the cut in southbound two seventy five slow
go from the Lawrenceburg Ramp onto the Carrol Cropper thanks to the inspection. Chuck Ingram on fifty five care see the talk station eight forty fifty five KR see the talks station Congresman Brad weinster Fin Studio going through the issues, and we certainly won't have time to get through all of them, but two segments here beginning with this one real quick here, I don't want to focus too long on it, but on the heels of my conversation with retired Lieutenant Colonel Matthew
Lohmeyer the other day on his book Irresistible Revolution, Marxism, Goal of Conquest and unmaking of the American Military. Uh, just a really eye opening book, and the problems within the American military along these DEI lines. It's ruining recruiting, it's ruining morale, elevating people who are not qualified to higher positions because they in the appropriate check marks on the DEI boxes. This is destroying
our fighting power and our ability to recruit more people. Can you have in the d n DAA a removal of any funding whatsoever or a prohibition on teaching DEI or otherwise relying on DEI principles in America's military? And so we have done that. We have done that. That is in the current form of the NDAA, which is moving forward. Did I the Senate have a comparable
provision in our version. That's what we're working, Okay, and then you know, the presidents sign it. And we've done efforts like this before the president has signed. The problem is they keep doing it and we're catching them. Just recently, somebody sent me a photo that they took or anything they had they had things like National Right to life as well. I read that this morning is a terrorist organized I saw the PowerPoint slide on the wall.
Now Fort Liberty, what was Fort Bragg? I mean, they just do it anyway. So you know, I immediately got in touch with Personnel, Chair of Armed Services Committee, and we're calling them in. It's got to stop, and there has to be consequences to the people that get to continue to do these things. And that goes across the board. Brian, you know, used to be the military was the agency that where unethical was unlawful, and they don't mess around, and in the other agencies they do whatever
they darn well please. Because the military has criminal liability called the UCMJ Uniform Code of Military. The other agencies don't have that. We put that in PISA reform. There's now criminal liability if you violate the standards of what should be happening. So what we did, something like crossfire hurricane can never happen again. And if it does, somebody's going to jail and and and certainly losing their job rather than just walking off and being hired by CNN. So
that's the thing. So we're in that vein SOI DEI has now gone into the medical schools, and so doctor Murphy and I doctor Winstrop. You know, we have a bill that no more funding from metal schools that do DEI. They're having people take an oath to this stuff, and they're putting people in medical schools that aren't prepared. Look, I am all for creating opportunity for people that don't normally have it. That's why I'm for school choice. I knew in second grade I wanted to be a doctor, so I went
to schools that would prepare me for that type of curriculum. But a lot of people don't have that opportunity because they don't have a choice on where they can go to school, and they end up going to schools that don't prepare them for it. You can't turn twenty one and say, well, your grades aren't very good and this and that, but because of who you are and what you look like, we're going to put you into medical school.
That's what's being done. Yeah, and UCLA finally, the professors are speaking up there and they're basically saying, we can't train these people, we can't teach them. They're not capable, they're not they shouldn't be here. The schools have gone to pass fail. They've gone to many have gone to pass fail, you know, so you can just get everyone, well they passed,
Yeah they passed. But you know, I was a residency director when you're and I know with my residency they told us, you know, we've looked at your grades, we looked at your board scores, we've looked at your recommendations. Now we want to know if you're a hard worker or not. So in other words, you eliminated a lot of people based on the academic part and didactic part and everything else. But now are you capable of working hard? And do you have the skills to say, be a surgeon
and do this and that. That's what we're looking for in residency. You do a pass fail system for as a residency director, you're in the dark. You are in the dark about who you may want to recruit for your program. That's frightening, isn't it? Though? And you know what, I never in my career, and I could name several people of color, etc. Women that are the most outstanding people in their specialty and in their career, and you never tell them. Did anyone doubt Ben Carson's capabilities as
a pediatric neurosurgeon. No, but isn't that what's going to happen. Are people going to want to know, well, is this a DEI doctor? Really good? And so we did a press conference with this bill, and you know, we doctor Murphy and I were being challenged and we had several doctors out there in the press conference. We were being challenged on it. He said, well, the numbers of certain groups, you know, all this identity politics, number of certain groups aren't represented very well in medicine.
And you know, I said to one guy, I said, you don't insist on on on this in in sports, you don't. You know, I got it. I kind of got into it with EMMITTT. Smith on one thing when he was asking what I'm doing for DEI for Intel in Ohio, and I said, I'm going to make sure my district people know there's job opportunities there and made the most meritorious, best candidate get the job. Yeah, and you know, prepare yourself for it. You know, it's
like, but hey, did you do that for your offensive line? Are you kidding me? You know His action was, well, that's just sports, right, No, that wasn't emittt Smith himself. But that was another guy where I brought that up, the guy who was at the press conference, and I said, well, we have what about in sports, because that's just sports. I said, yeah, the other's life and death.
That's why are you kidding me? You know, if the absolute best person you know, you know, I tell you I wouldn't be able to pick a Dei hier in medicine. And you know, if they're standing in the line, although if my never met him before, doctor demands that I refer to them by the gender pronouns they or them, I know I've got a dei hire in front of you. Oh yeah, exactly. Well, I'll tell you during that press conference it was great. I don't know if you
know Burgess Owens. He's a congressman from Utah. Burgess Owens grew up in the segregated South. He was one of the first to get a football scholarship to a major college. He has a Super Bowl ring with it with the Raiders. He wrote that he wrote a book called Liberalism, or How to Turn Good Men into Weenies, whiners and whims, and he handed it to this guy and his elitism. Because of course, this guy said, well, my father's a doctor. Oh yeah, you've got an in you know.
I'm sure you can find the care that you need, you know, because of your connections through your father. But the average person out there on this threat, especially from like rural and underserved communities, good luck with that duck with whoever they're in front of. Y Yeah, no choice and no knowledge in the matter. That's possible. In Congressman back one more segment with brad Winstrip after I mentioned Fast and Pro Roofing ultimate roofing company. Fast and
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long. The business is founded on the principle of honesty. You give people a square deal, you tell them the right information, and you are not going to have to worry about your business model and they'll give you the free upgraded shingle Certainty Landmark Pro fifty years Shingle. If you're going for a shingle replacement you need one, get the fifty years shingle. Talk about peace of mind. But it's not just shingle rules, and it's not just residential roots.
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scattered showers and storms today with a high of eighty three. Then if things get better overnight, dry, cooler sixty two, a pleasant sunny day Tomorrow seventy nine down to fifty eight with just a few clouds. Thursday night Friday a sunny day as well, with the high of eighty two. Closing out at seventy sixty degrees. Time for final traffic check from the U see up tramphingks center from every day HS to the most complex conditions, so you see
help backneck and spine center. We define some possibilities of every patient. Learn more and you see how Cruiser're working with REX on both sides of thirty two. Now near Batavia, it's a little bit further in than Bower, which is the first suspense I heard. Are actually a little bit closer to Olive Branch Stonewick. Traffic from South Bend seventy five continues slow through Block one.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC the talk station, Hey fifty want fifty five KRCD talk station Brian Thomas closing up the hour of commisson Brad, when's your
bread? Earlier you mentioned the coordinated efforts with the NDAA to get the hospital, the private hospital systems and the military hospital systems coordinating so in case we have a mass casualty event, which in which you interjected, or like a COVID kind of thing, and I was like, wow, okay, but you mentioned like a biological weapon is you know if you look at COVID as a biological weapon. What kind of good is it to have a weapon that
literally kills your own population, which of course happened with China. We had this conversation off air, and you mentioned a very frightening, frightening thing as we segue into your cutting off funding. Yeah, and I'm not saying that this particular you know, COVID nineteen was a biological weapon. If they have a biological weapons program in China, We've known this for years. They've talked about it openly, and they talk about using coronaviruses. But there's other things
too. The more they have, like data on people in general all around the world, gathering it unfortunately through things like twenty three and meters which the NA they get your DNA, so they may be able to potentially craft something that could then just target certain DNA. Right, So you could create something theoretically anyway that will target non Asian people. Right. This would be the concern, right, that this is something you're capable of doing. Look,
gain of function research is risky. Doctor Fauci's even said that as far back as twenty twelve, but he thought it was worth it. Personally, I think we don't need to do that we have enough that we can do with AI. If you want to look at existing viruses and try to predict what they may become and how they could possibly become infectious to humans, we can
do that through AI. We really can modeling absolutely, and we know what components of the virus make it more infectious to humans, so you know we can do that, and we're doing I'm all for surveillance of things that could be a potential pandemic or just even local illness, but to create something dangerous like that is very concerning. And the Chinese are looking at those types of
technologies right and we're hoping to fund this on top of it. So not only are we sending him money, but they are in the United States with companies that are doing things that harbor our personal health information, not necessarily our name, they don't even have to have that, but they're getting our health information and what we're made of, if you will, and that's concerned. I have a bill. It's a bipartisan bill. It came out of the
China Commission, which Mike Gallagher was chairing. He left Congress and I took over the bill and it's with another Democrat, ROJ Chris no Morthy who's on Intelligence Committee with me. He understands these dangers and so we have a bill will that will target these Chinese companies in the United States that they are not
getting any kind of funding from the United States of America. And ultimately we need to do like what we've done with TikTok Is You've got if you want to have this company here, you're going to have to sell it and to an American interest because we can't have the CCP gaining all this information on us. And those are the steps we have to take. Quite honestly, Brian, we're a good ten years behind on this, and the sooner we do
this the better. Well that's true assessment, but it's the reality we were living with today. And thankfully we have people like Congressman Winstrop trying to take care and keep us safe out there. It's gonna uphill battle. Congressman Winstrip Glad we had these times together. I'm gonna miss having them after you retire. I know I'm wishing the best of luck when you're in your future endeavors, but we've got several months before that kicks in, and i know I'm
going to have you back. At least I hope to have you back on in the morning show between now and then. We'll do that, and maybe afterwards too, we'll see. Oh I don't know what I'll be doing next. Hell, they could hire you at CNN or Fox or something as a as a political consultant. So you will continue to carry that that that that weight with you, or that this street cred with you even after you're out of office. So yes, I'll try to be in the fight. We'll
do that, and I hope you are. We need more people like you in that fight. Eight fifty five folks, have a wonderful day. If you didn't get a chance to listen live. That's Textpayer Protect Lines Dave Williams on earlier about the GOP Party platform, among other topics. Congressman Warren Davidson for a couple of segments reporting live from the RNC, and of course the
full hour of Congressman weinster Pier in Studio fifty five KRC dot com. Thanks as always the Joe Strekker, producer of the program for all that you do. Tune in tomorrow for Jay Ratliff, iHeart media aviation Expert and everybody else we got on the lineup. Have a great day folks. Glenbex coming right up, so stick around Worldians don't exactly happen on a schedule. What the latest jump Dings do at the top of every hour fifty five krc BE talkstation,
