General Mike's song.
It is are you ready to go? Always do? Why would do anything?
Hey? Thanks, thanks for tuning in again. This is for the defense of the American people. I am Attorney Brad Coffel. That is Attorney Eric Willison, affectionately known as Snarkmaster General. And a tip of the hat to our sponsor, Chezron Automotive Group. Love those guys. We'll talk about them a little bit later in the show. Wow. Uh, General, there's this middle class candidate who wants to be president.
And to be fair, she probably did graduate somewhere in the middle of her class.
I'm watching this middle class candidate do all the right things. It's a perfectly run campaign. Oh, certainly, she has tremendous depth of knowledge on foreign and domestic issues.
A very pleasing laugh.
Very It's just it's kind of one of those laughs that just warms you up.
Oh.
Yes, yes, like like a hot apple cider sure in.
The fall with a lot of alcohol in it.
General, did you watch the Al Smith dinner and Trump take the stage?
Yes? I did, Holy cow, wouldn't have missed it.
I almost missed it. Buddy of mine. Buddy of mine texted me FaceTime me give any friends that just FaceTime you instead of calling you.
I pick typically don't pick up a FaceTime request.
I maybe just in your only you have an only fans page.
I had to get rid of it.
It's just too much work. Well you can spend all the money you were making on your only fans. No you can't.
And all these these eighteen year old girls calling you all the time, I'll.
Stop, Okay, all right, so I get a FaceTime. Last night, Michelle and I were just we had a little bit of later evening and I'm I'm home. We've got the fire, we've got our dogs in the couch. Of course, the kids are gone off to college, and it's the fall, the crisp, cool air. I'm like, man, this is nice. What a nice relaxing evening. We've got the The Indians are playing the Who the Indians, Oh Indians Cleveland.
I thought they changed their name. Now they're just oh, just their Indians now they don't they took off the Cleveland Park Good the.
Cleveland Engines, and the Yankees Instant Classic. Last night. I've seen you kind of figure out when we're you know, we're recording the show. But I get this FaceTime from a dear friend of mine said, are you watching the Al Smith Dinner? I'm like, holy cow, I totally forgot. We jump on rewind watch it from the beginning. Wow, guys, if you haven't seen this yet, make sure you go on the YouTube's and type in Trump Al Smith Dinner and it's it's been going on since nineteen forty five.
It's to raise money for Catholic charities there in New York City and in order to keep expenses down, physical responsibility. Sure, it's held at the.
Waldorf, Yes, the Waldorf Astoria. And he's doing all this standing right next to Chuck shueh oh.
It is absolutely priceless. I can't wait to watch it again.
Kamala, Kamala something skips it? Yes?
Who are the thirty year old thirty two year olds that are running her campaign into the ground? Thank you first of all for all the missteps. And you know what, while we're at it, Democrat Party, thanks for anointing Kamala Harris. Is it still too late to bring Joe Biden back?
That's what people are wondering right now.
You saw a little lobbying going on at Ethel Kennedy's funeral.
Yeah, I think that Kamala had to change the air in her tires last night so she couldn't make it.
I am just blown away. I in general, look, I want to I want to get into this middle class business of Kamala Harris in all sincerity. And we're going to talk about Shared Brown today, which let me give you a little trailer, a little sizzle reel on Shared Brown. I know almost nothing about the guy. I knew almost nothing about him, and he's been in Ohio electoral politics for fifty.
Years, since nineteen seventy four.
Fifty years. We're going to spend a lot of time on mister Brown. But first we've got to go. We have to just talk about the machine and it getting exposed with the coup on Joe Biden and then this Kamala Harris and now you got the Biden Clinton machine. When those two they don't they hate. Those two camps hate each other. From what I understand, Well.
The Obama Clinton machine too.
Yeah, Democrat party is just getting blasted. It's just it's getting adomized. Now she starts with being a middle class grew up in a middle class family. Is that kind of her meme?
That's her oft repeated statements.
I grew up in the middle class. I think you did you grow up? Do you consider yourself in middle class when you grew up?
I would say, maybe, yeah, middle class?
Were you hedging up or down there?
A tiny bit up? Maybe it just depends. I mean, my stepfather was a doctor. My dad lived in Upper Arlington.
So oh you well, you backslid in a big way, didn't you know?
Oh yes, the right out there.
Now you're in a van down by the.
River, absolutely by the the fision's good.
A nice fan too steamed up. I will tell you I am a product of the Heartland. I was born in nineteen sixty eight. I spent the seventies and eighties in Ohio. Spent all my life in Ohio. But the men that I looked up to, my cousins, my uncles. My dad died when I was a little boy, just nine years old. But man, I grew up in mice time. The Coffels were up in the up in the Steel Country right and Columbiana County right on, you know, forty
five minutes from Pittsburgh. Growing up middle class was a blessing. We have the values of hard work. We learned how to get by. We learned how to be grateful and really the importance of family meals, home cook family meals, family traditions like Sunday get togethers. Like on my mom's side of the family, it felt like we were always driving down to Athens County, the People's Republic of Athens, to get together with family. We lived out. Grandpa was a farmer and he did a lot of his he
grew his own food, lived to be ninety six. And Grandma was just the classic church lady. But we had family traditions like Sunday get together, celebrating holidays, and we stuck to those family traditions. We didn't take anything for granted. For me and probably for many of our listeners, and perhaps for you. A family vacation in the seventies and early eighties was in a car and drove someplace like Virginia Beach or the Smoky Mountains. Remember we'd call it
the Smoky Mountains. No, yes, I don't think they call it that anymore. I don't think you referred to it as going out to the Smokies.
No, it's the two carcinogenic.
And having a new car was a big deal. Like you remembered the.
New car, smell, the new car.
But a new car come into the house. It was like, man, dad's killing it this year. You know, your dad's killing it this year. And it was almost like bringing home an adopted child. It was a big deal. That was life in the Midwest working class in the seventies and eighties, at least what I experienced. I appreciated what we had. I didn't pay attention to what others had. I just didn't.
It just wasn't It wasn't of interest to me.
It just it seems to be such a big deal now people now with their curated social media and Facebook and Instagram, look at me. Yeah right, We didn't have any of that stuff, So we just didn't. There wasn't really this compare contrast.
There wasn't this voyeurism.
But the men of my family worked, and the men of your family our listeners. They worked in the nineteen seventies, and I looked up to them like a boy should look up to his uncles. All military, pretty much all of them were military, and then came back into blue collar work or in law enforcement, and then those jobs moved to China. We give most favored nation trading status to China Mexico. Let's talk about China. The idea of what was sold to us was, We're going to open
up China. We're going to open up There're billions of people to buy our stuff, like, oh awesome is that? And we're going to make China more like us? Well, how'd that work out? Shared Brown, who's been in electro politics since nineteen seventy five when this all took place, how's that working out for you? We let cheaper steal into the United States from China, which almost overnight plants closed,
jobs gone. And after the break, I want to specifically talk about Shared Brown's Ohio and I want to talk about the Democrat playbook that they have been running on the American people, any establishment been running on the American people, and this election it can't get here fast enough. Hey, thanks for joining us. It can always catch our show on Spotify. You can catch us on Apple, iTunes, podcasts, the Purple podcast button on your iPhone, and the iHeartMedia app.
Get all the whole collection of the iHeart media personalities. We are talking about Shared Brown's Ohio and Shared Brown, of course is running for reelection. He wants a vote of confidence, putting back and back in the Senate for another six years, and no one knows really anything about shared brown.
Shared brown, more of the same. We'll talk.
We're going to I promise we're going to educate you on shared brown. It's not going to take very long. There's not much there. But I want to share my experiences growing up in Ohio in the seventies and eighties, and I have a feeling that many many of our listeners across Ohio have similarly shared experience. Republic Steel once the country's third largest steel producer, Republic Steel, But do you have us Steel? Obviously was the mac Daddy Bethlehem Steele.
Sure Republic would have been third. Republic Steel is from Youngstown now Youngstown back in the day was the place to be. Youngstown awesome and Youngstown. And you just take for instance, Republic Steel founded at the turn of the century, last century. It was the backbone of the Ohio, backbone of the Midwest, backbone of the United States. The steel that went into World War Two, the steel that went into automotive.
To some except the military during the various build ups.
Sure do you know where Republic Steel is now?
That would be six feet down.
It's now owned by Grouppo Simec if I'm pronouncing it correctly, a Mexican corporation based in Guadalajara. All right, General Motors, Ford, Fisher Body Remember where the Fisher Body plant on the west side of Columbus Delphi Automotive Parts off short quote off shot, what's another word for offshot?
That would be said to other countries.
We're gonna rip your dad and uncles and moms and aunts jobs. We're ripping them out, and we're going to give them to these people over here because they'll they'll work for twelve cents an.
Hour with no pesky environmental regulations or safety regulations.
Or unions sure can't unionize. So we're going to take this American dream that all you guys that that you were living, that you're living. We're gonna take the American dream that made us. This would be the politicians and the business people from the seventies and eighties, the American dream that made us who we are. We're going to go ahead and just take your jobs and we're going to offshore. We're gonna that's nice. We're gonna send them
over China, and we're gonna sit in Mexico. Well, that all happened under shared Brown's watch as well, whether he was in the state House or he was an elected state officeholder here in Ohio, or it was a congress or US senator. Goodyear, Firestone, be Of good Rich Manufacturing moves out of Ohio, moves out of the US, Emerson Electric, Westinghouse, Hoover, Black and Decker, Tempkin Steel, major operations in Ohio Major gone poof.
These were good paying jobs. Yeah, so benefits.
When when when I when I say that the American dream that I grew up visualizing and and and and watching, and then I go to college, I go to law school, and I stepped back outside. I'm like, what just happened to the American economy? I mean people from now are in these endless wars.
Yeah, people from Youngstown that they used to be able to get off work and watch their kids play baseball in Little League, got at the local field. Now kids can't even be there because they're unsafe.
Appliances used to be made in Ohio like Frigid Air and Dayton Poof gone to China. So I think, Look, I have asked, and I've paid attention to this US Senate race. And I've asked where are we in time general about five minutes, five minutes ago.
Five minutes in on the segment.
So if I'm a journalist, like, what's that guy's name, Brett Bear?
Yeah, he the one that.
Teed up Kamala.
He didn't try to, he revealed her put it that way.
So, look, this is pretty straightforward. To bring jobs back to Ohio in the Midwest, you can call it reshoring if you want. I say, tax incentives for companies that relocate their manufacturing operations back.
In Ohio and tariffs for those who don't.
Tax credits to you come in and create jobs in Ohio. You're going to get tax credits. Guess what, You're not gonna have to pay Uncle Sam so much you want to build new manufacturing facilities, tax credit right on your right on your return. You don't have to pay Uncle Sam so much. How about some grants or low interest loans for companies to build or modernize factories in Ohio to help offset those higher labor costs compared to the near slave labor of China. Grants or low interest loans,
We're doing more than that too. That global panhandler Zelenski. But we're not putting this money here where we need it. We need made in America policies. We need to strengthen buy American. This needs to be we need to send this to Madison Avenue and you. It should almost when I when I go into a store and I look at something and it's if it says made in China, we should be putting that thing back. We need to create a culture where you just don't buy stuff from
China or you or Mexico. You buy things made in America. So we need to get Madison Avenue working. We need to create the culture of made in America, by American and to reinforce that. As long as the government is the biggest lender and giver away or of money, how about some government contracts to prioritize American made goods. This is guaranteed demand. Just like the arms manufacturers get with our neocona neoliberal endless wars, do the same thing with
manufacturing our federal government. Although the libertarian part of me kind of gets a little wobbly on this one, the federal government does need to invest in upgrading infrastructure like roads, the Great Lakes Ports, broadband in the Midwest, instead of the billions that we're sending to millions of illegals, where we are attracting them, re routing them, bringing them in close to the border, are flying them in, putting them
on buses, hotels, vouchers, debit cards, cell phones, room service. How about we take that same money, cut it off from George Soros and the NGOs. We'll talk about them in a second. Cut that off executive Order day one, day one, and invest in advanced manufacturing technologies, automation, AI, robotics. Well, who's going to run that stuff?
Or how about just getting out of the way of those things?
I think I think in light of the fact that the I don't think we can do that. I think the federal government has created such a regulatory mess.
That's what I mean. Get rid of the regulatory regulation.
We need. We need new rags to get rid of the old rags. But we need to do what we we the federal government. We have a lot of money, and we need to stay competitive with low wage countries. How increase productivity and efficiency? Our urban schools at a disaster. They're just fourteen, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen year old kids in our urban schools that we know that's a pipeline straight to juvie court or prison. How about we take reroute more billions and put them into get these kids when
they're catch them at fourteen high tech manufacturing skills. Pay apprenticeships to teach robotics, machining, advanced engineering. You know what, Create corporate training camps, just like we the military does. Catch a fourteen year old kid who is kind of circling to drain, you know, you can teach that kid to do robotics and machining and advanced engineering.
Absolutely, you got to find what they're fascinated by first, Well, you.
Know what they're fascinating with money, Pay the interns. Let's pay them to teach them and get them, reroute them. Get them out of wherever they are Saint Louis, Columbus, Cleveland, San Francisco, Chicago, Date and whatever, and move them to the heartland, move them out into the big sky country and teach them. Get them on these on these kind of like a vocational camps.
I would even invest in hiring a bunch of linebackers from college who didn't make the NFL to be the teachers, right.
Right right, think outside the box be creative. So if if the state of the American economy was our body, we need to focus on our core and our low posterior chain and stop doing buys and tries and caps.
Get back to the basis.
So here we are the balance of powers tipping one way or the other based upon the US Senate race. Here in Ohio, the most expensive eluck in the country right now is shared Brown, who wants a vote of confidence to go back for his fourth term.
I think it's actually his eightieth term.
And US Senate and he's been in electoral politics since seventy four seventy five. He graduated from Yale with a degree in Russian studies. Russian studies.
When they were back when it should have been Soviet studies.
Actually, yeah, I'm not sure what's going on there. I mean, you know, you're from Mansfield, You go to Yale and you study Russian studies. It doesn't many sense. You graduate from Yale and you he immediately wants to get into politics. That's fine. I got no problems with that, But man, did you not study American history?
We taught history at OSU Mansfield for like eight years or something like that.
You don't it's not a career, dude, it's not a full time job in perpetuity. Had you studied American history, you would know that instead of the history of czars, you would know get in get out term elements get in, get out, Shared, We don't want you, run you. I'm sure you're a My guess is Shared Brown is a likable guy. He's probably one of those self deprecating types of guys. Where's the rumpled suit? Is rumpled a word? It is rumpled suit? No none fit well, just kind
of thing. And he's probably just one of those guys. It's like, all right, time to go, long time ago, time to go. What I would say to someone who wants this job, Bernie Marino, Shared Brown, Here's what I say, Ohio, we are a hardy stock of German, Scotch, Irish, Scandinavian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Italian and Greek. We have two thousand years of quote working blood running through our veins. We are hardwired to work. When we can't work, we go down the tubes. We
abuse alcohol and other drugs. We self medicate and potato chips bybe you So, I want to hear some innovation. I want to hear whatever has been happening since the mid seventies when Shared Brown arrived on the scene. I don't want more of that. I want We've talked about some tax credits, tax incentives, business regulations. How about partnerships with local colleges and create programs specifically designed to meet
the needs of modern manufacturers. How about some federal incentives for companies to source their raw materials and components in the US, in the Midwest, in the Heartland, in Ohio. We need to make sure that pharmaceuticals, electronics, and rare earth minerals not only are made here, mind here, but stored here. I can't find anything on Shared around about this stuff. I can't find anything about Shared Brown talking
about anti dumping regulations. If I was the Senator from Ohio, I can guarantee you my people would know what the hell anti dumping regulations are. You know what dumping is.
It's where you put the trash.
It's where foreign countries sell goods below costs. To undermine US industries exactly. Someone has not been paying attention to the dashboard, and this has been particularly harmful to industries like steam and automotive parts and manufacturing in the Midwest to my family at your family, our listeners, families, aunts, uncles, cousins, you get it, moms and dads. As it relates to tariffs,
it's not a bad word. Import regulations, that's fine. Let's make sure that what we need for national security is here, and let's make sure that there's no dumping and undermine our business, undermine our jobs. We need increased funding for R and D and biotech advanced manufacturing. Ohio can be a leader in emerging industries and help create high tech manufacturing jobs. Intel. Did Shared Brown have anything to do with Intel?
No?
I think that was our Republican governor and lieutenant governor did that? I think it was our Chamber of commerce. Where was Shared Brown? I can't find anything that he wants to support tax breaks and re douce the regulatory environment for easing startups and small businesses in manufacturing, tech and construction. We have a bed shortage, we have a housing shortage. Well, you can't build right now because you've got to have x percent set aside for low income housing.
And it does the math doesn't work, the law of supplying to man, it just doesn't work.
How about we get rid of people with low incomes by giving them a job, giving them a good paying job like we used to have yeap.
So one of my favorite words is vapid offering nothing that is stimulating.
Or challenging, sort of like that Harris Bear interview.
Yeah, and Shared Brown again. I've never met the guy, never talked to the guy. I'm not sure I've heard him. I asked our program director. He said, has Shared Brown ever been on our station? I mean, he's running for reelection here in Ohio and this is the one of the largest am antennas right in the middle of Ohio.
This is the blowtorch for a while, blow torch.
He's not here, his stick is up. Uh. And it's almost as bad as Kamala wanted to legalize marijuana and offer cash to the black community to get votes. I mean, how appalling is this? How appalling is this? So yeah, we can look at what Kamala has done. Uh, And we can look at California, San Francisco specifically general who's left San Francisco Meta x or Twitter, Snap, PayPal, air DNB, Tesla Slack Salesforce. Uh yeah, I think Tesla, right, So that's San Francisco.
A lot of a lot of human excrement leaves San Francisco and it rains, It all goes down into the Bay.
Right, and what fills that crime? Take a look at Chicago, Caterpillar, Boeing, Tyson, Stillantis, United Airlines all left Chicago. Why look at the policies, Look at environment that these the far left has done.
They're ruining cities. And Shared Brown, who betrays himself as a champion of the common worker and an adversary to corporate interest, you look at a close you do a closer analysis of his legislative record and policy positions, that many of his actions have in fact harmed the very constituency he claims to defend, the same people that he wants to vote to putting back in office. Now, let me mention one other thing. Did you know that he's related to Charlie Brown?
I did not know that Lucy would pull the ball away.
From to Charlie Brown. Shared Brown's brother, Charlie was the Attorney General of West Virginia from eighty five to eighty nine. Didn't know that. We've already mentioned that Shared graduated from Yale. Our listeners already know how we feel about the IVS. They were great until the long march through the institutions. And he graduates in seventy four from law school or from college. What do you do when you're graduating college. I'm gonna run for State Rep. Okay, I have no
problems with that. Go go participate, Go run for state Rep. Get in, get out. Well, he runs for state Rep. Low paying job in the seventies, and at the same time he goes back to school, comes a Buckeye. He gets a Master's of Arts degree in education in seventy nine and a master's in public administration at OSU and eighty one. So he's kind of like waiting, biting his time. It looks like from seventy four to eighty two, you're a Yale grad and you're not getting picked up by
Corporate America or whatever. UNI kind of wonder to kind of wonder what's going on here? How does he Yeale grad not get a job? He runs for state Rep, goes back to university, gets more degrees, and then says, I'm going to run for secretary of state first state of Ohio. What who?
Why?
What's a step We all know secretary of State's a stepping stone position. Sharon wanted to be governor. There's no doubt in my mind. He wanted to be governor, but he lost to Bob Taft. But he was Secretary State for Ohio from eighty two to ninety. He wanted to be governor. Bob Taft beat him to it, and Brown meanwhile was living in Mansfield. But he but he's getting crushed in electoral politics because he's far left. Where do you go. You go to the Cleveland area where there
are a lot more Democrats. So he moves to Lorraine, Ohio to run for Congress in ninety two, and he's never left the Imperial City since. What in the world study American history, not Russian history. S here, welcome back. We're talking about shared Brown, Kamala, Harris, the people versus the machine. Half the country woke up in the last four years to what's really going on, and then the other half of the country woke up the summer when Biden,
their predictable coup took out Biden. And then the machine is stuck and Kamala is the only person there that is going to work. And now they're deeply regretting that. What Brett I have an issue with Brett Bear's interview, and I do want to get back to Shared Brown. I want to know from Kamala Harris and Shared Brown, why won't you unleash American energy to drive down our energy prices? Why won't you massively reduce government regulations to
encourage American businesses to invest in our people. Why won't you Shareed and Kamala create a talk about creating a tax environment that rewards success, doesn't penalize it. Forty percent of Americans don't pay taxes.
And there's an easy answer to that, because those are all Bernie Morino's policies.
Sixty percent are you reading my notes? Sixty percent of Americans pay taxes, and we're the ones that are footing the bill, not just for America, but all the other countries that we're subsidizing. We're getting punished. If you add up just on the income side, your federal, state, and local, I'll tell you my marginal tax rate. You add those things three things up, it's forty three point five percent.
I want to know from Kamala and Shared Brown, why haven't you figured out how to reward companies that bring jobs back to Ohio, bring back, bring jobs back to America. I want to hear from Shared Brown, why haven't you done something in the Senate to stop paying people not to work? Stop paying people not to work. We have a lot of able bodied people that continue to get
federal and state assistance. That's horrible for our country. So if there's no other reason to retire Shared Brown to private life, it's the If there's no other reason than this, this should solve this election here in Ohio. And it's when citizen legislators like Shared Brown serve the public for a long period of time, decades, fifty years. The longer they are there, like Shared Brown, they become disconnected from
the people they're meant to represent. They are living in and dining with, and paling around with a concentration of power and small group of long serving lawmakers that are entrenched in the Imperial City. We have career politicians of twenty thirty, forty or fifty years that never studied American history because Shared studied Russian history. That you don't. That's not the way America is set up. You get in, you serve, you leave. For instance, Bernie Marino is specifically
said two terms. I'm coming in for two terms. That's it. So you when when someone like Shared Brown spends decades in Washington, DC, you have to become insulated inside that new political culture that's disconnected from the folks of Ohio. You're surrounded by lobbyist donors and fellow political elites, not HVAC and plumbers and local lawyers and doctors and.
Pop.
Right, there's a disconnect. And look, Shared probably entered politics with good intentions, but after fifty years he is now part of the very system that he was probably that he was elected to change, and he wants to.
Go back folks. Bread goes stale.
Yes, experience, there's institutional experience can be beneficial, but that is substantially outweighed by the concentration of power in the hands of a few long serving politicians like Shared Brown. Just I just really struggle why Shared Brown wouldn't step aside, Just say, just wouldn't step aside and say, you know what, I've been doing this for fifty years.
I'm out. Time to take some time on the beach, yes, right, go up to the lake, right right, I mean, enjoy the grandkids.
It's total stagnation. So in researching for the show, I go look for stuff on Shared Brown. I can't find anything. I can't find anything. I just can't. He's you know what he is. He is an automatic vote for the far left. That's what he is. And I'm looking for a metaphor and analogy. I'm not sure what it is.
And in general, you're good at this stuff. But the America, shared Brown, mister Brown, because you studied Russian history at Yale, not American histy our founding fathers envisioned a government in which citizens like you and me would serve temporarily and then return to private life, get back to it. The idea of a permanent political class was exactly the reason
why we had our revolution. George Washington set the president precedent for term limits by voluntarily stepping down after two terms, even though there were no constitutional limits at the time.
People wanted him to stay.
Why don't you just voluntarily step down, shared Brown. And had you studied American history, you would know that a healthy democracy requires a constant infusion of new leadership, and we don't have that with him. You know, he's like a parade maker. You know what a parademaker is. It's like that old person. It's like that person that drives in the car like ten miles behind the lower than a speed limit, and everyone's backed up. That's what he is.
So someone who's been in politics for nearly fifty years needs to retire. When he entered the electoral politics, we didn't have the opioid crisis, we didn't have job automation, we didn't have these healthcare challenges. When he entered electoral office in nineteen seventy five, things have changed so much. And I go look online and do some research. How chat GPT couldn't get fined much on this guy? What
has he been doing? So I look at his financials. Well, maybe the guy's just been helping himself and becoming a quiet little multi multimillionaire. I don't see that either. I don't know what he's doing. He's not even been taking graft, I mean, you know, to his benefit. So look, no one individual, no one citizen, should have a lifetime hold on power. And is the responsibility of us, the voters, to ensure that our representatives remain accountable to us and
in touch with us and bring fresh ideas. And Chared Brown just doesn't. He's just not there. It's time to go. If there's no other reason to vote for Bernie Marino. It's to retire Shared Brown. It's time to go. It's time to go. How are we doing on time? Is it time for us to go? No, we got about a minute left. General thoughts. I told you going into the show we were going to talk about Chared Brown because we've never talked about the man. There's been nothing to talk about.
Well, no one ever talks about him because there's just nothing there to really talk about. He's sort of the gray man. He's burrowed into the side of the tree and has stayed there all this time. I mean, what can we do?
He burrowed into the tree. Oh, I know what I want to mention real quick before we break. Did you know I'm gonna go back in time here a little bit. Do you know that I'm not gonna get I'm talking about gold and money. I'm not gonna I'm not gonna confuse everything, all right? Anyway, thanks for listening. Uh vote for Bernie Marino. If for nothing else, it's it's Shared Brown's been in office for fifty years. It's time to go go ahead and retire. To men, Thank you Shared
for your years of service. I wish you could have done a little bit more and keep manufacturing here in Ohio. I wish you could have done a little bit more on our border and its immigration stuff. I wish you could have done a little bit more on business regulations. I wish you could have done a little bit more on on tax policy.
Keeping men out of women's bathroom, yeah.
You know, but anyway, thank thank you. Shared time to go,