Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
My Monday afternoon in the Tri State. Welcome again at
the Bill Cunningham Show. Reds Baseball kicks off first pitch
about six forty air time, about five forty tonight. As
you may know, the Reds beat up on the Baltimore
Orioles big time. Twenty forty to two. That's right, twenty
four to two. They allowed us safety. That's all they allowed,
as Baltimore went down hard than out back to five hundred.
See what happens tonight in Miami. Three in Miami, then
(00:29):
three in Colorado, and away we go. But this morning
I had the very sad news the passing of Pope.
The Pope has died and Francis is now in heaven.
We got almighty we anticipate. And then he took over
from Benedict who resigned in twenty thirteen. So Francis has
been the Pope for about twelve years or so. And
joining you and I now is Michael McDonald of the
(00:51):
Catholic League in New York City. And Michael McDonald, welcome
again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all,
give me your reaction on his passing earlier today.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Hey, Bill Cunningham, great to be with you as always. Yeah,
this is really sad news. You know, whenever holy man,
especially as someone high ranking as Pope Francis, has died,
as a moment for prayers and reflection, not only for
the repose of his soul, but also for where the
church goes from here. And just keep praying that the
(01:22):
Holy ghost guides the cardinals to make the right decision
in the coming weeks for the successor.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
I've seen the movie Conclave.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
I'm not sure it's going to go that way, but nonetheless,
I watched Cardinal Dolan this morning who said that if
one head of fashion his own demise, it would have
been the way that this pope went out, Francis by
having one last lap in the popemobile around Vatican Square
and saying goodbye. I mean, he looked good enough to live,
but we don't know the circumstances of death. No autopsies
are ever performed, so we anticipate it was a respiratory failure.
Speaker 3 (01:54):
Give me the legacy.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
Looking back, the last thirty or forty years had Jeohn
Paul the Second, with John Paul the First who was
in office about a month, and John Paul the Second.
Then it went to Benedict the German. And this was
historical because Berglio from Rendzsaurus was perceived as a liberal.
He was perceived they're going to change things, and he
put his own imprint on the papacy. Many liberals thought, Okay,
(02:17):
he's going to reprove the same sex marriage, or women
can be priest, or priest can marry. A lot of
those things did not happen. But I know many conservative
Catholics who were not happy with his rule, and many
liberals at times were not happy either. Did he live
out when he was selected about twelve years ago in
March at twenty thirteen, And if somebody could have looked
(02:38):
over the last the next twelve years of his papacy
in a way, did he anger both sides? Did he
anger a little bit liberals and conservatives both?
Speaker 2 (02:48):
You know, Bill, I think that's actually probably the right
take here, Pote Francis. For all the glowing reviews he
got in the media, he did kind of struggle a
little bit with both sort of wings of the Catholic Church,
the more liberal, reform minded, very pro Vatican Two. Even
(03:09):
the people that think Vatican Two didn't go far enough.
They wanted to see obviously wanted to see more out
of Pope Francis's tenure in the chair of Saint Peter.
And then again on the more traditional side of things,
he was not the most vocal champion of traditional morals.
(03:31):
He pretty much just canceled the Latin mass across the church,
kind of seemed to be butting heads a lot with
the American cardinals, the American bishops, and some of he had,
you know, again getting into the weeds a little bit
on some of these reforms. Definitely did try to centralize
power in himself and the Vatican really trying to move
(03:54):
the ball, but the institution of the Church itself, it
just kind of seemed to be a bit of a
bridge too far to get a lot of these more
reformist goals initiated. So yeah, it does sort of seem
to be a bit of a checkered past. Probably didn't
do enough from one side of the equation, probably did
(04:17):
too much from the other side, but sort of left
things somewhere in the middle, and now the Vatican's going
to have to pick up the pieces and try and
figure out which direction are we going to continue in
sort of the mold of Francis and try and move
things more in the direction of reform, or are we
going to go with someone like Saint John Paul, the
(04:40):
second Pope Benedict the sixteenth, who were much more of
the traditionalist school of thought.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
Yeah, no question where we go from here.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
There was a hope by some that he would approve
a priest to marry, which isn't a new concept, as
Tony Bender knows, for the first one thousand years of
our existence. But priest did marry and so that wouldn't
have been a big deal. But women as priest that
would be a much different situation. He also reached out
(05:08):
to gay individuals who said that you are part of
this church, which was a concern to some. He did
not get into the transgender debate much about males and females,
but just on the idea that priest can marry. Can
you tell us why that would not be so revolutionary?
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Well, you know, as you pointed out, that there was
a reform in the Middle Ages to put a stop
to that, and at the time, the reasoning was that
the church was losing control of the parishes themselves. The
families were taking control of them and leaving it to
their sons to continue running the church. So yeah, personally,
(05:46):
I think that was probably the right thing to do
at the time and probably something we should keep on
the books for now. But just a real quick bill
on the subject of transgenderismo. Francis actually was a little
bit more vocal on the US at times, very very confusing,
because the only stories that you really see about Pope
Francis and the transgender question was he had a bunch
(06:09):
of them over for dinner one night or breakfast in
the Vatican, whatever it was. But in the past he's
called it demonic, he has called the transgenderism a form
of ideological colonization, and he has been a little bit
more forcefullness. Just the left wing media was doing a
lot to prop up their man and try and present
(06:31):
him as the loving guy that was just really caring
about poor people and was worried about climate change. But
there are some things that traditionalists would actually appreciate about
Pope Francis. But again, he was very prone to speaking
off the cuff, very prone to just you know, suffering
from jet lag, getting on the Vatican plane and saying
(06:54):
and here's how I really feel about things, and not
actually thinking through everything, which obviously created a lot of
headaches for people working in the church.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
You know, one thing I've noticed sixty minutes even to
the story on this about a year ago, the renaissance
of Christianity, especially among the young. And they return to
shall I say to the faith and that young people
in the last election, this is certainly probably Trump's behavior
is not the Pope's a favorite. But nonetheless there was
a renaissance of the young turning toward more conservative values,
(07:24):
which is why Trump was elected president. And now there's
a renaissance of Christianity among colleges. There was this plaintive
crime in Kentucky, Missouri elsewhere that colleges have a large
group of practicing evangelistic Christians and or Roman Catholics, which
I haven't seen before. I go to a little Catholic
church here in Cincinnati called Saint Gertrude's and an Easter vigil.
(07:46):
Penny and I had to get there at eight thirty
to get a seat, and the proceedings to not begin
to after nine pm Saturday night, and we were there
until midnight, three hours, and there was young and old,
and it was just a fabulous service put on by
the Dominicans. It was wonderful, and I spoke to a
couple of the priests thereafter. It was late, it was
early in the morning in fact, But nonetheless there's a
(08:08):
sense that Christian and Catholic schools are doing quite well.
Have you sense some the Catholic Lake in New York City,
Mike McDonald, a return to traditional values that we didn't
think would happened.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Yeah, you know what, And there is a very interesting
point on that. It does seem to be particularly the
within the Catholic Church, the more traditional minded orders of nuns,
the brothers, parishes, dioceses, they seem to be the ones
(08:40):
that are doing the best in terms of preserving the
faith and bringing in new people, growing the community. We
actually did a report on this on Catholic League dot
org probably about two years ago, comparing the Church in
Germany and the Church in Nigeria. Church in Germany obviously
(09:03):
very rich, richest diocese in the world. Church in Nigeria
very poor. They're they're constantly being attacked by Muslim extremists,
very hard times, but the Church in Nigeria is flourishing.
The Church in Germany is dying off, and the Nigerians
are very quick to hold two traditional values, whereas the
Germans are you ready to jettisen in them for the
(09:23):
next new thing. So that does seem to be a trend.
And even in the Christian community more broadly, even though
within the evangelical circles, the more traditionally minded evangelical pastors,
their churches are the ones that are growing that they
are actually the ones with the young families in them.
Whereas you look at the mainline Protestants like the Episcopalians,
(09:47):
you got a bunch of white haired people that are
you know, just sitting in God's waiting room. The churches
are slowly dying, very very sad deaths, and so there
there is something to this. And you know, the return
of Trump to the White House definitely that more traditional
mind is attitude, particularly young people reverting to their faith
(10:08):
going back in greater numbers. This is definitely going to
have a massive impact on society moving forward. It's unfortunate
that Pope Francis was kind of the urch nemesis within
the Catholic Church anyway, of the more traditional stuff. You's
vehemently opposed to Latin Mass and things of that nature.
So a lot of these things kind of seem to
(10:30):
happen in spite of Pope Francis's leadership.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
And one thing is next well, one thing in the
media there is the obliteration of Christianity and Catholics buried alive, tortured.
The Muslim attacks on Catholics happening all over Africa is
not well reported. You've seen some of the videos. I've
seen some of the videos. People are being killed because
of their faith. That would never happen in Germany. It
(10:53):
would never happen in France. And in fact, most of
the churches and cathedrals in France are like tourist attractions.
They're not real churches, even Notre Dame Cathedral as a
tourist attraction because the practice is almost non existent. Now, lastly,
before I let you go, Mike McDonald of the Catholic League.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
Who's the next Pope?
Speaker 1 (11:10):
I saw the movie Conclave and they selected someone that,
shall we say, an amorphi dite or something like that
from Afghanistan?
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Do you see that happening?
Speaker 1 (11:20):
That We're going to have some conclave in about two
weeks and there's going to be two hundred and fifty
two cardinals, but only one hundred and thirty eight or
electors one hundred and thirty eight or so, they're going
to be in the Sistine Chapel. And what's the early
pick for the Pope.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
H s bill? Your guest is as good as mine
just looking around at how it went last time with
the election of Pope Francis. Even Patty Power, the famous
gambling website, they didn't even give outs on They didn't
give odds on fantas. As we know from writing the elections,
typically the gamblers tend to predict the outcome much more
(11:55):
accurately than the pollsters do, and so they couldn't get it.
So this is really down to the guidance of the
Holy Ghost here. Looking at even last time, just looking
at the headlines, I found one mention of Pope Francis
Cardinal Bogoglio in anything, and I think it was the
Guardian said, you know, he came in second to Pope
(12:17):
Benedict the sixteenth, so he's probably not going to do
anything in this time, Clay. But next thing, you know,
he's the elected guy. But yes, I'm fairly certain that
it's not going to have a surprise twist at the
ending with some hermaphrodite getting elected and like they did,
in Hollywood and now that that was just a bizarre
They just were ripping on us.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Bizarre.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
I'm watching this, I'm thinking the political training at Satura.
Of course, the websites are out with some of the
names being mentioned. There's no chance I would assume a
Cardinal Dolwan getting the gig.
Speaker 3 (12:46):
Is that correct?
Speaker 2 (12:48):
You know? I don't think so. I mean, most people
don't know this, but at the age of seventy five,
the bishops are supposed to send in their letter of resignation,
and Cardinal Dolan just turned seventy five in February, so
it's probably probably a little too old, which is unfortunately.
He did a lot of good things here in New
(13:08):
York and we're lucky that we still have him. Hopefully
we keep him a little bit longer, but it would
be great to get an American hope in there, but
probably I don't think it's in the cards this time.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
The media likes Cardinal or Robert Sarah. He's seventy nine
years old, is a former Vatican official from Guinea. He's
an African, he's black, and that's the favorite of the
mainstream media. And if it's someone other than Italian or European.
That would be a big surprise.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
Yeah, you know, that'd be very interesting, and it is
kind of odd to see Sarah's name getting floating around that.
I mean, he is older than Dolwan, and I know
that is something that they're going to be taken into consideration.
But he's also very strong on the social issues, very
forceful on the moral teachings of the church. So definitely
not some that the mainstream media would like. I mean,
(14:02):
they'll probably do the same thing, downplay that as much
as possible anytime that Pope Francis. I mean, we can't
even say. Some of the things that Pope Francis said
about homosexuals in the church on radio, he would rip
into them, but you would never hear a word about
that in the mainstream media because he you know, he
was there to fight global warming and do nice outreach
(14:24):
to the homosexuals, and he really cared about poor people.
Never Mind, he never said anything about moral teaching, and
he did, to his credit, he did say some things
a little convoluted, could have been a little bit clear,
a little bit more forceful, But you know, the media
just completely ignored those issues because they had a narrative
that needed protecting at all costs, and unfortunately some of
(14:48):
the good things that Pope Francis did kind of did
get lost in that narrative. We'll see they'll probably try
and do the same thing with Sarah, but he's actually
much more of a traditional mindset. He is one of
the great ap African prelates, and it's good the cardinals
should give a lot of credence to the great things
that the Church in Africa has done. As you were
(15:10):
mentioning that they're besieged by Islamic extremists and yet somehow
their communities are still flourishing when martyrdom is generally the
price that people do have to pay to be a
Christian in Africa, So that's they're doing the Lord's work
there and maybe we do need someone with that sort
of mindset back in the Vatican, kind of taking us
(15:31):
back to the older days when Christians were thrown into
the lions den eating alive.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
And Cardinal Sarah has been called the Clarence Thomas of
the papacy, So I don't imagine the Liberals have much
to do with Clarence Thomas, and that's Cardinal Sarah.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
We'll see what happens JD.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
Vance, who goes to my church by the way, Saint
Gertrud's and Madeira. We saw the pope that day or
two before he died, and that some have remarked that
maybe Donald Trump is going to take over the papacy
and appoint JD.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Vance. Can we say, can we say that that's a
long shot? Draft Kings, I.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
Think that's but I think that one's a bit of
a long shot. But you know, we live in a
strange times, so you don't have to be.
Speaker 3 (16:10):
A priest to be you might have to be a
priest to be the pope, right, anybody could be the pope?
So why why this was?
Speaker 2 (16:16):
Yeah, this was actually one of the things that I forget,
which vasking counsel. They had to tighten this up. But yeah,
it used to pretty much be just whoever it was
from the wealthiest noble family in Rome could get their
offspring elected, male offspring elected to the papers. Here again
another great reform that the Catholics did back in the
day to really make sure that we're adhering to the
(16:39):
actual word of God.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
So we'd bet against it, but you know, otter things
have happened. But we'll see what occurs. But once again,
Michael McDonald, there's going to be several days of morning,
nine days, and then the conclave gets together, called by
the Secretary of State, so to speak, of the Vatican,
and maybe in two or three weeks we'll have white
smoke and not black.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
We'll see what happens.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
And Mychael McDonald of the Catholic League, once again, thank
you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
Mike, you're a great American.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
Thank you, Thank you, Bill, You're a great American as well.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
God bless you.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Let's continue with more kind of broke up Michael McDonald
there with Trump taking over the Vatican and apporting JD Vance,
it's possible, it's possible. Keep hope alive on News Radio
seven hundred WLW Noll right, Billy Cunningham, the Great America.
And of course today's the Easter egg roll in the
White House, and we have coming up after one o'clock today,
Scott Powell about the significance of Easter et cetera. Also
(17:32):
the death of Pope Francis earlier today, plus what's happening
in Cincinnati's a concern locally of great concern to you
and me and other Great Americans. Ken Coober, head of
the FOP, was on with Scott Sloan this morning talking
about the regular circumstances that happen at the banks after
dark and Dave, with your permission, hit it.
Speaker 4 (17:54):
You go down there midnight, one o'clock in the morning,
and you'll see the people that are there that are
just knowing around waiting to find the victim. You're not
seeing people going you know, the criminal element art, you know,
going in and out of bars.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
Here.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
They're not going to restaurants. They just hang out there,
smoke weed and wait for their next victim.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
Kind of sad.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
And when I read the story about what happened Saturday
night and Cincinnati Police Lieutenant Jonathan Cunningham, I mighty had
not related to me. Happened about ten thirty pm Saturday night,
and the victim, identified as Andre Harris, spoke about the incident.
He said that he arrived at the bank Saturday night
after going to a concert and left his wallet inside
(18:35):
the Cornerstone Market earlier that night, around the corner from
Ruth's christ and after achieving it, retrieving his wallet from
the market and leaving the store, a man with a
face mask approached him and quickly raised a gun, pointing
it directly at Harris, and at that point Harris said
he the shooter fired first. Harris said he thought the
(18:56):
gunman fired two shots, but police said witnesses claimed the
gunman had fired four times, likely semi automatic, and the
casings are on the ground. Harris said he was shot
once in the foot and that was part of the
bullets still there. Surveillance villea video shared by the owner
of the corner the market shows that Harris running away
after three shots rang out. Harris can be seen with
(19:18):
his gun. The victim had a gun in his hand,
and cops arrived and I'm looking at the police right now.
They're hearing shots fired. It's right there. Police are everywhere,
and the thinking that Harris was the perpetrator, which one
would reasonably assume that's the case, ordered him to drop
to his knees, release the weapon, and his get on
(19:41):
the ground.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Harris.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
The victim, Andre Harris, quickly complied, telling police I've been shot.
He explained to them that he can't remember what the
gunman looked like. He was wearing a mask, and Harris says,
I hope it's a case of mistaken identity. I have
no reason to feeling anyone would target me. I had
not one clue why someone will would want to shoot me.
The owner of the corner market told police that at
(20:06):
the time the police were standing several yards away when
the shooting took place. They locked down the banks and
areas close to those stores for numerous hours. Is to
try to find out who did it, and at this point,
as of what twelve forty two today, no one's been
apprehended of. More troublesome is that Ken Kober, who knows
(20:26):
where the bodies are buried, representing some one thousand cops
say this is a common event, it's normal, it's average,
it's not unusual, and he said it gets very dangerous
at the banks when sundown, hundreds hang out smoking weed
and doing other things. Looking According to ken Kober, the
policeman for his next victim, who will be the next victim.
(20:50):
This comes on top of many other incidents, including a
short vine. You may recall we had this on We
discussed this last week with ken Kober and others. There
was a man named Kyle Merrick who was simply standing
outside of a bar in the evening time looking at
his phone and a fifteen year old whose name can't
(21:13):
be released, I guess we have to protect his innocence,
came up to him stuck a gun in his belly,
and Kyle Merrick, the victim, responded by pushing him off,
pushing him away and grabbing for his own weapon, which
he had legally carried. Shots were exchanged. Kyle Merrick was
hit two or three times, may have on the county
(21:34):
corner later on to discuss it, and he was able
to get several shots off and hit the fifteen year old.
This is a kid that should be a freshman in
high school. Kyle Merrick is twenty five years old. He
was transported to UC Medical where he died and the teen,
the so called teen, has been shot at least seven times.
(21:56):
The teen eventually had been taken out of the courtroom
for proceedings because he was in such pain. And according
to Ken Coober Sergeant Cober last week, this fifteen year
old teen whose name cannot be released, had numerous previous
criminal encounters, including a firing at a house, numerous robberies,
aggravated burglaries, and this kid's fifteen years old and right
(22:18):
now he's locked up. The prosecutor's office is going to
try him as an adult, they.
Speaker 3 (22:22):
Hope, but don't know.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
It's got to be bound over by juvenile court Judge
Carrie Bloom and juvenile court. She seldom binds over these kids,
thinking that can be shall we say, rehabilitated in juvenile court.
And this comes on the sentencing of Justin Dugan, seventeen
year old, who was sentenced on his eighteen year olds
(22:45):
in the murder of Benjamin Addison last March UC student
in Mount Auburn. There was two persons involved in that
and that armed robbery resulting in a murder. One was
the least culpable. Was given four months of probation and
he did not fire the weapon. Justin Dugan did. It
(23:06):
was seventeen when he murdered Benjamin Addison. He's now eighteen
years old, which was a classic arm robbery felony murder.
You're committing a felony, which is the theft of an
auto vehicle, and during the commission of the felony, someone
is killed. That's called felony murder. That's called aggravated murder.
But new prosecutor said, no, it's not aggravated murder. It's
(23:30):
a voluntary manslaughter. Voluntary manslaughter is the unintentional killing of
another caused by the provocation of the victim. Now what
this is is a is an aggravated murder. It's a
murder charge. It's not a voluntary manslaughter causing the death
of another brought on by the provocation of the victim.
(23:51):
I'm not sure what Benjamin Addison did, but whatever it was,
he didn't bring about his own death, and for one
reason or another, prosecutor's office decided to lower the charge
from aggravated murder right through murder on the voluntary manslaughter.
Received twenty one years in jail, and Dugan is now
(24:11):
eighteen years old, been locked up for several months, so
he'll be out after eighty five months a good time.
He'll be out when he's thirty seven or thirty eight
years old. I would anticipate to commit more armed robberies,
more regaated murders that may be broken down. And lastly,
police officer told me on Saturdays, you may know, there
were protests, the hands off protests against Donald Trump, well
(24:34):
organized by the radical left, and quite often the protesters
are paid to be there and at wanted the so
called protests mayrift have. Pirival was present shutting down streets
in downtown Cincinnati for the so called marchers and protesters.
The march and protest. It wasn't at Washington Park anymore,
which is a confined area, but this protest poured on
(24:56):
the city streets and the police were told to shut
down streets. You may know that when a march or
a protest takes place, like the Saint Patrick's Day parade
or whatever, the parade organizers file a petition of request
to shut down certain streets certain periods of time, they
pay for security, and away you go. In this case,
there was no permit process by which those so called
(25:19):
protesting Donald Trump's policies, which are proven yet to be
greatly successful, that there was no permit filed. In other words,
they were trespassing on city streets. That's called criminal trespass.
And the mayor of Cincinnati, you have to appear Ofval
was marching with them, and the police officers, some twenty
five or thirty were present. One of them told me
(25:40):
they were told not to approach the mayor or anyone
else because just let it go. It's a minor matter.
It's called criminal trespass. But if you or I and
a group of our friends decided to shut down some
street or highway without permission to do so, that we
likely would get arrested. But how do you arrest somebody
with the mayor after piraval is heading up the protest.
(26:04):
On top of that, there were incidences over the weekend
in the Clifton area which on Saturday night especially, we're
large numbers were smoking marijuana, shall we say, outdoors openly
without consequence? Cops have said, including ken Kober, Sergeant ken Kober,
we're told by the city administration not to cite anyone
(26:26):
and not to ask them to put out their cigarettes
they're marijuana SIGs, because we don't enforce those laws anymore.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
Well, what laws do you enforce?
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Don't enforce marijuana possession laws in public, smoking in public,
which is a crime. We don't enforce criminal trespass laws
because after all, the mayor is heading up the protest.
Speaker 3 (26:44):
What do we do?
Speaker 1 (26:46):
And when it comes to schmail park and OTR until
lecture at the bank, since we're hundreds of youths gather
to openly smoke pot. I've asked police officers who are
president at the scene, why not go up to these
kids that are smoking marijuana openly and tell them put
out your pot. You can't do that, he said. We're
told not to enforce marijuana loss even though it's against
(27:09):
the law. And I don't know what to say other
than the shattered glass theory ought to work, that you
begin by the small stuff and metastasized to the big stuff.
We haven't got to the warm days of summer yet.
When real crime takes place in and around the Banks
area and OTR and around TQL, it's a regular event shootings.
(27:30):
In fact, Channel nineteen a few years ago did a
shot spot or check on how many shots are fired
in the city of Cincinnati every year. We're not talking
about Hamilton County or Kenton County or Boone County. How
many shots are fired? And shot spotter kept track and
one year there was more than twenty thousand shots fired.
And the city of Cincinnati, which is what north to
(27:51):
south might be about seven miles east to west, the
core area is about four miles. Very small area. Twenty
thousand shots are fired and very few hit their mark,
thank god. On the incident on Short Vine, several shots
were fired and Kyle Merrick is dead and the fifteen
year old perpetrator was shot seven times and he'll face
(28:14):
charges of some character. There's some doubt whether Judge Kerry
Bloom and Juvenile Court will bind over because she's a
liberal activist wearing a black robe. Who knows what our
juvenile court is lost? And throw on top of that,
what happened a Saturday night after a concert, twenty two
year old Andre Harris was shot several times by a
(28:37):
robber who identified him. I would imagine he may have
saw him pick up his wallet from the stone Market
there and thought it would be an easy pigeon, so
he stuck a gun in his belly. Then all hell
broke loose. So I tell those around me, and I
tell you on several issues, this is like gun smoke.
There's this large numbers of individuals walking around to try
(28:59):
to take property from you and kill you now, and
almost every circumstance the victim complies, and when you don't comply,
And I don't blame the victims for not complying. I
don't think Kyle Merrick, when he was murdered on Short Vine,
had thought, oh, I'm gonna go out tonight and I'm
gonna be murdered. I gotta be careful what I do.
But if the incidents take place, put your hands up
(29:21):
and say what do you want? Give the robber, give
the give the thief whatever he wants, give it to him.
And if you're in your vehicle and you see it
being stolen, to not chase down anybody. You can replace
a Hyundai, but you can't replace a human life. We
must be prepared for these incidents, beginning with don't put
yourself in a circumstance where you're in an area where
(29:42):
these things might take place. You know, I've not been
down to the banks in Shmall Park after dark on
a weekend night, have you? I would say the answer
is probably not. But ken Kober, sergeant says that a
few hundred youth are looking shots fired repeatedly, people or
shot and killed and wounded, and they're looking for their
(30:02):
next victim. And if the next victim is you, prepare
yourself mentally to understand what you should do if this happens.
Put your hands up and say what do you want?
I'll give you whatever you want. Then proceed slowly to
give the robber whatever he or she wants, because your
life is not worth a one hundred dollars bill. That's
where we are today. It's sad and it's sick, and
(30:24):
I give great props to those in the city trying
to stop it. You got to try to do something
youth violence, things of this Reverend Mingo. Whatever it takes,
get out there, whatever it takes to lessen it, to
make it less culturally acceptable, it must be done. There's
a very few number of individuals committing disproportionate offenses. At CPS.
(30:47):
There's about what thirty five thousand kids. There's about about
twenty thousand or so African American males, and the great
majority of them would have nothing to do with crime, zero, zilch, nada.
Speaker 3 (30:58):
It's a very.
Speaker 1 (30:59):
Small number who listen to the culture and act out
certain fantasies, and you're going to be victimized. I would
also encourage you not to lock your Have nothing of
value in your car and don't lock it because a
thousand dollars a window gets expensive. So leave nothing of
value in your car and leave it unlocked. And those
who go in, and if you happen to come upon
(31:20):
someone inside your car, back away and do nothing.
Speaker 3 (31:24):
Call police. They may come, they may not come.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
But if you're a police officer today, you know what,
You're not incentivized to enforce the law. Yours truly have
walked around Washington Park, OTR quite a bit, dozens of times,
because my family's roots go deep into the soil of
Washington Park. It is common to see dozens of individuals
smoking pot openly, and I've asked one or two cops,
(31:50):
how come you don't cite those marijuana users. We're told
not to. So when the law is disregarded completely at
small levels, it becomes bigger and more dangerous at all levels.
So that's where we are. And guess what, it's not
going to change once again. I get props to Damon
Lynch and to Reverend Mingo and others are seeking to
(32:12):
change a little bit. What's happening. The great majority of
kids who go to cps want nothing to do with violence.
The great majority. Joe Dieters often says that there's between
five hundred and one thousand kids who believe in the
system who should be in the system for what they've
done criminally. But the great majority have nothing to do
with crime. In fact, they're the victims of crime. So
(32:33):
let's continue with more after one o'clock today will be
Scott Powell about the importance of Easter. This is the
first day after Easter. The Easter egg role is this
afternoon in the White House. And after two o'clock today
will be Julie Gunlock of the Independent Women's Form and more.
Reds Baseball kicks off about five forty. First bitch about
six forty. We'll see what happens. Hopefully the Reds won't
(32:54):
be shut out the next three games as they were
the last time. They scored a bunch of runs. Bill
Cunningham seven hundred WW by Billy Cunningham. The Great American,
of Course, is a column written by the Great Scott Powell.
(33:16):
I read a lot of his stuff at town Hall
dot com and elsewhere. And the column the headline is
this Easter the resurrection of Jesus transformed the world forever.
And there's a couple of classic sentences he put together,
Scott Powell. One is that no other religion makes the
claim they were founded by a messiah, makes Jesus the
most revolutionary figure in American history. And all the other
(33:37):
religions had those who the prophets who had passed away,
but Jesus didn't. He did die, he was resurrected, and
he's in heaven above and is unique in many reasons,
one of which is we time the world history from
the moment of his birth. This is twenty twenty five
versus another important thing. Scott Powell, Welcome again to the
(33:57):
Bill Cunningham Show. So tell me about your column, The
Resurrection of Jesus transformed the world forever. Why did that happen?
Speaker 5 (34:07):
Well, it happened because since the fall of Man, life
has been distorted. People have had all kinds of problems,
and people need to be saved. You know, we need
a savior. I opened the article by you know, relating
to the recurring theme in Western literature and modern classics
(34:28):
as such as Superman and Disney Originals, revolve around the
struggle between good and evil and the need and critical
role for a rescuer or a savior. And everybody relates
to that theme, right, everybody does. Well, guess what, we
ourselves a need need a savior because you know, we're
flawed and we're you know, we're subject to temptation to
(34:51):
do the wrong thing. We don't always treat people the
way we should. I mean, there's all kinds of areas
in our lives where we're just efficient, can't seem to
get it fixed, try as we will, the reality is
that we can't. And all the other religions, all of
them are based on works. You know, in order to
(35:11):
get elevated spiritually, you have to perform certain works, certain rituals,
and so forth. Christianity is unique because its orientation is
not on ourselves, but it's outward. And it turns out
that it isn't works that open this relationship to Jesus Christ.
(35:32):
It is simply acknowledging our sin, acknowledging that we're flawed,
and that Christ stood in our place, if you will,
and gave up his life. He sacrificed his life to
justify us before God. And as we accept Jesus as
our Lord and savior, then we have this open relationship
(35:55):
with God.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
Let's talk about the historical character, because the skeptic, the atheist,
someone who says, well that this was a fanciful tale.
There's no evidence that he ever existed, nothing he ever
wrote has ever been discovered. There's pictures, maybe the shout
of turn. I think it's remarkable, but give the history
as to why. Objectively, the existence of Jesus Christ of
(36:20):
Nazareth is real.
Speaker 5 (36:23):
Well, you know, Skeptics of the biblic account of Jesus
simply have to come to terms with the fact that
there is more reliable historical evidence for his life, teachings, miracles, death,
and resurrection than there is evidence for any other historical
figure of ancient times. You know. Consider, for instance that
(36:43):
the authenticity of Alexander the Great, who was born some
three hundred and fifty years before Christ, is based on
only two original biographical accounts of his life by people
named Arion and Plutarch. But they they didn't write this
for some four hundred years after Alexander died. And then
(37:05):
you could take Virgil and Horace, very famous poets. The
manuscripts of Virgil and Horace, both of them lived within
a generation of Christ, were written more than four centuries
after their deaths. Yet no one doubts Virgil and Horace
lived and authored great poetic masterpieces. Similarly, the historical record
of Alexander the Great is unquestioned. But the reliability, let's
(37:28):
simplify it. How do we get to the reliability of ancients?
How can we be sure about things? Well, there's three variables,
and the reliability of ancient history is determined by the
number of eyewitness accounts of the events. These are eyewitness accounts,
people saw what was happening. And then there's the lapse
of time between the eyewitness accounts and the written record
(37:51):
of those accounts. So the shorter the time, the better
more reliable it is. And then there's the number we're
talking about ancient history two thousand years you know, we
were living, you know, two thousand years after Christ. Then
there's the number of surviving manuscripts of that written record.
So three things. Again, eyewitness accounts, laps of time between
(38:12):
the eyewitness accounts and the written record, and then the
number of surviving manuscripts of that written record. So if
we look at the big picture, they're about one thousand
times more manuscripts preserving the deeds and teachings of Jesus
in the New Testament, which are about twenty five thousand.
Then there are preserving other classical ancient works. And you
(38:34):
can pick other people other than you know, Alexander the
Great or Virgil and Horse. There's plenty of others you
could do the same thing with. There's twenty five about
twenty thousand surviving manuscripts that preserve jesus teachings. The next
(38:54):
closest is Homer's Iliad. That but that's only back by
eighteen hundred manuscripts. That that's still less than one tenth
the number of ancient manuscripts that back to the authenticity
of Jesus's life.
Speaker 3 (39:07):
So how many years?
Speaker 1 (39:08):
How many years went by from the events themselves and
those who watched them to the time they were written
they were written down? How many years.
Speaker 5 (39:15):
Passed in the case of Jesus, that's the that's the
incredible thing. These they were written down within a generation
or two of Jesus' life p.
Speaker 3 (39:28):
Four hundred years. Like Alexander the Gray, everyone says the exist.
Speaker 5 (39:32):
All the others. Remember, history was an oral tradition. Most
things were an oral tradition in those days. There weren't
that many scribes, but many of the many of the
ancient people that we revere, and we don't even question
their authenticity. The reality is is that they their written
record is four hundred years old after the eyewitness account
(39:54):
or after the actual you know, the poetic works that
were read and they were oral and heard by people,
but it wasn't really written down for four hundred years.
And yet we don't doubt that Virgil and Horace lived
and wrote these wonderful things. But in the case of Jesus,
(40:16):
there were four different accounts known as the Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke,
and John, and they weren't written hundreds of years later,
but within a generation or two of jesus life. Now
apostles Matthew and John, they provide eyewitness accounts from their
years walking with Jesus as his disciples, and that was
about a three year period. Mark also had eyewitness experience,
(40:39):
but he was only a teenager during the public ministry
of Jesus. And Luke fourth he was the famous doctor,
and he learned about Jesus from his friend Paul, who
was the primary apostle who wrote most of the letters
of the New Testament.
Speaker 6 (40:54):
So this is.
Speaker 5 (40:55):
Unique to Jesus. And yet many people doubt Jesus, doubt
the existence, the life, the history, everything about Jesus more
than they would doubt, you know, like Alexander the Great
or other historic figures.
Speaker 3 (41:09):
Well, I's got the dead states.
Speaker 5 (41:10):
They would believe all of Roman history before they believe
the account of Jesus.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
Now, why is that because you have Roman history, there's
some of them was written down, but the existence of
Jesus had thousands and thousands of references at the time.
And in fact, his name was was discovered somewhere on
a block of grant stone in and around Jerusalem. But
no one doubts that Julius Caesar existed. No one doubts that.
But they doubt Jesus. They doubt his existence. Why is that?
(41:37):
Is it a lack of faith? Is it to prove?
Speaker 7 (41:40):
Well?
Speaker 2 (41:41):
What is it?
Speaker 5 (41:41):
There's problem? There are probably a number of reasons. But
there are some people that are so you know, there's
there there somewhat unwilling to submit or surrender to a
higher authority. God is the highest authority, right, and Jesus
(42:02):
was his son. Jesus and God are really are really
are really God. Because Jesus was one with God, he
had all the power of God. We know the miracles
he did and so forth. And people have a hard
time to, you know, submitting, They want to They think
they want to be free to do whatever they want. Well,
the reality is is that God does want us to
(42:22):
be happy, fulfill having meaningful lives. But there are certain,
you know, boundaries that we need to operate within, and
when we do, life goes a lot better. And you know,
and the Jews had this right, going all the way
back to Abraham and Moses, particularly Moses, who who's really
authored the Mosaic law, if you will, the Ten Commandments anyway,
(42:46):
which are the main part of the Mosaic Law. There
are many more laws beyond the Ten Commandments. But Jews
were having a very hard time living up to all
of these. Life was very you know, complicated, and and
and people rested out over not being able to live
up to all these these laws and regulations, if you will,
(43:06):
in their lives. And so one of the Pharisees said
to Jesus at some point, he said, he said, Rabbi,
of which of the of the Mosaic law, which of
the laws is the greatest? And of course there are
so many of them. And you know what Jesus answered,
very simple answer. He said, if you love God with
(43:27):
all your heart and soul, and you love your neighbor
as yourself, you will have fulfilled all of the laws.
And this is unique to Christianity. The focus of Christianity
is outward, it's not inward. It's not you know, doing
the mantra and getting one with yourself and so forth.
It is, it is outward, it is loving other people,
(43:51):
it's serving other people. You know, you could encapsulate it
by the golden rule. You you want other people to
do under you as as you want to do unto
others as you would have them do.
Speaker 1 (44:05):
On that and Scott po before we get to the
critical part. For me, I'm a practicing Roman Catholic, and
uh I find my religion a source of great strength.
How do we know the resurrection took place? How do
we know that this wasn't some fable in order to
confirm the divinity of the Christ because he was dead,
that the spear was thrown into it pushed into his lung,
(44:27):
into his heart, water and blood came out. How do
we know he resurrected from the dead. How do we
know that?
Speaker 5 (44:33):
Well, we we know it from from the eyewitness testimonies,
and there there were you know, quite a quite a
number of those. As a matter of fact, Well, there's
a couple of things that I think are worth noting. First, First,
Jesus is the only people, only person all in all
(44:56):
of human history who who was There were prophecies about
his coming as much as a thousand years before Jesus
appeared in the world, David was prophesying that this Messiah
would be crucified. I mean, and that's at a time
when crucifixion didn't even exist.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
Different eighteen different prophets who talk about Jesus.
Speaker 5 (45:23):
Micah actually predicted that Jesus would be born in Bethlehem.
He names Bethlehem, And this is hundreds of years before
Jesus right now, how is that possible that that didn't
happen with anybody else? As far as we talk in.
Speaker 1 (45:38):
Scott, I find your column on townhall dot com. The
critical piece of evidence is this, the crucifixion is among
the worst ways to die. When I saw the movie
The Passion of the Christ, it was awful, it was terrible,
But the experts say it was much worse than that.
And at the end, Peter denied the relationship with Jesus
three times before the cock crowed. Three times he said,
(46:00):
I don't know the guy. Now, would you say?
Speaker 3 (46:03):
No? One will die for something contrived or false. Seeing
talking to and touching the risen Jesus transformed the apostles,
who then committed to the rest of their lives and
sharing the messages of salvation through Christ. And who would
give their life be crucified upside down, be stoned to death,
burned alive, skinned alive, if it was all alive, because
(46:24):
if it ended at the at Calgary, if that was
the end of it at Calvary and it didn't exist anymore,
the only way these twelve and Matthias took the place
of Judas would have given their lives is if it
was a true fact that Jesus was resurrected.
Speaker 5 (46:41):
Well, it's very compelling, you know evidence, there's no doubt
about that. You know, there still could be something that
would be skeptical. But if you go back to what
I said about about how we can understand you know,
ancient history through those three variables. The number of I
would accounts the lapse of time between those eyewitness accounts
(47:03):
and the written record. And if the shorter it is,
the more reliable it is. And then the number of
surviving manuscripts of the written record. And these are because
this is ancient two thousand years or more old. You know,
there's no you know, nothing really survived, you know, as
perfect parchment, I mean, you have you have fragments of
(47:25):
works in terms of what has survived. But you know
the written record, all of those variables put together make
Jesus in a class by himself, and all.
Speaker 1 (47:39):
The disciples and all the apostles would now have given
their life and be tortured and preached the word for
decades thereafter. Only John lived a fruitful life at the end.
But none would have given their life for a lie.
And if Jesus was crucified and put in the tomb
and never resurrect from the dead, this whole thing never
would have got to start. Nobody would have given it,
(48:00):
and unanimously. Not eight out of the twelve or six.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
Every one of them gave their life for something they saw,
which was the resurrected Christ. Otherwise they wouldn't.
Speaker 5 (48:10):
Have asked me about the resurrection. So the New Testament
provides accounts from multiple sources who witnessed Jesus firsthand. After
the resurrection. Jesus made ten separate appearances during these forty
days to his disciples between the resurrection and his ascension
into heaven, which was about a period of forty days.
(48:31):
Those appearances were the individual disciples. There were several disciples
at the same time, and once Jesus was seen by
five hundred people at one time. All of this, all
of this is testified in the Gospels as having happened.
And it's noteworthy that there were no accounts or witnesses
(48:52):
who came forth and disputed these appearances or called it
a hoax. That would certainly happen in modern times, but
it didn't.
Speaker 3 (48:59):
Happen back then, because they saw me, they saw him,
that's right.
Speaker 5 (49:03):
Nor is there any record of any witness accounts that
were contradictory.
Speaker 3 (49:08):
Scott. We got to run up against the clock get
the article everywhere. Easter.
Speaker 1 (49:11):
The resurrection of Jesus transformed the world forever. Scott Powell,
once again, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show.
And Scott, you're a great American. Thank you very much.
Thank you, Bill, God bless you. Let's continue with more.
No one is going to give their life for a lie.
Not unanimously. All twelve Matthias took the place of Judas.
If it was all a lie, they would not have
(49:32):
spent the rest of their life spreading the word about Jesus.
And secondly they were massacred in horrible ways. The truth
will set you free. Bill Cunningham on seven hundred wulw
real one.
Speaker 8 (49:46):
Marte swings, launches it high deep down the left field line.
Speaker 3 (49:51):
It is gone.
Speaker 8 (49:53):
That is a grand slam just inside the left field
foul poll for Noel v. Marte and the Reds have
put up twenty against the Orioles. Today it is twenty
to one Red.
Speaker 5 (50:11):
Hello, Piet, I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 2 (50:19):
God.
Speaker 7 (50:20):
Our job every day is to try to kick somebody's ass.
I mean, that's why we're here.
Speaker 3 (50:25):
Well, he kicked both cheeks yesterday, would you agree? Kicked
Memorial for two? Now if you I thought they were
going to score thirty at one point, what's the all
time record about it? Because that one dude, that mateo
or something that was pitching, he was just throwing it out.
He might as well throw it under underhand baseball heaven.
Oh but Marte hit that one to the next county.
(50:47):
But didn't they do this? Similarly? About three weeks ago,
two weeks ago, Willie thirty five consecutive innings without a
run over five games. That was after the what was
it fourteen to one win over Texas.
Speaker 1 (51:01):
So in two games they scored like thirty six runs.
Right then for like thirty seven innings scored nothing now
tonight's the test in Miami got them.
Speaker 3 (51:11):
Randy Johnson, Daddy lododo you, daddy got more motivation than ever.
Marlin's are nine and twelve. They lost five to six.
They avoided a sweep though over the weekend he beat
the Phills on Sunday. One of the better players, Griffin
co nine, the son of Jeff co nine, gone sixty
day I l with a dislocated shoulder. He was hurt
(51:31):
on Saturday on. So one of their best players is gone.
And uh, what the Red Legs are gonna do? You
take Miami and then take Colorado? Between those two, those
those teams stink. They got to win five of six.
Do you agree? Yes? Please contine?
Speaker 7 (51:48):
And what about our job every day is to try
to kick somebody's ass.
Speaker 3 (51:51):
I mean that's why we're here. What about Hunter Green
got roughed up, but then look what happened the next
Look what happened the next day. I mean he can't
he can't go out, He can't go out and no runs,
three hits, no eighteen strikeouts every every time out. I mean,
come on, pitcher in baseball will leave the stoot reporters
(52:12):
approud service. Every local Tamestar Heating and air Conditioning dealers
Tamestar Quality UKNDFEEL. In Cincinnati, colwayoming Erratt won eight eight, eight, nine,
nine six h v a C twenty four to two.
Yesterday will He had twenty five hit attack. The Reds
went fifteen to twenty five with runners in scoring position,
(52:35):
a record. Now Austin Wins, the backup catcher, only made
the club out of spring training because Tyler Stevenson opened
on the il fifth Red since nineteen hundred to score
to record six hits in a game, the first since
Philip Irvin in twenty nineteen. Left Fielder Wins also becomes
(52:56):
the sixth catcher primary position to pull off a six
hit feat game in MLB history. The last one to
do it was Paul Laduka in two thousand and one,
played for the Mets. Two other Reds catchers have done it.
Who are they? Walker Cooper in nineteen forty seven, you
were led to Cooper fly and Ernie Lombardi Ernie thirty
(53:18):
nine in the year of the Great Flood thirty seven,
Bengo Novelie isn't in thirty seven, I don't know. We
were underwater. Good point, Go ahead, Novellie Marte added five hits,
including a grand slam off a Hordey Mateo terrible wins
in Marte the first pair of Red's teammates with five
hits each in the same game since Veda Pinson and
(53:40):
Hall of Famer Frank Robinson in nineteen fifty. What were
their number segment? Veda Pinson was twenty eight and Frank
Robinson was I had it right there in my tip
ony twenty. By the way, Frank Robinson didn't come up
till fifty six. Didn't you just say fifty fifty nine?
He said, you said fifty I said fifty nine. You did.
(54:02):
All right, We're gonna look at the never ch eleven
Walks match, the most of the Reds had since twenty
twenty against the White Sox. Fan of Pinson was my
favorite Reds player at that time. You were a good player.
Twenty eight. And after that came Bobby Tolan, remember him,
not bad? Hurt his achilles though, yep, and then throw
in the chief and throw in Eric Davis. Doesn't get
(54:24):
any better than that. Not bad. Let's see. The most
twenty five hits were the most since May of nineteen
ninety nine against Colorado tied for six most in Red's history.
I mean this is I mean, how did this happen?
Speaker 5 (54:39):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (54:40):
Well, because I guess because the Oriole stink. And what
about l A Day La Cruz aka Superman that you
will not see another catch of that magnitude this year.
I let's put it right now, nine feet nine feet reach, unbelievable,
unbelievable down in the catch down the left field line.
(55:02):
They have a transition. A transition you mean transaction transgender? Yeah, okay,
let's see Lodolo is off the fraternity list. Randy Winn,
who came on, got a fleeing flight yesterday morning at
seven am to get the Baltimore wherever Louisville was. He
(55:23):
got to pitch three and he's got his first career save.
He's back in Louisville. Good job. Yeah, And how about
Brett Souter, the man of bowler getting it done? Not bad?
All I can say is hopefully the Reds will use
this as motivation to hit the ball. The next two
series should be won. I think the Reds are favorite
(55:44):
in every game in Miami, in every game in Colorado.
They really I think Colorado has won three games this year.
They stink and their uniforms look goofy too. The Reds
promoting Chase Burns from High A to Double A Chattanooga
already here he comes, Chaser number two overall pick at
A twenty twenty four draft and three High A outings,
(56:07):
three oh nine e RA and twenty punch outs. Not bad.
He'll be here by August three. Uh ERA is not good, though,
is it did? It'll get lower Reds and Marlins. Tonight
welly five forty Sports Talk, Arnell Carriers Inside Pitch, then
Kelsey Chevrolet Extra Inning Show after the game. Now the
(56:29):
University of Cincinnati Bearcats two commits in one hour. They
need it. A little while ago they need it. UCF
center Mustafa Thium has committed to UC out of the
transfer portal. Seven footer, he has a wingspan of seven
foot six seven feet six inches, about as about as
(56:51):
wide as this room. He's at a senegal ten points
or six rebounds a game in his freshman year with
in Orlando. Then the Bearcats and West Miller get former
Baylor guard Jason Jalen Celestine out of the transfer portal.
He hit thirty eight percent from three. He spent three
(57:13):
years at Cow Kentucky's gonna get Denzel Aberdeen from the
world chair or the NCAA champion Florida Gators. Is he
related to Denzel Washington? No, not really. Bengals Update brought
to you by Good Spirits and Party Town thirteen locations
in Northern Kentucky. First day of offseason workouts. Everybody's there, nobody, nobody,
(57:37):
everybody's there, so calm down. NFL Draft starts a three
day run Thursday night at Beautiful Green Bay. They're calling
for good weather, unusual green Bay seven under WLW Stone statements.
NFL Draft Spectacular Thursday Night begins at six live from
the Holy Grail with Lance Rock Chickster, everybody, AE and everyone.
(58:00):
What's the number one thing the Bengals need? Do you
think it's presented by Ortho? Since the Orthopedics and Sports
Medicine and Emory Federal Credit Union seventeenth pick overall, I
would go with an offensive lineman. Okay. Plus it also
depends that Duke Tobin was just talking to the media.
They're open to trades and there's nothing new about the
(58:23):
Trey Hendrickson matter. Nothing new, nothing new. Well, he's under
contract for one more year right now. Is he going
to say no to like twenty two million dollars. Is
he gonna play one more year? Doesn't he have to?
I guess, Oh yeah, I mean if you sit out,
so you still have rights with the Bengals for one
more year. Gotta play. Congrats to the Xavier women's tennis
(58:44):
team winning their fifth straight Big East championship over the weekend,
beating Villanova and Xavier gets an automatic bid to the
ncaah A Tennis Championships. That's good. How many you see
men as basketball? Have some sense that Miller has a
team to coach. Well, he's got two good guys right there?
So far? Do you have hope? There's always hope. And and
(59:07):
of course Duke Star Cooper Flag is getting out of
Tobacco road. He's declared for the twenty twenty five draft
to be the projected number one pick. Looks like he's
headed to who stinks the most in the NBA? Washington
The Wizards think do they? I thought was Dallas, Well
they stink, but Elas think is bad? Oh, I would
(59:29):
think Washington or Carolina something like that. Charlotte, well, they're
the worst teams. Good luck to you. Would you want
to go to Washington DC to play basketball. No, No,
FC Cincinnati wins its fourth in a row Saturday. Next
up for the Orange and Blue is at home on
this Saturday t QL Stadium against Sporting Kansas City and
(59:51):
their first place correct Todd second place, second place, second
place behind Charlotte. Well, we'll see what happens. See what
the draft starts on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. We'll will
we be there twenty four hours a day for those
three days, every day, every just Thursday. What about Friday? No?
What about Saturday?
Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:00:08):
Why not? First round is Thursday two and three, on
Friday four through seven on Saturday. About what time would
the Bengals pick be Thursday night? I would say around
ten pm or something ten thirty and a round day
offensive or defensive lineman or a stud linebacker. We need
a stud linebacker. Would you agree? They need a few
(01:00:28):
things and in a few kicker?
Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:00:32):
Well, I don't know, Money Mac Money Mac has issued
some insufficient They're okay at quarterback, aren't they? Briefly? But
money Mac wide receiver. I think they're all right, aren't they?
Why can't we get a kicker? What about a running back? Goals? Well,
we could use that they're not valuable supposedly, No, but
you got to keep number nine upright and cleaning, keep
(01:00:53):
them clean, being going with one in five, get the
ball from nine to one and nine to five, and
also play a little bit in the preseason, how about that?
And then another one win early might those two or
three four game you know, three or four games the
beginning of the season. Yeah, then you then all of
(01:01:14):
a sudden at the end of the year, you got
to dig out of that hole. And you can't do
it because then you need Houston to win, and then
Pittsburgh to lose, and then the Rams to win, and
then the Commanders to lose, and this team to win
and that team to win, and you're in sake, who
is worst beginning of season? The Bengals are the Reds
(01:01:35):
you mean last year or anytime the last few years.
Because the Reds right now are eleven eleven and were
feeling good eleven eleven, I feel good about well, they
lost what two out of three and to the Giants
right to begin the season. Then they took two out
of three, right, so I don't know, I mean, Bengals
got to get off on a fast and two you know, what.
(01:01:57):
I'll take that all day long. And if they they
have a weaker schedule because they finished no more and
three starts, those are a problem. Would you agree?
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
I would say, so, now there's fourteen games, you got
to go ten and four.
Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
In those games? Thank you. That gets a little difficult
slightly in the National Football League. Lest they have a
weaker schedule this year, correct, well, I hope so, haven't
seen it yet. They they maybe going to Spain, they
may be headed to Espadya.
Speaker 1 (01:02:23):
And if they are, they're going to be a visiting team,
which is fine with me. I don't want to lose
a home game at Leisia. Reese might go.
Speaker 3 (01:02:28):
Nuts, say you ready, they got to get that done.
That's another issue. Trey hendrickson the stadium deal. Matt Huffman,
the speaker is not too click keen on giving him
a check for three hundred and fifty million dollars. Would
you be, Yeah, you would be.
Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
I'll's continue with more after two o'clock today. What would
July Gunlock of the Independent Women's Forum segment get me
out of the student's report please? By the way, I
want to acknowledge that Diamond Dave lives in Madisonville as
a server at the Kenwood Country Club. And Diamond Dave
is listening to me and listening to Bruce Roddy for
thirty years. So if you know Diamond Dave telling me
(01:03:06):
he's a great American seg man, give me out of
the students report.
Speaker 3 (01:03:09):
Willye and Otter. What a happy birthday to one of
our own, Todd Kurlis. We leave you with the immortal
words of the Stooge Report.
Speaker 5 (01:03:18):
The whole town's battie about Cincinnati.
Speaker 3 (01:03:21):
What a team? What a team? What a team? We
hope that's the case. Three in Miami, three in Denver,
and then h O M E time back home. On
seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
Win a thousand dollars entered this nationwide keyword on our website.
Speaker 4 (01:03:38):
Win.
Speaker 8 (01:03:38):
That's win.
Speaker 6 (01:03:40):
Enter it now.
Speaker 3 (01:03:48):
By Bill Cunningham, the Great America.
Speaker 1 (01:03:49):
Of course, Julie Gunlock, your frequent guests, would try to
do this every month or two from the Independent Women's
Forum dot org IWF dot org. And for those parents
and for those sisters, for you, if you're a female
type person or identify, shall I say as a female,
I go to IWF dot org and it's got conservative
viewpoints of women that point out some of the fallacies
of governmental policies things of that character, and Julie Gunlock
(01:04:12):
walcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show.
Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
And someday soon.
Speaker 1 (01:04:17):
The US Supreme Court's hearing arguments, which I'm sure the
opinion won't be released until June, about the requirement that
parents be notified if their children are being taught in
public schools issues and indoctrinated against their religious principles. I'm
thinking about transgenderism or anti God, whatever it might be.
There are many schools, especially in Colorado, that have laws
(01:04:38):
that are going to say, you know what, if a
parent does not cooperate completely with their child's transitioning to
one of the other one hundred and seven genders, that
somehow that's the reason to take the child away, And
that hopefully the Supreme Court's going to rule by June
that parents must be notified about teaching principles to their
(01:04:59):
children against their religious principles. Can you first tell the
American people what's happening in this area and how important
that has to be to parents and others.
Speaker 9 (01:05:07):
Yeah, it is actually really frightening what is happening now.
There are there is an effort in many states. There's
most recently in Colorado, but there was an effort in
Virginia and also California. Of course, the way of California
is the way of Virginia to criminalize parents for objecting
(01:05:28):
or having any concerns. And I'm talking, I mean you
could literally voice the concern, and they want to criminalize that,
meaning that if a parent says no to a child
who wants to change their name and change their so
called gender and identify as a transgender. There is no
such thing as a transgender child. I want to be
very clear there. But if they choose to identify as
(01:05:51):
transgender and a parent objects to that and objects to
a school changing the child's name or calling the child
by the pronouns that they wish to be called, that
parent can be charged with child abuse. What democrats want
to do is add that to the list or CP
of violations where a CPS agent can be called and
(01:06:14):
brought to your home and your child taken away and
potentially put in foster care.
Speaker 6 (01:06:18):
Again. If you object to your child's wish.
Speaker 9 (01:06:21):
To be transgender or be called by a different name
or use different pronouns, it is absolutely orwellian and frightening
and parents need to be aware that this is This
is a very common belief among Democrats that is their
job to protect children against their own parents, and their
(01:06:41):
own grandparents and their wider family members. There is a
very sort of well known case in Virginia and there's
been some writing on it.
Speaker 6 (01:06:49):
It's called Sage's Law.
Speaker 9 (01:06:51):
This young woman named Stage, she decided that she was
a transgender of girl.
Speaker 6 (01:06:58):
She was actually she wanted to be a man. That
she decided she was transgender.
Speaker 9 (01:07:01):
Her school helped to transition her socially transition her. They
never told the family. It turns out that this young
girl was sex trafficked throughout the state. She ended up
in Maryland. She was put in foster care. They would
not let her parents or grandparents see her. It's an
absolutely horrible case. And again if you look up Stage's Law,
(01:07:22):
there was some reporting by.
Speaker 6 (01:07:23):
The federalists that was excellent. This could happen more commonly.
Speaker 9 (01:07:27):
We've already seen parental rights being taken away in California
again now in Colorado, and so you know, if you're
a parent anywhere in the country, be aware that Democrats
are pursuing this. It is very frightening. And again parents
should really know about it.
Speaker 1 (01:07:43):
Well when it comes to child cust disputes things in
that character. Colorado's on the path many others. And it's
interesting that in England, in Great Britain, the court ruled
whatever court they have. That's the spositive of the issue
about a week ago, that there are two genders.
Speaker 3 (01:07:59):
There's male and there's female.
Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
They're thirty years so to speak, ahead of us or
behind us, depending on your perspective. But for twenty or
thirty years, you could have a hormonal treatment, you could
have gender reassignment surgery as children, and the system encouraged
it and paid for it. And after this experiment for
twenty or thirty years, England said, now wait a minute,
this is wrong. It has terrible impacts on the child
(01:08:22):
later on. It doesn't cure the psychiatric difficulties a child
might have. In fact, it aggravates it. So explain what
England did and how America will be there in ten
to twenty years, hopefully quicker.
Speaker 3 (01:08:34):
But we're on the way.
Speaker 9 (01:08:36):
Well, look what was going on in England. It's actually
happening here too. We've got cases of biological men, fully
intact biological men simply saying simply declaring I am a
woman and being transferred to women's prisons where women are
then sexually attacked and raped. Some have become pregnant. It
is an absolute catastrophe and I really if you're interested
(01:08:58):
in this, you can look at uf dot org. We
have a whole serious storytelling series on this that really
tells pretty horrific stories of women that again that are
in prison and having to share space with men, sometimes
sells with biological men. And again all these men have
to do is say you know, I'm a woman, and
(01:09:19):
they will be transferred so and they can also receive
cosmetic surgery, they.
Speaker 6 (01:09:24):
Can receive.
Speaker 9 (01:09:29):
Breast surgery and other surgeries in those jails at taxpayer expense.
So this was happening in the UK. A lot of
sort of famous cases actually in Scotland where where men
were being housed with women in women's prisons. And finally
a case went before the Supreme Court in England and
the English Supreme Court.
Speaker 6 (01:09:47):
The England Supreme.
Speaker 9 (01:09:48):
Court ruled that a woman is known as the definition
of woman is by her biological sex, the sex she
was born with. This is the kind of thing that
makes me shake my head and go am I living
in the twilight zone because I cannot believe it actually
has taken courts to say what is just common sense.
(01:10:09):
But that is where we are, and you're absolutely right,
this is going to have to happen. In the United States,
IWF is working really hard to create what we call
sort of sex specific language in state by state, and
we have worked very hard to have some language codify
that a woman is a biological woman in the stry.
(01:10:30):
So we are working state by state and we've been
quite successful. But again, we would welcome a Supreme Court action. Sadly,
one of our Supreme Court justices doesn't actually even know
what a woman is, so it likely will not be
a unanimous vote if it comes to the United States
Supreme Court. But in the UK they're moving ahead and
we're very happy to see it.
Speaker 1 (01:10:51):
I kind of love these yard science. Science is real, well,
biology is real, and gender is determined at the moment
of conception, revealed at birth, maybe through a sonogram you
might see the little stem there is okay, but is
it is determined at conception and revealed at birth. And
anything that says something the contrary is contrary to science.
(01:11:13):
Contrary to biology contrary to nature.
Speaker 6 (01:11:16):
Right, you know, and you know, and Billy.
Speaker 9 (01:11:18):
What's so sad too, is that there's a common thing,
especially among libertarian uh commentators and writers, that oh, you know,
adults should be able to do whatever they want to do.
Speaker 6 (01:11:27):
And look, I really think that we.
Speaker 9 (01:11:30):
Need to understand that there are mentally ill males and
mentally women frankly in this country who are removing.
Speaker 6 (01:11:38):
Completely healthy body parts.
Speaker 9 (01:11:40):
They're removing organs, they're removing their breast, they're removing their genitalia,
they are altering themselves. I don't know under what in
what world that is acceptable that we allow people. I mean,
what if you're born and you say, you know, I
really should be blind? Should we allow people to poke
their eyes out? I mean, should we if you if
you have sort of idea that really I'm a paraplegic.
Speaker 6 (01:12:02):
Should we have people cutting their spines?
Speaker 9 (01:12:04):
It is a mental illness and the idea that we
are allowing this to happen. And again it is common
refraining to say, look, transgender people, if you want to,
you know, if you find but you know, make sure
that you're an adult. Just leave the kids alone. No,
I don't even agree with that. I don't think anybody
should be allowed to endure these kinds of surgeries. In
these alterations, they're mutilating themselves. And I don't know in
(01:12:27):
what civilized society that became acceptable, So I would say
that I'm even more radicalized on this. I don't think
that these surgeries should be allowed on anyone.
Speaker 6 (01:12:36):
I think it is a.
Speaker 9 (01:12:37):
Sickness that has been allowed to fester for too long,
and because of the opification of this country, we have
allowed mentally ill people to sort of appear.
Speaker 6 (01:12:47):
Normal, or we're trying to normalize mental illness.
Speaker 9 (01:12:50):
These people deserve compassion and treatment, not encouragement to do
these horrible things to their body.
Speaker 3 (01:12:56):
It's kind of a mental disease.
Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
I can't imagine if I if somebody would I identify
as a blind man, I'll go to an optalmologist and
have him take out my eyes. That not optalmologists would
look at him and say, what do you want me
to do?
Speaker 3 (01:13:08):
I'm not doing that, And.
Speaker 9 (01:13:10):
If not optimologist did it, he would lose his license.
This is medical malpractice. And honestly, Billy, what they've done
to children in this country, not to mention full grown adults,
there are an awful lot of doctors, an awful lot
of doctors who belong in jail for a long long
time to what they've done.
Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
Let me play devil's advocate. Let's say you have a
fourteen year old girl who is believing in the culture.
It is a thing to me, shall we say, alternative
in among girls, especially girls, but some boys.
Speaker 3 (01:13:38):
In high school.
Speaker 1 (01:13:39):
Something like twenty five percent of the women that go
to college identify as LGBTQ plus, which is factually, biologically,
scientifically wrong, but they identify as such. So the culture
is telling this girl, who maybe is a tomboy, that
you're a man locked in a woman's body. That the
parent are in liberals. They're certainly supporters of MS thirteen
(01:14:04):
members who are wife beaters and gang members who've tattooed
MS thirteen or in their knuckles, but don't identify that
person as with MS thirteen.
Speaker 3 (01:14:12):
Don't do that. And then you go to the doctor.
Speaker 1 (01:14:14):
You go to the family doctor, and the family doctor says,
you know what, we have to transition this child to
the male body, which is in the female body. And
then you go to a children's hospital and the children's
hospital says, you know what, we have a whole branch
of our hospital that deals with this. So the parent
is told, you're going to have a live daughter or
a dead son.
Speaker 3 (01:14:33):
Those are your two choices. If you don't do it,
what do you say to a mom or dad In
some states now, if you don't consent, the state will
take your child away and do it anyway.
Speaker 1 (01:14:44):
I would say move out of that state. But what
do you say, what do you say about that parent
that is between a rock and a hard place.
Speaker 9 (01:14:51):
Well, the facts matter in this, and I would encourage
everyone to challenge any medical professional who gives you that
binary choice, because they do like binary choices when it
comes to whether or not to get your son or
daughter mutilated.
Speaker 6 (01:15:07):
They're fine, it's a.
Speaker 9 (01:15:07):
Yes or no answer, and if it's no, you're an
abuser and you should have your child children taken away.
And if that sounds insane, it's because it is.
Speaker 6 (01:15:16):
Now.
Speaker 9 (01:15:16):
The data is very clear on this. Children who have
body dysphoria are unable to sort of accept it is
a mental condition. And if they are unable to accept
the bodies that they are, and they generally grow out.
Speaker 6 (01:15:29):
Of it by their early twenties, most of these kids
have look, I don't know if you remember when you
were thirteen.
Speaker 9 (01:15:36):
I was a lunatic when I was thirteen.
Speaker 6 (01:15:38):
I thought I could fly.
Speaker 9 (01:15:39):
Okay, honestly I was so I was such a mess
when I was thirteen years old, and thankfully my parents.
Speaker 6 (01:15:46):
Sort of said, she'll grow out of it, and she did.
Speaker 9 (01:15:48):
I mean, I wasn't that much of a mess, but
I really had some crazy ideas when I was thirteen, and.
Speaker 6 (01:15:53):
My parents knew I would grow out of it. Kids, puberty, it.
Speaker 9 (01:15:56):
Is a difficult time. Do not The idea that we
act on any desire of any thirteen year old is
absolutely absurd to me. Look if your son or daughter
comes to you and wants to drive when they're twelve
years old, do you let them?
Speaker 6 (01:16:09):
Do you let them vape? Do you let them consume alcohol?
Do you let them engage in sexual activity? No, you
wouldn't do that.
Speaker 9 (01:16:17):
So why in the world would you actually act on
a thirteen year old, a fourteen year old, a fifteen
year old, and frankly even older.
Speaker 6 (01:16:25):
Young adulthood is tough.
Speaker 9 (01:16:27):
These children mostly grow out of it, and for those
who don't, there is counseling to help them live, perhaps
in a body they don't actually like.
Speaker 6 (01:16:36):
Look it is.
Speaker 9 (01:16:38):
Really dangerous to alter a child's body and to even
sort of entertain these ideas with a child. You have
to stand strong and you have to be really a
leader for your child and explain to them that God
doesn't make mistakes. The body you were born into is
the body you were supposed to be in. So I
really urge parents, ignore, deny, move out of the state
(01:17:01):
if you need to. If they have these kinds of
criminalizing rules, it's a tough time to be a parent.
My sympathy goes it goes out to people, but do
not listen to doctors who advise this to parents.
Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
And in fact, the Supreme Court is going to rule
in this, hopefully by June. And Colorado has a law
that says that if you move out of the state
and Colorado design it to recognize the regulations laws of
other states. That would mean that if you're married in
Virginia and a couple moves to Florida, Florida and it
doesn't have to recognize the marriage in Virginia, which is
a bunch of bs. So hopefully the court will come
(01:17:35):
in and say, you know what, states cannot radicalize children
and transitioning can't be taught things that parents don't want
to be taught. School choice is an important issue. Now,
lastly about women in sports and radicalization and women in college.
Can you tell me why there's a whole bunch of
conservative movement going on, especially among the young. But you
send you're a girl of your sound off to college,
(01:17:56):
they come back with multi colored hair, living at altarnative lifestyle,
with a metal in their nose. What the hell is
going on with college today?
Speaker 9 (01:18:05):
Well, listen, you gotta be careful Bowers. Your kids go
off to college. But that is why it is so
important to talk to your children before they're there, Before
they're free to go to college and they're living out
of your size and out of your You need to
give your children a very good sort of basic understanding
of you know, why you believe the way you do,
why you vote the way you do, why you go
(01:18:27):
to church, why you're Christian or Jewish or whatever you are,
Why why you believe the way you do.
Speaker 6 (01:18:33):
You've got to talk to your kids.
Speaker 9 (01:18:35):
I mean, I think that too often people just assume
their kids will turn out conservative because they were conservative.
That is no longer the case, and you have to understand.
Speaker 6 (01:18:44):
I think you know.
Speaker 9 (01:18:45):
Look, we look back in the forties and fifties people
went off to college and there wasn't sort of this
desire to to sort of capture kids, right to change them. Today,
that's all they want to do. They really do want
to ende doctrinate kids. They really do want to indoctrinate.
Speaker 6 (01:19:02):
At a very young age.
Speaker 9 (01:19:04):
So this is happening earlier now. I mean here in
Fairfax County, Virginia, there is a part of the sort
of sex ed education that literally wants to teach elementary
school school children about alternative It's a nice family show,
so I'll just say alternative sexual behaviors. It is just
astonishing what the Democrats want to do and how they
(01:19:27):
want to indoctrinate the youngest children.
Speaker 7 (01:19:30):
Now.
Speaker 9 (01:19:30):
So again, parents, you really have to get your kids
a good education, if that requires.
Speaker 6 (01:19:34):
Getting the map of the public school, take them to.
Speaker 9 (01:19:37):
Church, talk to them, talk to them about why you
believe the way you do.
Speaker 6 (01:19:41):
Giving them that strong foundation.
Speaker 9 (01:19:43):
Will help them survive the awful years of liberal education
in college.
Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
Well, if some boy or girls in the third, fourth,
or fifth grade, they don't have to know about alternative
sexual practices, they don't have to know as a toddler.
Some liberal schools identify toddlers as man female, and most
toddlers have a hard time controlling their bowels. They don't
have to be informed about alternative lifestyles that you have
to choose when you're five years old. By the way,
(01:20:10):
little Jimmy, are you a boy or a girl?
Speaker 5 (01:20:12):
Goo?
Speaker 3 (01:20:12):
Google what? And so there's a.
Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
Radicalization and indoctrination happening, and it's got to stop. And
I hope that I have hope the Supreme Court will
say parents. Of course, a bunch of liberal parents with
these silly ass signs in their yards talking about signs
is real, but not when it comes to men and
women x X and xy, then science is not real. Well,
Julie Gunlock, we have to run but IWF Independent Women's
(01:20:35):
Form dot org. IWF dot org is the place to
go if you want to get more information IWF dot org.
And Julie, you're a great American. And thanks for coming
on the Bill Cunningham Show.
Speaker 6 (01:20:45):
Thank you, Julie, Thank you, Billy.
Speaker 3 (01:20:47):
God bless you all. Let's continue with more.
Speaker 1 (01:20:49):
Imagine being taught in Fairfax County schools when you're about
nine years old, or how a girl can pleasure herself
and parents, know your role and shut your mond. Bill
Cunningham News Radio seven hundred w l W.
Speaker 10 (01:21:04):
John Sena, damn, David damn John Pattner's pack.
Speaker 2 (01:21:09):
You cannot be a perfect cover.
Speaker 10 (01:21:11):
Bye Sena cover by Santa pattern said the ring John
Sana set the record shot Santa do the seven cod
Donald Champian.
Speaker 11 (01:21:31):
Still sh he Hello, Hello, Pyett, I'm I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 3 (01:21:54):
Talking about a matchup between John Cena and hul Cogan
and his prime. Who do you like in that matchup?
I'd have to go with taking my vitamins in the Hulkster.
How about John Cena versus Andre the Giant. I'd have
to go with a t G. How about John Cena
versus Rowdy Roddy Piper or Macho Man with the lovely
(01:22:19):
Elizabeth Another good match up? What about Flyer? How about
me mean Gene Okerland in the ring announcing me Gene.
Gene's fine with the interviews? What about Sena the Kamala,
the head of the Uganda Giant Wow or George the
(01:22:41):
Animal Steel correct? Good matchup? Yeah, it'd be a good one.
John Cena now is the all time greatest heavyweight champion
with the w w E SEV seventeen time last night, unbelieved,
Las Vegas, Las Vegas. How about those? They have some
parties after the match, do you think? I think so?
Well night, they got another raw as tonight in Vegas.
(01:23:03):
They've had like five straight nights of wrestling action in Vegas,
and I bet it's packed in stack oh jam jam
like the uh Brand Spence Bridge a Memorial.
Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
Day and Namala High School baseball team almost won the
national title.
Speaker 3 (01:23:16):
That's right day. Well, yeah, they lost like twelve to
eight or something. I forget what it was. Not bad,
but not bad, not bad at all? Will he the
student reporters of Pro Service, every local Tamestar Heating and
air conditioning dealers. Thamestar quality you could feel in northern
Kentucky on any weather. Heating and air at eight five,
nine seventy eight to one forty eight twenty two. What
(01:23:39):
about Bun It was just two weeks ago. They'll be
here tomorrow. Bron Heating and Cooling want to be here.
The amateur golfers of all time as Sheldon Braun of
Clovernook run by Danny Dieters and also Harry Alexander. Pretty
good right there. Also two weeks ago, Willie, the Reds
couldn't score in five five games, thirty five consecutive inning
(01:24:00):
without a run. Yesterday they pop twenty four on the
O's Impossible Tonight if game one in Miami with Lodolo
on the mound, the new Deady up against Max Meyer
and the Marlins, first of three. There seven hundred W
one of his coverage five forty Sports Talk, Rnell Carriers,
(01:24:22):
Inside Pitch and then the Kelsey Chevrolet Extra Inning Show
after the game. Now here's the lineup, Give me the lineup,
Franco to me, give it to me fast, give it
to me hard, Freedom and center, McLean at second, Superman
at short. What about the catcher, Let's see Austin, Willie
Mays Hayes and left not bad, Gavin Luxury and the
(01:24:47):
DH Newsom's no Gavin lux lucks Steer and first he's
got to start hitting Jake the Snake and right Novelvi
Marte at third, Grand Salon Avigno catching. Wait a minute,
what about the guy.
Speaker 7 (01:25:03):
Every day is to try to kick somebody's ass. I mean,
that's why we're here.
Speaker 3 (01:25:06):
You mean when the yes, he's got too many interviews.
Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
What does Frank ConA say, get up every day trying
to kick somebody's asses? That's right, I say, last night
both chigs got kicked.
Speaker 3 (01:25:18):
Oh you're not kidding twenty four and apparently I guess
the Orioles manager kind of went off on management saying
we need some players in here. What the manager of
the oath after there after their ace kicking by the
red Legs, I guess he kind of said, hey, where's
(01:25:38):
where's uh Jim Palmer, where is he? Fran Frank Robinson,
Brooks Robinson, the pale, Mark Blancher, what about you for
Davy Johnson? Get him in there? Not bat.
Speaker 1 (01:25:51):
I think those guys aren't showing up anytime soon. Bengals up.
Speaker 3 (01:25:54):
They brought to you by Good Spirits at Party Town
with thirteen convenient locations in northern Kentucky, one of Bengals
offseason workouts. Everybody's there, but no Trey Hendrickson yet. When
I don't know when the report, I have no idea
want to know when he pulls into the park parking
lot that's not flooded anymore? Did he? With the the
(01:26:18):
communications you have, uh, you can talk to people anytime anywhere,
So he thought there was still smoke signals. I'm telling
them we have phones right now. NFL Draft starts a
three day run in Green Bay on Thursday night. Seven
outd of ww Stone statements. NFL Draft Spectacular starts Thursday
at six oh five. What about John Cena and Rocky?
(01:26:39):
Where's Rocky? Is he back from Belize? I haven't seen him.
Maybe they maybe they didn't let him back in. Maybe
he was. Maybe he's in that prison at El Salvador
with the with the pebbles. Would you want to be there? No,
this guy's walking around. All they got is like a
white shirt and underwear on, and it look like they behave.
(01:27:01):
Is that fair to say? Yeah? They're always been over
to notice that. I've noticed that. It's the It's from
the Holy Grail, Willie. It's presented by Orthos since the
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Emory Federal Credit Union. The Bengals
picked seventeenth in round one on Thursday night. Who do
you like? Offensive line? Well, could trade it. We are
(01:27:24):
certainly not going to sit on our hands.
Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
He's not going to sit on his hands. But talk
to t do Francona. He kicks butt. We wake up
every day to kick someone's ass. Does that define you?
Speaker 3 (01:27:36):
That's kind of like what we have above the mantle
here at the station. DJ Hodge says, kick ass and
take names. Two commits within an hour today Willie earlier
this afternoon for Wes Miller in Clifton Wow UCF center
Mustafa Chiam has committed to Cincinnata's out of the transfer
(01:27:59):
portal good. The Senegal native ten point six rebounds per
game as a freshman in Orlando. Seven foot he has
a wingspan of seven feet six inches.
Speaker 1 (01:28:10):
Seven feet six inches. Can he stand on his tippy
toes and touch the rim? I'd say it's close.
Speaker 3 (01:28:17):
Probably do that and touch the top of the crew
tower you see lands a former Baylor guard Jaalen Celestine
out of the transfer portal. He's hit thirty eight percent
from three and the first three years he was at Cow,
the Home of the Bears. How about Christy nom robbed
inside a Washington, DC restaurant over the weekend. The secretary's
(01:28:40):
purse containing three thousand dollars in cash, her passport at
Louis Vuitton, makeup bag, DHS, access card, apartment kenother belongs
snatched from her table by a masked man is that Trump.
Doesn't he get blamed for everything. I think Trump's going
to be the new hope. Either he's the president jd
(01:29:03):
vance one or the other. Duke Star Cooper Flag says,
I'm out of here. He's declaring for the twenty twenty
five NBA draft. Projected to be the number one pick.
Speaker 1 (01:29:15):
Noam was taking her family out to enjoy Easter festivities
yesterday when a suspect grabbed her bag Louis Baton and
left the establishment at a high rate of speed, identified
as an unknown white man wearing a medical mask. Also
review Also, after reviewing security footage, she was shocked this
(01:29:35):
happened in an upscale Washington, DC restaurant. She had no
security with her at that moment. Probably a Democrat, she's
head of DHS. Your comments on that segment, also, Willie.
Speaker 3 (01:29:47):
Let's see FC Cincinnati at home this week against the
Sporting Kansas City and I looked it up. FC Cincinnati
tied for first in the MLS East. Now after they're
win with Charlotte f C at nineteen points, what does
Jeff Birdings say about all this? He's very happy. Plus,
I see orange and Blue.
Speaker 1 (01:30:08):
I spoke to a source of mine at the banks
relative to all the crime being committed there.
Speaker 3 (01:30:13):
Now, what's going on down there? It's like Marshall Dillon.
Speaker 1 (01:30:16):
He will join me on Thursday to discuss the outcome
of high level meetings.
Speaker 3 (01:30:23):
Who might that be af tab Perval he's leaving.
Speaker 1 (01:30:27):
He's the leading protest around Procter and Gamble. That's aft tap.
By the way, he needed a permit to do that.
The cops said, just leave them alone, walking in the streets,
shutting down the roads in downtown Cincinnati. Please just let
him on, smoking pot and public. Just leave them alone.
Speaker 3 (01:30:44):
Unbelievable, Andy Mackers segment, Get me out of the Stuge Report?
And when is the rock coming back? People want to know,
I guess Wednesday. When the sheriff said, I don't know Wednesday.
We got to see probably on the beach down there.
So CNL Salvador right now? Is he does he have
a right passport? You know what? Let's check out eb
the Pope. Maybe he's Rocky, the first Pope, Boyman Rocky.
(01:31:09):
The first segment, Get me out of the Suge Report,
willet under there's red legs and hot Hot hot headed
to Miami. We leave you with the immortal words of
the Stewd Report.
Speaker 5 (01:31:22):
At some point, this foolishness has got to stop.
Speaker 1 (01:31:26):
How about enforcing the law. There's a novel concept, Sherlock.
Let's continue with more We Never Stop segment, We Simply
Continue on News Radio seven hundred WLW