Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Bill cunning in the Great America. Welcome this Tuesday afternoon,
the tri did of his Veterans Day. We're going to
have it on two great veterans today. One is Lieutenant
General Richard Newton, retired. Another one's going to be brad
Winstrip Major retired US congressman for about twelve years. But
until then, plus the weather's breaking is going to be nice.
The next couple of days, the snowplows for the city
(00:27):
worked very well. As the mayor indicated. They had the
computer chips are up, you had the plows are out,
and the salt was distributed. Not really, it completely failed.
They weren't ready for this one inch of snow. I
can only imagine what happens and when we get twelve
inches of snow. But until then, Lieutenant General Richard Newton
retired thirty four years vice chief of Staff US Air
(00:48):
Force flew B one's B twos and Lieutenant General Richard Newton,
once again, thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show.
And General let's go back some I guess forty five
years ago when you volunteer to the military, why did
you serve? Why did you say send me, I'll do it.
Why did you join the US military.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
Well, Bill delighted always to be with you, especially on
this Veterans Day when we salute nearly eighteen million living
US veterans now Bill in the United States for their
service and their sacrifice. And I also want to underscore
the support of their loved ones, their husbands and wives,
moms and dad and kids, that really allowed them to
(01:29):
serve and serve so well. So I'm just honored and
blessed me part of that cohort of US veterans in America. Frankly,
I want to be like dad. My dad went to
West Point, graduated, was among the first inaugural set of
lieutenants graduating from West Point to join the ranks of
the brand new United States Air Force. A couple years later,
(01:52):
he finds himself flying combat missions over North Korea and
then serving nearly thirty years combat tour in Vietnam, ended
up commanding it a strateg gear commanded off at Air
Force Base. And frankly, as I'm growing up as an
Air Force kid, I went to thirteen schools in twelve
years and lived on a number of Air Force bases,
(02:13):
I wanted to be like Dad, and so I chose
an opportunity to attend a number of service academies other schools,
and I was blessed to be able to be accepted
at the United States Air Force Academy and graduated in
the class of nineteen seventy eight. That's where it all started.
(02:34):
And I think every day about that.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
Sixty four years I ded up my quick Deer Park
math the Newton his father and son put in sixty
four years? Will that continue? I don't know your personal circumstances.
You have family members still serving.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
We do. We have a son in law, Robert, I
won't use his last name, but he's Air Force Special Operations.
He's a Air Force Special Operations combat pilot, seven combat tours.
In fact, G and I were just up at Crolbert Field.
We pinned Lieutenant Colonel on his shoulders. He's a brand
(03:11):
new lieutenant colonel and we're going to be asking.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
More of him.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
This nation will be as he endeavors. And our daughter
Addie and our two grandkids. So we have a third
generation Air Force family and couldn't be more proud of
Robert Naddy and what they're adding to this nation as
well as you know, two point one million men and
women other in uniform, active duty, Guard Reserve serving this
(03:36):
great nation.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Lieutenant General Richard Newton I mentioned off the air the
story of Rocky Blier, the Pittsburgh Steelers, who was wounded.
He went to Notre Dame, was one hell of a
football player, served one year with the Pittsburgh Steelers, then
was drafted in the late nineteen sixties, ended up in
a rice patty in Vietnam, was shot, four of his
fellow mates were killed, and the story his story is
(03:58):
just an incredible story of soccer in love for this country.
Came back home. The owner of the Steelers, a guy
named Rooney, sent him a postcard saying, you know, we
need you back in uniform. He's lying in a hospital
with his right foot half blown off, He's got shrapnel
on his left leg, and he's That was the motivation
for him to get back into shape, come back to Pittsburgh.
(04:18):
He has four Super Bowl rings. And then recently he
went back to Vietnam fifty years later into the rice
patty where he was shot and his fellow soldiers were killed.
He also ran into one of the viet Cong members
who was part of a group that not sure of course,
in the massacre of battles. Whether he was part of
the group that shot him or shot his fellow and
(04:40):
killed his platoon mates, I'm not sure, but it was
so emotional. And every now and then I speak to
veterans groups about Iraq and Afghanistan and Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan.
How do you equipped yourself with the idea that we
have gotten involved because the Democrat and Republican politicians wars
that resulted I used the term maybe not defeat, but
(05:04):
less than victory. What do you say to someone coming
back partially alive from Iraq or Afghanistan who all gave
some such as yourself, and some gave all. And for
those who come back, whether it was Vietnam, maybe you
were too young to remember what happened in the seventies
when Vietnam veterans came back. It was despicable. But even
(05:25):
today it appears we've not won a war in a
very long time, but the sacrifice has been great. What
do you say to those who participated in Iraq and
Afghanistan without great military success?
Speaker 2 (05:40):
Well, I say all veterans, especially those going back to
Vietnam and during the Cold War, and as you allude to,
those Operation Iraqi Freedom Operation and during Freedom Iraqi and
Afghan vets and so forth. Your service matters, regardless of
what a politician may drive in terms of looking at
you know, US policy, UH, but your service matters. I
(06:04):
am very grateful for the fact that you ran to
the sound of guns. I'm grateful for your loved ones,
especially your wives and husbands, who stood by you as
you went off to war or perhaps you served in
the military in a peacetime post. However, that service matters.
Also the fact that you volunteered to where the uniform
(06:24):
of this country speaks, volumes about you as an individual,
about your family, UH, but also about why what makes
this this country so great? Regardless of what those outcomes were, Uh,
there were perhaps some decisions that were made that were
you know, it's it's the you know, obviously our civilian leaders,
(06:47):
our political leaders that make some harsh decisions that we
may or may not agree with. But it's a mini
win in the uniform who are called upon UH to
protect the freedoms that we all cherished this very day,
that we're so very grateful for. And so I try
to tegrogate the obviously, the you know, the political aspect
of this with those men and women in uniform. However,
(07:08):
I would underscore to our listeners that your vote counts
when you go to the booth. I mean, we fought
and died and bled for the freedoms that we have
to choose to vote our elected leaders UH and other
freedoms that we have cherished those freedoms, and to make
sure that we again put in the positions of elected
(07:30):
you know, positions across the United States that you make
the absolute better, best choice you possibly can, either Democrat,
Republican or independent, it doesn't matter. But what matters is
that we ask of our young men and women to
volunteer to run to the sound of guns if required,
to defend our freedoms. And we expect the best of
(07:51):
our leaders, both our civilian leaders and our military leaders
build UH, to make the right decisions, and that the
men and winim I've known, but either in Congress or
certainly are fellow leaders. And I count myself as a
very senior general officer, the vast majority of those leaders
I've been blessed to serve with certainly keep that in
(08:13):
the front of their minds when they make these tough decisions.
But there's nothing that America should hang her head regarding
the service of our men and women uniform, as you mentioned,
as I mentioned, certainly from Vietnam all the way through
Afghanistan and so forth. We should be very proud of
those who served in uniform and their loved ones.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
I kind of want to take a note. I posted
on my ex account support for the American soldiers, sailor
and marine. I got a response from His name is
Chris Sutton. He says, Bill, could you take a moment
to thank my cousin who fought in Afghanistan. He's a
fan of yours and appreciate a shout out. His name
is Sergeant Jonathan Sins SI n S. So you only
(08:55):
give a shout out now to Sergeant Jonathan Sins and
thank him for the service this morning a couple of
days ago. As you may know, you're an Air Force guy.
UK Britain has indicated they're not going to share intelligence
with the US Air Force anymore when it comes to
taking out these gunboats, these gun runners. Of course, between
(09:15):
choosing whether or not to take out those importing tons
of cocaine and heroin into America or not, I think
you know which place I stand on this, but some
are calling now for the United States Air Force not
to participate under the orders of the Commander in chief
to take out these gunboats, that somehow there's not due
process involved, somehow coming off Venezuela or Columbia. Somehow we
(09:40):
have to have due process. And I guess now the
UK government would like the US Air Force or others
to interdict these boats, to stop them and to arrest
the people involved, take them to a court somewhere in
the middle of the Caribbean Ocean. I guess you'd have
to have lawyers involved to find out where's the jurisdiction
off somebody in the middle of the Caribbean. How do
(10:01):
you as an air force guy and you get an order,
maybe it wouldn't be you in a B one or
a B two to take out a gun running boat.
The UK and many liberals in this country went the
US Air Force to rebel against the Commander in chief,
not to take out the gun run the runners of
these of these drugs and guns. How do you process
this came out a day or two ago. How do
(10:22):
you process that?
Speaker 2 (10:24):
Well? First and foremost, I salute the President and the
administration of taking a very aggressive stance against those who
want to bring drugs into you know, the cities and
towns and local streets and neighborhoods, you know, for the
American people. There's three aspects of counter drug operations. First
is the demand in the United States. We need to
(10:44):
pour as much of money as we can into law
enforcement into also trying to you know, prevent drugs from
hitting the streets. And look at how we are able
to stem the demand of the American people on drugs. Frankly,
that's been a decade old system and a problem right Techondally,
it's the uh, the supply of the drugs. I would focus, UH,
(11:05):
perhaps less so on the transhipment of this, but the
supply of the drugs. The supply of the drugs is
principally from UH from two countries in Latin America, that
being Columbia, the largest producer of cocaine, and they've had
a record production of cocaine this last year, UH, and
that's reaching the shores of the United States as well
as the rest of the world. The other UH, again,
(11:26):
the supplier of drugs is sentinyl from princely three top
Mexican drug cartels. UH narco terrace as they're now referred
to appropriately. UH. And that's where they are. Uh. You know,
they they provide fentanyl, which is the largest drug killer
of Americans UH to date at this point. I would
back that up also. But not only is it regarding
(11:48):
Colombia and Mexico, but you've got to look at China,
which allows UH to provide and delivers to these drug
cartels the key precursor chemicals which are the key ingredient
to fentanyl. So that's the supply aspect of it. The
transhipment piece is UH. I think we need to continue
to go after the transhipment aspect of this. I still
(12:10):
would like to see from what President Trump's vision is,
what his plan is, what's the strategy here using the
military going after with counter drug operations using military capabilities.
That that's one thing, but I want to see, uh,
you know what is uh, you know, the military aspect
of that. That's a change. UH. And I want to
(12:30):
make sure our men and women are properly trained and
ready and equipped to go after these these these drugs boats.
They do need the intelligence if it's not shared by
our allies. And by the way, the United Kingdom, Great
Britain is a great ally of ours. But if they're
not going to share intelligence, we'll find means and methods
in order to make sure our men and women operating
these military capabilities. If that is how the President wants
(12:51):
to pursue drug operators, then they provide the best, best
operations intelligence they possibly can. So much more to go
on that.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
But General Newton the left once air Force operators inside
our aircraft to refuse to refuse the order that they
any want some captain to say, I'm not doing it.
Is that possible.
Speaker 2 (13:14):
It's not possible, it's and it's inappropriate. Frankly, that's an
illegal aspect. If it's a legal order, you have to
obey the orders of those assigned over you and so forth.
So I again, that is something that I would not anticipate.
With this are two point one million men and women uniformed.
Know what I've inticated that with those who I was
(13:34):
blessed to serve with h nor from those when the
counter drug operations started back in the eighties under the
Reagan administration. That's ludicrous to expect an airman or sit
in our soldiering a space guardian UH to refuse the
order of the President United States, unless unless it's an
illegal order that that would be appropriate. That's done from
(13:55):
very rare circumstances and appropriately so, but not in this case.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Last the lots have been done on History Channel, etc.
About the Vietnam War and about Iraq and Afghanistan. Lot's
been done. It appears early on, whether it was LBJ
or Richard Nixon, and whether those in charge of the
Defense Department knew early on we weren't going to win
the war in Vietnam because we would not bring proper
(14:19):
military arms to bear to defeat North Vietnam. They were
being supplied completely by the Chinese and the Russians to
kill Americans. They knew early on that the mission was
going to fail, but they kept going, I guess for
political reasons. When you're standing at Heaven's Gate in Afghanistan,
you have an order from the commander in chief to
evacuate Bogram Air Force Base, the largest one in that region,
(14:42):
and turn it over to Al Qaeda, as it turned
out to be. And there were thirteen brave men and
women standing guard at Heaven's Gate to try to keep
the hoards from charging into the base. I'm talking about
the failure of political policy Republican and Democrat that have
said to the American soldier or airmen that we're going
to put you in a position where you're going to
be killed, and we know we can't win, but we're
(15:05):
going to put you there nonetheless for political reasons. How
does someone like you react to that.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
Well, the failure of political leadership under the LBJ certainly
administration and then perhaps you know that went into the
next administration. The fact that they they made a presumption
that we were going to lose right. Uh, we provided
the right military capabilities and by the way, that was
significantly could have been air power to turn the tie
(15:32):
to the Vietnam War. Uh. That is a black mark
on the history of the United States. Not against however,
not against the Vietnam veteran that served brilliantly and valiantly there,
the American veteran in Vietnam. And for the American people
to despise the Vietnam veteran whence they returned home and
through generation that that is bad on the American people
(15:53):
to do so, because it was really based on you know,
bad decision making. You know, certainly, first and foremost coming
out of the l LBJ. White House and so forth.
But let's not put that on the shoulders of the
American Vietnam veteran. We ought to be welcoming those Vietnam veterans.
They didn't get their due, Welcome home. They should be
(16:14):
getting their due and welcome home right now. Again, it
goes back to elections matter. That's why we need to
elect the American leaders who are strong on character, strong
on principle, have the integrity to stand behind their decisions.
And for instance, as you refer to at the what
was really the abby Gate at at you know, the
(16:36):
international airport in Afghanistan. Yeah, that at Cobble, that awful decision,
and that was the first and foremost what started that
poor decision inside the Biden administration was deciding to close
down Boggera air base.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
That was that was a bad.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
Decision and their consequences. And you're right, thirteen Americans were
killed at the Abbey Gate August twenty sixth of you know,
of nineteen, you know of two thousand, I believe it's
twenty one. So that is that that is something that
we all will have to live with. That's a black
mark against certainly the United States and certainly our political leaders.
(17:12):
But it is not against the men and women who
volunteer to serve, who go to the sound of guns,
run to the sound of guns. In this case, thirteen
Americans gave their lives, their their memories, their sacrifices, and
the reason and the purpose of the mission whereby they
served ought to be again that should be saluted every
(17:34):
day and remembered every day, And frankly closed on this
lest we forget. We should never forget the sacrifices of
our Vietnam veterans and the nearly sixty thousand names on
that wall, and Vietnam, you know, the Vietnam World in DC,
all the way after those thirteen Americans killed in action
at the Navy Gate. They should never be forgotten.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
General Richard Newton, once again, thank you, and I don't
want to leave George Bush and Dick Cheney and Donald
Runsfeld and Cole and Powell by themselves, they put the
American soldier in Iraq, Felujah, and Afghanistan in impossible positions,
and at the end of the sacrifice of so many,
Iraq is now controlled by terrorists, as is Afghanistan. But nonetheless,
thank you for your service. Lieutenant General Richard Newton, the
(18:16):
retired thirty four year Vice Chief of Staff of the
Air Force, and thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham show,
and thank you for your service and your family service.
Thank you General, Thank.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
You Bill again. Let me one final point, though, our
American men and women in uniform and their loved ones,
this is the day we set aside to salute those veterans,
those eighteen million veterans serving, and they've served us so
well from World War One, World War II, Korea certainly Vietnam,
all the way through Iraq and Afghanistan. This is a
(18:47):
proud day for America and Swedis should be proud of
every one of those veterans.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
God bless you, Thank you General, Thank you very much.
All right, let's continue with more news next on Veterans
Day twenty twenty five. There's Radio seven hundred WLW by
Billy Cunningham, the Great American, and so much going on
so little time. After one o'clock today will be Congressman
brad Winstrup, US military retired colonel, about Veterans State today
(19:13):
and so much more. First of all, let me get
into this, Greg Lansman, I think I've met him once.
I'm not sure. But he's a nice guy, got a
good wife, got some good kids. Greg Lansman is a
liberal Democrat, and that means when you're in a plus
six Republican districts, what is the new district he has,
he's got to tow the company line. That means, in
(19:34):
order to raise money, a Keem Jeffries in Washington and
others have got to give him a couple million dollars.
So when a Keeing Jeffrey calls Greg Lansman and says,
I need your vote on this thing, which is Obamacare subsidies,
which by the way, has failed miserably, I need your vote,
Landsman is hard pressed to say no. Left to his
(19:56):
own devices, I think Greg Lansman understands everyone understan Ends,
including the Washington Post, that Obamacare is a dismal failure.
So why would you fund a failure? Why would you
fund something that doesn't work? Why would you fund something
that is hurting those that intends to help. Well, it's
a government program. And when you have twenty two million
(20:18):
people participating in a government program, God help anyone who
wants to eliminate it, curtail it, reform it, you're going
to have a large constituency ready to go to oppose it,
So save me the crocodile tears Greg Landsman about well,
I want the government to open, aboud, I'm gonna vote
against opening the government. You'd have to be stupid to
(20:40):
believe such things, and many people are stupid. Look who
we have on city council in the city a Cincinnati
is pretty stupid. So when Lansman says the government should
be opened, but I'm voting against it, that's kind of stupid. Secondly,
he said, the reason is twenty two million Americans pay
so much for healthcare. Really just them because of this,
(21:03):
thirty two thousand folks in my district. Well, the reason
individuals are on Obamacare is because the government coerced you
to join a program. May did not want to join.
They were not on Medicare or Medicaid, they weren't veterans,
they didn't have one hundred and forty million Americans have
health care through your employer. It's a very small number
of Americans that use Obamacare anyway, It's about seven percent.
(21:28):
So it doesn't make sense to you to shut down
the United States government because of the wants and needs
of seven percent of the population who can get health
care anyway through Medicaid. Why would someone, for example, pay
thousands of dollars in order to be part of the
so called exchanges Medica in Obamacare when you can walk
(21:52):
into the er and get it for free anyway. One
might ask that question. Secondly, family of four cost about
twenty seven thousand dollars a year out of your pocket
in order to buy through the exchange's medical insurance twenty
seven thousand. Most of these plans have five to seven
thousand dollars per person deductions before you get to the
(22:15):
point of collecting any money at all. So a family
of four would have to spend four times five is
twenty plus twenty seven thousand out of your pocket forty
seven thousand dollars before you get to use a dime
of Obamacare. Does that make sense to anybody? It is stupid,
it's wrong, and let's go back in time. Dave Keaton
(22:36):
play the architect, the messiah of Obamacare. In his own words,
hit it.
Speaker 3 (22:42):
It will actually reduce the deficit by four trillion dollars
over the long term, reducing the waste of inefficiency in
Medicare and Medicaid will pay for most of this plant.
It will slow the growth of healthcare costs for our families,
our businesses, and our government. There will be a provision
in this plan that requires us to come forward with
more spending cuts if the savings we promised don't materialize.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
This House of cards was built upon corrupt lies that
Democrats believe to implement Obamacare in the first place about
fifteen years ago. Remember, it'll get rid of waste, fraud,
and abuse. Remember it'll take four trillion dollars off the deficit.
Remember it'll slow the growth of insurance premiums. Remember if
(23:27):
none of that happens, it's going to trigger cuts and
other government programs. None of it happened. So if something
is not working, should you fund it with greater dollars? No,
you get rid of it, right except in Washington, So
save me. The crocodile tears about Greg Lansman, who opposes
(23:47):
the shutdown but now is going to vote to keep
the government shut. Can you square that circle? Can you
tell Americans we're not going to send out your snap benefits.
We're not going to pay the military, We're not going
to pay the US government workers like a Social Security
We're not going to pay SNOP recipients because seven percent
of the American people are paying more for their healthcare
(24:10):
premium because of the lies we Democrats told in the
first place. What's the relationship between Obamacare on one hand
and shutting down the entire government on the other. There
is no relationship. One doesn't cause the other and the
other doesn't cause the shutdown. They're completely unrelated. So what
(24:30):
are you fighting for a program that's failed. To spend
more money on Obamacare because it's failed, therefore, let's prop
it up longer. Does this make sense to anyone? So please,
I hope Landsman is held to account for lying to
you about Obamacare, which has failed, and lying to you
(24:54):
about I want the government to open, but I'm going
to vote to shut it down. Does that make sense?
All right, let's continue. Here's here's Landsman right here. And
as far as the stuff that the crap that he's pulling,
it's it's it's incredible to listen to this, the Washington
(25:15):
Post says, And everyone knows Obamacare needs to have a
wooden stake put in its heart because it has failed,
it is too expensive, and has nothing to do with
paying American soldiers, has nothing to do with sending out
snap benefits, have nothing to do with operating a federal
government that has two million employees, has nothing new with
(25:36):
any of that. They want to trick you into believing
a lie, which has worked so often, like in city council,
lies upon lies that I think many voters are too
stupid to realize they're being played. Let's put Greg Lansman
off to the side. Secondly, yesterday the new US attorney
(25:59):
announced his name is Dominic Jerrasi. The second he said,
my office has been paying close attention to gun violence
in Cincinnati and that there's nine indictments being issued. The
indictment politically is against Hamley County Common Police Court. Let
me explain the nine individuals on this list, among the
(26:22):
worst of the worst and many to follow, have committed
numerous crimes in Cincinnati, such as a guy named Robert
Shaw fires twenty three shots at a man outside of
a downtown bar last month illegally, illegally in possession of
a gun, and he's fifty years old. His record is
(26:43):
a mile long, starting when he was a teenager. He's
been a career criminal, and he wasn't held to account
by who. Common Police Court in Cincinnati, the liberal judges there.
Shaw is among nine convicted felons who are now facing
federal gun charges as part of a multi agency operation
aimed at reducing gun violence in the city of Cincinnati.
(27:03):
Nine and died it in federal courts. So the adults
are taking over. If I'm a Common Police Court judge
and I'm sitting there for years, and I watched people
like Robert Shaw and Stephen Johnson and Carlos Williams and
Antonio Williams and Cameron Scott and Justin Johnson and others
(27:28):
commit crime upon crime upon crime, I might add in
the black community in the city of Cincinnati, and the
liberal judges on Common Police Court will not send them
to prison. They give them low bonds with ankle monitors
to go out and commit more crime. So this indictment
right here is an indictment politically against the liberal Democrats
(27:50):
who run Common Police Court and Cincinnati, whose names are
well known. And the local federal prosecutor said, because you're
not doing your job as a judge, what I'm going
to do now is take these cases away from you.
We're going to convict these nine and many more to
follow and send them to federal prison for between ten
(28:11):
and twenty years. How do you like me? Now? It's
sad this did not happen until recently because we had
a functioning court system in Hamlinin County that if you
committed crime, even democratic judges in Hamltin County like feller
Off and knee House and Yates and so many others,
(28:33):
will send these guys to prison in Ohio, which by
the way, has a mandatory three year additional sentence. If
you use a gun to commit a crime, you're going
away for a long time. But no more in Hamilton County.
No more in Hamilton County. Right now, you can commit
serious gun crimes, the charges are reduced and you're set free.
(28:55):
And the local federal prosecutor, Dominic Jerrasi, who I'm told
it's a good man, has said enough is enough. If
you don't do your job in the city of Cincinnati,
I will do mine. And these career criminals, criminals are
going away for a long time. I look at the
ages of these individuals too. One is fifty forty seven,
(29:16):
twenty nine, forty two years old, forty three, thirty four.
They've spent their time committing crime, largely in the black
community and the black community believe it. Once these criminals out,
but they keep voting for judges who have put them
on house arrest or ankle monitors, and they never go
(29:36):
to prison sufficiently for the crimes they committed until they
kill someone. So now the adults are getting involved, saying
to Cincinnati, you're not doing your job. I'm taking these
cases away from you and we're going to try these
individuals in federal court. They're going away ten to twenty years.
Gary Kurti is fifty one years old. These are all
older guys, and they began in juvie court and Kitty
(29:59):
Court and underneath the judge Kerry Bloom who gave them
book reports and don't do it anymore. Send an email
to your victims, say you're sorry, Say you're sorry, and
if you're really sorry, guess what, I'm not going to
send you to juvenile court. We had that one thirteen
year old a few days ago, thirteen year old who
murdered someone, who's being kept in juvenile court until the
(30:23):
age of twenty one. And then this murderer who's thirteen
in the sixth grade will be released back into society.
Let's continue. You got me all fired up. Now haven't
got to the point yet of talking about PG Sittenfeld,
and I'm gonna do that later, either today or tomorrow,
to talk about the ridiculousness of the prosecution of PG Sittenfeld.
(30:48):
The Biden Department of Justice did injustice to PG Sittenfeld.
The Trump Department of Justice is doing justice for PG Sittenfeld. Help.
PG may run as a Republican in the future, but
I doubt if you. If you want to, if you
live in Hamlet County, you better be a Democrat and
act and say stupid stuff like Greg Lansman. Then you'll
(31:10):
get elected and re elected like PG Sittenfeld would be
the mayor except for the wrongful involvement of the Department
of Justice under Joe Biden and have to have peerival,
would still be the clerk of Courts, which is where
he belongs. Let's continue with more. I'll talk about the
ins and outs of PG Sittenfeld either later today or tomorrow.
(31:30):
I have some insight on this. I'm gonna pass it
on to you. But operation and reduced crime in Cincinnati.
The Common Police Court is too liberal and too democratic,
and the Feds get involved, and you're going to take
it away, which is said, and Greg Lansman, don't be
a clown. Don't say I want the government open, then
you vote to shut it down all because of some
(31:51):
obscure part of a seven trillion dollar federal budget. By
doing one thing, you're telling cops and FBI, CIA, the
federal bureaucracy, American soldiers Snap benefits. You will not get
benefits from me until you do what I want you
to do with another failed government program. I'm connected to
(32:11):
SNAP benefits. You know what I'm saying. If you're stupid,
vote for Greg Lansman. Twelve fifty five, Home of Your Bengals,
News Radio seven hundred WWD. Billy Cunningham the Great America
and I have some comments on PG sitting Feld later,
(32:31):
but since today is Veterans Day, it's always good to
have on a veteran. We had on the General about
an hour ago. Newton, Richard Newton thirty four years now
joining you and I is I think twenty five years
in the military, retiring as a colonel, and also twelve
years United States Congress. The Great Brad Windsdrip and Bread
welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And Brad, how
(32:54):
are you?
Speaker 4 (32:55):
I'm doing all right, and Happy Veterans Day, and thank
you for so much acknowledgement of our veterans today on
your show. I appreciate it. I'm an avid listener, as
you know.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Why did you many many a quarter of a century ago?
I asked General Newton the same thing. It was an
all volunteer force. You were functioning in a medical practice, pedietary.
You had your life more or less going on the
right track. Twenty five years ago you said I'm going
to join the military. Explain what went into that decision.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
Yeah, So there are a couple of things.
Speaker 4 (33:30):
I grew up watching a couple of shows with my dad,
and one was called Medical Center. I knew I wanted
to be a doctor. But the other one was called Combat.
It was about World War Two heroes fighting Nazi Germany,
and you might remember that show. But the idea of
serving in the military never left my mind, knowing in
the family had really been there. And I remember during
the Golf War, a couple of local doctors reservists got
(33:52):
called up and we kept getting attacked, and I really
thought that if we need to go somewhere, I would
go teen ninety eight. I literally called one eight hundred
USA Army and asked for a recruiter and joined the
Army Reserve. And then after nine to eleven we all
went to war. And I have to say, as bad
as war is, and the experience where I was at
(34:15):
Abu Ghrab Prison is chief of surgery there and place
where we were attacked three four times a week, the people
I served with were so unbelievable and the cause was
so just because of someone like Saddam Hussein, who was
just a murderous person. But I came back and I
said I'm staying and it led to a career where
I ran for Congress, and while in Congress, I was
(34:37):
still in the reserves. And Walter Reed and I know
you were talking about Afghanistan earlier today. And the last
case I did at Walter Reed was when we left
Afghanistan and I got a call from.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
The chief of orthopedics who asked if I was in town,
could I come in because we have another transch of
wounded coming in and I operated on the guy whose
leg was blown up.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
So war is horrible, and these things are horrible, but
it's such an honor to serve and to serve with
those that do so much. And to me, the military
is the greatest club I ever joined. I mean it's
the only place where unethical is unlawful. I mean it's
the only place within our federal government. We have a
(35:21):
uniform code of military justice. And you have people, like
you said, volunteer. They step up and say, I'm going
to live by higher standards and I'm going to serve others,
and for example, the Army's acronym that we live by loyalty, duty, respect,
selfless service, honor, integrity, personal courage, all of those things combined, and.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
You try to live by those all the time.
Speaker 4 (35:42):
And it to me, like I said, it's the greatest
club I ever joined. And my deployment, I would say,
was the worst thing I ever had to do, but
the best thing I ever got to do. And it's
great that our country does pay respect to all those
who put on the uniform, and so many of them,
well they don't just serve uniform.
Speaker 2 (36:00):
They serve our country and their families and God in
many other ways. When they return.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
As far as politics, you had the good fortune of
serving twelve years. There are some who's saying you should
run again. In the New Ohio one which has spread
which is the district currently occupied by Landsman. Have you
given thoughts of getting back into politics and running in
Ohio One.
Speaker 4 (36:24):
You know, I served twelve years, and I do live
in the new Ohio one, and so it's certainly interesting.
I served twelve years. I had no regrets serving in
Congress and no regrets leaving because it was time to
be home. I'm coaching sixth grade basketball with a a
couple of my friends on my son's team, and to
be with my family more. It's really important. But I
(36:46):
did get appointed to the President's Intelligence Advisory Board, So Bill,
this gives me a chance to really continue the weigh
in on national security issues and I get to d
C about once a month, and at the same time
to work some of those issues on the outside. And
then the private sector, because that's the way we're going
to succeed in this country, as if we engage more
(37:08):
with the private sector than just waiting for government to
do things. You know, if you look at the United
States going to the moon, you know that was our government,
but today it's Elon Musk or someone like him, and
and we're working more in public private partnerships, and the
security of our nation needs a lot of work, and
I'm glad to have the opportunity to be home more
(37:30):
and to be able to participate in protecting this great country.
Speaker 1 (37:33):
So is that a no?
Speaker 2 (37:36):
It was a long no, wasn't it.
Speaker 1 (37:38):
Why do you foreclose the possibility?
Speaker 2 (37:43):
Yeah, I would say that right now.
Speaker 4 (37:44):
I just I'm gonna I'm gonna look into whatever is
going to be helpful for for of course, the country,
and for the party and here in Ohio, and hopefully
we can we can land that seat, so to speak,
and and you know, do some more good things for
the country. I know you've had some discussions today about
(38:08):
mister Landsman's decision, if you want to talk about that.
You know, I was there when we tried to repeal
and replace Obamacare, and so this is really kind of
the John McCain shutdown, if you will, because he sank
that ship, and we wouldn't be in this situation if
we had made those changes then. But the logic doesn't
add up. First of all, the bill to provide subsidies
(38:32):
was provided by the Democrats, as was the bill for
the Affordable Care Act, which that was their bill, and
they made all kinds of promises which I heard you
put out before you had Obama's voice. None of those
rang true as a matter of fact, just the opposite and
has cost our country greatly. And there's no proof in
any way that they have improved the health of the
(38:54):
Americans that are in that program necessarily.
Speaker 2 (38:57):
What have they done?
Speaker 4 (38:58):
How thing's gotten better since it was in And so
you look at all of those things and you say, well,
why are we going to continue to do that? So
they use the excuse of COVID to add the subsidies
to begin with, which only enrich the insurance companies who
often delay and deny your care.
Speaker 2 (39:14):
And I'm saying this as a.
Speaker 4 (39:15):
Doctor, because it lives through these things and it just
delays and deny your care. So no one's really getting
better necessarily, and the cost has gone way up. They
also are the ones who put the end date. They're
the ones who put the date for the end of
this year. That wasn't Republicans. What was the reason for
(39:36):
putting an end to it? Why did they feel like
they needed it to begin with when the promises were
so great, So closing down the government for that really
didn't make any sense. And we can have conversations, but
it's not going to be to continue to drive up
the debt to the American people in this country, in
the future of America through a program that's failing. We
(39:59):
have to able to do after action reviews on our bills,
Republican bills too.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
Are they working? Are they achieving the result that we
thought they would or said that we would. And if
they're not, be a man step up and say is
not working. We got to make some change.
Speaker 1 (40:14):
Well, you know how the game is played. Landsman is
a weak congressman. Not many people pay attention to him.
To get reelected, he's got to have a keem Jeffrey
sending him millions of dollars. So when a team calls Landsman,
so I need your vote on this, the answer going
to be yes, sir, I'll do it. He is saying,
loud and proud, it's my position to open the government,
So I'm going to vote to close it down. I'm thinking, way, Man,
(40:37):
you want to open the government and close it down
over a policy disagreement on a very small part of
the federal budget which has failed. Everyone agrees Obamacare stinks.
The promises have not been kept. So when a program fails,
Lansman and others say what if the program is failing,
Let's give it more money. That's the solution, and the
(40:59):
money for those who may not be in Obamacare. The monies,
hundreds of billions, go not to the patients and not
to the policyholders. It goes directly to the insurance companies
under a promise to lower premiums as they cut deductibilities,
as they make it harder in order to and the
price goes up. And so everyone agrees the program has failed.
(41:21):
We have to then pay more for it. And secondly,
it's completely unrelated to paying the military or paying SNOP
benefits or keeping the government open. Those two events are
completely different. In their mind, they've tied it all together.
And obviously, now that we understand they did it to
punish the American people until the election was concluded, it's
even more of a political game. And so how do
(41:43):
you have a congressman like Landsman, who on one hand
says the government should be opened, on the other hand
votes to shut it down. Who's now talking about Obamacare
being a great program? Everyone agrees it isn't. And brad
winstrif if you announced a running the new district and
you live in that district, you would win almost by acclamation,
much like in nineteen ninety nine and two thousand. The
(42:05):
American people are calling upon you to come out, come
out of the vineyards and come back and drink some
of the wine in the mansion house. We need you
to run again because you would easily win that district.
And if someone else doesn't come forward a lot like you,
will you reconsider to run to save the nation.
Speaker 4 (42:23):
Well, maybe I'll take your show when you run. Maybe
we can do that. We'll see.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
I'm trying to convince you that I no one else's
step forward like you, and you live in the district. Obviously,
Landsman is a weak, feckless politician doing with the radical
elements of the Democrats demand that he does. He's not
up to the district. He doesn't represent the district. He
represents those who want to pay more for a failed
(42:50):
government program. And he wants to shut down the government.
He doesn't want to pay the military, doesn't want to
pay the FBI, doesn't want to pay the prison guards,
doesn't want to pay the snap Benefit Assurance. And now
he's going to vote today tomorrow, I guess to keep
the government shut down so they're not paid anymore. When
it's unrelated to Obamacare. Can you smell what I'm cooking?
Speaker 2 (43:10):
Yeah, and you you hit it before you know. There's
this so many.
Speaker 4 (43:13):
Times, and I see this with Democrats, and even Democrats
in the Cincinnati area said, you know what, I can't
vote for this person, even though I think they're a
good person, because they're just going to go and be
another vote for Pelosi. And I've heard that from moderate
Democrats for some years and so, but this is the
dynamic that's there, and you end up being you know,
basically extorted. You vote for this or you're not getting this,
(43:35):
You're not going to be on this committee. All of
these things take place. We're we're a little more free
wheeling in the Republican Party, where you.
Speaker 2 (43:42):
You know, you fight for the position on the committee
you want, and we have a steering committee.
Speaker 4 (43:47):
But when this when the leader of your party has
that much control and financial control, you know, with money
for your elections, it's kind of hard to turn turn
against them. But it's also kind of hard to talk
out of both sides of your mouth.
Speaker 2 (44:02):
Greg.
Speaker 4 (44:03):
Greg, I know, you know, he tries to work with Republicans,
but the end of the day, you get this squeeze
from the top, and you summed it up pretty well,
and that's that's going to be a problem. So the
district has changed, and so there's a great opportunity for
Republicans and those that want to reduce spending in America. Yeah,
(44:25):
those that want to have a strong military, those that
want to have safety nets that actually work rather than
become a dependence. That's what we need in our offices today.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
How does one cause the other? So the argument is
of the radical Democrats, We're going to shut down the government,
blame Trump for our behavior, and then we're going to
go to the voters and say, look, I think the
government should be opened, but I'm voting against it. And
if you can somehow succeed politically without argument, we're in
more trouble than I think.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
Not now, well, you think about.
Speaker 4 (44:59):
It that you're just one source of media. The mainstream
media just plays along. They don't ask those tough questions.
They don't ask someone that question like why are you
willing to take food out of baby's mouths to supplement
subsidies for insurance companies.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
They don't ask that.
Speaker 2 (45:19):
They don't answer to anybody, do they.
Speaker 1 (45:21):
Well, how about this? I had on an expert the
other day who said that family of four pays about
twenty seven thousand dollars a year in Obamacare premiums for
allows the insurance, and most of the deductibilities are five
to seven thousand dollars each. So a family of four,
you got to spend forty seven thousand dollars before you
get a diamond diamond insurance reimbursement. And the moneies don't
go to the patient, they go to the they go
(45:43):
to the insurance companies, where ninety one percent of their
donations go to Democrats that they gave Harris and others
in the range of four hundred million dollars to keep
the subsidies coming. So the American taxpayer is subsidizing insurance companies.
What is in the media, ask that question.
Speaker 2 (45:59):
That's what I'm talking about. That's what I'm talking about.
Speaker 1 (46:02):
Well, so you know it's I want you to run.
I want you to run.
Speaker 2 (46:07):
I hear you. Somebody asked me will you ever run
profits again? And my wife was standing there and I said,
what you never say never? And my wife said, I
didn't know that. So I give you some idea.
Speaker 1 (46:18):
Well, you live in the district now, you don't travel
all hells half acre out to West Virginia. You live
right in the district. You fit the district. Your values
are this district, and you know where the bodies are
buried all over Washington. You're a veteran, you're a colonel.
You got twelve years experience. And we have a congressman
telling us I want to open the government, but I'm
(46:38):
voting against it. It's like what And I want to
get more money to insurance companies, so they give me
money to run and we're supposed to buy that. Come on, Brad,
I want you to do it.
Speaker 2 (46:51):
We'll talk, We'll talk, Bill, We'll have breakfast.
Speaker 1 (46:53):
All right, let's have breakfast at first. Watch. Well we
got it once again. Thank you, congratulations on a life
well led. And every now and then I see at
Saint Gertrude's. Every now and then I see JD. Van's there.
It's a growing parish. It's a great place to be.
But I don't want to be in a situation come
May of next year and we have some numb nut
running from Clinton County, and God bless Clinton County. I
(47:15):
love Clinton County. But nonetheless, we got somebody sitting here
who understands the issues can odd adequately. You wouldn't be
plus seven, you'd be plus ten, and maybe just for
the next four to six years, get back in service.
I know it's a sacrifice to make when you're living
the best life right now you can live, but just
give it. Well, you give us some thought.
Speaker 2 (47:35):
I'm always thinking, Bill, always thinking.
Speaker 1 (47:38):
All right, Brad Winster, I didn't mean to go this direction,
but you got me all fired up. When we have
a congressman playing upon our stupidity, acting as if it's
real when it isn't. And you can't vote, thank you.
You can't vote to shut down the government. You can't
vote to shut down the government. Then tell everybody I
went the government open. I want to pay the soldiers,
but I'm going to vote not to pay them. That
(47:59):
can't work.
Speaker 4 (48:00):
Well, Thank you today too for recognizing all those troops
that served in wars that were not necessarily executed well
from the political side because they did their job and
their great American heroes.
Speaker 1 (48:12):
Yeah they are.
Speaker 4 (48:13):
And you know, I would say, Vietnam, by the way,
exposed communism for what it was. And you can, as
an American walk through Vietnam today, right, and you have
a friend there. They do like America. They're still communist country,
don't get me wrong, but it is changed. We made
a difference. We made a difference in the long run,
and I think it was the beginning of the end
(48:34):
of the Cold War.
Speaker 1 (48:35):
Well, I hope we made a difference in a Rock
where you served, and also Afghanistan to Abby's Gate. That
decision when I see when I read all about the
Vietnam War now from all the experts who say that
LBJ and Nixon both knew we weren't going to win
the war but wanted to keep it going for political reasons.
And I'm thinking all of guys got killed for nothing.
When I look at the A team in I Rock.
(48:57):
We had George Bush, we had Dick Cheney, we had
way General Powell, we had Rumsfeld, we had the A
team that was completely screwed up, didn't understand it. And
then we go to Afghanistan and leave Bogram Air Force
Base and thirteen brave service members are murdered at Abbey's
Gate and then we're told that was a great success.
Reminds me of Landsman saying I want to keep the
(49:17):
government open, so I'm going to vote to shut it down,
and I'm thinking I live in some never never land. Well, Brand,
we got to run. Let's have breakfast. Meet you and
Alvin roher Well. I love Alvin rohor.
Speaker 2 (49:28):
That sounds good. Two good friends.
Speaker 1 (49:31):
Thank you, Thank you, Congressman, thank you. Let's continue with
more and if the line becomes available, you know the routine.
I still have my comments later on about PG Sittenfeld
and now he was screwed, blue tattooed, and barbecued. Where
does PG now go to get back his reputation? One
six Bill Cunningham News Radio seven hundred Wow.
Speaker 3 (49:50):
It will actually reduce the deficit by four trillion dollars
over the long term. Reducing the waste and inefficiency in
Medicare and Medicaid will pay for most.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
Of this plan.
Speaker 3 (50:01):
It will slow the growth of healthcare costs for our families,
our businesses, and our government. There will be a provision
in this plan that requires us to come forward with
more spending cuts if the savings we promised don't materialize.
Speaker 1 (50:19):
Hello, buyett, I'm broadcasting. That's the messiah of Obamacare.
Speaker 5 (50:30):
Was the President Obama recently on the Price is Right?
Speaker 1 (50:33):
Did quite well on it. I assume I cuts have happened. Correct,
I'll be playing plinko. Haven't we saved four trillion dollars?
Haven't we saved four trillion dollars of Obamacare? Don't you understand? Yeah,
you understand, don't you? No, they blame it on Trump,
like Greg Lansman says, I want to keep the government open,
so I'm going to vote to shut it down. Is
that it makes sense? Right? Sure, the government program has failed,
(50:56):
So what do you do. Let's subsidize it some more.
Let's spend more money on a failure. Yeah, why didn't
you run for Congress? You thought about running in the
state rep. You could sweep segment Butler County in middle Tucky.
You're the man that can save this nation. Will you
answer America's call? Or stay here as a lowly sportscaster
(51:16):
as opposed to going to the halls of power in
Washington and kick an ass like mister ass, where do
you stay? You want pre marijuana medicon? So for Bill
segnanifon the campaign is bubbling in the surface in the
bowels of the American people in US be expelled.
Speaker 5 (51:34):
Will leave the stude reporters of proud service of a
local Tamestar Heating and air conditioning dealers Tamestar quality you
could feel in beautiful Western Hills called Derby Heating and
Cooling at five one, three, five nine, eight eighty four
forty nine or go to Derby Heating and Cooling dot com.
Speaker 1 (51:52):
But Segond way to handle a failure is to subsidize
it and pay more money.
Speaker 5 (51:58):
As a democratic way you run for high office. We
want to thank Lear's Prime Market Willie for their deluxe
Deli sandwiches today located in beautiful downtown Milford Learsprime dot com.
Lears Prime always a cut above and also Willie. It's
at It's that time of year. The holidays are right
around the Cunna. The Wish Tree Program celebrating forty one years.
(52:21):
There's that number again with the go to old left
hander and if you want a tree or check it
out the tree uh five one three eight five two
eighteen ninety five. I go to Sachs Stutters for my
Treesy's email at the Wish Tree Program at gmail dot
com for more. In FI question, answer my question, You've
(52:43):
you've thrown somebody at me? I don't know what I'm answering.
Answer one of them please. Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow arrived
yesterday in limited capacity on the practice field. Here we go,
and Jason Williams today a brilliant article in the Inchoir.
Speaker 1 (52:56):
I'm trying to find it. The Pride of Marshall trying
to find it.
Speaker 5 (52:59):
Says now, between now and maybe Thanksgiving around that time,
the power struggle is on because Joe Burrow wants to
play and on Thanksgiving night.
Speaker 1 (53:14):
In Baltimore, that should be easy.
Speaker 5 (53:17):
But but the Bengals are saying, maybeah, you need more
time to write, you know, And then that's gonna make
him kind of psych sideways.
Speaker 1 (53:29):
Psycho and then you know, so here we go. Right now,
the Bengalley's are three and six correct, correct, the odds
of them winning Sunday in Pittsburgh not good.
Speaker 5 (53:40):
If Pittsburgh plays like they did Sunday night, then Bengals
are run over them.
Speaker 1 (53:44):
But then they come home and play the Patriots normally stink.
They're a six point dog. Well what if they lose
the next two and you're three and eight.
Speaker 5 (53:51):
Well, then I don't know. I mean, we'll have to
let's let's cross that bridge we get in Baltimore.
Speaker 1 (53:55):
I don't know. Why don't you answer the question?
Speaker 5 (53:58):
That's a that's a that's a long way on off.
The only guy that can figure that out is Crisken.
Why don't you answer my questions? College basketball, Elijah mally
Mahee eight scored eighteen points Santa Clara last night came
to town the rout Xavier eighty seven sixty eight.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
So much for the Big East.
Speaker 5 (54:18):
The Broncos took the lead two minutes into the game
and led the way with Ted. Rest of the way
with Ted McKay. Muskie's trailed by as many as thirty.
Speaker 1 (54:27):
And the faithful were unhappy. Would you agree? I would
say so.
Speaker 5 (54:31):
Tonight Tonight, Fifth Third Arena the site Dayton Flyers Vive
Cincinnati Bearcats six thirty seven hundred WLW Battle of the
Bluegrass Tonight What Happens Number nine Kentucky at number twelve,
Louisville six thirty on ESPN fifteen thirty.
Speaker 1 (54:48):
My friend Kenny Smith Louisville stands with Kentucky in Louisville.
Speaker 5 (54:52):
Red's update National League Manager of the Year war will
be announced tonight after seven. Terry Francona is one of
the free finalists for the other day. Other is Pat
Murphy of Milwaukee and Philadelphia's Rob Thompson.
Speaker 1 (55:04):
It's either Murphy or Tito. Would you agree? Yes? Go ahead?
Speaker 5 (55:09):
Redsfest is coming back January sixteen and seventeen to twenty
twenty six, first event in the newly renovated Beautiful Cincinnati
Convention Center. About the tickets on sale now at reds
dot com slash reds.
Speaker 1 (55:23):
Fest six seven six seven six seven. Yeah. Why don't
you answer my question? Have you thought about running for
high political office?
Speaker 2 (55:33):
No?
Speaker 1 (55:33):
You know you would sweep middle Tucky? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (55:38):
Okay, and then maybe maybe I'll get my operatives out
there to take a little bay.
Speaker 2 (55:43):
I got it some so for Bill.
Speaker 5 (55:48):
So I got to get signatures to get on the ballot.
Speaker 1 (55:50):
You need two hundred and fifty signatures. This line up somewhere.
Richard K. Jones would help you, okay?
Speaker 2 (55:57):
What? Well?
Speaker 1 (55:58):
I know I have to go off the air, wouldn't I? Yes,
you would. I'm just saying, what would you? What would
you do? Without me? I wouldn't be as good? Okay?
Speaker 2 (56:09):
Well?
Speaker 1 (56:09):
Thank you? Well? Can I get a yes or no
out of you? I'll think about it.
Speaker 2 (56:15):
What what?
Speaker 1 (56:15):
What office you want me to run for? I'm not
sure yet. It doesn't make any difference.
Speaker 5 (56:19):
Oh, you just get two hundred and fifty signals, say
I'm running running?
Speaker 1 (56:22):
Why did you?
Speaker 5 (56:23):
Don't you have to pick out which one governor? Governor's
run for Sheriff of Butler County. Take down Richard k Jo.
Speaker 1 (56:31):
Would that be something? It would be?
Speaker 5 (56:33):
No, I'm not taking down the Supreme Allied Command. Nobody
is beaten. Nobody, nobody is taken down. And you sho
him coming south Bingo, along comes the trail to take
down right down a little Miami and a great Miami
and take a left of the Ohio River and then
(56:55):
go in like d.
Speaker 1 (56:57):
Day, pure of all. Instead of getting eighty three percent
of the vote, at eighty two percent, so the city
residents held him accountable for his failure.
Speaker 5 (57:04):
Boy, now East, I see now that yat last night
that I guess you had all the action going on downtown,
but then all of a sudden short fight erupted into okay, correct,
how everybody's now he now he's shifting things to go
up there.
Speaker 1 (57:21):
How about getting more cops and judges that send criminals
to jail? What a novel concept that would be? Bingo
defense are stepping in Defenser, saying, look, common police court
liberal judges are so weak. We're going to arrest, try
and send to prison career criminals in Cincinnati, goes the
Democrats can't. Does that make sense to you? I think so,
(57:42):
But I don't know. I don't know what to tell you.
I think there's a crisis on Victory Parkay Santa Clara
is not very good? Am I right?
Speaker 2 (57:50):
A wrong?
Speaker 4 (57:50):
They were?
Speaker 2 (57:50):
They were?
Speaker 5 (57:51):
They're three and oh now they were I mean who
they played though, I don't know, and oh, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (57:55):
To have a big East team at home to be
losing my thirty po points well and lose by twenty, I.
Speaker 5 (58:02):
Mean he's got He's trying to put together a team,
will he in the same way with the UC He's
you know, these guys are trying to mesh together.
Speaker 1 (58:09):
What's gonna happen tonight? Seg Man, I don't know.
Speaker 5 (58:11):
The Dayton Flyers beat the UC here last year. Downtown
not good, So I don't know.
Speaker 1 (58:17):
I don't know. We're going to cry everywhere I look.
I see a dark crisis. It's getting aesthetic. That's what
I'm hearing. That was Sean Miller. Sean Miller all the way.
He's not welcome back to the Xavier campus. I don't
think so. How about Brian Kelly's deal, and he read
I've read this out in Louisiana.
Speaker 5 (58:33):
He's fighting it right. They want him to take some
kind of lower dealer or something.
Speaker 1 (58:38):
We're going to give you a check for thirty million dollars, Yeah,
he said, no, what is he nuts? Well, he thinks
he's got fifty four million, but they're claiming part of
that fifty four million. You have to use good faith
attempts to get another job. He's not because it's only
been about two weeks. I was gonna say, they're gonna
(58:59):
time up in court. Would you take thirty mili now
or fifty four mil later? What would you do? I
take the money and run bingo. I think anybody do
that the money, Take the money, then you're freeing told
do whatever you want.
Speaker 5 (59:13):
Are they gonna get ed ogeron back?
Speaker 1 (59:15):
Go Tigers? That's what they're thinking about Tigers? About him
and Joe Burrow? How about him? What did Joe Burrow
coming back? Burrow have any more eligibility? I don't think so.
Say get me out of stud High now, I'm gonna
talk like this for a while. Give me out of stoos.
Speaker 5 (59:28):
Report, Willie, and out of of a beautiful day here
in the Tri State, and Happy Veterans Day to all
the veterans past, present and future.
Speaker 1 (59:37):
I'm gonna vote to keep the government shut down, but
I'm in favor of opening it. Okay, we leave you
with the immortal words of the Stooge Report. You better
make up your mind what you're gonna do. It's your
football team, find a way to fix it, reach down
inside and be a fucking pro. What was Marvin Lewis's
(59:58):
record in the playoffs? Not very zero to five? And
what something? How do you do in the playoffs? Not good?
Seg Thank you, sir. I have comments coming up on
PG Sittenfeld. I support PG Sittenfeld. Did I see where
Jeff Pastor wants a pardon? He wants his money back
(01:00:19):
to that took it in the cash bribe? He wants
some money back, wants to run for office on seven seven,
seven hundred, WLW Well, you know the great American outcomes.
(01:00:40):
Not to praise PG Sittenfeld, not to compliment PG Sittenfeld,
but to tell you the reality of what happened to
PG Sittenfeld, which is a sad tale going getting at
the end, then back to the beginning. Main Justice in
Washington has determined that the trial, the indictment or the arrest,
(01:01:03):
the indictment, the trial, and the conviction of PG. Sittenfeld
was wrong. Really, it's been three or four years since
this thing began, and now the US Solicitor General D.
John Sower, whoever he is, has filed a brief with
the United States Supreme Court in which it says that
(01:01:27):
the pardon of PG. Sittenfeld should be a matter of record. Secondly,
the forty thousand dollars fine he had to pay should
be eliminated and the money returned to him, the PG. Sittenfeld.
And they're saying, essentially, we made a mistake, sorry the PG. Sittenfeld.
(01:01:48):
This is under the Biden administration. Go back in time
a little bit. The role of the local US attorneys
in Ohio. There's two Southern district Northern district. Southern District
unterly take a parallel line to Columbus. Everything south of
that is the Southern District, including Columbus. Everything north that
has the Northern District. The President appoints the US attorneys
(01:02:11):
for the all, I think it's about ninety in the country.
He appoints them all and they're confirmed by the Senate.
And until recently, when local common police court judges have
become so liberal that the US Attorney locally is going
to start prosecuting local criminals for committing gun violations, the
local judges don't do it. The main function US Attorney's
(01:02:33):
office in the past has been public corruption. In fact,
they have a public corruption section in which local prosecutors
try to determine if local governments, especially are corrupt. Then
they go through Maine Justice in Washington to get permission,
shall we say, to launch investigations on local politicians who
are taking bribes and acting improperly. And so what occurred
(01:02:57):
is that the local US Attorney, who was an appointee
of the Biden administration, determined that city council was dirty.
The rumors were rampant, a lot of development going on.
Of course, there is more development now going on than
six seven years ago, but nonetheless US Attorney's Office for
the Southern District of Ohio had authorized to pursue a
(01:03:18):
corrupt practices investigation of members of city council kind of
on the outside of this were other members of council
that they couldn't really get into, get into Baileywick of
committing serious crime. And so what happened is they got
authority to spend some serious money, the results of which
(01:03:39):
would be indictments of city council members and or the
mayor at the time was John Cranley, and John Cranley
the mayor, got a clean bill of health to determine
how much money it took to get deals done in
the City of Cincinnati. They determine, and I think a
lot of the same stuff's going on today not yet
determine who's doing it, that big money was being paid
(01:04:00):
to council members in order to get projects approved. From
that came the situation with Jeff Pastor. And by the way,
Jeff's on Channel nine. There's a really good story about
him on Channel nine and about Redemption, and I watched
some of the story. I met Jeff Pastor more than once.
(01:04:20):
Seems like a nice guy. PAULA Christian of the I
Team did a story on Pastor, completely different story than
pg's in and felt with Pastor and Tamy Denard they
literally took cash, bags of cash in order to get
votes for the city developmental projects. In one case, Jeff
Pastor was on a FBI jet to Miami in which
(01:04:43):
it was wired for sound, and they videotaped him taking
piles of cash in a bag and that was a layup.
Caught in all that circumstances was Tomyo Denard, who did months,
months and months in jail. I think Pastor did about
ten months in jail federal prison in Nashville, and I've
I've been there, and not not as an vate, but
(01:05:05):
visiting a cline or two. It's a federal prison. It's
not good, but it's not like it's not sing sing.
It's not what Pete Rose went through, for example, in Joliet, Illinois,
and he got four months and a halfway house. I
think got two years probation as part of that. They
thought it might be good to see if they could
hook PG sitting Feld and had taken money and exchange
(01:05:28):
for his votes. So Main Justice and the FBI spent
serious money wiring up hotel rooms, telephone calls, wired taps,
went over many many months, and the key meeting took
place somewhere in the Columbus hotel room that was wired
for sound. And in this room undercover FBI agents one
of a certain project, shall we say, approved by city
(01:05:51):
council members, and it was the key at that point
PG sitting Feld with sideways with John Cranley, did it
five votes on council and as part of the key
part of a maybe thirty second part of this hour's
long videotape, it's PG sitting Field said, I can deliver
the votes. And then from that started the federal indictment
(01:06:13):
of PG. Sitting Field. I can deliver the votes. Now
does that mean in a corrupt way deliver the votes?
Or does it mean in a political way I can
deliver the votes. I don't know what it meant. It
was a close case. Main Justice under Joe Biden decided, okay,
let's arrest him an indictament at least send a message
that you can't do this kind of stuff. So this
went on for months, maybe a year or two before trial.
(01:06:36):
And the jury in this case was not drawn from
the city of Cincinnati, nor from Hamlinton County. It was
drawn from southern Ohio, which are the forty five counties
south of Columbus, and those jurors came in there thinking
this is a big city, politician, he's slick, and he
seemingly took was it twenty thousand or forty thousand dollars
(01:06:59):
to a pack in exchange for him saying I can't
deliver the votes and I'm the total number was twenty
thousand dollars made out to a pack that was controlled
by PG Sittenfeld. And so PG Sentenveeld once he was indicted,
(01:07:19):
shall we say, had a step down. He was perceived
to be the next mayor of Cincinnati. F t have
pirival right now, would still be the clerk of courts
if PG Sittenfeld was not indicted and convicted. And so
he's fought the case now low these many years and
he's finally won. And main justice in Washington has said
(01:07:44):
they want to give the presidential pardon full effect, and
they want the conviction wiped away, and they want the
forty thousand dollars fine returned that's been paid. And at
this point one might say that PG Sittenfeld he's free
and clear of a felon in the conviction. We think
(01:08:05):
because he's been pardoned. However, PG wants a ruling from
the US Supreme Court that the words that he said
did not constitute a criminal violation that could be interpreted differently.
How many times as a powerful politician said to donors
at a fundraiser, yeah, I can deliver those votes, not
(01:08:26):
in the he didn't say this, but not in the
corrupt fashion, but in illegal fashion. It's a close call.
And I've heard other law professors talk about I think
Jack Crumbley had on Kenya Katkin, constitutional law professor at NKU.
So this is a close case. When a politician says
I can deliver the votes. Does it mean give me
(01:08:48):
the twenty grand of my pack and I can't deliver,
which you didn't say, Or does he mean this is
the right thing to do. And I'm sure the other
council members are going to agree with me, and so
sit and Faild said recently he's not interested in running
for any more political office. He wants to protect people
or running the future from the selective prosecution. Simply put,
(01:09:10):
he said, I don't want what happened to me to
ever happen to other people who go into public service
for good reasons. So now, after three to four years
of this, Maine Justice have said, we made a mistake,
We're sorry. He did not commit felonies. We're going to
return back the money to PG Sittenfeld and now PG wins.
(01:09:34):
But do you think him and his wife and two
kids had a victory celebration after what that guy's gone through.
I don't think so. His life's ruined, at least in
a public context, and I'm not sure he gets a
dinner reservation anywhere. And if he wants to get back
into politics, the Democratic Party that controls everything in Hamilton
County is never going to endorse him for any position
(01:09:57):
that is different than what happened to Jeff Pastor and
tomorrow Dinard who actually took money in exchange for votes.
And the mind of PG Sittenfeld, if somebody would ask
him after that meeting in that hotel in Columbus, did
you just commit a serious felony? He would have said,
a course not. If you asked Jeff Pastor Or to
my Dinard, did you commit a serious felony after they
(01:10:19):
took money for their votes, they would probably say yes,
I did, but no one's going to discover it. They
did not know they were dealing with the FBI. So
at this point PG Sittenfeld is free and clear. The
US Department of Justice has asked the US Supreme Court
to throw out a ruling by a federal appeers appeals
court that upheld sentin Fell's conviction and send the case
(01:10:43):
back to district court in Cincinnati, who oversaw the trial
for a finding of not guilty. Okay, does that mean?
What does that mean? If your life's been ruined? Where
does PG Sittenfeld now go to get back his reputation?
Where are his kids go? How about his I never
met her by I think she's a medical doctor at
Children's hospital. And the point is they made a mistake. Well,
(01:11:09):
and PG. Sitting Field's life. It wasn't just a mistake,
It was a It was an event began for political
reasons by the Biden Department of Justice to destroy the
life of PG. Sittenfeld. And guess what they succeeded. In
the other two cases, the behavior of the council member
(01:11:30):
caused their destruction. In this case, it was a interpretation
of a federal statute that could be interpreted one way
or another, the result of which was PG. Sittenfeld. I
think he went to didn't you go to federal prison?
For like four or five months before it was released
by the Sixth Circuit and that was that was a
(01:11:52):
year and a half ago. I'm told by a friend
or two of his, he's a destroyed man because injustice
was served upon him, and now Maine Justice says we're sorry.
The next step is suing the Department of Justice, or
suing the US Attorney, or suing the witnesses against him,
(01:12:13):
or suing the federal government, which they have partial immunity
but not complete immunity. The recent actions of the Department
of Justice indicates that PG. Sittenfeld is going to get
a settlement if he wants it in the ten to
twenty million dollar range. Now is not going to recover. No,
but the government should not do these things to people
(01:12:33):
like PG sitting filed and get away with it. And
I might add, if you think it's political, the Biden
Department of Justice went after PG. Sitting Felt, and the
Trump Department of Justice gave him a pardon and wants
to return the money to him, the forty thousand dollars
fine that he's paid, no harm, no foul, because it's
(01:12:55):
the right thing to do. Of course, it is what
jeffor that's a different issue. I saw the report of
paula Christian that was very good. Jeff Pastor, who took
the cash on the plane, talked about redemption. Of course,
he's got a wife, he's got six kids. I have
no idea how he supports the kids. Federal rand jury
(01:13:17):
charged him with taking fifty five thousand dollars in bribes.
US attorney at that time, David de Villers, said the
indicet was indicative of a culture of corruption, a culture
of extortion, a culture of pay to play in the
city of Cincinnati under cutter. FBI agency sent it on
the city hall in twenty eighteen and twenty nineteen, posing
is out of town, wealthy developers, lots of cash to spend,
(01:13:40):
and one third of city council was arrested and the
rest is history. Justice was done to Tamai Dinard and
the Jeff Pastor. It was not done to PG. Sittenfeld. Normally,
when you have a corrupt bribe, you don't put it
on your campaign forms, and in this case PG. Sittenfeld
took the twenty thousand donation by check and put it
(01:14:02):
in the bank for his disclosure requirements and thought he
had done nothing wrong. That's the way politics has played.
You know, campaign donations happen all the time. I'll see
what I can do. I'll see if I can help you.
I should be able to get the votes. Whatever it
is happens every day. Right it doesn't make it a
(01:14:22):
federal felony unless you interpret it this way, interpret it
that way, And right now, Main Justice wants to apologize
to PG. Sittingfield. As Ray Donovan said, I think in
nineteen eighty seven, when he was the Labor Secretary Oner,
Ronald Reagan came out of the courthouse where Washington d c.
Jury found a Republican not guilty, which happens extremely rare.
(01:14:47):
He said, Now, tell me what department do I go
to to get back my reputation. I'm an honest man.
PG Sittenfeld should say to the federal government, tell me
where I go. Now, where's my Department of Restorative Justice
for me? When I did nothing wrong. You've ruined my
life and my family life. You've ruined my family and
(01:15:08):
took away from the people of Cincinnati the right to
elect PG sent and Feil the mayor and after pureval
would still be in the clerk's office, and PG sitting
Felt is nowhere to go to get back his reputation.
Well with me, I'll give it back to him. I
met him one time in my life. I disagree politically
with him, I don't like many times. As a matter
(01:15:29):
of expression, this was a young man, a young father,
whose life was destroyed because of the corrupt activities of
Joe Biden's Department of Justice. Can Democrats smoke on that
peace pipe for a while and on behalf. Someone should
say I'm very sorry for what's happened, and away we go,
(01:15:51):
and God blessed Donald Trump. He's making things right. Let's
continue with more and we'll see it happens down the road.
The line becomes available five one, three, seven, four, nine,
seven thousand. Bill Cunningham News Radio seven hundred ww good afternoon.
Speaker 5 (01:16:11):
Oh hello, Pietos, I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
God good afternoon. That's Mike Tomlin and the Steelers getting
ready for Sunday's game. Is he frightened? I think that
Ben Galleys are about a touchdown dog, aren't they. They
want him fired. Everybody wants him fired. Mike Tomlin.
Speaker 6 (01:16:35):
Yeah, because yeah, because he didn't go in the playoffs
in a while, and what is it, eighteen straight non losing.
Speaker 5 (01:16:42):
Seasons, So he's only like the fourth coach I've ever
had since eighteen hundred.
Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
Yeah, huh yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:16:49):
Seriously, it's Chuck and old Bill Cower and him like
the last right forty years exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:16:56):
They want him gone because they wont him gone against
the playoffs were done. Advances out it enough in the playoffs.
How about just getting into the playoffs? About get him
on a boat and coming down river. Now, I'm glad
you brought that up. Not saying I watch all ESPN,
I watch everything simultaneously. They did a segment this morning
on Joe Burrow. Part one was he'll be prohibited from
(01:17:17):
entering the field against Baltimore if the Bengals are at
that point.
Speaker 6 (01:17:20):
Three and eight, parks better be or somebody should be shot.
If the benger are three and eight by the time,
somebody should be shot if they put him out there.
Speaker 1 (01:17:27):
If he goes out there because he goes, that makes sense.
Can't the knee, the appendix and the wrist if it's
the lost season, they're not. But he says he's impossible.
Him man, Joe Burrow says, I'm playing that. That is
what held.
Speaker 5 (01:17:40):
That's what he told Jay Glazer of Fox Sports. I'm
playing at Thanksgiving night.
Speaker 1 (01:17:46):
I don't know the MRIs and run.
Speaker 6 (01:17:48):
But every indication I got when he got injured, every
doctor we talked to said, boy, this is a kind
of a complex thing. And and all of a sudden
he's back. He's doing back well short of the time
frame that put out, what do.
Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
You do if you're if you're Zach Shuler, what do
you do Zack Schul, Zach Taylor?
Speaker 6 (01:18:06):
And he's in there three and eight and they're mathemag eliminated.
He does not go on the field, whether he wants
to or not. That's the job of the franchise is
to make those tough decisions.
Speaker 5 (01:18:16):
Well, Jason Williams, just get hit it right on the nose.
Speaker 1 (01:18:18):
Today.
Speaker 5 (01:18:19):
The power struggle is down the Rock coming down the road.
We've got a power struggle. He wants to play. The
Bengals are saying, nababanah.
Speaker 1 (01:18:27):
So then, now, so who wins?
Speaker 6 (01:18:29):
Who wins Rock? The franchise should win. He's an employee
of the franchise. What the franchise says? What goes record?
So what's he gonna dock down and quit and go
to another team.
Speaker 1 (01:18:41):
If he does that, then he have health him the
record of Zach Schuler without Joe Burrows nine to twenty eight.
Now you think about without Zach Schuel is going to
have a season where he's going to have three or
four wins. Do you keep him next year the last
year of his contract? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:19:00):
Yes, say they don't like to do that, Willie. They
don't like to get rid of coaches and pay him.
So I guess he's going to be here, a million bucks,
going to be more changes. I guess they had a
capable roster. Okay, okay, maybe we can talk about that.
Speaker 6 (01:19:13):
But the first thing needs to happen is that the
folks that are making the decisions on which players are drafted,
that should be addressed, and that never will be. You
know what Duke to take Tobin was very friendly with
his dad, was best friends with Mike Brown.
Speaker 2 (01:19:29):
And that's it. Now.
Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
Secondly, as you may know, the Jets J. E. T.
S has thousands of first round draft picks.
Speaker 6 (01:19:36):
As far as I can see, they got it's like
seven or eight first or second round draft picks.
Speaker 1 (01:19:40):
The experts say, trade Joe Burrow to the Jets. The
experts do not say that, and Jets will give the
Bengals a whole bunch of draft choices. Then Duke Toban
can pick some more players.
Speaker 6 (01:19:54):
See, the issue is it's going to be easier to
pick in the draft because they're going to be at
the It's easy to pick at the top of the draft.
You get evaluated on. Your record should be judged upon.
Can you draft players late in the first round? Can
you draft players in the third round? In the fourth round?
Speaker 1 (01:20:10):
Duke Toby says, Now, wait a minute, I drafted Joe Burrow.
Speaker 6 (01:20:14):
Remember back in the day, after We've got Geniu Atkins
in the fourth round. Got to turn out one of
the best players in the last deb you know, twenty
five years right that that those are the guys you
gotta you got to hit on. I can pick Joe Burrow,
you can, Yeah, I can pick Jamar Nick that right,
Tobin says, those are my big picks.
Speaker 1 (01:20:34):
So even if they trade Joe Burrow to the Jet,
they're not trading Joe Burrow. That's what the experts are
saying where he belongs to New York. Who are these
experts can't say, yeah, Stephen A. Smith's in the loud
mouth of New York, give me some sports segma. But
what would you do?
Speaker 6 (01:20:49):
Would you if you would you let him play out there.
Even if he wants to play, he wouldn't let him play.
He's a football player.
Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
Go right there in Baltimore at eight o'clock on Thanksgiving
night and much what happens to Joe Burrow? What's left? Toe? Calf, knee, appendix, wrist,
what's left?
Speaker 2 (01:21:06):
Should?
Speaker 6 (01:21:07):
Yeah, I mean a a rehab that was an accelerated rehab,
so he gets back. He hasn't played in two months
against Baltimore. At Baltimore, they'll just say all that out
loud at night and they're angry. Yeah, and they're in
the they're in the thicker and the defense thinks.
Speaker 2 (01:21:24):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:21:24):
Secondly, ioc I answer this question. What is the question?
I just asked you the question? You put him out there? Yes, yes,
Olympic right right there.
Speaker 2 (01:21:34):
You were.
Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
You were one that didn't want him to play a quarter.
Speaker 6 (01:21:37):
Of a preseason game because don't I recall that I
remember everything? And now you want him to throw him
out there two months off a complicated complex toe injury
with an accelerated rehab. I guess with a team that's
not going to go to the playoffs at night at Baltimore.
Speaker 1 (01:21:54):
You changed my mind. Don't play. I'm with you. Now,
I worry about this boxer. There it is right there.
Kate n. Jenner, dressed up like a woman with all
male body parts, is happy the I o CEE will
will deny male boxers the opportunity to beat the crap
out of females. He has some reasonable takes, Bruce Jenner,
(01:22:15):
it makes sense, makes sense. Maybe she'll come back, Caitlyn Jenner.
Speaker 4 (01:22:18):
Maybe that.
Speaker 1 (01:22:19):
How can that be defended? No one can defend that.
It's I mean, it's Greg Landsman. Why don't you run
for Congress? Have you thought about it? You know I've
thought about it. Why did you do it? Campaign?
Speaker 6 (01:22:33):
I gotta get the little rocks a little more? Why
don't you try it again? I think I'm a fool.
Speaker 1 (01:22:40):
I never read that. I never fix the fixes out
and fixed vote the man. Vote Cunningham a chicken at
every pot was my motto.
Speaker 5 (01:22:49):
Will he the stooge reporters of proud service of your
local teme star heating and air conditioning dealers, Temstar quality
you could feel in Cincinnatikos should be the heating get
coolie five one three five three one sixty nine hundred.
But well, ye, first off, we want to say the
best of Larry the Colonel Davis, get well soon, Colonel
(01:23:11):
heart surgery. Recently for the Colonel radio superstar Extraordinary in
Local twelve A TV star Larry Davis, get well soon.
Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
I'm thinking about you, the Colonel. I like the Colonel.
Speaker 5 (01:23:22):
Let's see Joe Burrow on the field yesterday with limited practice.
I guess tomorrow he'll be back out there.
Speaker 1 (01:23:28):
There's going to be a fight between him and Zach Schure.
HeLa wants him to play to help his record, to
keep his job.
Speaker 5 (01:23:35):
College basketball tonight dating in Cincinnati, Bearcat's fifth third Arena,
six point thirty here on seven undre WLW.
Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
I was Xavier last night. That was a pay game,
wasn't it They They paid him a quarter of a
million and come beat the crap out of them. It's hard. Look,
they got a brand new coach, got all brand new players.
It's gonna take a little time. Don't freak out. I'm
not freaking out. No worries about what.
Speaker 6 (01:23:56):
Happens in today's college football. College went berserk an hour ago.
Brand never mind Miami and Ohio. I'm calling tomorrow. They
kicked off their season at Wisconsin. Every one of their
offensive players was new to that team. But by night
by now they're they're in the thick of the max
win it.
Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
By the time Patino came, it was April. All the
players have been bought and paid for. He was picking
over the remains of other people. And still they're going
to spend two to three million dollars on that roster
that lost to Santa Clara.
Speaker 6 (01:24:28):
How's that possible? To take time from the jail, take
that whole patience at jail.
Speaker 1 (01:24:32):
We got the jail.
Speaker 5 (01:24:33):
Okay, got jail number nine Kentucky and number twelve Louisville.
Tonight at the Yum Center along the Big River, I
was six thirty ESPN community.
Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
Do you like yum young sauce? I'm more of a
sy Please continue.
Speaker 5 (01:24:48):
Xavier University is gonna officially retire the number fifty two
jersey of All American two Holloway on Saturday, January twenty fourth,
as part of a celebration round the two thirty game
against Saint joh And. The number fifty two will join
a number five Trayvon Blewett and number ten Romain Sato.
Speaker 1 (01:25:07):
Pretty good stuff.
Speaker 6 (01:25:08):
How come Jumping Jamal Walker's jersey wasn't retired jumping jamalicis
give me the ball.
Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
I don't know jumping Jamalici. Just give me. Maybe he's next,
He's next.
Speaker 5 (01:25:17):
Red's update National League Manager of the Year Award will
be announced tonight after seven Reds manager Terry Francona one
of the three finalists going for his fourth career Manager
of the Year award.
Speaker 1 (01:25:29):
If Joe Sunderman and Byron Larkin retired, kind of like
Marty Brenahan and someone won't rip off their microphone, that's
a different story. Those guys belong in the Hall of Fame.
Please continue. That's all I got. Rock. You have also
a forty one year old.
Speaker 6 (01:25:42):
Yeah, yeah, this is a guy I consider a friend
of known for about four years. I've coached his son
for last four years. Guy's name is Chad Bruce. Just
tragically passed away last night. Forty one years old, wife,
beautiful wife.
Speaker 1 (01:26:00):
Two kids. Absolutely terrible.
Speaker 6 (01:26:04):
But I'll say this so the team that his son
plays on, East Central Okay thirteen that beat us in
the Super Bowl, right, they dominated the lad they did,
and I'm thankful that he got to see that. You
got to see his son have an m v P
type performance and they got to win that thing, even
though it was at our expect it doesn't. I'm thankful
(01:26:25):
that he got to see that in the last week
of his life. So Chad Bruce, we we love you,
We love the Bruce family, and prayers are going out
to all you guys.
Speaker 1 (01:26:35):
And that's just a terrible, terrible thing. Love those guys.
That's reality, not the funny pages of life. That's reality.
Speaking of funny pages, what else you got? So you
just snicker at the idea of Joe Burrow playing against
snicker at I. I try to think about it.
Speaker 6 (01:26:55):
I'm kind of paid to give my opinion on things
that you're analyzing all the data, and that's that's what I've.
Speaker 1 (01:26:59):
Come up with. I go, I go both ways because
I like that. Well, yes, you like to leave both off.
Whatever happened. See, that's what I said. I told you so,
I told you he was going to play. I told
you wasn't going to play.
Speaker 6 (01:27:10):
Yeah, if the praide is going that way, you're up
in front leading it that way. It was going that way,
you're out in front leading it that way. You've mastered
the art of that. I'm on you, But you've mastered
the art of it.
Speaker 1 (01:27:20):
I can slow dance, but I also do the cha
cha I do the cha chaw pretty good. We'll see
what happens. I like, why don't you run for Congress?
Is it too early? It'll happen, it don't happen. How
about a congressman that says the government should be opened,
but I'm voting to shut it down.
Speaker 6 (01:27:38):
Millions of people are snap benefits, blah blah blah blah blah.
Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
But we should have.
Speaker 6 (01:27:42):
It was causing the Republicans some pains, so we should
have We should have kept it shut down.
Speaker 1 (01:27:46):
Good politically to shut it down till the I really feel.
Speaker 6 (01:27:49):
After analyzing that issue, that's going to come back to
bite it. Okay, we lost New Jersey and Virginia, big deal,
that was politic Blue is Blue Stadium City, New York City.
Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
By the way, that that good and hard, good and
hard in New York.
Speaker 6 (01:28:02):
I'm sorry for you, but there must apparently it's not
been enough pain in New York City, So bring more,
more pain, more pain. Paintball only learn by experiencing paint.
Speaker 1 (01:28:14):
What's on the show today?
Speaker 3 (01:28:16):
Rock?
Speaker 1 (01:28:16):
If anything? You have no idea? No, we got a
uh set up for you.
Speaker 6 (01:28:21):
We got we got Mike Petrelli right out of a
resume at four o'clock on the Bengals and Joe Burrow.
Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
I'll run the scenario him, see what he says. I'm
gonna see what he says.
Speaker 6 (01:28:31):
What if there are three we got and we've got
Mike Schneider at three o'clock, he's out of Cleveland, talk
about the Cleveland pitchers, talk about the stadium getting moved
to the burbs.
Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
Lots of news coming out of there, and then some
other stuff.
Speaker 6 (01:28:45):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:28:45):
Part of Major League Baseball is fixed, like the NBA.
That's not a good.
Speaker 6 (01:28:50):
If the fans are betting money or spending money on
jerseys and shirts and tickets and beers, they they don't want.
Speaker 1 (01:28:55):
The game to be fixed. Where's the Commissioner of Baseball
and all this? So where's that out silver NBA? Where
are they.
Speaker 5 (01:29:02):
Can't find him with a search warrant. Baseball commissioners out
in Las Vegas?
Speaker 1 (01:29:07):
That's appropriate.
Speaker 5 (01:29:08):
That's where the GM you see betting on that classic
bad optic perfect perfect places is in Las Vegas gambling
perfect Blackjack day Blackjack, probably with class A and Ortiz
sitting next to h throwing fifty two Mile, p Our, Fastballs,
yep Si, thank you and Rock, thank you, give me
(01:29:28):
out the Stew's Report, Willie and Honor of a nice
day here in the tri State. Finally, the snow is
melting tomorrow. We leave you with the immortal words of
the stew Report.
Speaker 3 (01:29:41):
I'm in the sexy underwear business.
Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
PG sitting Feld's got new work. How about Main Justice
apologizing the PG sitting Feld giving back his forty thousand
dollars fine and saying sorry, So he's free. Yeah, but
now is he? What's happened in the past three years
(01:30:04):
in Justice? He's got a big lawsuit coming against Main
Justice and everyone who testified against him. If he wants
to take it goes lies upon lies from total damn lies. Rock,
thank you, Thank you, Segment run for office in Middle Tucky.
You and Kyle Schwarber, who, by the way, is going
(01:30:26):
to sign I'm told with a base and the next
month he'll be signed. Well, he's signed with the Red Segment. Yes, Rock, Yes,
I say no, we'll flip completely if the opposite occurs. Absolutely,
let's continue with more. Bill Cunningham's Radio seven hundred W