Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Billy Cunningham, the Great America, and welcome this Thursday afternoon
of the tri State. The government has opened. The Democrats
have suddenly said, Okay, let's have TSA workers not sleep
in their cars. Let's make sure the food stamps get
out to people. We're gonna pay the We're gonna pay TSA.
We're gonna pay the air traffic controllers at the expense
of the insurance companies getting all the money under Obamacare.
(00:28):
But that's a different issue. As you may know, there's many,
many problems in River City. One of them is on
short Vine. Another one is babies and boxes. And Brian
Hamrick's on top of both stories. And Brian Hamrick, welcome
again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And Brian, how are you.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
I'm good. Thanks again, mister Cunningham.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Let's talk about short Vine this afternoon. Because I saw
one of the captains and CPD gave me a shot
spotter detail about in the last month, what are the
shots being fired in Cincinnati? As if a white piece
of paper was in front of me, and I took
a bunch of black pepper and shook it all over
the paper. There's thousands of thousands of shots being fired,
(01:09):
and that doesn't count the other to bacherous misbehavior. Short
Vine right against UC campus. And you've done stories on
moms and dads not feeling comfortable their kids going to
the University of Cincinnati because of the robberies because the
car break ins, guns are everywhere. But now it's metastasized
a little bit off campus to short Vine. So, first
of all, for those listening in Iowa, describe short Vine.
(01:32):
Then we'll talk about the failure of parents to keep
their kids off Short Vine. At two o'clock in the morning.
Please give the American people a full report.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Well, short Vine is what one block over from UC
main campus if you go down Jefferson right where you
go into the all the sports sporting events there, you know,
you go into with basketball, the football, baseball, all of
that just across from there. It's it's it's really it's
(02:05):
not officially a part of the u SEE campus, but
it is a part of the u SEE community. Uh,
And so all the students come over this way a
lot of times, especially if there's a sporting event, you
have to park over here where you want to or
not and walk through the area. And uh, you know,
we have talked to. You talk to any of the students, anybody,
(02:29):
they know that this area is trouble. And you talk
to the business owners down here, they'll tell you the
same thing. You know, and some are saying it's as
bad as they've ever seen it. Now, short minds had
its issues over the years. But you know, just a
few weeks ago, they're videos circulated.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
We had it.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
You can see it on our website. Somebody's firing off
a gun. People are running, there's a crowd of people.
Somebody just opens fire. Everybody's running. I did the story
not long ago. Down in front of a liquor store,
a fifteen year old goes to rob another guy, a
guy we had incidentally interviewed a couple of weeks before,
(03:10):
just as a random person who observed another crime somewhere.
He's standing outside this liquor store, all caught on camera.
The kid goes to rob him. He pulls the gun
on the victim. What he doesn't realize this victim he
has his own gun. So they're in a big shootout,
people everywhere. You can see him scattered there, you know.
(03:34):
So the victim gets shot to death. The fifteen year
old shot as well, but he survived, and so that
case is still in the courtroom. And there have been
all kinds of other there's other ones that don't even
go reported. Kids that have been attacked. We just talked
to the mother of UC student who's been attacked two
times walking out here. So city council today is going
(03:58):
to try and do something. Uh. They're going to enact
as curfew.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
You know, if you talk to business owners down here,
they think what's happening is they did that crack down
down by Fountain Square and all that. Well, these these
folks that create problems, they go somewhere, They're going to
be somewhere, and a lot of people think they're just
up here. So we've got sort of a whack a
mole problem going on. And so we're gonna whack the
(04:26):
mole up here and see if and see if that works.
But you know, who knows if it's going to have
any effect at all. But it looks like here in
just a couple of hours the uh if city council
is going to vote to try and do something up here,
and right now their answer is a curfew, uh for
(04:46):
the middle of the.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Eyes kind of queue the red box, get rid of
the food trucks. Let's have a curfew. I watched Chief
Isaac Are retired as the chief of police from CPD.
Now's the chief of police, and U see and he
said that it's ridiculous when you we have ten to
eleven twelve year olds, thirteen year olds running around committing
mayhem at two o'clock in the morning, and when the
weather is good, it's worse than the weather is bad.
(05:09):
You had a couple of us, these students two weeks ago,
thought it might be a good idea to get a pizza.
I think for meos They're walking out with a large
pepperoni pizza and a gang of six or seven kids
got around him and they didn't want to give them
the pizza, and so the gang of six kids beat
the crap at him, kicked him in the head, broken
bones everywhere, and the robbers got the pizza, running down
(05:30):
Short Vine trying to eat a slice of pizza. And
so it's absurd. It's ridiculous, And what we need is
a functional juvenile court system that when you catch these
kids there's consequences. There's that thirteen year old who murdered
someone who's going to be held in Jubie court till
twenty one. Then he's going to be released. And there's
not a statute under fourteen to deal with murder. We
(05:52):
don't have laws that even deal with ten, eleven, twelve
year olds committing arm robberies. What do you do? And
I want to know where is my where is dad?
Where's the social constraints on bad human behavior? And uh
with the weather nice tonight and tomorrow is gonna be
a problem.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
It's uh, it has uh in a lot of these kids.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
This has become part of the uh of the culture.
It's celebrated in song and dance and music and the
tenements of this and this isn't This doesn't just come
from me. This comes from the folks who are down
here in these neighborhoods. You know they know it as
(06:36):
well that you know it's uh. You'll hear it in
their music, for example, you'll hear these uh these songs
and the and the lyrics are all killed. The cops,
beat the women, UH, take the money, smoke the dope,
and and that you're that that those are the tenements
the ability, and then they aspire to be these thugs
(06:57):
that they see standing on the corner, right, And it's
because I mean, the sons have done great marketing. I
gotta give him that. You know, the city ought to
see tire those guys and say, hey, what are you
doing to attract youth? Because at the end of the
rainbow there is no there is nothing. There's nothing for him.
There's jail or they're getting shot to death, you know,
or getting out of it somehow. That that's what's really there.
(07:19):
But but nobody's dispelled the myth that they're gonna be
a big wheel and there's some sort of al Capone figure. Uh,
you know, that's you know, there's some grandiose lifestyle. You know,
at best, a guy gets about a week and a
car he paid for him cash with speakers blasting their
theme music, riding through the sounds of Cincinnati. That's the guy. Like,
(07:43):
he gets about a week of that, maybe a month, Yeah,
and then he's shot to death or thrown in jail
or something happened to him. But but you know, there's
nobody living the high life. You know, if they are,
I don't see them. What I see are the dead people.
Those are the ones who you see.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Like boat guards, etc. Is always a market, it is
kind of an ovank guard, kind of a music theater venue.
But the actual business owners don't want to come on
camera and talk, do they.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
No. We've talked to a number of folks up here.
I just I'm up one short vine as we speak
and just talking to people and they're like, yeah, nah,
you know what. I don't think I better, but but
I think it's a good idea that they do something.
But people are afraid. They're afraid. They don't want any
kind of repercussions because if you stand out, you might
get a lightning bolt. We're not done trying to catch
(08:35):
up with folks. Hopefully we'll get somebody today, one of
these business owners. But they'll tell us all, you know,
off camera. They're willing to tell us, you know, hey,
look something's got to be done. It's crazy. I think
Chief Isaac said, look, it don't even count the violent crime,
but just the chaos that's going on. That's the way
he put it. So you know it's happening, and there's
(08:59):
you know, it's just a lot of activity up here,
and you know, we're fortunately that it hasn't gotten worse
with like I said, when you got somebody unloading guns, Yes, yoh, well,
I mean you've got people unloading guns when there are
dozens of people standing around. You could have one of
these situations where you've got multiple people shot and killed.
(09:23):
You know, Like, I was amazed that when these two
the guy who got killed pulled the gun and shot back.
That when there's people sitting everywhere, how the bullets missed
all those other people? I have no idea, because they
both basically unloaded their weapons and those bullets were flying everywhere.
(09:43):
It's like the OK Corral out there.
Speaker 1 (09:46):
Well, it's not fair to the OK Corral. And lastly,
on this topic, before we talk about babies and boxes, uh,
the superintendent of schoolers came home with slowly a couple
of weeks ago. There's about five thousand kids in cps
that are homeless, five thousand boys and little girls living
in cars, and another five thousand are English second language kids.
(10:07):
That and then you have a chronic absentee rate of
forty seven percent and seventy one percent of black boys
are chronically absent. You put all that together and you
got a recipe for total cultural collapse. Secondly, I got
to get to this. You did a great story on
babies and boxes and I saw this, and I said,
I heard the number. One hundred and seventy newly born
(10:29):
babies put in boxes in fire departments another example of
collapse of our culture. Explain that story.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
Well, yeah, they put these they call them, they're the
ones they use around here mostly are called the safe
haven baby boxes. And so you have these moms who,
you know, they're stuck in a bad spot and they
they don't know what to do, and so they've opened
this up and then anonymously you can drop the baby
in this box and at the fire station the alarm
(10:57):
goes off. Don't have these things for years, and you know,
kind of forget that they got it, and then all
of a sudden, that's what they had in Union Township.
Somebody puts a baby in a box. They know nothing
about where the baby came from. It was a healthy baby,
and now that baby's on the road to a whole
different life. That was in a Union Township. They don't
(11:19):
give a specific day or time when that was, but
it was very recent and last week or two weeks
they had the baby drop there. And meanwhile in Hamilton
they were putting in a brand new baby box. Just
you know, someday somebody's gonna use it, you know. And
so these moms who feel they got no other choice,
(11:41):
nowhere else to go.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
I know, they could have bored it and killed the baby,
and they didn't do that. And so it used to
be a felony to do it. Now it's no harm,
no foul for the mother. Correct.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Well yeah, no, huh, they're no charges. They don't even
you know, want to know who the mom is. They
just want the baby to be safe. That's their main goal.
And I talked to the woman, she's out of Indiana
who started this. There's like somehow I think she said
three hundred This was a three hundred and ninety fifth
baby box, the one in Hamilton. They got them all
(12:15):
through Texas and everywhere. Uh, And they have had seventy
babies since they started the program put in the boxes,
and one hundred and seventy eight that women, just moms,
came to the fire station where they have the baby box.
They didn't put it in a box. They just handed
(12:36):
it over to the firefighters there though, and said, you know,
take care of the baby. And so they put it
in with the child services and then you know, they
find a home for it. I wouldn't be surprised if
the one in Union Township didn't already didn't already place.
Or you know, there are people that are waiting for babies,
hoping to get you know, a healthy baby, right and
you know can't have kids and all that. So, like
(12:57):
you said, it's a you know, it's a it's a
it's a program that you know is working. Like you
said that it should certainly be the alternative because you
know what the folks who have these boxes and put
them in say, you know, you know, it gives women
an opportunity to do something rather than the alternative, which
(13:19):
often is not a good choice to make.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
And for those who may be caught in this about
a minute remaining, those might be women that are caught
in this no harm, no foul, And you don't know
who the mother is. And I guess down the road
in fifteen or twenty years somebody a mother could pop
up and say, where's my child? I don't know, there's
no identifiers, correct, right, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
No, they they say there's no identification to it. I'm
not sure how they do that. If it happened. I
don't know that they've been in there well enough to
have had anybody come back and say, hey, you know,
let's reconsider this. I'm not sure what the procedures are
are for that, if they did have that, But but
(14:02):
the whole idea is that it's an anonymous it's an
anonymous uh uh drop that you drop the baby and
nobody is like, no questions asked, ass you know, and
and that's the way they set it up to be.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
So now we'll see but or whatever. It's sad, it's
sick and it's good. It's one of those things in life.
It's sick, but it's sad, but it's good because it
is so easy to kill baby in uterot today. In fact,
there's organizations like Planned Parentode making millions of dollars through
that terrible business. At least mothers have the you know,
(14:40):
it's not easy, of course delivering a child. But well,
once it's done, to recognize I can't handle this as
a positive. We'll see what happens at two o'clock with
short vine and that's a game of whack a mole.
And if that is shut down, back to the central
business district here, there and everywhere. And I won't stop
until parents are responsible and juveniles are held accountable. The
police need to arrest, the prosecutor needs to prosecute, and
(15:03):
the judge needs a sentence, and it has to be consequences.
And right now you can kill, murder, rape, rob and
there's no consequence because we have a juvenile court system
like Harry Bloom, the judge there who give book reports
and say don't do it again and apologize and out
you go again. It's a revolving door. There's about a
few hundred needs to be taken off the streets to
save a few hundred thousand, and until that happens, for nowhere,
(15:26):
but I'll be watching tonight for the story about short Vine.
Brian Hammrick, once again, thank you for coming on the
Bill Cunningham Show.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Thank you, Brian, Thanks again, mister Cunningham.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
All right, back to work. There's the best street reporter
in town covering Shortvine, babies and boxes, sexual assaults in
college os, Episcopalian churches and more. Let's continue news coming
up at sho home of the Reds, the Bengals and more.
Which Joe will be quarterback on Sunday in Pittsburgh on
News Radio seven hundred WLW NO. I'd hit the music
(15:56):
Dave Keaton hit the music. Another Thursday afternoon in the
Tri State. Whether it's unbelievably well today, tomorrow, Saturday, little rain,
next week, right now, get out and join things, enjoy things.
It might be last weekend for a while, who knows.
And we'll continue to follow that closely. A couple things
the band aid on a bleeding wound, or having prohibitions
(16:18):
against red bikes or against food trucks, or having these
ridiculous curfews that no one follows. I think as if
that'll solve any of the problems. When it does not.
It is lousy parenting, this functional youth and a bad
culture that don't understand the value of hard work, perseverance,
fear of God, and love. A country of delayed satisfaction
(16:38):
to do things necessary in life to make the better
things possible. That means that the three rules of life
for a great America's number one number one go to
school and graduate, could be high school, could be college.
Go to school and graduate. And number two work or
continue to go to school. Many young folks I know
(17:00):
do both. They work then go to school. The number three,
do not commit crime. Do those three things. You don't
need a government program. You'll need red bike prohibitions, don't
need food truck prohibitions, don't need any of the so
called curfews or any of the other issues that are
band aids on cancerous tumor. The cancerost tumor is a
(17:21):
culture that does not recognize the values of being a
great in American and a great human being because education
is the latter out of the hole in which you
might find yourself. Now many do not see the light.
I can't imagine living living in a car, or being
homeless if you're twelve years old, or if you're thirteen
years old, running around short Vine committing crimes, beating people
(17:44):
up for their pizzas. I can't imagine the lifespan of
that person long term is not good. End up like
Ryan Hinton hoisting cars in northern Kentucky then getting shot
by Cincinnati police because you're running around with guns. That's
the resolution is they have so called leaders say the
problem is not the police, The problem is not red bikes.
(18:06):
The problem are parents, mainly fathers out of the home,
great bulk of the fathers out of the home and
mothers that are overwhelmed and our children themselves, so especially
males don't develop full mental alertness till they're about twenty
five or thirty years old. In my case, I think
it was about thirty five years old. I came out
(18:27):
of a culture of St. Savior, of Roman Catholicism, of nuns.
I was grounded and going to school, working from an
early age. And that's not the way things happen today.
If you're poor. If you're poor, become a perpetual victim
and expect free stuff from the government. And I would
add that the affordability crisis we're being discussed, and I
(18:48):
want to talk about Jeffrey Epstein before too much time
goes by. But you know, having taken several econ classes
in the at the end of the day, despite the
demands of Mamdani and liberal Democrats like Greg Lansman, that
the way to have better healthcare is to restrict supply
(19:08):
and raise the price, not exactly just the opposite. When
government gets involved in something like Obamacare, it becomes less affordable,
becomes more expensive and more bureaucratically driven, causing less good outcomes.
That that is what Obamacare is. But I regress, it's
only in the end, there's two ways to make something
(19:30):
more affordable. That is, to reduce the price or increase
the supply. So you reduce demand and you increase the supply,
then guess what prices go down. It's a simple rule.
It makes sense. So with the so called affordability crisis,
(19:53):
when government intervenes in the market, it tends to cause
precisely the opposite of what it tends because the only
way to reduce pricing it to reduce prices is to
reduce the price artificially because of demand or increase the supply.
That's it. The reason chevrolets are so shall we say, inexpensive,
(20:17):
is because the demand is high because there's less of them.
And the opposite occurs. And the reason something like healthcare
becomes more expensive when government is involved, it raises the
price reduces because the price is reduced allegedly because government
is subsidizing it, more people jump in. But then when
(20:39):
the market forces come into play, the price jacks up.
So every time the government intervenes in the marketplace, interventions
are designed to increase demand through subsidies. If we subsidize
something that will that will tend to reduce the price.
Because government's involved, it doesn't. It increases the prices they're
(21:00):
designed to reduce supply through restrictions or regulations. Are both.
So when government in the last ten or fifteen years
got involved in some industry or some business instead of
letting the market forces work, whether it's hospital services or
college tuition, college textbooks, medical care. Look what's happened to
(21:22):
childcare largely subsidized by the government. Way up, food and beverage, housing,
But housing's gone up because the supply is about the same,
but the availability of individuals to afford a houses gone down.
It's no coincidence. But when there's heavy governmental regulation and subsidization.
(21:43):
The list includes products left to their own, devices would
go down in value, but down in price and up
in value. The opposite happens. Free markets generate more supply
and more efficiency and less price. Right apply more efficiency
and that means the price goes down. You can think
(22:05):
about what's happened, for example, to the price of a
television set. When I first got married, we had to
rent a television set from Barker TV for I think
it was nineteen dollars and ninety five cents a month.
I rented a TV, a Sony Trenton Tom was too
expensive when I first bought the fancy TV sets. They
were ten thousand dollars. Now there's six hundred. The market
(22:29):
forces came in, the prices came down, the efficiencies came down,
the supply was greater, and more Americans buy TVs. Am
I teaching a class an econ right here? I would hope. So.
So when Obamacare came in about fifteen years ago, the
government there were few people signing up because the great
(22:52):
bulk of the American people, about ninety five percent, get
their healthcare from where Medicare, Medicaid, veterans benefits, or employer
employee sponsored plans. And employers and employees are in the
business of holding down expenses. iHeart Media has a pretty
good health plan that I don't use because I'm on Medicare,
but nonetheless I regress. Plus I'm on the state's system
(23:15):
because of my lovely wife, but those on the system
tell me that I hurt. Media is in the business
of holding down the cost to employees, and the employees here,
some fifty thousand strong across the country want certain services,
so law supply and demand begins to work. That means,
instead of going up higher higher, people can't afford it.
(23:35):
Employers can't afford it. The two work together with the
market to hold down the price provide more services at
a lower expense. Now with Obamacare completely different. As you know,
the goal of Obamacare, like the Campbell's nose under the tent,
was to bring socialized medicine, one payer for all, put
(23:57):
everybody under medicare, let the government make your decisions. We
see what happened with Obamacare when that was done. For
those who don't know about Obamacare, there are exchanges and
if you're not covered anywhere else. Only seven percent of
the American people have applied so far for Obamacare. The
government has put out exchanges of large insurance companies. So
(24:20):
the government says to these large United Healthcare et cetera,
large insurance companies, We're going to give you large subsidies
in order to get as many people possible in your plans.
So their private plans that are paid for by the
government largely up to the tune of about fifty billion
dollars a year. The idea was is to have the
(24:42):
same market forces at play because who's making the payment
and who's paying who's receiving the services. Instead of through
an employer employee plan in which both sides rub against
each other. To have lower cost to the employer and
lower cost to the employee along with better broader services,
(25:02):
might be opt to go with dental. Well, Obamacare didn't
do that. Obamacare gives billions and billions of dollars directly
to insurance companies to sign up as many people as
you can through the exchanges under the idea that well,
the market forces at work are going to go to
come into play and guess what the price price is
going to go down. Well, no, the government funded Obamacare.
(25:25):
When the government gets involved in one of my principles
of life, the cost go up, availability goes down. So
the insurance companies have received fifty to eighty billion dollars
a year in subsidies from the federal government, which means
from you, you pay for Obamacare. Then the insurance companies
decide their plans, who gets covered, who doesn't get covered,
(25:45):
What are the deductibilities, what are the prices paid for
by the individual person that we're largely going to subsidize.
So the insurance companies have made off Like Bandits, their
stock price has gone up one thousand percent. People want
a buype because the government is funding healthcare Secondly, the
companies decide how much each individual person pays and what
(26:09):
the deductibility is and whether you pre existing conditions, etc.
Can apply, So the company decides that. And so the
seven million people on the Unaffordable Care Act have seen
their premiums artificially kept low because market forces were not
at play. And secondly, the government is subsidizing the medical
insurance companies. So now but you take away the subsidy,
(26:33):
now you find out that your premium might go up
two or three times because now the companies can say, look,
we're going to have to charge you the market rate
because the government's not subsidized, subsidizing, subsidizing us anymore. Now
we've got a crisis of seven million people fired up
by the fact is I've been artificially supported off to
(26:56):
the side, independently by the American taxpayer, and I'm going
to have to pay the real price for my medical
care instead of letting forces come into play. So this
is health savings accounts. But now people are fired up,
and the course the media will blame the Republicans every
time and not the Democrats. It'd be interesting to get
stories as to what Obama promised when he said it.
(27:17):
I've played you of the cuts, I won't bore you
with them further, he said loud and proud. This is
going to reduce the deficit by four trillion dollars. You're
gonna get better care to lower price. You like your plan,
keep your plan, like your doctor, Keep your doctor. All
the lies, all the lies are told, and the media
will not tell you about the lies because they're in
the business of attacking Republicans and not telling the truth. Now,
(27:41):
the truth is Obamacare has miserably failed. The Campbell's nose
under the tent to make sure we had one payer
medicare everyone have government sponsored healthcare has failed temporarily. But
what will happen. I may not be with you when
it occurs. At some point, the Democratic Party, now run
(28:02):
by AOC and Mamdani, are going to control of the House,
the Senate, and the Presidency. The first thing to do
is get rid of the filibuster requiring sixty votes. Then
they can ram through with a compliant US Supreme Court,
who at that point will have fourteen justices and not nine.
All liberals like Justice Jackson will be appointed be fourteen
(28:25):
members of the of the US Supreme Court, and the
House and the Senate, and they're going to be able
to bring into the Union two or three more states
like Washington, DC will be a state, and Puerto Rie
Rico will be a state, guaranteeing control of the House
and the Senate. As far as I can see, they're
going to demand that everyone have one payer of Medicare
(28:45):
will be it, and then we'll look like Canada or
Western Europe, where average Americans cannot get medical care. You
stand in line the costs of skyrocketing. When the government
gets involved, the prices, the costs go way up, the
subsidies increase, and when the rugs pulled out from under you,
you're left holding the bag. Very simple, Let's continue. I
got to get onto Epstein files here. At some point
(29:07):
I'll briefly say this down on my side of the fence,
believing the President Donald Trump on this issue is pure
as the driven snow. Virginia Goufrey, who's the main litigant
in many of the lawsuits, who now has killed herself,
has said for years under oath, Donald Trump was not involved.
All the attorneys for Jeffrey Epstein, from Alan Dershowitz to
(29:31):
large law firms all represented him have been released of
their lawyer client privilege now because their client's dead. Have
all said unanimously that Donald Trump was not involved with
Jeffrey Epstein as far as trafficking of young girls, teenage girls,
or having sex with young girls. CNN is in the
business of trying to find somewhere, somehow, some girl somewhere
(29:51):
who's now in her thirties or forties that she had
sex with Donald Trump when she was sixteen years old.
They've sought tither and fro and the answer is zero, zilch, nada.
So on one side, you have all the victims of
Jeffrey Epstein who said Trump didn't do it. You have
Alan Dershowitz and all the attorneys representing Jeffrey Epstein and
(30:13):
just Laine Maxwell who said Donald Trump didn't do it.
You have the women themselves who said Donald Trump didn't
do it. You have all the US attorneys and states
attorneys like Alvin Bragg New York City, who is all
the information who wants to indict Donald Trump for anything
said Trump didn't do it. You have all that lined up.
But then every now and then there's a leaked email
(30:34):
that may reference the fact that Donald Trump is the
dog that didn't bark. What bell does that mean? I
don't know. But the victims said Trump didn't do it.
The lawyers said Trump didn't do it, The prosecutor said
Trump didn't do it. Jeffrey Epstein said he didn't do it,
and Jeffray Maxwell said, uh, just Laine Maxwell said Trump
didn't do it. But the media won't let it alone,
(30:55):
will they? More bombshells are coming out. The truth will
set you free. Let's continue. But don't tell me when
the government gets involved in a large way in a
big governmental program that availability goes up and costs go down.
Just the opposite happens. And Obamacare, the Unaffordable Care Act,
(31:15):
is a great example of that. The media won't tell
you the truth. But I just did twelve fifty five
Home of Your Bengals. There's radio seven hundred WW. Now
let's continue. Bill Cunningham, the Great American. Of course, the
turning point USA. Events taking place in college campuses are
(31:39):
generally accepted, and every now and then completely unacceptable. Goes
to the behavior of you, Cal Berkeley. What happened a
week or so ago is indicative of what happens on
many liberal college campuses. But Charlie Kirk had a mission,
and it was an important mission because to capture someone's
mind early in life and have them form a certain
conservative and godly principles is critical, especially in a marketing
(32:03):
system and an education system where those ideas are not welcomed.
So when turning point USA a month or so ago,
went to Auburn, went to Alabama, and went to Mississippi,
sold out crowds. The prophet I call him the Saint
Paul of the twenty first century. Charlie Kirk was struck
down in his prime by a left wing assassin. It
(32:24):
was thought by killing the messenger that the message would
not live. But the message continues to live. But if
you've seen the video about what happened at Berkeley u
CAL Berkeley, which by the way, was the birthplace the
free speech movement, you know free speech movement was important
at Berkeley. Now not so much. Because of what happened
at Berkeley. The Feds are launching a civil slash criminal
(32:48):
investigation of those involved with Antifa and others, and also
against the administration itself. Jon of you and I now
is Collie Stimpson. He's a former local and federal prosecutor
he's with the Hardy Foundation. And Collie Stimpson who went
to Kenyon College. I'm night in the great state of Ohio. Welcome,
I think for the first time to the Bill Cunningham Show. So,
first of all, for those who may not know what happened,
(33:10):
describe the events of a week or so ago at
the UC Berkeley campus. What occurred.
Speaker 4 (33:16):
Yeah, So tp USA, Charlie Kirk's organization, applied for and
got a permit to hold a typical lecture rally within
a facility at Berkeley. A whole bunch of people signed
up to go to the left. These got upset because
the tolerant left is not so tolerant, and so all
(33:36):
sorts of agitators went to Berkeley or or from Berkeley,
and not only did they cause a riot and engage
in violent activities outside the place, they really just caused mayhem. Now,
the event did go off inside without a hitch, but
(33:59):
people were assaulted, and of course the FEDS were there,
and the local police were there, and the campus.
Speaker 1 (34:05):
Police were there.
Speaker 4 (34:06):
So the FEDS have asked the local and campus police
to preserve all the videos so that they can get
to the bottom of this.
Speaker 1 (34:12):
In the US Department of Civil Rights Division is headquartering this.
It could be a criminal situation since we have experienced
and prosecution. Go back in time. I saw some By
the way, this story never hit the mainstream media. It
doesn't fit the mainstream media of left doing the agitators
shutting down free speech at Berkeley, but it's on several
other websites, including Heritage and including Fox News, the Bright Part, etc.
(34:35):
It hit there, But go back in time because I
saw reporting that when the permit was issued, there was
a circular went around the Berkeley campus telling students how
to get tickets who didn't want to go but wanted
to keep others from actually getting inside the hall. They
had double and triple ticketing that indicated they wanted to
(34:56):
destroy the event by making look as if nobody would
attend it. And second, there was funding from George Soros
and other foundations to pay for individuals to travel to Berkeley.
They have their signs pre printed and if you act
in a certain way, you got certain monies. If you
acted up, if you got arrest it, you got five
thousand dollars. You had to get arrested, do stupid stuff,
(35:17):
you got paid for it. So this is astro turf protesting.
But may I ask you, Colley Stimpson, what is the
indications of who funds these riots, how much are they paid,
who's doing it, and what's the liability of the college campus.
Speaker 4 (35:33):
Well, let's start with the black Letter Law. Eighteen USC.
Twenty one oh one is a federal statute that criminalizes rioting,
and so it's not criminalizing free speech, which of course
we still enjoy free speech in this country. But rioting
is defined by federal statute that whoever travels an interstate
(35:55):
or foreign commerce commerce, or uses a cell phone, et
cetera to incite a riot, to organize, promote and encourage,
or participate and carry out a riot, or commit any
act of violence. Fruence of a riot, and riot is
not free speech. It means a public disturbance involving an
act of violence by one or more persons. And so
(36:15):
I think when you hear Scott Basant, the Treasury Secretary,
and Hermith Dillon, the head of the Civil Rights Division
at DOJ, say they're going to get to the bottom
of this, They're going to get find out who's funding this,
you know, whether it's Soros, the source affiliated organizations. You
can read my book Road Prosecutors, How radical Soros lawyers
are destroying America's communities. Chapter two goes to all the
(36:36):
funding of these If they're funding people for free speech,
that's not a crime. If they're funding people encouraging them
and citing them to commit acts of violence, they're as
guilty as the violent person. So I think they're going
to get to the bottom of this, and they need
to prosecute some people federally to stamp stamp this out.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
I'm looking at the video now, there's two or three
individuals making complete funos and themselves throwing things at the
at the police. And also there was circumstances of physical
assaults that happens, and one particular is vicious. Someone wearing
across was beaten in the streets of Berkeley, and I
understand there's criminal charges against that person. What do we
(37:16):
know about that person, who, by the way, will be
paid by these foundations to act up. And how serious
a crime could it be for someone who beat someone
in the streets of America because they're wearing across attending
a Charlie Kirk memorial event.
Speaker 4 (37:30):
Depends on the level of the assault. If it's a
simple assault, it's a misdemeanor. If it's a felony assault,
it can carry a longer period of time. The problem
is that in Oakland, just like across the Bay in
San Francisco, they had Soros rogue prosecutor. So Pamla Price
is the roague prosecutor in Oakland. And so I think
the FED that the locals are just going to turn
(37:52):
the blind eye and say, oh, this is just Berkeley.
This happens, It's been happening since the sixties, no big deal.
So this is why Harmeith Dillon and the Federal Eure
of Investigation and the Joint Terrorism Task Forces are looking
at the bigger picture. Who's paying for these people to
be agitators? Who's paying for them to assault? Because then
you raise it to a federal offense if they cross
(38:13):
state lines or used a means of interstate commerce i e.
A Cell phone, text, etc. And who doesn't that can
rise to the level of a federal offense. You don't
want the local prosecutor to handle this because she doesn't
do prosecution.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
Let's broaden this a little bit to Alvin Braggue in
New York City. We had for long period weeks and
months violent riots happening on Columbia University all over the place.
When they shut down city thoroughfares, they throw rocks and
bottles at the police, they keep students from going to classes,
violent ugly stuff, hospitalizations. Not yet a murder, I don't think,
(38:49):
but the most violent riots are taking place. And Alvin Bragg,
who's the state prosecutor, has prosecutor a total of zero people. However,
with Donald Trump, he found on a form he didn't
put some payments supposedly to Stormy Daniels, and he metastasized
that form from a state violation to a federal violation.
That thing is still pending, and that thing's going nowhere,
(39:11):
even though he's been convicted. So when you wrote your
book on rogue prosecutors federally in state, certain crimes should
be prosecuted, certain crimes should not. Is it common in
blue cities and blue states when these riots take place
that the local prosecutors turn a blind eye and do nothing,
including some of the local federal prosecutors under Joe Biden.
Speaker 4 (39:34):
So ninety percent of crimes are prosecuted at the local level,
ten percent only or prosecute the federal level. There's twenty
three hundred elected das across the country.
Speaker 1 (39:43):
These are low visibility, low dollar.
Speaker 4 (39:45):
Rates, but Soros figured out in twenty sixteen he could
buy himself a DA, which was a cheap investment, and
by doing that, you reversed engineer. That's their word is
not ours the criminal justice system, because the DA herself
is the gatekeeper to the criminal justice and she and
she alone decides who gets prosecuting who doesn't. So even
(40:05):
though only seventy or one or two of these twenty
three hundred are are Soros bought and paid for, that
represents sixty eight percent of the nation's population. These are
in the big cities, and so they are a perfectly
good law and ordered Democrat DA's in cities across this country.
This is not a blue or red state issue, or
a liberal or conservative issue. This is either your for
(40:27):
law and order or you're for chaos. The reason we
dedicated an entire chapter to Alvin Bragg and our book
is because he's a chaos guy. He's a Soros bought
and paid for road. Prosecutors don't prosecute misdemeanors, water down
felonies to misdemeanors, don't send violent use to adult court
don't ask for cash, bail, etcetera. And of course, why
that happens, crime goes up. So that's why Alvin Bragg
(40:49):
hasn't done the right thing or authorized as prosecutores do
the right thing to prosecute thugs and people who commit
assault and by the way, almost all of whom do
so as a hate crime because they're against Jews. And
after October seventh and at least a whirlwind of anti
semitism across college campuses almost all focused on people of
(41:14):
the Jewish faith.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
It's pathetic, and someone is funding this because you can't
have thousands of so called students showing up with the
same signs, with the same circulars. And then moneys are
being paid to protests. If you're arrest at bond is posted,
if you commit certain crimes, you're paid additional money to
commit crime. And this is all below the surface. I mean,
Donald Trump as busy as can be. Nonetheless, I hope Harmett,
(41:38):
Dillon and others US Department of Justice can go to
the head of the snake, and that is the Foreign
Ford Foundation, the Gates Foundation, George Soros and other liberals
who are billionaires that fund turmoil I don't understand how
it's in American interest to have individuals paid large amounts
of money to cause complete chaos on college campuses in
(41:59):
major cities and get away with it. And let me
give you an example here in Cincinnati which has gone national,
and you might recall, on July to twenty sixth, we
had what many considered to be a race ride in
which individuals with white skin were beaten at the hands
of individuals with black skin, and it was all on videotape,
and of course that went national because we had city
(42:20):
council members in Cincinnati who stood up and they brought
in the microphones and the cameras and said, listen to
what I have to say. This is like a week
or ten days after the event. All the person's charge
were black and all the victims are white. And the
city council members said, at this news conference, you know
this is wrong. We want the prosecutor to find somebody white.
(42:41):
We want a white person charged with a crime and
lo and behold. About two or three weeks later, one
of the victims, whose head was treated like a soccer ball,
was charged with a crime under the orders of the
city solicitor, who wanted a white person charged. The line
prosecutors and the Hamlet County Prosecutor's office said, no, you
(43:03):
had the police officer CPD sint Police said, we've investigated
this and there's nothing here. We're not going to charge
the victim who has head treated like a football with
a crime. They also then went to the chief of police,
her name is Teresa Thiji, who wanted her to sign
charges against this white victim of crime because of the
color of his skin, and she refused, so she gets fired.
(43:26):
And so finally the city solicitor finds a captain to
put his name on a criminal charge that a white
person committed a crime to playcate the members of city
council who just happened to be black liberals. Isn't that
on the surface, you're an expert on this. Is this
on the surface a criminal civil violation? To have city
(43:47):
officials demanded a person be charged with the crime because
of the color of their skin, isn't that wrong?
Speaker 4 (43:54):
Of course it's wrong. You should focus on the conduct,
not the color of the skin. And people who commit
criminal violations should be held accountable, and people who are
victims should receive the proper dignity and victim services they deserve.
I mean, I was a criminal defense.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
Lawyer, I was a judge for five years.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
I've been on all sides of the courtroom. I never
looked at the color of the skin of the purp
or the victim. You look at the status of the
person for their actus rays what they did or didn't do,
and whether they were the victim.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
Or not a victim.
Speaker 4 (44:30):
And so people who view the world with race colored glasses,
and this is the problem, have a skewed vision of America.
And most Americans have moved way past this. And so
that's why this rogue prosecutor movement is the worst failed
social experiment in criminal justice in the last fifty years.
(44:51):
That's why Alvin Brad I'm sorry. That's why Chess Aboudine
in San Francisco, and George Gascon in LA and Marilyn
mose Being Baltimore, and Kim Gardner Saint Louis and Rachel
Rollins and Boston, all the rest of them, Kim Fox
in Chicago, the first Road prosecutor have all slithered out
of office or gotten voted out of office because people
want their public safety. And you know better than most
(45:13):
that the people who that violent crime is demographically and
geographically located concentrated in the inner cities, and the main
victims of violent crime inner city are blacks and minorities.
And so you're either for law and order, which then
protects communities, especially hard tough communities, or you're for chaos.
(45:33):
And if you're for chaos and you view the criminal
justice system through race colored glasses, then you're actually harming
the very people you pretend to care the most.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
About, which is interesting. But it continues, and I see
subterfuges on college campuses in which the DEI, as a
wooden stake put through. It's hard. However they do it
by some other mechanism. They want to continue the race discrimination,
they want to continue the religious discrimination. Call it something different.
And I can recall fifty or sixty years ago in
(46:02):
the South, Democrats refused to enforce federal law. And now
we're fifty six years later, and all of a sudden,
Democrats are refusing to enforce federal law. Isn't that somewhat unusual?
Speaker 4 (46:15):
Well, it's a sad reality. What's been going on for
a while, and it was only made worse during the
Obama and Biden administrations. And you know the fact that
settle civil rights laws which prohibit a hiring, promotion, tenure
based on race haven't been enforced doesn't mean it's not illegal.
And thank god the Supreme Court issued their decision and
(46:37):
Students for Fair Admissions against Tarvard and against the UNC
to prohibit the use of race and admissions in colleges.
But it's been illegal for decades to promote higher people
based on the color of their skin.
Speaker 2 (46:51):
And again, I think.
Speaker 4 (46:52):
Most people have just moved beyond this right. And it's
only the elite race baiters who care about this because
they don't want the civil rights laws applied equally across
the board. They only want a one way ratchet, and
most Americans are done with that.
Speaker 1 (47:08):
All right. Once again, Cully Stimpson of the Heritage Foundation,
and you've been on both sides of prosecution, plus as
a judge. What's happening in American society is sick, and
it's well funded for particular purpose to cause chaos. And
during chaos and confusion, that's where liberals and Marxists get
their way. And I look at what's happening in New
York City with Mom Donnie's election, and I'm thinking, my god,
(47:31):
I can't wait to see what that looks like. He's
not going to send cops the nine to one one
calls anymore. He's going to send social workers to see
if that works with domestic violence victims. I don't know
how that's going to work, but we'll see what happens.
Coullie Stimpson, you're a great American and thanks for coming
on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, Cully.
Speaker 4 (47:47):
Great to be with you.
Speaker 1 (47:48):
Thanks God bless America. Let's continue with more. We get
the government we deserve and the times that worries me greatly.
Bill Cunningham News next Year Home of the Bengals News
Radio seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 2 (48:00):
And so I'll be quiet, man and answer your questions
so I can get the work.
Speaker 5 (48:08):
Hello, quiet skulls, I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
God you know I'm saying. That's Mike Tomlin. Mike Tomlin,
as you know, Mike Tomlin. Yes, they're there to talk
about the great news of the bank was getting ready,
Let's get back to work. By segment, we have soccer
high school boys Royalty in the house. And then for
the second time in a row, we have a coach
seeing Severling is here to talk about the Summit Country
today and say give me a full report, Willy.
Speaker 5 (48:37):
We want to welcome in the Division five Ohio Champions
of State Soccer champions Boys. They defeated Toledo Ottawa Hills
five to one to win the title. To get in,
they went overtime in the semi finals, scored with five
seconds live regulation five second and then they wanted an
extra time. They go in, whip up on Ottawa Hill,
(49:00):
seat him and beat him about the face and head.
Speaker 1 (49:03):
It is.
Speaker 5 (49:04):
Let's see they they have won nine state champions the championships,
they're nine to zero and championship games.
Speaker 1 (49:12):
Scott Savoring, he is here, he's the coaching Scott. Let's
talk about the last game. Set it up Ottawa Hills.
You told me off the other. Essentially you've beat them
a total of two times out of the last seventy
eight times you played him, but these two times should
beat him. It was for the state title. Tell the
American people about that last match. It's a great game.
Our guys came out ready to play. We knew that
(49:32):
if we scored a first game and forced them to
kind of come out with to match our tempo it'll
be a struggle for them. And Carter Long, one of
the guys that I have with me today. He put
on a clinic, scored two early goals, and finished the
game with a hat trick to set us up to
go on and win five. Hat trick. This the pitch,
(49:55):
tell me about the goal. They're winning goal five seconds remained.
The fans are going nuts, screaming is everywhere. The pressure
is on. You're bleeding from your eyeballs. You gotta score.
Tell the American people what happened. Well, I didn't score
that one. I'm sorry. I try to set you up.
Speaker 6 (50:09):
No, it's okay, it's a good but our sophomore scored
that beck at Brinkman and it was unbelievable. He stepped
up and we talked about pressure a lot, and that's
the most pressure moment I think I've ever been in soccer.
And he's stepped up and just I guess hit it
and it was unbelievable. Five seconds left and we all celebrated,
like you the world.
Speaker 1 (50:26):
You went nuts, got like Louisville, be Kentucky. The coach
broke his hand during the celebration. Yeah that's crazy.
Speaker 5 (50:32):
Well now, Willie also the Summit girls won the state
championship in soccer. They're here next Wednesday. It couldn't get
a bay they wanted. They had to go to algebra class.
Speaker 1 (50:42):
And these kids right here, I've already completed their studies. Correct,
girls who are still working toward their g D. They
had to stay in school. Is that correct? Correct? Do
you coach the girls too? I do not. That is
coach Mike f is Mike any good? He's all right guy?
Before I go into the academic questions these boys. Because
I want to know the quality of education at Summer
(51:03):
Country Day segment, give me some sports and make it fast.
Speaker 5 (51:06):
Willy the student reporters of proud service of your local
tame Star Heating and air Conditioning dealers, Tamestar quality you
can feel in Cincinnati, Cowayoming Air.
Speaker 1 (51:15):
It won eight eight eight nine.
Speaker 5 (51:17):
Six h v A C Sports. And we also want
to thank Ron's roost Willie the world's greatest fried chicken
on the west side thirty eight to fifty three race
road at five seven four two two two. I think
the team ate about fifty pieces of chicken in between
they got when they got here.
Speaker 1 (51:36):
You don't want to get Ron, I don't want to
get behind the segment in a buffet line. Don't want
to these guys in a buffet line. That's right, left.
Speaker 5 (51:44):
Let's see Joe Flacco didn't throw yesterday. Willie's out on
the field right now as we speak. Getting that shoulder
ready for the Steelers game and preview it all tonight
Cincinnati Tax Resolution powered by Toe Round Table Show presented
by Postman Law Live from Long Nicks and Hebron Get
this six oh five, Get them all in, and also
(52:04):
college basketball The West Miller Show, Get the Latest on
the Bearcatch tonight eight oh five for the origin of
Montgomery in.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
Now, Coach, as he continues, you told me off there
are these boys did not win half their games in soccer?
Is that correct? What was the final record?
Speaker 3 (52:19):
That's correct? We went we finished twelve six and six.
We finished this season the regular season at five six
and six. But we knew, with our schedule being as
difficult it was and the teams that we played, that
we would be ready for the postseason.
Speaker 1 (52:31):
You got them ready at the right time. Exactly did
you play Deer Park Wildcasts and were able to compete
with those boys? But we did not. We almost did.
We were one round from playing them.
Speaker 3 (52:41):
Unfortunately they they did not make it, but it would
have been a tough game for us.
Speaker 1 (52:44):
We will.
Speaker 5 (52:46):
Coach told me, this is the sixth time boys and
girls at Summit overall have won the title.
Speaker 1 (52:53):
Right, both boys and girls. It has been done six times,
in the fourth time by Summit Country Day. Incredible. How's
the cupboard? Is it bear for next year? Are you
gonna reload? What are you gonna do? Rebuild? Reload? What
are you gonna do? We graduate six seniors.
Speaker 3 (53:09):
We expect to be competitive again next year, trying trying
to reload.
Speaker 1 (53:13):
Let's go one by one. Give me your name and
what your future is like in life.
Speaker 7 (53:19):
My name is John and Baka and I want to
go to college, graduate with a four year degree and
study finance and going to the financial field after college.
Speaker 1 (53:28):
So you want to be rich, is what you're saying.
That's the goal. Where are you going to go to college?
Maybe like Xavier, You might go to Xavier, might go
to Toledo, might get into NKU if you're lucky. What
are you thinking about?
Speaker 7 (53:39):
Those are all great institutions, But I like Ohio State
or Indiana the.
Speaker 1 (53:43):
Home of the Hoosiers, sir, all right. Next up, I'm
Clemente Volk.
Speaker 7 (53:49):
I plan on studying industrial engineering college and I want
to go to either Ohio State or Purdue.
Speaker 1 (53:54):
If I'm engineering, sir.
Speaker 7 (53:56):
Next up, I'm telling a long I want to study
environmental studies and then I'll either go to High Whistland
or Butler.
Speaker 1 (54:06):
Do you know how Ohio was flat? And most of
the Ohio was flat? Environmental studies? You know why? Because
of the glaciers way back when? Pretty good about that.
Fifteen thousand years ago, a glacier that was a mile
and a half high of solid ice came down from
the Arctic and it stopped in Cincinnati. And that's why
we have seven hills, you know about that stuff. That's
(54:27):
why we have the Great Lakes, which I may ask
get a name? Next? What are the name of the
five Great Lakes?
Speaker 7 (54:33):
Oh Superior, Michigan, Huron Erie, Ontario, Ontario.
Speaker 1 (54:40):
That's it? Pretty good? Next up, young man, I'm Elijah Warner,
and I'm looking to play soccer. College. Where you're gonna
go to college, if anywhere, trying to go, probably somewhere
coastal like Florida down there down south, that's where the
girls are and also it's nice and sunny down there.
Is that correct? It is very sunny, Ynny. Next up, last,
I'm name's Carter.
Speaker 6 (55:01):
I'm only a junior, so I'm not looking to go
to college next year, but the year after that, I
plan on to go into the financial financial field.
Speaker 1 (55:07):
You know, Scott. I want to test the educational achievement
of these boys, to see what some of country day
is like and whether or not they have received a
good education because they got GPAs of fifteen apiece, I
had the Mason comments were in and those girls didn't
didn't miss a beat. No, all right? What is the
square root of thirty six six? All right? What year
(55:28):
did Ohio become a state? What year was it? High
became a state in what year? Eighteen three? Very good?
Right there? Now, can you name three or four US
presidents from the state of Ohio? Taft one William Henry Harrison,
Harrison right there, that's three. How about Garfield, Garfield? How
(55:49):
about Harrison got Harrison, Wilson Wilson, Now he's from New Jersey. Nonetheless,
who is the lieutenant governor of the state of Ohio?
Government Dressel. That's it. The old football coach in Ohio State.
Very good? What is the state capital of California? Named
after her? By the way, a Catholic procedure called a
(56:10):
sacrament What is the state capital Sacramento? Very good? Right there?
What is the capital of New York State? Very good?
Coaching not bad at all? Who's better? Messi or Ronaldo? Who? I?
Speaker 7 (56:25):
No?
Speaker 1 (56:25):
Messy? Messy? Do I look like Ronaldo? My wife says,
I do? I think you do? From the knee down,
I look just like him, no question about it. Segment
Complete sports. If you don't mind?
Speaker 2 (56:34):
Will he?
Speaker 1 (56:34):
Also?
Speaker 5 (56:35):
The Reds have added to the coaching staff today. They
have announced the hiring of Oscar Marine as the bullpen coach.
Last year, he was the pitching coach for the Pittsburgh Pirates,
overseeing a staff that featured Paul Skeins.
Speaker 1 (56:51):
Can the Reds get Paul Skan? Guys? You know who
Paul Skeens is? Yes? Who does he play for now?
The Pittsburgh Pirates? Who's his girlfriends? Not bad? Also? Will
the Governor de Wine on X?
Speaker 5 (57:04):
Governor de Wine says that the Reds should sign Kyle Schwarber,
which would add big power to the lineup and bring
a Middletown native back to southwest Ohio. He doesn't say
whether the state's going to give the Reds thirty five
and a half million dollars to sign him, but maybe so.
Speaker 1 (57:21):
I don't know. I talked to Karen Kraft about that,
or runs the Reds, as you know. I said, don't
pay him any money now, but agree to pay him
beginning in ten years. Junior, that's right, pay him at
beginning in ten years. Yeah, thirty million dollars a year,
and she's gonna think about it. Give him five million
a year now, then pay him later after the Castolini
sell the team in ten or fifteen years. You know
(57:41):
what I'm saying. Whatever you say, that's what I'm thinking. Okay, coach,
let's talk about nil money, Scott, Let's talk about nil
These boys told me off there they're looking for some
big money. They brought lots of glory to Summit Country Day.
You can tell that it got their hands in their pockets.
Nothing's in their pockets. What is the status of no
money for high school kids in Ohio? From what I understand,
(58:01):
is all but happening.
Speaker 3 (58:04):
These guys are hoping that there's somebody out here listening
that's going to pay them, Yes, pay them basically, but yes,
from what I'm understanding, I don't know a ton about it.
Speaker 1 (58:14):
But Innio is coming to Ohio. Do they get rings?
Do they get to what do they get for winning
the state title?
Speaker 7 (58:20):
They do?
Speaker 1 (58:20):
They get rings.
Speaker 3 (58:21):
They'll be fitted for those next week, probably get them
sometime in the spring.
Speaker 1 (58:24):
What can we do for Mason? The Mason girls have
won how many state titles segments? Something like nine? Uh yeah,
nine of them, yes, in a row, and they can't
get rings at Mason. Can I know you're rich at
Summer Country today, you have a lot of money. You're
on Grandon Road, number one school. Academically, these kids are
going into finance. They'll be owning us all at one point.
Could you assist Mason High School? The comments for the girls?
(58:47):
By the way, they need the rings and they don't
have any.
Speaker 3 (58:50):
What can you do, comic fans, if you're out there,
if you're as an alumnians, to step up help them out.
Speaker 1 (58:56):
When Deer Park High School in twenty eighteen and undefeated, untied,
unscored on in basketball twenty nine to Ohero, they got rings,
they got the parade. So these kids get a parade
down Grandon road. Did they get anything like that?
Speaker 3 (59:11):
The school does the sort of a welcoming back, and
there was a PEP rally yesterday.
Speaker 1 (59:17):
It was it was pretty awesome. Guys, who are the
two US senators from the state of Ohio the wne No,
he's the governor. Two US senators. They're just the election
last year he was lieutenant governor Lieutenant it was John
(59:38):
used that. No, and the other guy's Bernie Marino. Do
these guys take any classes in current events? I don't know.
Can you name the mayor of the city of Cincinnati, Puable?
That's it? Well, guys, congratulations and Scott. Will we see
the team next year? That is always the plan. But
(01:00:00):
the plan is to win more games other than the
state championship game against Odaway Hills and Toledo. Is that
the whole thing? They won? The whole thing? What their
record was, I don't care. Do you care? What if
you go nineteen and one and the one losses in
the state finals, is that a good year or a
bad Yearly, that is not the ideal. That's not the ideal.
(01:00:21):
Ending You'll be back next year, we hope. How many
rings you guys got so far? Two rings? Not bad?
All right, that's not bad and pretty good. I give
him a B plus on the questions would you agree
shimm a B plus something like that? Why what is
the value of pie? I give you an eight minus segment.
(01:00:41):
Give me out of the students report, please will you?
And honor of the Division five state champion boys.
Speaker 5 (01:00:45):
Soccer team in Ohio two in a row and five
of the last country day, all hail the knights. We
leave you with the immortal words of the stood report.
Speaker 2 (01:00:55):
All. I should be with you, Bill, see you later.
Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
It's Governor Mike Dwaines saying goodbye. He's getting the money together,
got it on tomorrow and the Mustangs come in they
do that? Yes?
Speaker 5 (01:01:04):
Did he give the ring and give money to the reds?
Is blowing money on these these kids?
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
Got all the nil money next year on seven hundred
WLW my Billy cunning in the Great American And let's continue.
Whenever stop, we simply continue. There's a presidential order signing
(01:01:34):
a schedule for three o'clock today that is supposed to
address one major problem with the Democratic policies that have
been enactive for the last four or five years when
it comes to truck driving and as the truck. And
Bozo always said that if you wear it, if you
eat it, if you smoke it, if you look at it,
it came by a truck. And so trucking is at
(01:01:55):
the heart and soul of the American economic capitalistic experiment.
And because of that, more focus has now been given
to those who are driving trucks illegally through one means
or another, generally get their CDLs through shall I say,
blue cities and blue states. One is the number of
(01:02:16):
illegal truck drivers operating right now the truck and Bozo
would hate this. The number might be as high as
three to four hundred thousand. Illegal truck drivers are operating
on the super slabs of this country right now. And
it's because they have caused so many accidents in Mayhem
that suddenly the President is more involved and as his
(01:02:38):
secretary Duffy and making sure that when you see a
large truck that's operated by a legitimate company not from
Eastern Europe, and that the person operating behind the wheel
is someone who complies with federal law and something called
the eled loopholes, which is fueling a lot of fraud
and driving good carriers out of the business. So what
(01:02:59):
that means is that the logs keep track, for example,
how many hours of driver drives, how many miles they drive,
and if those logs can be self certified, it means
that illicit companies can get contracts to move freight all
over the country. And many times the drivers from Eastern Europe,
for example, doesn't speak of the English, can't read English,
(01:03:21):
doesn't speak English. And when the individual running the so
called trucking company is able to pay them almost slave
wages to drive and then they self certify the logs,
it runs out of business. Legitimate trucking companies like Gateway Distribution,
for example, makes it more difficult. And so if the
first time ever the President and Secretary Duffy is cracking
(01:03:44):
down on truckers and truck drivers that can't read English,
can't speak English, are here illegally and cause mayhem all
over the world, especially in the United States. So I
look forward later on this say afternoon, what the president
can do and what he can't do in that regard. Secondly,
what's happening is a classic smear against Donald Trump when
(01:04:06):
it comes to the Epstein files. Let me explain this
Epstein matter. Jeffrey Epstein started sometime in the mid nineteen
nineties when he was charged in New York City with
raping girls. He was only at that point about thirty
years old, and he went through a couple ideations of
raping women, this time not girls, and the police determined
(01:04:26):
not to proceed. This is NYPD under the administration of
Rudolph Giuliani, when they were cracking down on everything. Somehow
he metastasized, not even a college education, into handling billions
of dollars of the rich and famous in New York City.
Of course, in New York City in the nineties and
twenty five years ago, you're going to come in contact
(01:04:48):
with Donald Trump on a regular basis. And so an
investigation was launch starting in twenty oh three in Florida
on Jeffrey Epstein because complaints were made beginning from a
mother a teenage girl who seemingly was living with Jeffrey Epstein,
and she was sixteen years old at the time Epstein
would have been forty one. The mother was unhappy, so
(01:05:09):
the prosecutor's office in Dade County and the US Attorney
started an investigation at Jeffrey Epstein and went on and
on for about a two year period. They finally decided,
and this is quite unusual to have the FED stepped
aside after a couple of years and said, okay, let
the state officials handle it. And the state officials worked
(01:05:32):
out a deal deal with the approval of the US
Attorney's office, to let Jeffrey Epstein plead guilty to an
offense that carried one year in the county jail, on
condition that he and everyone around them disclosed all the
information about the girls and secondly, that he would successfully
complete probation. So he did a work release program out
(01:05:55):
of the Miami Dade County jail, in which he had
to be locked up at night, but during the day
he'd go back to his mansion and conduct business and
now and every now and then come back to jail.
One might ask, how's that possible? To me, it was unbelievable,
And the federal prosecutor who was involved in the case
said it was the best thing to do because many
(01:06:16):
of the girls did not want to testify, their mothers
did not want them to testify, and so it's the
best deal they could get. In the FED steps aside,
let the state handle it.
Speaker 6 (01:06:24):
Well.
Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
That did not stop Jeffrey Epstein over the next ten
to fifteen years doing the same crap making big money.
One of the elements of this is, according to media accounts,
if you can believe the media, he would also very
often videotape or film what was happening in order to
have dirt on the rich and famous doing what they
were doing to the girls and disgusting. Maxwell would as
(01:06:49):
a woman, and many times women are feel safer around
other women and girls than men, would often recruit girls.
One of them was Virginia Jeffrey, who has committed suicide
about six or seven months ago. So the investigation was
relaunched about five or six years later, and this time
the US Attorney's Office got involved, and they put out
(01:07:10):
the bat signal and said, anybody that said any contact
with Jeffrey Epstein, please stepped forward. Whether it's New York
City or whether it's Southeast Florida, whatever it might be,
step forward. You must step forward. They launched another two
year investigation of Maxwell and Epstein and went on and
on and on, and they had subpoena power. They subpoended
(01:07:30):
several people. They developed a list of up to one
to two hundred girls who at that point were under
the age of eighteen who were trafficked for pleasurable and
sexual purposes and also to have maybe dirt on the
rich and famous. One of those, of course, was Prince Andrew.
One of the remarkable things about the entire circumstance before
(01:07:51):
I get to the most recent smears against Donald Trump,
is this, other than Prince Andrew, who's been identified from
Virginia as a person that she was forced to have
sex with. There's not one other man whose names come
forward of supposedly hundreds of well healed men who had
(01:08:15):
sex with these teenage girls, largely on video that was
used by Jeffrey Epstein to course or to bribe them
and doing certain things. And here we sit in twenty
twenty five. In November twenty twenty five, this guy's been
fully investigated for about twenty twenty three years. Maxwell received
(01:08:36):
a prison sentence of twenty years. Elaine Maxwell, she's still
locked up in federal prison. And as far as what
the charges the smear is against Donald Trump, every time
there's any information, it's called a bombshell from the Epstein files.
It's the lead story on CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC.
(01:08:57):
It's always big news. The emails. I understand there's one
hundred thousand emails. I think about this, over one hundred
thousand pages of emails and text messaging starting twenty years
ago in and around Maxwell, in and around Epstein, everyone involved.
It's voluminous. It looks like several old telephone books to
(01:09:20):
be poured. Over twenty thousand were released recently, and of
the twenty thousand yesterday, And the reason it was released
by the Democrats yesterday is because of the governmental shutdown
to take a lot of this team out of the
failure of the Democratic Party. But one element in one
line in one email alleges that Trump Donald Trump knew
the girls quote unquote, but the full sentence reads quote
(01:09:43):
of course he knew about the girls. He asked Maxwell
to stop quote unquote. Is that exculpatory inculplatory? I don't
know which it is, but line up on my side
of the table that this is death by innuendo and
death by smear. Is the following pieces of information about
Donald Trump not being involved in this, having sex with
(01:10:06):
teenage girls or anything of that character, or hiding whatever
it might be. On my side of the fence, are
all the girls who are now women in their thirties
and forties who had sex with these men. And the
men we don't know who they are, except allegedly Prince Andrew,
who's not a prince anymore. And these girls number up
to three to four hundred girls over a thirty year period.
(01:10:30):
We know the number because of all the class action
lawsuits that have been filed, and these girls have been
told that we want full disclosure of all the men,
the circumstances, where you were, who picked you up, where
did you live in order to get the payment out
of the class action lawsuits that have been filed. They
need information upon which the base the payment to the girls.
(01:10:52):
And the girls have received many times millions and millions
of dollars each either from the Epstein estate from the
selling of his real estate, or from the banks that
have ensued or the insurance companies have ensued all the
special masters. As a reason, if you step forward and
say I was one of the girls that Jeffrey Epstein
or Maxwell recruited and had sex, it was on this
(01:11:13):
occasion with this guy and this or and they can
prove who it was, and then money's being paid out.
So all the girls have been told to fully disclose
to the lawyers, to the law firms, and to the
defense attorneys of Maxwell and Epstein all the names of
the men. How many of those men's names do you know?
(01:11:35):
The answer is almost none. How's that possible if these
girls illicitly, wrongfully it's a statutory rape, had sex with
these men. I like to know who they are. I'm
not the kind of guy that is conversant in the
idea of letting men off the hook have sex with
(01:11:56):
teenage girls. It's bad. So all the girls who've been
subject of as plaintiffs in large numbers of lawsuits, and
their lawyers and their law firms have provided under oath
all the names, places, circumstances, how they were treated, how
they were paid, etc. Over the last fifteen or twenty years.
(01:12:17):
That culminated in twenty nineteen when Epstein killed himself. So
there's lots of information out there. Would you agree now?
And all that information, how many times have any of
the girls mentioned the name Donald Trump as a perpetrator
or a co conspirator? The answer is zero. Didn't happen CNN, MSNBC.
(01:12:43):
They continued to look for one girl who now would
be in their thirties or forties, a woman to say
she had elicit sex with Donald Trump when she was
a teenage girl. How many women have said that? Zero? None. Secondly,
Maxwell gave a two day deposition to the federal government
(01:13:06):
US Department of Justice. Maxwell said, everything that I know
about the Epstein of my personal matter, and she's been
sued repeatedly and took the fifth but now she's talking freely.
How many times in these two days of sworn depositions
did Islaine Maxwell state that Donald Trump was somehow involved
(01:13:28):
in the sins and crimes, the felonies of Jeffrey Epstein.
The answer would be zero. Does she have a motivation
to lie? You can make the argument yes, because she's
getting treatment. She could get a pardon from Trump, but
I don't think he'll do that down the road. Who knows.
(01:13:49):
But what about all the victims, the one to two
hundred girl victims who have received payouts were told, you
have to be truthful about what happened. Now is one
girl said Trump was involved and never as Maxwell said
Trump was involved. Jeffrey Epstein himself was represented by Alan Dershowitz,
(01:14:11):
eminent criminal events attorney, and many other lawyers and many
other law firms and civil and criminal matters going back
thirty years, and in all that time, Jeffrey Epstein had
the ability to uh truthfully or falsify the information about
(01:14:31):
Donald Trump to get better treatment. Of course, you'd have
to prove what happened. And there are photos of Donald
Trump with Jeffrey Epstein, there's photos of me with all
kinds of people. It doesn't mean I did anything elicit
with him. Well, Jeffrey Epstein himself has said, you know what,
Trump was not involved in any of these illicit activities.
(01:14:54):
And the law firms who represent the insurance companies that
had payouts to the victims, and the banks in New
York City had payouts to the victims, and the special
Master selling all of Epstein's property to put in a
pot to pay out as victims. Those law firms and
lawyers number and the hundreds many of whom have in
(01:15:16):
tipathy toward Donald Trump. Has you know, the round number
of the law firms, the civil attorneys, the criminal defense attorneys,
the special masters, the judges and the magistrates. The round
number of how many times any of those multitude of
hundreds of lawyers have come forward to say that Donald
Trump was involved and the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein. How
(01:15:39):
many times does that happen? The answer would be zero.
Alan Dershowitz and others have said. He went on TV
he said, I have all the Epstein emails and texts.
There isn't anything involving Donald Trump. And Dershwitz said, while
he was alive. Of course, I asked Epstein directly while
(01:16:01):
I was his attorney, and I've been released from the
privilege now because Epstein is dead, whether Donald Trump was
involved in any kind of untoward activity involving teenage girls.
And Epstein said no, not right now, he wouldn't. So
whether you believe a lie or not is within your
own head. But line up on my side of the
table are the hundreds of victims who said it didn't happen,
(01:16:23):
the hundreds of lawyers who said it didn't happen, the
hundreds of prosecutors, magistrates and other lawyers who said it
didn't happen. And may I say the smear continues. It's
death by innuendo. They want to imply that Donald Trump
had sex with teenage girls despite all the evidence of
(01:16:45):
the contrary. Because he's been so successful as the president,
they want to undermine his presidency because they disagree with
his political goals. If I line that up and say
to you know what, it's not going to stop. No, no,
it will not stop because the media benefits by smearing
Donald Trump. God knows, there's lots of legitimate things wrongfully
(01:17:09):
to say about Donald Trump. One thing you can't truthfully
say is that he had sex with underage girls. It's
not true, it's provably not true. But the media acts
as if every bombshell is suddenly proof of something untoward,
when all the evidence says it's not true. Well, the
truth sets you free, I hope, But will you permit
the smear against our president to continue? If you're a Democrat,
(01:17:31):
the answer is absolutely yes. Facts don't matter. It's my
opinion that matters. To twenty five. Bill Cunningham is Radio
seven hundred WLW and that's how it should be. And
so that being said, I'll shut up and open it
up for questions. Hello, bye, I'm broadcasting. You know, say
(01:17:57):
the towel waivers are unhappy that Mike Tomlin. Try wearing
the stripes for a while and tell me.
Speaker 5 (01:18:02):
Yeah, yeah, okay, I don't know, but he's only the
fourth head coach I've had since time began, Chuck Noll
and Bill Cower and.
Speaker 1 (01:18:12):
Come on, I mean, that's about it. You know, I
don't know, but that is what I ran in Tony
Pike in the hallways. Is Pike working here? Is he
back now? Yeah? He's back? Yeah, And he said, has
the Bengals offense CAUs so much turmoil with the defense
if the locker room is split kind of like the
(01:18:32):
Democratic Party, that is, the offense can score forty points
a game and it's not enough. The defense has given
up seventy seventy And so as a consequence, much like here,
is a great split, you know, between the reasonable guys
here like you and I and those that are in
some sort of flight to put Brendan on our side
(01:18:53):
of the fence. On the other side of the fence,
you have Lance mcgallister, Yeah, Gary, Jeff Walker, you got
Red Eye, you got the others that'll think differently, Eddie
Fingers think a little differently than normal people. So the
rock is on our side of the rock is with
us against the others, Okay. And so I'm thinking when
(01:19:15):
we do our Christmas spectacular and Christmas Morning and the
rock gives up that time with his three kids to
come here. Right, We're going to have it, maybe a
little bit of it. It's academic test to see who
knows what about of which they speak. And I would
think the rock and I and Brenneman will be on
one side of the fence, then Sloaney and Eddie and
Gary Jeff on the other side of the fence. You
(01:19:36):
know what I'm saying, sounds pretty good to me. And
you'll be straddling the middle. I'll be the co host
like Wink Wink Martindale. He's dead. But speaking of that,
give me some sports.
Speaker 2 (01:19:47):
Will he?
Speaker 5 (01:19:48):
The st Reporters a proud service of your local Tamestar.
Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Heating and air conditioning dealers. Tamestar quality you.
Speaker 5 (01:19:54):
Can feel in beautiful Northern Kentucky any weather heating air
at eight five nine forty eight twenty two spots. Bengals update. Well,
he brought to you by Good Spirits and Party Town,
thirteen locations in Northern Kentucky. Bengals are on the practice
field right now, Joe Flacco throwing passes and Joe Burrow
(01:20:15):
running around.
Speaker 1 (01:20:18):
Well, he's on the steeler because he unbelievable. Andy Mack,
the rest the calf, got the appendix, got the knee,
and right now you know it's toes okay, I guess
could he play Sunday? No? How do you know? They
said he's not playing.
Speaker 5 (01:20:32):
Preview of the Steelers game tonight, Cincinnati Tax Resolution, Power
by Tope Roundtable show percent of by Postman Law. That'll
be live from Long Necks and Hebron Lance and Company
at six oh five here on seven hundred WW.
Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
Don't want to forget that. Thursday Night football Jets and Patriots,
will Joe Burrow will be traded to the Jets seven
thirty on Fox Sports thirteen sixty. ESPN said this morning
some of their experts that a nice fit would be
Joe Burrow to the Jets. The Jets send the Bengals
a bunch of first round draft choices. They got six
of them, all six, bring them here. Well, do you
(01:21:10):
trust Duke Tobin to make good choices for the draft choices?
Speaker 5 (01:21:13):
Let's see Will Hee at college basketball Wes Miller show tonight.
Get the latest on those Bearcats Richard Montgomery end at
eight o five. Now for Xavier, they picked up a
four star shooting guard, Kaylek House. Need him for the
class of twenty twenty six get him up here. He
is one of the top twenty guards in the nation
and a top ten player in Arizona.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
Hill Up starting time with Xavior.
Speaker 5 (01:21:35):
Miami and Travis Steele, have two basketball players signed for
twenty twenty six. Anthony fresh is the six to four
guard out of Jeffersonville, Indiana, twenty points a game.
Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
And then.
Speaker 5 (01:21:48):
They also got a player six to nine power forward
Alan Horton out of Toledo fifty nine block shots last
season in high school segment.
Speaker 1 (01:21:57):
I had a story here out of the Gallup polling
group and asked women American females between the agents of
eighteen and forty, if you had the opportunity, would you
like to permanently move to another country? Now, think of
all eighteen to forty women eighteen to forty quote, if
(01:22:18):
you had the opportunity, would you like to move permanently
to another country? What percent of eighteen and forty or
a women said yes, sixty five percent forty percent. But
if you're a single female, it's sixty five percent. You're
out of here sixty now. But men asked the same question,
nineteen percent of men would move and twenty two percent
(01:22:41):
of married men would move. So the point is is
a twenty percent differential between men who want to be
Americans and single females, especially single females want to move.
And their favorite country would be Canada and number two
would be Italy. Number three would be Japan. If you
(01:23:03):
were in that group? Or where would you go? I
wouldn't go to Canada how much socialism? And can't go
to Japan because I don't speak of the English. Can
you speak Japanese?
Speaker 5 (01:23:13):
Well, I think you could probably learn a little bit
of Japanese. Well, I don't know. I don't think they
speak English over there. I wouldn't move maybe to Costa Rica?
What Costa Rica? I would not move to.
Speaker 1 (01:23:26):
Italy is a nice place to visit, but you don't
want to live there. Do you speak of the Italian?
They speak English over there too? Yeah? I'd go to
What about you segment? If you? If you you wouldn't leave,
of course, But if you had to go somewhere, where
would you go? Canada? I don't think so, Micronesia. I
(01:23:51):
don't need number one among the ladies, were Canada to Italy?
Three Japan? I wouldn't want to go like the egypt
or nothing. No Middle East forget it. No. By the way,
how come Muslim countries don't take in Muslim refugees? Can
you tell me that? Will you?
Speaker 5 (01:24:08):
A Reds update, the Reds have an additional hire to
Terry Francona's coaching staff. The club has named Oscar Marine
as the new bullpen coach. Matt Tracy has moved to
the assistant pitching coach after serving as a club's bullpen
coach for the last three seasons. Kyle Swarber, that's because
Simon Matthews left the Reds to become pitching coach of
(01:24:30):
the Washington Nationals.
Speaker 1 (01:24:32):
Is the next year all in for the Reds because
twenty seven might be a strike year might be gone.
Second year of Tito Francona. You got players that are
a year better be the best starting pitcher since twenty thirteen.
Speaker 5 (01:24:45):
Marine enters his seventeenth season as a professional pitching coach.
Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
I go for it.
Speaker 5 (01:24:50):
He joins the Reds after the last six years as
a Pirates pitching coach, overseeing a staff that featured twenty
twenty five National Cy Young Award winner Paul all Schemes,
who says he would like to play one day four
the New York Yankees really, Bengo. But I tell you
(01:25:11):
one thing. If that happens, the entire Yankees roster would
have to be traded for Paul Skeens.
Speaker 1 (01:25:18):
Well, he's got what two years in? You can't leave
to after six? Right, he's got four more years if
he wants it as a pirate. He's not going anywhere
like Hunter Green's not going anywhere. Hunter Green has signed
through twenty twenty nine. Bingo, he's not going in. Maybe
that's a factor, would you agree? I would say be
a factor? Yeah, I listen Andrew Abbott last night. Yeah,
(01:25:39):
you take you take the Reds best starting pitcher since
twenty thirteen, with a better, better team this year, a
year better, not a year older. Give me Kyllee Swarber
and go for it. How about giving Colle Swarber two
years and sixty million dollars? Would you do that? Yes?
Speaker 5 (01:25:56):
And I would drive him to this ballpark every night from.
Speaker 1 (01:25:59):
Me, or from five hundred million dollars to be paid
beginning ten years from now. Correct? How about they did with?
That's it? Right?
Speaker 5 (01:26:09):
The MVP Awards are going to be out tonight, welly,
of course, Kyle Schwarber they say showy Otani's going to
be a unanimous choice, so many more. Vaughn Soto, He's
got about as much chance as me.
Speaker 1 (01:26:22):
And seg There was a question to ask of the
faithful in the Tri state area, if you were to
pick one radio station to listen to, yeah and none others?
You can listen to one station permanently. We got seventy
percent of the vote. Now who's this from? It's an
objective pull? How about that seventy If you think about
(01:26:45):
picking one station? Unbelievable? What station would it be? The
big one? Right? You get it all? You miss the day?
You miss a lot.
Speaker 5 (01:26:52):
Let's see the American League finalist or Aaron Judge. Reports
are he may edge out Kyle Rawley the big dump
for the MVP Award.
Speaker 1 (01:27:01):
Why does he called the big dumper? And Jose Ramirez
of Cleveland? But still uh?
Speaker 5 (01:27:08):
Emmanuel Emmanuel Classe was arrested this morning after coming back
for the Dominican Republic at JFK Airport.
Speaker 1 (01:27:17):
Why do you come back?
Speaker 2 (01:27:18):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
How to stay where he was? I was going to say,
you can't do anything to him?
Speaker 2 (01:27:22):
Can you?
Speaker 1 (01:27:22):
Or that? Can they go get him?
Speaker 2 (01:27:24):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
Dr on a property crime? I doubted. But if he
turns in the gangsters and the dr as the recipients
of the money, he better go to Antarctica. Might he
have more difficulties.
Speaker 5 (01:27:37):
And then the other guy says, well, it wasn't for
it wasn't for my pitching. It was for rooster fights.
That money went. Yeah, rooster fights. I guess they must
have had him outside the Guardian's locker room or clubhouse
after the game or something. I'm not sure that's gonna
up with that. Yeah, the money went to rooster fights.
The bus he must have had, you know, he must
(01:28:00):
they had fifty roosters on his.
Speaker 1 (01:28:02):
Roster, Michael Vick style. Oh hell I it's a bad look,
seg that's for sure.
Speaker 5 (01:28:09):
And then Willie on xas morning, your good friend, Governor
Dwine go to get him on, got to talk to him.
He said the red sighting Kyle Schwarber would add big
power to the lineup and bring the Middletown super Native
back to southwest Ohio.
Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
Schwarber living still in Middletown. You look, he lived by
you that I don't know, but you know he lives.
You see him around around. He's in he's I think
he's in Middletown next Wednesday. He's around, So I think
you can sign starting the fifteenth or the sixteenth, which
is what Saturday or Sunday. So the Reds pick him up,
(01:28:49):
they will sell out my ballpark every game. Huh. And
there's no reason they wouldn't be one of the two
or three favorites next to the Dodgers, who spent one
point three billion on four pitchers. The Reds don't have
that kind of money. Is that fair to say? Correct?
But they have money to sign, you know what.
Speaker 5 (01:29:06):
Well, they they got their money's worth because what shoey
Otani is worth seven hundred million? They made seven hundred
million or more in advertising and also endorsements with him
from Japan.
Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
Correct. But would the citizens in Middletown provide the economic
boom that o'tani has provided for the Dodgers from Japan?
Is middle town similar to Japan? I don't think so,
but they would give it. But if if the governor
Mike Door maybe economic led some green Salad, the Salvation
(01:29:43):
Southwest Economic Development Program to one hundred Joe knuxall way,
give it to them and make sure that mister Schwarber
if they sign him, I will drive him to the
ballpark every night. Where does he live in Middletown? You know,
can't say got a two bedroom walk up flat. Can't
say get him down here? And who else came from Hamilton?
(01:30:04):
Joe Knuxall, the old left hander. He should wear forty one,
but Nutsy also wore thirty nine, didn't he? Yes, So
just pick one.
Speaker 5 (01:30:12):
On just depends well, I mean, Andrew Abbott's got forty one,
so thirty nine is available.
Speaker 1 (01:30:17):
Parkway, Parkway, I magic, Mah, where you go? Do they
retire that one? I don't think so, because his greatness
wasn't in Cincinnati. I went Bury Larkin to get a statue.
That's what I want.
Speaker 5 (01:30:29):
No, we we'll see what happens and have every day
replaced Marty's microphone down there. The kids, the kids out
of jail already. I haven't heard too much from the
statue lately.
Speaker 1 (01:30:38):
The kid who did that's fourteen. Yeah, his guns threatened
to kill his mother and his siblings. So what is
juvenile court to let him go? Bingo and the custody
of his grandmother. The mother doesn't want him. And by
the way, the mother's got six children from five different fathers,
and the most recent one is two months old and
(01:31:01):
she don't want him back, and he's thirteen. Better prohibit
more of the red bikes, get rid of the food trucks.
Say give me out of the stud's report.
Speaker 5 (01:31:10):
You got me fired up, Willie and utter of a
beautiful day on this Thursday.
Speaker 1 (01:31:14):
We leave you with the immortal words of the stud report.
Speaker 2 (01:31:19):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:31:21):
It was out Rob Butcher. Now that was Box Miller,
Wayne Box Miller to you the Bengals Radio network. Well
we're gonna know about the Bengals season about four fifteen
on Sunday afternoon, three and seven, non recoverable four and six. Eh,
Patriots here, five and six. Now you're talking. Then meet
(01:31:43):
me in Baltimore eight ten, eight fifteen pm. Thanksgiving Night,
Joe Burrow back in the helm against.
Speaker 5 (01:31:52):
Lamar, Turkey and dressing. And then all of a sudden,
here come the boys.
Speaker 1 (01:31:55):
Fatten them up, fatten them up. Yeah, say thank you sir.
Let's continue with more. And whenever the high school kids
come in, I have faith, hope and love or the
future of this country. When I meant kids like this
from Mason, or from Madeira or from Someday summit, they're here.
The transmitter madera and seat, and they're here. Tomorrow's volleyball
chance Saints will come marching in correct correct on seven
(01:32:17):
hundred w