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December 18, 2025 82 mins
Willie breaks down President Trump's address last night with Congressman Warren Davidson. Also Dr John Brady explain how some of history's most famous assassins are connected. Finally Kendall Tites explains a new wave of racism we are seeing in Minneapolis schools... against white people!

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Bill Cunningham, the Great American. Welcome this Thursday, afternoon, Christmas
on the horizon. Last night, the President addressed the nation.
I thought it was fabulous. I thought it was great.
I'm gonna share with you my ex account or my
tweet it. Can I use the word tweet anymore about
what I said about last night's speech and more. Plus
the Bengals two is not going to play on Sunday.
We'll see what happens now the Bengals won from an

(00:29):
underdog to a favorite. We'll see what happens there. But
until then, Congressman Warren Davidson, and welcome again to the
Bill Cunningham Show. First of all, Congressman, Merry Christmas, Happy
New Year. May I share with you my ex account
and what I said last night late?

Speaker 2 (00:43):
It'd be an honor. Thank you.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
This is what I'm saying. Trump speaks to the nation.
Three main goals as potus fix, the border lesson crime fix,
inflation check mark all three. In fact, this morning the
numbers came out. They're down to two point seven from three.
They went down then place and number went down ten
percent in one month, from three point zero to two

(01:06):
point seven. May I continue American service members each receive,
due to tariffs, a Christmas bonus of one thousand, seven
hundred and seventy six dollars. Do you stand with DJT
or you want Biden and Kamala back? They're back. Can
you imagine the road not taken that if Kamala Harris
and Tim Waltz the marshmallow Man was in charge of

(01:26):
the economy. Now, where would we be.

Speaker 3 (01:32):
It's it's insane where we would be if if we
had Kamala Harris and Tim Watson.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Look, the country.

Speaker 3 (01:39):
Rightly decided we need another term for President Trump, and
he's made the most of it. I mean, you look
at the executive actions they've taken, and the momentum is great,
and I think he kind of teed it up to say, hey,
we've got a lot of things done. More good things
are coming. The biggest thing that we did with the
tax reform package. Some people are seeing that already, but

(02:01):
you're really going to feel it when you get to
April fifteenth next year and you see, wow, okay, big
returns and a lot of people are just in the
coming year going to start seeing their withholdings changed so
they have more take home pay to be able to
drive our economy, and I think that's really going to
be a strong year ahead. President Trump really teed that
up nicely, and I think he baited the whole country

(02:23):
in the media into covering it too. They all thought
he was going to talk about Venezuela and he basically
gave a here's what we got done so far, but wait,
there's more coming.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
I have a sense Tony Bender tells me this. I
think at times he has liberal leanings that they're kind
of rooting against the country. They don't want the inflation
number to go down. When the number came out this morning,
I watch MSNBC MS NOW so you don't have to,
and the coverage was not about the number three point
zero to two point seven percent inflation. The number was about, well,

(02:52):
coffee's up seventeen percent, cars are up four percent, meat
is up fourteen percent, as like saying, well, my fingers
and arms way a lot, but my body's in good shape.
And so they want to downplay the number to say,
you know what, well, and can you trust the number.
Trump's in charge of the numbers. Can you trust the number?
And after Trump mcgasoline maybe down to a dollar fifty

(03:13):
a gallon and might be ninety nine cents again, which
it was when I was a kid. But nonetheless, things
are terrible. Things are awful. The economies in free fall.
Tariffs are going to be overruled by the O Supreme Court.
The border's going to get wide open. Venezuela is going
to attack Miami, Florida. And I'm watching this, I'm going,
what are you saying. Do you think that Democrats under

(03:33):
Trump want America to succeed or fail?

Speaker 3 (03:37):
Yeah, they're rooting for failure and they're looking for issues.
I mean, look, the House of Representatives just yesterday we
passed it had to start on healthcare reform, not more
free stuff for more people, not COVID era subsidies. Real
reforms for all all Americans, lowering health care costs, giving
more options to people with health care.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
It's a start.

Speaker 3 (03:58):
I want there to be more reform on our overall
healthcare market.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
But we passed that on the floor of the House.

Speaker 3 (04:04):
No Democrats joined joined us in passing that, and why
because they want the issue and what they're talking about
with this COVID subsidy thing is really hiding the fact
that Obamacare failed to make health care more affordable, and
even the subsidies that they're fighting for, these aren't subsidies
for regular Obamacare people that have them. These are bonus

(04:24):
subsidies essentially for affluent people that don't even go to
the people. They go to the insurance companies that clearly
aren't working, and they want to They want to hold
that out there as their healthcare issue. And you know why,
because they want an issue. They don't want to they
don't want to solve the problem.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
And the other thing is one of the best. If
you're in the military right now. You were in the military,
you went to Notre Dame, you went to West Point,
you've been a ranger. And if you're a product of
what's it called today, private or a corporal at the
bottom of the run, and here comes a check to
you for one thousand, seven hundred and seventy six dollars,
No we own one in the media is covering that

(05:02):
because it is so good for service personnel, and it
reflects the idea that the tariffs are going to be
used for those purposes. If the US Supreme Court rules
at some point in the future that that's all illegal,
and now we owe hundreds of billions of dollars. Wouldn't
that wreck the economy.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
It'd be a really bad idea for the court to
go back and kind of retroactively nullify, you know, the tariffs.
And I don't think they're going to do that personally.
But look, the goal with the tariffs has been to
force a negotiation that's been very effective.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
We made progress. There's a lot left to do.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
And you know, part of the reason why would we
teariff some of our allies and friends, well because they
took America for granted and they were all trying to
curry favor with China and at the expense of the
United States, they weren't helping confront China. China's been abusive
in their trade practices with everybody. And finally, even the
US Europeans are there. Mark Carney up in Canada is

(06:02):
the most stubborn guy going maybe in Brazil. So there's
still some lingering tariffs on Canada and Brazil because their
countries aren't helping. But even the Germans, with the big
German auto industry said, look, okay, we get it, we
need the China market, but we are really seeing problems
here and they are starting to help confront China, and look,
we'd rather have a friendly trade relationship, the idea that

(06:25):
we trades better than we have conflict. But we can't
stay dependent upon China. And that's been a clear theme
of the president. That's a clear foreign policy initiative, and
in the way he's used it has been to forced
that that's the prerogative of the president, the commander in chief,
and I hope that the Supreme Court takes that into
account when they.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Provide this decision. Yeah, there is.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
Revenue there that comes from the tariffs, and Okay, Congress
at some point, hopefully we'll walk those in and create
some certainty around this.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
And that's kind of the theme.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
Like we passed some things through the House last year,
but in the year ahead, even some of the things
that we really want done our HR two three four
five bills, the Senate hasn't taken up. So we really
get to put pressure on the Senate to give us
a vote. Hopefully they'll all pass, but we got to
show the country, hey, we are on offense and there's
a reason why we can get all this done.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
Well.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
We also have massive fraud, waste and abuse. We talk
about it every cycle. We never do anything about it.
This time something is occurring. Ninety percent of the new
signups for Obamacare or bots or individuals that are simply
doing it with fictitious Social Security numbers and huge amounts
of moneys are going to individuals and so called clinics
all over America that don't exist. Same thing with Social Security.

(07:38):
There's about one hundred billion dollars a year in Social
Security does waste, fraud and abuse. When you can talk
about SNOP benefits, about half the SNOP benefits are bots,
are illegals. And I'm reading this out of I read
Minneapolis newspapers. I'll try to read everything. Minnesota officials and prosecutors.
These are Minnesota state our warning, the state of Minnesota

(08:00):
and treasure. They're facing unpresidented fraud crisis and his social
service programs, with losses to Minnesota being about two billion dollars.
And by the way, the states paid ten to fifteen
percent of these costs. The Feds paid ninety eighty to
ninety percent of the cost So if Minnesota lost two
billion dollars, that means the federal taxpayers, you and I

(08:20):
lost about twenty billion dollars in one state. How do
you respond to that? The massive fraud, waste, and abuse
in Minnesota. What do you say about that?

Speaker 3 (08:29):
Well, look at who's leading the state, Tim Walls, right,
that's who Kamala Harris picked as her vice president candidate.
You look at Gavin Newsom, who wants to be the
Democrat nominee. Look what he's done to California. That's what
these people want to do to our country. And tragically,
the one Democrat senator in the state of Minnesota who
voted to turn off free health care for illegals in

(08:52):
Minnesota was murdered. But you look at how deep is
the scandal in the corruption up there with this money,
No wonder people didn't want this exposed, and there has
to be accountability. And I think, look, this is hopefully
twenty twenty six will be the year that we finally
hear the answers of the most frequent question I've got
as a member of Congress. When is somebody going to jail?

(09:14):
They want the accountability for the people that are doing
this corruption. We keep having hearings and exposing the corruption,
but now, Pam Bondi, when is somebody going to jail?
And those prosecutions need to take place.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
Well, every now and then I'm sure in Congress Warren Davidson,
you're running to elan omar. Her federal forms indicated six
years ago she was worth sixty thousand dollars. Her federal
forms now say she's worth thirty million, a Somali congressman
from Minnesota. Can you ask her how that happened when
you passed her in the hallway and the Rayburn office building.
Can you ask her that question?

Speaker 3 (09:49):
Well, I am curious. I mean, I hadn't heard that.
That is stunning. Maybe she was following Nancy Pelosi's stock
tips or something. But there's a lot of work there.
We haven't even held ourselves to account on some of
those things with with reforms. But look, Alano Mark seems
very clear from public information that she committed immigration fraud.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
She married brother no less.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
I mean, who doesn't marry, who doesn't marry their brother,
who doesn't marry their sister? Married the married the brother
as a as a felony to get into the country,
get the brother into the country, and now they're both citizens.
Isn't that fraud? If you marry your brother or sister
to become a US citizen.

Speaker 3 (10:29):
It's a it's a criminal of house and again, when
is somebody going to be held to account?

Speaker 2 (10:34):
I mean, these kinds of things are out there in
the public.

Speaker 3 (10:36):
I mean I still am in shock that there's never
been an accountability for the Clinton Foundation. So look, there
are a lot of these things that have been out
there for years, and I think, look, people, people don't
talk about them every day anymore because they've kind of
given up hope. And that's really it's a sad time.
Dan Bongino took a year away, came and served as

(10:57):
deputy director at the FBI.

Speaker 2 (10:59):
But I think a lot of people.

Speaker 3 (10:59):
Are little demoralized, like, man, it's jam Bongino can't get
the reform at the FBI.

Speaker 2 (11:04):
What's it going to take.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
Well, I'm reading from this this is Minnesota, which is
a blue state, Minneapolis of Blue City. Twenty one percent
of the country's states, which are all Democrats, don't want
to share any information with the FEDS. This says. While
investigating the scandal, Minnesota agents discovered that one suspected scammer
his name or her name, I'm not sure is Asha

(11:26):
Farhan Asan defrauded the state's autism treatment program of roughly
fourteen million dollars. He built Medicaid for fake therapy sessions,
used untrained staff, and paid paid parents fifteen hundred dollars
a month to keep their kids in the program when
they didn't have autism. And by the way, they've tracked

(11:47):
the money, they sent hundreds of thousands of dollars to Kenya, Nigeria,
and also to Somalia and also to El Kaeda and
al Shabab. So the federal taxpayer and the Minnesota part is,
so the federal taxpayer spend one hundred and forty million
dollars for fake billing that went to terrorist groups. Tony

(12:07):
Bender paid for that. And there's not more of an outrage,
Are you kidding me?

Speaker 2 (12:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (12:13):
Look, we got to make twenty twenty six the Year
of accountability, and you know, a lot of things got done.
I think it was nice that President Trump came out
there and said, hey, don't forget we got a lot
of great things done this year.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
But he also pointed to the future.

Speaker 3 (12:26):
And you know, my hope is that we do, in
fact make twenty twenty six the Year of accountability. And
you know part of that in Congress, we got our
work cut out for us. We got to hit the
January thirtieth deadline fund the government, and then there's really
no excuse if we don't hit October first funding deadline
with everything this year. So the part that we can control,

(12:47):
we just got to get after. But we do have
to put accountability on DJ. I mean, that is clearly
out of control and broken. Lastly, January thirtieth is coming.
My gosh, only five or six weeks away. Are the
Democrats going to shut down the government again? That's what
I'm hearing that they want to shut down the government again.
Is that conceivable? Well, it's certainly conceivable. And look, I

(13:13):
was here when it happened last time, and there was
we didn't even change anything. So we are close on
some appropriations bills. Our appropriators got all the bills through committee.
But again it's syncing up with the Senate and they
say they got the sixty vote rule, and that kind
of comes in. Are they going to break the full
of buster or are they gonna do something different? But
the idea that we're going to just kind of continue

(13:34):
status quo. None of us campaigned on preserving the status quo.
We have to pass our priorities with a funding bill,
and okay, we need some Democrat votes in the Senate
to get it. They can't just continue to obstruct, obstruct, obstruct.
I know twenty twenty six is an election year, but
we do. Look, we need to take care of the
country and come together and passing in the appropriations bills
as part of that.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
I know, you run on the House floor at two o'clock.
According to c they're never wrong about two to two thirty.
You're going to be voting on extending the Obamacare COVID
subsidies for three years in about two hours. How's that
going to turn out?

Speaker 2 (14:12):
Well? Sadly, it might pass the House.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
I mean we had four Look, part of the reason
that the Speaker Johnson kept the House out of session
was to keep pressure on Democrats when they shut down
the government, so that we could just reopen the government
and not cave to their one and a half trillion
dollar list of demands. Now they're not caving to everything,

(14:34):
but one of the core ones was plus n up Obamacare.
Because Obamacare is failing, they want to pump more cash
into it. And this is a COVID era program. Democrats
set the expiration date and now they're looking for Republican
votes to help save it, and unfortunately, four of my
colleagues have pledged to join that fight. Maybe more when

(14:54):
they call the votes, will join it, so it might
pass the House. They called the votes in the Senate
on the same plan. The Democrats voted for it. It
did not pass the Senate. So hopefully it'll go nowhere
at the end of the day because we've got to
pass the House and Senate. I doubt President Trump would
sign it if it made it to his desk either,
but nevertheless, they're going to force a vote on it.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Let's get more money to this to the Minnesota fraud programs.
Even Minnesota officials were saying, we can't live like this.
One program was supposed to cost fourteen million dollars and
one year, a jump from fourteen million to four hundred
and twenty five million dollars in one year for autism relief,
paid for only by the Minnesota DAX payers. And that
is ridiculous. And God help I guess a Democrat who

(15:36):
doesn't keep the fraud going because you'll be voted out
of office. And one was killed in Minnesota. My gosh,
every time I talked to you, I get more depressed.

Speaker 3 (15:45):
Well, look to good news is there's a lot of
good people in the fight, and we get another got
a great holiday season coming up. We can celebrate the
birth of our Messiah and we'll be back home in
Ohio to do it. So it's always an honor to
celebrate with you. God bless you and all your lists.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
Thank you, Warren Davidson. We'll see what happens in a
couple hours. And let's keep all the fraud going because
democrats benefit, kind of like they keep racism going because
they benefit and get paid. So but thank you very much,
Warren davids and Merry Christmas and happy New Year. Thank you.
Let's continue with more Billy Cunningham The Great American News next,
plus my time with doctor Brady, who has connected the

(16:22):
Sirhan Sirhan assassination and Lee Harvey Oswald to Luigi MAGGIONI,
Oh my gosh, I didn't know that coming up at
your home of the Bengals News Radio seven hundred WULW
by Billy Cunningham, The Great American And much like rock
stars dying or committing suicide in the sense of drugs
When the twenty seven, a new book is out by

(16:45):
doctor John Brady. It's called Breakdown, a criminal analysis of
Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan, Sirhan, and Luigi Mangioni and
many others, Ted Kaczinski, O J. Simpson. Is there a
threat among all of them? Joining you and I now
I think from California? Is doctor John Brady authored the
book Breakdown many many times. He's a criminologist. He knows

(17:05):
how the criminal mind works. And doctor Brady, welcome again
to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all, one
of the fascinating things about Luigia Mangione is the almost
love and the hero worshiping happening with him. So is
there a thread between all these so called infamous murderers
that runs between O. J. Simpsons, Sir Hans, Sir Han,

(17:26):
Luigia Mangione twenty four year old, that the kids supposedly
who killed at Providence Brown University's twenty four one of
the Islamic terrorists and Australia is twenty four years old?
Is there a thread between all of them or not?

Speaker 4 (17:42):
Listen, Bill, thanks for the invitation. You know, I'm looking
forward to a nice interview here. You know, there's a
pathological fascination with these kinds of people. If we look
at Mangione, if we look at Sir Hand, even Lee
Harvey Oswald, there is this affinity to connect to these

(18:05):
kinds of murderers with with some kind of a deep
psychological distortion that makes people gravitate towards these people. Now,
this this syndrome was defined about twenty years ago. Uh
and it's called hybristophilia h.

Speaker 5 (18:28):
H y b r I S t O p h
I l I A.

Speaker 4 (18:32):
And it's exactly, I'm serious, exactly what I just said.
It's a pathological attachment to these kinds of extremists in society,
Charlie Manson being one of them with his following with
with other Ted Bundy that that had his hybristophilia.

Speaker 5 (18:56):
Followers.

Speaker 4 (18:57):
And then you you transition into Luigi Mangione and other
kinds of famous you know, criminals such as such as
Elizabeth Holmes who stole nine hundred million dollars with the
Farnel situation. So and she's in federal prison. So there's

(19:18):
this this abnormal attraction to these kinds of cases where
where the the the attractor kind of goes out of
their way in order to to to be famous, to
be special, to be something different from the ordinary person

(19:40):
with Mangioni. With Mangioni, you have this kind of a
magical thinking process that he is special. He has a
a brief manifesto where he talks.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
About how important he is. He never talks about the victim.

Speaker 4 (19:59):
He talks about he is the one that had the
brutal reality to face this kind of a situation and
to take out Brian Thompson as a symbolic figure in
the healthcare industry that he abhorred.

Speaker 5 (20:15):
Not only that he was sort of a.

Speaker 4 (20:20):
Leftist Marxist that was really against the division in society
where certain people had privileges which would include healthcare, and
other people were militated against and they didn't.

Speaker 5 (20:35):
Have access to it.

Speaker 4 (20:36):
So this was his cause celeb And it's really interesting
when he was in court last week, he's fist pumping,
he's mugging, he's mugging for the cameras. So he has
his almost a delusional bravado about him that tells me
that something isn't right.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
And the thing I found amazing is out of opportunities
got to meet the delusional grandeur of the mind of
someone like Sir Hans, Sir Han or Lee Harvey Oswald.
If Sir Han, if Robert F. Kennedy had walked the
other direction, Sir Han would not have been in the
position to kill Robert F. Kennedy. And if Lee Harvey
Oswald had gone to the Texas Corbook Depository in Fort

(21:21):
Worth where he was assigned to work and then got
switched to Dallas, that wouldn't have so discuss the opportunists
because O. J. Simpson, Luigi Mangioni, they had, they had
their delusions that they had to seek out and kill
the victim. But sometimes opportunity plays a role.

Speaker 4 (21:39):
Correct, Yes, sometimes opportunity does. But in these the kinds
of cases that you're talking about with Sir Hand and
with O. J. Simpson, this involves a transformation of a
love hate situation.

Speaker 5 (21:56):
Where the the the.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
The victim becomes a victim after being admired by the
perpetrator in Sirhan's case, in his diary, in his writings
in TV interviews, he first said that he loved Robert.

Speaker 5 (22:14):
Kennedy, he was his hero.

Speaker 4 (22:17):
He transferred his affiliation from President Kennedy to Robert Kennedy
and said, when I saw him on TV, it appeared
like he had a halo around him. Okay, so this
love hate situation, the love changed to animosity and hate

(22:39):
based on his own background coming out of Palestine where
he was severely traumatized starting at age eight before he
came to California at about age thirteen. So he suddenly
suddenly transfers this switches this love relationship into a hate

(23:00):
and a murderous relationship. When Kennedy said he was going
to send fifty bombers to Israel to bomb his people,
his people meaning the Palestinians, so he shifted his allegiance
to Kennedy and became the aggressor and had to take

(23:24):
him out because he saw him as an enemy of
his people. So in this kind of situation, this is
what we call personal cause homicide. That he had a cause. Man,
let's flip forward to Mangione. He had a cause. His
cause was deeply embedded in his Marxist orientation towards the

(23:49):
unfairness of society, that everything was upside down, and he
saw himself as the savior, as the Prince, as the
Janah of arc figure who is going to reverse all
this by by taking out Brian Thompson. It's it's very
interesting that he stopped Brian Thompson. And it's also interesting

(24:13):
that that this murder took place at the Hilton Hotel.
That was a an assembly of investors into into United Healthcare.
It wasn't a strategic meeting. It wasn't a meeting concerning coverage, geography,
what are the plans? It was a meeting specifically designed

(24:34):
to get more money. This may have been an added
feature to Mangione's own pathology to strike back at United Healthcare.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
And so and the and the death for example, this
isn't in your book, but it clicked when you gave
me the answer by John Lennon's death. If Mark David
Chapman just happened not to get the autographed on the
on the on the album, and if something had happened
in John Lennon had to peer, then Mark David Chapman
and other names on the list to kill, including Johnny

(25:05):
Carson and some others. But unlike O. J. Simpson, he
specifically wanted to kill his ex wife Nicole Brown. Ron
Goldman was in the way. So sometimes it's happens to that,
some other times you target it.

Speaker 4 (25:19):
Yeah, well, well that Mark David Chapman, who is a
pretty condoluted psychiatric story and a criminal story. He is
falls into this love hate relationship similar to to Sirhan. Initially,
he loved John Lennon and he had all of his records.

(25:41):
He had his house decorated like John Lennon's. He lived
in Hawaii, he had he had a he joined a band,
he married a Japanese woman in Hawaii. He adored John Lennon.
Once again, just like Syrian, something changed in his thinking.

(26:02):
For Chapman, it was his alienation and his belief that
Lenin was serious when he said that the the the
Beatles were more important than Jesus. Chapman was a was
a a born again Christian supposedly whatever that means, and
he took offense and immediately he shifted from allegiance to

(26:26):
this person has to be eliminated because he represents some
threat to some kind of a religious ideology that Chapman
held at the time. So once again it's the same parallel.
I know you talked before about there is opportunity, but
opportunities can recur also once this once this mental shift

(26:51):
takes place from from my love situation to I must
I must eliminate this person as being a threat to me,
sir and didn't want the fifty Jet bombers to go
to Israel to kill his people, the Palestinians. Chapman wanted
to eliminate Lennon because he saw him as a threat

(27:13):
to his fundamentalist belief system.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
And then Lee Harvey Oswald was a great supporter of
Cuba and Fidel Castro, and Nick Kennedy tried to kill
many times Fedel Castro, and he all of a sudden
he found himself the opportunity with the rifle and he
killed me. Is Lee Harvey Oswald similar to Sirhan, Sirhan,
and I guess also Chapman, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (27:36):
I think that you know. In my book, I go
through the.

Speaker 4 (27:40):
Destabilizers that contributed to Lee Harvey Oswalt's criminal career, starting
when he was young, starting when he was locked up
in the New York juvenile system, starting when the psychologists
and I reanalyzed them of the psychological testing because I'm
a psycho collegist also, so I reanalyzed the psychological testing

(28:05):
given to Oswald at age twelve, and there was definite
signs of psychopathy, of a psychopathic personality type of an
acting out of a disregard for rules. Interestingly enough, in
my book, I detail one of the contributing factors to

(28:27):
Oswald being derailed was his crazy mother Marguerite. She induced,
or what I call infused, these kinds of definitions which
are favorable to the violation of the law, which means
there is a mental attitude that she conveyed to her

(28:48):
son that it was okay to violate small issues concerning
the law. Later than he becomes this becomes encapsulated into
his personality. He attempts to assassinate Edwin Walker, who was
a yeah yeah, ex general who tries to assassinate him

(29:13):
seven months before the assassination of the president, and then.

Speaker 1 (29:17):
He killed Tippet, the police officer, and then he ran
into the movie house War as Hell. Van Heflin was
the star of that movie. The book, I tell you what,
we've not even scratched the surface. I don't know where.
And lastly, for those who were applauding Luigi, for those
who say go get a maggione, what you did, Brian

(29:39):
Thompson is great, by the way, it is despicable. And
Kazinsky wanted to stop advancement to college professor's technology, and
we have about a minute. Romandi, what do you say
to those outside of the courtroom of Luigi Maggione applauding
the murder of an innocent man and a father and
a husband. What do you say to the sickness of
those people?

Speaker 4 (30:00):
Bill, You want me to get this all in sixty.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
Seconds, do your best, do your best.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
Give me another five minutes.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
Oh, I can't do that. I'm up against the club.
Give me the headlines.

Speaker 4 (30:13):
Okay, So the headline is that these people are have
a distorted sense of perception when they have this identification
with with the the evil person. It's kind of a
that they see uh Manngione as a robin Hood figure,
whereas actually he's a a an evil robin Hood figure

(30:35):
who has only mal intent in mind.

Speaker 5 (30:39):
When he assassinated.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
Brian Thompson as a symbolic gesture towards his Marxist belief
system that his actions, you just think about this, that
his actions are actually going to change change something in
the United States and to overthrow capitalism. He inherited this
kind of belief system from Ted Kaczinski, who was his hero,

(31:08):
and Ted Kazinski. Ted Kazinski who was at Berkeley when
I was there. He also wanted to engage in revolution,
and as you say correctly, he was against technology and any.

Speaker 5 (31:23):
Progress in society.

Speaker 4 (31:25):
He was a true ludyite that really couldn't face the futures.
So he decided to try and show his specialness by
assassinating these three people and injuring twenty three others as
the unibomber.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
I'll tell you what I could spend weeks on this.
The book is breakdown, great for Christmas and the holidays.
And well like O. J. Simpson when he was found
not guilty, a lot of black Americans did an end
zone dance, so happy that a murderer got off, and
much like similar to what's going on with Luigi Manngioni,
people are just happy with the fact that a health
care executive was murdered brutally in the early morning hours.

(32:04):
And to me, there's a sickness of those who applaud O. J.
Simpson and the sickness of those who applaud Luigi Manjioni. Well,
I'm sorry, we got to run, doctor John Brady, and
the book is a breakdown. It's everywhere. Thanks for your
signed copy. I'm sorry to say we got to run,
But doctor Brady. The book is breakdown. It's all there,

(32:24):
and once again, thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham share.
Thank you, doctor Bill.

Speaker 5 (32:29):
I'll show up anytime you ask me. Thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
Your I got your number.

Speaker 4 (32:32):
I got your number now and you have a merry
Christmas with your family.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
God bless America. Thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
Doc.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Wow, it's fascinating. I read about three quarters of the book.
It's wonderful, and I don't know how you prevent these
kinds of things, but the fascinating criminal mind is something
as a criminal defense attorney that's interested me for many years.
Let's continue with more news coming up. Bill Cunningham on
seven hundred WULW Billy cunning him the Great American and

(33:12):
Christmas is coming. They want to thank Congressman Warren Davidson
and also doctor Brady for their perspectives on things. We
have an esoteric dispute at times about what should happen
with Obamacare, what should not happen. It's now political football
being kicked back and forth because clearly Obamacare has failed

(33:32):
the insured, which is you, and it's failed the doctors.
It's failed the hospitals. I can't tell how many docs
tell me. They can't handle the paperwork. Enough is enough.
The only party benefiting are the insurance companies whose stock
value is going up one percent in the last twelve years,
and they're making billions and billions of dollars. So I

(33:55):
have this this text after Warren Davidson said what he said,
and they're going to vote in about an hour from
now about extending the subsidies for a three year period.
And in this text is heartfelt, and I'm sure it's
a real person, and I'm sure it's a real text.
I will not use names. This is from a person

(34:16):
who I know. I won't use the husband's name either.
So since Jojo lost his job, we lost his benefits,
so we sign up for Obamacare because we have assets,
we have a couple of small kids, and we can't
afford to have our house taken. The place I worked

(34:37):
does not provide medical insurance, so I was notified that
our premiums went from something affordable two hundred and eighty
six dollars a month starting in January, which is almost here,
with the same plan, is going to cost nine hundred
and sixty five dollars a month, which is a seven

(34:58):
hundred dollars a month increase, approximately a four hundred percent
increase through Obamacare. This pretty much covers nothing, So we're
being asked to pay. We were paying two hundred and
eighty six dollars a month for lousy insurance. Now it's
for the both of us. It's closed to nineteen hundred

(35:19):
dollars a month for the same same plan, which covers nothing.
It will cost about ten thousand dollars per person out
of pocket as a deductible should we get sick or revenoxen. So,
before I continue the next two sentences, imagine you're this
this woman. You were paying too eighty six a month.

(35:42):
You're not going to be asked told to pay nineteen
hundred a month for the same plan through Obamacare, which
over a year would be what approximately twenty four thousand
dollars and insurance premiums to the insurance company twenty four thousand. However,
for each of us, we got to spend ten thousand

(36:03):
dollars per person out of pocket before the plan kicks in.
That means for the husband and the wife they got
two kids. I don't know how that works, but just
for the husband and wife twenty they got to spend
forty four thousand dollars and get zero benefits zero? Basically,

(36:25):
should we do this so we don't lose our house
and the government sue sees our paychecks in case of
a medical emergency. This is sickening. My husband's had a
bad time finding a job that carries benefits, this woman
says to me in this text. And I know the
woman fairly well. I know it's legit. So the next

(36:49):
time you have on a congressman or a senator, ask
about this, and you please ask them what are we
supposed to do? Now? We have about two weeks to
make the decision. So when they yank the subsidies right
out from under us without any warning, and we have
nowhere else to go, what do we do? Well, I'd

(37:10):
like to get an answer from somebody that they were
sold the idea that Obamacare like your plan, keep your plan,
like your doctor, keep your doctor. Obama said, Look, it's
going to reduce premiums every year by twenty five hundred
dollars a month on average. I'm sorry, twenty five one
hundred dollars a year on average, two and a half
thousand bucks a year. Your premiums are going down. You're

(37:32):
getting better coverage and the deficit will be reduced, Obama said,
because of all the savings through Obamacare. And you might
recall at the time, not one Republican voted for it,
and every Democrat voted Jess and it passed. And it
was designed to fail from the beginning because the money

(37:55):
is not going to the person, not to the individual
American who's insured, is going to the insurance companies. The
four or five big ones are getting the money. A
few days ago, ahead on executive vice president of Blue Cross,
Blue Shield, and I asked her the question, isn't it
true that insurance companies have benefited greatly through Obamacare and

(38:17):
that the premiums and deductibles for the individual patient has skyrocketed?
And I got an answer that she never answered the question.
You can't answer the question if you represent Blue Cross,
Blue Shield, United Anthem, whatever. You're in the business and
making money. You're not in the business of providing care.

(38:39):
It's an ancillary product of making money. If you don't
make money, you're not in business anyway. And so this
is completely screwed up, and it's not getting any better.
This is typical. Imagine paying twenty four thousand dollars a
year for a family of four as insurance premiums, which

(39:00):
are after tax dollars is not deductible twenty four thousand.
And then every time you got to go to a
doctor or go to a hospital, God forbid, you have
to spend ten thousand dollars more per person before any
insurance kicks in. And they knew or should have known

(39:21):
fifteen years ago when this thing was passed, this was
going to occur. The government gets involved in something, the
cost or skyrocket availability goes down. So mark my words,
put them down here. We are at one twenty one
pm on December of the nineteenth. Within ten years, within

(39:42):
ten years, we're going to have Medicare for all, which
means the government, operating under the principles of Obamacare, will
seize control of the entire five trillion dollars a year
medical system and operate it like a DMV. They're going
to get rid of all the insurance companies for the
hospitals and the doctors and the pharmacies. You're going to

(40:05):
have to apply in some government office at HHS Health
and Human Services to get care somewhere. It's going to
look like Western Europe, or it's going to look like Canada.
Unless the Republicans and Democrats can work together as one,
is that going to Is there anything in this climate
we have today that would cause Democrats to work with

(40:28):
Republicans and vice versa. So I don't know. I do
not know. I don't have the answers. I want the
market forces to come into play. I want individual Americans,
especially moms and dads with kids, I want them to
be protected. You can't have a system where you've got

(40:48):
to spend forty or fifty thousand dollars a year for
medical insurance and deductibilities when all you make every year
is eighty thousand dollars after taxis you make fifty five thousand,
that means ninety percent of your income is going to
go to insurance companies. Does any of this make sense
to you? I don't know. Let's continue have the news

(41:10):
coming up after two o'clock today. We have an expert
going to talk about the crises in Minnesota, which is
similar to the crises in Columbus and around the world.
Because let's face it, there's twenty one blue states that
will not send to the Feds their information about who's
on all these welfare benefits. They will not share that

(41:30):
with the feds. You know what I'm saying. So I
can only imagine the The problem is probably worse than
we think. By the way, there's a small jet that's
burst into flames in North Carolina after a failed landing.
And I don't want to give out the names the
people in the media unless it's confirmed by by the
authorities themselves. But there are big wigs in NASCAR. So

(41:55):
Statesville Regional Airport crashed and burned, and it's ugly. So
say your prayer for the reprise of their souls. One
twenty four Home your Bengals News Radio seven hundred.

Speaker 6 (42:07):
Wow, we're the two smart ones in here, aren't we?

Speaker 2 (42:10):
Seg?

Speaker 4 (42:14):
Hell?

Speaker 5 (42:15):
Hello, Quiet, I'm skos, I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 6 (42:23):
We're the two smart ones in here, aren't we?

Speaker 2 (42:25):
Seged?

Speaker 7 (42:26):
We have a special guest. How about this, Willy. It's
a special, a super surprise stooge. Rachel, where have you
been the past five years?

Speaker 1 (42:34):
You're back?

Speaker 5 (42:35):
No, you know what.

Speaker 6 (42:35):
They haven't let me back in here because they know
what trouble we get into.

Speaker 2 (42:38):
Willy.

Speaker 1 (42:40):
There's a cut right one right there, So let the
American people know, Rachel, what are you doing now? If anything?
To make your life productive. You're a big star in
country music. I understand, and also program country stations.

Speaker 6 (42:50):
This is true.

Speaker 1 (42:51):
Yeah, have us a full report.

Speaker 6 (42:52):
I run all of the country music stations for this
wonderful company. iHeartMedia in Kentucky. And uh, you know that's
you had a big part end in that.

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Why don't you give me something? Give me something, you know.

Speaker 6 (43:03):
I think back when I was able to talk you
into Twitter. I want to say it. It's beautiful, it's wonderful.
But literally I do.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
I do.

Speaker 6 (43:13):
That is what keeps me employed at this company. That
single event in history. I am still riding the way
from that.

Speaker 1 (43:21):
Let me read my most recent one. I'm not sure
you'll agree with it. Are you ready hit me? Sega?
There's a cut right there. So far she's begging me
to hit her. That's a different issue here. It is right.
Can you see it?

Speaker 6 (43:33):
No, you'll have to read it to me.

Speaker 1 (43:34):
Trump speaks to the nation three main goals as potus fix,
the border lesson crime fix, inflation check mark all three
bout a boon, a bout a ban butt a bang
plus American Service personnel each received seven hundred and seventy
six dollars a Christmas bonus because of the tariffs? Do

(43:55):
you stand with DJT or you want Biden and Kamala
Harris back?

Speaker 6 (43:59):
So many characters there? It is right, that's a wht
of characters. I remember when people used to think that
I was ghost tweeting for you, that you weren't doing
it yourself. I could not make that. I could not
get this level of excellence on my own.

Speaker 1 (44:13):
No, this is believe or not it's sake? Do you
believe it's me? Yes? Can I give you one that
got one hundred and twenty five thousand responses?

Speaker 6 (44:21):
Absolutely?

Speaker 5 (44:22):
There?

Speaker 1 (44:22):
It is right there? Are you ready?

Speaker 6 (44:23):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (44:25):
May I offer a contrarian view. There's a fear that
Joe Burrow, a living god being paid two hundred and
seventy five million dollars over five years, may quit since
he's not having fun? Do you have fun in your
job to support your family? Who does this? Twenty nine
year old? Think? Think who he is? Either I have

(44:45):
fun or not? Bye? Bye? What's your view? So you
don't make two hundred and seventy five million bucks? Say
you do if you don't have fun? That got one
hundred and twenty five thousand responses.

Speaker 6 (44:56):
That's the sell see this is and this is exactly
why I bring it. Yeah, I bring this up. I
was like I I was the one that talked Willy
into Twitter. Like when people go over my resume, that's
one of the bullet points I hit, sir. I mean,
I'm not I'm not kidding.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
Made you what you are? You did?

Speaker 6 (45:12):
You did? You shaped me as a person?

Speaker 1 (45:15):
Write that down. How do you have a boyfriend? People
want to know you.

Speaker 6 (45:18):
I don't. He's so busy. We are taking applications though,
like we're going to try to get this situation resolved
this year.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
I do what about what about a reality show? Oh?

Speaker 6 (45:30):
We should do that. We should do that. And Willie,
you could be one of the girl judges of this
reality show. And you know that. All of the gentlemen.
For me, I work with a wonderful man in Kentucky
that also happens to be a police officer detective with
the Kentucky State Police, So he does my background checks
for me. It's great.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
Wow, what about Joe Burrow?

Speaker 6 (45:51):
Isn't Joe Burrow dating a show?

Speaker 1 (45:55):
We need a regular girl.

Speaker 6 (45:56):
Like you, somebody to keep him locked down in Cincinnati.
It's Zach Joe.

Speaker 1 (46:00):
Burrow called you and say, Rachel, I heard you on Willie.
Let's go get some coffee.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
You know what.

Speaker 6 (46:05):
I think he and I would vibe because he is
really into paleontology and I am also into my weird
like hobbies and you know, history things, and I feel
like we could just yeah, like I want to. I
want to talk about geology and you know, sediment layers
with him, like I would enjoy that. Like get a
girl that can do both. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (46:24):
I'm going to get a hold of his mom and
dad and see if I set up a date between
you and Joe Burrow.

Speaker 6 (46:28):
You do that? I mean, I think one of the
last days I had that was actually set up by you,
and it was some random guy from the Kenwick Country Club.
You just called me and were like, hey, I found something.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
Called me and said, well, what can I go out with? Rachel?
I knew he was a multi millionaire and I said,
she'd love to meet a guy like you. Whatever came of.

Speaker 6 (46:47):
That, I don't like nothing. I think he ended up
getting engaged the next girl he dated. I want to say,
so I dropped the bag. I did, But this, this
is why I need your help.

Speaker 1 (46:56):
What kind of bag was it, Louis Vuitton bag? Is
that what you're saying?

Speaker 6 (46:59):
You know, I'm more of a Gucci girl, but you
know I can be flexible.

Speaker 1 (47:05):
Write that down another one.

Speaker 6 (47:06):
I have a bone to pick with you. We need
to get into this.

Speaker 1 (47:09):
Pick my bone. What you got.

Speaker 6 (47:11):
I'm I'm kind of a big deal now in the
country music.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
World, excuse me.

Speaker 6 (47:15):
And they invite me to all of these cool like
golf courses like Augusta and places like that, and and
I don't know how to golf. And I contacted you
at the beginning of the summer and I said I
need help golfing, and you were like, I can't, I'm

(47:36):
too busy.

Speaker 1 (47:38):
I didn't hear the word Augusta.

Speaker 6 (47:39):
Did I had to qualify it. I thought, because you
know I helped you become a social media superstar, that
you would repay the favor and teach me how to
handle a club.

Speaker 1 (47:52):
Write that down. Now. When you said Augusta, are you
talking about Augusta National and Augusta, Georgia or Augusta, Kentucky.
Which Augusta are you talking about Georgia? Wait? Hold on,
is where's where's your doctor? What's your doctor, and.

Speaker 6 (48:11):
There's I think, is there one called Troubadour down in
Nashville too, Yes, but it's not as it's not. But
like I get invited there all the time too, and
I don't know how to golf, so like I needed
help and listen, I'm trying to be like I'm trying
to be super woman over here right, Like I'm one
of the few female programmers. I have to step up,

(48:32):
and like all the boys go to the golf course
and I can't golf and I need to be at
the golf course too, making decisions, and you let me down.

Speaker 1 (48:39):
Are you ready for the big question?

Speaker 6 (48:42):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (48:43):
Is there a chance I won't make you promise? Women
break promises all the time. Is there a good chance?
And if I teach you how to play golf, that
you can get me to Augusta National to play on
that golf course.

Speaker 6 (48:56):
I mean, I don't know, I don't know. That's up
in the air. You could probably be my plus one.
But how's Penny going to feel about that?

Speaker 1 (49:06):
She's not possessive?

Speaker 6 (49:07):
You know that that's true. She'd probably be like you
can keep him.

Speaker 1 (49:09):
She shares, She shares, So you're saying this is no
bs that you have an entree to go to Augusta National.

Speaker 6 (49:21):
Yes, because all of these record executives like go to
all of these golf courses, and they have to take
their artists to these golf courses because guess what, Artists
don't want to hang out with people like me unless
it's somewhere cool. So that's how I end up somewhere cool,
not because I'm cool technically, say give me some sports.

Speaker 7 (49:39):
Will he the Student Reporters and Proud Service ever your
local temp Star heating and air conditioning dealers temestar quality
you could feel in Cincinnati, calls Sheldon Braun at Braun
Heating at five one three three eight five seventy seven
sixty five.

Speaker 1 (49:54):
You're welcome here anytime, Rachel, anytime.

Speaker 7 (49:57):
Wells, you want to thank Willie Ron's Roost Restaurant and
Bar the world's greatest fried chicken. Of course, Ron and
his son Matt came down and brought our lunch today
thirty eight to fifty three Race Road at five one
three five seven four two two two, or on that
thing called the world Wide Web ronsroust dot net as national.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
Do you know what Augusta National? I have this thing
called the Master's golf term.

Speaker 8 (50:22):
You know what?

Speaker 6 (50:22):
Yes, yes, I do.

Speaker 1 (50:24):
And is it a big deal to you, Joe?

Speaker 6 (50:26):
Not really, I mean, but I mean everybody, you know
what everybody gets in during the Master's not everybody. It's
a ticketed event. Obviously it's hard to get into. But
this is not during that time. This is like private.

Speaker 7 (50:39):
He would just go down turn in off the highway
there in Augusta and go down Magnolia Lane and go
around the roundabout there in front of the clubhouse and
then drive out again, pass out.

Speaker 1 (50:51):
He would. He would be, fine, what's the.

Speaker 6 (50:53):
Golf course south of Jacksonville.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
That's well, you got the TPC Sawgrass and sawgrass I
got in by it there too. You got invited to
salgrass I did.

Speaker 6 (51:03):
Yeah, but I can't go. I don't know how to go.

Speaker 1 (51:08):
You need to come. You need to be around more often.
You gotta hang, you gotta hang.

Speaker 6 (51:12):
Well, you know you're too busy for me. You're too busy.

Speaker 1 (51:15):
Write that down, Wow, Rachel, come back anytime.

Speaker 6 (51:18):
I will.

Speaker 1 (51:18):
I'm giving you my number, my blood type, give you
a urine sample, my brain ek, I'm giving you everything
I like.

Speaker 6 (51:25):
How I drop Augusta and then all of a sudden Yeah,
I got.

Speaker 7 (51:27):
Here, his buddy say give me out of a stude
report Willie and Hotter of Rachel's return, here is a
Christmas gift.

Speaker 1 (51:33):
I would pass out if that happened.

Speaker 7 (51:35):
We will leave you with the immortal words of the
stood report.

Speaker 9 (51:41):
Tiger is playing at a level unknown to mere mortals.
Now he is primed to take home his fifth Green
jacket and begin his quest for the perfect season at
the year's first major, a tradition unlike any other.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
The Masters on CBS, Oh my God, Willie out Augusta
because of Rachel. On News Radio seven hundred, you can
stay with me in the Crow's Next on seven hundred
WLW Bill Cunningham, the Great American. When I looked at

(52:23):
the history of American race relations, most of the difficulties
that come to the left, going back one to two
hundred years, the Democratic Party used black folks as slaves,
and then after the Civil War, after the Republican Party
freed the slaves, guess what happened next is that the
Democratic Party in the South said, you know what, let's
have the Ku Klux Klan. And after that failed miserably

(52:45):
because Republicans opposed to going up to the nineteen thirties
to forties, the black folks were denied entrance into the
regular military by the Democratic Party. Then in nineteen sixty
four and sixty five the Civil Rights Acts all passed
because of the Republican Party. Enough is enough, And so
you thought that racially discriminatory segregated classes, for example in

(53:05):
school after Brown versus Board of Education would be concluded.
But that's not the case. In fact, there's a new
segregation happening in public schools. And it's happening mainly in
blue cities, blue states, like in New York City and
Los Angeles, Chicago, but also happening in Minneapolis. And joining
you and nine now is Kendall Teats. She's an investigative
reporter for defending education and she's focusing now in Minnesota

(53:29):
many other states. Lots of work to do in Kendall Teats,
I think for the first time, welcome to the Bill
Cunningham Show. So describe the formula Minneapolis schools. Public schools
are now using to use race based decisions when it
comes to the students who should not be race based.
Tell what's going Tell the American people what's happening in Minnesota.

Speaker 8 (53:49):
Right, So Minnesota has been in the news recently, as
you know, but something that hasn't been covered is really
just Minnesota's left word shift in education become one of
the most aggressive states in reshaping education. So we can
discuss Minneapolis public schools, they have had racially segregated classes,
and I can get into some of the specifics on that,

(54:11):
but we really document in a state wide leftward shift,
and it really is a civil rights crisis. So you've
got grant opportunities coming down from the state at the
government level that are race based. You also have ethnic studies,
which is going to be required by every high school
offered that they require it by twenty twenty six. So

(54:33):
there are lots of examples across the state where race
has been a factor and we've really been documenting that.
But to go back to your question about what's going
on specifically in Minneapolis public schools.

Speaker 6 (54:48):
They have racially segregated.

Speaker 8 (54:51):
Classes, which would be a violation of you know, Title
six and the cool Protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
In response spending education in October, file the civil rights
complaint with the US Department of Education over these racially
segregated classes. And like you said, I mean we settled
this in nineteen fifty four in Brown versus Board of Education,

(55:12):
the Supreme Court made it clear that segregating students by
race in public schools is unconstitutional. It's really as simple
as that. So, you know, this is this class, these
classes that are being offered, they really do appear to
be only open to black students, which is obviously unconstitutional.
In the same school district, they have a required Ethnic

(55:34):
studies course that centers around structural analysis of racism and colonialism.

Speaker 2 (55:39):
Kind of just goes back.

Speaker 8 (55:40):
To this race based teaching, you know, direct students to
challenge the white savior narrative. So these your ideas that
are being taught to the most impressionable minds at the
K through twelve level. And like you said, at a
public school district. This is not this is not a
private school.

Speaker 1 (55:58):
Handle tates. So are they so outwardly racist for the
Democrats to say, black kids, you go in this class,
white kids or brown kids you go in that class?
Or do they couch it in such a way as
to hide the races and the Democratic Party practices because
it benefits them. How specific are they if you're in
the third grade and you still can't read. I don't

(56:20):
care if you're white, black, or Polka. Doont government ought
to be saying you can't go to the fourth grade
unless you can read social promotion? How specifically are these
blue city, blue state schools and explicitly excluding children, not adults,
much less children based upon skin? Coller, give me a
concrete example.

Speaker 8 (56:40):
Yeah, So, like I said, you have multiple classes in
high schools across Minneapolis public schools that do feature regular,
regular or sorry, racially segregated classes that appear to be
limited by race. You can see the specifics of those
classes on our website defending at dot org. As far

(57:01):
as this ethnic studies course, I mean they cite critical
race theory that is completely based on race. It promotes
the ideas of Courl Marx and pedals. The notion and
this is documented as well on our website that capitalism
and Western culture are to blame for slavery, genocide, colonialism,

(57:23):
and white supremacy. And you know, this is.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
An you know, it's amazing that America and Europe, specifically
England stopped a slavery. They didn't keep it going, they
stopped it. There were thousands and thousands of British sailors
who were killed on ships stopping the slave trade. America
stopped racism and pursuant to slavery. Other countries, all of them,

(57:47):
world continued it. And you have in your column teachers
ask students quote challenge the white savir narrative and they
have to complete a youth led participatory action research project
that pushes them into activism. So you can't teach reading, writing,
and arithmetic. Well, so let's move on to targeting white
children that are in the third and fourth and fifth

(58:09):
grade about their privilege and about the savior narrative. How
corrosive is that to the white kids they have to
hear this crap.

Speaker 8 (58:18):
Well, it's corrosive to the white kids, and not to mention,
it's also corrosive to the black kids. If you are
sitting in class and you're getting told that because you
happen to be white and immutable characteristic, you are an oppressor,
and if you happen to be black, you're oppressed.

Speaker 10 (58:34):
So you're basically.

Speaker 8 (58:35):
Told from the outset that you know, the authors stacked
against you because of your skin color. That is not
I don't think like you said, what America was founded
on and that should not be something that you know,
we're teaching our kids and I, you know, I just
one more example I think is really important to point
out is Minnesota at the state level has teach your

(58:57):
licensing framework. They call them the Standard of Effective Practice
that have a requirement that teachers talk about racial consciousness
and reflection and it includes training on how you know,
white supremacy undermines pedagogical equity. And that sounds like a
bunch of random words slap together, but there is meaning

(59:19):
underlying all of that, and they want to make sure
that race is the underpinning for anything that teachers are
teaching in the public school system.

Speaker 1 (59:27):
So you fail when you teach the basics of academic
excellence and then you go into indoctrination of children that
are quite impressionable. You also have Minnesota's fighting the Trump
administration's quote gender ideology and sportspan you're like a woman
type person and Title nine was in there to give
girls high school, grade school, and college and later on

(59:48):
equal opportunity to money when it comes to scholarships, et cetera.
So explain what this is about gender ideology in Minnesota,
which is all over the Blue cities and blue states
and sportspan that allows men to pretend as if they're women,
boys as if they're girls, to play women's sports. What
is gender ideology? What are we talking about?

Speaker 8 (01:00:10):
Well, when we say gender ideology, we mean instances where
you know, progressives believe that males who identify as females
to be able to play in female sports, use female
locker rooms, use female restrooms. And at the state level,
you know, the Trump administration has put down executive orders
that fight against policies like that or sports bands in

(01:00:33):
the examples of you know, biological men wanting to play
in women's sports, and we believe that those are unlawful
rewrites of Title nine, which, like you said, we're put
out to help women and girls. That is what Title
nine is about. So you really just flip the purpose
of Title nine on its head when you're allowing biological

(01:00:55):
men who might identify as girls sure playing in their sports.
And you know, at the same time, we have we
documented a group of school board candidates under the banner
of the name gender Justice.

Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
They published a.

Speaker 8 (01:01:12):
Joint initiative supporting the full inclusion of transgender and nine
non binary students in school athletics, which they claim that
Title nine protects so at its core here is really
just the push and the pull of what Title nine means.
I think it's pretty obvious what Title nine says. It's
protecting women and girls, but progressive in this instance, school

(01:01:34):
board candidates are really just flipping it on its head
and saying that, you know, this is this includes the
full inclusion of transgender and non binary students, which is
just you know, specifically in school athletics. I think that
that is an extremely unpopular issue that isn't eight and
ten Americans don't think that a biological man should be

(01:01:55):
participating in women's sports.

Speaker 1 (01:01:56):
How about this one and your and your column defending
education dot Normally your racial discrimination is not so public.
But in Minnesota, which I'm sure is the same thing
in many urban districts. In Chicago public schools, in Los
Angeles public schools, they have a form you fill out
as to how you want to be identified, and you

(01:02:17):
have to be he she. They them, that's got eighty
or ninety categories. And we're asking an eight year old
girl to identify and has to read exactly the one
hundred and five categories of jender to determine which I
fit in. But you point out that the Minnesota Department
of Education has a grant worth nine point four million.
It's opened to universities and explicitly focused on quote increasing

(01:02:39):
licensed school psychologists, school nurses, and school counselors and school
social workers of color and indigenous. So they simply put out, effectively,
it says it that in order to get this money,
you have to you have to be black, I guess
Hispanic and or maybe an Indian can I say, I'm

(01:03:00):
not sure? But what In otherwords, if you're a white female,
a white male, you can't get the money. Normally, the
racism of the Democrat Party is not so explicit, but
here it is. And you point out this effectively excludes
all who are not black, indigenous, or people of color,

(01:03:20):
and on its surface, it violates Title six of the
Civil Rights Actor, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color,
or national origin. And Tim Watson, Minnesota, I guess, Keith Ellison,
the ag they're saying, we're going to violate the law
and keep practicing racism.

Speaker 5 (01:03:37):
Do I have that right?

Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
You got me all urinate and off right now?

Speaker 8 (01:03:41):
Oh yes, no, that's exactly right. And you know there's
multiple instances of grants and programs top down from the
Minnesota Department of Education in the government that set out
these rules about how teachers need to be licensed, how
they need to recruit teaching, and this money really goes

(01:04:02):
towards certain people, and this is effectively excluding those who
are not bipok as they say, black Indigenous people of color,
And as you correctly point out, this appears to be
a violation of Title thinks of.

Speaker 2 (01:04:16):
The civil rights gucts.

Speaker 1 (01:04:17):
I'm looking at I thought, well, you know, I'm a lawyer.
I've been in ag in Ohio, and I'm thinking it
looks to me like it does. You also point out
there's an administrative rule in Minnesota standards of effective Practice
teachers must meet to be licensed. So if you're a
teacher and you want to be licensed, the standard on
racial Consciousness and Reflection requires teachers to understand how efocentrism ism,

(01:04:43):
you're a centrism, ism, deficit based deficits, white supremacy undermine equity.
So to get licensed to be a teacher, you got
to check the box saying yes, I'm a racist, Yes
I have benefit, my skin color is wrong. I understand
what I got because the way I was born, I'm
not as good as someone a person of color. Do

(01:05:04):
I have that right.

Speaker 8 (01:05:07):
That that is correct? You know?

Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
These are these are these are.

Speaker 8 (01:05:11):
Teacher licensure requirements. And you know, as I mentioned before,
it sounds like a bunch of random words strung together,
but there's meaning behind that. It's basically blaming white supremacy
for undermining quote pedagogical equity. That just means white supremacy
is to blame for bad outcomes when it comes to

(01:05:31):
maybe black students, and you know, all roads in their
mind apparently lead back to white supremacy.

Speaker 2 (01:05:37):
That's what to.

Speaker 8 (01:05:38):
Blame is to blame if you know certain students are
not doing as well as others, and I think that,
you know, I mean, we could keep going with these examples.
You have a statewide grow your Own program and that's
you know about recruiting district employees to become licensed teachers.
But it requires any district applying to have at least

(01:05:59):
thirty percent students of color, and if they don't reach
that thirty percent threshold, they're just not eligible for the grant.

Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
So these are all public money.

Speaker 10 (01:06:07):
Imposed, Yeah, exactly, it's they impose these race based stipulations
that you know, determine how grant money from the government
is allocated and who can participate.

Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
Well, this is blatant racism, of course, the party practicing
and benefits and in a sense, because the Democratic parties
made the decision that we're going to appeal and apply
racist principles that they've done since they're founding in the
nineteenth century in order to a gin up a particular

(01:06:40):
racial group to vote for us. To look at all
the benefits we give you, and so many white liberals,
especially white liberal females, simply bow their head at the
altar of dei, which is dee, and they bow their
heads saying, yes, we have to in order to be
licensed as a teacher, I must practice racism against white
students and others. And I can only imagine what's happening

(01:07:03):
in the major cities in this country. When the Democratic
Party stops benefiting from racism, that's when things are going
to change. I doubt it will. And race based licensing,
grant programs and teachers that are lying to their students
in a world, then what happens when these kids get
out and the white kids grow up thinking I'm a
marching Marxist. I don't like this country anymore. I can't

(01:07:25):
imagine some little boy or girl in the Minnesota school
and the same thing applies in almost every blue city,
blue state that I come out thinking I've done a
lot wrong in my life because of the color of
my skin, and the only way for me to absolve
myself a blame is to be a liberal Democrat, to
march around ice officials, make a fool of myself, and
as a consequence, I'll pay the penance. Well, good luck, Kendall, teacher,

(01:07:48):
you're at this, You're at a reporter for Defending Education
dot Org. We could spend all day a lot of
this stuff. But I hope when the court system gets this.
We have about thirty seconds remaining. What are the court
say about this? Other than the Chief Justice who says
the way to stop racism is to quit practicing it.
But what does the court system say about this stuff?

Speaker 2 (01:08:09):
You know, it's a good question, and you're a lawyer.

Speaker 8 (01:08:12):
I'm not, so I can't. I can't speak to the
specifics in what it all means. But I think it's
clear that you know these The Title nine, Title six
have been part of the United States Constitution for a
while now and that and it's just we should just
be abiding by that. These are not even new laws,

(01:08:33):
and we need to by the laws and the regulations
that we already have.

Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
Kendall Teach, you're a great American defending education dot org.
Thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. And Merry
Christmas and Happy New Year. Thank you, Kendall, thank you,
thank you. God bless America. Let's continue with more of
the truth will set you free. The Party of racism
continues to practice it and blame others for their sins
and crimes. Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WULW.

Speaker 6 (01:09:01):
I'm telling you I just did everything wrong with my life.
I should have just gotten naked on the internet.

Speaker 5 (01:09:10):
Hello, quiet, and I'm I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 8 (01:09:18):
I got.

Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
I feel the same way about Rachel. She should have
gotten naked on the internet. That's still an.

Speaker 6 (01:09:22):
Accurate statement, guys, that's I still stand by that statement.
You know when that statement was made, But yes, it's true.

Speaker 1 (01:09:28):
And you you're not going to look now, here's the
word you're like a woman? Correct?

Speaker 6 (01:09:33):
Last time I checked?

Speaker 1 (01:09:34):
When you say that one, when you look at the
world the way it is configured today, you got your
good friend shown more? Who's on with only fans model
segment has an on page and only fans? You do know,
I don't even know what that is.

Speaker 6 (01:09:50):
Well, whatever it is, I've found I've found out some
people that I casually know through the industry do have
only fans like somehow, some way and it's you know,
you don't know who has an only fans now? I
do not have one. I do not have one.

Speaker 1 (01:10:05):
Have you got naked? You could be a millionaire. I
don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:10:07):
I feel like the market saturated now. I feel like
naked women out there there are like you have to
do something funny like along with the nakedness. Like there's
a woman that farms and she's naked and she is like,
you have to do something like that, right, she's hoeing, she's.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Hoing, and so she gets How do any get paid?

Speaker 8 (01:10:24):
Is?

Speaker 1 (01:10:24):
How do you get paid if you're you're online? Is
an only fans model? When you're like hoeing naked? How
do you get paid?

Speaker 6 (01:10:30):
People subscribe to your channel and they pay you a
monthly fee. You need that, that's what you need? Yeah, Willie, After.

Speaker 7 (01:10:37):
You're after you're taking your photos on the on the console,
or something.

Speaker 6 (01:10:43):
When you were talking about that the other week myself
Scott Reinhardt like, how did we get away.

Speaker 1 (01:10:47):
With that's soundly because you were present. That's a different issue.
I showed my shortcomings. I'm glad you're hearing another issue.
You're prepared for another issue. Wait, no, going back to AUGUSTA.

Speaker 6 (01:10:57):
Yes, I think we should have an only fans for you.
I think it should be willly unfiltered.

Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
What does that mean?

Speaker 6 (01:11:02):
That means you just get on OnlyFans and people will
get the unfiltered version of Willy Willy that they can't
see off air, not necessarily.

Speaker 1 (01:11:10):
So what do you do now? I explained this to me.
Let's I want to make a few extra bucks?

Speaker 6 (01:11:13):
Yeah, and what do you supplement your income somehow?

Speaker 1 (01:11:15):
What do I do?

Speaker 6 (01:11:16):
You would set up your only Fans account, you would
advertise it on here as Willy unfiltered, uh, and then
people would subscribe to see your real thoughts and feelings.
It's kind of like it would be like your Twitter,
but like you taking videos of yourself going off about
these things instead of just typing it up.

Speaker 7 (01:11:31):
Imagine you getting stuck on that roof and how many
have you had it? Only fans back then, you would
be bigger than Ta Ta and everybody else.

Speaker 1 (01:11:40):
I thought only fans was like naked people. You're saying,
that's not.

Speaker 6 (01:11:42):
The It doesn't have to be.

Speaker 1 (01:11:44):
I don't have to be naked. It's encouraged.

Speaker 6 (01:11:46):
Yeah, you don't have You don't have to be naked,
but you could be if you wanted to.

Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
I don't want to be naked. My wife told me,
I made a fool of myself.

Speaker 6 (01:11:53):
I mean, it's everybody has an opinion, but you it's it.

Speaker 1 (01:11:57):
Exists about my only fan unfiltered.

Speaker 6 (01:12:00):
Oh, this could be the next thing that you know,
how much.

Speaker 1 (01:12:03):
Money could I make on this deal?

Speaker 6 (01:12:05):
With your following?

Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
A lot?

Speaker 6 (01:12:07):
Probably?

Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Actually, what do I have to do to make money?
I'm gonna do something immral and proper on a way.

Speaker 6 (01:12:11):
You're just gonna like how you talked to me off air.
You would go on you go on OnlyFans and talk
to people that way, beat.

Speaker 1 (01:12:18):
Beat beat, beat beat beat. That was happening. There's no
beeping on only Fans exactly. I don't have to fum
or something. That's fine, that's a big deal. It's fine there.
You don't have to worry about it.

Speaker 6 (01:12:27):
There.

Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Here, you have to worry about it. My people will
talk to your people.

Speaker 6 (01:12:30):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (01:12:31):
Secondly, we have Tayte Taylor Swept. I saw online she
gave her roadies like a total of almost three hundred
million dollars she did. Yes, it's like real money.

Speaker 5 (01:12:40):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (01:12:41):
And also Travis is always a connection to Cincinnati. Whatever
in the world, Cincinnati, Travis Kels. Yes. I understand that
they're gonna get married, allegedly in April or May.

Speaker 6 (01:12:50):
No, it's gonna be June. June sixteenth is the supposed date.

Speaker 1 (01:12:54):
June sixteenth.

Speaker 6 (01:12:55):
June sixteenth up next year in Rhode Island.

Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
Rod's Roost allegedly are gonna to cater But that's a
different issue. Yeah, So what do you know about the relationship.
If I'm a lawyer, I'm thinking either side you got
to have a prenup. Normally, the man, what's a prenup
for the woman? Chair in this case, she what's are
pren up from him? Correct?

Speaker 6 (01:13:12):
He is. They are negotiating their prenup right now. Of course,
Taylor has a lot of assets to protect. She is
worth over a billion.

Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
Dollars how much a billion?

Speaker 6 (01:13:22):
Yeah, over a billion dollars now, and so she's got
a lot of assets to protect, and they are working
it out, and supposedly the rumor is that some of
the things they are discussing is how long he's going
to stay in the NFL. That is one of the
things that the prenup is covering, and then whether or
not he'll have a broadcast career after the NFL, which
he may or may not. I you know, because she
wants to control this deal. Well, I mean she's a billionaire.

(01:13:45):
She can do that. She can she can afford to
do that.

Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
Sake, if you got married again, would you have a prenup,
get that hot model friend of yours, make sure you
shouldn't seize your assets. Yeah, now getting back to you, Yes,
Sharon Moore, I want to ask you this question. The
Tate situation to be resolved. Not many like that, but
there's going to be a pres I.

Speaker 6 (01:14:03):
Mean, he won, he won the lottery. He gets to
date the like one hot billionaire. There's not that many
hot attractive billionaires like on their own in their thirties,
and that she got the one though, like one in
the world. He like, it's nearly impossible to do what
he did.

Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
And didn't want in like a blind date he got it.
Did she know who he was? I hate to use
the term you know who I am? But did she
know who he was or is not she?

Speaker 6 (01:14:29):
I'm sure she was aware of him as a human,
but she she didn't know much about like what he
did for the Kansas City chiefs per se.

Speaker 1 (01:14:36):
Is she pregnant? No, right told me she's pregnant? Really?

Speaker 6 (01:14:40):
Yes, No, I have not heard that.

Speaker 1 (01:14:42):
Another thing. I'm glad you're here. Segment get us into
the Stude report. Then I got Greg Biffle. We don't
over you know the media's reporting on this and is
playing with his family. Will discuss that later segment. Get
me into the Stuge report.

Speaker 7 (01:14:54):
Will he the stooge reporters A proud service of your
local teme Star Heating in air conditioning dealers tames a
quality you could feel in Cincinnati called Stacey Heating and
Air Solutions. At five one, three, three, six seven h
E A. T. Sport well Lee College basketball. Last night
Cincinnati Bearcats knockoff Alabama State.

Speaker 1 (01:15:16):
Creighton klobbers Xavier. Talk to me about that second now
that was by forty one points at home to allow the.

Speaker 7 (01:15:22):
The largest losses by the Musketeers in the history of
the Centas Center.

Speaker 1 (01:15:27):
What does Petina say about that? Well, not happy?

Speaker 7 (01:15:30):
And they forty one point and the ball wasn't going
in the other the team went the other way and
they were going in. At one point it was forty
one to twelve. Correct, let's see, uh, Bengals up. They
brought to you by Good Spirits, Winding Tobacco and Party
Town in Northern Kentucky. Bengals in Miami Sunday. Apparently it's
a about eighty three degrees, so they go from minus

(01:15:50):
six last Sunday here to eighty three this Sunday in cut.

Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
Florida without tua, no no.

Speaker 7 (01:15:57):
Preview the game tonight, Cincinnati Tax Resolution powered by Toefround
Table Show presented by Postman Law, Live from Lognecks and
Wilder at six oh five Wait right here on seven
hundred WLW. College Football, The Athletic reports at. Former Ohio
University head football coach Brian Smith was reprimanded last month
for violating school policy.

Speaker 1 (01:16:18):
What did he do.

Speaker 7 (01:16:19):
Regarding storing, storing and consuming alcohol after games in his
university office?

Speaker 1 (01:16:26):
Wasn't women?

Speaker 7 (01:16:26):
He was fired yesterday by the school and the Bobcats
are getting ready to take on unlv in the Frisco Bowl.

Speaker 1 (01:16:34):
Might be an alcoholic segment if you store in booze
and snipping on the moonshine in between practices.

Speaker 7 (01:16:40):
Red's making official Willie with the signing a free agent
left hander Caleb Ferguson today to a one year deal
four and a half.

Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
Million not bad dollars. So there you go. You were
in rock for a long time. Now you are in
a country. I said, Eddie Fingers a legend in his
own mind. Would you agree?

Speaker 6 (01:16:57):
I would say a legend truly.

Speaker 1 (01:16:58):
That's what I mean to say that rock is dying.
I gave you some of the rock acts of the seventies,
and there's no rock acts today with orchestration that's done.
So in five or ten years, even Keith Richards might
be dead, you'll be ninety still. And so what happens
to rock when there's nothing to play?

Speaker 6 (01:17:15):
I think that you know, they don't have a lot
of new acts coming up, and that is one of
the problems as to why rock music is hard up
these days. Classic rock is still doing well because that's
still you know, just keep playing the hits, keep playing
the hits, but you're not replacing it. And my genre.
Country has picked up a lot of what used to
be considered rock music. If you look at things like

(01:17:36):
Jason Aldan you mentioned him off air, you know, Kenny
Chesney even they have more of a rock sound, the
southern rock sound, and nobody's replacing skinnerd On, you know,
w ebn Our friends over where I used to be
right and they could. There are acts out there that
sound like that and that are really good, but rock
music is rock. Radio is scared to play them, so

(01:17:57):
they're not replacing that sound. And I think that's really hurting.

Speaker 1 (01:18:00):
And started in the country singing, singing to Tim McGraw
in front of his wife, what'd you comment on that? Please?

Speaker 6 (01:18:07):
The whole of Nashville still loves Taylor Swift, which is
a testament because it's not an easy town. It's you know,
it's very much like Hollywood, but with Bless your Heart,
you know, like it's it's it's very it's it could
be a rough place. But everybody still speaks very highly
of Taylor and loves her. And she does a lot
of things behind the scenes that people never hear about.

Speaker 1 (01:18:27):
That she's wonderful.

Speaker 6 (01:18:28):
There are you know, things like for kids that are
sick and stuff like that that nobody ever hears about
because she doesn't need people to hear about it.

Speaker 1 (01:18:36):
It's very genu where's the island?

Speaker 6 (01:18:39):
Island?

Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
Seem she bought an island somewhere.

Speaker 6 (01:18:42):
I think she bought something in the Bahamas or something
something not far from Florida, because.

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
Epstein hopefully not. No, what's your take on Epstein and
all that? You're like a woman?

Speaker 6 (01:18:52):
Yes, tell me about that's a very broad question.

Speaker 1 (01:18:55):
Don't use the term broad anymore. It's very insulting.

Speaker 6 (01:18:58):
I know I have to watch. I have to watch
what saying here.

Speaker 1 (01:19:00):
You have to be careful.

Speaker 5 (01:19:01):
I do.

Speaker 1 (01:19:02):
I do two things I want to present to you
that might be true. Okay, are you prepared best?

Speaker 6 (01:19:07):
I can't be.

Speaker 1 (01:19:07):
Augusta. Oh, I'm sorry, Augustin Asham. And when you said
would you join me in Augusta, I thought it was
Kentucky and not Georgia. So I apologize.

Speaker 6 (01:19:14):
I'm running with a different crowd now.

Speaker 1 (01:19:16):
Really. Secondly, Jeffrey Epstein was a bum, a derelict of
purv whatever term you want to use. Lay him out there.
He did it. Now. The US Attorney's Office in the
Southern District of New York, as you know, is the
preeminent to federal prosecutors in the country, and they started
investigating him in twenty fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, and eighteen, with
full subpoena power, with grand jury testimony. They did everything.

(01:19:39):
And because they believe there was large numbers of New
York men, large numbers who were having illicit relationship with
underage girls. That's what I believe happened without facts. Would
you agree most likely yes? Do you believe that? Yes.
One of the US attorneys was James Comey's wife. I'm sorry,
James Comey's daughter, who's always say James Comby has ill

(01:20:01):
feelings toward Donald Trump. In fact, the daughter has more
ill feelings than the father has. Goes the father's trying
to lock up James Comy, now the former FBI director.
But I regress one of the prosecutors one on CNN
about six months ago and said the following We thoroughly
investigated all the girls and women, the crimes committed Jeffrey Epstein,

(01:20:22):
the Banks, Morgan Stanley, et cetera, all when the moneies
went through Banks, et cetera. And we indicted the two
people responsible, and we could find no other criminal acts
committed by others. So I'm watching this my eyes come
out like a like a bugs Bunny movie. I'm saying
what I think.

Speaker 6 (01:20:40):
It's the banks. I think because the banks are supporting
both political parties, and they have a vested interest in
making sure that they do not get caught up in
trafficking because they could legally be, and they have been
found liable in civil court. They could face worse ramification
in criminal court due to what they knew and what

(01:21:02):
they didn't know. And obviously they've proven in civil court
that they did know enough to know something was off right.
So I think that we're we're not getting the full
story because the banks. Rachel Ell, you know everything, and
I know everything. I mean, I learned it all from you.

Speaker 2 (01:21:14):
Willie.

Speaker 1 (01:21:15):
Thank you? All right, write that down. If it's true
that all these men being mentioned and the prosecutor's office
who wanted to get these guys couldn't get them because
they didn't do it. Could that be true? Could the
US Attorney's office, whether it's Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, Donald
Trump line them up? Well, there's dozens of men. The

(01:21:36):
US Attorney's office wanted to get him, and they said
they didn't do it. Now do you accept that?

Speaker 6 (01:21:43):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:21:43):
See what I'm saying. Do you accept that?

Speaker 2 (01:21:44):
Say no?

Speaker 1 (01:21:45):
Give me out. Rachel wrote, welcome here anytime.

Speaker 6 (01:21:48):
Thank you, Willie.

Speaker 1 (01:21:49):
You and I will talk about me being an OnlyFans model.

Speaker 6 (01:21:51):
I'll help you set that up. I want to cut though, how.

Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
Much you got it segment out of the stution court.

Speaker 7 (01:21:59):
Willie had honor of Rachel's return here to the tri State.
We leave you with the immortal words of the Stood report.

Speaker 6 (01:22:06):
You can't stiff a prostitute.

Speaker 1 (01:22:11):
Rachel, Thank you, Thank you. Let's continue with more seven
hundred WLW

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