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November 14, 2025 87 mins
Willie talks with a man who found a gun at a recent shooting near the police search area, and why the police didn't find it. Also Katy Talento of the Alliance of Healthcare Sharing explains why Obamacare is failing. Finally Willie talks with the American people.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Billy coming into Great America. Welcome with somewhat rainy Friday afternoon.
The tri States should clear up in an hour or two.
Should be great weather. They are all the high school
football tonight. Plus on Sunday the Bengalleys go into Pittsburgh
to hopefully beat the Steelers. The Bengals are about a
touchdown underdog. We'll see what happens if they win. I
al it's like to be optimistic. If they win on Sunday,

(00:28):
they're one game out of first place, So we'll see
what happens down the road. But here in River City,
the mayor, elected by a wide margin to a second term,
has spoken about a low supply of housing and high rents,
generational poverty, racial wealth gaps, accessibility to guns and violence
in the urban core, and so much more so. The
state of the city, he said, is pretty good. In fact,

(00:50):
the city of Cincinnati's taken big swings. About ten days
or two weeks ago, Slowey had on a guest who's
a big time developer and OTR who lives in the area,
who may have a little dissenting viewpoint at times, joining
you and I now as Michael the big time developer,
OTRs put millions of dollars at risk and OTR mainly

(01:11):
because of the q TQL stadium deal with FC, but
also the fact that there's four hundred million dollars in
investment plus going into that area generally, but public safety
is number one. And Michael welcome. I think for me
the first time to the Bill Cunningham Show, you were
with Sloani about two weeks ago you found a gun,
most recent shooting outside of a bar. So overall, can

(01:31):
you give the American people maybe a descending viewpoint about
safety and OTR and what's actually happening on the ground.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
Yeah, so thanks for having me on, Willie. Just a
little background on myself. I actually lived I've lived in
Over the Ryne for fifteen years, really the majority of
my adult life. This is kind of what's you know
I've made my career is you know, fifteen years ago
I got this idea to move into the neighborhood and
start investing. I started buying abandoned shells, shells that have
been a brick building that I've been bannoned for in

(02:01):
some cases fifteen plus years and taking big risks and
spending years and tearing everything out of them, rebuilding them
into apartment buildings and renting them out. Two great people
that are going to contribute to the neighborhood, and then
also making the neighborhood look better by getting rid of
these abandoned shells. I find it's funny that I have to,

(02:21):
you know, things that we need housing. That's literally what
I do. And I'm just asking for basic you know,
for the police and for the city council and for
the local politicians to do the basic things that we
need in order to keep people like me doing what
we do.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
Right.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
You take the big risk, you take the big swings.
You're not generationally wealthy. Fifteen years ago, it was mainly
a bombed out It looked like Berlin after World War Two.
And you're one of the persons that came in and said,
I see potential here, I see a walking community. I
see Washington Park from my personal family have deep roots.

(02:57):
TQL wasn't existing at that point, but quite high. It's
not unusual to buy building now in OTR for a
million dollars plus. So what's happening specifically in the bar
in that community rod right near your businesses and right
by where you live. What is happening in that bar.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
Yeah, well, at first, I think it's important to backtrack
to the beginning of June. A little off topic, but
I was one of Patrick Haranger's best friends. And I
don't know if you look Willie, if you've seen his home,
if he saw any of those news stories. But the
reason why his house is painted green is because my
crew painted his house the four days leading up to
his death. Patrick was one of my best buddies, and

(03:40):
it's really really affected me. But unfortunately, the more I've
kind of looked at what happened, it appears that Mordecai
Black climbed on one of my ladders through Patrick's window.
And so that's when the neighborhood really started to affect me.
A lot of the violence that I had been seeing
over the last fifteen years, a lot of it was

(04:00):
kind of in little pockets right where it was. Some
of these blocks that were generationally violent had continued to
be and then I could live my normal life around
those pockets. So that was the first that was the
first thing that really really kind of flipped my world
upside down. And then the series of events that you're

(04:21):
referring to is right down the street from where I live.
We had a previous gay bar that was called E
nineteen that vacated and was sold to new ownerships that
put in a club called Privy on Elm and the
clientele base of that club is completely different than than
E nineteen was not really not just their sexuality. E

(04:45):
nineteen was a gay club, but it's it's just a
completely different clientele. And for the last seven months we
have been calling the police every weekend. We've been calling
city council. Just in the last ten days. I have
tried to call aftab's office. I tried called Cheryl Long's office.
I tried to call Evan Nolan's office. The only person
I've actually spoken to was Seth Walsh and I had

(05:06):
a really good conversation and he's completely on our team
trying to get something done about this. But more or less,
what I'm trying to get at is that Lily, we
have been trying to tell the police and the city
how out of control Privy has been, and it all
escalated to four people getting shot on I guess it
was the morning of November two. I actually didn't even

(05:29):
know the shooting had taken place. I was going for
a walk on that Sunday morning, and I took a
video showing the amount of trash that was outside of
Privy the following morning, just to document another reason why
they have been such an unruly neighbor. And I turned
the corner on the alley and saw a big pile
of blood and I was like, what the heck happened here?

(05:50):
Got online and was able to find out that four
people had gotten shot. I guess hours before and from
the photos that I saw online. I went to the
other side of Privy where it looked like the shooting
was and just laying in the grass was a loaded
nine millimeter just right off the sidewalk, one foot off
the sidewalk. I guess they would have been twenty feet

(06:12):
fifteen feet from Privy's I guess it would be their
south end, that is on Sinley Street. Called the police
make sure new children got the gun. But he could
have been a tragedy.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
And that's just the.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Stuff we deal with on a weekly basis. Down here
is the lack of enforcement of the small crimes, the
drinking outside, the smoking weed in the cars. When people
leave Privy at two am, they don't go home, they
hang out outside. My house and they blare their radios
and they smoke weed and they fight, and that is

(06:44):
what escalates to four people getting shot.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Now, one thing you told me off the air is
that I think of a club, and I want to
say this. Gay bars tend to be extremely peaceful and quiet.
It's kind of entertaining and fun. Every now and then
I'll find myself, maybe in Key West, with a good
friend of mine, in a gay bar, almost by mistake,
because it is good times, it's acting, it's fine. But

(07:06):
how the privy describe the guards in front, which kind
of set the tone.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Yeah, so again, this isn't like it was a quiet
block and then they put a nightclub in. And this
isn't a bunch of neighbors that are just upset about
a bar. This was a nightclub prior. Okay it was
for years. I lived next to E nineteen for I
don't know, it's been three or four years. And again
they were great. I would go out and I would
stop there sometimes one on my way back home. A

(07:34):
completely different clientele. They don't lit her outside, they don't loiter,
they're not fighting. The police weren't there every weekend. So yeah,
a completely different clientele. But what I was telling you,
Willie is that if you drive past Privy on a weekend,
I believe they're up in Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday. They
have probably two or three guard security guards outside and
they look like Swat team members. They have bulletproof vests on,

(07:58):
they're openly displaying pistols. And then directly across the street
you have Ryan Geist with a you know, a fat
guy with a beard and a security shirt, just you know,
checking id's and it shows you exactly what you need
to know. I give Privy some some credit, right, they're
spending money on security, and we appreciate that, but really
all they're doing is they're attracting that clientele we're fearful

(08:20):
of to the area and then using their security to
not even you know, it's it's it's a wash, right,
They're they're they're drawing them down there, and then you know,
the buckets overflowing unfortunately. So but yeah, I mean, if
you just saw Privy security, you would know exactly the
type of establishment it is.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
And the police, Michael Developer, the police have got to
know what's happening. They have supposedly patrols in the area.
They see the open air drug use, they see other
forms of aberrant behavior. After hours, they see the garbage,
they see the blood, the gun you found a foot
from the sidewalk after the four people were shot. Did
the police drive by that's with their windows up and

(09:01):
look straight ahead and don't bother because you've complained to
share along after have bare of all the new Chief, Henny,
You've complained and nothing happens. Right, This isn't a one off.
This happens all the time.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Not only that, but I went to the city council
meeting yesterday. I spoke for two minutes. That's all they
would give me. And I'm trying, you know, but that
they don't know. They all hide. Every time I've called
somebody's office downtown, Willy, it's they have an assistant, and
then there's an assistant that they have to give it to.
And it's like, can I just talk to share along?
Like can I just talk to her on the phone

(09:35):
or have her email me? No, nobody wants to talk.
They all hide behind each other and they all push
it off on somebody else. But yeah, I mean, we've
called the cops. I would be willing to guess, Willy,
that there are probably more than seventy five complaints about Privy,
probably between seventy five and one hundred complaints about Privy

(09:55):
in the last five months. It's just every weekend, you know,
and and it's this is not news to anyone, No,
and I don't know, you know, part of part of
what I think the problem is is this is, you know, unfortunately,
I believe this is a this is a black owned business,
and I think that there there is a lot of
racial stuff going on here where you know, the black

(10:17):
city manager, you know, is fearful of taking action on
potentially a black owned business. And it's really frustrating because
we're just asking to feel comfortable in our homes. I've
been there fifteen years, really, I was there before Rhengeist.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Not only that, but I have tons of neighbors around me,
some of which are black neighbors are the ones also
complaining absolutely, And so this isn't a white versus black thing.
This is just a lawlessness versus lawabiding, you know issue.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
And nothing changes. Is this symptomatic of a larger problem
or is this isolated to the privy which is a
slang term for a bathroom, which is another issue, but nonetheless,
is this isolated to Elm Street by Privy because you
have serious investments over by Ali's trolley over it that way,
which is closer to TQL. Is this isolating? You live it,

(11:08):
you walk the streets, you talk to the community leaders,
it says one off. Or is this percolating throughout OTR?
Because you might recall I mentioned you off the air
that a captain a CPD sent to me the shot spotter.
The shot spotter, it looked like you have a take
a white piece of paper and take black pepper and
just shake it all over the white piece of paper.
That's shot spotter. And when the mayor was asked a

(11:30):
question about it looks like there's thousands of shots fired
and OTR and CBD all the time central Business District.
And the mayor says, well, a lot of times it'll
catch a backfire of a car or a pop gun.
But there are thousands of shots fired every year in
that area, and the mayor says, it's no big deal.
How often in your community, Michael, do you hear shots

(11:52):
being fired that you can know it's not backfiring of
a car, it's not a pop gun. It is actually
rifles or nine millimeters. Is it a regular event?

Speaker 3 (12:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (12:03):
So, you know I was telling you about the one
project I'm doing now that's you know, kind of over
in the area of the soccer stadium. I'm actually outside
of that property right now. I'm looking at my guys.
We were getting outside of the building payment right now.
This is a seven figure, you know, investment. It's a
big risk that you know, my business partner and I
are taking. But really, I've got property all over the neighborhood.

(12:23):
I've been doing a fifteen years and every little nook
and cranny of over the Rhine. Yeah, good question. I
don't want listeners to think that it's too dangerous to
come down to over the Rhine. There are pockets right where,
you know. I could draw them on a map. If
somebody said, hey, you know, my daughter is asking me
if if she can live in over the Rhine, is

(12:43):
it safe? I would say, well, where right, and I
could circle on the map for you typically, you know,
and that's part of my job. Will in order to
invest in this neighborhood, have to really really understand it.
And there are absolutely areas in this neighborhood that my
partner and I we wouldn't even go see the property.
We already know that it's a it's a no go area.
And and those areas are typically because of a bodega

(13:06):
on the corner and will you know the shell that's
on Liberty right, that's all everywhere around there is a
bad spot. You know, Tina's across the street. It attracts
crime loitering, and that's non conducive of a of a
development of a property in that area. So so yeah,
I hear gunshots all the time, Wily, but typically I

(13:27):
can hear that those shots are coming from the blocks
that I'm referring to where the crime. It's just kind
of a little halo around the area. And you know, generally,
you know people that are coming down here to eat
dinner or to socialize, they're not really in that area.
So yeah, I mean, good question. But you know, why

(13:47):
did I want to be in over the Rhine? You know,
people are like, well, why would this guy from the
suburbs want to.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
Move to over the Rhine.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
I'll tell you, Willy. I went to that soccer game
the other night, the Sunday playoff game. And I'm not
I could care about soccer, Willy, but I'm walking down
Elm Street. It's great weather, There's people everywhere, everybody's outside
eating the street cars driving by, and I just kind
of looked at my I'm like, wow, this is great,
this is this is really cool, and this is why
people come down here. But what the city needs to

(14:15):
realize is that if you don't want people to come
down and go to the game and then lead and
then just run home, you gotta do a better job
of enforcing the crimes. Okay, and Willie, I have lived
down for Town for fifteen years, and I never ever
ever see Cincinnati police pull cars over for traffic violations.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
Never.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Okay, they will, they correct, they they're going to, you know,
when they're called about something. But if you're driving down
the street and speeding, or if you don't have a
license plate, or if you don't use turn signals, or
if you know you run red lights, no, you will
not get pulled over. No, okay. And the lack of
enforcement on the basic crime is what creates a neighborhood

(14:59):
of law listeness, and then those lesser crimes escalate. Those
lack of enforcing of those lesser crimes makes people feel like, okay,
well I can do that, maybe I can do something
else too, well, right, and then it's just this ladder.
They keep climbing up to the point when they don't
get into Privy, and they pull out handguns and just

(15:20):
unload on the side of the building and shoot four people.
And apparently that's what I was told happened. I was
told that. I was told this by the ownership, actually,
and I saw some of the security footage where they
had five or six guys on the south end of Privy.
They didn't want to get searched at the front door,
so they went to the side door, and then they
couldn't get in the side door, so then they just unloaded,

(15:41):
you know, round on a crowd of people. But that's
what we're dealing with down here.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
I'll tell you, Michael. I think thank you for coming out.
You came on with Sloany and me. Let's keep the
communication going. My heart aches for Patrick Herringer and Sarah.
It's just aches. He gave us life. I think Sarah's
moving out because she can't pay anymore the city once again.
She moved out and the city is teetering, and the
mayor says these are good times up against the clock,

(16:09):
Michael OTR developer, big time guy in OTR. Thanks for
coming on and forwarn his forearm. There are certain no
go areas and otherwise it's a great community. But once
again Michael got a run. But thanks for reporting this
to the American people and we can make our own
decisions about what to do. Michael, thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (16:27):
Oh anytime, Thank you.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
God bless you. Let's continue with more.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
That's the truth and the truth mayor after pure of
all and the city manager share along, y'all take some
telephone calls, come out the ivory purchase in which you
find yourself and talk to those actually on the ground
and OTR like Michael and many others. Bill Cunningham's Radio
seven hundred w let's continue broadcast Superbody. By the way,

(16:54):
I love staking Shake. That's a different story. I think
when he's in Steak and Shaker about the best there
are when it comes to face food. But I regressed
just a little bit picking up on what Michael had
to say. Met him a couple times as serious. Money
at Stake began fifteen years ago when OTR was a
bombed out shell of Berlin in nineteen forty six. It's

(17:14):
a problem. It was bad, but urban pioneers said, you
know what, Washington Park is right here. And by the way,
my family have deep roots in Washington Park. And of
course TQL and FC wasn't on the horizon at that point.
But it's a walkable community, excellent shall we say, architecture.
And in the eighteen eighties eighteen nineties over the Rhine

(17:35):
was a community with forty thousand people living in it.
Forty thousand is now down to about seven thousand. And
those who want to be urban pioneers, like the great
Patrick Herringer who was murdered in his own home by
Mordecai Black, want to locate in an area where they
can build something up with their own hands. The politics
fit what they want to do, but they need police

(17:56):
protection of one type or another. And that's why Michael
has put out the bat signal again to the city
hall because he's got no responses at all to the
delineation between lawlesses and illegal activity, and city council doesn't
respond because it doesn't fit their diatrine. You cannot call
seventy five to one hundred times over a six month

(18:18):
period for police services and they don't show up. Otherwise
believing right now that they don't care. Of course they
don't care. And one of the inklings of why they
don't care is that if it's a black business operating
in the so called black community. I'm not sure OTR
is majority black. It might be, but I don't know.
To me, it's multiracial. That they don't want to come

(18:39):
down hard on a black business owner because he can
play the race card and get out from under. And
that when you have a business in which there's guards
at the front door with visible weapons on their hips,
wearing kevlar, look like Ninja warriors, you may want to
avoid going into that business. But on the other hand,
there's elements in our society that consider thek avenjury or

(19:00):
death part of the excitement of walking in. Maybe you
and I should go there at some point and see
what happens inside inside Privy on Elm Street, see what's
going on. It's about thirteenth and fourteenth in Elm and
see what's going on in there. Walk in at night.
I'm not sure I'd be welcome, but nonetheless, take your
life in your hands. And what's happening in OTR is

(19:22):
and Pat and Michael brings it out is that police
are not conducting police activities, that is, pulling people over
for my which can be major offenses, leading to even
more important crimes such as speeding, running through red lights,
throwing trash out the window, open air drug use. That
kind of stuff leads to other indicators that where's your license?

(19:45):
I don't have a license. Show me your insurance. I
don't have insurance as car registered, I'm not sure who
owns it. I have no license plate.

Speaker 4 (19:52):
So be it.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
And what happens is that Scottie Johnson on City Council
and lemon Kearney and others have told the police to
be somewhat passive and enforcing crime in certain parts of town.
This would never work, by the way, in Hyde Park
or Oakley, that's different, and the residents there would like
police services, they would like to have traffic laws enforced,

(20:14):
but not in OTR, not in the Central Business District,
because there's too many people pulled over that looks like
Scottie Johnson. And so his point is when you pull
somebody over, it opens up a can of worms. Can
I see your license? Well, my license is suspended, all right,
get out of the car. I'm not getting out of
the car, I'm gonna I'm gonna arrest you. No, you're
not gonna arrest me. Then your hands on with someone,

(20:35):
and the police at all costs do not want that
to Those hurt by these passive, flaccid policies tend to
be the residents of the communities where these events take place.
Overwhelmingly black communities are under police today and most of
the residents want them to have proper policing, and it
doesn't happen because of what it leads to. What it

(20:57):
leads to are more offenses and more people being arrested
in Room Ay and Hamiliny County Justice Center. Room May
used to be in the Alms and Deputy building and
now it's in the Justice Center. Used to be filled
up the night before with a couple hundred people arrested,
and the fact no matter is there's few of any
people there doesn't happen anymore because well, city council and

(21:20):
the mayor and the city manager does not want aggressive
policing in the city of Cincinnati. A few hundred must
go to jail, so a few hundred thousand can have
a normal life until city council and now that they've
all been reelected. Aid and Comb and Saw got reelected
by wide margins, and the Mayor's been re elected. Instead
of getting eighty three percent of the vote, he got

(21:42):
eighty one percent of the vote. All the stuff in
Hyde Park, etc. Amounted to him getting about eighty two
percent of the vote in Hyde Park doesn't mount to
hell of beans. So the message taken away from council
is that what we're doing is acceptable. So the Michaels
of this world, the developers who want to make a
bus and take a shell of a building and turn

(22:02):
into something productive every night kind of take their hat
in their hands hoping it'll get shot or something bad happens.
If there are no go zones in OTR, don't you
think the police know where they are? Of course they do.
So instead of setting up shop and no go zones,
getting the small number of criminal elements out of OTR,

(22:23):
they allow it to transpire because of the people. The
color of the people getting arrested is not something that
they desire. And once again Channel nineteen had a first
Now Channel five had it with Karen Johnson last night
Shari Piello, in which the so called slap of Alex
Schravinsky resulting in this ultimate arrest because of the color
of his skin. Was an event that was in reaction

(22:46):
to other events that happened forty five seconds earlier. It
was started by those six individuals who wanted to telling
the so called white customers, you don't belong here. It's
a black event, the music festival is a black event.
Get off the street. And the first punches were thrown
by one of the six members who were black, attacking
Alex Stravinsky and then down the road. Forty five seconds later,

(23:10):
he responded to the assaults on him by slapping somebody
in the face. That resulted in his head being treated
like a soccer ball on Elm Street. That's what started
at all, and that's what started to Holly having the
crap kicked out of her. But the racial individuals, the
racial cloud from which they see through the racial prison

(23:30):
on City Council indicated that they had to find somebody
white to charge with the crime, and that was Alex Shavinski.
And now that the case is going to be dismissed
at some point, and his lawyer is going to make
sure the case is going to be dismissed. Be Fortycember
of the eighth. I assure you the city is not
going to go to trial and have Alex's criminal attorney
across examined, the mayor and the chief of police and

(23:53):
the line officers, etc. That's not going to happen. Believe me,
that's not going to happen. And so Alex's attorney, Doug
Brannon from Dayton, anticipate sometime soon now that the mayor
has been re elected, that case will slowly go away.
It would be a beautiful thing if on December the eighth,
Alex Stravinsky, who was the man beaten to within an
inch of his life, would actually go on trial for

(24:16):
disorderly conduct and put all these city leaders on the
stands to answer some questions. Do you think that's going
to happen? Man, I don't think so. Not going to occur.
So what does occur is that there are a lot
of movements the Trump derangement syndrome, the chaos being created
on a regular basis that attract disaffected and maladjusted individuals

(24:39):
who blame external factors for the system or for the
circumstances in which they find themselves and their lord. By
many utopian promises of criticisms of society where the a
lot in life is not defined by their personal choices
but by external forces such as racism or classism, something

(24:59):
like this. And ultimately, these so called left wing movements
rely upon deceit in propaganda and leading the scapegoating violence
and solitarianism. That's what's happening. I see it with Trump
arrangement syndrome. This morning, yours truly happened to be watching
MSNBC which is now ms NOW ms NOW, and they

(25:20):
pointed out that this morning, about eight thirty am, the
criminal case in Atlanta, Georgia against Donald Trump has resurrected itself.
You might recall a couple of years before the election,
when it was obvious Donald Trump might might want to
get his old job back, Biden's in the White House.

(25:40):
In the White House itself, they called meetings between New
York City and Atlanta and other Blue city prosecutors to
see who could file criminal charges against Donald Trump to
keep chaos going. And they wanted the mug shots at
Donald Trump and hopefully, hopefully the conviction of Donald Trump
on a felony Alvin Bragg in New York City. He
was successful and having some paperwork error result in thirty

(26:04):
four felon accounts, which will be thrown out on appeal
by the way. And then Fanny Willis and are a slim,
shady wade her boyfriend had the case blow up in
their face, but has been resurrected. And not just Donald
Trump and numerous other criminal defendants associated with the President
are now finding themselves in hot water once again in
the criminal courts of Atlanta Fulton County. Of course, Fanny

(26:27):
Willis is off the case, but now MSNBC seemed to
be ms now and CNN as a flutter with the
Georgia election case, and a new prosecutor has been appointed
to prosecute Donald Trump and all those around him. Of course,
Donald Trump cannot be prosecuted when he's in the White House.
But no matter what else happens, in about three years
he's out of the White House, he'll be like eighty

(26:49):
three years old, and Fulton County wants to go after
him again on criminal cases from the so called made
up elector scheme of twenty twenty. Does Arizona State of
Arizona have criminal charges against Donald Trump? They put on
hold for him, but all the others around Donald Trump
as chief of staff and about fifteen other people who

(27:10):
can't afford this kind of nonsense are going to have
face criminal charges. It's all part, shall we say, of chaos.
Does the democratic chaos strategy work? I think it does.
As soon as the election was over, they quickly had
a jumped to some other horse to ride for a while.
It became Jeffrey Epstein and that Donald Trump is a pedophile.

(27:32):
No he's not. In fact, the evidence indicates he's been
given a pass. He's been a clean bill of health
by not just the Biden administration, who wouldn't prosecute him
because there was nothing prosecuted about relative to Jeffrey Epstein,
but all the other counties and Blues states and want
to go after Donald Trump constantly. Do you think when
he leaves office in three years that the Blue cities

(27:55):
and the Blue states will say, Okay, we're done with that.
Absolutely not. They'll keep prosecuting him until he's dead. And
democratic chaos it works. Chaos when it comes to Russian collusion, delusion,
chaos when it comes to Obamacare, chaos with the criminal
cases in Georgia being resurrected, Chaos against ice. Watching TV

(28:19):
right now in Chicago, there's ice violence going on, fire
bombings of Tesla's and all the injunctions issued against them.
What happened in Berkeley, that this movement's on the left, live, die,
and breathe chaos constantly espressed by Jasmine Crockett and AOC
and Eric Swallwell and throw in other Democratic activists want

(28:43):
to have chaos reigning supreme with the Republicans, and Donald
Trump is the object of chaos, calling him every rotten,
filthy name of the book. And this morning the Trumpster
on truth Social talked about the number of times that
the name of Bill Gates and Bill Clinton and Larry
Summers and other big time Democratic donors are mentioned inside

(29:04):
the Epstein files. How much reporting have you seen on that? Correct?
None doesn't happen. Donald Trump's name is mentioned. None of
the victims have said that he sexually molested or raped
them while they were in the employee I guess of
Jeffrey Epstein, do you believe the victims? Liberals say, you

(29:27):
got to believe the victims, or the victims say, including
Virginia Goufrey, that Donald Trump was a complete gentleman. And
so nothing comes of this until the media creates a
diet tribe once again to keep the chaos going. And
the chaos will continue. It will never stop, It will
simply continue. This morning at Keem, Jeffries was on CNN

(29:48):
Morning Shows talking about January the thirtieth, it continues. I said,
what the Democrats are jeinting up? I guess how about
this one seventy ten weeks away, about seventy six days.
It's January the thirtieth. That's when the cr expires. They
want to go through this again. They want they want
the air system completely disheveled. They want those getting food

(30:11):
stamps to get nothing. The Democratic approach is to have
complete chaos and the media coverage confusing often the public.
They can't sort it all out. They know the Republicans
are in charge supposedly of everything, so they blame the
public upheaval which just go away, but the media will
not permit it. Every day they wake up with new
claims against Donald Trump, about Jeffrey Epstein, about Tesla. It

(30:38):
might be about crazy district court injunctions. It might be
about street violence or fire bombings. It might be more ice.
It might be more riots here, or there might be
more Charlie Kirk type riots that chaos continues, and as
an American, it's hard to sort it all out. But
here in the mean streets of Cincinnati, those who live
in OTR, including Michael No, there's certain no goes on

(31:00):
owns in the City of Cincinnati, well known by the
city of Police that refuse to enforce the law because
they're told not to enforce it by share a long
and you can't find her with a search warrant. Oh,
let's continue the line ever becomes available five one, three, seven, four, nine,
seven thousand. Coming up after one o'clock is Katie Talento,
and she worked for Donald Trump in twenty nineteen to

(31:21):
try to improve Obamacare or get it killed. It is
a dying federal government program costing a fortune that does
not provide good medical care, and it's failing. It's in
a death spiral. That means it must be doubled down
and more money must be spent. More chaos. Let's continue
twelve to fifty five, Home of your Bengals. Chaos and

(31:42):
nihilism reigned. Supreme Bill Cunningham, with you every day, Bill Cunningham,
the Great American. Of course, the healthcare prices in America
has caused the shutdown of the government now opened, and
watching one of the morning talk shows, King Jeffers is

(32:04):
saying they have another bite at the apple in about
ten weeks. January thirtieth is not that far away, and
he says there might be another government shutdown happening, which
is utterly ridiculous. Putting money into a failed system, a
failed government program, doubling down on stupid is often what
Democrats and what many in Washington do. Some are fighting

(32:24):
against it. Katie Talento is the executive director of Alliance
of Healthcare Sharing and first of all, Katie Talento tell us,
can you give me, generally in the American people the
status of health care in America today? Volumes have been
written on that topic. But about out ninety three percent
of us get either our health insurance or Medicare Medicaid

(32:46):
from private plans, through employers or veterans or whatever. It
might be about seven percent through the Obamacare exchanges, which
have failed miserably. So, since you're in the industry, what
is happening to us healthcare system in America in general
and the response to it by government.

Speaker 5 (33:02):
Well, it's not a good situation though, Thanks for having me. Yeah,
I think the affordability crisis is hitting everybody, and so
you know, premiums are up double digits this year for everyone,
even if federal employee has got a twelve percent rate hike,
So you know, they get no love for having been
put out of work for you know, twenty seven weeks,
but they have to now pay more for their insurance too,

(33:25):
so at least they're suffering with the rest of us.
I do think that this is going to become a
campaign issue unfortunately, and Republicans are usually in trouble when
healthcare becomes a campaign issue. You know, I was a
veteran of the White House when we were doing repeal
and replace back in the day, and I can tell
you it's going to take longer than you know, five
weeks for us to negotiate some sort of master plan here.

(33:48):
So I think that if the Democrats want to have
another shutdown, they will do that at their political peril.
But you know, that may not be the best thing
for the American people.

Speaker 1 (33:56):
At this point. What happened. I've done any topics the
last few days weeks on the failure of Obamacare, in
which is government subsidizing and billions of dollars It might
be forty to fifty billion a year. Maybe you have
the number that Washington sends directly to insurance companies under
a promise to hold down premiums and to the seven

(34:18):
percent twenty three million people on Obamacare. Why did Obamacare fail?

Speaker 5 (34:26):
So the promise to hold down premiums has not really
been tested. Obviously, the premiums have skyrocketed. They've more than
tripled since twenty ten when the bill was first enacted. However,
affordability is sort of addressed by Obamacare because they just
subsidize your overpriced premiums, and so the vast majority of
people who are buying their plans on the Obamacare exchanges

(34:48):
are getting premium subsidies, so their premiums are either free
or they are largely subsidized. And that is truly the
only way that you can keep anyone who is younger
or healthier, or who is not sort of already sick
from fleeing this market where it's so unaffordable that they.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
Don't see the value of it.

Speaker 5 (35:06):
But they need to have all these younger, healthy people
in the insurance pool, or the insurers do, or else
it'll go into what we call in the insurance business
the death spiral where it's just sicker and older and
sicker and older people every year, and then the premiums
go up, and then a few more younger healthy people
leave because they can't afford it anymore, and then it's
older and sicker, and so this get you get into

(35:28):
the spiral, and that's that's the death of an insurance product.
So they have to force people to stay in the pool,
and that's why it's failing. It was never a good
value for young healthy people. When you're requiring these policies
to cover everything from abortion and transurgeries to maternity writers

(35:48):
for men and you know, preventive cap smears for men,
you know, like this is this is too much. It's
too much insurance coverage for what most people need, and
it's not enough insurance coverage for the people who do
need it because the deductibles are so high they can't
even afford to use their plan when they do need it.
So it's an absolute failure. I do think that there

(36:09):
are promising alternatives out there, like health care sharing ministries,
like health Savings account, like direct primary Care, which is
sort of a Netflix subscription for unlimited primary care. And
people are fleeing to these better alternatives that feel more
human and feel more rational meeting their needs.

Speaker 1 (36:27):
Funding of failure is what Washington does, which is why
Democrats want Obamacare to be funded. I spoke to a
twenty eight year old who called in a couple a
week or two ago, and this guy says, look, I
was in Obamacare for like two years. I got out
because I never I never used it. I never went
to the er. I never I had a primary care physician,
but I didn't feel a need to go. It was

(36:48):
costing me seven hundred dollars a month, and I'm thinking,
why am.

Speaker 6 (36:50):
I doing it?

Speaker 1 (36:51):
I got rid of it. Plus, he said to me, look,
isn't it true, he called me uncle Bill. Isn't it true,
uncle Bill, that if I have something bad happens to me,
I can go to the er anyway and get care
at the er, and if I can't pay for it,
I can't pay for it. So why have insurance if
I get the product anyway for nothing? How do you
respond to him?

Speaker 5 (37:11):
He's exactly right, He's making completely rational choices. You can
go to the er and they are required to treat
you regardless of your coverage. Now you might end up
with a really horrific bill being said to you. You
might end up in collections over it, but at least
you will be treated in that moment if you're having
a life threatening issue. I totally sympathize with your caller
because he's the exact reason why Obamacare is failing. Young

(37:35):
healthy people. They just see no value in this product,
and so why would they say, And so you're left
with only healthy, unhealthy, expensive people driving up premiums so
that it happens even worse next year. That's why this
whole project has failed, and that's why we've got to
seek alternatives. I was so encouraged by President Trump tweeting

(37:56):
or rather truthing out in the past couple weeks about
let's just stop putting money in insurers pocket and let's
actually put it in health savings accounts for people so
they can go buy what they want.

Speaker 1 (38:08):
Great idea, but a Keem Jeffries and the Democrats don't
want any part of that because it puts the person
in charge, not big time health insurers who pay them
huge amounts of money and campaign I think the average
America don't understand that. How about how much money every
year goes from the US Treasury to big time health
insurers in order to knock down the premiums of individuals

(38:31):
who may not use the product at all. And how
much money is the taxpayer funding healthcare insurance companies? How
much money we're talking about about, It's.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
About a trillion dollars.

Speaker 1 (38:42):
I published with it with a trillion.

Speaker 5 (38:45):
With a team of Johns Hopkins researchers. A few years ago,
we estimated that almost half forty seven percent of the
entire United States budget goes towards some form of health care.

Speaker 1 (39:00):
If you're United healthcare, are you in the business having
taken all this money from the government under Obamacare? Are
you in the business and making sure that you're ensured
have great healthcare at to low cost, or are you
in the business of making money?

Speaker 5 (39:16):
Well, that's exactly right. You know, these giant companies we
call them the Bukahs, Blue Cross, United, Signa at nine, Humana, Buca,
and these these giant companies nobody had ever heard of
some of them, you know, years ago, and now they're.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
On the Fortune fifty list.

Speaker 5 (39:30):
Their stockholders are loving it, living it up, and you know,
their CEOs are living off they're billionaires. And you know, meanwhile,
United Healthcare is denying a furtive every claim that comes
to them, and most people think of their insurer like
the cable company. They hate them. And so this is
a product that nobody really wants to pay for because

(39:50):
they don't see the value in it, and when they
really need it, when they really need it, it's an
absolute bureaucractic night there to use.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
Aren't the insurance companies because they are a for profit
business in the business of denying claims and having high deductibilities.
And that's true because I listened to a Keem Jeffries.
If Republicans don't agree to this, you want people to
be sick and die in hospitals. You don't want people
to get medical care. In reality, the Democrats get millions
of dollars in campaign donations from insurance companies, and aren't

(40:23):
they in the business of making money and not in
the business of providing healthcare?

Speaker 5 (40:29):
Well, the secret of the dirty little secret of healthcare
is that the insurers are interested in high prices from hospitals,
and hospitals are interested in lots of sick people. So
when you get paid when people are sick and high
price stuff is done to them, you're going to get
more sickness and higher price stuff, and that's what we're
seeing over and over again.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
You also say in this column you believe that the
recent US government shutdown that ended after forty three days
result of from protecting lucrative political donations from big healthcare insurance.
And the media never asked a King Jeffries or Democrats
the question, how come we're funding the BUCA, the large

(41:10):
Blue Cross Blue Shield and United Healthcare and SIGNA. We're
funding them and they're in the business of screwing the
policy holders. Why isn't that brought up by the media.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
Well, you know, to be fair to these politicians.

Speaker 5 (41:24):
And let me tell you, the healthcare swamp funds all
parties and every single one of them. You know, the
pharma industry alone has four or five lobbyists for every
member of Congress. So nobody is innocent here in DC.
But I will tell you that you know, these people,
they are in the business of making money and profiting
off of our sickness. But the American people are also

(41:46):
absolutely committed to having insurance at any cost.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
I mean, we have seen that.

Speaker 5 (41:52):
It's unfortunately, if you try to take i mean the
battle scars from the repeal and replaced effort in twenty seventeen.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
If you try to take a.

Speaker 5 (42:01):
Single dollar away from insurance subsidies for even a small
percentage of the American people, you will lose the next election.
So I think the Republicans take this issue on at
their peril. The Democrats take this issue on at their peril.
It's very perils, just going to make everybody a little
bit scared. So it'll be very interesting to see what
happened over the next few weeks.

Speaker 1 (42:21):
You seem to say, almost Katie Talento of the Alliance
for Health Care Sharing, it's almost a soluble problem that
Democrats are incentivized to keep the issue front and center.
By the way, Obamacare had little or nothing to do
with the shutdown, because the shutdown was shutting down the
whole government. So the Democrats said, look, we're not going
to pay the soldiers, We're going to make TSC agents

(42:42):
sleep in their cars, We're going to shut down snap,
We're going to shut down the entire government on this
unrelated issue of giving money to insurance companies out of
the public treasury. And I think the American people bought
it because politically, most of the polls now indicate this
weekend that Republicans are blamed for the for the shutdown
and not Democrats. So when Republicans voted to open the

(43:04):
government and Democrats voted to close the government, the American
people believe that the Republicans closed the government and the
Democrats wanted to open the government, when in reality, the
Republicans wanted to open the government and the Democrats wanted
to close the government. You know what I'm saying, democratically,
the Democratic Party.

Speaker 5 (43:21):
Won, no, I mean, they're in the civil war right
now over. You know, they're eight traders who actually opened
the governments. But those eight traders, the Democrats who voted
with the Republicans to reopen the government government, they're the
ones in the swing states, so they kind of know
that this is not actually a good plan to just

(43:41):
shut down not do their jobs for months on end.
So I think Democrats that actually are in any kind
of political peril, we're thanking these eight behind behind the back,
behind the scenes all right now.

Speaker 1 (43:53):
And lastly, for those of us who receive healthcare from
our employer, I work for a large company and it
takes a degree in Chinese calculus to figure out all
the plans and the deductibilities, and do you want this rider?
Do you want that rider? Do you want prescriptive care?
Do you want not want it? Do you want maternity care?
I don't need that very much. Do I need transgender care?

(44:13):
Which I don't think? God hope I never need that.
So I leave it to my wife to decide what
do we do. And according to polling, the majority of
employee or employee based plans are popular with employees, which
is about one hundred and fifty some million people. But
still the cost keeps going up. If you're on Medicare
Medicaid generally you pay little or nothing anyway. You don't

(44:35):
have a dog in the fight. So can you tell
me get out your crystal ball, Katie Talento? How does
this issue resolve itself without a complete collapse of our
medical system? How do we resolve it?

Speaker 2 (44:48):
Well, I don't know that we're going to I'm very nervous.

Speaker 5 (44:52):
I'm very nervous that we're going to end up with
single payer at some point because it is not a
sustainable trajectory. And you're exactly right that those who are
bearing the largest cost of this are wage earners at
big employers who are actually paying for most healthcare in
this country. You're right, half those country is insured on

(45:12):
the job. And those companies, you know, they have some
other core mission that's not running a health plan, but
they're now in the health insurance business, and that business
is absolutely spiraling. And so it's a huge crisis for
every company. And so if we don't get this under control,
I fear very much it will be the business community
that pressures Congress to have a complete government takeover.

Speaker 1 (45:34):
Of health care. Lastly, explain single payer. I have a
pretty good grasp of what it is that everyone under medicare.
Explain to the average Americans what is single payer, how
would it work, and why is it a bad idea?

Speaker 5 (45:49):
Yeah, so single payer is what every other country in
the world, literally every other country in the world, has
decided to do about healthcare, where the government actually pays
for healthcare, and they do it. In some countries like
Israel and Germany, they basically do it like an Obamacare
on steroids, where it's all filter through insurance companies which
are just agents of the state. But at least you

(46:10):
pick an insurance plan like Medicare Advantage for instance. But
other countries like the UK or like Canada, you know,
they just have the government. You just walk into the
government clinic and the government hospital and there are no
insurance companies. And the reason why this is a problem,
and I mean again like there are trade offs, right
for some services like primary care, it's a much better

(46:32):
experience and it's much more sane in these countries where
you have easy and free and unlimited access to primary
care and preventive care. But what happens in these situations
is when it comes times that you need specialty care,
there is rationing and long lines, and you don't get
the best technology, and you don't get the timely treatment,

(46:52):
and cancer patients are waiting and people with you know
who neednee replacements are waiting for years. There are people
who die on the wait list for their knee replacement.
So it's just it's not a good situation, and America
has chosen a different path. I hope that we figure
a way out of this. There are some innovative and
creative ideas out there, like health care sharing ministries, like

(47:13):
health savings accounts for everyone. I think that might help
as we as you know, President Trump actually implemented when
I was there, a price transparency initiative forcing hospitals and
insurers to post their secret prices publicly in an effort
to try to create a healthcare market. What we have
right now is either free nor market in healthcare. So

(47:33):
to the extent that we can force an actual christ
competition in health care, we might just be able to
pull this thing off. But it's going to take a
miracle from God.

Speaker 3 (47:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:42):
Well, Katie Talento, Executive director of Alliance of health Care Sharing,
you've laid it out, and I fear this issue is
too easy to demagogue, which means sure, I had it
toured within ten years of Medicare for All system in
which you will ration healthcare, and it's going to be
similar to Canada. And most of my Canadian friends get

(48:04):
their medical services of any exceptional quality or quantity from
the United States. They don't stick in Canada because they
get a knee replacement or they have cancer treatment. It's
taking months, it'll die on the list before it's replaced.
And if someone needs a knee replacement in America, you
can get it. You get it a week from Tuesday.
Katie Talento, you're a great American. Laid out the problems

(48:24):
once again. Thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show,
and Katie, you're a great American.

Speaker 3 (48:28):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (48:30):
Thank you, Bill, you too, God bless you.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
Let's continue with more. There you go. I don't know
what to say, but the politicians, especially Democrats, are not
incentivized to solve the problem because politically, in their minds,
they benefit from low information voters. Bill Cunningham, News Radio
seven hundreds WLW.

Speaker 7 (48:48):
What done Cincinnati? No point with that, but iss you
do a bit of mathematics. I'm going to go that
we called Cincinnati. Yeah, on the three games? How many goes.

Speaker 3 (49:07):
Five? Good? And how many go to the discode? Okay,
so we won't. We won't. So we wont five three
and we're out?

Speaker 1 (49:20):
What O? Hello? Quiet scos, I'm broadcasting segue. Have high
school girls soccer royalty here? But that is the coach
of the Columbus crew, bad mouth and f seed tell
the American people.

Speaker 8 (49:40):
I couldn't understand much of what he was saying. I
have no idea what his problem is. Well, he crossed
two to one, they lost two to one in the
three game series. I don't know what he's complained about.
What they're going to do replay the game. He's a
socialist from Germany.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
What does he know?

Speaker 8 (49:53):
Well, we welcome in the Maderra Amazon's earning a three
nil win over Doylestown Chippewa, capturing the Division five girls
state championship in soccer and historic Crew Stadium, the third
girls state title have a school history and second in
a row.

Speaker 1 (50:12):
Madera is here, and also coach Brady is here. He's
kind of like the Zach Taylor of Madeira High School
girls soccer. Hopefully you'll do better than.

Speaker 8 (50:21):
The president of up eighteen four and one, by the way,
a little bit better than three and six.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
Coach Brady went to this team having madea the other
girls did not have, going back a couple of years.
These girls looked angry, They look ready for victory. They
got scars all over their body, they got stitches, they
got head wraps, their knees have all been worked on.
What do these girls have the other girls didn't have,
who didn't win state titles. Oh, they were ultra competitive
for sure.

Speaker 3 (50:44):
Me nasty.

Speaker 9 (50:45):
I think they kind of had a legacy of winning
its state championship last year and they wanted to continue
that and they wouldn't be denied for sure.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
Three overall and two back to back to back. Is
the covered empty or is it covered full? Because demands
more nil money. The girls are now going to be
paid serious money to Wednesday titles nil. So who's coming
back next year? We have a great junior class coming back.

Speaker 9 (51:11):
We have great sophomores, We have some good freshmen, some
incoming kids are coming in and hungry, Yeah, hungry. The
cupboard is definitely full.

Speaker 1 (51:20):
And Coach Brady introduce these fine young Amazons. By the way,
Madeira voted not to have the name Mustangs apply to
the girls teams. The girls who dominate life in general
wanted to stick with the Amazons instead of the Mustangs.
All right, absolutely, Amazon's they ride the Mustangs. Introduce these
fine young Americans. So I've brought with us our captains

(51:41):
and our senior class.

Speaker 9 (51:42):
And I'll start with our two junior captains, Elilah bears Eilah.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
And then what street do you live on? Jeweler, that's
next to Jeffey, very close to Jeffey. Next up, Macy Mueller,
what street do you live on?

Speaker 3 (51:57):
She's rich?

Speaker 1 (51:58):
Next up, ellamulen Ella. She looks mean and nasty. She's ready.
She's a senior. Right, she is a senior. What position
did you play? Outside back?

Speaker 3 (52:10):
What is that?

Speaker 1 (52:10):
The rest of all? That's a defender like a linebacker.
Come up to the microphone here the next up you
come on up your next girl, introduce her. This is
another senior, captain, Natasha Davis. Natasha, where do you go to?
Where do you want to go to college? If anywhere,
I'm still a.

Speaker 5 (52:24):
Study if I want to play college soccer. But if
I don't play college, so then.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
I'll go to use see problem you see and study
what academic discipline? What do you want to be when
you grow up? If anything? Definitely a nurse.

Speaker 3 (52:36):
I like that.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
We need more people. Maybe you'll be caring for me
in a few years. Hopefully you do a good job.
Next up, next girls, This is another senior, Olivia Davin
for Olivia. Come on up here, Olivia. What do you
like about Madeira schools? And I ask you about Kenji
and the problems he calls as a superintendent? What do
you like about Madeira? There's a lot of opportunities of
one on one. Is John a pretty good coach, assistant

(52:59):
coach or doesn't know what he's talking about?

Speaker 3 (53:00):
Or not? All right?

Speaker 1 (53:03):
Next up introduced this another fine senior goalkeeper, Mikayla Michaela.
Come on up here, Michaela. Was there a point in
this season you had a doubt whether Madere would win
again a state title? Where was it unlikely when you
played deer Park you could even compete against that school?
Or did you have doubts you could beat deer Park?

Speaker 7 (53:25):
Next?

Speaker 1 (53:26):
He played eight or eighty minutes.

Speaker 8 (53:28):
I had two saves to cheap keep chip Awall off
the board the title game.

Speaker 1 (53:34):
Next up, young lady, come on up here, another senior,
Riley Donovan. What street do you live on? If Anny?
She's rich again too? What position did you play? If any? Defense?
Defense like a linebacker, like a safety, like a cornerback?
All right, Next up, goalkeeping coach? The coach up, she

(53:54):
lives in deer Park. Correct? In fact, my pseudo, I
think got his chops at deer Park. His assistant super into.
Now tell me about the girls. Is the goaltender coach?
What is these goaltenders brought to the table that you
taught them? Otherwise they would have lost the championship. What
did you teach them?

Speaker 10 (54:09):
Well, they have quite the eagerness to learn. Actually, a
fun fact about Mikayla. She three years ago was a
field player and so she embraced this role on the
team of goalkeeper that we asked her.

Speaker 1 (54:22):
To and big hat got big hands.

Speaker 6 (54:24):
Yeah, yeah, good hands, that's for sure.

Speaker 10 (54:26):
So very proud of her.

Speaker 1 (54:28):
Now. In the last game, Coach Brady, tell me what happened.
The game started, the ball was left, the ball was right,
it was kicked up in the air, owheaders were reused,
and knees ankles. Tell me about the last game.

Speaker 9 (54:37):
So the last game we were we played the same
teams we played last year to us Joy's township.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
Well, how bad you beat them last year? We beat
them three to zero last year consistent, So you beat
them six to zero two games.

Speaker 9 (54:48):
Absolutely, so we didn't really know what to expect, but
we did score relatively early again for the second time.

Speaker 1 (54:54):
Makes a big difference.

Speaker 9 (54:55):
It makes a big difference when you got the best
defense in the state. And I think it gave us
a lot of confident. Yeah, that's right, seg.

Speaker 1 (55:01):
Maybe maybe they could play for the Bengals in Pittsburgh.
They played that kind of defense. Gave me some sports
and make it fast. These kids want to answer some
tough questions because We're going to see how good the
Madeira education is.

Speaker 8 (55:12):
Sega will He the stuot reporters of proud service of
your local tame Star Heating and air Conditioning dealers, Tamestar
quality you could feel in beautiful Southeastern Indiana called Joe
Exstein at Eckstein Heating and Cooling at eight one, two, nine,
three to two, twenty twenty six sports. I also want
to thank Lear's Prime Market Willie with their lunch today

(55:34):
Deluxe Delhi located in beautiful downtown Milford, Learsprime dot Com.
Lears Prime always a cut above, give me a full report.
Now you've got high school football tonight all across a
tri state Willy coverage at six High School Football Tonight
show on Fox Sports thirteen to sixty. That'll lead into
the Division one Regional semi final at Welcome Stadium. Fans

(55:55):
are probably there now, Saint X and Mohler.

Speaker 1 (55:59):
Who do you likes? Bombers?

Speaker 8 (56:03):
I'm taking mo. I'll bet your hot sun over the Bombers.
How about this for a semi final match? I mean
two eleven and O teams taft the Indian Hill.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
Benji says, to take taft, I'm not sure that's the case,
he says, Indian Hill cannot win.

Speaker 8 (56:19):
Kentucky's into the second round and in the fourth round
at night, East Central and Lawrenceburg look to.

Speaker 1 (56:25):
Advance Trojans against the Tigers.

Speaker 8 (56:28):
Arizona and the Bearcats tomorrow in Big twelve play at
Nipper at eleven o'clock.

Speaker 1 (56:31):
Here on seven hundred WLW Bengals update.

Speaker 8 (56:35):
Let's see no Trey Henderson or Shamar Stewart Sunday with injuries?

Speaker 1 (56:41):
Which show is going to play quarterback? Joe Flacco? All right,
who's the governor of the state of Ohio? Girls, very good?
Give me three rights in the first Amendment US Constitution?
What are three of the five rights guaranteed to Americans
in the first first Amendment to the Constitution?

Speaker 5 (57:02):
Speech cross an assembly?

Speaker 1 (57:05):
Excuse me?

Speaker 3 (57:06):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (57:06):
What's the square root of eighty one nine?

Speaker 2 (57:12):
Well?

Speaker 1 (57:12):
Look at me. You keep going to the question. Who
was the second president of the United States? Not George Washington?
Who followed after him and him to bear after him?
That's it, Adams. Hopefully they don't drink it. Girls. Congratulations,
You've been a champion in sports, and I'll be a
champion in life. Three rules? What three rules of life.
Write them down. One graduate can you do that?

Speaker 11 (57:35):
Two?

Speaker 1 (57:35):
Either work or go to college? Can you do that?
And three don't commit crime?

Speaker 6 (57:39):
Can you do that?

Speaker 1 (57:40):
Don't need a government program, don't need help, don't have
to ban the red bikes. Don't worry about the food trucks.
Don't worry about curfews. None of your kids are walking
around Maderra at two o'clock in the morning, are you no?

Speaker 4 (57:51):
So?

Speaker 1 (57:52):
Number one? Graduate? Number two, work or go to school.
Number three, don't commit crime, and you'll be a success
in life. Benji coach Brady on congratulations. Any questions any
comments from you, Canchy, you're here all the time. None.
He's picking. He's picking Tampa beat Indian Hill. I know
that boy segment. Get me out of the student's report. Girls, Congratulations, the.

Speaker 8 (58:12):
Billion honor of the Division five state champions in soccer,
the Madera Amazons, all.

Speaker 1 (58:19):
The words of the Stooge report always could be with you.

Speaker 3 (58:24):
Bill, see you later.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
Whose voice is that?

Speaker 3 (58:29):
That's him?

Speaker 7 (58:29):
Right?

Speaker 1 (58:29):
The goalkeeper got that she had a kick saved right there? Girls. Congratulations,
I'll see most of you next year. Bill cunning In
the Great American Life, It's remember the Bengals News Radio
seven hundred wl WINT Dave Keaton hit the music the

(58:52):
Boy you think It's over and has just begun. I
think many of us, be included had taught the Georgia
criminal cases again. Donald Trump had evaporated after the misdeeds
of Fanny Willis and Nathan Wade. But no, they have
not gone away. It was announced this morning that a
new state Georgia prosecutor has been appointed in order to

(59:14):
pursue the criminal charges against Donald Trump and most of
his associates, to lock them up in Georgia state jails. Now,
in Donald Trump's case, that will not happen, nor can
a trial take place until after his presidency has concluded.
At that point, according to prosecutor, had just heard him
with Matt Reese talk about breaking down the cases in

(59:34):
a smaller, more digestible modules so that a overall grand
conspiracy or rico case would not lie. So that means
that the current Georgia State prosecutor is going to look
at ways of charging Donald Trump in about fifteen to
twenty other associates of trying to fix the Georgia election,

(59:54):
which of course did not have failed miserably. It didn't work.
Georgia was one, as you might recall by Donald Trump, etc.
I'm sorry, by Biden and the US Senators, And what
they want to do, somehow is to change the outcome
of the election. What they want to do is prosecute
Donald Trump and everyone else. So if you're Donald Trump,
it's something thunder on the horizon that may come back

(01:00:18):
to you in two or three years plus from now,
when you're eighty three years old. You could be sitting
in a Georgia state courtroom like you did in New
York City with Alvin Bragg, fending off these ridiculous charges.
But if you're one of the twelve to fifteen other
individuals who simply were around Donald Trump, like his chief
of staff, like Meadows, like his chief economic advisor, like

(01:00:39):
those involved in the effort to count ballots in the
state of Georgia, your behavior is now criminal and they're
coming after you and most normal Americans you're and me included.
We cannot afford to have a half million dollars or
more in legal fees to pay out. And that assumes
that you're found not guilty. If you're found guilty, and

(01:01:00):
then the criminal appeal process starts, and you'll be at
this for the next several years trying to fend off
criticisms that you were in some conspiracy with Donald Trump
to send a different slate of electors to Washington from
the state of Georgia, which, by the way, has happened
repeatedly in American history. Now, it happened repeatedly when we
didn't have means of communication we have today. But it

(01:01:22):
was not unusual for two sets of electors to go
from Iowa to Washington, d C. In the early part
of the twentieth century, and then the House would determine
which state of electors to sit and they're the ones
that vote. It's happened repeatedly. But now this has been
criminalized by Fanny Willison by the Democratic Party again, same

(01:01:42):
things occurring in the state of Arizona, where a presidential
partner commutation doesn't lie, it's a state charge. And so
talk about the threats to democracy, talk about weaponizing the
law because of one's political persuasion. It's been going on
against Donald Trump now forbout the last ten years, and
this can continuing. When I had on Eric Trump, we
scheduled have Eric Trump come on again next week. Talk

(01:02:05):
about what's happened to his family since the president decided
to run for office. They're attacking through all means necessary unnecessary.
So the whole Georgia thing, many thought, Okay, that's going
to go away, that's not going to work, that'll never fly. Well,
guess what, it's back. It's back again with a vengeance.
And so maybe some of the twelve to fifteen other

(01:02:26):
criminal defendants indicted by Fanny Willis who don't have the
presidency to protect them, may be in the criminal court
in the middle of next year on charges that carried
ten years in prison. And those are the games the
Democratic Party play. Same thing in Arizona, same thing in
New York City. Alvin Bragg took payments to a porn
star and said that the Donald did not put her

(01:02:49):
name on the forms making a campaign donation when she
was paid off. Now that is not the right of
a state prosecutor to do it. But Donald was convicted.
His sentence was cr which means costs permitted. But he's
still appealing that. And so when you associate with Donald Trump,
the Democratic Party wants to make it sure that you

(01:03:11):
know there's consequences of state, local, city, county, and federal
prosecutors that will come after you. In fact, King Jeffries
and others said that if in when they seize the
presidency again, which might happen in twenty eight, they're going
to continue to weaponize the Department of Justice against Donald
Trump and the Republicans go back after them again and
again and again. When does it stop. I have no

(01:03:34):
idea when it stops, but I know for America it's
not a good thing. So we'll see what happens down
the road. And that's something to keep your eye on,
because they're coming after him through any means necessary, you know.
Every now and then I like to do a little
bit of a week in review of what we've done
this week. If you miss the day, you miss a lot.
There was a poll taken that's seventy percent of Tri
State residents if you would have picked one radio station

(01:03:57):
to listen to and none other, it would be this one.
And so I take that seriously. On Monday, I had
on Senator John Euston from Ohio about the shutdown what
was going to happen a day or two later, and
Euston to pointed out that by voting to keep the
government open as John Eusta did. The media is saying
he's trying to shut down the government, and when US

(01:04:19):
senators of the Democratic Persuasion voted seventeen times to keep
the government shut down, the media says what they were
trying to do was open the government, which is an
incredible juxtaposition to reality. That's not the case. In fact,
this morning I watched the game Jeffries talk again about
what's going to happen January the thirtieth. He was on

(01:04:39):
MSNBC soon to become ms now the leader of the
Democrats in the House said on June twenty ninth, I'm sorry.
On January twenty eighth, twenty ninth, and thirtieth, they're going
to again to try to have the American people pay
for a debt spiral of Obamacare to keep it propped
up with your tax dollars. And he says we may
shut down the government again, and this time he thinks

(01:05:02):
it will last longer than forty three days. This is absurd,
it is wrong. If the media covered it correctly, we'd
have different outcomes. Pursuing there too. I had on Curtis
Howk of the Media Research Center, and they record all
the ABCNBCCBS, and the PBS broadcast in NPR. Ninety one

(01:05:23):
percent of the media coverage was blaming the Republicans for
the shutdown, even though the Republicans voted against the shutdown
and given credit to the Democrats, even though the Democrats
voted to keep the government shut down. Many of the
American people were so confused with what's going on they
simply blamed Donald Trump. And how do we get out
of this cycle? I have no clue. As many said

(01:05:46):
in the beginning and the founding this great nation, it's
a republic if you can keep it. And that means
that if the mass means of communication have failed, and
that more and more individuals can't trust what they hear
in the mainstream media. About seventy five percent don't trust
what they hear and what they see because they don't
believe it's truthful. Where do you get necessary information upon

(01:06:07):
which you can cast an inform ballid hopefully places begin
like right here and on Tuesday and on Congressman Soldier
brad Winstrop retired as a colonel, and he talked about
the politics of the shutdown, which ended, of course, and
they were getting ready to vote on Wednesday to open
up the government, and brad winstro pointed out that the

(01:06:28):
Democratic Party, when they're out of power, is in the
business of suing and prosecuting Republicans, and secondly, they're in
the business of blaming the other side for the failures
of their policies, most of which was the Unaffordable Care Act,
which told to Americans not covered by insurance anywhere else,
come into the exchanges. The government will make a lot

(01:06:50):
of the payments for you. Your Obama promised that twenty
five hundred dollars a year would go down in premium payments.
He promised that Obamacare would cause the deficit to be
reduced by four trillion dollars, and that the average premium
would continue to go down because more people were in
the pool. As things turned out, As I pointed out
about an hour or so ago, I have a relative

(01:07:11):
of mind who calls me uncle Willie, who called me
twenty seven years old. And so I've been in the
Obamacare exchanges now for two years. I'm a young, healthy
male and I'm covered in a sense for medical care
because I can go to the er to get coverage.
Because you can't turn me down. Why do I pay
seven hundred dollars a month with a five thousand dollars deductible,

(01:07:32):
So he pays about what about eighty four hundred dollars
a year in premiums. He's got a five thousand dollars deductible.
That means he's got to have he's got to have pay.
He's got to have bills of about thirteen and a
half thousand dollars each year before he gets a nicola coverage.
He said, this is stupid. I'm dropping my Obamacare. And
I said, well, if you do that and you have

(01:07:53):
to go to the er if something serious happened and
a single pay, which is you, it means that you'll
be charged and if you don't pay, they'll send you
to collections if you can't work it out. He said,
I don't want that either to ruin my credit. I said,
good point. So decide which way you want to go.

Speaker 3 (01:08:08):
Stay in.

Speaker 1 (01:08:09):
Do an exchange that you don't use that cost about
fourteen thousand dollars a year as a young person before
you get to have a nickel of coverage. And if
you don't do that, you may have bad credit for
the rest of your life. And so when this comes up,
I mentioned this to my guest about an hour ago.
This is all headed toward a single pair system in
which medicare what's like in most of Western Europe. It's

(01:08:31):
like the DMV. You're not charging anything as part of
your taxes, but care is to minimus. There's no great
pharmaceutical discoveries that doctor carryoucus is don't work in that environment.
Many persons that are younger don't want to get into
medical care. It's too expensive. And when you put thirty
million additional people into the country, thirty million illegals, on

(01:08:54):
top of the twenty million already here, maybe fifty million
people live in this country, they shouldn't be here. Housing
will go up, emergency use will go up, the public
schools will get more crowded, and average Americans like you
and I will pay the burden of all that. So
it is sick and it's sad, and it's the way
things are. And then later on Wednesday, we had the

(01:09:15):
big vote on Wednesday night in the past, but you
and I heard from Congressman Warren Davidson who talked about
the fact there will be two or three Republicans that
are going to shall I say, vote to keep the
government shut down. The great majority of ninety seven percent
voted to open it up. But he said there will
be four or five Democrats who have some common sense
that live in swing districts that can't vote that way.

(01:09:36):
And so the Democratic Party voted to make sure TSA
agents continue to sleep in their cars, that soldiers are
not paid, that the hunger are not fed. But if
you ask the American people, the polling came out today
in one source that the Republicans were blamed for the
shutdown and not the Democrats. So they know the end
of January, the primaries are going to be in many

(01:09:57):
states in March, April, and May getting ready for the midterm.
So the Democratic Party once again will say we want
to keep alive and intact a failing, large, expensive government
program that benefits less than seven percent of the American
people and call it healthcare when it's not healthcare. And
then yesterday I also had on Kully Stimpson of the

(01:10:18):
Heritage Foundation about what's happening at cal Berkeley. In fact,
many college campuses that Charlie Lark legacy continues, but on
many college campuses you can't express certain viewpoints of a
conservative Christian character otherwise you'll be have your tables turned
over and you'll be assaulted. And thank god the EUSt
Department of Justice Civil Rights Division is going to be

(01:10:38):
out there to hold accountable in Berkeley, which is the
free speech, free speech haven, the idea that all speech,
especially this kind of speech, should get some benefits. And lastly,
today add on Michael whose last name must be saved,
a big time developer and OTR you miss the day,
you miss a lot. He talked about the daily risk

(01:10:58):
of living and to OTR he talked about the seven
figure investments he made in apartment buildings. In fact, there's
a bar there called Privies, which is violent, in which
four people were shot about a week ago. That every day,
every night when they let out his open air drug use,
there's lots of blood running in the streets in and
around Privy. He's complained many times as many OTR residents

(01:11:22):
have complained to city council to share along at that purival.
Get no return calls. But the most important two things
he said. I think Michael said is that there are
no go zones in OTR. That if you live in OTR,
which he does, he knows which streets to go on
to which streets not to go on to in OTR,
and the police know what streets to go on to,

(01:11:43):
which streets not to go on to. He also said
that the gunfire is a frequent part of what occurs.
I know Channel nine is tried now repeatedly to get
shot spotter out of OTR. A captain sent me a
shot spot or detailer when shots are fired in the
last ninety days. If you took a blank piece of
white paper and took some black pepper and shook it

(01:12:04):
on the paper repeatedly, you'll get some idea that there's
thousands of shots fired every month in OTR in the
central Business District that generally don't hit people. You might
be wounded, four to five hundred are wounded, but most
are not killed. And I think Michael made the point
that city council and the city manager is not listening
to the homeowners and to the businesses in OTR. As

(01:12:27):
a consequence, it's teetering and hopefully it won't tip over
and lastly miss the day you miss a lot. Katy
Talento came on. She was part of the Trump team
in twenty eighteen twenty nineteen to get rid of Obamacare,
because it is too expensive, does not provide care, but
mainly it benefits greatly the insurance companies who have been

(01:12:47):
paid one trillion dollars to provide coverage to individual Americans.
And they're in the business of denying care, denying coverage
and making you appeal till you give up. Also because
of the deductibilities healthcare at all, and the premiums are
going up and up and up, and those healthy in
the system going down and down and down, which means

(01:13:07):
that things in a death spiral. When something is in
a death spiral, do not try to prop it up
illicitly by putting more money into it. The program has failed,
so let's not continue to fund it. Democrats don't feel
that way. You miss the day, you miss a lot.
Let's continue with more. After two thirty we scheduled to
have the Seat and Saints here. The Seat and Saints
a volleyball team who won the state title. And there's

(01:13:30):
a pleasure to have the kids from Madeira. I see
many of those girls in and in and around Madera
at Starbucks, et cetera. And they're the hope of this
great nation. Led a course by Kenji Matsudu Matsudo and
also coach Brady and John from Harvard two twenty five
Home of your Bengals. Maybe next time we'll get together
on Monday. The Bengals, ever win in Pittsburgh be one

(01:13:50):
game out of first. If not, the three games out
of first, and the season is lost. All on News
Radio seven hundred WuW.

Speaker 3 (01:13:57):
O' paul's and open it up for questions.

Speaker 1 (01:14:03):
Hello quiet, I'm broadcasting card segment. We had more high
school royalty here today. The Saints came marching in loud, proud,
and Sassey had bands and major rettes all over the place.
Explain who's their segment if anyone will there?

Speaker 8 (01:14:21):
The Seat and Saints have been the best girls volleyball
team in Ohio for the last two seasons. Each year
the ranking is number one, and they whipped up on
the Mentor in three straight sets.

Speaker 1 (01:14:33):
A tormented Mentor their.

Speaker 8 (01:14:35):
Eighth title, overall eighth twenty eight and oer record twenty
eight to fourth, undefeated, championship.

Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
Undefeated, untied on score.

Speaker 8 (01:14:42):
They dropped us three sets the entire season, the Deer
Park High School on the fewest of any team in Ohio,
joining Tippecanoe and Tylor Catholic and Calvert.

Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
Coach, tell me what's special about these girls from Seaton.
They came marching in. Nobody beats them. Nobody beats them.
Explain about these girls and the accomplished.

Speaker 6 (01:15:00):
Seaton talented special kids, special senior.

Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
Class, tall, tall, powerful, athletic. When I was in high school,
then they didn't make girls like this. Now they're six
foot one.

Speaker 6 (01:15:13):
It's a good thing.

Speaker 1 (01:15:14):
Now you're telling me. Introduce the players here, coach, from
left to right, right to left. Start in the middle.
Start the left, start and the right, then go back
to the center, then to the right, and then to
the left. Go ahead.

Speaker 6 (01:15:22):
Sure, I got eleven of our players here today. I
got Kenna.

Speaker 11 (01:15:25):
Calli, Free, Grace, Naddy, Leah, Kirsten, Maggie, Hallie, Charlie, Meredith Reagan.

Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
Now which one is the best one? Tell me the
best player you got.

Speaker 6 (01:15:36):
They're all the best.

Speaker 1 (01:15:37):
They're all the best. You got your assistant coach with
you too.

Speaker 6 (01:15:40):
On My assistant coach, Bree.

Speaker 1 (01:15:41):
Bree keeps an eye on everything. Are there plays in volleyball?
Like if it's getting tough, it's a fourteen. All you
got to get the you get fifteen or twenty one?
Twenty five is twenty four to twenty four and you
gotta score? What play do you call? Is it red dog?
Is a crossbuck? Twenty five? What play do you call?

Speaker 6 (01:15:58):
What play do we call? CALLI Get it done?

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
Sounds like a country song right there? Segment? Give him
some sports. Will come back with some of my academic questions.
Will he the stoutureport is the proud service of a
local Tamestar.

Speaker 8 (01:16:12):
Heating interconditioning dealers, Thamestar Quality. You could feel a beautiful
Milford the home of one main gallery called Baker Heating
at five one three eight three one fifty one twenty four.

Speaker 1 (01:16:24):
Give me some spot segment to make it fast.

Speaker 8 (01:16:26):
High school football tonight will the all across at Tri
State coverage begins at six. High school football Tonight show
on Fox Sports thirteen sixty Arizona and the UC Bearcats
tomorrow in Big twelve Football Wildcats against the Bearcats Bengals
at the Steelers Sunday?

Speaker 1 (01:16:41):
What angle the action right here? On seven hundred WLW
Do you play defense in volleyball?

Speaker 7 (01:16:47):
We do?

Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
Could you help? Maybe the Bengals at Pittsburgh on Sunday
maybe we got some good blockers. Please continue.

Speaker 8 (01:16:53):
Let's see Xavier as our first road game in college
basketball tonight action at seven point thirty here on seven
hundred w all of you and also Willie, we want
to say congratulations to the Miami RedHawks are the eight
time champions of field hockey at the Mid American Conference
and the NCAA Field Hockey Tournament. Today in the first round,

(01:17:14):
Miami is upset fourth rated Virginia in Charlottesville two to one.

Speaker 1 (01:17:18):
Impossible.

Speaker 8 (01:17:19):
So the Red Hawks will play in the second round
Sunday at one o'clock either against Yale or Northwestern.

Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
Coach, I got a note here from Pete Whitty of Western.
You know Pete Whitty Right there. He says, my wife
won one hundred and six and zero won three state
titles and fishburn Witty. Is that true? That's true? So
these girls run, they've lost more in three games, and
that team lost over three years.

Speaker 6 (01:17:41):
Well, but that's their match record, that's right.

Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
Yeah, we can't do better. Stay titled.

Speaker 6 (01:17:46):
You can't do better. We're forty We have a forty
one match.

Speaker 1 (01:17:48):
Strip, forty one segment. Please continue. That's all I got now, girls,
all the time, I want to test your academic achievements.
That's Seaton because we had good results, we've had bad results.
First up, it's like it's academic. I'm gonna give you
five questions some US citizenship tests. Are you ready? What

(01:18:10):
are the three branches of government? Who can answer a question?
Get up to the mic? Three branches of government? Get
up there? What's your name? Yeah? Can I get up there?
There's the mic right there? What are the three branches
of government?

Speaker 4 (01:18:22):
Lative, legislative, executive?

Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
And then that's it right there?

Speaker 3 (01:18:27):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:18:27):
Next up, another question is how many states are there
in the United States of America?

Speaker 4 (01:18:33):
Fifty?

Speaker 3 (01:18:33):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:18:34):
How many colonies were the originals? Thirteen? Can you name
three of the original colonies?

Speaker 7 (01:18:41):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:18:43):
What was that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:46):
New England? Well, that's not a state. That's not a state.
Come on, Massachusetts, Massachusetts in New Hampshire. That's correct, right there,
that's not bad at all. Can you name the Vice
President of the United States? J? E. Vance? Who's the
governor of Ohio? What is the capital of Kentucky?

Speaker 7 (01:19:10):
Very?

Speaker 3 (01:19:10):
Good?

Speaker 6 (01:19:10):
Right there?

Speaker 3 (01:19:12):
Not bad?

Speaker 1 (01:19:13):
What's the square ruto one? What is the value of pie?
Not lemon, not lemon, not chocolate? What is the value
of pod that we'll accept that as an answer. That's
not bad at all, not bad. One more question. Name
four of the five rights guaranteed to you as an
American and the first Amendment the US Constitution. Speech is

(01:19:35):
one religion, Religi two Pruss three four three four and
petition your government? Coach? You doing pretty good?

Speaker 7 (01:19:43):
Right?

Speaker 6 (01:19:43):
Pretty good?

Speaker 1 (01:19:44):
It's not bad at all? Segment your reaction. They pay
attention in class, will they're smart? But they're not in
class today are they?

Speaker 7 (01:19:51):
Now?

Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
They have the day off because they're coming here to
be honored. One of the five Great Lakes carry Superior
Superior Michigan year on in Ontario.

Speaker 6 (01:20:08):
That's it.

Speaker 1 (01:20:08):
Segment.

Speaker 8 (01:20:08):
They got those right too. What about that they're big
fans of the Edmond fit scherrell I bet went down
about one hundred went down? How many years ago? About
fifty years and a years ago?

Speaker 3 (01:20:16):
Monday.

Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
At some point, the foolishness has got to stop. Who's
that voice right there? Mike Dewan coach next year? How
does it look? Kind of set it up? I know
you want to try to schedule mee coming now Notre
Dame and Dale parksher you want to schedule them in volleyball.
But how does it look next year?

Speaker 11 (01:20:33):
Well, we lose six incredible seniors, but we can return
a good group. And our junior varsity team was twenty
two and oh this year, so we should be in
pretty good shape.

Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
The seniors, Who's which one of your girls? Six seniors?
Are you one? Come up to the microphone here? What
was the value of a seat in education, in companionship
with with with your sport that won the consecutive state
titles volleyball? What was the value of going to Eton
winning the state title? The friendships, et cetera. What did
you find good about Seton? What'd you find bad? What

(01:21:06):
is your name? By the way, I'm Kirsten Kirston, Go ahead.

Speaker 4 (01:21:10):
I just felt like Seatson was just the right choice
for me. There's people that are always going to be
out there to support you, and many come to our games,
which makes games like more fun to play in. And
then also, these girls are my best friends. We do
a lot together outside. We get a skyline, we do
faith building with one of our soccer.

Speaker 1 (01:21:30):
Coaches, and we just where are you going to go
to college? If anywhere?

Speaker 4 (01:21:36):
I'm playing volleyball at NC A and C.

Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
North Carolina Ashville Iger culture and type.

Speaker 4 (01:21:42):
I like that.

Speaker 1 (01:21:43):
Next, who's the next senior? Are you a senior? Come
on up here, give me your first name, Natty? Natty?
What did you learn about life from playing soccer at Seaton?

Speaker 6 (01:21:53):
Volleyball?

Speaker 1 (01:21:53):
Vollytrack from volleyball? Just like how to work together as
a team for a common good. That's that's worthy to
pursue a bad up bad right segment? Yes, sir, fine, Now, coach,
how much support do you receive from the alumni like
Pete Whitty and Chris Smitherman's at Seaton when it comes
to volleyball, soccer, basketball? What kind of support do you receive?

Speaker 6 (01:22:15):
Incredible support. It's a it's a whole community. It's Seaton.
We probably had over two thousand fans out the state
championship match. Sea agree two thousand.

Speaker 1 (01:22:25):
Wow, it's been around for about one hundred years, not
going anywhere, pride to price, so no question about it. Segment.
That's unbelievable. That was at another center right at another Yeah,
two thousand, it's great. And girls, I got one more
question to ask. Are you prepared for this question? This
is off the US Citizenship task. Fear in their eyes
when you ask him questions. You know that, don't you.

(01:22:45):
What is the supreme law of the land in the
United States of America. What documents the supreme law of
the land. That's it right there? What's your name, Charlie?
The Constitution? Now give me the approximate year the US
Constitution was passed and accepted by all thirteen colonies to
form the United States. About what year was it? Seventeen?

(01:23:10):
That's not bad, seventeen eighty seven. Who did America fight
in the War of eighteen twelve, which the Americans won?
Is you know eighteen twelve? Who did an America fight
in the War of eighteen twelve? You said, Great Britain.
That's it right there, your grandpabably. Who did America fight

(01:23:30):
in World War Two? Who were the opponents of America?
Germany and Russia? Not Russia, they were with it, Japan
and Italy a little bit right there? Not bad. Who
did America fight in the Vietnam War? Who were on
the other side when they fought North Vietnam and the

(01:23:52):
viet Cong, the NBA and the viet Cong, you might recall,
is that correct? What is the date of nine to eleven?
Why that's correct. I'm gonna little surprised. They're pretty good. Segment,
what are you thinking? They're excellent? Well and very well
on and off the court, on and off the court.
I congratulations coach, And next year, may you have a

(01:24:14):
three Pete. I understand that Pete Whitty might be buying
you girls rings? Do they get rings? And everything they do?
They get plaques, they get parades, they get confetti, the
whole deal.

Speaker 6 (01:24:22):
The whole deal.

Speaker 1 (01:24:23):
Better than Mason, better than Mason. Now, girls, you're gonna
champion in volleyball, be a champion in life. Do you
want the three rules to live by? You're ready for these?
Write these down? Number one graduate?

Speaker 3 (01:24:34):
Can you do that?

Speaker 1 (01:24:35):
From mcllegwhall, you're in high school? Number two either work
or go to school? Can you do that? And number three?
Don't commit crime?

Speaker 6 (01:24:42):
Can you do that?

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
If you don't need red bikes, you don't need food trucks,
don't need curfews. Number one graduate, Number two, work or
go to school? Number three, don't commit crime. If you
do that, you'll be great Americans. Congret you've been champions
and volleyball, be champions in life. Segment get me out
of the studs report, Congratulations, all hail the Saints, Willie
and honor of the seat and Saints and champions. We

(01:25:06):
leave you with the immortal words of the stood Refort.

Speaker 8 (01:25:12):
Next week's case handled about the highway patrol is a
very exciting one.

Speaker 3 (01:25:15):
We hope you'll be with us until then.

Speaker 1 (01:25:18):
Remember the careless driver isn't driving his car, he's aiming it.

Speaker 3 (01:25:22):
This is Robert Crawford saying, see you next week.

Speaker 1 (01:25:24):
Do you girls have driver licenses? Yeah? Do you drive
your car?

Speaker 6 (01:25:28):
Do you aim it?

Speaker 1 (01:25:30):
I told you a little bit about it, a little
bit of both. She's the one whose grandfather listens to us.

Speaker 2 (01:25:36):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:25:36):
Yes. What's his name? Mike Owins? Mike Oes, nice young man.
Where does he live if anywhere?

Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:25:43):
He lives in del High lives and die done count.
He's the Dalahesian Dunken. Well coach, congratulations, assistant coach. We'll
see well. I see you next year. Well you here
last plan on him.

Speaker 6 (01:25:52):
We were here last year.

Speaker 1 (01:25:53):
You're gonna come next year. I'll beat Has anyone ever
won more than three in a row in volleyball seat
other than Setan?

Speaker 6 (01:26:00):
I'm not sure that's a good question.

Speaker 1 (01:26:02):
Do you have nil money for these girls?

Speaker 4 (01:26:04):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:26:04):
Name, image and likeness is coming to high school sports.
And I'm told you all she wants is lunch money.
Some quarterback at Mauler was going to be offered ten
thousand dollars to pay quarterback for Maller next year. You girls,
how to hold out for more money? What if you
went on strike? What if you formed a union? What
if you had to demand certain foods to be fed
and maybe you got a lot of money. Would you

(01:26:25):
want to go on strike?

Speaker 4 (01:26:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
Yeah, no, you all? You just lost your team. Coach,
you lost your team.

Speaker 2 (01:26:32):
What do you do?

Speaker 6 (01:26:33):
Willie?

Speaker 4 (01:26:33):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:26:34):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:26:35):
Nil money. Are you worried about nil money?

Speaker 4 (01:26:38):
No?

Speaker 6 (01:26:38):
We play for we play for our school. We play
for the love of each other.

Speaker 1 (01:26:41):
You don't play for money. Yeah yeah, yeah, girls, congratulations
do it again?

Speaker 4 (01:26:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:26:46):
Hey yeah, it wasn't this much better than John? John?
I got that? I got that right there. Let's continue
with more two fifty four Home of Your Bengals. Here's
Radio seven hundred w all different.

Speaker 6 (01:26:58):
That's got a picture
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