Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Try back on the Big one, seven hundred WLW. It's
twelve o eight. Dan Carroll in for the great American
Bill Cunningham. Bill Cunningham and enjoying a few days off
this week. So I am glad to be here for him,
and I am glad to be here with you as
we rock and roll till three o'clock this afternoon. A big, big,
big weekend this weekend all around the country with the
what do we call that, the No King's Protest, And
(00:32):
you know, I was I was looking at that, and
I was singing to myself, I'm looking at all these
different videos from the No King's Protest and the demonstrations,
and you got these people who are out there and
had all kinds of people who were out there asking
questions about the people who are protesting or the people
who were participating, and they simply, they simply can't answer
our question. And the questions were, what is going on
(00:56):
that makes you be out here today?
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Well?
Speaker 1 (00:58):
We hate Trump? Okay, hey Trump? Why? Well, he's he's
doing things, he's acting like a king, and I'm not
exactly sure how that happens. So and the the videos
and the audio, and I was thinking about getting some
of those cuts and playing them today. But I mean
they're all pretty much the same. You get the they
get these blank looks on their faces and they start
(01:20):
stumbling around and they and it just seems like, I mean,
are they being paid to be there. I've heard where
George Soros has funded a lot of this stuff, and uh,
and and they're out there and they're singing it some
of the worst songs I've ever heard. I actually thought about,
(01:40):
uh bringing a couple of those clips in and playing
a couple of those today. But you look at you.
If you're interested in that stuff, you can you can
go out and find it for yourself. We are expecting
to have Butler County Sheriff Richard K. Jones on as
a guest today. We are David, we make any progress
on that of getting getting hold of the sheriff. Okay,
so we we are endeavoring to reach out to this show.
(02:02):
He actually he put on his his Twitter feed is
x feed that he was going to be on the
show today, And I mean, you know, we set this
up during the course of the day yesterday and so
hopefully Sheriff Richard Jones will be here anytime now. But
interesting story that is developing a Butler County and according
to Foxwell, according to the news here to the top
(02:23):
of the hour, and Fox nineteen is saying that the
sheriff is going to rake in millions, millions by housing
illegal aliens. That's a pretty good deal. And the sheriff
just bumped up the rate. So starting next month, ICE
is going to pay one hundred and five dollars a
day for every ICE prisoner that is housed in the
(02:46):
Butler County jail. Right now, the rate is sixty eight dollars.
That's a pretty nice increase. And just eight months this year,
the sheriff says his office has built the government, the
US federal government, nearly nine million dollars, so that's not bad.
By the year's end, he says, that figure is projected
(03:07):
to hit twelve million dollars, six million more than originally projected.
It'll swell to twenty two million total next year. About
fourteen hundred illegal aliens have been deported from the Butler
County jail out of about seventeen hundred that have come
through in just eight months. Most Americans agree to fix
(03:29):
our borders. I'm going to do my part, and he says,
come here legally or get out. It's simple. That's Butler
County Sheriff for Dge Jones. And that's a story that's
posted on Fox nineteen right now. So we were hoping
to talk about that, and I mean, you think about that.
Here's a guy who has been in the forefront of
(03:50):
dealing with illegal aliens and god knows, they've had their
hands full with the illegal aliens for whatever reason in
parts of Butler County. That's been going on for years.
And this guy has taken a no nonsense approach to
dealing with these individuals and dealing with the whole issue
of illegal aliens coming here to the United States and
(04:12):
causing problems and all the you know everything else that
comes with it. And now he's turned it around into
w a. He turned it into a money making opportunity
and paying one hundred dollars a day to hold someone
at the Butler County jail. Does that seem like a
(04:32):
lot of money? Does that seem for one individual?
Speaker 3 (04:36):
What is it?
Speaker 1 (04:37):
One hundred and five one hundred and five dollars a day?
It doesn't seem like it doesn't seem like well in
right now, I mean the rate of sixty eight dollars
a day? Can you go? Can you spend a night
in a hotel for sixty eight bucks anywhere? I've I
don't know what kind of hotel you're staying in, but
I don't think you can do that. So one hundred
(04:58):
and five dollars a day to hold illegals in the
Butler County jail, and look at it solves a lot
of problems. How many times have we seen Tom Homan, uh,
the different individuals who go out on the streets and
got to arrest these illegals who are out calls and problems.
And Tom Homan has said, if we could just get
(05:20):
some cooperation from local police chiefs, local sheriffs like Richard Jones,
local city councils and mayors, different governors and different states,
we'll just get some cooperation from them, things would be
a lot easier. But no, you've got to have the
sanctuary city policies and the sanctuary state policies, and you
(05:44):
gotta I don't know who who's the constituency for that.
Who When when you have a politician that wants to
make a big deal about having a sanctuary city or
a sanctuary state or whatever, the jurisdiction is, who does
that impress I've never been able to figure that out.
(06:09):
You've got people here who are here illegally, really don't
have a right to be here if someone is here legally,
or someone is here to do some work because someone
I've always thought that the immigration policies that we've had
at the border need to be addressed in a meaningful way,
and I don't know that we have done that over
the years, and I think we're paying the price for
(06:31):
it now. And thank god the Trump administration has been
serious about dealing with this issue. Dan Bongino was just
don Fox News this morning talking about the number of arrests.
I think what is the number, It was like thirty
eight or forty eight thousand. It is a huge number
of people that these ICE agents have gone out and arrested.
(06:54):
It's dangerous work, and it's made even more dangerous my
people who want to go out and standing their way.
So here's the sheriff turning things around in Butler County
and is having a windfall in Butler County because he's
got he's got the illegals that are being housed in
(07:17):
his prison. Let's see what else did he have to say.
I'm looking at this this piece from Fox nineteen. Now,
in any case, we're still trying to get ahold of
the sheriff. I'm he must have got busy all of
a sudden. Coming up on the show, We're gonna talk
to Corey Bowman at the bottom of the hour. Over
the weekend, Corey Bowman, who is running for mayor in Cincinnati,
(07:37):
made some news when he talked about his church. The
church he has was they discovered a bullet hole in
the church, and I'm thinking to myself, well, this is
kind of a big deal. Someone's taken potshots, and we
just saw that this dude who shot up the or
shot at the what it was, the City Chicken Place,
(08:02):
has finally been arrested. So the whole idea that someone
drives by your building and takes a pot shot at
your building, it's not something that's really totally out of
the blue. It happens apparently with some regularity Instincinnati. So
Corey Bowman put out a statement over the weekend that
(08:26):
they discovered a bullet hole in their church and I'm
looking at a picture of it right now on the
WCPO website. They said the building was unoccupied during the incident.
It's been classified as property damage. But the one thing
I haven't seen is I've not seen a statement from
a f tab purvol the crying this incident or they're
(08:51):
saying that, you know, this is not the way that
we should have public policy discourse in the city of Cincinnati.
Haven't seen any statement condemning these actions of someone actually
took a shot at the church that is run by
his political opponent. So we'll have him on to talk
(09:11):
about that. And then the whole notion of dee I.
I've got a guy on his name is Tim Manilla,
and that's it's coming up in a one o'clock hour.
Tim Manilla is with the Goldwater Institute and they have
been looking at DEI initiatives that have been going on,
and the whole, the whole arc of dee I seems
(09:36):
like it's coming to an end, the whole and it
coincides with the whole notion of all the all the
transgenderism nonsense that we've seen over the last several years,
and there have been there were several stories that were
posted last week about how this trend in transgenderism is
(09:57):
coming to an end, that the Apparently the whole fad
of this may have run its course, and we are
starting to see, I mean, the numbers of individuals, especially
a college agent, who are identifying themselves as transgender or
non binary or whatever, some sex other than what they
(10:24):
were born as, not as they were assigned at birth,
but as they were born, that those numbers are literally
falling off a cliff. Why because you know, the sizzle
has come off of that steak. People have stopped, by
and large, buying into this notion that this is something
(10:48):
to get behind, that this is a real thing. Are
there individuals who suffer with these notions that somehow they
were born into the wrong body? Absolutely, there's no doubt
about it. There certainly are individuals who genuinely suffer from
these ideas that God made them the wrong way. But
(11:11):
is there also a level of a level of activism
that is involved in this that has convinced people who
otherwise would not entertain these notions that they were born
into the wrong body. And if you've been involved in this,
(11:32):
if you have a family member, a son or a daughter,
or you know someone in your family that has been
caught up in this, there is no doubt in my
mind that you have heard the phrase from either that
young person or someone associated with them, maybe someone from
(11:56):
the school, a counselor so called medical professional. You've heard
the phrase would you rather have a dead daughter or
a live son? Or a dead son or a live daughter?
And I have said since the very beginning of this
(12:17):
topic that that puts parents who care about their kids
in an impossible situation when they hear that, what sort
of decision, if you care about your kid, are you
supposed to make? And so it has been a lengthy process,
but a lot of that has been debunked now. And
(12:37):
the idea that we have all these different schools and
there are school systems out that are still out there
that are promoting this notion of transgenderism and queer theory
this and rainbow of that and all this other stuff.
They are still putting these notions out there. And I
(12:58):
think to myself, a school ishouldn't schools be interested in truth?
And one of the things, no matter if you're a teacher,
an educator, if you're on a school board somewhere, shouldn't
your school shouldn't you want to have a school that
is interested in teaching kids things that are truthful and
(13:19):
the notion that you can it takes some drugs, you
can have some surgery, you can put some makeup on,
you can change away your face looks that somehow that
is going to transition you from a boy to a
girl or a girl to a boy. I mean, shouldn't
we really be at the point, especially when we're talking
(13:40):
about kids who are in grade school, and a lot
of this stuff starts in kindergarteners. As soon as they
get into a government run school, they start getting bombarded
with this stuff. So yeah, so it's no wonder that
so many of them, who get influenced by what they
see online that they see at school have come out
(14:02):
and said, oh, yeah, this is this is me, this
is what you know. I am growing up, I have angst,
I have all these things going on in my head.
I must be in the wrong body. And to feed
into that notion and to bolster that whole idea that
you need to you know, you need to lean into that,
(14:26):
and you need to to take the drugs and do
the surgeries and all that stuff. It's all going away
because because there's simply no truth behind it. At least
that's what I think. So it's a good thing. So
in any case, uh that this whole notion about DEI,
you've got a you've got a administration in the White
(14:49):
House now in Washington that does not play into that.
Meritocracy is the word, the the notion that we are
going to people because they are best qualified for the job.
The color of your skin, your genitalia, all those sorts
of things that shouldn't really make much of a difference
(15:13):
at all. Those sort of things are being put aside
now and we're talking about the best sorts of things
that you can do because you're qualified to do it.
So we'll talk to the Goldwater Institute about that. And
what they're saying is that, yeah, yeah, there's been a
lot of businesses, there's been a lot of colleges and
(15:36):
universities that have come out and done away with these
programs because the administration has said one thing, Look, you
want to can if you're if you're a university that
is getting money from the federal government, and you want
to continue with these DEI programs that they find discriminatory.
On their face, they're saying, look, you're in violation of
(15:56):
these non discrimination policies that we're supposed to have and
so when that happens, they're saying, you know what, you
want to continue on with this, that's fine, but you're
not going to get any more money from us. And
so when you make that statement and you start cutting
off the money, well then that that really starts to
make a difference. So it's going to be an interesting commisation,
(16:19):
a conversation with Timothy Manella from the Goldwater Institute. So
I am looking forward to that. It is PubL. Twenty four.
We're going to get to a break news coming up
at the bottom of the hour, and then Corey Bowman,
the Republican candidate for mayor of City of Cincinnati, is
going to join us. He's got an event that's coming
up later today too, So we'll plug that a little
bit along the way, and at some point we actually
(16:42):
open the phone lines and take a few of your
phone calls. At five, one, three, seven, four, nine, seven thousand,
or one eight hundred the Big one. It's Dan Carroll
in for Bill Cunningham on seven hundred WLW. A right
back on the Big one, seven hundred WLW twelve thirty seven,
(17:04):
Dan Carroll, Ford, Bill Cunningham and man we are just
striking out on guest today. He's supposed to have Sheriff
Jones on at twelve oh five. He finally called in
at the end of the segment. We're going to have
reschedule him for two to five this afternoon. So he
got busy with something and couldn't make it at twelve
oh five. And Corey Bowman is supposed to be on
(17:25):
right now and we are trying to reach out to
him right now, so we will see what happens with
the mayoral candidate, the Republican who could become the mayor
of Cincinnati, but Corey Bowman. According to and I Love
the headline in the Channel nine website, the mayoral candidate
Quarterboman claims to have discovered a bull hole in the
(17:48):
church where he serves as pastor. Claims as if he
may not be telling the truth. So the church put
out a statement on Saturday saying that they discovered in
a bullet hole that penetrated an exterior window on the
Clark Street side of the church. He's filed a play
(18:09):
report with the Cincinnati Police and thankfully no one was
inside the building apparently at the time. And and he
did say that that they they look at the they
look at the outside of the exterior of the church
all the time, so there's something going on out there
and we will see. And then this follows a lot
(18:30):
of negative comments that were posted on social media and
the like, and so it's I mean, is there something
going on with that. Hopefully we'll get a chance to
talk to Corey Bowman about that, you know, and I
wanted to ask him about what, you know, what his
take is on the police chief who is still twisting
in the wind. It's just what is happening at city
(18:54):
Hall right now, in my opinion, is just an absolute mess.
And you you make the you make the police chief
come back from a conference in Denver and make sure
it gets out in the headlines. Everyone knows if you're
going to fire the chief, fire the chief, but just
don't leave her twisting in the wind. And as of
right this moment, we still don't know what the future
(19:16):
of the police chief in the city of Cincinnatis. And
Corey Bowman is here now, and Pastor Bowman, welcome to
seven hundred WLW. It's great to have you on.
Speaker 4 (19:25):
Hey, it's great to be on. Thank you so much
to you and your listeners for having me.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Well let me, since I was just talking about the
police chief, Teresa Thigi, give me your opinion on the
way the kind of treatment that she is getting from
city Hall right now. You know, the headlines came out
last Friday that she was at a conference with other
police chiefs and in Denver they call her up and say, hey,
(19:49):
you've got to come back. And when that normally, when
that happens, it's not good. And look, if you're going
to make a move on the police chief, just do it.
But to leave her twisting and the win the way
she's twisting in the win, it's not fair to her.
It's not fair to the people of Cincinnati. It's certainly
not fair to the men and women who wear the
uniform every day and they don't know who's in charge
(20:12):
of their police force. What say you, I.
Speaker 5 (20:15):
Think you're exactly right. You know, no matter what we
see in.
Speaker 4 (20:19):
The city, this is a police chief that has devoted
over thirty years of time to the city through the
police department, Her and her family have all contributed to
the city. And you know, let's not forget that this
administration does have a history of not really letting go
of people properly or not treating people properly when it comes.
Speaker 5 (20:38):
To these positions.
Speaker 4 (20:39):
I'm reminded of Michael Washington that got released from the
fire department and now he's in what's looking like a
settlement with the city that's going to cost the taxpayers
money because it wasn't done properly. And so I think
on the surface, you're seeing a lot of uncertainty, which
doesn't leave the voters, doesn't leave the citizens of Cincinnati,
and a lot of confidence the administration knows what they're doing.
(21:02):
And then behind the scenes, you know the police officers.
They just want to do their job. Police officers aren't
trying to play politics when they're trying to keep our
cities safe.
Speaker 5 (21:11):
And I don't think that this is a good look.
Speaker 4 (21:13):
For the city, and I think that just needs to
be done differently.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
I was talking about the little bit of news that
you made over the weekend when you announced that you
discovered a bullet hole in your church downtown, and I
love the headline on Channel nine their website there it
says Corey Bowman claims claims to have discovered a bullet
hole in the church where he serves as pastor, indicating
(21:39):
that they're really not one hundred percent sure if you're
telling the truth or not. So what do you make
of the reporting on Channel nine? And maybe Corey Bowman
is not exactly sure what he's talking about.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
Well, one thing I've learned since we announced our candidacy
in February is that no matter what interviews you give,
people are gonna report.
Speaker 5 (21:59):
Whatever they want to report. I will say this.
Speaker 4 (22:02):
We were doing our weekly inspection at our church, and
as we did our inspection at the building and cleaning
getting ready for our Sunday services, we found a new bullethole,
what appeared to be a new bolthole, And so we've seen,
you know, a lot of activity when it comes to
attention on our church, our church members. You know, I
want people to remember that I'm a pastor of a
(22:24):
congregation as well that on Sundays we're not having political rallies.
We're housing a house of worship for people that trust
that we know what we're doing, that we're going to
keep them safe. So I had made a report with ADPD.
They dealt with the situation very well, and then I
just knew, based on the nature of the campaign, that
this was going to be a public report, police report
(22:46):
I was already getting text from cops asking if everything
was okay. So I made as a pastor, I made
a public statement just telling people what was going on
and assuring our church members that we were going to
have the proper security and we were going to do
everything within our means to keep our parishioners safe. And
that's exactly what happened.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
So you say you found a new bullet hole, so
this is and then look, we know that that there
are bullets flying around Cincinnati all the time, so the
fact that your your church gets hit with a bullet
shouldn't be that surprising to anyone but you. But you
are running for mayor. There have been a lot of
(23:26):
a lot of a lot of negativity going on in
social media directed at you and your candidacy, and can
you connect the two? Can you? Can?
Speaker 5 (23:36):
You?
Speaker 1 (23:36):
Can you say it's a direct result. Maybe not, Maybe
you can't make that direct connection. But I would suspect
that at least the mayor might come out and say, hey,
if there's a connection here, we can't have that kind
of stuff. To your knowledge, has the mayor made any
sort of statement to that regard yet?
Speaker 4 (23:55):
To my knowledge, no, you know, but I recognize this
type of political climate that we're in, you know, and
what we're in a lot of people want to make
connections that way. For me personally, whether it's connection to
somebody of a threat or whether it's just a crime
that's happening regularly on the street that my church is on,
I think those are issues that just need to be resolved,
(24:17):
no matter what you know. Overall over the summer, we've
seen two to three instances of shots being fired on
Clark Street right past my church. I've had neighbors that
their car doors were shot into, and they would tell
me that they would see bullets bounce off the stone
foundation of our church.
Speaker 5 (24:36):
So this isn't a new thing.
Speaker 4 (24:37):
But for me, this was a weekly inspection that we
typically do and that's why I knew that it was
a fresh bullet hole, and I just wanted to go
through the proper authorities to make sure that they were
aware of the situation.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
Well, I think he did the right thing. In any case,
there was an arrest that happened over the weekend and
on Sunday, this guy, Shaquille Ferguson, turned himself in and
with thanks to his attorney, Clyde Bennett, and this is
the guy who was suspected in the shooting on Fountain
Square Shaquille Ferguson. So he has turned himself in, and
(25:16):
what a surprise. It turns out that he's got a
criminal history, that he was convicted of aggravated assault but
served no time for that. So a guy who number
one probably shouldn't have been on the streets, and number
two shouldn't have had a possession of a firearm because
he was on probation. So this is Corey Bowman. This
is the thing that we see repeated time after time
(25:37):
after time when it comes to the criminal element in
the city of Cincinnati.
Speaker 4 (25:44):
You're exactly right. You know, when we see the headlines
of crime that happened over the course this year, the
majority of them have been by repeat offenders or by
people that had been released on a very low bond
weeks or months before. And something that's got to change
in our city. You know, the majority of people in
(26:04):
our city are law buying citizens. They want safe streets
and clean streets.
Speaker 5 (26:09):
But what's being done is done by.
Speaker 4 (26:11):
A very small percentage of criminals that basically have, in
my mind, have been a result of the justice system
and lacks prosecutors, judges, and people that haven't held them accountable.
And that's what needs to change from city Hall. This
is nothing short of just enforcing the law properly and
(26:32):
allowing the judicial system to back it up.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
The citizen launch dog is he likes to call himself.
Todd Zinzer has put out a lot of information lately
looking into what's going on with Iris Rolling and her
role with the city, how much money they have paid
out to her, and when you look at that and
the way that the city has paid her over the
last three or four or five years in the neighborhood
(26:56):
of three hundred thousand dollars probably going to go as
high as if her contract gets carried out, it's going
to be over half a million dollars that the City
Assistance Cincinnati is going to pay her. And he's been
concentrating a lot on the invoices that she turns in
for the City of Cincinnati, and a lot of those
invoices a month after month after month are simply carbon
(27:18):
copies of the invoice that she turned in previously, including
he says, misspellings. So it seems apparent that all she's
doing is just making a copy of an invoice, sending
it in and getting paid for it with really no
accountability for the time, no accountability for if anything is
getting done, no accountability for the people that are working
(27:42):
for her or working with her. Under an administration run
by Corey Bowman, is that sort of thing going to
continue in the City of Cincinnati.
Speaker 4 (27:53):
What I tell people is that what we're witnessing is
trickled down in competence from the top down. You know,
last time I checked, not voting for any of these
other individuals. We're voting for the mayor Cincinnati. We're voting
for city council members. And if we put people in
leadership that allow things to happen, whether it be with
the budget contractors, city manager's office, whatever that might be,
(28:16):
that we're displeased with, you know, and I'm thankful for
a citizen watchdog and you know, other people that are
trying to keep the city accountable because that's what needs
to happen. There needs to be accountability, there needs to
be transparency. But if people are upset with what's going
on at city Hall, we have a ballot a November
where you can put people in leadership that are going
to make sure this doesn't happen. And as mayor, you know,
(28:39):
vote isn't a blank check to do whatever you want.
Speaker 5 (28:42):
People voting for me for mayor.
Speaker 4 (28:44):
Are going to say, hey, they want transparency, they want
honesty and accountability. They want to make sure the budget
is being spent properly, they want to make sure the streets.
Speaker 5 (28:51):
Are safe and clean.
Speaker 4 (28:53):
And we're going to work hand in hand with the
with the new council, and with any position at city
Hall to make sure that it's being done with the
best intentions.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
Yeah. When I watched most of the debate that you
had on Local twelve with Mayor A. F. Tab Purval,
and he seemed to be having a little bit of
fun at your expense because he talked about the money
that was coming from the sale of the railroad and
where that money is being spent, and he said, hey,
it's very transparent. It's all out there what we're doing
(29:24):
with the money. And he seemed to be taking a
little bit of a poke at you because you apparently
haven't been able to access that information. When you when
you look at that and the money that is coming
from the sale of the railroad and what it's being
used for, are you of the opinion that that money
is being used properly or how do you see it?
Speaker 4 (29:47):
I think one of the biggest things you got to
look at is how it's being held by the trust
and then how it will be spent. You know, we're
still in the beginning stages of this money being deposited
into the city's accounts. You know, for me, you know,
there's a lot of people are very unhappy with the
results of that railroad purchase, and rightfully so. But the
reality of it is that it's already been done. So
(30:09):
moving forward, what's going to be the best way to
ensure that there's accountability, transparency, and not corruption happening in
the spending of this money. When you look at the
city budget, you know, they can categorize whatever they want
as existing infrastructure. They can categorize whatever they want as
far as expenditures within that budget.
Speaker 5 (30:28):
But then when you go down.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
Deeper, you see that it's being funneled into nonprofits, organizations
and contractors that there's no accountability on their end. There's
a lot of undisclosed board members that are connected with
a lot of these boards, a lot of these nonprofits,
and that's something that has to be looked into. Because
it's not just about, Hey, nobody's going to get any
(30:50):
more money, We're going to fire everybody.
Speaker 5 (30:52):
That's not it.
Speaker 4 (30:52):
It's just making sure that every dime is being spent
properly for the betterment of the city.
Speaker 1 (30:57):
Well, we are told all these guardrails are put in
so the mouthfeasance and corruption and money being spending properly,
that all those sorts of things couldn't happen. Are you
telling me you're not satisfied with all that stuff?
Speaker 5 (31:11):
Well, I would have the city of Cincinnati.
Speaker 4 (31:13):
Are you satisfied, because last time I checked, You know,
if we're looking at let's say, fifty million dollars, according
to the mayor's statements, a million dollars can actually pave
one mile of Center Lane Road, and so fifty million dollars,
in my mind, means fifty miles of paved road. Are
we seeing that in the city. Are we seeing the
(31:33):
potholes filled? Are we seeing the infrastructure being managed properly?
I don't think we are, And I don't think that
you can just say time and time again, oh it's
being spent properly. People have to see it, and they're
not seeing it. You go down Sunset, you go down Harrison,
you go down any aspect of the fifty two neighborhoods
of our city, and the streets aren't being maintenanced properly.
(31:54):
And let's actually not forget that the railroad was not
supposed to be a substitute for exis, seeing infrastructure budget.
Speaker 5 (32:01):
It was supposed to.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
Be an additive on top of it. And that's not
what's happening either. We're seeing a lot of shell games
taking place with recategorization of things in the budget, and
that needs to stop.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
Yeah, it seems to me that that is what the
basics of city services ought to be, keeping the streets
in safe. They're keeping the streets in shape, i should say,
and making sure that when it comes time to clear
those streets and have those streets open. And I'm thinking about,
you know, last winter, we had several episodes where we
(32:33):
couldn't clear the streets after a major snowfall, and I'm
thinking that if we are going to change that, and
they claim that we didn't have enough vehicles, or we
didn't have enough vehicles or up and running, it seems
to me that the time to get those new vehicles
in here, in here or make sure that everything was
ship shape and ready to go for wintertime. It seems
(32:53):
to me like that should have already happened, and I
don't see any any indication at all that any of
that has taken place yet.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
No, you're exactly right.
Speaker 4 (33:02):
You know, when people are asking me, what will the
first hundred days of office look like? What will the
first year of office look like? Well, last time I checked,
we're going to be, you know, sworn in in January.
And what happens in January and February. It's the dawn
of time, it's snow, So we need to make sure
that we're ready for snow. We need to make sure
from a city services perspective that we're ready, and if
(33:24):
that's not, we have to contact STAY in Federal Dot
to make sure that we're getting to help needed. Because
for me personally, I have a business in the West
End and there was a week where.
Speaker 5 (33:35):
Customers couldn't come into.
Speaker 4 (33:36):
My shop because of snow file removal, and so those
things have to be proactive in our planning.
Speaker 6 (33:43):
And then when you have the winter.
Speaker 4 (33:44):
Months, that leads to spring potholes because you have damage
to the streets because of all the winter and the
wear and tear of the weather.
Speaker 5 (33:52):
We got ready for that, and.
Speaker 4 (33:53):
Then summer and fall months you got another summer and
fall month of higher crime rates. And so we have
to look at it being proactive from start to finish
of the year. Are we going to be ready for
the snowplow removal? Are we going to be ready for
the spring potholes? And are we going to be ready
for the summer in fall crime? And under our administration,
we're going to be proactive and making sure that we're
(34:14):
utilizing every resource and every relationship to ensure that Cincinnati
is ready.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
We'll see what happens this winter. Corey Bowman, we got
a run, but before we do, you've got an event
that's coming up tonight. Tell me about that.
Speaker 4 (34:27):
Yeah, we have two of our final events happening tonight
and tomorrow. One is at Hyde Park. We got the
Pub and Rookwood. That's happening. Everybody's open to ten I
believe it starts at six pm. And then on Tuesday
we have one n Wyoming as well, and anybody can
go to our website, contact.
Speaker 5 (34:47):
Us and get more information on those.
Speaker 4 (34:49):
One of the biggest things that we have to push though,
is that early voting is open now. The election happens
November fourth. People got to get out and vote, and
if anybody wants to help the campaign, they can go
Coreybowman dot com, contact us, email us and let us
know if you're ready to get out and door knock.
Speaker 5 (35:05):
For us or put a sign in your yard. Because
we got two weeks left.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
All right, Corey Bowman, we got to run. Stay safe
out there, brother, and I hope no more bullet holes
up here in your church. But keep up the great
work and all the best to you. Will be talking
again before too long.
Speaker 5 (35:21):
I appreciate it. Thank you to you and your listeners.
Speaker 1 (35:23):
All right, there you go, Corey Bowman, the Republican running
for mayor of City of Cincinnati, and if he wins,
that's going to be a huge deal. Twelve fifty five.
It's seven hundred WLW, seven hundred WLW. It's one o
(35:44):
nine on this Monday afternoon, Dan Carolyn for Bill Cunningham,
great American taking a few days off. I get to
be here tomorrow as well, So I am glad to
be here, glad you are here as well, and glad
to welcome in My next guest. His name is Tim Manella.
He is with the Goldwater Institute, and Tim Manilla's got
a great history there and I want to find out
(36:04):
more about the Goldwater Institute. And he is actually we
used to work at the University of Kentucky and he
lives in Kentucky. And Tim Manilla, it's great to have
you on seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 2 (36:16):
How are you today, Hi, Dan, It's great to be here.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
Tell me a little bit about the Goldwater Institute for
those who may not know that much about it.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
Goldwater fights for liberty in all fifty states. Were originally
based out of Arizona, but we've got associates all over
the country like me, and we're about restoring constitutional principles
to American life and that's what I work on, with
(36:48):
a focus on higher.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
Ed, especially outstanding. The subject that we're here to talk
about today is DEI Diversity, equity and inclusion. And if
I'm looking at the headlines right now Fox News is
talking about, was twenty twenty four, the year DEI fell apart.
There's dozens and dozens of major companies that have gotten
(37:11):
rid of their DEI I guess offices or DEI initiatives.
Companies like PEPSI JP, Morgan, Blackrock, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs,
all kinds of different companies. IBM got rid of their
DEI policies. So the headlines are that DEI is starting
(37:35):
to I guess slowly get into the rear view mirror.
But according to at least some at the Goldwater Institute,
that may not actually be the case. Why is that.
Speaker 2 (37:48):
Yeah, Well, despite some successes, and you've lifted some of
them there, and despite the Trump administration taking some excellent
as to restrict discriminatory DEI policies in various ways. Despite
all that, this site is far from over. And I
(38:09):
would say that, especially at the universities, what we've seen
is that very often, even when the universities have clear
directives from their board of trustees or even their state
legislatures that you will no longer practice these discriminatory tenants
of DEI, they are hiding it. They're hiding the ball
(38:32):
by changing the name of what they're doing and continuing
to engage in discrimination and indoctrination in various ways. And
we recently released a podcast at Goldwater.
Speaker 5 (38:45):
Called Dismantling DEI, and this.
Speaker 2 (38:48):
Does I think an excellent job of showing how this,
this is something we need to keep our eye on
the ball here in various ways. The guests on that
podcast do an excellent job of talking about how we
need to continue to call out these practices that frankly
go against our constitution and we need to especially think
(39:13):
about this in terms of education because it's truly a
threat to education.
Speaker 1 (39:17):
In a lot of ways. Yeah, I think the vik
Ramaswami was one of the first to sort of put
up a red flag about this. He put out a
book several years ago, and I had him on after
the book came out, and he was talking about the DEI,
especially in the corporate world. He was talking about the
policies and the things that he witnessed when he was
(39:38):
when he was in the business world, and how it
really affected the way the company ran and the effected
the bottom line and the expenses that were that were
associated with it, and how the people who were best
suited really were being left by the wayside, and the
damage that that sort of thing can do. But when
you when you look at DEI policies on the face
(40:00):
of it, it really is and there's a lot of
excuse making. As I look at DEI policies. There's a
lot of excuse making that gets done for these policies
when they really are discriminatory on their face in really
the worst sort of ways. And you're simply saying, we're
not going to hire someone because it's a straight white male,
(40:25):
And when that's your starting point, how can you look
at that and say that that is not flat out
discrimination on its face.
Speaker 2 (40:35):
Yeah, I agree, Dan, And that's what I would emphasize
as well, that no American should be discriminated against based
on race, based on sex, or other categories of identity.
And at the heart of DEI that is what is happening,
(40:56):
is that people are given either preferences or they're being
ungraded based on immutable characteristics.
Speaker 5 (41:04):
Really, and that is.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
Something that is completely contrary to our Constitution, as enshrined
in the fourteenth Amendment, to that magnificent document. And so yes,
absolutely that we need to realize and act on and
enforce the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection.
Speaker 5 (41:29):
Under the law.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
You know, I go back to the Nixon days when
and it was it was Richard Nixon who signed into
law the whole idea of equal opportunity for when it
comes to employment, and when it was actually a military
initiative that when individuals were going to be promoted to
higher officer ranks, colonel general, things like that, that they
(41:54):
they were going to make the policy was not to
overlook candidates who were black, and because they looked at
themselves and they said, you know what, we might have
a deficiency here. So the whole idea of equal opportunity
for everyone was something that started under the next administration.
It was a simple policy just to say a candidate
(42:15):
cannot be excluded because they're not a white male, that
we're going to start looking for people who can be
promoted and no matter if a man, woman, they're black,
they're Asian, whatever. So that policy and just I think
(42:37):
it started there and it got us to where it
got so bastardized into what we saw manifesting itself over
the last five to ten years.
Speaker 2 (42:50):
Yeah, I would agree, And what I'd add to that
is that I think people need to appreciate how DEI
is part of the those discriminatory policies that you're talking about,
But an additional part of it that goes along with
that is the indoctrination component, where under the banner of
(43:12):
DEI people are being taught in training sessions, in college curricula,
in these required educational sessions to renew your license if
you're in a field that has a license from a state.
They're they're being forced to take these indoctrination sessions.
Speaker 3 (43:33):
That say that our society is systemically biased, or systemically racist,
or systemically sexist against certain groups.
Speaker 2 (43:45):
And that goes to justify the discriminatory policies that are
enacted in various ways. And so I think people need
to realize that DEI is those discriminatory policies, but it
also is this ideological crusade meant to force people to
adopt this notion of the United States as a systemically
(44:08):
bigoted place. And that's another part that the Goal Oar
Institute is opposing that while our country has problems, it
is not systemically racist in the ways that DEI advocates
are claiming.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
Well, yeah, and and I and I was subject to
this myself at a former employer that I had, I
had to attend these sessions where you go in and
you're going to listen to someone lecture, and they're going
to look at all the white guys in the room
and tell and and they're going to start. Their starting
point is that with without any discussion whatsoever. Their starting
(44:46):
point is that you're racist, you just don't know it,
and I'm here to tell you why. And I mean
when and when you when you look at that and
your subject to that, I don't know how you're supposed
to have an honest discussion about that when that is
the starting point, that you've already been found guilty, and
that this individual is getting paid a hell of a
(45:07):
lot more money than you're getting paid to tell you
why there's something wrong with you. And there there was
a whole industry that was created on this, and there's
a lot of people that made an awful lot of
money going around telling people this kind of stuff. And
I've seen some of them posting that, especially after the
Trump administration came into being, that their gigs have been canceled.
(45:29):
The companies don't want them anymore. This college course is
not happening anymore, and they're losing out a lot of
money and they're not happy about it.
Speaker 5 (45:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (45:40):
But what I say, Dan, is that one of the
issues that we've identified is that there are still a
massive number of requirements, for instance, in college curricula that
say that in order to graduate from our institution, you
have to take courses that instruct you and in these
(46:01):
concepts that we've just been talking about that America is
founded on racism, that it is a systemically bigoted place,
and you're being forced, whether you're accounting major, whether you're
a biology major, what have you, you're being forced to take
courses that instruct you in this ideology in order to
progress to the institution. And that's what we want to
(46:23):
reform here, is that there's no reason why this sort
of ideology should be mandatory in order to complete your
education at a public college. And that's what we want
to see changed.
Speaker 1 (46:37):
Yeah, hasn't the Trump administration looked at this and said
that if these colleges are going to persist in doing
this and promoting these DEI policies, that that is going
to affect the federal dollars that they get. They they've
done that right.
Speaker 2 (46:54):
So, like I said, the Trump administration has put forward
some very law executive orders restricting the discriminatory aspects of DEI,
and that's great, but they have explicitly said that we
are not going to touch the curriculum of public colleges
(47:14):
and universities, which is appropriate because the proper place to
regulate that is at the state level. And so that's
what I emphasize to your audience is that if in
your state, you should be looking at what is required
in your public colleges and universities, and that is that
(47:37):
is an area where we need to take a lot
more action because still millions of students are being forced
to take courses in this stuff as a condition of graduation.
Speaker 1 (47:48):
So the and I think the University of Michigan was
one of the first major universities that that made it
known they were getting rid of and they had a
whole DEI office. They had a dee I. I don't
know what their title was, but they had one person
that was in charge of the whole thing, making a
huge salary, and then multiple people that worked in their office.
(48:09):
And you know, you look at what these people and
you think about what what do you do all day
when you when you work in a in a in
a DEI office at a major university. And so you've
got all these different universities and a lot of these
companies that they just looked at I guess they looked
at the bottom line and just said it's not worth
spending all this money that that we're spending on for
(48:31):
so little tangible results. So they so they got rid
of that, But what you're telling me is that they've
moved it into the curriculum. It still exists and it's
just under a different sort of name right now.
Speaker 5 (48:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (48:46):
So, Dan, the the University of Michigan example was a
really instructive example where they they did spend millions on
DEI offices and DEI bureaucrats, and their own survey of
students found that it had the opposite effect that after
those DEI plans went into place, students were less likely
(49:07):
to interact with people of different political views, different religious backgrounds.
Speaker 1 (49:11):
It in fact to the opposite.
Speaker 2 (49:13):
It did not lead to more inclusion.
Speaker 5 (49:15):
It led to the opposite.
Speaker 2 (49:16):
But then in addition to that, what I'd say, what
you said there is exactly right that a lot of
states in Michigan has said that they're going to get
rid of that bureaucracy, those various non academic positions to
push DEI in various ways on campus. They said they're
getting rid of that, and other places said they're getting.
Speaker 5 (49:37):
Rid of that.
Speaker 2 (49:37):
But this stuff is still happening in the academic set.
Students are still being forced to take courses on DEI
as part of their major or as part of the
general education program.
Speaker 5 (49:51):
So in many.
Speaker 2 (49:52):
Ways, you're correct that this stuff has not disappeared. It
has simply changed form.
Speaker 5 (49:57):
And because we value.
Speaker 2 (49:58):
Academic freedom, that's a place where you can sort of
get away with this indoctrination under the banner of academic freedom.
Speaker 1 (50:06):
You know, I've always thought that if companies and universities
and places that promote these DEI practices, I've always thought that,
you know what if if you just go out and
you if you have a position that's open, that you
just look for the best person you can get, that
(50:29):
the whole diversity quotient sort of will sort of take
care of itself because you're going to have different people
that are interested in the position. If if you're an employer,
that you're going to have different people who are interested
in the position. You're going to have people who are
qualified to do it, and they're not necessarily going to
be the same the same sex, the same color, same religion,
(50:50):
all that sort of stuff that that that diversity part
of the equation is just it's it's going to happen
on its own. Is there any evidence to support that
that notion?
Speaker 6 (51:03):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (51:03):
Well, I mean I would just say that I think
in many cases you would be correct that that if
if you if we go back to this common sense
notion of people should be judged on their merit and
their character instead of these identity characteristics, I think we
(51:24):
would see that in many fields. It's like you're saying,
it would it would look like America. But I think
beyond that, it's it is. I think to me, it
is the principle of what we're fighting for here. And
the principle is equal opportunity and equal protection under the law.
Speaker 5 (51:46):
And the bottom line is no.
Speaker 2 (51:48):
One should be discriminated against based on these identity characteristics.
And that is the critical principle.
Speaker 1 (51:56):
Yeah. Well, Tim Manella, we've only scratched a surface on this.
We go on for hours on this, but it's been
great having you on the Goldwater Institute. And if people
want to find that podcast we're talking about, where can
they find that?
Speaker 2 (52:10):
Oh, they can find that at Dismantling DEI, where wherever
you get your podcasts such as Apple Podcasts, where it
was recently a number one government podcast in the podcast sphere,
so we're very excited about that.
Speaker 1 (52:25):
Outstanding Tim. Tim Manilla, great talking to you today, sir,
appreciate the time, and I certainly hope that we get
a chance to talk on down the road. Really good
having you on today.
Speaker 2 (52:34):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 3 (52:35):
Dan.
Speaker 1 (52:35):
All right, there you go, Tim Manilla of the Goldwater Institute,
and a good discussion there about de EI one twenty six,
Dan Carolyn for Bill Cunningham seven hundred WLW Lansford good.
Speaker 7 (52:46):
Hitting Oakland third baseman and Meyer's bringing it and the
pictures hitting the air foul off first, Benzinger backing and calling,
and the nineteen ninety World Championship. The logs to the
Cincinnati Rats. As you might expect, they pile out of
the dugout. They are jumping up and high vibing all
(53:07):
smiles as Blue Panilla and his coaching staff break out
of the dugout, gloves and caps all over the enfield.
The Cincinnati Retch have done the absolute improbable by defeating
the club considered to be the best in Major League Baseball,
and they've.
Speaker 6 (53:24):
Done it in a four game series.
Speaker 7 (53:26):
Suite. Oh hello, quiet and I'm Scot, I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 1 (53:38):
God Sega. I never heard that call.
Speaker 8 (53:41):
October twentieth, nineteen ninety on miss Day.
Speaker 1 (53:45):
You know why I didn't hear it?
Speaker 8 (53:47):
Drunk again or something or what?
Speaker 1 (53:49):
I was there? Oh, okay, I was. I was. I
was actually in the seven hundred WLW newsroom at the time,
and I was there in Oakland covering the game for
seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 8 (53:59):
There you go, probably drunken in the background.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
Grew out there with Davy the arm Brewster boy. And
who else did I fly out there with? Willie? No?
Not Willie wild Man? What's it?
Speaker 5 (54:13):
No?
Speaker 1 (54:13):
Not no, not wild Man, Nah, Furman the fur Ball.
And we got we got, we got a surprise. You
got that far. We got to the airport. We had
to rent a car, and then for some reason, Furman
decided he wanted to drive. The guy's a terrible driver,
(54:33):
and in Los Angeles, in Los Angeles, up in prison.
We drove. We drove for about five minutes. He's I mean,
the guy's got sweat rolling down his rolling down his forehead.
Have no it has no idea, I said, Furman. I said,
I said, stop the car. I said, I'm driving. I
used to live in Los Angeles. I know how to drive,
and so so I wound up doing the driving around
(54:53):
around the Bay area when we were out there in
uh in Oakland, California.
Speaker 8 (54:59):
Dan Carrol the stood reporters and proud service of your
local Tame Star Heating and air Conditioning dealers Tamestar, well
you could feel in Cincinnati, cal Sheldon Braun at Braun
Heating at five one, three, three, eight, five, seventy seven
sixty five. But let's see Bengals update. It's brought to
you by Good Spirits and Party Town with thirteen convenient
(55:21):
locations in northern Kentucky. Bengals get ready this week for
those who win. Seven New York Jets come on now
that come to town. More on Bengals Line tonight at
six oh five right here on seven hundred WLW Monday
Nights and doubleheader.
Speaker 1 (55:33):
The Bengals cannot lose to the Jets.
Speaker 8 (55:36):
Tampa Bay and Detroit at six tonight and in Seattle
hosting Houston at ten, all on Fox Sports thirteen six one.
Speaker 1 (55:43):
Why do we need to have two games on a
Monday night? Why can't we just have one?
Speaker 8 (55:47):
Ask me, I call the ESPN. I don't know it's
supposed to be. I got enough problems around here.
Speaker 1 (55:53):
It's supposed to be a national thing. Monday night football.
Speaker 8 (55:57):
It's the National Football League Monday. Get enough of it,
Monday night football.
Speaker 1 (56:02):
Because now you try to watch one game and you
and you got to miss the other game.
Speaker 8 (56:06):
Call him, I know you won't. You'll be able to
watch one and watch.
Speaker 1 (56:09):
The other one. Well, don't they?
Speaker 8 (56:11):
Tampa Bay and Detroit? Does one start after the other
six o'clock? What times the first game start six o'clock?
And then Houston at Seattle at ten?
Speaker 1 (56:19):
Oh? That that game doesn't start till ten? Yeah, for
crying out loud. Who doesn't watch it? Who can stay
up till ten o'clock at night? Not me much. Cunningham
won't be watching it.
Speaker 8 (56:29):
College football, though, Cincinnati Bearcats six and one and co
leaders in the Big Twelve, moved up three spots to
number twenty one this Wendy AP twenty one.
Speaker 1 (56:38):
Coaches Poll twenty one.
Speaker 8 (56:40):
The Bearcats will host Baylor the Bears this Saturday at four.
Speaker 1 (56:43):
That'll be big.
Speaker 8 (56:45):
Let's see. Florida fired their head coach Billy Napier over
the weekend.
Speaker 1 (56:49):
How much did he get paid?
Speaker 8 (56:50):
Twenty one million dollars, half of which has to be
paid in thirty days and he gets the twenty million
or whatever it is, even if he gets another job.
That is America, right, there's all that that right there,
it's America.
Speaker 1 (57:09):
I read, I read, I read what Brian Kelly's payout
is at LSU and you know what it is.
Speaker 8 (57:14):
Well, the U Kurt Signetti uh in Indiana. Yeah, just
got that total ninety three mil. He's owed all of
it if he leaves.
Speaker 1 (57:24):
Yeah, Brian Kelly's payout fifty three million, fifty three million for.
Speaker 8 (57:29):
Ls He might be next m LSFC Cincinnati in.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
The come to get fired after a while.
Speaker 8 (57:36):
Well, you never know. Let me go not coming back
here and guarantee you that m ls FC Cincinnati will
host the Columbus Crew and hell Is Reel and the
best of three MLS first Round playoff series on Game
one TQL Stadium on Monday, October twenty seventh.
Speaker 1 (57:53):
Do they go back and forth? Do they play all
the games here or do they play like here and there.
Speaker 8 (57:58):
They played Monday October twenty seventh here, then they play
in Columbus and then Game three will be here. Let's
see Game seven winner go home tonight between the Mariners
and Blue Jayson Toronto Game seven of the Alcs and
the winner there, of course gets the gets the Dodgers
in the World Series that'll start on Friday. Let's see
(58:21):
what else is going on here, Oh Mason girls tennis
team when their ninth consecutive state championship over the weekend.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
How about that and the.
Speaker 8 (58:31):
College dodgeball power rankings. We give it to you all here,
College dodgeball power ranking. Power Ranking. Had no idea this
was going on. I had no idea either. Miami RedHawks Ono.
I think Miami RedHawks are second in the nation. Cincinnati
(58:52):
bearcatser sixth, NKU is sixteenth.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
That'll be huge.
Speaker 8 (58:58):
We've got powerhouse volleyball around here.
Speaker 1 (59:00):
Boys. When when do when do we get to see
a game? I don't know you get to watch? They
can have all three of those teams show up at
uh SO At with the arena downtown and have a
giant dodgeball.
Speaker 8 (59:11):
Matt Also back to baseball, Ret louder remember him, Yes,
two starts so far in the Arizona Fall League.
Speaker 1 (59:19):
I'm on now two twenty.
Speaker 8 (59:21):
Five e r A, no walks, five strikeouts, so that's
a start after two starts, mister Louder, so didn't he have.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
Something wrong with his elbow or something.
Speaker 8 (59:31):
That had four arms, four arm, elbow arms something.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
I don't know what was going on. I was supposed
to be pretty good.
Speaker 8 (59:36):
He had more injuries than that. Doc Hollywood could probably
figure out. Also, Dan Carroll, it's at getting to be
that time of year again. The wait, no Christmas times
right around the corner.
Speaker 1 (59:52):
Well, wait a minute, wait a minute, the wish We
haven't we haven't had trick or treat yet, right, we
haven't had Thanksgiving yet. Yep, and you're jumping right ahead
to Christmas. Amen to that baby Sandy Claus all the
way with Ted mckaye. What about Claus?
Speaker 8 (01:00:03):
The Wish Tree Program celebrating forty one years this year.
Uh So, if you want to help out need each
children and adults, get a tree, and all you got
to do is call the Wish Tree Program wish Line
at five one three eight five two eighteen ninety five
five one three eight five two eighteen ninety five for
(01:00:25):
the Wish Tree Program and help out your fellow man
this Christmas season.
Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
That's a great thing, yes it is, But what about
we haven't had we haven't had a great pumpkin. Charlie
Brown so we haven't had Thanksgiving. Yeah, well, I mean
and now you just sip there, give it right over
that stuff going right to Christmas. That's right.
Speaker 8 (01:00:46):
It's the birth of you know who, and that's more
important than getting in your candy and the're and stuff
in your stuff in your gut.
Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Saga. I'm reading that former WWE champion Bobby horn Huh,
best known to fans as sir Mo from the Tag
Team Men on a Mission Okay, passed away Sunday at
the age of fifty eight. Oh boy, sir Mo from
the w I don't I cannot tribute.
Speaker 8 (01:01:18):
Probably a tribute tomorrow morning on the Kid christ Show
on w E.
Speaker 1 (01:01:22):
Probably, but but I'm not familiar. I'm not familiar with
sir Mo of w w E fame.
Speaker 8 (01:01:29):
That that name, that that name is. That name escapes
me too.
Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
I don't know.
Speaker 8 (01:01:35):
I wouldn't what bigger into.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Sarah says he was a tag team champion, all right, Well.
Speaker 8 (01:01:41):
Not good fifty eight not good either. Rest of soul, God, God,
bless amen. But seg we got all, we all got
all hell breaking loose.
Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
We got the sheriff coming up after the news the
top of the hour, America Sheriff Richard K. Jones. Yeah,
well you're talking well here from he's raking in millions
of dollars. Old nice prisoners up.
Speaker 8 (01:01:59):
There here here, he's going to take over Venezuela's.
Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
We'll see what happens, but in any case, we got
to get out of the stuog's reports.
Speaker 8 (01:02:05):
Seg Dan Carol in honor of the sheriff, the sheriff
coming up. We leave you with the immortal words of
the stooge report.
Speaker 9 (01:02:14):
Lichtenberg throws a pitch to the rights and the tackle
will be made under Kyrie Anderson to end the game.
He lost a few yards on the play. The clock
hit zero and the UC Bearcats have a six game
winning streak. They have earned Powl eligibility as they come
(01:02:38):
to Oklahoma and stop the Oklahoma State Cowboys. The final
score tonight the bear Cats forty nine, Oklahoma State.
Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
Seventeen forty nine seventeen Bearcats now twenty one in the
nation on seven hundred WL seven hundred WLW two O nine.
(01:03:11):
Dan Carroll in for Bill Cunningham. We rocked on Rock
and Roll till three today, same tomorrow, So I'm looking
forward to that. Also looking forward to talking to the
Sheriff of Butler County, Richard K. Jones and Sheriff Jones,
Welcome to the show and great to have you on today.
How you doing.
Speaker 6 (01:03:28):
Hey, it's a crazy world we live in, but right
here it's not bad. And your little piece of the
turf and mine as we speak.
Speaker 1 (01:03:40):
As we speak it is. Did you enjoy any and
no Kings demonstrations over the weekend?
Speaker 6 (01:03:47):
Actually I did, you did? It'll surprise. I drove past
a couple, not on purpose. It was a beautiful day
and that's the last place I would want to be
wasting my time. Uh. And when I when I went
past them, I didn't.
Speaker 5 (01:04:06):
Give them.
Speaker 6 (01:04:08):
The thumbs up. I just simply put my arm out
and went thumb down, not finger up, but thumb down.
And uh, listen. I never seen so many people dressed
up in costumes like little bears, little turtles and uh,
big blow up walking uh uh I guess outfits for Halloween.
(01:04:31):
And I never seen somebody senior citizens all in one place. Uh.
And they were different. I never seen nothing like it.
It was humorous. I'm glad I got stuck in a
light so I could see them, and they looked so sad. Uh,
but made my day, made me happy that they were
(01:04:52):
wasting what little time you had. When you get older,
you're at the tail end of the spectrum as far
as yours go. You're not at the front end. And
I was actually enjoying my day having fun. So there
you go. I got to see two of them, and
I was pretty pumped up.
Speaker 1 (01:05:10):
Well that's our r. It's a beautiful thing. It's a
great thing about America. You can protest peacefully all you want,
and it appears everything was peaceful. So let those folks,
I say, Let those folks let their freak flag fly
all day long. And as long as you're not hurting anyone,
I'm good with it. Sheriff, you're making the news today
because of the ice prisoner situation that you have there
(01:05:32):
in Butler County. The rate for having an ice prisoner
in your jail is one hundred fives going up to
one hundred and five dollars a day, and that's raking
in a nice chunk of change for Butler County. Tell
me about that.
Speaker 6 (01:05:46):
Well, listen, basically, we've done deportation from this year for
twenty years, through five presidents, two Democrats, and I think
three Republicans. Guess what, They're all gone except for Trump
and the old sheriff is still here. We bring in
(01:06:06):
in the last twenty years, we've bought in two hundred
million dollars, not two hundred thousand, two hundred million. Now,
if you count this year, we're going to bring in twelve.
We said we bring in eight. So shame on me
for bringing in more than I said we would bring in.
Next year, we're going to bring in instead of twelve
(01:06:28):
that we told the commissioners and our budget hearing, we're
going to bring in twenty two. And that's just in
this year. Next year, and if you go the third
year total, we're going to bring in close we're going
to bring in close to one a quarter. I want
to make sure you hear this right. A quarter of
a billion dollars, not million. A quarter of a billion dollars. Now,
(01:06:54):
what does that money go to. It goes to the commissioners.
They determine what that money gets you. And listen, our
county is debt free. They pay cash for buildings when
they build them, which isn't often. They don't have any debt,
and their cofers are pretty good shape. And the old
(01:07:16):
share helps with that. But I want you to realize
that by the time this is done just this year,
next year, and in twenty twenty seven, we would have
bought in a quarter of a billion dollars in twenty
twenty three years billion. Is that that's not bad? Would
you agree?
Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
That's not bad. That's a nice chunk of change, especially
for a county like Butler count Really in any county
in Ohio I think would be glad to have that
revenue stream. So with all these prisoners that you're housing
there at the Butler County Jail, are they coming from
all over Ohio? Or are they coming from outside of Ohio?
Where are they all coming from?
Speaker 6 (01:07:56):
They come from everywhere. They come from all over the world.
There's like one hundred or two hundred and thirty different countries.
I could be off a little bit on that. There's
so many countries I know not where they come to
the United States and for some reason they want to
come to Ohio. And in the past the past eight months,
(01:08:18):
You've got to give Trump a couple months when he
got in and had to get his cabinet people. His
two point charged past eight months, we've had seventeen hundred
illegals in our jail close to that fourteen hundred have
been deported. That's a lot of deportation. And where they
come from, they're already here. The southern border is sealed.
(01:08:39):
I've been to the southern border, the Mexico border for
three times. I'm all the national committees for in the
national sheriffs. It's the northern border, the Canadian border here
that touches a little bit of Ohio, and they're running
the drugs in through a three thousand mile line that's
hard to secure, but they're working on it. They're working
(01:09:02):
on the Canadians don't help us, Mexico doesn't help us.
All these countries they've emptied people out of their prisons
and their site wards. I don't blame them, and they
helped get them here like Castro did at one time
when in Cuba. Remember when he emptied the prisons out yea,
and in sant asylum short trip, hundred mile trip. Hey,
(01:09:24):
the United States, I love to have you, and we
just stupidly we took these people. That's not happening anymore.
Ice is tightening the belt. They're getting people out and
they have said the commercials no, I'm on TV the
Homeland Security. She has said, if you're here illegally, you
(01:09:45):
need to leave, they'll give you a ticket, just fly
you back to the country where you come from and
give you a thousand bucks. A lot of them have
took them up on that. But if not, if you
get captured in these stings, what's going to happen is
you'll never allowed back to the United States ever. Go back,
get in line, and come in the correct way the
(01:10:07):
United States, whether you voted for Trump or you did not.
The American people boat parties Democrat and Republic seventy eight
percent want the borders sealed, and they want people to
port it back to their country. Pretty simple, my friend.
Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Yeah, absolutely. I've heard Tom Homan say many times that
if these different places around the country are you know,
these places that want to be sanctuary cities and sanctuary
states and sanctuary jurisdictions, if they would simply just stop
doing that, it would make the job of these federal
officers a lot easier. If these people are already locked up,
(01:10:45):
they can go in, they can do a transfer. There's
not a lot of commotion going on. It's very easy.
No one gets hurt is when they come to pick
up prisoners from the Butler County jail. Is that how
it goes, the very peaceful, very calm. They come in,
they pick them up, and they and they go on
their way and there's not a bunch of commotion going
(01:11:07):
on now.
Speaker 6 (01:11:09):
Basically, if you're jumping from an ICE car and discounty,
you'll go to jail. But my citizens, the citizens, if
you jump in front of their car, they'll probably run over.
You go to the hospital first. It's different here. It's
not like Portland or Cincinnati. We do things a little
different here. And when we go out with ICE, if
(01:11:34):
you throw a brick at them or us, your lam
will get shot first. You'll probably go to the hospital.
A brick is deadly forced. In case you don't know that,
a brick hits you upside your head, you can die.
If you spit on the police here. Uh, you'll go
to the hospital first, then you'll.
Speaker 5 (01:11:53):
Go to jail.
Speaker 6 (01:11:54):
If you shoot at us, we will shoot.
Speaker 1 (01:11:55):
Back at you.
Speaker 6 (01:11:57):
It's different here and ICE doing their job. And what
you see on TV is in those places where those
communities are okay with that and their police. I promise
you are not okay with it. But things are changing rapidly.
The president's only been there since January and he's just
(01:12:20):
got his people in place, and he's moved very fast,
and he's not done. They've got twenty to thirty million
people that are here illegally, plus the ones that are here,
terrorisd that are here that we don't even know where
they're at. They've got hundreds and hundreds and hundreds, if
not thousands of people that have committed crimes that are here,
(01:12:40):
and the people that snuck across the border. You can't
just sneak across the board and think it's okay. I
guess there's people that think it's okay. But if you're
sitting at your house watching TV. Let's say you're watching
the Bengals football game Thursday night, and you're sitting there
eating a little popcorn, drinking a soft drink or a beer,
(01:13:01):
and all of a sudden, somebody opens your door, comes in,
sits down, get you your refrigerator. You did not invite
them in your house. So that's the equivalent of coming
across the border and just sneaking across and thinking we
can give you all the welfare you can stand, you
can get all the free stuff you can you don't
have to pay any taxes. You can go get your
driver's license, don't even have to speak English. You can
(01:13:24):
have an interpreter with it. That's how bad it's gotten.
But not in Butler County, my friend. Now, I also
want you to realize, we have an operation going on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday of last week, and we just put
it out today. It was Operation Deportation, and we arrested.
(01:13:45):
ICE went out with Homeland Security, federal agents from different
agencies and the Sheriff's office and ICE arrested. I'm close
to thirty illegals.
Speaker 1 (01:13:55):
How about that?
Speaker 6 (01:13:57):
Thirty in in Butler County. And we've arrested probably in
Butler County just in the past couple months, probably one
hundred and fifty just in Butler County. We're not done yet.
There's going to be another one going on soon. And
if you're here, you need to go somewhere else.
Speaker 1 (01:14:15):
Pretty simple, outstanding, outstanding. You've also been watching what's been
happening here in Cincinnati, and you posted on your X
feed a couple of days ago you wrote that the
Cincinnati criminal justice system sucks. You wrote, I, as the
sheriff could fix a city in short time. How would
(01:14:37):
Richard K. Jones approach what is happening here as it
relates to crime in the city of Cincinnati.
Speaker 6 (01:14:44):
Hey, the police chief is only allowed to do what
she's allowed to do. It's not her fault. Nice lady,
I know her well. They won't let her do her job.
She's going to be a scapegoat in the end. And
it's the people that run the city that are the goats.
Speaker 5 (01:15:01):
They won't let her do the job.
Speaker 6 (01:15:03):
Comes from a great family, a background, and police officers
a family history. And then but when you take those
jobs and you work for goofs and people that aren't
very nice, they'll tell you one thing and they'll sacrifice you.
It's a luction coming up. Pretty simple. I would go
to the police department. I would meet with the police officers.
(01:15:24):
I'd meet with the FOP and they would like me
because they would be allowed to do their job. I'd
have to have a contract from the city, a six
month contract, and with that six month contract, people would
get arrested the jail. People would go to jail. I'd
have to work with the judges who don't want to
(01:15:46):
put them in jail. They do a no pash bond.
I'd work with the prosecutor's office and we would do
like the broken windows if you ever heard of that,
the windows. You go in, you clean up the streets,
you paint the houses, you get the garbage cleaned up.
(01:16:07):
You make people feel good. People that live in poor communities,
they need the police. I don't agree with Al Sharpton
at all, but I do agree that they don't need
to defund the police in poor neighborhoods. They have no choice.
So six months I clean it up. The police would
love me and the place would be cleaned up, and
(01:16:28):
then they would want to get rid of me. And
I understand that I would come in and fix it.
Speaker 1 (01:16:34):
But how do you convince these judges to keep the
bad guys in jail. We just had this guy who
turned himself in Sunday. He's out there. He's wielding a
gun at a business on Fountain Square, shooting into the business.
His lawyers claim in self defense. But he was just
convicted of aggravated assault. Serve no time for it. So
number one, he shouldn't have been out of He shouldn't
(01:16:54):
have been out of jail, and number two, he shouldn't
have had a weapon. But if you get these judges
who just to let them go, and these guys it's
a turnstile at the Hamilton County Justice Center and at
the Hamilton County Courthouse. And so how do you deal
with that? Do you say you'd work with the judges, Hey,
go ahead.
Speaker 6 (01:17:14):
Yeah, you gotta go, You gotta you gotta go. You
gotta go work with them. And if not, I meet
with the federals, the federal guys, the prosecutors, federal prosecutors,
and I look at crimes that I can run them
through the federal system whole way to work them out. Uh.
Six months. The police would love it. They they they'd
be able to do their job. The police chief that
(01:17:35):
you have is a great person. She's a good person,
and she comes from a family of police officers. Great, great,
honest person. She's being scapegoaded and blamed for everything that
they want her to do. But she has bosses, city manager,
city council. But they'd have to give me a contract. Uh,
(01:17:56):
and they just have to go on vacation for a while.
Speaker 5 (01:17:58):
And come back.
Speaker 6 (01:17:59):
I picked, and then then I would leave and go
back to Butler time six months, six months and I
six months.
Speaker 1 (01:18:08):
Jones the six months, the six month plan. I like that.
I like maybe if we if we get a new mayor,
new administration in here, we'll do the Sheriff Joones six
month plan. That would be fantastic. They would miss you, though,
in Butler County for six months six.
Speaker 6 (01:18:22):
Months, but I could do both.
Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
You do.
Speaker 6 (01:18:26):
The businesses downtown would love it. Uh, the restaurants that
are concerned, the business owners, they would love it. People
would feel comfortable coming downtown. They don't now, and they're
not going to again. They're going to sacrifice. They've already
tried to sacrifice the police chief and uh uh but
(01:18:48):
and uh, good person, great.
Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Family, no doubt about it.
Speaker 5 (01:18:55):
Oh they are.
Speaker 6 (01:18:55):
But give me a six month contract and then they
can blame it all on when it's fixed, and then
I can turn a note over to them like a
Swiss watch. It'll be cleaned up. People be in jail,
they'll be in prison, and they'll leave. The crooks and
the punks, they'll leave.
Speaker 1 (01:19:13):
They won't want to be there.
Speaker 6 (01:19:15):
Best police department in the United States, one of the best,
all of them. Good policemen, good, good leadership. It's the
poor leadership of their city council that the people have voted,
and they voted for these judges. But I come in
there and I fix it. I'm pretty confident with myself
and I have somewhat of an ego.
Speaker 1 (01:19:36):
Would you agree just slightly? Just slightly, But Sheriff Jones,
it's great. It is always great having you on, my friend.
Keep up the great work, and keep up the great
alliance with the Feds and Ice and all the rest
of it. And always great to have you on. Thank
you so much for the time, and stay safe out there, brother,
(01:19:58):
and we'll talk to you again before too long.
Speaker 6 (01:20:00):
Hey, just remember six month program, Sheriff Jones.
Speaker 1 (01:20:04):
The six month program for Sheriff Jones. Sheriff, you're the best.
We'll talk to you again soon. I appreciate it. On
seven hundred WLW Lansford.
Speaker 7 (01:20:12):
Good hitting Oakland third baseman and Myers bringing it and
the pitcher is hitting the air foul off first, Benzinger
backing and calling, and the nineteen ninety World Championship belongs
to the Cincinnati Reds. As you might expect, they pile
out of the dugout. They are jumping up and high
viving all smiles as Blue Paniella and his coaching staff
(01:20:36):
breakout of the dugout gloves and caps all over the endfield.
The Cincinnati Reds have done the absolute improbable by defeating
the club considered to be the best in Major League Baseball,
and they've done it in a four game series.
Speaker 10 (01:20:52):
Sweet Hello, quiet, I'm scows, I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 1 (01:21:07):
God seg. There's an entire generation of Reds fans who
have never known victory, a World Series victory.
Speaker 8 (01:21:18):
That game four, Dan, will they ever know one again?
October twentieth, nineteen ninety.
Speaker 1 (01:21:23):
Nineteen ninety, this is twenty twenty five.
Speaker 8 (01:21:26):
Won the game two to one. Randall kirk Myers, New Richmond,
Ohio z owned Todd Benzinger catching the ball, and uh
Cincinnata reigned supreme in the baseball world.
Speaker 1 (01:21:40):
That was a long time ago? Was that thirty five years?
It's been a while thirty five years. Oakland, California as well.
Speaker 8 (01:21:48):
I was going to say something, but I say right now,
Dandy Stuart reporters a proud service every local teme Star
Heating and air conditioning dealers, Temestar, Well you could feel
in Cincinnati, Callyoming Air won eight eight eight nine nine
six h v A C. But thank you Roxy. The
(01:22:10):
Bengals are back at work, getting ready to those oh
and seven New York Jets. Come on now, j e
Ts rolling into town at pay Corse Stadium Sunday. Bengles
right now at early six point favorite of the Cincinnatams.
Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
And games of the Jets won oh and seven oh
and seven. That means zero. They haven't won a single game,
so they're dangerous.
Speaker 8 (01:22:30):
Hopefully they're on eight by Sunday when they leave Cincinnati.
Mor tonight on Bengals line starting at eight six oh
five right here on seven hundred WLW. Bengals Update brought
to you by Good Spirits and Party Town, thirteen convenient
locations in northern Kentucky. Monday night football. You got a doubleheader.
First game starts at six Tampa Bay and Detroit. Then
(01:22:51):
it's off to the Great Northwest. That's that way Houston
at Seattle at ten, both games on Fox Sports thirteen sixty.
Speaker 1 (01:23:00):
And I think he just pointed to the south. No,
it's that way. I think you're pointing south.
Speaker 8 (01:23:05):
No, northwest. That way is Indianapolis, that way?
Speaker 1 (01:23:11):
That way? That way is not.
Speaker 8 (01:23:13):
West, Yes, it is from here.
Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
Well, you can't tell. We don't have any windows. Theater
of the mind, Dan of the mind.
Speaker 8 (01:23:20):
I think south is that I pointed towards my back,
which is Northwest. MLS Soccer FC Cincinnati hosts the Columbus
Crew and the best of three MLS hell is Real?
Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
Are they calling it that? Are they calling it? Hell
is Real? Playoff Edition?
Speaker 8 (01:23:35):
First Round Playoffs? I'm calling it?
Speaker 1 (01:23:37):
There you go?
Speaker 8 (01:23:38):
Heck with anybody else? FC Cincinnati and midfielder Evander Big
Will you only get one? Vander has been named to
the MLS Team of the Match Day. He earns his
twelfth starting Team of the Match Day honors this season.
Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
So is that the equivalent to MESSI then one name? Yeah?
So you got a like seg Like, well, you've got
everyone knows your your sege.
Speaker 8 (01:24:05):
So does Evander. You can play soccer better than me,
the most individual honors in club history. Scoring a goal
and an assist in the three nil win over CF
Montreal that helps Cincinnati into the playoffs, and that game
one of that series will be at TQL Stadium Monday,
October the twenty seventh.
Speaker 1 (01:24:25):
But they didn't get the Supporters Shield this year.
Speaker 8 (01:24:28):
Now Philadelphia got it, but I think they fell four
points short. Four points Where it goes that's all right, Yeah,
baseball tonight winner go home into Toronto. That way ALCS
go at Game seven tonight Seattle in Toronto. George Kirby v.
Shane Bieber, the former Guardian. Let's see. Uh the North
(01:24:50):
winner goes on to the World Series against those Los
Angeles Dodgers.
Speaker 1 (01:24:56):
I think that is who's going to beat them?
Speaker 5 (01:24:59):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
How about Tommy over the weekend? What three home game?
Two of them? Two of them I think went was
the greatest game by a Major League baseball player.
Speaker 8 (01:25:09):
Yes, I think two of them landed in San Diego
and he had what ten strikeouts.
Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
And they took him out in the sixth inning. Thank
you all, it's all he needs use.
Speaker 8 (01:25:19):
He scored five six runs for game right. High school
news at Indian Hill, junior Devlin Daniel, a standout on
the football field at baseball Diamond, announced his verbal commitment
to play baseball at Mississippi State. All over the Cowboy
on the Diamond, Daniel had a career four ninety four average,
(01:25:39):
seventy one RBIs, fifteen doubles, eight home runs, thirty eight
walks in two full seasons. At a sophomore, he had
five point fifty seven alone so. And on the football field,
he rushed for two and sixty yards last year, thirty
four touchdowns, leading the Braves to the regional on my finals.
(01:26:00):
And he goes to quarterback this year eight hundred passing yards,
twelve touchdowns, six hundred and seventy seven rushing yards and
thirteen touchdowns and Indian Hill's nine to zero.
Speaker 1 (01:26:11):
Is he gonna play baseball or football or both? He
do whatever he wants, do whatever he wants.
Speaker 8 (01:26:15):
He could be the Olympic to Catalon champion wherever that
dude can play.
Speaker 1 (01:26:21):
That's amazing. There's some good numbers right there.
Speaker 8 (01:26:23):
Congrats to a Mason girls tennis team over the weekend
they won their ninth consecutive state championship. And uh and
as you said, Dan, you told me about this. The
college dodgeball power rankings are out. I didn't tell you
for the week you had it. You got it on
your Facebook page. Miami RedHawks number two in the nation.
(01:26:44):
Come you see Bearcats number six and n k U sixteenth.
Speaker 1 (01:26:50):
We need to we need to halley. We need to
have a three way dodgeball match. They say volleyball or
dog dodgeball. I'm sorry, dodgeball.
Speaker 8 (01:27:00):
Ttween who how about how about like a crosstown shootout.
Speaker 1 (01:27:02):
There the seven hundred wl W all Stars versus Miami University.
Speaker 8 (01:27:08):
N k U and U s Well, I guarantee you
one thing. How many are in a dodgeball game?
Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
I have no idea.
Speaker 8 (01:27:13):
Okay, well, they better have many ambulances ready and a
lot of helicopters.
Speaker 1 (01:27:18):
Could be you.
Speaker 8 (01:27:19):
No, I'm not knowing, Jack Crumley, You kidding, I'm not
playing the number two team in the nation, crazy, Sarah
el No, No, go ahead, I'll be the equipment manager.
Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
You get audio there winging the ball. Those folks.
Speaker 8 (01:27:36):
College dodgeball must be big. That's got the rankings.
Speaker 1 (01:27:40):
They try. I'm going to try and go to a game.
So I don't know. I mean they call it a
game or a match.
Speaker 8 (01:27:45):
I don't know. I have no idea college got dodgeball
power rankings? Miami Cincinnati and nk Miami Cincinnati and n KU.
Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
Baby, I want to I want to see it. What
about xavierot the Zavier dodgeballton.
Speaker 8 (01:28:02):
Not in the not in the top twenty five.
Speaker 1 (01:28:05):
What about Ohio State?
Speaker 8 (01:28:07):
I think they were like in the top ten, the
top ten, all right, So I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:28:13):
Got to get gotta get some games going, and let's
see what else. Let's see it. Richard Jones says he
can he can take care of things. He he broke
some news today when I was talking to him. He said,
he's got he's got the six month plan, he said.
He said he can come to Cincinnati, okay, and in
six months get the crime situation squared away. He said,
(01:28:33):
city the city administration's got to give him a contract.
They'll come in, they'll get the streets cleaned up, They'll
get the crime cleaned up. They'll work with the judges
and get the judges squared away. Work with the police department,
get the police department going, get those gay. He said.
The police department's great. And he said, he said the
city Hall is doing the police chief dirty because because
(01:28:55):
of the way they're treating her. Correct but he would
come in, get things squared away. You can take care
of the crime in Cincinnati in six months time.
Speaker 8 (01:29:02):
Well, they're waiting for I don't know in He called
it the six month plan. Invasion from the north.
Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
I said, what about. I said, they'd miss you in
Butler County. So I can do both exactly. He can
be the sheriff and Butler County and be the new
Sherman and General Sherman. Sherman's run to the to the
to the to the to the ocean. Maybe they out
to send him over there to Paris and figure out
why they can't catch these dudes who stole the stolen Georgian.
Speaker 8 (01:29:33):
That's like a bad movie. I mean, he'd come on,
I mean, I've never been to the Louver. Anybody didn't
go to.
Speaker 1 (01:29:37):
The Louver with you.
Speaker 7 (01:29:38):
You've been.
Speaker 1 (01:29:38):
You've been to France though.
Speaker 8 (01:29:39):
Yeah, but we were in Albertville, French. How far away
is that long way? A long way?
Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
You couldn't take a side trip to the Louver when
you were when you were in France.
Speaker 8 (01:29:48):
We were. We had eight feet of snow around us,
not leaving going anywhere. We were in the Alps. You crazy.
You're there for the Olympics, Yeah, ninety two, But I mean,
you know, broad side, rent a car, take a broad
daylight at the Louver. Come on, I'm all over the
place at that joint outside.
Speaker 1 (01:30:09):
How can they not catch it? How can you how
can you steal? How can you possibly steal anything from
the looth?
Speaker 8 (01:30:14):
Those guys did. Then they dropped something. Right, then they
drop some kind of necklace or something.
Speaker 1 (01:30:20):
Apparently they dropped something. They opened a window using an
angle grinder. Now like nobody can hear that stole a
bunch of jewelry and nobody and nobody saw it. Well
they think they were like just taking it out. I
don't know, unbelievable. Andy Macker, he said, they're doing everything
they can. The French president said, of doing everything they can.
Speaker 8 (01:30:40):
I bet they suspects. Then they got away on motorbikes, right.
Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
Are you kidding me? I mean, it's ridiculous.
Speaker 8 (01:30:45):
I they say, you know what, send send Sheriff Jones
over there. He'll wrap that case up at a day.
Speaker 1 (01:30:52):
According to the Parisian newspaper, police found two angle grinders,
a blowtorch, gasoline gloves, a walkie talkie, a blanket and
a crown at the scene of the robbery. The yellow
vest used by the perpetrators to disguise themselves as workmen.
Whole what absolute geniuses. We're gonna put some yellow vests on,
(01:31:16):
pretend we're doing some work, and we're gonna go in
and steal a bunch of stuff.
Speaker 8 (01:31:23):
You don't think anybody like Nike security didn't like Hey,
what what are these guys doing over there?
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
I don't know. Well, somebody they they let me see
they took they took a tiara and a necklace worn
by Queen Marie Amelia and some other queen. And then
and then in Florida. In Florida, you've got the hunting stand.
Speaker 7 (01:31:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:31:48):
How about the outside the Palm Beach Airports?
Speaker 8 (01:31:50):
Good job, secrets, sir, it's.
Speaker 1 (01:31:51):
Got a direct line of sight to Air Force one.
Speaker 8 (01:31:54):
How about that act?
Speaker 1 (01:31:55):
How does that happen?
Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (01:31:57):
How's that happen? At That guy is hiding into weed
sit on the golf course, That's what I'm saying. I
don't think he was looking for his golf ball.
Speaker 1 (01:32:04):
No, I don't think he was. You know, I don't
know that. That dude's a nut, that's for sure. But
they but they say they've got Yeah, they're they're investigating.
Speaker 8 (01:32:15):
Sure, I'm sure they'll they'll they'll check that out. And
I guarantee you they'll have those guys within a week.
Speaker 1 (01:32:22):
They'll maybe maybe maybe you ought to send Sheriff Stone
Jones down to Palm Beach.
Speaker 8 (01:32:26):
Why not find out what the heck is going on?
He's gonna he's gonna take him everywhere. He'll be America's envoy,
he said.
Speaker 1 (01:32:36):
He said, in Butler County, they've made a they've made
over two hundred million dollars already by housing these federal prisoners,
these ice prisoners, the illegal aliens. He's the man now.
And now the rate is going up. He used to
be sixty eight bucks a night. Now it's gonna be
one hundred and five dollars a night.
Speaker 7 (01:32:55):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (01:32:56):
And that that money's coming from the federal government.
Speaker 8 (01:32:58):
They can't go to travago and you know, like I say,
get a lower rate. So I think so one hundred
bucks of the night is the government still paying him
because of the shutdown.
Speaker 1 (01:33:09):
They're paying He's getting paid. He's not going to do
it for free. Okay.
Speaker 8 (01:33:13):
I'm just checking.
Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
And the money goes to the Butler County Commissioners. Amen
to that, brother, he said, I want to make sure
you're hearing this right. We're gonna we're gonna be he said,
I estimated eight million this year, so we're bringing in
twelve million this year.
Speaker 8 (01:33:27):
He's the man. You know what, don't challenge it. Don't
challenge the sheriff, absolutely not, especially in pickleball.
Speaker 1 (01:33:35):
Good play do you play him in pickleball, yes, and
some what about dodgeball?
Speaker 8 (01:33:42):
Somehow you lose to the sheriff. He's that good of
a player. He probably covers covers a lot of ground.
Speaker 1 (01:33:48):
I'm sure.
Speaker 8 (01:33:48):
Well he says it's either you win or you get
six months.
Speaker 1 (01:33:53):
I'm just kidding.
Speaker 8 (01:33:54):
Now, he's a good player. He's a good player.
Speaker 1 (01:33:57):
Seg you're the best. Damn. Let's go ahead and get
out of the Stooge report. Seeing I think Eddie and
Rocky are coming up at where's Rocky today? By way
should be here? I think he only comes in with Willie.
He's big timing. He's comes in once in a while
when he's waiting. All right, get us out of the
Stooge report.
Speaker 8 (01:34:17):
Dan and Otter of the Bengals looking for those oh
and seven gents.
Speaker 1 (01:34:21):
Take them down.
Speaker 8 (01:34:22):
Baby, We leave you, and Tony Pike is back. We
leave you with the immortal words of the Stooge Report.
Speaker 6 (01:34:29):
The sheriff should not talk to Bill Cunningham on WLW.
Speaker 2 (01:34:32):
He should do his job more.
Speaker 1 (01:34:35):
Okay, Well, he wasn't talking to cunning Hand today was
talking to me and long lived Tony Pike. Amen now
back at fifteen thirty Yeah, down and dirty and all
the way with Ted McKay on seven hundred WLW