Let's continue. Whenever stop, we simply continue on this Florus Too's death to me. The weather is great, suppose to rain tomorrow. We'll see what happens. Reds and the Rocks. It started about six ten tonight erst Spitch about eight forty last night in Colorado. The Red Legs looked impregnable. They won thirteen to three. They gave Colorado a field goal and that's about it. And they just dominated completely, going for three in a row tonight.
They got tonight and then tomorrow and then back home for four against the Cubs. They're about to make a June run. I can almost taste it, but let's continue. I received a report a few weeks ago from a Channel five reporter about what's happening at juvenile court relative to a brutal assault that took place in Washington Park about a year ago on May seventeenth of last year. And the headline is fourteen year old arrested in connection to a brutal attack in
Washington Park. And part of this was on a video, which I've seen. The video, it's awful. And it all started with a small gathering of friends who were sitting in a circle in Washington Park on a warm Wednesday afternoon about a year ago, and for reasons unclear, a group of kids came up as the small other small group was leaving and one of the children
was targeted by the mob, knocked out unconscious in the park. All six kids proceeded to literally kick the seventeen year old then sixteen year old boy in the head, hit him, punch him, treat his head like a soccer ball, and one of the persons doing the beating had a cast on used that to beat the kid in the head and the back of the ribs punched unconscious, serious injuries, taking the children's hospital and joining you and I now is I won't give out her last name, but her first name is Tracy,
and she is the mother of the boy, the victim who came within a half an inch of being murdered. And I wont to relate what happened in juvenile court with Judge Carrie Bloom and Tracy welcome for the first time to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all, he kind of set up what happened because some of this is on videotape, what happened in Washington Park and OTR about a year ago. Yeah, well, thanks for having me, and I really appreciate my story out there because I think there's a lot
of people that need to know what's going on. My son was a student at one of the high schools downtown and he had called me in the day to ask if he could stay after school with some friends and go to Washington Park. It was a beautiful Sunday or a sunny day, and gave him permission. He had done it before, and I just wanted to make sure that he was going to be in a group, because I felt like a
group was safe. But that day it didn't turn out that way. They were sitting down, had just gone to Kroger down in Central Parkway, came back with snacks, and we're just sitting in a circle and you know, as kids do these days, and one of them had one of those vape pens, and a group of six kids came up to them and started asking the girl if they could borrow her vake pen, and she told him no,
and I mean it kind of kept up. One of the girls at this point decided that she was going to video the beginning of the altercation. Thank God to us that she did, and they just proceeded to Hassler and my son basically told him to leave him the af alone, that they didn't know who they were, and you know, and that's when the focus of the argument or the I guess, discussion turned to him, and that's when
they said they could take him and if they wanted to. And I guess from what I understand, because he doesn't remember anything at all, he either stood up or they group of his friends got up to leave, and in doing so, this group cold cocked him and beat him behind a tree, and like I said, just left him unconscious, bleeding, right in front
of these six girl rolls that were his friends. And you know, in the middle of the park, everybody was walking the dogs and people were riding bikes, and there was a street vendor that I talked to after the incident that said he couldn't get over there quick enough to stop them, And so that's where we went. And according to media accounts, they told us we were very lucky that our son is alive, especially the number of blows kicks, including beating in his face with a cast on an arm. He was
left with a severe concussion, many stitches. He can't remember anything probably for this two weeks after the accident, continued through the summer with symptoms of a serious concussion. A fourteen year old boy was initially arrested for repeatedly striking the victim in the chest facing head with his foot. Prosecutor's office upgraded at the
charges to a felonious assault. So, your son was within a half an inch of having his head cracked open like it like an egg, and fortunately he lived, and Children's hospital told you, according to media accounts, your son's very, very lucky to be alive because of the serious injuries he suffered. Now at that point, when were you notified, because I'm sure that you were in a state of shock. How did you know this happen at
all? Well, we started getting phone calls from my son in the back of the ambulance, and he just kept repeating that he was very sorry. He has three other siblings, so my husband and I and all three of our other children were getting repeated phone calls, just repeated. It was like Groundhog's Day. It was just he kept calling all of us telling us that he was sorry that he got beat up at the park and he didn't know what happened, and stuff, And I mean we were just the utter fear
of driving the Children's hospital was It's just unspeakable. When you arrived at Children's Hospital, what did you what did you find? Well, we were finally allowed to go back to the room because they have a policy on how many people can be back there. I went back with one of the policeman that was there that day so that he could try to get our son's recount of what happened and to have him sign the Marcy's Law amation. And when we walked in, you know, I'm a nurse, and he had obvious facial
confusions. He had split lip underneath his chin where his teeth had gone through his face, He had eye groups on one side, and I mean I was absolutely positive that he had an internal bleeding in his brain. Thank god he did in the cat skin was negative and proceeded to vomit and just kept asking about everything, telling us how far he was. It was horrible. It was something that I hoped never see him. Believe me, I've seen a lot of stuff I worked in the emergency room. Well, did you
ever concerned that your son would not live? I mean, you know, I didn't know that D D I mean, I had no idea when we were driving down there where he had been hit what had happened, because he couldn't tell us anything. So the fact that he was talking on the phone
to us, I thought was a good thing. But when I got in there, I was just waiting for things to turn pretty bad, because you know, when if you have a bleed in your head, you know, you can be Ronald Reagan riding a horse one day and you know right end up, you know, subtereralhemotomin and in his case, they how many days? Uh? According to this story, he has appears that he's fully recovered, which is a minor miracle with the injuries. He was struck dozens of
times in the face and head by this mob of teenagers. How's he doing today about a year later? You know, the the most amazing thing is that after this happened, and after he kind of started feeling a little better, he told me that he didn't blame his kids for doing this. But as a parent, that didn't really sit well. I mean, it was proud that I had raised such a decent child, But I mean, this whole episode has changed the trajectory of her life because you know, he was
a junior for now. He started his senior year, he couldn't finish two weeks. He couldn't take his exams, he couldn't go to prom. He slept twenty hours a day, He could barely come up and talk. He just wasn't a really good thing. You know, he's not going to college because he feels like he needs to take a break. Mentally, because he doesn't concentrate very well. His anxiety is pretty much off the charts. You know, he gets headache. You know. Yeah, something like this changed
my life forever in his now. You anticipated that when this case of this fourteen year old boy who did this to your son with the others finally worked this way through the juvenile court system in Hamilton County. It was a flonious assaulted. But a few months ago I talked to judge I'm sorry, Prosecutor Melissa Powers about this case because it's gotten a little bit of play, and
she said, we're going to upgrade the charges. But she said to me, I have no confidence that Judge carry Bloom and juvenile Court is going to do much at all. And I said, well, you know, it's some of it's on videotape. There's a profound, perhaps a lifetime injury to a child inflicted by this fourteen year old and others. I would like to think she would have pangs of conscience and say, well, we can't let them go because they're going to do it again and again and again until someone
is killed. So when you went to court the other day, I think it's been a week or two. What happened in front of Judge carry Bloom, Well, the whole process is kind of skewed because, you know, we had all these pre trial hearings and stuff, and I saw the defendant twice. Other times he was not present and his mom was on a video
conference call while we were in court for the entire time. And I'd asked about that, and I was basically informed that after COVID, that's the way that they were doing, you know, that was a procedure that no defendants had to show up physically in court, and that it was appropriate for the mom to be present. But I was also told by the prosecutor's office that if we my husband and I didn't show up for all the pretyle trial information,
that the case could be dropped. And that was very concerning to me because I had to physically be present every single time. I didn't have to, I chose to. But you know that's very defeating. Well, at this point, the COVID excuse doesn't play well in twenty twenty four. But nonetheless, from other experiences, people have told me about this particular judge, they do not want defendants in court. They do not want defenders to be
shackled, They do not want defenders to be at twenty twenty Auburn. They don't want them in juvenile detention because of the harm inflicted upon these defendants by being in jail for one or two nights. It's a terrible thing. And I am certain that this fourteen year old and the other boys were quickly shall we say, released. They didn't spend a few hours in juvenile detention.
They were simply cited to come to court. And every time there was one of these multiple hearings that took place frequently, the defendant generally was not present. The mother of the defendant was not present, and you were correctly identified saying look, if you don't show up and show interest. The fact that this fourteen year old who's now fifteen year old, almost murdered your son. Judge carry Bloom was dismissed the case and put it on the unofficial docket.
So at the conclusion, can you tell the American people at the end of the day, what happened with the sentencing of this fourteen year old who's now fit thing. So the case was continued because there was a pre trial psychological evaluation that wasn't completed for the first sentencing. So when we went to the sentencing, my husband and I were present and we went into court with high expectations. Before that, I had written my husband and I were told to
write victim's impact statements, and mine was pretty lengthy. My husband was kind of shorter. But I was contacted by the prosecutor's office that they instructed me that the probation officer would like a copy of that before court so that they could help make a decision on the outcome of what was going to happen to
the defendant, which in the beginning I thought I was okay with. But the day I was going to send it, I called and I told them I was not sending my statement, that it was none of their business what I was going to say work, and you know, if that wasn't anything that I had to do, I wasn't going to do it. We showed up at court, went in and I had completed with the prosecutor to make sure that the video could be seen, because this was our only day in
court where anybody could witness what happened. And he was basically told that they didn't need to see the video, and he started presenting the case, and I can tell that he was kind of frustrated at that point that you know, that wasn't even going to be seen by anyone. So he basically presented the case and stated that he that the defendant damn near killed my son,
and she screamed. The judge screamed at him, and we rated him and told him that there were there's no curse words to be said in her court. And I knew right then it was we were. I was not gonna he said. He said to him, did the defendant kill our son? And he said no, he damn near killed him, and that was zipped
up immediately. The second person to talk was the detective, and the detectives basically stated that he had tried to contact and reach out because this child was on probation he had a probationary questionable episode that he was on probation for before he was arrested. So this happened May seventeenth, and he was arrested April
twenty I'm sorry, August twenty third. The detective reached out to him several times through probation to try to meet with the defendant to get the names of the other children, well thugs that were involved, and and he never showed up to pribation. You know, he was eluding them the whole entire summer,
and the defendants was she kept referring to him as a child. And the detective was be rated again by the judge and basically told that it wasn't the defendant's job to identify any of the other victor or any of the other assailants, that it was Cincinnati Police's apartment's job to find out who the kids, who the kids are, And how could you expect a child to give you names? Do you know what that would do to that child on the street. This is Judge Carrie Bloom. Let's get to the bottom line.
So when the judge finally wise, first of all, she attacks the prosecutor for using the word damn. She attacks the detective. The police officers rates them for intes that a defendant would want to mitigate his own punishment by giving names of the others. And of course Carrie Bloom is very concerned about the status of these thugs on the street. So at the end of the day, what happened to the fourteen year old who's now fifteen, that almost killed
your son, almost beat him to death? What happened, Well, let's see, he had he's told that he's on probation until he's twenty one. He had art monitoring on during court because he had a quirky violation during his arrest that I was informed about. And then she was irate about that. How did I know all this information that was privileged information because he's a minor and my son was a minor too, and it wasn't information that I was
looking for. It was strictly in contacting the detective about the case that I found out about all of these things. He has a stay away or her from my son. She gave the example that if my son went through the drive through window at Wendy's and this defendant or I guess, this convicted felon was the person that was checking him out that he couldn't he couldn't, couldn't take his money, He had to leave the building and she had to explain
that to him, like what exactly that meant. So essentially there was no punishment other than continue probation from the other offenses, don't do it again, berate the cops, rate the prosecutor, and at the end of the deal, the mother and father of this of this well, there was no father there. There was no father, of course, no father. But was the mother of the defendant present? Did she hear any of this? She was, he had to. He also has to stay away from Washington Park
until he's twenty one. And wait, this is the best part of it. He's not allowed to have any social media and that can be checked on a phone if his mother permits him to have a phone every single time he goes to probation and means and she went through the whole list. No Instagram, no Snapchat, know this. And then then the defense attorney said another thing, Oh what about this? No X, no threads, no all this other bullshit. All right now, lastly, this is your first and
maybe only involvement with the criminal justice system. In juvenile court, Judge carry Bloom have about a minute remaining, Tracy, can you tell us your feelings about the behavior of Judge Tracy Bloom Judge Kerry Bloom. Carry Bloom, Well, I mean, I just felt you felt very defeated. I felt like what I had asked for was a year in some type of a place to
pay back the year that was taken from our family and my son. And basically told that that was not anything that was going to happen because there was no sense to do that, that he was in a Dawn Academy program and that you know, he was going to be dealt with on the outside versus the inside. Right in other words, don't make it worse on him by putting him in jail, because that would cause more psychic damage to the criminal. Tracy, I don't know what to say. As a lawyer. I
want to apologize. But this is happening today as we sit here this afternoon, this is happening. The same thing is happening right now in juvenile court with Judge Kerry Bloom, exactly the same thing and some other mother, some other father, and it's going to continue until she stopped. But Tracy I'm very sorry for your situation and I wish it was different. Yeah, me too. I'm just glad that I have a son that's alive and you know, can still be a part of our family. All right, Tracy,
thank you very much for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, Tracy, thank you though, all right, let's continue. My comments are next on news radio seven hundred WULW looking for all right now, Billy Cunningham, the Great Am Maria and I just heard one story in River City about what's happening in our juvenile court system that does not happen in other juvenile court systems around the Tri State, whether it's Dearborn County, Boone County, Claremont
County, doesn't happen that way. And until Judge Kerry Bloom sees power in Hamilton County Juvenile Court, it didn't happen this way in Hamley County. Going back to Benjamin Schwartz, through Grossman, through Sylvia CV. Hendon, through Williams, we had a series of judges who always wanted to give kids a second or third chance, assuming the first chance it wasn't an attempted murder. They always wanted to because of the cost of incarceration and things of that character.
The money's involved. We have a dysfunctional juvenile court jail system, completely dysfunctional. Mike Dewaine wants to completely reform, and I get all that it's hard to find people that want to work and of a life's work inside criminal detention centers for juveniles. Monstrous difficulties arise, but nonetheless you do your best with what you got. Something changed about two years ago when Melissa Powers,
who's now the County Prosecutor, decided to retire from juvenile court. And then she came out of retirement when Joe Dieters was pointed to the High Supreme Court, and the person that took over was Judge Carrie Bloom, who individuals tell me that she's a wonderful lady, very kind and generous. Her history is
filled with aclu and public defender work. She comes to the bench as an endorsed Democrat, beats Judge John Williams, who was nationally recognized as a juvenile court judge that came up with inventive ways of assisting juveniles to get out of
a life of crime. There was always a carrot and a stick, so she took over, and from the moment she took over, things changed fundamentally, things change for the worse, and let's face it, mainly has gotten worse within the black community itself because they're the ones who suffer so many of their brutal assaults by the few in their number who commit large numbers of vicious assaults. In this case, high school kids on a Wednesday afternoon, about
three point thirty, they're going to school downtown. They decided to walk to Washington Park in order to sit around about three thirty four o'clock in the afternoon, and you heard the mother say one of the they were mainly about seven or eight girls and three or four boys sitting around and the one or two of the girls are using a vape, which I think is a bad idea, but nonetheless is not a crime. Maybe it is. I don't think it's a crime when you're a juvenile to use vape. I'm not sure.
But nonetheless, they were just kibbetzing in this fifteen i'm sorry, fourteen year old was the head of a crew and they would terrorize people in Washington Park and steal stuff and make things difficult. That's what they do in fact, we've learned the subject of this criminal investigation was already on probation. And this was at the age of fourteen, already on probation fleeing and eluding police on probation. He had several violations filed against him, nothing ever happened, never
went to jail. I can imagine the student. This student and this crew don't attend school. Seventy percent of black boys don't intend. They're chronically absent from CPS. How can there be education when high school kids seventy percent of the time are chronically absent. So they had nothing else to do. So this these thugs is called by Tracy, the mother of the boy that was almost beaten to death, sat around and he fell to again like defend the
girls who these thugs wanted to take the vapepen. And as the boy got up, Tracy's son got up. All six of the kids proceeded to literally kick him in the head, in the ribs, punch him. One of the group had a cast on. He was using that to beat this kid
in the head, in the back, and in the ribs. When he punched him in the face, hit him so hard his teeth came through the lower lip and suffered serious brain injuries and facial contusions and breakage of bones in the face, brushed the children's hospital severe concussion in addition of visible injuries. You can only imagine mom and dad driving the children's anticipating what they're going to
find, and it was awful. The parents were told the kid's the seventeen year old son is lucky to be alive, especially since the repeated kicks by feet and by the cast and by punching it caused a blame breed. He was left with a severe concussion, can't remember much and you hear what mom said. He's going to take a year off and just try to get healthy physically. So they located somehow. The fourteen year old initially arrested a simple
assault. It was quickly upgraded to felonious assault, which is an F two. If you're an adult doing this, you get up to twelve years in prison. And he would not disclose the name of anyone else. In fact, Judge Carrie Bloom did not want that to be done. The mother requested the judge Bloom look at the videotape. She said, I don't need to see the video. I know what happened. Then when the word damn is
uttered by the prosecutor, the prosecutor is admonished by the judge. The detective is there describing what's going on, and the judge is telling him to shut up, And so she proceeds to continue his probation, which she was already on probation a year or two earlier, until he's twenty one, and to
stay away from the victims of his crimes. And there was also numerous other curfew violations administered against his kid and essentially nothing happened, zero zilts, nada, And I said, Tracy, and you should know that we have a juvenile court system which is in complete collapse because of Judge Carry Bloom and one other inside baseball. When a person commits a felony, the odds are one
out of fourteen you're going to get a particular judge. In common Police court, it's rolled, and there's about seven pretty good judges and about seven lousy judges who don't think criminals belong in jail and crimes should not be punished. About seven of the judges of the fourteen believe just the opposite. They believe that criminals who commit vicious crimes should be sent to jail to protect society.
Unlike Juvenile Court, every juvenile in Hamley County, and there are thousands who commit crime, go in front of one judge, that is the presiding judge of Hamlety count of Juvenile Court. There's not fourteen judges and you might get a tough judge or an easy judge. The presiding judge and Juvenile Court is
Kerry Bloom. She's been there now about four years and she determines completely every directly or indirectly, everything that happens in Hamlety County when it comes to a juvenile, whether it's Green Township or dent Or's Anderson Township, or the City of Cincinnati or Sharonville, every juvenile appears in front of Judge Kerry Bloom.
Her attitude toward justice is simply unjust. She just. In fact, she told one of the fine reporters of Channel five, I think it was Lindsay Stone interviewed her that she thinks the trauma introduced to a perpetrator's life by spending one, two or three nights in jail is so bad for that juvenile offender, the criminal, that she avoids that at all costs, and in this case it was an attempted murder, and she continued probation and told to stay
away and to stay off social media, don't go to Washington Park, and away you go. I would say, of the I don't know one hundred juvenile court judges in the state of Ohio, only one would have seen in this case cause to go after the prosecutor and go after the detective, but not go after the defendant who committed these acts and he's still committing them. I bet you a dollar to a donut that this is one of many crimes
committed by this crew somewhere in and around Washington Park. They will keep doing it until they're stopped. They won't stopped, so they must be stopped. That's the way to get it done. And all the judges we've had up to this point have understood that if someone shoplifts a candy bar from a convenience store, that that's an handle unofficially. But now we have a judge who thinks serious felonies, if committed by juveniles, should not be punished because the
harm inflicted upon the criminal thug is great. If that thug's got to spend a couple nights in jail. This kid should be in jail until he's twenty one years old, and then I don't know what's going to happen the rest of his life. It's ugly. There's hundreds, maybe a thousand of kids like this in Hamilty County, especially in the city of Cincinnati. Over ninety five percent of black boys would have nothing to do with this. This is
not a black thing or a white thing. It's a criminal thing. And when you grow up without education, with and a terrible culture, without a father in the home, and you're incentivized to do this behavior now because there's rewards and breaking into cars and stealing vehicles, that's all good stuff because there's no punishment until you get to be eighteen years old. Then you get rolled.
In common police court, the odds are fifty to fifty. You'll get a real judge instead of someone like Judge Jennifer Branch who's an ACLU lawyer on the bench. You can imagine what happens there. The odds are fifty to fifty. But in juvenile court in Hamlin County, residing judge determines what happens there, and she's taken off the doc and unofficially hundreds of cases, so
the media doesn't know the resolution of a case. We would not know the resolution of this case unless, said Tracy the Mother stepped forward and said I can't take this, and I've told her on and off the air, this is regularly what occurs in juvenile court now in Hamlin County because of Judge Bloom. This is justice now in Hamliny County, and she will not stop. Therefore, she must be stopped either at the ballot box, which is very
unlikely, or by the Ohio Supreme Court. And I encouraged Tracy the Mother to file disciplinary charges against Judge Bloom. The difficulty is, if she has the right to do something as a judge, she can choose many options. She can choose any of the ones that she desires. So ultimately it might be up to the voters to say, we can't take this anymore. These judges get so little pub that many times she simply go and vote for a D or an R and that's the end of it. It's kind of sad,
all right, thanks for listening. Let's continue with more after one o'clock today we've scheduled at Curtis Halk of the Media Research Center to come on and talk about the scandals not covered by the UH by the mainstream media. Twelve fifty five, Home of Your reds Who's Radio seven hundred Wow. I'm like a good woman babe, and I make a good woman steel, I'll make an old woman bless and I'm make a young girl squeal want to be baby. I'm hit a that I'm bad to the bowl, bad of the bowl,
bad the Bowl. As I've often said, I think the odds of Trump getting convicted in New York City was like ninety nine point nine percent. The odds of Hunter Biden getting convicted in Delaware is about zero point one of
almost anything. And when I read all the media accounts of what the media doesn't cover, joining us soon as Curtis Halke of of Media Research Center, and they have a poll up there by Brent Bozell that indicates that if a voter receives most, if not all, the information from ABC, NBC, CBS, the spread between Biden and Trump is fifty five percent for Biden and thirty five percent for Trump, which means if you get your news in mainstream
media, you're not getting news, you're getting an opinion. Joining you and I now is Curtis Halk of Media Research Center, and Curtis, welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And I've potted up the stories out of the Media Research Center about five new Biden family scandals that ABC, NBC, and CBS are censoring. First of all, give me number one, two, and three, and then we'll talk about how come they don't cover the real stories. Give me a full report. What's the what's the first big one?
Curtis, Well, first of all, I just have to say that poll is a very good setting point to at the table for this about how people get the news, because this election is going to be decided on the margins, very very slim election. So you know to say that, oh, those network voters, we could just let them go by while you want to fight for every vote. Okay, So the first one, and I think this might be the one that everyone has heard of. For the most
people have heard of. New York Post reported back on May twenty seventh about how Hunter Biden, knowing that his father was going to be nearby Connecticut for a memorial in twenty seventeen of the Sandy Hook School shooting, arranged for his dad to make the short drive them down to New York City to meet with a Chinese energy executive in New York City. So, in other words, this means that Joe went to Sandy Hook or met with a Chinese businessman by
way of a memorial for dead kids. And so that meeting, which by the way, Joe Biden constantly says no connection, never met with anyone, made no money off Hunter Biden. And so this demonstrates that really the dead kids at Sandy Hook would be used as a jumping off point for the meeting
in New York City involving Chinese energy executives. And did the meeting actually take place, Well, we have no evidence that it actually did happen, but the relationship nonetheless continued with with job or with Hunter Biden, Jim Biden, and these Chinese executives, So you would every reason to think that they did. They ended up with that cool ten million dollar deal with Tony Tony Babolinski so infamously talked about. So we have that. The second one is I'll
run through these second too quickly. May twenty second. New York Post also reported House votes to release evidence that proves Hunter Biden indisputably wide under oath, which interesting is housewazy means committee, house overside committee. You're not hearing soundbites from these members of Congress in stories about the Hunter modern trial, but certainly in stories about the Trump trial. Wow, you had mister Democracy Jamie Raskin
and mister camera hog Adam Schiff all over the place. And then the third one that we have here, Hunter claims he never introduced his dad to Beisma executive, despite them having had dinner together on May twentieth through also via our friends at the New York Coast. He claims Hunter body suggested he didn't introduce his father to an executive from Barisma, except there's photos, and there's photos of the meeting taking place now, and you point out that the four point
nine million dollars, in fact, the energy executives who are bank rolled Hunter and the presidential campaign twenty nineteen were tapped out after giving Biden four point nine million, and that wasn't enough. Is this the deal what he sent? You know, I'm here with my dad. You don't want to make him your enemy. He's kind of threatening these Chinese interests that we need more than four point nine million plus the ten million from Babolinski, all of which went
to the big guy. When that was tapped out, we can't give any more money. You would think this would be a big story now. I would assume ABCNBC and CBS covered the perjury of Hunter Biden because related to his father. How much coverage was there an ABC, NBC and CBS A zero
A zero zero zero nothing zero zero point zero. Isn't that interesting? Let's talk about a fund manager claims Jim Biden, the brother Joe Biden, had business relationships with Katari officials, the closest link between a Biden family member and a foreign government, all of which is completely illegal. Talk to me about that. Yeah, So this story came from Politico Ben shrek Ander, a
guy who's actually done some really good reporting about Biden family corruption. Heat a story about Jim Biden with a rural hospital chain that went under really bad stuff, but it always seemingly gets buried. It gets published early morning on weekends when no one's paying at time, so right after the White House correspondence dinner.
A very nice stuff. It's ended up in a bankruptcy court revealing that President finds partner partnered with Katari officials in his quest to find money for what I just talked about, these US healthcare ventures, which in other word, was a rural hospital chain that was going under. And so yeah, that's
kind of how that came about. This is a Kentucky bankruptcy court, and a testimony came from a hedge fund manager who was a former business partner of Jim Biden that they worked on facilitating efforts with companies that were partially owned by members of the Katari government to get infusions of cash to keep their hospital chains afloat how much money? How much money came out of the Biden hands from that any idea, not that we know, I was gonna say, not
that I know. I'm sure Jim Biden was paid for his work, but in terms of obviously it didn't work because the hospital chain ended up going on.
But the point, though, is very similar to what we talk about with the Trump Tower meeting, that infamously infamous Trump Tower meeting where the media and Adam Schiff in the world tried to say was proof that, you know, Donald Trump Junior was some sort of Russian agent, because this clearly kind of Russian agent came claiming the US government was blacklisting Russia over adoptions and how terrible this is, and they realized that this was a pointless meeting. They
tried to say that there was a lot of hay out of this. Well, I think there's kind of a lot of hay out of this one. Because you're working with a foreign adversary to try to keep rural hospitals. What's
with the well, are you consulting these people? Why would Kataris care about working through Hunter Biden to keep rural hospitals open in Kentucky unless Hunter Biden was getting a cut of the money coming from Katari to the Kentucky rural hospitals, in which case, the goodness of their hearts, the goodness of their hearts, you know, I think that's really what this is all about, right, You know, Dataris care about working people in rural Appalachia. I'm sure
I probably can't even pronounce if you asked them to. No, And katar has no interest unless Hunter Biden want to leverage his connections with his father Joe to get money from the Kataris and go back many more times. Now, let's go back a little bit because one of the most fascinating scandals is from Gary Shapeley and Joseph Zigler, two veteran IRS agents testified under oath under subpoena in the House talking about the criminal investigations of Hunter Biden and where that would
lead. And they wanted to get more aggressive, shall we say, doing their job to find out why the grandchildren of Joe Biden had thousands of dollars put in their bank accounts when they were eight, eight, nine years old and where the money come from. What happened when Gary Shapeley and Joseph Ziegler, by the way, veterans who are Democrats, went and started investigating the Biden family. What happened to that investigation? They were shut out. They
were shut out. They weren't don't do that. Uh. They testified before Congress, as many people may remember. That received some initial network coverage, but then it very quickly went way. And that's the thing that I think is particularly insidious with the networks. Yes, these bidens again those that we've talked about, they get zero seconds on the networks. But the media also have this strategy where they will cover something for like a day or two,
for like a news cycle, and then it goes away. So they'll say, we haven't ignored the story and we did cover it. Well, no, no, no, no, you kind of it's like a kid trying playing pranks on your neighbor. It's ding dong bitch, you know, is great. Rush Limball would say the drive bys, right, they would parachute in, parachute out. That's really what this is, this is about,
and that's what we're seeing right now with the Hunter Biden trial coverage. I mean, I mean through Tuesday morning, we saw that the coverage tally for the Hunter Biden trial was twenty three minutes and thirty seconds in the ABCCBS and NBC. At this that same point, a day and a half into the Trump trial, the media were at fifty minutes, forty nine minutes and forty seven seconds. So that's you know, that's a two to one disparity right
there. It's not surprising. So that's what they do. They'll still cover something, but they won't cover it to the same degree. So it's, yes, a little bit more of a nuanced argument to make, but it's very nonetheless, very important to make because we know when we're dealing with the liberal media, they don't deal necessarily always in facts, so it's important that we come with the facts when we're responding to them. This IRS matter is
so serious because these two people are Democrats. They've worked to fourteen and sixteen years for the IRS total of thirty years. They responded to about one hundred and fifty stars reports, which is suspicious activity reports that we're fine with US Department and Treasury of somehow tens of millions of dollars were flowing in to the Biden's accounts over a period of many years, and they're thinking, wait a
minute, I wonder who got the money, where taxes paid? And when they got close, they got close to Joe Biden, Jim Biden, doctor Joe Biden, the Biden grandkids, and they were told to know uncertain terms, stop what you're doing. One cannot justify a nine year old granddaughter getting twenty seven thousand dollars put in a quickly made up checking account into her account from somewhere in China, as if that wouldn't raise a few red flags.
And so they raised the red flags. And then I'll wait a minute, something's wrong, and they're superos and DOJ said, shut that down. Yeah, isn't that incredible? Yeah? And one of the other family members was like one of the grandkids or one of the like either Hunters X or both widow or something like that. You know, there was great school counselor or
something in truckloads of money ended up in their bank accounts. Yes, I'm pretty sure foreign governments, whether it's from Eastern Europe, the Middle Easter China, are definitely interested in what a grade school guidance counselor from Delaware thinks about about foreign affairs. You know, that's some smart nine year old there too, you know the grandkids I mean. And that's the other thing too, Like what does Hunter Biden actually know if you asked him when he worked for
Barisma? Could could he explain how fracking works? You know, if you know how it well works? Do you think about that like Jim Biden? Same thing. Does Jim Biden know how like solar panels work or how to put a solar panel together? No, of course not so. Why would
Barisma? Why would Romanian business interests, why would Russian business interest why would communist red Chinese business interests do literally tens of millions of dollars worth of business through Hunter Biden when he had no connection to any expertise they were paying for. What were they buying influence? Possibly? Maybe? Of course, of
course that's exactly what it is, direct access. That's what this isn't Washington, That is one former members of Congress end up being picked up by lobbying firms because they know the ins and out and they know people that still work on the staccavitees. They can influence their former colleagues by being paid by certain interests, including foreign governments. We see this with TikTok. You know, former members of Congress being a lobbyist for the Chinese Communist Party to defend TikTok
in order to influence Congress. They don't know anything about TikTok, they don't know probably know how to post video on TikTok, but they're getting paid money to influence US policy. That is exactly what's going on here with the Biden family, and we're just supposed to pretend, oh, this is just poor Hounter, poor Hounter. That's what we saw in a lot of coverage, just Pasi. They referred to him as a child, the man who's like
fifty four years old. A child's a child who's got drug addiction. We're supposed to feel bad for him. Yes, we all know someone who has addictions or struggles in their life. But guess what when you break the law this, you deal with the consequences, because, as Joe Biden tells us, no one is above the law. How much media coverage on these issues did ABC, CBS and NBC evening and morning news shows, including The View? How much coverage did they provide of these issues, about lying under oath
by Hunter Biden, the stopping of the IRIS investigations. In the track talk about Devin Archer, et cetera, Buris, how much media coverage did ABC, NBC, and CBS give this say in the past year. Oh, I was going to say, it's probably going to be in a couple dozen minutes, you know, some of these more specific developments. It's zero's across the board. But Devin Archer overall, I mean, you're going to get if I would look two or three seconds here, or two or three minutes
here, two or three minutes there, thirty seconds there. So not even close to what we found with the Trump trial, which was through Wednesday night, so about twenty four hours before the verge came out, we were at six hundred and forty minutes. Six hundred and forty minutes. All right.
Now, Lastly, this clearly points out massive illegal criminal payments from overseas interests which are illegal through Hunter Biden as the bagman to the Biden family, with Joe as the head, like the He's not the concilary, he's like the don He's like Marlon Brando, the head of the family who claims nothing. And one of the most ridiculous things is that there's no connection between the Biden
administration and the Trump trial other than Matthew Colangelo and Mark Palmeranz. Colangelo left the number three position in DOJ in Maine Justice in Washington to become an assistant county prosecutor in Manhattan, and he worked for years within democratic circles, and he was the one quarterbacking in the prosecution of Donald Trump that resulted in that
ridiculous thirty four count conviction. Although Joe Biden continues to say, there's no connection between my Department of Justice and my Matthew Colangelo and this assistant prosecutor's job, who goes from a gig number three in the country making two hundred grand a year to become an assistant county prosecutor in Manhattan. Who does that without
a political motive. Oh, it's just a pure coincidence to believe. On the on the evening shows on the network evening news shows ABC, CBSNBC three stories one on NBC two on ABC mentioned Colangelo's name, but none mentioned Yes, his previous gig at the Biding Justice Department, And we're just used to believe again, this was out a pure coincidence. Who's working at the Biden
Justice Apartment as a top official there and then just just sided. Oh my gosh, out the goodness to my heart, Alvan brag needs my help. I'll just volunteered take a fifty percent pay cut to prosecute Donald Trump, which has no connection to Joe Biden. Understand, there's no connection, and there's no gambling going on upstairs. There's no problem institution upstairs, the pano that's it. This is what we saw with the Clintons exactly. The Clintons were
just like you know, Hillary Clinton with the cattle futures. You know, I mean, I was in I was a toddler during this time. But my superiors have informed me that yes, sort of sense through all of that was, well, I read the Wall Street Journal and I'm really good at it. Great, and we're just supposed to believe this kind of crap like great, seriously, yeah, great investor, smart investments, you know, just like members of Congress. Nancy Pelosi's family did make really sound decisions.
Now, Paul Pelosi made about eighteen million dollars last year on tech stocks, just out of the blue, eighteen million came in his account. And Nancy Pelosi is still in the Congress. Would Curtis had at the right time, Well, it's just just fortunate, just know the right people. There's no connection, no connection, Okay, just put that to the side. Colangelo decided to go to an assistant county prosecutors. Gig just happens to be on
the case involving misdemeanors with Donald Trump. Just happens to do it. Curtis, how give my best to Brent Bozell and Tim Graham, all the folks at Media Research Sound for those listening MRC, check it out. It's wonderful. And Curtis Hawk, once again, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you. I love you guys in Cincinnati and WLW, thank you. So much for having me. God bless America. Thank you. Let's continue with more. What a coincidence. It's unbelievable. How do
these things happen? How did the grand children of Joe Biden have tens of thousands put in their accounts. It's unbelievable. What great work they're doing with Chinese. Of course, nobody knows anything, nobody sees anything. Let's continue. Bill Cunningham News Radio seven hundred. Wow. It's Carly from Ohio Valley Antique mal a shopping destination for your summer bucket list. Why because our dealer.
This is the last alerting announcement from Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forts. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Soldiers, sailors and airman of the Allied Expeditionary Course. You are about between mark upon the great crusade toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you in company with our brave
allies and brothers in arms on other fronts. You will bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of Europe and security for ourselves in a free world. Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well equipped, and battle hardened. He will fight savagely. I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty, and skill in battle. We will accept nothing less
than full victory. Good luck, and let us all be seeks the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking. Hello, quiet, and I'm skos. I'm broadcasting you know, sag On the sixth, I'm gonna read the Communic Cave from General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Right, what would happen if the landing failed? Because there was a chance Rommel, as you know, was not there. Well, then they had the they didn't build
the Atlantic Wall all the way down, and they didn't think that. They thought they were going to Calais. They weren't going to Norman, they weren't going to Normandy. No, it did the old Switcherrooney Bingo. In today's world, that wouldn't happen, probably not, but it just knew them today. I don't know what we do or something would have done. Wanted to kill every Nazi wherever you could find them, correct, Can you imagine on the outskirts of Berlin and nineteen forty five, I'd say, you know what,
you guys, stay in charge of Berlin. It's okay, Hitler, you stay in charge, and we're gonna go back much like Hamas. You know, you guys just stay right there. We'll just leave Berlin to you go. Let you guys stay, and I'm well anticipating in the future you won't rape and murder babies. To just stay in charge of Gaza and it's all gonna be okay exactly. In fact, is Israel is the only country on the earth you can't win a war. We don't let them win a
war. Well maybe they will this time. Who knows. They're blowing everybody else up over there, and they're blowing everybody up. But Julius King, Assistant eighty of Indian Hill is almost here. But we have Tennis Royalty in the house. Three of the players of the Indian Hill tennis team that won the state first of all, Michael Rua, I have that correctly, Yeah,
give me a full report. Tell me again, Indian Hill, I send you a lot of money, by the way, Yeah, and I am c the Hall of Fame function every year in the basketball to maybe maybe in twenty years you three guys will be in the Hall of Fame. So tell me, Michael, what happened? How'd you win the state? How tough was it? Do you represent the best of Indian Hill or the home of the Free and the land of the Braids. Give me a full report, Michael, it's uh. I mean last year we had a really tough
loss to Seven Hills, like in the state quarters. Maybe seven Hills. Yeah, I mean we were really pissed off about losing that match, you mean urinated off, but yes, yeah, please continue. What was the final score? How bad did you get whipped? We lost three to oh but three? Oh yeah, we were got good. We got be pretty bad. But then we were just really hungry this year, hungry like a
cat. He wanted to eat the big dog eat. And then h yeah, we pretty much just beat every D two team this year pretty badly. Introduce your teammates here, who are they of anyone? Seniorhan Gandhi right here, and then I like Gandhi yeah, and then senior Ethan camp Ethan, I like you too. I got some questions asked, go what is the capital of the state of Ohio, Columbus? What's the capital of Michigan? Very good, Lancing, what's the scare root of eighty one? Not bad?
Who's the Vice President of the United States? Kamala Harris? Okay? Who's the governor of Ohio? Who's the mayor of Cincinnati? I have no idea, you don't know. We call him PG purevll F tam Per. But you did pretty good. Any other stuff, seg the eighties coming. Give us a full sports report. These young men need information about sports, Willy the stute reports of proud service of your local Tamestar heating and air conditioning
dealers. Tamestar quality you could feel on the east side called Clement's eating in air nine three seven four four four forty four oh one four just outside. It is hot out there, so you need temestar to cool off? All right? Well? How many US Senators are there in Washington? The total number US senators fifty or no? Hundred hundred? How much about the House of Representatives? How many Congressmen are there? I should know this. That's
it right there, segment. Please continue, Willie. We want to thank a Lear's Prime Market for our lunch today, full catering service, Deluxe Deli located and beautiful downtown Milford, Learsprime dot Com. Lear's Prime always to cut above. Let's see the Reds whipped up on those Rockies last night? Will he thirteen to three. I think the Rocks had a field goal, didn't he? Will Yes, Will Benson drove in three runs. Jimura Candelario and
also Tyler Stevenson each belted out two run homers. That's pretty good. Red's had eighteen hits at coors Field tonight. They'll be shut out. Well. I think it's the heat wave is hitting out in Denver. It's like hotter than the hinges of Hell. Seven out of ww's coverage, six oh five of Sports Talk RNL carriers Inside Pitch at seven forty Kelsey Chevrolet Xtra Inning Show After the game, Michael did the Indian Hill this year compete with Deer Park
the Wildcats. I don't think they have a tennis team, But say that again, I'm not sure if they have a team, but I don't think if we did play them, I didn't play that match, But you don't think they have a team. They do not have a tennis team. Yeah, I'm pretty sure they don't. That's where I went to high school, you know. Segment please continue Padres infielder to two pucks ashore by mcconno. McConnell is out of baseball, permanently banned by MLB today for wagering on bets
again and involving the Pirates with his team last season. He bet more than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, won only four point three percent of his bets. He didn't know anything about baseball, so uh. And then there was another gentleman that let's see out. Oakland Athletics pitcher Michael Kelly is out for a year. He bet a total of ninety nine dollars. Ninety nine
ninety nine dollars. He's out of the league for a year. And apparently, I guess he had a deal a contract where seven hundred and fifty thousand. That's a bad investment thing right there. Let's see also minor leaguers. Jay Groom of San Diego bet more than four hundred and fifty three dollars and he lost four hundred and thirty three. How about that? These guys, these guys out to go to Vegas. They played the game and have no idea how to bet. No. Jose Rodriguez of the Phillies bets seven hundred
and forty nine dollars was it worth it? And Andrew Salfrank of Arizona ban for one year. He bet four hundred and forty five dollars and lost two hundred and seventy two. Now Marcano of this of the pirates made three hundred and eighty seven different bets, right, totaling one hundred and fifty grand He got four percent right? Not good? And then your good friend the interpreter for Otani, Yeah, just got the thirty three years in prison? Hey
what thirty three years is it? Sentencing is in October? See, you one't want to be you? So he bet how much money did he bet with Otani's money? Stole? What? Sixteen to eighteen million? I'm serious jack, you guys and in you know don't need money, right, just clip coubones and rich. Yeah, but you still don't want to play deer park, do you. Uh? Let's see final days of ot Final day
of ot as Willie for our Bengals. Uh. The world went absolutely cuckoo over the past hour and a half because Joe Burrow wasn't there, and speculation running a rampant. Is it the TV stations acting like it was some kind of major injury that he suffered. Is he hurt? No, everyone in a crisis and the media and everything else on social media, including Sarah Elise. Everybody needs exhale. It was just a day off. You don't believe that. Do you think of the conspiracy theory? No, he's had what
a Taylor said, I made Zach Taylor said, pand a mistake. He should have had the day off yesterday, but it was today. That's a bunch of what he's all right. You're got to get Dela Cruz to catch some footballs from Burrow. That'd be something. State Girls lacrosse tonight, King's and Upper Arlington and Indian Hill area St. Francis to sales. These are at it. Yes, they are playing at Kings the Knights. Who are they playing? The sales? The sales? How was the Knights involved?
The Kings play Upper Arlington Vision one, home of the Golden Bears. Let's see, we're going to have him on at about an hour, Willie. But Jim Herman qualified for the upcoming US Open at Pinehurst, beating winning a four man playoff yesterday and the qualifier in New Jersey. He's a good friend of Donald Trump. Of course, he can't say, Donald Trump, You'll be as soulid and beaten within an inch of your life. And these guys are tennis at Champs Champions. What about the joker, Michael? What about
the joker? Jokovic is out of the French got a knee problems to withdrawal from the French Open quarterfinal against Casper Rude due to a right knee injury sustained to the fourth round of his win yesterday. Casper Rude, Yeah, he's kind of torn meniscus. Is he pretty? Are you guys excited about the Cincinnati Open and the Western and Southern o going to be playing it? Can
you guys play at that level? I mean I probably. I don't even think I'm good enough to be a hitting partner like the woman, So really that's pretty bad. Then, what do you mean a hitting partner just like like a warmon like a practice. Yeah, I think you have to make a d one. You go to wund sock him in the head or something, just beat him up a little bit. You have to be like a D one level. Play among the tennis community has had a big deal.
Like high school tennis kids they want to go up there and play. They want to knock it around a little bit. Oh yeah, I mean like the best kids in the state could be like hitting partners for sure. So like the top four guys in D one. What about this Carson Dwyer character. We're still looking for him. Would he play? Uh? Yeah, he's one of our good friends. I like him. Can you tell him it's he came in last year. We tell him to come in this year
because his mother, doctor Jill, you know, Harden. What Tara did was care for the teeth of a rambe before the gorilla was taken down by now to get it. I mean she she used to fill cavities in a rambe's mouth. Would you do that? No, that's Carson's mother. Wo Michael, would you do that? And he wasn't No, he wasn't asleep. No, he insisted. She just put the just worked on his teeth while they found that tiger in downtown Cincinnati. Where's the tiger. It's a
tiger on the loose. I don't know where the tiger is. Well, he had a matchup between a tiger and a Rambe. Who wins the matchup? Tiger Tiger? I don't think. I don't know. I think I'm taking a Rambe and eat matchup? What do you say? Yeah, my god, I don't know that they can't tear that. He tear the height off that tiger and I don't know about that. I don't know how it could be. Let's get the match up. Well we really can't because yeah
is in heaven. Joe Dieters had him killed. Harambe wrongfully? Who had the code red Rambe? I think it was that colonel and from Cuba, that guy that was in the movie. That guy. Yeah, I've seen that guy. Wait a minute, we got now, we got Fiona and uh, they're all up. Who wins in a matchup? The hippo Fiona or Harambe? Who do you like in that matchup? He's here, Well, go get him real quick. We got about three minutes. He's late. I won. If you were late for school, what would happen?
You'd be suspended without paying, beaten with a can get beaten. That's what they do. They beat you if you're late. It's like in Indonesia, if you do something wrong, they tie you to a post and just beat the crap out of you. But Julius King's about to come here very slowly on my head. He got lost. It's a tough building to get into, Willie. He probably doesn't teach geography. Is that fair to say, Julius King? How you knowing man? Come up with the mic? Here?
Here he is? Here he is, Julius, I can't be any better? Now? What was the give me a dramatic moment at the end of Indian Hill was at risk, could have lost it. All the stars weren't aligned. There was lightning being struck, it was hail, it was tornadoes happening. And these boys came through. What happened at the end that won the state title. These guys just dug deep and they walked it more than the other team. Man who was the other team? Oh the Orange
Orange, Syracuse Orangeman something, And they beat him up pretty good. Yeah, them boys up north, they're not very good. They don't play tennis, do they. I don't know. It seemed like every year we go to the championship, those guys are up there. But Michael, tell me you lost last year to Seven Hills. What happened with that coach. We don't want to talk about that. We don't talk about it. Sound like
a politician. Jesus out of three years, right. I got this good friend of mine, doctor Harden, whose son you may know is a guy named Dwyer. You know, Carson Dwyer. He plays with him every now and then he goes to accident. Doney, why don't you guys go to Deer Park? Have you thought about? What are you laughing about? Let's Carson Dwyer get these three guys that deer Park it doesn't have a team, right, well, you could be the foundation of Deer Park greatness and tennis.
We don't want to do that because what we're building over in Hills, it seemed like it's gonna be pretty special. You know, not only are tennis guys. I mean we can rely on them to pretty much get to that state final. Name you go, baby. But you know we got coach Rodenberg that's doing his thing with football now, so he's got us coming. Not that coach Hill, Ricardo'hill with our basketball coach. Yeah, Wyoming was number two in the state. He took care of them this year,
so whip them the only him. You couldn't beat with Derrick Park in twenty eighteen. Now am I right around? Undefeated? Steve Gentry, undefeated, untied, unscored on. How about that team express exclamation point, A lot of question marks behind that. I love Steve, I love Reggie, but uh, no comment. We got it done. Just say that, Yeah you did? Unscored on. I give you that. He a championship is the champions Johns, I give you that. Now, who's getting these kids
and rings? They need some rings? We are, We are placing that order soon. Jeff Muir, you know a friend of mine, Jeff Muir and his wife, they want to buy the rings. Jeff Muir mirror blacktop. That sounds good to me. And Bobby Henderson lives in Indian Hill. These are rich guys. They'll buy the rings for you. You like that. Yeah, a lot of diamonds. But coach, good to see you.
You're wonderful. Thank you, miss gun Hand. We appreciate everything you do over Indian He'll come through with the Hall of Fame and everything helping us out. So we appreciate you, guys. I want you back next year. Do you promise these guys are all graduating aren't they going to Xavier or some other good school junior Yeah, Mighty be back and then uh Nylon, he'll be back. So Yeahlon's gonna be like he failed his senior year, got to repeat it or something is that that don't work that way? Indian
heil a triple. I see, let's get her done and believe me, the park will rise again. I guarantee you the park will rise again. Not sure when, but we will ride. Guys, congratulations segment. Get me out of the student's report, please, Willie and Utter of the Indian hill Braves a state champs in Tennis. We leave you with the immortal words of the stood report. Thank you. That's it. On seven hundred WLW.
Keep listening for the next chance to win your way to our iHeart Radio Music Festival presented by Capitol One, A weekend full of by Billy Cunningham the Great America. Of course, summer is here, big time. Now Storms
are everywhere, tornadoes and god knows what else. We have circumstances who are being told by the so called weather experts who can't predict weather tomorrow night, telling us is going to be the worst hurricane season ever, telling us that in seven or eighty years, we're going to live in a cinder of a planet. Who the weather types cannot predict what's going to happen in a few
days. So what we need as Americans are foundations. I might use the term lessons in Liberty Jeremy Adams as a California high school teacher who has the time to write thirty rules for living from ten extraordinary Americans. We can't do all ten, but the two I want to focus on is General George Washington and Teddy Roosevelt. And once again, Jeremy Adams, Welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. Before we get into their book, which is now out,
Lessons in Liberty, it's on many platforms. It appears that almost all the classes have now concluded. Was it a good year or a bad year for public education in the state of California and around the country. Well, I got to tell you it was a heck of a lot better than the COVID years. But to be honest, they couldn't have been much worse. But you know, you know, all things considered, I'll take it. You know, my students, I get to teach the honors and the ap
kids, So I'm very blessed. That being said, I mean, there's a lot of odd things about them. I mean, honestly, their attention spans aren't what they used to be. They're not as patriotic as they used to be. They have all kinds of a anxiety all the time. They can't read very well when it comes to being able to focus on things. But wonderful kids. I love them to death. But it's a harder job build than it was twenty years ago when I was a youngin in the class.
Let me tell you that. In fact, Jeremy Adams, you said you're teaching ap and I look at this generation of Americans, mainly without faith, many many without family, many many in a dysfunctional culture. And then on top of all that, the COVID nineteen shutdowns, especially in your state of California, was devastating, and many states did not shut down, but
California, I guess because the teachers had to. And as far as the attention span, as far as the prescriptive drugs being used, as far as marijuana is now used more than alcohol, as far as the ability of these teenage boys and girls have difficulty grasping concepts and have no idea about those who have paid their price. One point two million Americans have been killed defending our liberty, he Said's kind of sad we've come to this. Let's get to
your book, Lessons in Liberty. A couple of the characters. I have it here in my left I took an home over the Memorial Dayly weekend and I read it. It's good stuff. Let's talk about George Washington, a terrible temper. Who was George Washington the founder of our country? Well,
you know, Thomas Jefferson, I think said it best. He said, people of George Washington's quality come around about once every thousand years, and he is one of these extraordinary men for whom I think you can say that there would not be a United States of America without this man. I think you could maybe argue that any other founding father could have been replaced in one instance or another. But without George Washington, we do not win the Revolutionary War.
We do not have somebody of his continental reputation sharing the Constitutional Convention. We certainly don't have anybody with his gravitos as the first president of the United States. And Bill, you said it right, man. These kids just don't know these stories. And you know, one of the things I've noticed in the last just two or three years is just how reflexes so many young people are about how rotten their country is. I mean, forty percent of
gen Zier's now saying that the Founding Fathers were villains. I cannot imagine calling George Washington a villain, or James Madison or Thomas Jeffers or any of them. It's incredible. So yes, we need to tell these stories. Forty
percent say that Founding Fathers our villains, are not worthy of saving. I would also point out that a week or two ago, George Washington's statute, which I've seen it, it's beautiful at George Washington University was first painted over, and then it was hamas Hamas clothing was put all over the face of George Washington and George Washington. I hope by this point that that's been taken down in a shocking I know it on page twenty three of your book that
the Washington's nickname was quote the American Cincinnatus comes from. Cincinnatus famously answered the call of the Roman senative become a temporary dictator while applying his land he went in, defeated the vandals and the enemies of Rome, and went back to the farm that was George Washington. What would have happened if he would have stayed one more term was that something in his mind without a changed the country. Well would have changed the country, because remember he didn't live in all
the way through John Adams's first term. See, and that's what's so interesting about the first few presidents is that, you know, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson lived for decades after they left the White House, so much time in fact, that they had time to reconcile their broken relationship in the eighteen twenties. And George Washington, George Washington, you know, you talk about the
American Cincinnatus. I mean, here is a guy who understood what so many Americans today don't understand, which is that the country and the nation and the institutions are bigger than the man. I mean, and this is where you know, our traditional conservative view of power bill is that it comes from virtue, right, it comes from character, It comes from moral excellence. It doesn't just come from ambition. And the thing about Washington that was so amazing.
I write about this in the book is he had this level of what we call disinterestedness, which is a very eighteenth century Enlightenment word, but it means that he was he was never doing these things for himself. He was doing it because he believed that his life and his actions were part of something bigger than himself, you know. And yet today today, I mean, I know, I feel like I'm passioned the kiddos. No, it's not
just the case. It's not just the kids. I mean fIF I don't know if you saw this statistic, fifty two percent of Americans said they would fight if the country was invaded. Now that's not like signing up to go into combat. That's like only fifty two percent said that they would literally defend the country. You know. Thirty percent of Americans are broadly dissatisfied with their lives. That's a new thing. It was only ten percent twenty years ago.
So people like Washington really can be these models for living. And that's why I know you noticed this because you read the chapter. The very very first lesson in the book is what the book is about, which is this idea that we have to embrace self help, right, this idea that we can always be better tomorrow than we are today. I mean, Washington was buying self help books in late into his life, even when he had accomplished everything he could. You know, I'm forty seven years old. I don't
know how you are. I think you're in your seventies. Right. But every single day, yes, right, every single day, we want to be better than we were yesterday. And that ethic, that's an American idea of progress, getting better and using our freed him to do it now. You say on page nineteen when he was appointed Commander in Chief of the Continental Congress at the onset of the war, he refused any salary, asking only to be reimbursed when the war concluded. He should have been killed numerous times
in battle. What happened to Valley Forge and that cold, brutal winner was unbelievable. He could have kept it together, and the fact that he could beat the British was also an incredible I need to get on. There's so many, so little time. Teddy Roosevelt is one of my top two or
three presidents. Some of the stuff that Teddy Roosevelt went through, and on page one eighty six, roosevelts belief and the value of struggle might be assumed by a modern day reader to be a benefit of life for privilege, but in fact, suffering was no abstraction for him, even from his early childhood. Talk about the terrible health that Teddy Roosevelt enjoyed as a kid and how
he overcame it. Yeah, great, great question. When we think of Teddy Roosevelt, we think of the man in the arena, right, we think of the man who is, you know, wrestling, born out in the bad lands and you know, dealing with criminals and climbing mountains. But as a young man he was very, very sickly, had all kinds of breathing problems. His parents were constant a word, he was going to die.
And there's this amazing scene, this incredible scene where his father kind of brings him into the room and says, Theodore, you are going to have to make your body. You have the mind, but you don't have the body. And so what did Teddy Roosevelt do? He said, I'm going to make my body and he starts with you have this kind of famed Roosevelt gymnasium. But this is one hundred years before people really went to the gym. All that often right, you know, and he remade it, he
remade his body. And and the thing I love about Teddy Roosevelt, and this is what again I hope all Americans really will internalize. This is this idea that things are not supposed to be easy. I mean, I'll tell you Bill, as a teacher, the worst thing we have done for kids in the last ten to twenty years is that we have quoked easiness in the
cape of compassion. And it's not we do our children no favors by constantly taking things, taking work late, not giving them tests, saying you're going to have open note tests and retake your tests, you know, come to school three days a week. But Teddy Roosevelt understood that greatness isn't a chance, it's a choice. And real Americans get into the arena and they're going to be bloodied and they're going to be marred, and people are going to
say bad things about them. But he understood that strength has to be a byproduct of your own exertion and your own will. And that's you know, that's one of the great keys to a meaningful life is to use your freedom in a way that's not easy. The greatest generation and so many are dying about three thousand a day. It would be an anathema to them to hear now that forty percent of Americans believed the Founding Father's were villains, and that
fifty two percent would fight for the country if invader. That means about half the country. It wouldn't bother to fight because there to concern with TikTok on Teddy Roosevelt. There's his classic story. But I'm giving a speech and he was shot during the speech, and he was he refused care until his speech
was concluded. Please explain. Yeah, well, you know he was he was campaigning in that famous nineteen twelve lost caused Bull moose election, and you know he was giving multiple speeches a day and somebody came up with him about a five or six feet away and shot him. But what was kind of funny is you know he went back on his on his on his behind, and he went and he grabbed the guys and I won't look at this guy's eyes. And he noticed that he was kind of mad, that he's just
completely crazy, and he said, oh, there's nothing here. He said, I'm gonna I'm gonna go give my speech. And his Hammler thought he was crazy. But what happened was, you know, cause maybe Teddy Roosevelt's verbosity saved his life because he had his speech folded over and the bullet, you know, it made it all the way through the papers, but it
got lodged into his chest. And it's funny because when he arrived at his speech, the person who was announcing him said, well, you know, there was just an assassination in the top at tempt He was just shot, and the people didn't believe it. So what did Teddy do? Teddy took off, took off some of his clothes to show his kind of crimson soaked blood shirt, and he spoke and spoken, spoke until he almost passed out because he said, you know again, this is supposed to be easy,
and I have an election and I want to win it. And he spoke and spocus, spoke until he was done with his speech. One of these great stories in all of American history. And again, you know, young people, old people were not telling these stories anymore, which I think is
one of the reasons why we're so cynicle. You can't bully it can't be cynical about this country when you hear these stories about Washington or Teddy Roosevelter or Arthur ash or or you know Ben Nighthorse Campbell or any of these people that I talk about in the book. They're incredible. All right, Let's talk about one thing t R is noted for, and I want to I want you to give us the background, but first I want to read what he
penned, and that is this. It is not the critic that counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who's actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who airs and comes up short time and time again,
because there's no effort without error and shortcoming. But who does actually strive to do deeds, Who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in worthy causes, who at best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be
with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat. Where was that spoken and why is the classical quintessential tr Yeah, I mean that wasn't even spoken in America. That was spoken in Paris. Yes, And it's funny when you read that bill, I mean in you're broadcaster, so you're good at it. It gives me the chills. It absolutely gives me the chills. And I think in the book, I say, if there was an American sermon on the mount it's that speech that he delivers in Paris.
Because if he understood that free people are supposed to be a striving people. You know, free people are supposed to have aspirations and be inspired to retire and climb, climb harder mountains, and and and Teddy Roosevelt was that guy. He didn't expect anything to be easy. And that's why. You know, if you live in a monarchy, and if you live in a monarchical society, you know you're supposed to be a subject. And what Teddy Rolls helps say, by God, I am not a subject. I'm a citizen.
And because I'm a citizen, that means I have freedom and I have agency. And with freedom and agency, I get to make of my life whatever I want it to be, you know, And this is where I think is so much of this cynicism that you see on campuses where they're quoting Marx or Fuco or any of this. Frankly, this garbage intellectualism that doesn't believe in individual lives, doesn't believe in the agency of each individual person to make of their lives what they want. I mean, my god, well,
that's that's what we fought these wars for. That's what one point two million people died for. You know, this is why you know, you talked about the distinction between the science generation. You know, here's a disturbance statistic. Ninety three percent of the silent generation finds holidays like Memorial Day meaningful. Barely half of Gen Z feels the same way about it. And yet Teddy Roseveill understood that if you're an American, you're going to fail. You're
going to be bloodied. But you've got to be in the arena of life even if you're failing, well, you have to. You know, life is about handling the successes but also the failures. There's many more failures in life than there are successes. And at the end of the day, if one finds himself on their deathbed and they're given opportunities to be with their loved ones, what you're going to reflect upon is time not spent with friends and
family. You're not going to talk about a business deal, and you're not going to talk about an investment opportunity that went south. Here, You're not going to talk about some pet arrest or the fact you didn't make a mortgage payment, or you have a bad you have a car that's broken. You're going to regret time not spent with friends and family. And what worries me is that the new generation of Americans coming up don't are not anchored in faith,
not anchored in family, not anchored in American principles. So I guess the last question, Jeremy Adams, I have from you, author of the book Lessons in Liberty, on all the platforms right now, is it a lost cause to tell sixteen to twenty five year olds how great the Founding Fathers were? Absolutely not, Absolutely not. I mean That's why I wrote the book. I mean, but first of all, you put your finger on
it, though. I mean, at the end of the day, nothing, nothing, I don't care how great the book is, and I think it's great, but I'm not going to be able to take the place of week families, week schools, week, churches, week institutions. But what I do believe is that as a teacher, that we learn by example,
and we are either improved or depraved by those examples before us. And I think if this generation needs anything at all, they need inspiration, because they're not getting get on TikTok, They're not going to get on Twitter, right. And what's so disturbing about the fact that so many of them reflectively say no to America is that some of the greatest human beings who have ever lived. You don't need to go back to Greece and Rome. Look in our
own history, right. American history is like buried treasure in your backyard that's about an inch deep. You don't have to go very far to be inspired. And that's really what I wanted to do in this book. I wanted to write a book that was really well written, but also very inspirational, also very actionable. So if you want to feel better about your country and you want to be inspired to have a better American journey, I think this is the book for you. Well it is. It's a Lessons in Liberty
by Jeremy Adams. He's the California Teacher of the Year, social studies teacher at Bakersville High School and a longtime political science lecture And I think your students said Jeremy would be blessed to have you as their teacher, and California needs you badly. Please keep doing what you're doing doing. Don't get involved in politics. You're having you're having an effect all over the country as we speak
now. But Jeremy Adams, thank you. The book has lessons in liberty, and with your permission, in three or four months, let's do it again. Thank you, Jeremy, thank you so much. I'm honored. Thank you, God bless you. Let's continue with more line becomes available, which it never does. Five win, three, seven four, nine, seven thousand, Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW and Progressive Commercial. We know Trucker's time is money, and well there's a lot that can impact
your time on the road. This is a pretty easy putt. I think I think this will have a chance. I really do. And he knows he's got to make it. So there we go. It's Hello. Pinehurst for a sixth time, Jim Herman will compete for a national championship. Oh hello, quiet, and I'm I'm broadcasting saying that was a dramatic pipe by Jim Herman. Did he go to Deer Park x u se Hall of Famer three time three three time three time PGA Tour winner and Rocky Boyman taught him
everything? You know? Well? Well, Jim Herman was at st X when I was there. I believe he was a couple of years older me. Now. He hung out with the in crowd. I was kind of with, you know, the the He didn't really associate just me. He didn't want to talk with me or my kind. He was above all that. He was the popular kid. He's the one getting all attention to all the pretty girls, all the girls everyone wanted to hang out with. Jealous
didn't want didn't want to hang out. And I'm fine with him. I'm just saying, you know, I said Jim Herman might be the greatest pro athlete ever to come out of st X. I think that's probably true. Jim Herman, how are you? You guys are pumping me up pretty good there. I don't believe all those statements. Jim, Jim, tell the American people about how you used to throw me in a locker and beat me up at St. X High School. I don't think that's true one this.
I think I might have been the one thrown in the locker. I wasn't very tall, and uh, you know, playing on the golf team, that wasn't the end thing to be. So I kind of said the greatest athlete ever to come out of Saint Next. I look at some of the Luke, Keikley, Rocky Boyman. It's a toss up between Luke and Jim Herman. I don't know about that. Jims national championship. He's going to go and Jim, how many national PJ titles have you won? Three
TJ Tour wins for sure? Right, Luke was a hell of a football player, so I'm gonna give it to him. He's gonna be a Hall of Famer NFL Hall of Famer. So he didn't have a ring, ring, ring, almost had a ring. Rocky's got a ring. I got a ring from der Park, said you got a ring? Yeah, from the ninety world cheries. You do not? I do? You didn't play though, No, But Marty got me one now, Jim Herman. I'm asking this. I have three names up. I want to know the greatest
golfer ever to come out of Greater Cincinnati. Here here are the three nominees. Jim Woppenheim, It's won seven man titles, shall we say undefeated, untitled, scored on the match, Steve Flesh has won a few tournaments also some senior and then Jim Herman. The greatest golfer? Is it a Herman, Flesh or Jimmy V. Well, I'm gonna have to go obviously with Steve. He has more PJ Tour wins, more Champion Store wins that I have. Maybe when I get through get on Champions Store in a few years,
I can try to catch him there. But I'm gonna I'm pretty humble guy, so never gonna go for myself. Steve Flesh, Well, you, buzz Eaters tells me a clovernook. We're gonna have a match between you and Joe Dieters, me and buzzed Eaters. Who do you like in that matchup? If you give me my by the way, what's your handicap? Uh? I'm you know pro golfers. We don't have to you know have handicaps. We just played scratch. No, no, no, we don't do that. We don't do that. He told you, I don't do
we don't do that. Unexplained. Now, well, getting to go ahead, I would say handicap wise, I'm gonna have to be about a plus plus four is pretty standard. So I'm a six. Sounds like I get ten strokes. Let's play. Let's play. Sounds like we got to play ken View too. Ken Wood is beautiful. Ken View, you raised the cord here that course, there's land mines. So if you can't step on, have you played? Have you play a view to the kill at Kenwood
Country? Love the view? Well, little backstory, sat X. We would always uh get our butts kicked by moller uh nine hole matches over on ken View. They wouldn't put us on ken Dale beautifulause they knew that would be you know, that was a little bit more traditional of a golf course. Ken View, little hilly home course. Knowledge very important. That's that's that's fine. Well, maybe we'll have we'll do two matches. We'll do
one of Clover over then one over. You're lucky, You're lucky. Jimmy's gonna lie he might, you know, insists that you play you know, like left handed or blindfold or something. One way or another. He's going to find a way to rig this game. So just be careful to put a negative movement in the hole. Just go away from it. What about this four four player playoff yesterday? I had crazy Tell me why you were in your jersey? Tell me about that. Yeah, obviously, Uh,
scores were low, lot lower than I thought. I eagled my second last hole, my seventeenth hole in h on my uh second round just to get the seven under. So a late surge, big putt, big putts to make equal get the seven under, got it in. Didn't think it was gonna be enough, but luckily a four for one. Playoffs. You know, playoffs are tough. You you feel like you want to make birdies, but you just you know, you just got to survive them. You know,
you just feel it out. No one was really tight, you know, just make some good shots and uh, you know, just try to survive. And uh three whole three hole playoff made a great save, great up and down for birdie, and here we are. We're going to the open. So uh, my sixth open. It's uh they're always fun.
Every major play then, is uh very rewarding and very satisfying to qualify for I got a text here from Tony Rosiello, a good friend of Rocky Boymans, who says, your mother taught at Saint Antonidis and that Herman and Rocky bot from Green Townships. That's it. That's it. Go Are you from Dent, Jim Dent? You live in Dent, Dell? Hi, that's deep, Tobe the King, Yeah, that's close. Now what is your relationship? Go ahead? I went to a lady Victory. My mom taught
at Antoninis, but I'm a Victory boy. That's even better. But nice. Well, what's your relate I see Dana White, I see the Rock. What's your relationship like with Donald Trump? What role did he play in your professional life? Assistant golf professional for former President Trump two thousand and six In two thousand and seven, played a lot of golf with him. Qualified
for the Corn Fairy Tour after two years working for him. Been very supportive of me and my golf career, and seems like whenever I played golf with him or I'm around him, I played some pretty good golf. Afterwards. I won Houston Open at twenty sixteen, after playing the week prior with him. I won Barbersall in twenty nineteen. You know, two weeks before I
played golf with him as well. I just played golf with President Trump, former President Trump on Sunday Sunday morning, and then I qualified for the Open today. Total good luck, charm. I went to the UFC fight on Saturday night. That was pretty exciting. I was a guest of President Trump there as well. Can you describe what happened when you walked in? They were cheering for you, but also Donald Trump and Dana White. But I
thought Jim Herman cheering for you. I got to come in first, you know, and the crowd was expecting Trump and it was me, and then they all sat down, and uh, that's a good joke, I think. Uh, but it was pretty amazing. It was probably ninety nine percent for Trump. You can turn around and see a few people that were booing and uh did not did not like him being there. But uh, what
a what a scene. It's Uh, it's pretty amazing. I mean, I don't I don't know what's gonna happen November fifth, Uh, but it's it's gonna be it's gonna be one uh one exciting election night, no question. Well, Jim, thanks for calling rock any questions for fellows Saint X. In fact, you began your career in a sense a Deer Park on the field there with Luke Keigley he wanted. His first game he played was in the eighth grade at Deer Park, and that instilled in him that I
didn't know where deer Park was so about two years ago. But none. Nonetheless, I still don't. I still don't know where. Dear boom, you got one two punch from two guys. How you I like that? Not good? We got to run. But Jim, good luck. He could get Trump to caddy for him in the open. What about that when he wins? What if you bring out Donald Trump for the last eighteen holes? Oh I don't. I don't think that's gonna happen uh schedule. But he's got luck going on right now, going on him. Jim, good
luck and win it all for the American people. Jim Herman, you're the best. You're better than Flesh. You're better than Jim Woppenheim, You're better than Rocky boy Man, better than you, better than me. He gives me ten strokes on view. Not so much, but nonetheless the greatest athlete that would be come ever to come out of Saint X. Let's make that. Let's make that game happened. Ten shots, that's nothing. You got them? Oh, we got that on tape. My agent will be in
touch with your agent. Call Buds. Buzz has to be there to officiate. Buzz Eaters will be there with Joe Dieters, the Buzzard. All right, thanks Jim, thank you. We'll see come on, thank god. You know I've always said if you give me ten shots on ken view, I'd be a handful. But nonetheless, the bet has been laid, the bet has been made. Let it be written, So let it be done.
Segment, give me sports. You have one minute. Well the you are the stooge reporters, appronch service of your local Tame Star heating and air conditioning dealers, tame Star quality. You could feel the Northern Kentucky called tom Reckton Heating in air at eight five nine, two, six, one eighty two sixty nine. Sports Reds and Rockies tonight in game two of their series. Will he coverage begins at six oh five of Sports Talk. Uh,
let's see uh. Major League Baseball has banned that dude from UH Marc Andres for life. Yep, let's see the uh. The interpreter interpreter for Showey Otani is going to uh. He's been He's gonna be sentenced on October. Looks like they're gonna go for thirty three years in prison. What about Otani? He gets nothing and like it. Pete Rose should have had an interpreter the way he uses for Sharif language. He could have got off with something.
I don't know where you're selling what I'm saying. I'm speaking Japanese. We also say we also say congrats Willie to the boys co ed tennis team of cove CAAF. They won the Kentucky state championship. This afternoon the Colonels are they coming in? We'll get a hold of them. Indian Hill was here with Julius King. That guy's hilarious. It is funny. He's a funny man, a funny man, a d a jordinaire good Man. Home the Braves, Home of the friend of the Land of the Braves. Rocky,
what's on the Big Show? You have ten seconds? We have Medelan Mitchell run out of the Gate talk about CPS and not doing questions. Not good. We're's gonna have discussion with a reporter from Indy about the Kaitlyn Clark situation. What's going on there? How I was treated at a deer park when I was going thirty a game. I was hit, I was clipped. What about Jordan, Michael Jordan? What about the rules for Michael Jordan? Did Jordan complain? No, he won six NBA titles. Know your
role and shut your mouth. Caitlin, suck it up and play. She hasn't complained, though everyone else is complaining for getting teed up. Yeah, tea, she said. I played with boys my whole life. I'm fine with it. Let's go about Jordan rules and Willie rules. No segment. Thank you, sir, seven hundred w l W. Keep listening for the next chance to win your way to our iHeart Radio Music Festival presented by Capitol Wide, a weekend full of superstar performances.
