7-11-23 Bill Cunningham Show - podcast episode cover

7-11-23 Bill Cunningham Show

Jul 11, 20231 hr 42 min
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Episode description

Willie discusses affirmative action with US Senator JD Vance, the new weight loss wonder drug with Liz Bonis, and climate change with Steve Milloy.

Transcript

That got us our game itself is tonight. But first of all, the Supreme Court ruled about ten days two weeks ago important matters about individual liberty, and Senator jd Vance as caution, college is to comply with the affirmative action ruling. John, and you and I now is that same? Senator Vans and Senator Vans, welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show, and tell us why you thought it was necessary to send the letter. What's in the letter

and what is the concern that you have? Well, yeah, well so, so, first of all, the Supreme Court rules rightfully, in my opinion, that you can't discriminate against people based on the color of the skin of this country and college admissions that was the subject of the case. Now,

that's obviously the right decision to make. But as soon as it comes out, you have college administrations from across the country, especially at our most elite colleges, both inside and outside the state of Ohio, basically saying we're going to violate this ruling. We're gonna find ways to subvert the intention of the ruling, to find ways to discriminate against people on the basis of skin

color. Basically, they continue to award spots in our elite colleges based on whether you belong to the right racial group, and we fought to ourselves. Look, if these colleges are telegraphing that they're going to violate the law, we should warn them that if they do, we're going to come after them. We're going to investigate them, We're going to identify the ways in which they've subverted the law. And look, we're going to identify ways in which

potentially they can face some consequences for it. And I think that's important, Willie, because when you have the Supreme Court, even if you disagree with the decision, even if you disagree with JD. Vans or Willing Cunningham, and you think that you should be able to award favored racial groups with spots and college admissions, the Supreme Court says you can't. And if you're going to be a system and a country of laws, you can't have administrators saying

the Supreme Court is issued opinion, we're going to ignore it. That's not how the system works, And Senator, it comes from the top. Normally, we have a system of government checks and balances in which the president executes the law. The Congress makes the law, the Supreme Court interprets the law. And so when the June twenty ninth decision came out, we had the specter of President Joe Biden almost immediately going to the microphone saying, you know

what, I disagree with it. I'm going to ignore it. I'm gonna work around it. We're gonna try plan A, plan B, Plan C. He gave the message to colleges and universities to not comply with the law. It got so bad. Irwin Schemerinsky who's the dean of the University of California Berkeley Law School, and Schemerinsky has been there like twenty five years, and he was caught on tape by a student that afternoon saying, what we're gonna do now is putting nothing in writing. I'll send you the clip off

your staff if you haven't seen it. No emails, no Texas. And what we're gonna do is continue to have racial discrimination, but we're not going to put it in writing. And then if I'm under oath and a deposition, if I swear to God to tell the truth, I'm gonna lie about what we're doing. And that's the law. S Dean hiring faculty and matting students. How do you reach into that circumstance and make him applicable to the

Supreme Court. When he's the chair of the Constitutional Law Committee in Berkeley, he's the dean of the law school, he's the decision maker, and he's saying, guess what, I'm not going to pay attention to the law. How do you react to that? It's just crazy, Willie. Think about this guy, one of the most important people in the legal profession, a guy who brings in new law students, who trains them, who prepares them for the legal profession, effectively telling them that he's going to lie in order

to accomplish a policy preference of his. By the way, Willie, that's illegal, right, That's the definition of perjury. If you go into a deposition you swear an oath to tell the truth and you don't, that's a criminal violation. And so we just have to expose these people to consequences. And that that was really the point of the letter is, Look, if you're going to violate the law, preserve the documents, because we're going to come after you. These guys have got to know their consequences for it.

This is sort of an age old principle. It's true when you're dealing with a three year old kid. It's apparently true if you're dealing with law school administrators. People know that if there are no consequences for violating the rules, they'll keep on violating those rules. At least some people will. And that's why we have to be willing to do consequences. I think that something's happening Willie in the conservative movement. It's a good thing for our country. But

we're saying we're not just going to talk about this stuff. We're not just going to wind about this stuff. We're actually going to be willing to cause people who break the law to suffer consequences for it. That's something the left has been willing to do for thirty forty fifty years. Even when people don't break the rules, they're willing to send the justice system after them. We have to be willing to send the justice system after people when they break the

law. If you don't have that, you don't have equal protection of the law in this country, and we need to bring it back. Well, it's reminding me and what happened with Brown versus Board of Education in nineteen fifty four, when the Supreme's rule that's separate but equal plus versus Ferguson is not the law of the land anymore. We're gonna have black kids getting the same kind of quality public education as white kids. It took ten to twenty years.

And when that came out, you had the Democrats, the same political party, the Democrats in the South, said you know what, we're going to ignore the law. We're not gonna admit black kids the Little Rock High School. And it took ten to twenty years for the Democrats to understand that the law applies to them. I guess I'm shocked that I'm watching this same political party in nineteen fifty four that stood in the doorway in Alabama and Arkansas

and Mississippi and will not admit black kids. That same political party in twenty twenty three is saying we're not gonna we're gonna keep practice racism. We're gonna have a qualified admission standard for black kids as opposed to white kids. And so I would ask you, Senator Advance, what's changed this nineteen fifty four with the Democrat Party. Well, really, of course, they've just changed

the skin color. Are the people they're discriminating against. That's really it, Willie is is if you look at the history here, there's always, of course been racial discrimination in almost every society across time in place. What's unique, of course about our country is that we set up a system of laws and consequences to try to prevent this stuff from happening. That's an admirable thing. But of course whenever it happens, somebody tries to subvert it. And

that's really what we're going after here, Willie is. Look, I don't care if you're white, or you're black, or you're something in between. I want if you're a deserving applicant at a college, if you're a deserving applicant at a medical school, if you're a deserving applicant to fly a plane that of course all of us that our children fly on every single day, all across our country. We just want the best person for the job. We want the person who deserves it, who worked hard for it, who

has the merit and the work ethic. We want that person to get the job. But there is a group of people who want a racial soil system in this country, that want to divvy up who gets what, not according to who earned it, but according to skin color. It's always been an impulse that exists in the human heart. I think that it's wrong. I think we have to continue to fight against it. And this is all we're

doing right now. If you could step back a little bit, William, think about you know what it took to get us to this point where the Supreme Court is saying you cannot have racial discrimination or reverse racial discrimination. It took a lot of work. It took a lot of arguments, It took a lot of Senate confirmations, a lot of Senate elections to elect the right people who would vote up people like Clarence Thomas and Justice sam Alito. This

is really what it has taken. It's a great actually day for the country when you have the Supreme Court saying our founding principles say you've got to treat everybody equally. It's shocking to me that people are offended by that. But

of course some people are. Imagine if a JD vance at a little Middletown, Ohio and Butler County, Ohio with the background that you have, and for many listening locally and around the nation that don't know your background, it was may I say awful that you were raised by your grandmother and you had a terrible family, drug addiction problem, heroin, etc. You want in

the military service, you got a minute to Yale. If there is a racial spoil system in place some twenty five years ago, when you went to Yale and you were the wrong skin color jd Vance, maybe never would have

happened. No, that's exactly right, Willie. I'm very mindful of that that I was the beneficiary of a country that allowed me to achieve some incredible things because it gave me a chance, it gave me some mentors, it gave me some good opportunities, and things worked out for me through some combination of hard work and good luck. Things worked out for me. I think these people are trying to take it away from the next generation of American children.

They're trying to teach these kids to see themselves as victims, and they're trying to say that if you want to achieve anything in this country, you better say the right things. You better pretend to be the member of a victim group, because that's how we're going to divvy up things in this country, not based on merit and hard work, but based on victimology, and I think that's going to destroy the psychology of a generation of young people.

It's going to destroy one of the critical things that makes this country a great place to live. Now here's the other crazy thing about this, Willie, is it's destroying the talent that will power the country for the next generation. And we want high quality surgeons, high quality airline pilots. We want brilliant

scientists inventing therapies that solve the next generation of great medical challenges. If you teach people that they get into our good schools and our good professions not by being bright and working hard, but by trying to claim the mantle of a victim, you're going to destroy so much of what makes this country great. Speaking of a victim, I live in a corporate environment, and you leave you're kind of an entrepreneur. You came into politics horizontally, not vertically.

Every year in a corporate environment, we have to go through two hours of sexual harassment training. And this is true, and every conceivable corporate structure you got to be. There's no water cooler talk anymore about what did you do last night? Who are you dating? God forbid, if you would ask

somebody out in the workplace. It gives generally to a woman power. On one hand, in the corporate environment, we're all adults and we're being taught and told do not do this, do not do that, to not talk about sex, to not talk about dating, to not talk about anything of that character. On the other side of the equation, you have three small

children. I often hear of grade school. There's elementary school, junior high in which there's a sexualized environment in which nine year old little boys and nine year old little girls are asked, what is your gender? You are gendered fluid right now? Forty percent? A Brown university considered themselves to me, shall we say LGBTQ plus plus forty percent, which I don't believe at all.

So on one side, Senator Advance, we have a corporate structure that says you can't get anywhere close to sexual harassment or sexual talk in the workplace. On the other side, and public and private schools, we have an indoctrination of children and sexual matters that are inappropriate for a grade schooler. How can we have a corporate structure telling adults and what they can't do in their workplace? Then it's a free fire zone and an elementary school. How is

that possible? You know, it's It's weird, isn't it, Willie? That we're treating children like adults and adults like children. And I think that's that's the symptom of a very diseased mind, and unfortunately a lot of our elites suffer from, I think some very very bad ideas, and our society is dealing with the consequences of it. Can you talk about sexual harassment in

the workplace? And I think this is one of these issues where, of course you don't want the boss to come to one of his underlings and basically say you have to do something for me or to me as a condition of employment. That's illegal and rightfully so. But you can't take that principle and then and then tell too consenting adults that they can't ask each other out on

a date. And that's unfortunately. I think what's happened in a lot of our workplaces in the country is that we've we've taken sexual harassment, which is a bad thing, and we've put in a situation where we treat consenting adults

like children. It's funny you asked about this, really because it was a law school professor of mine actually wrote this really interesting article, she's a liberal, called the Sanitized Workplace, and her basic argument was that we've we've so sanitized the workplace that we've made it miserable for a lot of consenting adults. Like you said, they're not talking to each other around the water coolere terrified that they're going to offend their coat workers. If you're terrified you're going to

offend somebody, you can't build a relationship with that person. So yeah, we've got to get back to treating adults like adults and children like children, not the other way around. Lastly, about a minute remaining. East Palestine is one of the causes that you've taken up. And I see that our governor, or, the good Governor, Mike Dwine, is asking the President to declare the disaster area. Here we're are the middle of July. What's the latest on East Palestine. Well, you know, the cleanup at East

Palestine is proceeding a pace. That's a good thing. Actually, that's always been to me the first and most important thing. We've got to finish the cleanup in East Palacetine, get the toxic soil out of the ground there, dispose of it properly before people can go back to living their lives. We're really now, i think, transitioning to the point where we're focused on the

economic devastation. A lot of livelihoods destroyed, property values destroyed. We've got to get some people some money to make up for that, and we've gotten some of that, but we've got to keep on working it and getting people more of the resources that they deserve because of this disaster. And then, Willie, the thing we're going to be worried about for the next ten years

is long term health consequences. We're focused in our office and making sure that people are getting the testing that they want and that they need, so that if they do have God forbids and health consequences for this, either a year from now or ten years from now, they know about it and they can get they can get what they need to get some help. All right, Senator to J. D. Evans once again this Tuesday afternoon, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Good luck on all your ventures.

Thank you, senatorially, thank you here. Let's continue with more to me. It is beyond ridiculous that workplace has so infected with sexual harassment and concerns. And I'm not in favor of anyone having to do anything against their will or wishes. But about one third of our relationships begin in the workplace. That's where many of us been a lot of our time. So, as the Senator said, we treated doves like children and children like adults. And

so much of public education is not anymore about education. It's about indoctrination and marching Marxists come out of schools ready to change the world to a socialistic heaven that doesn't exist. And so a forewarnedness, forearmed. Let's continue with more your comments from next plus after one o'clock today will be Liz Bonus of Channel twelve. She's going to talk about getting bit in the butt by mosquitoes on news radio seven hundred WLW. No, that's amazing. Be careful near White

Rock Lake in Texas. Since nineteen sixty four, there have been reports of a young woman in a soaking wet dress who tells people she was in a boating accident and needs to get to an address on Gaston Avenue. When she gets into a car's back seat, she disappears. No, that's speaking of amazing. Check out Eddie and Rocky. They have the fun times you're looking for after a long day. No, that's Eddie and Rob this afternoon seven hundred WLW. Hey are you drowning in credit card debt? You want to

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for your free online visit. Fo r hims dot com slash r Adio, Craftsman Electric, Craftsman Electric dot com. All right, Billy Cunning, end to Great America. No one cares about their home run derby anymore. I tried to listen last and I tried to watch, and it's impossible. If Della Cruz had been involved, it would have been a high viewership and listenership. But because of the nature of that proceeding without Boomer, it's not quite

the same the game itself as tonight, we'll see what happens. Most importantly, the Reds are back at at Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. I have a call into Dan Lewis and Bill Reinberger that run the Reds with an iron grip about any available tickets. This ten game homestand is going to define the second half of the season. They have course to brew Crew in for three, and then the Giants for four, and then the Snakes Arizona is

in for three. That ten game homestand is the longest of the season, and they're playing three very good ball clubs, and I hope they can go five and five or six and four or something like that and maintain the league. But they have to do better against the Milwaukee. They have six games left with Milwaukee, three here, three there, and that's about it.

Because they have the Inner League schedule, everyone plays everybody. That kind of means that there's less games against Pittsburgh and Chicago and Saint Louis and Milwaukee, etc. We'll see what happens. But if somebody had told you back in March, as I predicted the Reds wood march to the World Series, you probably would not have believed it. But it might be happening. And the

Reds have a big decision to make. That is, do they trade for a big gun out of the starting rotation or do you trust Hunter Green to come back along with Nick Ladolo and give the relief. Course some relief got

Lively pitching well habits, so I don't know. So those in charge got to make the decision, But I know there's thinking right now to stand pat because you have supposedly Hunter Green, who's twenty three years old with a multitude of injuries, who the Reds signed to a fifty million dollar contract, seemingly cannot stay healthy. And Nicolodolo's in the same Bailey Wick it's got a lake problem. So we'll see what happens, but for weeks and months on end,

the pitchers simply cannot pitch for supposed health reasons. So we'll see what happens down the road. But at this point they've won fifty games already. They're likely to win eighty five to ninety games. We'll see if it's possible, and the so called second half of the season, if they can win forty of the remaining games, that gives them ninety wins on the season, likely that's going to be enough to win the division. It's unlikely they can

get a wild card, but nonetheless, let's move on. And you heard Senator Vans talk about so many issues, but one that percolates is the murder of an eight year old child and Silverton doing nothing. I would assume she was sleeping or just relaxing in her home. And they're on Plainfield Road where I've spent a lot of my time at Silverton there at Grafton's in sixty second shop right there. That urban violence is spreading out throughout the Dry State,

and it shows further the threads of our society are fraying. That it's more difficult, it's it's more dangerous, it's not good, and it continues to have an eight year old girl with her life in front of her, I would assume in bed inside of her home, to be shot through the wall

in some sort of gang initiation, right, is just unbelievable. And it's kind of avoiding the elephant in the room, and that is that that the urban communities are suffering not because of race, because if that was the case in the thirties, forties, fifties, and sixties and seventies, the same stuff would have been going on. I would note from the US census surveys that in the nineteen forties, fifties, and sixties, eighty percent of Black

children were born into two parent households. Now eighty percent are not born in the single into two parent households. They're single mothers. And all the affirmative action programs you want cannot affect out whatsoever to make up for the decline of two parent families over the past fifty years and the effects on generations of Black

children. It's now become almost inculcated inside the urban black community of a single moms raising numerous children with different fathers, supported by the government and the Great Daniel Patrick Mornahan Democrat in New York States out of nineteen sixty five, are we sure we know what we're doing by paying individuals, especially in urban areas, not to be fathers slash husbands simply would be absentee and Democrats raised the

banner. Then nineteen sixties, wait a minute, if we take the place of fathers, well, these fathers want to become husbands. It used to be if you got your girlfriend pregnant, well there was a shotgun winning, which means the father put a shotgun in your back and marched you to the alder, you are to marry the girl. Guess what, that doesn't happen whatsoever anymore. The race link disparities that continue to impede in achievement in our

great country is not based upon skin color. White communities, hispanning communities suffer from exactly the same depravities. And it's not going to change because the course has been said. What would it take to culturally change an urban black dysfunctional community to suddenly value education, to value marriage, to value not having kids

till you're married, and to value work. Because we're told repeatedly by the US senseless Census Bureau, Survey, etc. That If you do these four things, four things, the odds are over ninety percent you're gonna live a good, successful life. And go to a Tailor Swift concert. Where between the Tailor Swift concert and the Reds games three of them and TQL, three hundred thousand people made their way to downtown Cincinnati over a three day period,

three hundred thousand. There wasn't one story about a drive by shooting. There were no stories I'm aware of any violence whatsoever. The girls, the Reds fans TQL, even when nic Nicaragua had teed it up and and played some soccer at TQL that there was little, no violence. Colors got nothing to

do with violence. It's how you're raised. And I would think the boys who shot into that home in Silverton some sort of gang initiation, right, couldn't have cared less about killing an eight year old girl, probably of their same color. You do these four things, One graduate from high school? How tough is it to graduate from West High? How tough is it to graduate from Making? How tough is it to graduate from Simon Gentnon? How

tough is it a graduate from Lawrenceburg or East Central? Not very tough at all. You gotta apply yourself. You can't be a clown. You can't be a full can't be a derelict. Number one graduate from high school on time? Can you do that? Absolutely? Number two? Upon graduation work other words, take a job. It can be a menial job in the beginning. Then every day, show up, do your job. Report the next day. How many employees have said to me and elsewhere you know,

we can't find someone to do this work. When we put out a missive that we're ready to interview, most people don't show up. Those who do show up and we hire them, they would not come to work the first day, and then some after a week or two simply have no work habits and simply quit. Number one graduate from my school. Number two work. Number three don't have children out of wedlock. What a novel concept. Don't bring lives in the world when you can't support them. And number four don't

commit crime? Makes sense? How hard is it to graduate from high school? Work, no kids out of wedlock? And four don't be a criminal. You would think that'd be simple. If anyone, whatever color you happen to be or claim to be, to those four things, we're told, statistically, you're gonna make it in America more than ninety percent of the time. But if you don't graduate from high school, and if you don't work, and if you have kids out of wedlock with baby mamas and you commit

crime, guess what, It's not racial. It's driven by behavior. So that's the elephant in the room that Justice Jackson can tenje Jackson doesn't talk about, but Clarence Thomas does. And if you fail in one of those areas later in life, you can pick up the pieces and get things together as long as you don't have a criminal record, as long as you have big child support payments that you pass on to someone else to raise your kids.

And what's happening in Ohio is happening in many so called red states. The lawmakers have now passed vouchers school choice that makes it easier and easier for parents who really care, not just say it, but really care about their kids to get a voucher based upon income and go to a Catholic school, a charter school, or a private school. So some school districts based upon income,

you can have your kid educated at Mountain Notre Dame High School. You may have your kid educated at lasal or Mueller or Lady of Victory in Delhi. In other words, for the parents who care and know that their elementary school is completely dysfunction because of the inability of children to restrain their behavior, they can take their good child who wants to learn out of that school with a voucher and go to our Lady of Victory in Delhi, admit them.

You can go to Muller High School. Yes, go to our lady, go to our Lady of perpetual Sorrow, whatever it might be. You have a voucher now available in Ohio. How publicized is that, I don't know.

I don't think it is greatly publicized. The head on the Great State rep Bill sites about a week ago, and they greatly expanded the voucher system in the state of Ohio that if your general public school is dysfunctional, you as a parent or parents can apply receive a voucher, and you have time between now and the middle of August to get your kid out of completely dysfunctional environment and to go to a good school. And what's proper behavior is followed.

Now, what's behind is not good for those kids. There might be five or ten thousand out of CPS that'll leave and the parents care. They don't want track meets in the hallway, they don't want food fights every day, they don't want their kids shot outside of Woodward High School. They care deeply knowing that education is the latter to pull yourself out of the hole in

which you find yourself. And so the five or ten thousand to take advantage of this new voucher system with a school choice is gonna take advantage of that and go to a better school. What's left behind is even worse. It's awful. One can only imagine if you would take Walnut out of the grading system of CPS, what's left behind and twenty to twenty five thousand dollars per

kid per year, and you get such lousy results. And the best teachers go to the general like Dayton Public Schools or Cincinnati or Columbus, and after one or two years they're filled with ur urine and vinegar, are ready to get to work. And after four or five, six, ten years they're beaten down where teachers cannot teach because of the social problems brought to the school

by dysfunctional urban culture that dominates the thinking of what's occurring. And then even school board members some are left wing Marxists and socialists, but many have good intentions and they want to have thirty five thousand kids at CPS doing well. But after a while you begin blaming everyone but the parents for not producing children in school ready to learn. The last, the best, and the first teacher of every kid our parents, because kids see a lot better than they

hear. They see the victims and the circumstances in which they find themselves, and after one, two, three, four years, peer pressure takes over and start behaving in a certain way that's acceptable to the culture, and that's

not good for their survivability. And so the elephant in the room is that for a very long time, we've ignored the fact that there's a distinct, minor urban culture that teaches the wrong attributes and demands the wrong forms of behavior, that results in an eight year old girl being gunned down at home by a drive by shooting. It's awful, it's disgusting, and so I'm open anyone's open to discussions about to improve this. It's getting worse day by day,

week by week, month by month, year by year. It's getting worse as far as who's showing up, who's not showing up. It's not the number of people that go. The tailors who have concert the reds games, You're gonna have hundreds of thousands of people show up without any crime being

committed of any consequence. What is occurring is that the lawmakers in Columbus, which is a red state, thank God, is going to tell a black mother in Avondale, here is a seven thousand dollars voucher for your child to get her or get him out of the circumstances in which the culture has placed them to go to a functional school to do so much better. And God blessed those lawmakers in Columbus to spend the money to try to save those kids.

They're worthy to be saved. Just like that eight year old girl in Silverton, the home of Hal Pennington, tried and tried and tried to have a good life and gunned down. I would assume maybe in her bed getting ready to get up and play the next day, and urban violence found her. In the city of Chicago, there were in the last testing cycle a fifty five schools in the city of Chicago with forty thousand students who did not have one child pass proficiency test in math, in English, not one out

of forty thousand. Now, you would think the City of Chicago, like the City of Cincinnati, would say, you know what, we got to stop doing this. At least in Ohio, there's a voucher system now available for you, and the state of Illinois there is not because the state of Illinois is controlled by those Blue Democrats that won't provide a way out for kids who want to learn. And there's a way out in Lachland. There's a way out in Cps. There's a way out in Dayton. There's a way

out in Van Worth, there's a way out in Wappa Kannada. If you're in a dysfunctional district, you're gonna apply online and that by the middle of August, get your kid into a school where learning is valued and that the values of the streets are ignored. That's what you must do, because nothing's going to change. I can't imagine what it's like for a black kid in Washington, d C. Or Atlanta or Saint Louis or Baltimore to live in

that environment to try to be healthy and succeed. It's impossible able to have a healthy fish swimming in a polluted stream. Over time, that healthy fish is going to get contracted and die. It's simply going to happen. And at least the lawmakers in Columbus, led by Bill Sites, have said, here's a voucher, apply, get the hell out. I know Silverton has tried for years to become part of Deer Park and CPS will not let Silverton

go. They need those kids in the school system and CPS, which by every standard, is an abject failure, not because of the desires of the school board or the principle or the teachers or whatever the administrators. It's the culture in which those healthy kids dream swim in the streams that they get polluted. And it's Silverton tried for a long time to become part of Deer Park

and CPS would not let them. Let's continue and about ten minutes less bonus will be here with many stories include the diet lost drug and how that might be a benefit to many and if a line becomes available five win three seven four, nine, seven thousand, Bill Cunningham News Radio, seven hundred WW Tank South Bank shuttles back, get a right to all of the downtown Cincinnati's meeting when the home run contests a thing, no one cares about that.

It would have been interesting if Ellie Della Cruz had played. I think he probably would have won. But that's a different issue. And of course the westnyl virus has reared its ugly head. Plus I know many individuals here are thinking about weight loss drugs and Liz Bonus at Channel twelve is dealing with those issues. First of all, Liz Bonus, welcome to the Bill Cunningham Show. Let's talk about the West nil virus first, which it was a big

deal until recently. What happened to the little mesquite in the past two or three years, since you've not been talking about it for two or three years. Well, they say it's become endemic, which means we just simply know it's here now. And well, most people, about eighty percent of people according to Infexus, these specialists won't feel a thing. The other people can still get a bad bite, and it can sort of solely become like flu like and then you know, it can impact the brain. That's the thing

we're worried about the most. It sort of shuts down the ability of the brain after it starts swelling, and it can get really sick and die from West Nile. So there's bonus. We just say it's here. Yeah, you're saying it's always been here, but now it's proliferating more now than it was before. Maybe it goes wait, it's such a wet spring, something

like that. Well, the Health Department announced in the Cincinnati area yesterday that they regularly test and as part of regular testing, they now have West Nile in the area. They would not say which neighborhood it showed up in because what they do is they assume that if it's in one neighborhood, it's in your neighborhood. The mosquitoes don't really understand the coasts, so they don't know it's not supposed to go to Silverton or wherever you're hanging out that day.

So they wanted people to know it's in the area so that you can assume it's in your little b backyard pool as well. Well, Joe's Trucker wants to know what do you do? How can you avoid getting bit from a mosquito? Because as you travel the highways and byways, you're taking a jog, you're playing a little golf, maybe a pickle ball out on the picnic. How do you stop from getting bit So I love that question because I am a mosquito attractor, and they say it has something to do with our

own scent and whatever scent I carry. I am like a feeding ground for those lovely critters. And sometimes I'll come back and have like ten or twelve bites and they'll go like right through clothing. I'll come back in my butt. We'll be covered with mosquito bites. When I'm out walking, I'm like, how did that happen? It's awful. So it's kind of interesting. Recently, CBS News sort of looked at testing different repellents and what things would

work and what things wouldn't. And I found it really interesting because I'm not a wild fan of deep you know, using me all over my skin, but I gotta tell you deep work. They found that when you really want to repel mosquitos up to six hours, if you get a book free with the it's the top thing. There's something else called pacaratin that is a synthetic repellent. It can protect you almost as well as an alternative. For I prefer that one. And then I don't know if you've been playing at all

with any of those like essential oils. Anybody in your family like burn those in the house or tell you that they're good for all things. The essential oils are really really hot right now. And if you, for example, if you smell frank, instance, it will help you with eating pain. There's all kinds of good things about that. But they found a couple of them actually work. When you look at repelling mosquitoes, clove oil was the best, cinnamon oil was the second best. Then they've kind of down the

list are things like garlic oils to trenella oils. So some of those oils really work too. But the bottom line is you have to stop from getting bit if you really want to avoid West Nile and not just West Nile. Are you hearing now about malaria in the US? Yes, yes, yeah, well really we haven't seen this in twenty years. So the CDC just issued an alert and said that they found two more cases in Florida. Now, you know, when that brings the total to six, there's probably sixty,

you know what I mean, Because you don't know. Some people may get it and have no signs of infection or whatever, but here and especially in those warmer climates. And answer this question, why does everybody insincnty go to Florida in the summer. I have no idea because it is the ocean. I think we don't have an ocean. I think mainly it's the ocean and the fact that Florida tends to be less occupied in the summertime than in

the wintertime. The crowds have left. So if you want to go see the ocean, enjoy some of the vicissitudes of the Sunshine State, getting out doing something, changing the old, same old, same old, and going south. It's a two hour flight. It is easy to get in, easy to get out. Less people are there, and the ocean is present.

I think that's it. Well, it's really really hot there. But what does that tell you if we're getting some of these cases, I guess what's gonna you know, eventually come back to the rest of the world. Now, Liz Bonus, on this one issue, you brought up an interesting point. Penny and I can be out together doing something and I'll have no mosquito bites and she'll have ten to fifteen. How is it? Is it pheromones? It's a sweetness? Is it sweat? What is it that attracts

a mosquito to my wife, but not to me. So it's it's interesting. If you look up who who gets bitten by mosquitos, sweat is top in the list. Like to see so I sweat, like when you have more muscle, you do sweat quickly, and so mosquitoes love the sense of sweat. They will definitely like go for that without a question. And then I've looked at some of the research like why do you know, why do they like me more than someone else? And there's something certain sense that they

say attract mosquitoes, but they don't necessarily know which ones. Like you could put something on you and it could come up as a different sense that if I put it on me. So we haven't really found except we do know they like sweat. We do know that there's a sweetness we do. They like plant, So if you're wearing perfume melk, go for those. But when they actually do like blood, stampoles and whatnot, there isn't a continuity to say, well, if you didn't smell like this, you wouldn't get

it. But I gotta tell you, like, I do think that there is there's just something in some people's blood that they just really really like. You can do I know, like certain people who take like vitamin B one, the mosquitoes will leave them alone. Other people say if they take certain medications, the mosquitoes don't like them. So you can have things that change your sense as well. But I just I think it's like, hey, they like certain sense and if you're it, you're it. And the other

thing about using deeper one of those other things. I just have a sen sense a carcinogen that is not good to put that stuff on your body. When I use spray tan stuff, rub it on when I play golf, I have a sense I'm putting something on me that may may hurt me. Is there any indication that if you use something like deep, especially on a kid, and has cancer causing agents in it, you know, they've really not been able to support that. And the question I have to ask is

benefit versus risks. So if you were worried about that chemical, and that's why I said that the card stuff is a little bit, you know, it's an alternative, But think about that, like, if my kid's going to get West Nile and my kid's gonna get malaria, might be worth it for me to put a little feed on if he's going deepwood hiking. Yeah, I'm now. Secondly, this weight loss drug could be a multibillion dollars deal. I think it's a zemic. Are one of those kinds of things,

And all I think about is finfen. I think about stan Chester. I think about hard valves and other difficulties. What is the latest on the weight loss drugs which people think are going to be a miracle for exercising, eating the right kinds of foods. Weight loss drugs could be a multibillion dollar

industry. What's the latest? Yeah, so this's its fascinating. I've been doing following people that are omnise drugs now and just so you know before you think it's like the way you're gonna lose weight, The average person loses five to ten pounds a month. Now, you could do that with diet and exercise. But what they do is they delay what they call the gastric emptying, so it goes into your stomach and you feel full longer, and so

you're not as hungry and you eat less. These are called GLP one activators, and it plays with a center in the brains. You don't feel it's hungry, and then it delays the emptying. So here's what we know. We know that they're short term. You know, if you think about something in your gut longer, you're gonna have like gas, and you're gonna have bloating, and you're probably gonna have some dizziness. And but those are probably

the short term things you can control with dosing. What we don't know is there's some question about how it works in the pancreas and how it works with your thyroid, and so they are suggesting that people who may need to be on them long term have those checked because you can get pancreatitis which can shut down your pancreas, and you can get fibroid cancer. But we don't know how much or how long because we only have studies out a few years.

And you know, my thought yours was, ooh, you know, wait till everybody's on this, what are we going to see? And I know it's send send. What happened was people were using it for off label use. With this, now there are FDA approved for weight loss. There's semi blue Tide, which is generic, there's will Go be for weight loss, and there's those empic for people with diabetes. But until the world's on it.

We're probably not going to know everything that's going to happen. And you know, the question is are you gonna have to stay on it forever when we really don't know long term? You know what it could do, and again you got away benefit versus risk, but it's only been out a couple of years, and ten years down the line, twenty years online, we are, you know, kind of asking some questions of what don't we know?

And I have the same thought like even with the vaccines, until everyone took it, you didn't see certain risk factors that would pop up, so the vaccine as sorry at this point, we always say go through your doctor, but I think many people simply want to take the weight loss drug immediately and see what happens down the road. And maybe it's different for someone who's sixty five or seventy as supposed to twenty five or thirty years old. It

could have different reactions, but who knows. And AI, of course, AI is going to be the next biggest thing. Some have said it's going to change the entire world. The new Alzheimer's drug has gone through an AI process. The weight loss drug is going to go through it all the variables. And this is at the beginning of artificial intelligence and the impact that's going to have in our life and what it's going to do for medicine with all

the million possibilities. I'm watching this thing last night on CBS News that if you want to have if you want to have ten thousand songs prepared in the next one hour, AI can put together ten thousand different songs in one hour that sound pretty good. And you could you could say to your AI instrumentality, Hey, by the way, I need one hundred pages on the effect of the Peloponnesian Wars. And within two or three minutes, you have a

one hundred page essay on the Peloponnesian Wars. And so they can and through all the various tests of this weight loss drug or alzheimer drug, and within a few minutes they can get all the possible examinations and possibilities. Well, let's bonus is a big question for you. Are you ready for the big question? Yes, Well, AI change the world. Oh absolutely, it will change medicine beyond belief. And I'm actually not I don't think that's all

a bad thing. As we know. It has boundaries, but like if I were to say to you, you know, my doctor noticed this about me taking one of these weight loss medicines. That gets documented once, it's not going to show up in the literature. AI can search for all those things and it can put it all together and we know what's happening. So there's some real power in like for medical breakthroughs and things, to take literature

and be able to in an instant search and put it all together. That's huge because stuff starts happening long before you actually know about it, because we didn't see enough cases a I'm going to be able to tag that. I mean, I actually think things like that are very cool. You know. The other thing it's going to be able to do is eventually they'll have,

you know, different tests they can give you. Then AI will analyze them beyond what a human could do. For some really small things that maybe you know as a baby, you would know are in your DNA and we could start early with prevention. I mean, AI is going to change the world, but it is going to change medicine dramatically. In fact, some jobs

will be gone completely. I can't imagine being an architect. I know in law school you might have to write a paper on a map versus Ohio, you might have to write one exclusionary rules that would take hours and hours of research. You simply could speak into your phone, give me fifty pages on the impact of map versus Ohio, and within a minute you got the fifty page paper done in correct grammar. It makes sense. And how do you

grade someone when AI is doing their work and not the lawyer? I don't know if research has to be done anymore in many areas when AI can do it immediately, think about putting the other a paper and a law school paper and a couple of minutes instead of a couple of months. Unbelievable. Well, and thinking about that with medicine, so I had to take human annim

and physiology to be a dietician. You go into the lab and they cut like organs in half and they put little pins in them, and you'd identify all of the body parts and muscles and brains and what they're for and how they work and whatnot. And if you think about it, AI you can just go, hey, what's happening in this part of the muscle and it'll

pull everything up so much for A and P except for one thing. Did you ever have your doctor tell you that they could look at you and knowing you and go something's wrong, like, for example, if your liver's not working right, people turn yellow. You know, you see things like that.

And I don't believe that AI will ever be a substitute for a human with experience in medicine, because there is something about what you've seen that you know something's happening in the body that I don't think a computer will be able to look at Willie or look at Liz and know that we look different than we did when we saw them the last time, and something is going on. And that's why you're always going to need the human eye and the human

contact. Even if AI helps them, that's great, but it's not going to be a substitute that'll tell you, like you know, I saw you last time and and something's going on. They'll look in your eyes and they can tell that. They look in your throat and you can tell that. I don't know that the AI can do that, do you. I don't know at this point, you could have an AI take a picture of someone's body and say these are the things to look at. Worry, I don't

know where it's headed. I've often said this, Liz. I think you and I have lived and perhaps the best part of human civilization ever to have lived. It's like right now now, maybe in twenty years. I have great concerns in twenty years what American society's gonna look like. I don't know if it's going to be good. I don't think it's going to be bad. I have a sense it's not going to be good, but I might

be wrong. It might be better. Because when you had to drive by this morning in Silverton, an eight year old girl is shot through the wall. It wasn't even the victim. I see abrant behavior everywhere and don't know how AI can correct any of that. There'll be functional parts of our society and other parts that are completely dysfunctional. And why that works, how that works, I have no idea, But Liz Bonus, thank you once again. I know that your butt is bitten by mosquitoes. That's something I did

not know half an hour ago. I did not know that. Always tune into Willie you never know what you might learn. Huh. All right, Liz Bonus of Channel twelve, once again, thank you for coming on. The Bill Cunningham show this glorious Tuesday afternoon. Liz Bonus, thank you very much, all right, love you, Willie God bless America loved you too. Let's continue if a line becomes available. Five one, three, seven, four nine, seven thousand pounds, seven hundred the new ateen t and

about an hour. I have a guest on allegedly that's going to say that the heat that we're now experiencing is very common, and don't listen to the hype from the meteorologist. And more. Bill Cunningham News Radio, seven hundred Wlwe spent out for deer drive flood deep blood field did a thud number thirty seven. Tyler Stevens follers, you're the right feel, I mean way back.

Tyler Stevens A dozen number twenty seven three. Grayley a three run the whole brun number done back the plane turning it all rounding second, he's head for three. He's a man sitting out of a rich play. I'm a hohole of the realty deploys seven hundred W l W. Billy Cunningham the Grand American for court into financial planning. Right now, the markets up a little bit. The market could be down lots of variables occurring in your life.

Are you thinking now about retirement? Are you retired? Do you worry you may not have enough money saved? Why not call the experts at Court into financial Planning and set up a no cost, no obligation consultation. They will

recommend a financial strategy after studying your economics to your personal circumstances. If you have asked sets of over two hundred thousand dollars, how about calling Steve Perrin Junior Steve Perrin Junior at five one, three, seven, six, nine thirty one thirty one get your financial house in order seven sixty nine thirty one thirty one or Coordinato Financial Planning dot com. Well, I think culture is

it is a reflection of our moment in our time right and present. Culture is the way we express how we're feeling about the moment, and and we should always find times to express how we feel about the moment that is a reflection of joy, because you know it comes in the morning. We have to find ways to also express the way we feel about the moment in terms of just having language in a connection to how people are experiencing life. And

I think about it in that way. Oh Hello, Hello, I'm broadcasting. The poet once said that a sound and fury designating nothing. What was that? That was our beloved vice president trying to explain culture. Now I'm not sure what she said, but if one didn't understand what she said, you're normal. If you understood what she said, I would check out your

mental faculties. In fact, if we had a Jeopardy show and there were Senator John Fetterman, Senator Diane Feinstein, President Joe Biden, those three are on Jeopardy, would there be any questions answered properly? No? None. You might want to throw her in as they host, because she understands about goofy. What is culture? She said? No? And I know what did she just say? I have no idea five still words. It's like

that, there's like the main man himself. You don't know what he's saying over there in England and the King King chasm and say, come this way. How about that conversation between Chaz and him, Big Joe and Chaz sitting together. We talked about climate change and a few other things. What else do you talk about? Not about diagrams? Those three circles? Right? And then let's just see where they overlap. You will not be surprised because

I have constructed a Venn diagram on this. Remember those three circles, how they overlap. I love ven diagrams, so I just do whenever you're dealing with conflict, pull out a ven diagram, right, and so you know the three circles, and so so I asked my team, Right, he sees the Venn diagram of it all. He sees that there are those circles, and maybe people seem that they're a little different. They live in different parts of the country, they may be different age or different races, but

that area in the middle that overlap. But I asked my team to do a ven diagram of where these attacks are happening, so voting rights, women's reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, and of course there was a huge intersection, you know. I asked my team to do a Venn diagram for me of where we are seeing attacks and who are the attacks against and the similarity. And when you look at a diagram of the just a Venn diagram in that

regard, it tells a real to him. Do you know what about the Olympic flag the Venn diagram, you know, the Olympic rings, right, Well, there's only three. There's only three send lendrical circles. That's what they are. Also, she's not talking about the Olympic close of the Olympics. But then you put the two at the bot two, put the three, put the three and they intersect. It's a woman's ability to kill a run. But what the police do tracking down criminals? And the ven diagram?

Where did that come from? Came from the nineteen eighties? There are three circles together. When was that? Well, she just described it. Didn't you understand what she said? No? I haven't understood her since he's been on. If you do understand, something's wrong with you because she's not making any sense at all about then diagrams and culture, women's reproductive rights with LGBTQ plus plus rights. Geez, what about my rights? All right? Do I have any rights? You? And shut your mouth. I want

to see Jeopardy with Fetterman, Feinstein and Biden. Now you're talking. I want to see that matchup. Willie. The students reporters a proud service. Every local teen Star heating interconditioning dealers, teen star quality of could feel a beautiful Southwest Ohio called Better Choice Heating and Cooling at five one, three,

eight, six, eight, thirty three eighty eight. And if we want to thank Lear's Prime Market for our lunch today, Willie, Let's see the meets trust Lear's Prime Market one stop shop for craft beers, best wine selection, and state liquor agency. Yeah, a full catering service, a deluxe Delhi headed up by Chef DJ himself, located in beautiful downtown Milford, the home of the Eagles. I went to the Google describe what a VEN diagram

is? Are you prepared Lear's Prime dot com. These diagrams are used to teach elementary set theories and to illustrate simple set relationships in probabilities, logic, statistics, linguistics, and computer science. You got it now? You got it now segment. You sounded like her. I don't want to do that.

How do you spell vin v I N M E N N V n N. It was a guy that lived in the nineteenth century that had the elemental relationships set in theories, relationships, probabilities, logic, statistics, linguistics, and computer science. In case you want to know, do you think she understands any of that? I don't how does she get have no idea. She's got big people working under just drawing circles all day long day. Great your leadership, mayor thank you for the warm welcome. So here's the

thing. Who doesn't love a yellow school bus? Right? Can you raise your hand if you love a yellow school blass? Right? Just there's something about and most of us, many of us went to school on the yellow school blass right, And it's part of it's part of our experience growing up. It's part of, you know, a nostalgia and a memory of do you have any memories of a yellow school bus? It's part of our memories. She grew up in Canada, by the way. But nonetheless, that's

the person in charge. That's why people aren't calling for the political scalp of Joe Biden because if he goes, guess what, that's the president and worries and they don't have enough to do. Willie Pga Tours are testifying before the Senate today. I gotta worry about golf. Are they getting where they getting free? Eighteen somewhere? Do you think the Senate might have more things to worry about than PGA golf? I would say so. Inflation uh, you

know whatever? Or how about China? Yeah, Russia? How about human traffic? That? What about that war? We're fighting in a rock? According to Oh, I mean Ukraine? Do you mean a rock don't you? Yeah? Yeah that one. Bengals Willie will induct a twenty twenty three Ring of Honor class who are during a prime time Monday night football game September twenty fifth against those Los Angeles Rams. Then, voting for the Ring of

Honor has already taken place, with thirteen nominees on the ballot. The nominees the two former players who received the most votes will be announced next week. Who are they? I don't know, they're gonna let us know. Let's get the people. I think one of them is gonna be Corey Dillon. No. Baseball's All Star Game is tonight in Seattle. America League has a nine game winning streak against the National League. Unbelievable seven o'clock ESPN fifteen thirty.

Let's worry about How about that that home run derby last night? Can't wait for another one? MLS Soccer Saturday's FC Cincinnati match against Nashville at TQL Stadium sellout, the tenth this season. On Saturday. FC Cincinnati's on the road tomorrow night to face off against those New York New York City Red Bulls. What about the Reds? You forgot about them? They're done until Friday.

With the action with the Brewers coming to town, Brewers, Giants, snakes, right, that's not going to get any easier, and all of them are really good, right, I would take Giants or there Arizona leads a West six and four. I go six and fourth, they go, and they might Zach Gallen, the guy that's going to start the All Star Game tonight, eleven game winner for them, the pitching Tuesday, I guess, so, I don't know. We'll see what happens. We'll see what

happens. You may pitch some Hi, it's gonna be close. I hope we don't see him. Is this a mirage or the Reds really in first place? Yes? By one game over the over the brew crew. Are you sure? I mean yes, This isn't some dream of mine. No, remember my speech? And then wait a minute, well tomorrow it's two weeks tomorrow until Bengals training camp. Bengals, how about that back and probably less than a few months, A few weeks until the the preseason opener August

the eleventh. How about that? Who do they play? August the eleven? The Green Bay Packers come to town? What about Rogers? He's in New York with the Jets. Jets e j Yes, Jets, Jets, Aaron Rodgers Jets. The Senator is investigating the PGA tour in the of Murger. You care, Come on, come on, those guys are just getting free golf. I'm playing. That's all they're doing. I guarantee you you wait and see those congressmen. Hey, how about uh? How about yea

thank you? What about the stadium course? Yeah? How about the TP how about the TCA? How about the Players Championship? Got to worry about? Go down there to in Inverness. I've been there many times in Toledo, Inverness, Well, there you go. What about Firestone? Been there too? Merefield the Home of a Bear. I've been there and can't Murker Kent. Murker's the man. If he can't do it, nobody can. How about the Jeopardy matchup John Fetterman Gee, Scion Feinstein and Joe Biden.

I'd rather watch the host of uh? What was it? What about the the the Uh, the spoof that Saturday Night Live did with uh the guy that was Sean Connery, Uh, Burt Reynolds and somebody else and then uh Farrell was the comedian. Fair was Alex Herbeck speaking of that? What about Sarah Elise this morning? But she would not divulge what part of the dress bingo? Yesterday she left me a note that said to Willie, I knew you were trouble, signed Sarah Elise, and she cut off part of her

dress and gave me a piece of Sarah the rest of it. Well, now we understand that there's a bidding war for that. No, for the rest of the dress, it may go to the Hard Rock Casino downtown or the Smithsonian or Rocky Boyman's private collection. That's correct because today she was this morning saying that Rocky was a little was kind of flirting with her on the air yesterday. Really, yeah, I didn't. I didn't. I don't know what was I don't know what's going on there. But the Rock may

have to explain things and about forty minutes wow, and he will. He will explain things. Well, he has him talking to do well, he's got issues right now. A beautiful young wife, three kids, kids, and nil money coming in for it already, Little Rock right being asked to go down, and you got central, Well, then you got you know, then you got mos kid daughter who's being betrothed. You know, Rock's a mess. I don't know what then he got. He's gonna have to

defend himself because I can't well. And maybe Rocky and Sarah in the morning over there at one oh two seven, can't say, can't say, don't feel strongly about much. I feel very strongly about that. That's Moe talking about his daughter's betrothal to the little Rock. Start him off early. I think somebody will ask the House speaker McCarthy, what the investigation with the PGA tour and live golf is. Let's get the Senate involved with golf. Why

not? They got nothing else? You're looking for free? They're looking for free. Eighteen or thirty six this weekend. Sege a guest coming up on about fifteen minutes about the climate oaks perpetrated upon the American people from Algore. Trillions of dollars we get are and John Kerry how many how many icebergs are melting? That's gonna create havoc around the world. Say if you have a large glass of ice and water, right, and let's say over time the

ice all melts, Yeah, does the water like overflow? No, same principle with the Arctic. In the Antarctic, if there's more ice that melts, right, it displaces the water currently present, producing no greater volume. Right. It doesn't take a rocket science to figure out. Get a big glaska of ice water and when the ice melts, the water takes the place of the ice and there's no increase. This isn't rocket science to figure this stuff out. I know where you're coming. Every time it's hot in the

desert in July, that's climate change. Whatever rains in New England climate change. Well they're having you know, deadly floods there and everybody's going as that's climate chant there. It is the hottest temperatures ever in the nineteen thirties that we know about. There wasn't much climate change talk going on ninety years ago. You know what about El Nino. Nobody's brought that up late. Bring it up. I'll bring it up. Where's the biggie and that I'm not

It's like, give me out of the Studge report. Steve Malloy of Junk science dot Com is coming up next Junk Science dot Com. William Otter of The Red Legs opening up the second half of the season on Friday against those Brewers. We leave you with the immortal words of the student report. You know when we talk about our children, I know for this group, we all believe that when we talk about the children of the community, they are a children of the community. Say that again, did you understand that?

Say you know when we talk about our children. I know for this group, we all believe that when we talk about the children of the community, they are a children of the community. You made that connection between two to spare our thoughts to go up with a cohesive conclusion. We're talking about a mind that operates segment above your level. When we're talking about the children of

the community, we're talking about the children of the community. That is especially true when it comes to the climate crisis, which is why we will work together and continue to work together to address these issues, to tackle these challenges, and to work together as we continue to work operating from the new norms, rules and agreements that we will convene to work together on to galvanize global

action with that, I thank you all. This is a matter of urgent priority for all of us, and I know we will work on this together. That is, I thought you was in charge of the border. What she's worried about climate change? He's worried about ven diagrams. But the three circles together there where you add two more, it's the Olympic flags. There you go, the Olympic rings. Don't get her working on that. Police, leave her alone with the southern border. She's doing great work there.

Yeah, we are great. Let's continue. Steve molloy Junk Science dot Com is next. Some of the reds relaxing, taking it easy until Friday night when all hell breaks loose. Yeah. On news Radio seven hundred, w Aldo the moment when you realize you have a serious air conditioner issue, a real, stripped down to your Skivvy's No One's American Dream written by Steve malloy about the climate alarmism which is driving public policy, causing it to spend literally

trillions and trillions of dollars. We don't have to solve a problem that may not be able to be solved. By Steve malloy. He was part of the Trump a transition team. Also a fellow, a legal fellow to E and E. A senior fellow, Steve malloy been on with me several times.

Welcome again at the Bill Cunning Show and see. First of all, we were told by someone that July third and July fourth were the hottest days in the history on the Earth, and that story percolated all over the world, especially in America because it's now the middle of July and it's hot, especially in deserts like Arizona is a desert, it's hot, and all of a sudden, it's the hottest it's ever been. We want to talk about evs later on. Also tell me whether it's true or not that right now,

the middle of July, it's the hottest it's ever been. So thanks for having me back, Bill. Yeah. So last week they were saying that the July third and fourth were the hottest days in one hundred and twenty five thousand years. What they weren't telling people is that the temperature guest emits for those days are based on satellite data enhanced by computer modeling. Now, of course, we had neither satellites nor computer modeling one hundred twenty five thousand

years ago, so they're just basically making it up. But m and we know that from actual temperature measurements around the world there was no spike in temperature at all. Average average global temperature all this year has been about fifty seven and a half degree fahrenheit. It was sixty seven and a half degrees fahrenheit last week, although the mainstream media tried to say it was like sixty two

and a half degrees totally made up. What's going on is there is a there's an Arctic heat wave or I'm sorry, heatwave in the Antarctic, you know, at the bottom of the world, and it has taken temperatures from like you know, ninety below zero up to thirty below zero, still freezing. There's no melting going on. But you know that heat wave in such a large area had you know, biased, you know, the temperature modeling up. So the bottom line is, you know, the temperature is the

same as it ever was. H emissions are not causing any warming climate. Climate remains a hoax as far as the measurement system itself, who's measuring it? Do they have their thumb on the scales, maybe a cender block on the scales, factually, who's doing the modeling, who's taken the temperature, how many temperatures are taken? Is the Pacific Ocean being monitored? I guess we're going to build a railroad according to Joe Biden, somehow the Pacific Ocean

into the Indian Ocean. We're gonna have a railroad built there. We're going to have better modeling at that point. Who's taking the temperature, how many temperatures are taken, when are they taken, the time of the day. How can we rely upon that data at all? Well, it's very difficult to do this. I mean, let's start out with the fact that you know, the US government claims to have global temperature going back to eighteen eighty

and maybe even earlier. But if you look at maps of where these temperature stations are, they're basically in the US, some in Europe, some in Asia and populated centers. Most of the world has not been covered. So the notion that we know global temperature going back into the nineteenth century is just crazy. We have satellite temperatures starting in nineteen seventy nine, even those are

not really direct measurements. There's a lot of guestimation going on. With those um temperature stations around the world, no matter who has them, you know, in the in the United States, for example, more than ninety percent of them are not precise to within one degree celsius or two degrees fahrenheit. Now this is significant because you know, global warming lore has it that the globe has warmed one degree celsius since the Industrial Revolution started. But the temperature

stations aren't that precise. So how do we know, Wow, do we don't? We don't, we don't. Well, it's all just guestimate and we you know, just look at what happened last week, this tremendous antarctic heat wave. Um, you know, once you start, you know, making up temperatures, it was enough to bias you know, people's imaginations into thinking that it was the hottest days ever, which is crazy. So we don't really know what's going on. We've never really known what's going on.

This is all just based on guest amid uh, you know, posing as certainty. You know, the science is not settled. Anybody that says that has no idea what they're talking about, aren't Tho's doing the measuring a have a outcome desired basis. In other words, Individuals that are objective aren't doing the measurement. Individuals that demand a certain result cause the certain result because of their bias. And since we don't have accurate measuring stations, maybe we're going

to rely upon ABCNBC and CBS News. I'm watching now their national forecast to start off. If there's a thunderstorm or a flood or a drought, it leads the ABCNBCCBS News. Is there an agenda there? So? Government agencies, especially during the Bide administration, are heavily invested in global warming hysteria, climate idiocy, heavily invested. Their theory is not working out. We just had the thirty fifth anniversary of NASA scientist James Hansen's famous testimony in Congress.

I went through this on junk science to comp point by point nothing he claimed was going to happen has happened. So this whole thing has fallen apart. But you have these you know, major agencies. How do they walk any of this back? And and you know, instead of walking it back and trying to recover some of their credibility, they're just doubling down. So, yes, these people have a bias. They you know they're afraid of being exposed, and so they're just going to keep lying and doubling down on their

lives. How much money are we spending on this hoax of man made climate change? How much money are we spending? Well, just last year, since Biden passed the Inflation Reduction Act, we're going to spend one point three trillion. But around the world there's trillions being wasted on this wind you know, wind solar. It's making energy prices more expensive. We have these taxpayers

subsidies. We are losing opportunities, you know, instead of if we're going to spend government money, instead of spending it productively, we're wasting it. So this is costing US trillions and uncountable trillions of dollars. I'll I need to fix our infrastructure. We don't need more. We don't need wind and solar crep No, in fact, it doesn't work. But well, let's

talk about evs. I had a guest on a week or two ago called Blood in the Congo, in which the majority of these so called exotic minerals come from mining systems in the Congo in the middle of Africa, and up to five hundred to a thousand boys and girls are killed every year in the

mines. Massive human trafficking is taking place. These exotic minerals are then sent by truck to the coast off to communists read China to make these exotic batteries inside teslas that are sold to us as as the result as something good for the environment. I'd ask you this, if we all by twenty thirty, I think Ford by twenty thirty's only gonna make evs or by twenty thirty five.

Gavin Newsom, Governor California, has said, by twenty thirty five, you won't be able to sell a gasoline pirate car in the state of California. Do we have the power grid available to us? Are we planning to improve it by that much more that all of us can plug in our cars at the same time every night? Well before I get to get to get to that, since you mentioned forward, lest your forward lost thirty four thousand dollars on every EV vehicle, it's soult they lost thirty four thirty four thousand

on each one. Getting back now, going to the grid, um our grid is only growing at a pace of about point four percent per year. We need to we would need to increase that by eighty times to meet the goals of Gavin Newsom and Joe Biden in terms of you know, electrifying the car fleet. I mean, our grid is just way behind. And ironically, you know, as we're you know, these guys want to burden the grid with more electricity demand, you know, from evs and heat pumps and

just electrifying everything. You know, California, they want to electrify their ports. It's totally nuts. As we're burdening our grid, the Biden administration and out in California, you know, they're dismantling the baseload power, the coal plants, the natural gas plants. We're not building nuclear. So our grid is becoming weaker and weaker. Yet we're burdening it more and more. And so you know, I mean disaster awaits. Let me ask you this,

uh, I guess the central question. Are you ready for the big question? Throw it at me. Our evs good or bad for the environment? Good or bad? Well, in terms of emissions, they're a non event, okay, So you I mean, let's start with emissions. Don't harm the climate. Evs are supposed to reduce emissions, so they don't meet that fundamental test. They're not doing anything to the environment. To build an EV you need child labor in the Congo. You need communist China to process the

output of the child labor. There's other strip mining that goes on in China, which is there's no environmental regulation for that. No. Evs are a total disaster for them. They're a humanitarian disaster and an environmental disaster. Why is it not reported by the so called mainstream media of the hundreds of children and the Congo killed and mining systems so that we can have the evs.

We have no system to get rid of the batteries once they're spent. By the time you have to have to put another thousand pound batteries inside your town, it may cost twenty to forty thousand dollars more than the car is worth that. China itself is opening up one new coal fired power plan every week. As far as the eye can see, America is singularly disarming completely,

even though we're an energy giant, and none of this is reported. All I can imagine if the New York Times really cared about the issue, wouldn't they send reporters to the Congo to find out how many children are killed because of art desire for battery production, and it hurts the environment, it kills

them. Why isn't that reported? Steve malloy. Well, I've just got to say, you know, if the New York Times were the rest of the lamestream media was interested in reporting honestly about any of this, they wouldn't be shutting people like me down. Because we've been talking about these kids in the Congo becoming more dependent on China, and you never hear about this on

the news, You never read about it in the newspapers. Until Elon Musk bought Twitter, you couldn't even really find out about it on Twitter or or social media. They're all in the media is all in on the climate agenda, and they only present, you know, what helps the climate agenda, and so that's why they're all whipping up this hottest Day scare. And oh my god, you know, Joe Biden is planning our climate future with King

Charles. What could go wrong with that? Steve? Steve malloy And the other the other issue, because of clean energy, because of clean coal, because of natural gas, because of methane, because are propane. Isn't it true that America the last ten to fifteen years has gotten much better with emissions, assuming emissions like CO two is as bad for the environment. Assuming that's the case, and that's up to debate. Haven't we gotten better every year

for the past ten or fifteen years anyway? Well, in fact, we're the only nation, you know, if you are going to worry about emissions, and I don't, but if you're going to, just for sake of argument, we're the only nation that has really reduced emissions. And the reason we have is because we have been fortunate enough to have fracking and we had been able to substitute natural gas for coal shorter that those those are really the

only emissions cuts that have ever occurred in the world. Emissions. Global emissions are going up. You know, Europe claims to be cutting its emissions. They're not. They're actually just exporting their emissions to China. The world is becoming more dependent on China. China is like the world's smokestack. Actually, but so so, you know, other than the US switching from natural gas to coal, I mean that emissions are just going straight up. Are we

building, unbeknownst to yours, truly more nuclear power plants in America. Are we building more natural gas power plants in America? Are we building more coal fired Paul? Are we building any of these natural gas power plants or nuclear power plants anywhere in this country? Well, there are some gas plants going up, not any There's no new coal plants coming online. Nuclear power forget.

I mean there's like there's been one new reactor since nineteen seventy nine, and that is you know, many years late and huge cost overruns, so junk science dot com. And we're not building the power plants sufficient to handle the need demanded by the government. The government is demanding economic sophistication, they're demanding new energy production, and we don't have the ability to produce the energy.

In fact, lastly, didn't you have a Wall Street Journal talked about how much do we have to increase the power plant production to meet the goals of a completely ev society? And it's by what factor we have to increase, which of course we're not doing. Yeah, so we would need we're going to need to increase our electricity production by a third, and at the

current rate that would take about eighty years. But of course Joe Bay and Gavin Newsom want to go one hundred percent ev by you know, twenty thirty or so. So I mean there's a huge mismatch here. And as with other federal programs on climate, like you know, the move to to get rid of coal plants, none of this stuff is really meant to take effect. I think it's just meant to cause chaos in a system, because you know, out of chaos comes more government control. That seems to be the

way people are. And every day that we have the desert which is Arizona has hot temperatures, or there's floods in New England because it thunderstorms in the summertime, and I'm waiting for the hurricane. We've had no hurricanes yet, but Florida has the hottest water around it has ever have. Every time there's a weather related issue, the media, if it bleeds, it leads to put in supple minds the idea that we must stop CO two emissions and we

can admit more CO two emissions, which is a natural substance. And lastly, is CO two like arsenic? What's wrong with CO two in the environment anyway, is so environmentalists love to say that CO two is is pollution and toxic and of course CO two. You know, we exhale a great amount of it, but it's also plant food. Without CO two in the atmosphere,

plants would die. The fact that you know we've had you know, human population has increased eightfold since industrialization is because of the combination of UM, fossil fuels, more CO two and warmth. You need all of those things to do the sort of agriculture we you know, we need to support eight billion people and more on the way. Um. You know, people like John Kerry that want to actually not only stop emissions but then start sucking in

the air. That's going to kill plants. It's going to kill agriculture, and it's going to kill people, and I think that's really what their goal is. So lastly, Steve Maloy, CO two is a good thing. We need. We need the right balance of one to two percent of the atmosphere. Having CO twos we're not close to the upper limit yet, and having temperatures one or two degrees a bit warmer not a bad thing. In fact, we were told nineteen seventies it was gonna oh we're going to freeze.

Now we're told we're gonna fry. But having a little bit more CO two a little higher temperature. Is that a good thing. There's no evidence that CO two has warmed the planet at all since industrializations, just absolutely none. So CO two is a good thing. We are nowhere because we're never in our lifetimes and in anyone's future lifetime, are we gonna ever hit a level of CO two that's bad. As a matter of fact, the more CO two we add to the atmosphere, the less of an effect it has,

the less of an effect it has. That's just the way the science works. It's really incredible. We are really being led down the garden path, and you know, we we we've just got to stop. And I think the way to do that. You know that an opportunity coming up in November twenty twenty four to change direction. We've got to take that opportunity. You know, you may not have the perfect candidates wherever you're four, but we've got we've got changed direction. We got to do it. The money

to cast Steve Maloy, you're a great American. Once again, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, God bless you. All Right, let's continue with more education. It's a weapon that we can use News Radio seven hundred WLW yours Cincinnati Red Space Rats just keep coming with

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Low credit scores often no problem at McKinley Mortgage five one, three, seven, nine, one, twenty seven hundred or best low Rates dot Com. Hey friends, I just got my new Kroger wireless phone and it's awesome. Plus it's saving me serious money krogstage of time right, the significance of the passage of time. So when you think about it, there is great significance to the passage of time in terms of what we need to do to lay

these wires, what we need to do to create these jobs. And there is such great significance to the passage of time when we think about a day in the life of our children. Oh oh, I'm broadcasting the rock wants to change the subject is the greatest stroke of genius and throughout history Joe Biden picking her as VP, knowing that no matter what he does and how bad he is, maybe as stupid as he is, he's actually a genius.

Maybe he's stupid, maybe he's smart. Yes, especially true when it comes to the climate crisis, which is why we will work together and continue to work together to address these issues, to tackle these challenges, and to work together as we continue to work another ice operating from the new norms rules, and that we will convene to work together on to galvanize global action. That I thank you all. This doesn't matter of urgent priority for all of us,

and I know we will work on this together. Fair well. People love it. I love crisis but but speaking of a crisis, Yes, there's been an allegation from the segment. No, no, not me, not me, it's from outside sources that we can't say. That's you kind. You have the rest of a Lisa and you have the rest of Sarah's dress that I have a small part. You have about a what you say, but six by six inch piece of the dress and it's rest and you would not revealed today on w EBN not part of the dress. We have

who's way my name's on that love letters seg correct speak. I have the rest of it. I've I've fashioned it into a pair of underwear that I'm wearing right now. Say you want to lift my showing you weird? Are you kidding? Well? You think I am Pat Fitzgerald or something? Easy enough speaking, listen to this, Go ahead, go ahead, Pat Fitzgerald. I've I've done probably three or four Northwestern Games of the past six years. He is a god fearing man's man, straight as an arrow, just

stud right. So the investment, here's what I can't understand. They had an outside source come in and do an internal investigation. Right, how many months? Six months? I'm sure costs millions and millions of dollars. They dug through every nook and cranny of that program. They interviewed everybody, they connected the dots, they did all this, and after all of that, it came back and said, nuh, can't really find much here. The only thing we can suggest is a two week July paid suspension for him as

can't find anything nothing sexual harassment and that sexual his assment. Nothing of that was found. Two So they paid for the study, they got the study, they got the results, and then the president just makes his own determination and fires. Why pay for and do and follow through with the investigation if you're just gonna do what you want anyway, explain it to me, say, a white Christian male football coach, expendable really and segment you were defending

Northwestern before? Will you tell the rock what you said in our anything about Northwestern? I mean, the player like them, I don't like Purple. The entire Northwestern football team put out a statement and it's pretty long, but a couple of the highlights the recent allegations brought forth are exaggerated and twisted. Northwestern University hired an independent third party to conduct its own private investigation, which

lasted for six months. The university took the matter seriously, engaged in in comprehensive interviews with current former players. Following through the examination, outside council reached its own conclusions, which were based on fair and unbiased evaluation of facts. And they took all that and we got the verdict. Pat Fitzgerald said, well, okay, I'll take two weeks. What does the outcome we want, and that is to get this honest, great man fired and let's try

to figure out a way to make it somewhat justifiable. What happens the Northwest from the home of the Wildcats. Here we are in the middle of July. He's gonna sue I think three like you know who he's He's already lawyered up. He is saying, now players. The transfer portal rules, if if anybody's wondering, if a coaching change happens, no matter what time of year, there's a thirty day window to enter the transfer portal portal because I

mean the camp's are gonna start in like three weeks. There goes the program. So you have thirty days to not find a new team. Do you have thirty days to enter the portal when a coaching change happens, and I imagine a lot of those players are going to do that and it's going to be chaos with a capital K. And they play a big ten schedule, they don't play a max schedule. Now coming in what next year? Here

it comes usc UCLA, Here it comes Ohio. They had a tough year last year, it's been that's a tough place to win, right, tough place. You're in Chicago, god sakes, it's an academic school. It had some good years here and there. But he is, he has done the absolute best anyone could possibly expect, giving all their circumstances. Sometimes how much has he owed? Yeah? But at what point is your your reputation

and your life's work. They go another team, take him, He'll go to the NFL and he'll become a coach and you know, and he'll make money. You reputation, Your reputation is ruined. And people want to get out of places like University of Michigan. They want to get out of Northwestern Illinois. How do you recruit against nobody wants to go to Michigan, for God's sakes. A lot of the people that you talk to and things you read is it's likely a disgruntled player who isn't playing, isn't getting what he

wants. This isn't that, so boom boom boom. Here comes all the excuses, Here comes the reasons. Why again, say, maybe I am wrong, but why would an investigation that takes six months into the tune of millions of dollars not uncover one thing as worthy of him being kicked off? And within one day the president I'm sure a left wing, a radical extremist, Notre Dames in Chicago. In Chicago, he got Northern Indiana terrible place

to be and the school isn't what it used to be at all. It's in the middle of nowhere, and it was one of the one of the schools that should have joined the Big ten or the ACC. Now the left alone. And so maybe pack can go to Notre Dame. After Freeman loses, he can go to Notre Dame. Is that before or after Ninre Dame joins the MAC? Well one of the founding I mean, what about Notre Dame joining the MAC? He feels and I do it as well, that

this could be a pretty nice year from Notre Dame. Could it could be? But you see, as a founding member of the MAC too. You see he's gonna struggle this year, the founding member of the MAC. How will they do at Kansas State? At Texas Tech? Seg? Who is you see his quarterback? Seg? It should be Tony Pike? What happened to the Wyoming off Pike? What happened to the Wyoming Flash? At you

see Evan Prater? I don't know what happened? This was his year and Bryant left right, Yeah, Eastern came back and then you went to I knew I knew this when it was right about Emery Jones. What about Evan Prater? What about the Wyoming Flash? This is his year, to seanyars, and he can't seem to take hold of that job. So he could take the Xavier program. Xavier is gonna have football soon. I know I'm coaching him. Are we talking? He's gonna come there and Xavier is gonna

maybe get like get into the Big ten in football? Wouldn't that be something? Kick Northwestern out? Wouldn't that be something? Yeah? La Big ten in football? What are you insane? I'm just saying they got a new doctor of osteopathic medicine coming. Who just saying so all I know is Sarah Leese's dress is no longer. Now we're back to this south from fashion into an undergo from We've gone from one end of the other under spectrum. Willie

talk right there. There may be a professional union being collaborated with me and Sarah. You better not talk about unions around this place, believe me. Yeah, that's a bad word. What kind of union you're talking? You can't say. Maybe you'll need a lawyer, domination, you'll need a lawyer. Then, you know, when we talk about our children, I know for this group we all when we talk about the children of the core, they are a children of the community. Though, don't repeat that wall is

gray. And did you know that that wall is gray? I have a question for you, Rock before we get to sports. Go ahead. If there was a Jeopardy evening program, and the three contestants who are Senator John Fetterman, Senator Diane Feinstein, and Joe Biden. Those are the three, how many questions are answered? Oh my god, do you think they hit one? No? Let's say I want um, I want to want uh presidential for a thousand? Oh no, no, uh uh. If the

category was Biden policies, I still think he'd get them all wrong. Kevin McCarthy would be the game show host. He had flash cards this morning in Britain just to have a conversation with their new prime ministers. Lead him around. You see that video and I said, Joe, come on, come on, come on, Joe, walk over here. It's crazy. What is he going to be? The nominee would be? I said on Cable News yesterday, it's gonna be Gavin Newsom and a Keem Jeffreys. That's the

ticket for the Democrats. Write that down because wait, who's a Keen Jeffreys's congressman from Manhattan's the House minority leader. And you got to get a person of color as a number two position, right, you can't have two white guys. Thank you for the warm welcome. So here's the thing. Who doesn't love a yellow school buss? Right? Can you raise your hand if you love a yellow school buss? Right? Just there's something about in a

sentence talking about PGA golf, we're we're a mess. Is there somebody in her cabinets says, look, look, don't talk. Yeah, you shut you shut up and know your role and shut your mouth because you're making no sense. No, that's why that's going insurance for Joe Biden. Right, people around you that aren't afraid to tell you when you're screwing up royally? Why don't you tell Sarah at least that I will later on the night's sake

will lead the student Reporter's a proud service of your local temp star. He didn't get air conditioning deal ten star quality of you could feel in northern Kentucky. Go Johnson Heating Cooling eight five nine four seven two sixty fifty one Sports. Let's see All Star game tonight in Seattle, Garrett Cole up against Zach Gallant. Seven o'clock ESPN fifteen thirty. Did you watch a home run derby last night? Rock? No? Did Lapham watch the home run derby?

Heard Dave Lapham watch? Did Lapham loves it? Number sixty two? Also Willy, we say congrats to the Loveland under thirteen baseball team who just won the state championship in Ohio. They're headed to the regional national play on Friday and Beautiful Iowa. Good Bengals Update, Bengals are gonna induct the twenty twenty three Ring of Honor Class Prime Time Monday Night Football September twenty fifth against those Los Angeles Rams. The two former players who received the most VOTs recently in

balloting, they will be announced next week. What about Oo Sinko? I don't know one of them. What about Corey Dillon? Negative? Say please continue? Two weeks from tomorrow, the Bengals open training camp. At this time of year, do you get that? You still get that itch? Yes, like it's yes, time for me to go to camp. Remember I remember those days because you know the summers are you know, the off season ain't bad. You're working out and get rid for the season, your

side of the season. But then you're like, man, you could have Sarah Hitchett thirty one days until the preseason opener against the Packers. Cut Man's coming back on to the Packers. By the way, what do post Bengals games? That's what I heard the Packers. By the way, at the time the Bengals play them first preseason game, Sean Clifford from the Saint Xavier High School could be their starting quarterback. That's right? With the reports?

Are they are not in love with Jordan's love? Why not? You can't play Jordan's not so they're saying it. Maybe they'll wish that you know who was back? Yes, Sean Clifford would be the starting quarterback. Clifford. What about fifth round draft pick lap Lap up said no, he said all time leader. Penn Safer says number six. Donald Trump signed his paychecks. Lap them just said yes, did you vote for Donald Trump? He's not saying, he's not saying, well, you say he played for him?

Very political laugh played for the saga's ad it in sports. I think, So, what's on the big show today? If anything? Well, have your girlfriend right? I thought, maybe Sarah or maybe Cherie Pello or maybe Kate Upton, Kimberly, Gilo, one of my old ones, Chrisian, Mackie Chris and Mackie ye Rock. Thank you. We want to keep these rumors to a minimum. Okay, yes, we don't need any media. Give me out of the Stewoge report. Well you out of a beautiful day

here at the tri State. We leave you with the immortal words of the student. Remember ven diagrams. Those three circles here and then let's just see where they overlap. You will not be surprised because I have constructed a Venn

diagram on this. Remember those three circles, how they overlap. I love ven diagrams, so I just do whenever you're dealing with conflict, pull out a ven diagram, right, and so you know the three circles, and so so I as he sees the Venn diagram of it all, he sees that there are those circles, and maybe people seem that they're a little different. They live in different parts of the country. They may be different age

or different races, but that area in the middle that overlap. But I asked my team to do a Venn diagram of where these attacks are happening. Teams should tell you to stop talking. Kamala, know your role and shut your mouth. She is insurance for Joe. Let's continue with more the Rock and Eddie or next with the ven diagrams. And maybe Sarah Leeese and her cutoff dress. She couldn't get the dress off fast enough. She had to

cut it off on news Radio seven hundred WU. Well, how were you get your tickets now dot com for our twenty twenty three

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