Live on Sunday Night with Bill Cunningham 6/18/2023 - podcast episode cover

Live on Sunday Night with Bill Cunningham 6/18/2023

Jun 19, 20232 hr
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Episode description

Willie relates his story with his Father. We also hear from Tammy Coker, Scott Gerber, WAR!!! on Sunday night LIVE across America.

Transcript

Portions of the Bill Cunningham Show may be prerecorded Willie bad of the Ball Rocking You by Choice Hotels, Econo Lodging Roadway in Hotels are serving up double points for every qualifying stay book at Choice Hotels dot com. Sal Here's the man who's been recognized against radio's best, the recipient of not one, but two prestigious Mark Cony Awards for he is broadcast excellence. The one and only Bill cunninghad t Billy Cunningham, the Great America welcome this Father's Day night and had

a great time. I often tell my beloved wife that I have two days a year where or mine. One is that my birthday, the other is Father's Day. Played golf with friends and after that hit dinner with a family. It was wonderful, great And when you have less time to waste as you get older, these holidays become a bit more important. So I put a tweet out and if you want to join me after I give my Father's

Day story about what should happen. If you're a son or a daughter and you're a strange from your father, you may go to my Twitter account and I have a posting up there and I'd like to hear what you have to say quite often. If you can do that. My Twitter is at Willie wi l l i E at Willie seven hundred WLW, and I have a posting up there that simply says the following, wishing all the great Dad's a wonderful Father's Day. I had a great day of golf, then dinner with

my family. I often feel that I enjoy an undeserved life. Listen tonight at ten h six pm Eastern time. So far it said about twenty five hundred responses. And if you want to respond on Twitter at Willie willl Ie seven hundred WLW, is how you can communicate with me with me on this topic. Later on we have on Tammy Cooker and she lives in Minnesota.

She's a great American. Tammy Coker is the executive director of the New Life Family Services in Minneapolis, and she's written a column she is trying to save the lives of unborn babies, especially on Father's Day, and she also testified before the Congress and interacts with many pregnancy crisis centers put together by Right to

Life First to try to save as many unborn babies lives as possible. Because the Blue machine is revved up doing a lot to make sure that as many babies as possible or killed so the fewer fathers can have a say on Father's Day. As far as whether or not to become a father, the courts have routinely ruled that we dad have nothing to say or do with the pregnancy we may have caused. So mothers quick, it's simply their decision and no

one else's course have ruled that. And so Tammy Coker will be here from Minneapolis, and I want to ask her the big question early on, and that is about a year ago, on June to twenty fourth, twenty twenty two. You're a Supreme Court rule of five to four that Roe versus Wade

was incorrectly decided. The matter belongs back in the states, And as a consequence, the Blue states and the blue governors and the blue attorney generals have expanded abortion rights in those states, so that in a state like many Minnesota that mothers freebee no expenses whatsoever, the state will pay for everything, can take the life of unborn babies through the second trimester with no questions asked. Other states like Mississippi and Georgia and Florida, Ohio and can Kentucky, Indiana

have been more reasonable but trying to save the lives of unborn babies. And it used to be on the row versus wade. The first trimester was a free fire zone. The second trimester the state had an interest and had to

get doctoral. The third trimester is real difficult. Now the Blue States have expanded to such a point that they've taken the third trimester, and really it moved it all the way forward to such an extent that it used to be hard in Minnesota to get an abortion after the first trimester, and now it's easy through the second trimester. So they've taken this opportunity to kill about ten

thousand unborn babies every year in Minnesota. So Tammy Coker will be here, executive director in the New Life Family Services Center in Minneapolis, talk about that also later on as perfector. Professor Scott Gerber, I believe I hit him on about a month or so ago, and it's gotten worse. Scott Gerber is a law professor of great note in his sixties who teaches at Ohio Northern

University. Now, with all due respect, I went the University of Toledo which isn't considered the best law school, but damn it gave me one quality, great legal education. And if you go to o NU in Ada, Ohio, I'm somewhat certain you're gonna be a great attorney coming out of o NU. It's not exactly Stanford or Michigan or Harvard, but nonetheless, believe

it or not. On April the fourteenth, he was teaching his constitutional law class that he's done for twenty three years at o NU Ohio Northern University in Ada, Ohio. I've driven by on I seventy five a little bit, never stopped at Data, Ohio and campus police armed during his class, walks down from the back of the classroom to the front, whispers in his ears something to the effect of you have to come with us. He was met in the hallway by a couple of city police armed, taken in the dean's

office, and he essentially fired for a lack of collegiality. He had the temerity of writing a column for The Hill dot Com that appeared on the Wall Street Journal about defending Clarence Thomas and some of his jurisprudential works. He's a libertarian conservative who also believes in d EI, but he also says the exclusive of the diversity, he's got to be a thought as well of race and gender and sexual orientation. You gotta have diversity of thoughts. It's got to

be part of that. So Ohio Northern University perp walked him with armed guards out of his classroom during class, and he's fighting to get his job back. So that's unbelievable. And also tonight is Wayne Allen Root lie from Las Vegas. I'm gonna talk to Wayne Allen Root about father Day. He often calls himself the son of a butcher at SOB, and we're gonna get Wayne

Allen Roots thoughts on what's happening with Donald Trump. And also later on, and you might recall a lot of the wildfires in Canada is still going like crazy. And at this point Steve malloy is going to join us. He's a reasonable scientist about what's really happening with the control being administered on university campuses and elsewhere about man made, man made global warming causing climate change, and also the farce which in the ev is. But he's going to give it's

been about a week since they dropped it. But in large parts of the Midwest right now, the results of the Canadian wildfires are still apparent. If it doesn't happen in New York or Los Angeles, it doesn't happen. But

in the Midwest there's a lot of residue. How common, unusual is out etc. So we have five lines opened right now eight six six, six four seven seven three three seven eight sixty six six four seven seven three three seven my Father's Day story and at the end of my day, and let's face it, I have many more yesterdays than tomorrow's when it comes to talk radio. Anticipate being with you on Sunday night for the next two to three

years. Anyway, the ratings are good, We're picking up stations. Advertising is good. But nonetheless, I'm not a fool. I've been doing talk radio now for about forty years, and Sunday nights with you about sixteen years. So I am very certain that my yesterday's grossly exceed my tomorrows. And the older you get, the more you realize that events have more significance.

At the end of my days on talk radio, I think my reaction to my Father's Day stories, We'll stick with me for all times, because I've received over the years thousands of positive messages from sons and daughters as strange from their father because of circumstances that have happened previous to today, and it was the impetus to have many say, you know what, let's make the phone

call one more time. Here's my story. Living in Cincinnati, Ohio, my father, who by the way, was named Bill Cunningham, was my coach. He was my mentor. I loved my dad and spent time with him. We shared the same name. Total of four kids and living a typical nineteen fifties sixties life with the father working and the mother staying at home. My mother, who is a as a saint, never had more than an eighth grade education. So she meets her man, Bill Cunningham, start

having babies, have four of them. I get to be twelve thirteen years old. You can hear the yelling, you can hear the screaming, and hear the arguing. But he was my dad. My mom did her best to keep it away from the kids, but in a small house that is difficult. She had not worked outside the home a day in her life until she sat us down at a kitchen table in Little Dear Park, Ohio, when I was like twelve thirteen years old. I had an older brother,

a younger brother, and a sister. And Mom said, your dad is gone and he's not coming back. First thing I said, I tended to speak up a little bit, believe it or not. Is he dead? Oh? No, he's left. He's gone. I said, where did he go? I'll go with him. No, he's gone. When back and forth, what do you mean he's gone? He's gone, he's not coming back. In fact, we're going to move in with my sister.

You're aunt you're auntie, I said, what are you talking about? So around and around, and each night I would wait for it to hear my father's voice. Once again. I knew he had a drinking problem because his name was in the paper. Now and then Bill Cunningham arrested. Bill Cunningham locked up, and some of my classmates at the seventh and eighth grade would remark, is that you And I said, no, that's my dad.

So it was a little bit of a source, a little a little bit of an embarrassment, But nonetheless we moved in with my aunt Money was tight as a rubber band on a watermelon. And we got to work. Thirteen fourteen years old and went to finished high school, went on to went on to college, got a basketball scholarship to Muskingham College. I led the city of Cincinnati and scoring first team All City and the Basketball Hall of Fame. I could shoot like crazy, and as the years rolled by, he was

a distant memory to me because I had my own son. I got married when I was twenty twenty one years old. My wife was twenty metter in grade school, still married. By the way, I've looked at that face now for fifty years, I told her today. Every few days, I say, you know, I've looked at that face now for more than fifty years, and it hasn't changed one bit. Penny look at me and say it. By the way, my nickname to her is Fred Fred to look at me and say you're lying. I said, that face hasn't changed.

And over half a century. So the years rolled by. Somehow I got scholarships in college. I went admit to law school University of Toledo, which I had a great education in Toledo, Lucas County. Worked during the day for a judge Robert Vernon Franklin Common Police Court, His literal roommate at Morehouse College in the late nineteen forties was a guy named Martin Luther King Jr.

Best friends with mL tell stories about him. Of course, by the time I was a bailiff to Judge Franklin, mL had been murdered by James Earl Ray, and that hurt the judge greatly. I went all my life. Things change about fifteen years in this process. I get a telephone call in my apartment in Toledo and it's my father. Have not heard from him in fifteen years, Not a Christmas card, not a telephone call, not a telegram, not a note. Nothing for fifteen years, any of us mind,

the four kids, zero, zilch, nada. I get a call and the first thing he says to me is, Billy, this is your dad. Could have I stopped? I said, my dad, and I said how do I Well? I said, what was our address in Deer Park? He routed off the address. I said, who was your assistant coach with Rutter's Pharmacy? Gave me the name. He was right, and I said, well, what do you want? He said, SNA, I'm dying. I'm living in Illinois and came here started a new and different

life. They're giving me a few a few weeks to live. And I understand from Mary Ellen, my mother, that you have a little baby. I'd love to see you, and I'd love to see my grandson before I die. And I said, let me call you. What's your number? I'll call you back. I wanted to call mom and say, you can't believe what happened. I take his number down. I called my mom and Cincinnati. I'm in Toledo and I said, Mom, You'll never guess who just called me. She said, Billy, it was your dad. I

said yes. She said he called here and when I told him that you had a son, who was at that point was two or three years old, he wanted to see you before he died, and he wanted to see his grandson. She said, what do you want to do? I said, Mom, let me think about it. So I sit out with Penny and I talk and with her and I said, what do you think? She said, Honey, it's up to you Hellinois. It's probably a seven eight hour trip. Se he is dying of cancer, deliver alcoholic and uh,

what do you want to do? And I said, I got I got to think about this. I waited about an hour and picked up the phone, called him back and he said, he said, Billy, Yes, when are you coming out? I said, Dad, you were not a father to me in my life, and I will ut be a son to you in your death. I'm not. I'm not, I'm not coming. He said, please, please, and he begged me and he was

crying. I said, Dad, forget it. I hung up. About two weeks go by, and that point in my life I was extremely busy because I was a bailiff and common Police court from eight am to four pm, and I was going to law school every night six to ten pm, and I was real busy. He called me a couple of three weeks later. He was very weak, and he said, Billy, this has got to be my last call. Is there any way you can come out this weekend? Please? And I said, Dad, forget about it. And

I hung up as hard as I could hang up that phone. Let's stop right there. To use the term of Paul Harvey, good day. The rest of the story's coming up twenty three minutes after the hour, Bill Cunningham, the Great American Live with you every Sunday night. Mercedes Benz of Fort Mitchell dot com. Get your tickets now. Four twenty twenty three, I heard Radio Music Festival and with us, we'll drive to Illinois. We'll see your dad before it's too late. And I said, Annie, let's face

it. Uh, I don't want to go bitter angry. It flooded back into my mind, in my heart, the number of sins and crimes he committed against the family, and I wasn't mature enough for wise and to forgive, not forget, forgive and move on because he offered sincere apologies on the phone, and I was still angry at what he put my mother through, mainly because by the time he left, I was thirteen fourteen years old, almost a man, and I was thinking of a pain and anger he put

my mother through, and that's why I could not I could not forgive, and I'll never forget. About a month later, I got notice that he had passed away from liver and kidney cancer, and that was over with, so my life continues. I thought, Okay, maybe I should have gone see him. Maybe I shouldn't found out why these things happen, find out the excuses for alcoholism, or why he treated the family left my mother's a

living saint. But then I've moved on, probably fifteen and other fifteen to twenty years go by, and at that point I have opened up a string of sports bars called Willie Sports Cafe and for them. And so I was always into public I was on the air course, I was also practicing law, and I had a couple of hundred employees and operating businesses going well. In one afternoon, during a NFL game, watching all this, uh Browns and the Bengals and the Ravens and all that stuff, somebody tapped me on

the shoulder and said, can I see you for a moment. And the place was I was out in the dining room and the place was packed, and guy, I said, what's it about. He looked at me and said, it's about your dad. And I looked at him, I said about my dad. So I said, okay. I said, let's let's go back to my office. Things were allowed out there in the dining room, so we walked back to my office. He sits down and I sit down, and he says, let me tell you about your father. And

I'm looking at this guy saying you're gonna tell me about my dad. This was some thirty years after he deserted us in fifteen years after he had died. Story continues on the other side, and there's a lesson to be learned. The rest of the story. Twenty nine minutes after the hour, Bill Cunningham The Great American Live with You every Sunday, News, Traffic, and

Weather, News Radio seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati. A mystery white powder sent to nearly one hundred Kansas public officials with the ten thirty report, I'm Sean McCormick. Breaking now a growing mystery in Kansas, as state and federal investigators are looking into at least ninety public officials receiving letters with a suspicious white powder, sources are telling ABC News. So far, there's no indication of the

substance being explosive or a biohazard. With more is j O'Brien. State Representative Stephen Owens opened his letters, saw the note inside, then spotted white powder folded up in a piece of paper. Owens says the envelope had a fake address for a local church, a ploy he believes was designed to make lawmakers think it was from a constituent. They were definitely very methodical and very thoughtful. This was very intentionally meant to get lawmakers to open this letter now.

The Lettus weather from the forecasters at nine News Overnight Tonight scattons staying mostly Cottie was scattered showers pushing in out of the south and west, Temperatures dropping down to sixty four with a wind out of the east at five to ten miles per hour. Better chance at rain throughout the day. On Monday, scattered showers, maybe a few thunderstorms, becoming a little more persistent through the middle

of the day and afternoon. We're looking at a high of seventy eight Tuesday, more scattered showers of temperatures hanging out into the low eighties, some spots into the mid seventies. From the Severe Weather station, I'm nine first wanting medi roal just Brandon Spinner News Radio seven hundred WLW. Radar is clear.

It's currently seventy two degrees. Bring out the brooms. The red sweeping the Houston Astros over the weekend, winning their eighth game in a row while doing it the most consecutive wins and the Majors this year, and the most for the Reds since twenty twelve. The nine to seven win keeps the Reds a half game back of Nano Central leader Milwaukee the Brewers beating Pittsburgh five to two

earlier today. Our next update is at eleven o'clock. I'm Sean McCormick, News Radio seven hundred WLW Secure Windows before summer travel with Cincinnati Glassblock Cincinnati Glassblock dot Com. Welcome to the Good Stuff. I'm Jacob Schick, a third generation combat marine, and I'm his co host and wife, Ashley Shick. We believe everyone has a story to tell, not only about the peaks, but the valleys they've been through to get them to where they are today.

We're joined by some amazing guests who share the lessons they've learned that shaped who they are and what they're doing to pay it forward and give back. Listen to the Good Stuff on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. This is the sound of salmonella giant rating on your undercooked chicken now, and it looks like mom might be taking it out a little earlier. Don't let

salmonella get funky with your chicken app work. On average, one in six Americans will get a food born illness this year, so use the thermometer to cook each type of meat to the right temperature. Keep your family safe at Food Safety dot gov. Brought to you by the USDA, HHS and the AD Council. The Reds welcome the Atlanta Braves for a three game series June twenty third and through the twenty fifth, presented by UDF The Weekend. Gully

Cunningham musts continue with the rest of the story. So he taps me on the shoulder, says, I want to talk to you about your dad. I'm looking to this guy. It's crowded. I said, let's go to my office and we can talk. So we walk in, sit down, and he said, let me tell you about your dad, and I'm going to stay to shock. At this point, I hadn't heard about my dad since our last conversation some twenty five years earlier. My dad, my dad. I said, what do you mean my dad? He said, let

me tell you about your dad. He worked at Kroger, he worked at Procter and Gamble. He developed one hell of a drinking problem. He probably he thought, had warrants out for his arrest because he skipped on paying fines and skipping probation. But do you know why. At least he attributed to him having a terrible drinking alcohol problem. I said, no, what is it? He said, Well, you know your dad was a marine. I said, yep. I saw pictures to him, and you know he

served in Okinawa, and you know he also hit one other island. He thought it was guad ocanal Okinawa was one of the last ones. And that your dad did things and saw things and on those beaches that the no human beings should ever see. And it hung with him and stuck with him, and it affected him. He had night flashes, he had whatever you might call today his post umatic stress syndrome. At that point, it wasn't called that. So when he came back from that war, he would have flashbacks,

and he had fits of anger exhibited toward others. He broke things, he punched walls, he wrecked cars. And it's because of what happened during World War two, because he said he did things and saw things that no one should see. And so for a long time, when he came back from the war and started having babies, that occupied his time and talents. But after many years, the night flower, the screaming at night, came

back. And I recall that occurring in the house that he couldn't deal with it, and at that point there was no such a thing as post traumatic stress syndrome, and he jumped into the bottle in order to serve his medicine

for him. He went through years of that, and when the criminal charges started piling up for DUIs and fights and bars, etc. He just couldn't deal with it anymore, and he left and he drove after he had one or two tanks of gas and stopped, and he with his wife and his four children, four or five hundred miles away, started a new life, taking menial jobs and working his way up into a small company. And he

kept drinking, and he would send me letters. This is his best friend in Cincinnati, who knew him and knew him when he was here and knew him from Illinois, and said, he always wanted to stay in much with the kids. But he has such shame about what was going on. He just couldn't bring himself to make a telephone I said me. And he couldn't

make a telephone call, he couldn't send a letter, he said. In his mind, he was just filled with guilt and shame and anger about his incapability of handling what he had done to marry Ellen, my mother and those four kids. He couldn't handle it. I said, well, then I told him. I related to him his friend as to what happened when he called me and asked me to see me and his grandson, his first one. He wanted to see him, and I said no, no, no, can't do it. And his friend said, I didn't know that was

going on. And at this point I feel about two inches tall. I have great respect for police officers, like the ones killed almost every weekend. I have great respect for firefighters and the military who say, choose me off fight, And whenever I have a chance to help or raise money or speak to the veterans, I do it. So my father was a veteran who reached out to his son to visit him in his final days, which I would anticipate he would have said to me, I'm sorry and explain all this,

and I could have asked him why'd you do it? And do you forgive me? And I would have spent time with him in the last few weeks of his life, and I thought I never gave him that second or third or fourth chance that I think all of us need at one point or another. So all my life, I've tried to be the father to my son that my father was never to me. I kept that in the back of my mind, and I hope I have served well my son as my

father did not serve me. So tonight, at forty minutes after the hour, would say, there are thousands and thousands of people listening to the sound of my voice on Father's Day night that has the opportunity to do what I did not do, which is reach out or respond when someone to dad reaches to you to want to explain how many times and as normally men not women, commit more wrongful acts, reach out and say, hey son, hey

daughter, I want to speak with you. And sometimes maybe the estranged father doesn't understand yet that in the last few weeks, a few moments of life, that death as a final act, and you will spend that A child will spend the rest of his or her life wondering what would have happened if I contacted my dad. I've had over the years thousands get a hold of me directly and indirectly and thank me for relating my story. My story was a serious mistake that I made in my life. If I had to do

it all again, it would have been different. Regeneration, blames, the wonderful. You know, the frustration competing on your door singing. I know that I'm a prisoner to all my father hustle, I know that I'm a hostage all the folks and bees. I just wish I could have told him in and I did so. I met in counseling with that father, Anthony Browsch, who's a great man, in a seminary, and he suggested to

me that I forgive my father, which I do now. Every Father's Day night tonight I will say the our Father, the Hail Mary, the Glory be, and I pray to God he's in heaven above, and that I will say to my dad, Daddy, I accept your apologies. I forgive you, and I'm sorry that I was not mature enough many years ago to answer your call. If I had, I would have completed that circle in

my life and shut that chapter the right way. And he would have met his grandson, who was only like two or three years old at the time, and I'm sure it would have been among the most emotional get together as of my life and his life to see him. I remember as a strong and brave black hair marine who was my baseball coach and my dad. I always called him Daddy, and I did not respond when he tried at the end of his life to reach out. I think you would have said,

I'm sorry. I think you would have said I shouldn't have done it. I think you would have held my son on his lap and cried, and then I would have left in peace. So in the last days of my life, I'll look back upon that failure of mine to reach back in time and accept I thought would have been his apology. I don't think he would have justified his behavior. I think he would have said I'm sorry. So every Father's Day night, as a father, Anthony Browch, I say to

my father, Daddy, accept your apology. I'm sorry I did not meet with you at the end, and I forgive you. And I would say to him and Heaven above, do you forgive me my babies new So tonight, if you're estranged from your dad, sons and daughters, and you've tried repeatedly to bridge the gap and it's failed, I implore you to try one more time tonight, call and say, Daddy, I want to begin a relationship with you. From this day forward and forget about the past unless apologize

to each other for whatever injuries each have caused to the other. And let's move on. And if somehow you want to reach out to me, the way to reach me is on my Twitter account. This point I have about three thousand responses wishing all the great Dad's a wonderful Father's Day. I had a great day of golf then dinner with my family. I often feel that I enjoy an undeserved life. Listen tonight, it's at Bill Cunningham at Willie WI L L I E seven hundred ww. That's my Twitter account Willie seven

hundred WW. And let me know if my words have had some measurable impact in your life. Because things can be repaired in the living years, well once that death takes place, those things tend to be final. Daddy, I accept your apology. I'm sorry I didn't come to you in the last moments of your life, and uh, I forgive you. Let's continue forty six minutes after the hour, Bill Cunningham, live with you every Sunday we

see what are you doing to portal for many Mother's Day? I think is the biggest thing because mothers I think do a much more difficult job than father's. And uh, I'm gonna have a few guests on the night to talk about this, and that we have calls from California, Hampa Bay, and Idaho. I love calls from Idaho and Montana. And if a line becomes

available at eight six six sixty four seven seven three three seven. I saw that there's a thought among right to life activists and on Father's Day, right to life and babies are somewhat important that it's become worse in the Blue States after Row versus Wade was overturned than it was before. In fact, in a sixth sense, it might have been better for Row versus Wade to remain the federal law of the land, which would restrain the Blue States from their

lust for the killing of unborn babies, because now they're unrestrained. When you're in a completely blue state with a blue governor, a blue Attorney general, a democratic House, a democratic Senate, and democratic judges appointed by left wing governors, and by the large cities like Minneapolis or Compton or Oakland, that you're in an area where no one's going to contest the fact that wait a minute, maybe an unborn baby has the right to live just possibly, and

so in a sixth sense, and the Blue Cities and the Blue states, abortions now are much more easy to receive than it was before. They are

unbridled. They are unrestrained, uncontrolled. So Tammy Coker will be here from Minneapolis and about fifteen minutes to talk about what's happened in Minnesota, which is Governor Tim Waltz and the radical left wing Keith Ellison, Attorney General, and the Blue House and the Blue Senate have swung open wide the doors of abortion all the way through the first and second trimester, trending toward the third trimester

in some states. I can recall a governor of Virginia who said, well, after the baby is born, let's put the baby off to the side and talk with the mother about what to do to the baby. It's like, are you kidding me? I had hoped and thought that returning abortion to the states would mean the great majority of states would ban abortion, certainly outside the first six to ten weeks, because the heart's beating and fingerprints exist, and genetic code is present, baby feels pain, etc. But according to

Tammy Cooker, just the opposite has happened. Minnesota's gotten worse off after ro Versus Wade was overturned by Dobbs, which is going to be commemorated later this

week. Then also later on is Professor Scott Gerber talking about the infection of socialism, totalitarianism, and d ei that's happening now in every law school he teaches for over twenty years, the law professor of the year of Ohio Northern, and he's been fired from o NU because of a lack of collegiality, which means that he thinks Clarence Thomas is okay to have rich friends who and he's okay being a conservative libertarian. He thinks diversity of viewpoints should exist at

Ohio Northern University. Then I'm gonna take out this matter with the great Wayne Allen Route. On Father's Day night, he often refers to himself as an sob son of a butcher, And so I've given you my Father's Day stories, which I'll continue to do every Father's Day as long as Short and others allow me this platform to talk about the impact that Wayne Ellen Root's dad had

on his life and made him what he is today. And also later on, as Steve Malloy, who's an expert in the environment, we're being lied to when it comes to the Canadian wildfires and to the temperatures in Texas which is in the one hundreds, instead of building new power grid, instead of building new power stations, instead of using natural gas, which has plummeted CO two emissions because how clean those natural gases work. And for utilities, we're

doing just the opposite. As Red China is building one brand new coal fired power plant per week. We have about thirty five hundred power plants and eighty percent of them are controlled by natural gas and oil and coal. Andre and Joe Biden's making it impossible for them to exist. We're gonna make the middle class lifestyle almost impossible in the future if we buy evs and we don't have

a power grid it's supported. Then lastly, in the Middlewest tonight, there's still a lot of the of a lot of the substance from the Canadian wildfires. The CO twos in the particulate matter is coming and so I know it's largely vacated Boston and New York. But Steve Malloy says we're being lied to

repeatedly by the mainstream media that will not tell us the truth. And I would note that Wyndham Clark is when the US opened by one stroke about an hour or so ago over Rory Malcael Roy who boge to part five when he should not have. So let's continue the line becomes available eight six six six four seven, seven three three seven. First guest ninety's Tammy Coker on Father's Day Night, What's happened to the lives of unborn babies in a blue city

Minnesota? I thought was like a purple state. I don't think it is anymore. And she's gonna talk about fatherhood and motherhood and the survivability of unborn babies in the state of Minnesota under the leadership of Tim Waltz and Keith Allison. Not good plus continued by the way, it isn't too late. It's late on Father's Day night, or reach back talk to your dad if at all possible. Bill Cunningham, the Great America with you every Sunday night.

Home title left. It's on the rise, and it's devastating if it happens to you. Listen to the alarming words of an actual home tide Woo Willie bad the ball brought you by Choice Hotels Econo Lodging Roadway in Hotels are serving up double points for every qualifying stay book at Choice Hotels dot com. Sal He's the man who's been recognized as radio's best, the recipient of not one, but two prestigious Mark Cony Awards for he is broadcast Excellence, the one

and only Build cunning Head by Bully Cunningham, the Great American. And of course, later this week we're going to celebrate in a sense the Dobb's decision that was rented on June the twenty fourth, twenty twenty two, which essentially reversed ro versus Wade, which is a course that even Ruth Bader Ginsburg constitutionally flawed, she said. And of course, since then, almost a year has gone by, and the media is telling us as great Americans, that

somehow saving the lives of the unborn is politically unpopular. I'm not so sure that is. Plus, whenever I have an occasion to watch on c SPAN, normally Republicans will go after the Attorney General and maybe the FBI director about the lack of enforcement of vandalism and crimes committed against against pregnancy Crisis centers and

family services centers because it doesn't fit the political diet drive. But if someone like a hawk out in front of an abortion clinic tries to counsel a woman not to go inside, then the FBI will rate his home with twenty or thirty well armed agents to scare the but jabers out of him. Joining you and I now is Tammy Coker. She's executive director of the New Life Family Services Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. And Tammy Coker, Welcome to the Bill

Cunningham Show. And before we go any further, it's been almost a year and before the Dobbs decision came out about a year ago, did you have hope that unborn babies lives would be saved or did you think this would be the final nail and the call from before the final decision was made. That's a great question, you know, I think that. I mean, politically, we always want to do what's right, and we want women to be

respected and cared for and love throughout an unplanned pregnancy. I think the reality is we knew that unplanned pregnancies would ever go away and there would always be women to serve, and so we certainly didn't hang our hats on anything. But we also couldnot have imagined kind of the fall out of what would happen after the reversal of Row, especially here in Minnesota. It's shocking, to be honest, shocking in what regard because I know you've tepoid the Congress about

the face actor Stad. You work for numerous years to ensure that women, by the way, women have babies, men do not, that they receive the necessary care and support when they want to keep their unborn baby alive. But when you say you were shocked by it, which way or what are you referring to? Sure well, New Life has been around for fifty years, and I can unequivocally say that we have never experienced the type of attacks

that we have this past year. And so all of a sudden, pregnancy centers across the country have received threats, death threats, vandalism, all kinds of things. We are being forced to provide additional security and to really step up our game just to protect ourselves and our patients. And we've just never seen that before. But in addition to that, I know for us in Minnesota legislatively, things have just really gone to the extreme. So we used

to be what I would call a purple state. And that has certainly changed. And you know, in January, our Minnesota legislature legalized abortion through all forty weeks. They removed almost all of the restrictions that we had protecting women making sure they have you informed content, informed information about the risks and procedures for abortion. All of that went away. And it's just turned very very

quickly. And yeah, our own attorney, our own Minnesota Attorney general, you know, in August put out a consumer alert, misleading consumer alert, I would like to say, warning Minnesota's about pregnancy centers like ours using the same false narrative that the abortion activists have perpetuated. And it's just it's been crazy, and we've had so many protests and just negative publicity and outright attacks

and threats against us. And as far as a Governor Tim Walts and many others, a roversus Wade generally allowed it completely the first tries trimester, and the second trimester it was more or less frowned upon but could be granted with physician involvement. The third trimester, before ro versus Wade was overturned, was kind of like it can't be done, so you're saying that in a sense in a blue state, and let's face a Minnesota is now a blue state

and a blue state. After Dobbs, things got worse in Minnesota for unborn babies. In fact, in a sense, roversus Wade was a benefit compared to what Governor Tim Walts is doing in the blue state of Minnesota. I would say, definitely things have gotten worse for babies, But I would say they've also gotten worse for women. You know, as centers like ours are attacks, and you know, and there's all kinds of ridiculous narratives out there

that are just completely untrue. But women are going to be afraid to walk into pregnancy centers because of the lies that are told about us. Women are not given. In Minnesota, in particular, they took away the Women's Right to No Act, which included making sure that women had information about the risks and procedures of abortions, that women were given medically accurate information about gestational age and the resources that were available to them if they decided to continue their pregnancy.

That is no longer required in our state. So women have fewer choices now. Wow, So as far as the attacks can you be more specific about the narrative put out by the abortionists, by the supporters of Governor Tim Waltson Minnesota and others, is what are the false narratives about pregnancy crisis centers? Absolutely so, I mean, right after our Attorney General put out a consumer alert warning people about pregnancy centers, we had threatening posters plastered all over

the community of our brand new, our fifth clinic. We have five centers actually in Minnesota, and there were you know, all kinds of posters classed saying if abortions aren't safe, neither are you calling us all kinds of names fake clinic. They don't do real medical care. They don't do any of this. I mean. In the Attorney General's alert, he specifically says pregnancy centers often make misleading and exaggerated claims about the health griff associated with obtaining an

abortion. They don't counsel or provide accurate information about available abortion services. But the truth is, we hide accurate, up to date information taken directly from the Minnesota Department of Health to women about the procedures of abortion, something that women have a right to know about before they decide to get an abortion. And so the narrative about you know, pregnancy centers are fake clinics they're lying

to women is just ridiculous. It's ridiculous. The abortion clinics in our states don't even believe that. No, if they don't, the abortion clinics in our area are referring their patients to us for medical services. Certainly they wouldn't do that if they genuinely believed we were a fake clinic that doesn't provide legitimate healthcare. Do you have some sense of how many unborn babies are killed every year in Minnesota? About ten thousand, ten thousand per year, so it's

about two two hundred a week, it's about five days. About forty to fifty every day are killed. Yea. And our women given sonograms, our women told the long term health consequences to them of having in a baby, or women told what happens to the unborn baby in the womb? Our women told any of those things. No, And actually Minnesota law has now removed that. And so women are not required to be given information about that which

take any other medical service anywhere? Where? Are you not required to be given information about the risks and procedures of a medical procedure? That you're going to have, no matter what it is. No other medical yeah, no other medical service. I can remember when I had a taiver, trans cather or aortic valve replacement. I've been a lucky man. I've been in a hospital one day, one day in my life, and that was for that. I had assigned so many forms. I'm an attorney, I've been an

assistant ag and I had assigned so many forms about the risk. But as far as women having an abortion, as far as fatality risk, well, how's the baby evacuated from the room? One of the long term mental psychological damage inflicted upon a woman. None of that is related to these to these ladies. None, none, No, that's all been removed. What role is Keith Allison, who's one of the most left wing Marxist Democratic attorney generals.

Is he protecting as a law enforcement of fish or was he protecting pregnancy crisis centers or right to lifers? Or is he making it more dangerous? Well, we certainly have not heard anything from him. So our brand new center in the Phillips community of Minneapolis, which I want to give you just a little background on that. This is a brand new building twelve thousand, six hundred square foot facility that not only houses our largest pregnancy center, but

also a full service, nonprofit medical clinic started by African immigrants. So we were so excited to open this building. And on March fourth of this year, we were notified by law enforcement at two am, a little after two am, that our center was badly vandalized. We had threatening graffitia written all across the front. If abortions aren't safe, neither are you F twelve, all kinds of other crazy things, a bunch of broken windows and all of

that. This is you know, the face X protects pregnancy centers like ours, and so the FBI did an investigation. There's been nobody has been identified to my knowledge, no arrests have been made. But we are the fifth center. We're the fifth organization in Minnesota to have this happen too, you know, since the reversal of row last year, when you acknowledge, nobody

has been arrested. So there's no sense we got to find the people who attack these pregnancy centers because federal legislation says that the federal government may bring criminal charges under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrance Act, which prohibits threats of force, obstruction, and property damage, intendant to interfere with reproductive healthcare services, or other federal criminal statutes where arson, firearms, and threats also used.

It's not necessarily about abortion. It's also there to protect your centers in Minnesota, and at this point the FEDS are not actively pursuing it whatsoever. Yeah, I mean, we did have a good conversation with the FBI, but against my knowledge, nothing has been done about it. No arrests have

been made. Yeah. Nothing. Again, We're the fifth organization since the reversal of ROW, and I believe some of those attacks happened before Keith Ellison made his consumer alert against pregnancy centers, so he added fuel to fire. I mean, words have power, especially when they come from you know,

people and positions of power. You know, it's kind of odd. We're celebrating fathers and all the things that we have done and mothers and things Tammy Coker, when you interact with similar right to life groups throughout this great country, when you testify before the Congress, is what's happening in Minnesota similar to what's happening in other Blue states? Absolutely, I think in all states. Actually, there have been over a hundred documented attacks against pregnancy centers across the

country, and it's disheartening to your knowledge. Is anyone brought to justice because of this, Like I can think of Mark Halkey who was out in front protesting of an abortion clinic, a planned paramoute center, and all hell broke loose. In his case, he was brought to criminal trial. Of course, he was found not guilty. Had maybe if he was found guilty, I'm confident he would have been put in jail for many years and leave as

six or seven kids without a father. I'm confident that would have happened. But but nonetheless, when it comes to pregnancy centers, the law was intended also to protect you, and that's not happening. Absolutely, yeah, absolutely, I believe there was one case in the same instance where four people were indicted out of the hundred attacks. That's that's my understanding. I don't know if that's when I testified in front of Congress, Mark Hauk was actually there

as well, and that was brought up well. In a sense, I'll conclude with this. In a sense, when Dobbs was decided, it was perceived by those like us who care about the lives of unborn babies that this was a victory. Has it turned out to be a victory in Minnesota? It really has not quite the opposite. Well, and it's because of the liberals, those who want to kill unborn babies. All over the Blue States have enacted worst laws for unborn babies instead of relying upon roversus Wade. It's

worse and I don't know if it's going to change in Minnesota. I think Minnesota today is similar to California or New Jersey, or Maine or Vermont or Oregon or Washington or Wisconsin. It's similar in the sense it should be. It's an Upper Midwest state. Great Americans are there. It's a functional state. But dabb has been so Dobbs. The Dabbs decision has hurt right to life in the state of Minnesota. It definitely has. Yeah, definitely has

all Right, Tammy Coker or what is your website? If people listening around the country would like to help produce something, what is your website? It's New Life Family Services dot Org. Well, all I can say, Tammy's keep hope alive. The fight continues. I'm sure there's thousands and thousands of persons alive today because people like you decided to do something about it. And we thought, we thought Dobbs would go one direction and may go the other,

but not the less. Tammy Coker of Minnesota, Minneapolis, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you very much, Thank you so much. Thank you, Tammy Coker. All right, let's continue, and you think about Father's Day Night and that father's constitutionally have zero zero to say about whether the mother of his children can abort his baby or not. Zero. Let's continue with more Bill Cunningham Live with you every Sunday night.

Get your tickets now. Four twenty twenty three. I heard Radio Music Festival Unborn Babies, and it is an unborn baby. It is not a tumor, it is not assist it is not some extra flesh. It is an unborn baby. And it was thought, with great glory and great anticipation that when Roe versus Wade was overturned about a year ago, and talking about this on Father's Day Night is particularly appropriate in my opinion, that there'd be more

babies saved than ever before. But what happened is that the Blue cities and the Blue states and the blue governors and the blue attorney generals people like Governor Tim Waltz and Keith Ellison and Gavin Newsom wherever you might be, have used that as an occasion, believe or not, to make abortion on demand in those states even more dangerous to the lives of unborn babies. It's made it

worse, not better. At least Rowe versus Wade gave some protections after the first trimester, and so when the US Supreme Court returned it to the states, which is where it belonged all the time we were working this thing out in nineteen seventy three, it was coming some states would have in some states

were not restrictions. So one stage, like Minnesota, which is turned dark blue, have said, Okay, we can pass whatever a damn well want to pass to make it almost impossible for an unborn baby to realize life in a blue state. If the mother desires, for any reason, including her health, which is emotional health or mental health, to kill her unborn baby, we're gonna encourage it, We're gonna pay for it. We're gonna make

it damn near impossible impossible for those babies to live. And later this week Vice President Kamala Harris is going to celebrate the fact that in many Blue states that's exactly what is transpired in the Dabb's decision. And so I don't know it's here. It is. We're celebrating tonight a parent a father Father's day about fathers, and it is sad that fathers have no say whatsoever when it

comes to the death of their own unborn children, no say whatsoever. And so the Keith Ellison's now pass out a missives how dangerous pregnancy centers are. And I pray to God at some point we come to our senses and realize the life of the unborn. Let's continue with more coming up next. As Professor Scott Gerber of a small law school in Ohio that has national implications,

Let's continue and never stop. We simply continue Bill Cunning of the Great American with you every Sunday night, News, traffic and weather, News Radio seven hundred WL Cincinnati. The Reds come home riding an eight game winning streak with the eleven thirty report, I'm Sean McCormick breaking now. It took ten inning Sunday, but the Reds came up strong and beating Houston nine seven It's a sweep of the Astros, giving the Reds the longest current winning streak in the

MLB this season at eight. Reds manager David Bell a great road trip of today. It wasn't a perfect game, you know, we overcome in the States with a lot of great play, but that's what it's all about the rand. The win also keeps the Reds on pace with division leader Milwaukee, as the Brewers have won the last three games, all against Pittsburgh over the weekend. The Red State one half game in back in the National League Central

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through the middle of the day and afternoon. We're looking at a high of seventy eight Tuesday, more scattered showers of temperatures hanging out into the low eighties some spots into the mid seventies from me severe weather station. I'm nine First Warning Medioralis Brandon Spinner, News Radio seven hundred WLW. The radar is clear.

It's currently seventy three degrees. A single vehicle fatal crash and Highland County Sunday, the Ohio State Highway Patrol reporting the crash of a vehicle operated by sixty four year old Kassie Ferguson of Leesburg. Ferguson's twenty four Hundai traveling south on State Route one thirty eight just after from when the car was driven off the left side of the highway, striking a ditch and a tree. Ferguson pronounced dead at the scene. The victim was not where a safety belt.

The UC Bearcats have a new baseball coach, the university announcing Sunday the hiring of Jordan Baschell. Michelle signed a six year contract with UC. He's been the Central Michigan head coach for the past five seasons. Our next update is at twelve o'clock. I'm Sean McCormick, News Radio seven hundred WLW. Welcome to the good stuff, Finfully Cunningham, the Great America. We may recall a couple of weeks back, and we had a story of Professor Scott Gerber.

Scott Gerber, who was at Ohio Northern University College of Law for some twenty two twenty three years, received about every award that the law school could give him, very well respected law school professor who was purp walked out of his own classroom by university security personnel because he wasn't thinking right about diversity and d EI and Professor Scott Gerber, welcome again in the Bill Cunningham Show.

And Professor, for those who meant not have been listening a couple of weeks ago, can you tell the American people the circumstances that brought you to radio This Thursday afternoon on April fourteenth, I was teaching my constitutional law class, and just as my class was ending, just before one o'clock, multiple campus

security officers came into the room in front of my students. Came to the front of the room at the electorn where I was, and whispered into my ear something to the effect of your respected member of the campus community, please follow us quietly to the Dean's office. And then at the door waiting for me were armed town police, and then they all they all of them. The group of them led me to the dean's suite, where the dean.

They then took me into the dean's office, where he handed me a piece of paper and said I had one week to either resign or he would institute the Kenyere revocation process. And so that's basically what got all this started at this moment, and when they're whispering in your ear, you're a respective member of the community follow us. Did you what did you think? Was it like an active shooter in your mind? Was family member had died? What did you think? Well? I was confused. When they did it,

I was frightened. I looked up and the students looked frightened, and of course I was humiliated by it. But you mentioned the active shooter scenario. In fact, the campus newspaper, a student who wrote an article about it, characterized it as it seemed like the school was on lockdown because of some active shooter. So that's how ridiculous this overkill with the armtown police was. So the number of armed guards would have been three, four or five,

and you're walking to the dean's office. You got to be thinking, oh my gosh, what's going on, and so what precipitated this? Because I know what it is, but many may not know. At this point, you had been there some more than twenty years. You're well published. I've read some of your work in the passes an attorney. The Wall Street journals are rated on this. In your mind, what were you told was the reason you were perp walked out of your own classroom? Well, the dean

put on the piece of paper that it was collegiality. I either insufficient collegiality, but of course that's not even listed in the faculty handbook obviously as the grounds for terminating a professor. But the timing of it was that, you know, earlier that week I had written an op ed in The Hill saying that Justice Clarence Thomas was allowed to have friends, including a rich friend like Carlan Crowe. And then the week before that I had done a TV interview,

you know, criticizing these DEI programs for drifting in to illegality. And the week before that I had published two op eds, one in Your Cincinnati Enquiring one in the Washington Examiner, making the same point. Earlier in the semester, I had pushed back against the fact that our d EI program did not include viewpoint diversity, and the president herself said that they would not include viewpoint diversity when that's the most important type of diversity you need in a college

and a university setting. And you know, I had objected to illegal hiring practices in the past in the law school and things like that, and so they just want to violate the law and get away with it. And as far as Clarence Thomas and Harlan Crowe, this is of course a national issue. And I've driven through Ada, I've driven through High University, the county.

But for those listening around the country, this is a small rural county, a little bit south of Toledo, and the most popular thing you see in that area are cornfields, And so one will not anticipate this isn't exactly Stanford College a Law or NYU or Michigan College of Law, and which the so called best and the brightest might go there. Because I won the University of Toledo and I got a great legal education at the University of Toledo up

the road from o NU. So how would you describe to the American people listening around the country the quality and character of those living around Ada, Ohio. We're not talking about a hotbed of of a left wing politics, correct. Yeah, the community it's it's it's Trump country where I'm at. But the university, not surprised, is on the left, you know, far left, and you know, and I love working with my students in all of that, but clearly I'm not allowed to oppose what I view as illegal

hiring practices that d EI has has led to. And speaking of how small and we will an O and you are, I think that is. And soone's actually told me this that because it's so small and isolated, the administration thanks, no one will care what happens there, for example, what happens to me, No one will care. Whereas if I was at Ohio State, which is an urban, massive university, or if I was at Toledo, where you went to law school, it's more urban and larger, and

it would get attention. So I think the administration is frankly shocked that this has gotten so much attention nationally. You mentioned the Wall Street Journal. I've been on your Great show now twice. Michelle Tafoya her interview with me a couple of weeks ago, has the most used by far of anything on our

show. On their podcast series, there was an article this week and Just the News where they had yet another development where they put a quote from a recently graduated law student where the dean of the law school accused him of cheating on a paper that he had written for a class from from me that won a national award, a national award which got him five thousand dollars and the university five thousand dollars simply because the law student had contributed twenty dollars to the

Scott Gerber Legal Fund go fund me page. Think about think about that, sorry, Tom student. Yeah, a student receives an award and references you and the university comes after Hamlet, Hooks and Claus. Yeah. It was the dean of the law school is necessarily Yeah, the dean the guy that had me that summoned armed police to banish me from the campus. A complaint was filed with the president of the university, Melissa Bowman. She claims that

she's sent it over to HR to investigate it. The student apparently had been has been interviewed, you know, yesterday by HR. But it's clear to me that they're just going to try to cover it up and trivialize it. In all of that because one thing that they don't do it oh and you

as hold administrators accountable. And one other new development, even though the dean used the police to do this to me, even though the dean retaliated and accused the student of cheating, and even though the dean has a documented history of making digoted comments about people, they recently re upped them for another five years. That sends a message, is to the outcome of your case.

Isn't it ironic that you're teaching a constitutional law class about procedural and substantive due process and the dean of the laws go to O and U IO Northern ignores your own due process perp walks you out of your own classroom, and then puts a document quickly in front of you saying sign this. We'll give you like fifty thousand dollars to shut up. Isn't that ironic? Yeah, it's

even worse than that bill. Because you know Peter Wood, the president of the National Association of Scholars, and he's a major figure in higher education. He's written two public letters to own US President condemning how I've been treated and

so she finally finally had her PR, her PR officer. She didn't do it herself, but finally had her P officer right to Peter Wood and actually claim that they're following all kinds of due process, which of course is not true, because the American Association of University Professors has already written them twice condemning how they're hand during this procedurally, and the American Association of University Professors,

he's on the left. I'm not on the left. But the violations of my due process are so egregious that they've written the university twice and told them to clean this up, and they just ignore it and then misstate what these other groups have actually said to them. Professor Scott Garber of Ohio Northern University College of Law. I guess formerly, hopefully in the future, isn't the clear message being sent by a small law school in the state of Ohio.

There's one way of looking at jurisprudence. There's one way of looking at Clarence Thomas, there's one way of looking at DNI. And if you don't look our way, whether you're a student or a twenty three year tenured college law school professor, we will come after you and make your life miserable. Doesn't

this have a chilling effect on any free speech in the future. Absolutely, And speaking of precisely that, just last night, the leading authority on mobbing i e. Group bulling and higher education posted an analysis of my situation at

Ohio Northern University where he makes exactly those points. And he also sent it last night to the president of Ohio Northern University and he actually sat there that listen, unless you guys stop doing that this kind of stuff to people like Scott just because he doesn't think like you do, your universities is at risk of being shut down. What actually what he wrote down? What group bullying? Because I think differently than my colleagues, and the administrations just trying to

ruin me. You know, that's it. It's not just one bully on the playground, it's the whole the whole system, that's what it is. So yeah, go ahead, please, yeah, your listeners. Could you know if they google um Kenneth West, who's w E S T h U E S, You'll get to his scientific web page and there'll be a link to my Uh that's the case study he just posted about me. And it's

incredibly sophisticated because he's brilliant. So they'll Understill, they'll be educated better than I can do on mobbing is so to be accredited by a law school. Your law school must be accredited by these various academic groups in order to have your law degrees recognize and to sit for the bar examine Ohio, You've got to be credited. Someone like Tony Benner just can show up in Columbus and say, I'm want to take the law school three day test to become a

lawyer. You have to be accredited. You got to go to an accredited law school in order to be able to sit for the bar to become an attorney. So in this case, if they take away the accreditation of Higher Northern University Law School, they're out of business. Yeah, but as you this want't surprise you either. Bill. You know, the ABA, who is our crediting body, is on the left. The ABA wants this DEI stuff. But that's it. I'm told that my situation is being brought to

the attention of bodies like that. I don't have the specifics, but I've been told that Professor Scott Gerber here rather the middle of June, I would assume law school was out, but I can recall taking some summer classes University of Toledo just to keep it and make it easier in me in the fall. Is this issue tamped down in the Aida, Ohio or is it still proliferating. Well, it's still getting uh, you know, national at tension there, you know there there, I'm talking to you for example. That's

not a minor thing. But you know, there was a newspaper story a couple of days ago I got reached out to by the Chronicle of Higher Education, a periodical called Just the News just published a bombshell article, and that was the one where they outed the dean for accusing the student that won the first a first prize ten thousand dollars in a national competition. He accused him of having me write the paper form, which is about as far from too

true as me being better at than bron James at basketball. It's not even plausible. I read the paper, gave him an a on the paper because it was fantastic, and encouraged him to publish the paper in our law, would you, which he did. And then it goes even beyond that, and he one's a national prize in Washington, DC. What do you want to see happen? I'm sure they're going to offer you some shekels of one type or another to kind of go away. What do you want to see

happen in this case? Well, as I think I mentioned before, I want I want to keep my job. I'm great at my job. I love working with my students, I love writing about ideas. I'm very good at it. You know. At one other point, I won the Teaching the Writing Prize this year and the Dean withheld it from me. Think about that comment, because he certainly can't call in the police for a professor that just won the writing prize, you know that kind of stuff. So I'd

also like a public apology from the president. I'd also like whoever orchestrated this to be held accountable for it. And you know that seems to me, you know, like it's the Dean, But Peter Wood actually thinks the President herself had to sign off on it. And course the President's not going to hold her self accountable for it, and so instead they're going to try to ruin my life and ruin my career. The presidents their own misdeeds. The president's Melissa Bowman. Is that correct? U? M A N N Yes,

Professor Well, and lastly, uh, we'll see what happens. I'm going to continue to follow this story to a logical conclusion. The lawsuit has not yet been filed. You want to work internally, as I understand it. And what is your a website? If people want to help you with your legal defense fund? If you google h Scott Gerber Legal Fund, it comes right up. It's it's a go fund meat page Scott Gerber Legal Fund. It'll come right up. I will continue to follow this to his logical

conclusion. I will encourage my brothers and sisters and talk radio to do the same thing, because your fight today will be our fight tomorrow. Professor Scott, go once again, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, Professor Well, thank you very much. Bill. I appreciate it. Bill cunning in The Grand American Live with you every Sunday night.

Taking privacy policy in terms of condition supposed the text planned US ticketing roles reccurring on a many take maket messages, mission data may player placed opptop drinking.

This issue is percolating because of law professors who believe in conservatism and who believe in things like the opinions of Clarence Thomas and have a libertarian view along with d EI, which is collapsing in so many parts of our country, collapsing that it is one thing maybe in Stanford College of Law or NYU College of Law or Duke College, something like Michigan, a national law school to have

a circumstance where, you know what, it's a problem. It's a major problem when law professors cannot glowingly talk about the glories of a Clarence Thomas decision or won by John Roberts or Brett Cavanaugh or Samuel Alito or Amy Coney Barrett. And that's the role of a law school professor is to talk about, of course, the differentials. I went to law school at a time when you had to moot court and you'd be handed the plaintiffs case or the defendant's

case thirty minutes before the argument. You had to quickly grasp and sometimes you switched off for the next case. And so the ability of an attorney to be formed intellectually to argue either side of debate is absolutely critical to the functioning of a law school, right, But that's not the case at Ohio Northern University, which may I honestly say is not one of the highly considered law school. But the virus, the infection of Marxism and liberalism has infected itself.

Not just as Stamford or in yu Are Michigan or Duke, It's worked this way to Ohio Northern University in Ada, Ohio, when even or not a law professor will be perp walked out during a class by armed agents of the state to let that law professor know that there's a lack of collegiality.

Lack of collegiality. Therefore you must go said, Stay tuned for more on this Father's Day night thrown in You and I now is Wayne Allen Root live from Las Vegas if a line becomes available eight six six six four seven seven three three seven. Bill Cunningham, the Great American live with you every Sunday night. Go with your gut. Your Dug's immune system is based in the gut. A diet lacking of nutrients can cause itching scratching in a weak immune

system. Downloaded now Willie Bad of the Ball, Rock and You Bite Choice Hotels A cut of lodging roadway in hotels are serving up double points where every qualifying stay book at Choice Hotels dot Com sow. Here's the man who's been recognized as radio's best, the recipient of not one, but two prestigious Mark Cony Awards for he is broadcast excellence, the one and only the old cunning

Head. I'm Bill Cunningham, the Great American. Again once again, I would urge all the sons and the daughters to contact their fathers on this Father's Day to reconnect in ways that would be sufficient for the needs and wants of each party. So I know it is much harder to be a good man than a good woman, I think. And I've had nothing but difficulties with my father and how I dealt with that during the eleven years, and I'd

urge you not to take that approach. Joan, and you and I now is Wayne Wayne Allen Root live from a Las Vegas And before we talk about your great presentation which talked about the Trump's during what he should have done when he first became the president, I couldn't agree more. Do you have some story or some attribute? I know you call yourself an s ob the son of a butcher, that the kind of things your father gave to the great Wayne Allen Route, Well, I mean, first of all, Bill,

he gave me conservatism right and patriotism. I mean, at the age of three, he was one of the original found out to the butcher with the white apron and bloodstains, answer and ad in the newspaper in nineteen sixty two, if you think Republicans are doing a lousy job, and you're no different the Democrats. This was in New York, and the problem was RINOs like Rockefeller as governor and Jacob Javits as Senator, and they were Republicans, but

they were horribly liberal Republicans. So my father answered, they had in the paper for the founding of the New York State Conservative Party, and he became one of the founders and took over the Westchester County Conservative Party where I was born and raised them. By the age of three, I was handing out literature for Barry Gowater in my father's arms, in front of a supermarket and a train station in Malvernon, New York, right on the Broadze borderline.

So my father instilled in me this foundation of conservatism and patriotism and yes, capitalism because even though he's a little butcher, just a blue collar butcher, and my grandfather owned the butcher store and my father worked for him, they believed so strongly in America and capitalism, and eventually it became one of the most successful butcher stories ever. And my grandfather became certainly a small businessman,

a moderately wealthy man, and told me how much he loved America. So I think they instilled in me that love of conservatism, the love of America, love of patriotism, and a love of capitalism. And last, but not least, from the dad was born. Not only did my father brainwash me that I had to be a conservative and that was the only way to go, he also brainwashed me that you gotta go to Columbia University. You have to aim high, you have to be number one, you have to

graduate Zala Victorian. You have to get the best grades and SAT scores in America. And eventually, this son of a butcher was accepted into Columbia University, and so was my sister. Two children of a butcher both went to Ivy League College, and she went on to Columbia Law School and became an Ivy League lawyer. So I mean in America, if you believe and if you aim high, anything is possible. Well, let me tell you that's all been trashed. Bill. When you look now at what's going on with

every Ivy League school of America, there's no white man wanted anymore. You're not allowed to be a white middle class kid. They would never allow Waynard in any Ivy League school ever again. And has nothing to do with my conservatism, has to do with the color of my skin. My buddy just got back from taking his daughter on a campus tour of Duke and he literally said, Wayne, you know, may I not have a single racist bone my body? I love everyone. The entire campus look like a traditional black

university. He said. There weren't any white people on the campus of Duke. He said, no white person could ever get in anymore. It's all a minority, not just black, but Latino, Black, people of color, gay, transgender, straight white males will never be allowed at Ivy League universities ever again, other than if your father puts out, you know, one hundred million dollars to have a building named after him. Other than the

super rich. There's no white people allowed college campuses of elite universities who are certainly white and straight. My other buddy as a kid in another major college. I won't even name it, but he said, every woman is lesbian. He said, my daughter is the only straight person in the entire dorm. There are no straight women anymore at these elite universities. They pick you because you're gay, of color, or lesbian, or buy or transgender.

It's the most incredible thing. We're not allowed to get a higher education anymore. Hey, and Chinese Americans are among the greatest. And I see story after story about if you're a Chinese American, if you're an Asian American with a six sixteen hundred on the SAT and you've got four point five, you can't get in that. This one kid is suing. It's going to be

heard and released by the Supreme Court a little bit later. But he can't get in because there's too many achieving Asians taking the place of lesbian, transsexual persons of color. They get in automatically, and he can't get in. Well, Wayne, before we talk about the Trumps, how did we get to this? What happened? Because those making these decisions were generally, in the beginning, white liberal men who must have hated meritocracy. It's I'd say

it's impossible to turn around. Am I wrong? No, it's real tough. It's gonna be a tough, tough road to home. Man, it's not gonna be easy to turn this around, and maybe impossible. You might be right. I mean I say this every day. It's the ninth inning. We're losing like nine nothing. There's two ounces and two strikes. That's how bandit is. But in the history of baseball, my New Year Yankees have won several games where they were losing like nine nothing in the ninth inning

with two strikes. They won a World Series game where there's two strikes, two outs and they were losing like four and not winning five four. I think it was Tommy Henrick Old reliable get a home run in the ninth They need to win it so you can win, you can come back. It's not over at this point. I'd say, pray and have faith in God, and pray that God has a better plan for American no matter what you see in front of you, a miracle as possible. I think that we're

on the right side of history. I think we're on the right side of God. And I don't think the door is closed yet, but it's real close. It's real bad out there, and there's so many stories that prove it. And I thought the number one story I've ever seen that proves the absurdity of what's happening in our country. I don't know if you saw this, but there's a famous Jim in Manhattan and there's a woman who worked for them. She was just one of their you know, they have like a

thousand employees. It's Big Jim, and they've got many employees. She was one of them. She happens to be African American. She was late for work forty seven times and I think it was a six month period and they fired her. She suited them because she said it's racism and they hate her because she's black. And a Manhattan jury awarded her eleven million dollars. Late for work forty seven times, And you can't fire someone in America anymore if

they're African American, because that would be racism. And someone who's making minimum wage deserves a payout of eleven million because the pain you caused them by firing them, because they were late forty seven times, and they were obviously a terrible, incompetent employee. This is America today, and I don't know how you turn this bus around. I can keep fighting, you know. I'll just keep fighting to the last man, to the last bullet, to the

last moment, to the last breath. I never give up. But it doesn't look good. Bill Well from the heartland. There's a little law school Ohio, Northern University, which Wayne Allery, you've never heard of. It's halfway and the halfway between Dayton, Ohio and Toledo. There's at is ranked may I say, near the bottom of law schools. But nonetheless, if I could have got in, I would have gone there in a heartbeat.

But there's a professor there named Professor Scott Gerber, who's unfortunately a white male in his sixties. And during a he wrote an op ed that was run on the Hill and also the Wall Street Journal supporting Clarence Thomas about his good scholarship, about the fact that it's okay to have a rich friend. It's okay that when that when that hit the this is I'm not talking about New York or Stamford or Las Vegas. This is an end bingo. It gets

worse. Aida, Ohio have you ever heard of Ada Ohio? Never? All right? During a class on April the fourteenth, the campus police armed walked into his classroom with two Aida City police departments. They only have five cops behind them, and to take him out of his constitutional law class. Through the middle of the class, his students are looking at this. Someone whispered, a cop whispered in his ear, Professor, you have to come with us, And so he's thinking, active shooter, my wife is dead.

What's happening? And so he stops the class. Four armed police officers walk Professor Gerber passed the students into the dean's office and he was fired. And he's saying to them, well, what's going on. It's because of your lack of collegiality. Collegiality, that's an Aida oh No, this isn't a duke, this is Aida Ohile. Yeah, listen, it's a communist tick over the United States. And these are communist stubs and the law marks

of communism are rigged and stolen elections. At once they Reagan steal the election, then no one's allowed to dissent from the people in power. You can have a different opinion, or your opinion is labeled as misleading, and you are banned or censored. Does that sound familiar? It goes on every day on social media. Every opinion I put out is misleading. As a matter of fact. Right now, I want to do it right now, right in front of I'm on my computer in front of me, and I'm going

to go to Facebook right now. And the first thing you see when you go to Facebook are that my views are not acceptable to Facebook. There's a big, giant, like a giant sign at the top to the last week. I don't know if it's still there. I'm going to find out one second. But the sign said something to the effect of views are not acceptable, click here to make them acceptable, or we're not going to share this page with anyone. And I've been shadow band my page isn't shared with anyone.

Oh, and I click to see what they have to say. And I knew what it would be for me to become acceptable to Facebook and then be willing to share my page. They set me like a hundred things I've said in the last year that have to be deleted. And if I'm willing to delete everything I believe in, that is nearly conservatism. If I'm willing to delete it. They'll make my page sharable again and I'll be acceptable to Facebook. This is communism. There's no other way to describe it. These

are communist thugs. I if this virus has infected Aida, Ohio, much less the Ivy League or the Big ten or the Pac ten or twelve, whatever they're called now. And what we saw was Stanford law when a US Court of Appeals judge was shouted down and the equities are the woman was in the classroom supporting those disrupting the presentation. I don't know what to say. You think the bottom of the ninth were down nine to nothing, Nolan Ryan's on the mound and we have to score ten runs. Yeah, you just

made even more difficult. No, it ran? What is that bad? I know? I saw a story that shocked me. A parent was arguing in front of a PTA meeting recently that transgender education and ideology and brainwashing to convince his child to change the gender from boy to girl is disgusting, disgraceful, and unacceptable and we cannot allow it. And I swear to you.

The article said, by the time he got home from the PTA meeting, there were already a hundred messages on his phone threatening his life, and a hundred plus messages at his workplace telling them that if you don't fire him, we're boycotting your company. And they fired him the next day. But how

did they They're so organize. These radical gay rights organizations are so radical that they knew what he said at a PTA meeting and had organized a hundred phone calls to threaten his life and threaten his job and get him fired before he got home and before he was at the office the next day. This is incredible, and it just goes back. As you know, my new book is a Great Patriot Bycott book number one bestseller, endorsed by President Trump.

We have to organize better than them, just like I was the guy who before Trump said it. I said it. I hope he got it from me. We have to beat them at mail in balloting and ballot harvesting and ballot drop boxes and voting for three weeks before an election. All of it's horrible. All of it should be illegal. If we win, make it illegal, ban it. But in the meantime we have to do it. If they're doing it, we have to do it better than them. And

if they're boycotting. We have to do it better than them. We have to destroy the bad guys. And it's working, by the way on our side, because Target's dying, Target the department stores dying, and Disney's blues in so much money to know what to do. They're they're freaking out in panicking bed Pass and beyond is that of business. And heyser Busch is dying. So it's working. We can use our pocketbooks. That was the point of the Great Patriot Bycot book, and that's why I guess we're winning the

battle because our pocketbook matters. If you don't spend money with Target anymore, and you don't spend money without Hyser Bush, and you find a conservative patriotic alternative like Cores or Youngling, who are both. In my book, I give you one hundred and twenty eight great alternatives that are great conservative or Christian or patriotic companies. Then we make a difference by starving them, bringing them to their knees, and putting them out of business. That's the only answer.

I can give you a bill that and lie detector tests. I keep saying the way to save American I keep getting standing ovations at every speech for proposing lie detector tests. We demand lie detector tests of politicians and the top agency heads of each government agency. Are you on the payroll of China? Are you on the payroll of the Mexican drug cartel will keep the border open? Are you on the payroll of Feiser to lie about the death from COVID

vaccines and cover them? You will find our entire government, Republican and Democrat, is on somebody's payroll. And we are getting screwed over, I'm telling you, and there there'll be no law. No one's different gonna make a law that you're gonna have a light of tech attest. That's not what I'm proposing. I'm saying demanded of your candidates. And those who take it we support, and those who take it in pass with flying colors, we support.

Those who refuse to take it or ignore us, we automatically throw them out of the Republican primary because you know they must be corrupt, they're hiding something, and demand they take a light of success and then it's voluntary. They either take it or we're not going to support them. I think that movement has to start now. Why Alan Route once again? Happy Fathers Day weekend. We have not touched on yet, and we can't because the time

constraints. What Trump should have done the first few months of the first term, and he didn't do it. I watch their presentation Deliberty Council. But sentence, what sentence? He fired everyone, fired everyone, and indicted everyone, And he didn't do it because he didn't want to divide the nation, which is already so divided. After he beat Hillary and Democrats were so shocked and they said, what he didn't win, and they thought it was an

illegal election and he was an illegitimate president. So he didn't feel like he had the capitol to fire every government employee and indict every Democrat that was in on treason against America, like Hillary, like Obama, like Biden. And he should have Eric Holzer, he should have indicted everyone he could, and he should have fired everyone he could, but he didn't do it to be nice to America. No more, mister nice guys. He gets in this

time, and that's a problem because the thing is rigged. You know, it's rigged. The election process is rigged. But if he gets in, my advices, fire every government agency head everyone him assumed they're all traders and fire them and indict all the high profile Democrats. If you do that, maybe we get a chance to save America. Bottom of the ninth losing eight to nothing. Nolan Ryan is on the mound. We have to score nine runs with two out and the counts O and two, and if we can

get that done, we can save America. Wayne allenou continue to have a great Father's Day weekend, and thank you very much. Happy Father's Day everyone, God bless American. Grab a copy of The Great Patriot Bycot book Root for America dot com. Thank you Bill, Bill Cunningham, the Great American. Live with you every Sunday night. It's the Marketers Report Today Capital was Chief brand Officer Mark Mintry. Ways In Steve Malloy will be here and as

Sunday night without Wayne Allen Route, as a Sunday night without sunshine. I love that guy. Spent time with him in Las Vegas, went to his beautiful home and he's in the Las Vegas Walk of Fame. When Route talks about Donald Trump, or Route talks about being the son of a butcher, we have to listen. But next up is Stephen Malloy about the fraud that Eve's truly are in this country and how the Canadian wildfires are exactly what nature

demand for the culling of the of the extra vegetation from the forest. And it's quite normal. So let's continue if the line becomes available At eight six six six, four, seven, seven three three seven, Bill cunning in the Great American Live with you every Sunday night, News, traffic and weather, News Radio seven hundred wl W, Cincinnati. The Reds come home riding an eight game winning streak with the twelve thirty report, I'm Sean McCormick breaking

now. It did take ten innings Sunday, but the Reds came up strong and beating Houston nine seven. It's a sweep of the Astros and gives the Reds the longest current wind streak in the MLB this season at eight. Reds manager David Bell a great road trip of today. It wasn't a perfect game, you know, we overcome the game, the stakes, what a lot of great play, but that's what it's all about. The wind keeps the Reds on pace with division leader Milwaukee. As the Brewers, they're now winners

of thwall against Pittsburgh over the weekend. The Reds stay a half game back in the NFL Central Now. The latest weather from the forecasters at nine News Overnight tonight skatings staying mostly Cottie was scattered showers pushing in out of the south and west. Tempertures dropping down to sixty four with a wind out of the east at five to ten miles per hour. Better chance at rain throughout the day. On Monday, scattered showers, maybe a few thunderstorms, becoming a

little more persistent through the middle of the day and afternoon. We're looking at a high seventy eight Tuesday, more scattered showers of temperatures hanging out into the low eighties, some spots into the mid seventies. From the Severe Weather Station, I'm nine first Warning Medirial Just Brandon's inter News Radio seven hundred WLW radar

is still clear. It's currently seventy three degrees. A single fatal crash in Highland County Sunday, the Ohio State Highway Patrol reporting the crash of a vehicle operated by sixty four year old Kassie Ferguson of Leesburg. Ferguson's twenty oh four Hundai traveling south on State Route one thirty eight, just after five pm. The car was driven off the left side of the highway, striking a ditch and tree. Ferguson was pronounced dead at the scene and wasn't wearing a safety

belt. Our next update is at one o'clock. I'm Sean McCormick, News Radio seven hundred WLW. Taxing crazy call scene terms condition supposedly takes, planned u s, tifting rolls, recurring onybody take market messages, mission data to maplier placed toppoptop by drinking had become the problem too many nights waking up.

It from fully cunning in the Great American of course, several days ago, and it's ongoing that the mainstream media stops itself in as trucks when wildfires take place and the wind changes a certain direction caused in New York City, Washington, etc. Even a little bit here in Cincinnati where I broadcast from to

have some pollution in the skies as they call it. Also, there was an Omega block going on in which not only did the winds come north to south, but it was blocked for several days because of the Omega blocking system in the atmosphere. And of course, whether it's David mure, whether it's any of the experts, Margaret Brennan, etc. They all talk about this being evidence of man made global warming, man made climate change at all.

And if you would ask the average New Yorker right now that wildfires were they caused by a pollution, the answer would be yes. And normally the mainstream meets should be in the business of putting this in perspective, explaining how common these events are, even though it was an uncommon traffic weather pattern that caused the so called pollution in New York City, and it's not given any first effective because it doesn't fit the media narrative a man made global warming causing climate

change. Someone who follows this closely as Steve Malloy. He is a founder, he's been with the Cato Institute. He's a climatologist and founder of junk science dot com. Steve Malloy, Welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. So well, we're gonna cover this for months and months into the future. That is that man made global warming is causing climate change, scaring the daylights out of everyone about the air quality and the pollutants. How many people are

going to die? That these pollutants go into your nose, going to your lungs, and they're going to kill you. And this is part of the media attraction to man made global warming. As a scientist, can you tell us how common or uncommon Canadian wildfires are? Well, Canadian wallfiers are a very common occurrence. No one would have even paid attention to this if it wasn't for the change in wind which blew all the smoke on to the East coast, especially to New York City, Washington DC. The media live,

right, and so they immediately went apocalyptic. Yeah yet yes, and you know even even conservative media, you know, their physicians would get on and rave about how apocalyptic it was, and in fact it wasn't apocalyptic at all. Um. You know, us ETA models would predict that like New York

City death rate would have doubled over. You know, those two day's June seventh and eighth, no change, No bodies reported, They hyperventilated about asthma, you know, not really any any extra asthma in New York City. The whole thing was just you know, an alarmist bust but great visuals. Now it did. In fact, they're talking that Belmont was going to be canceled but it ran. Baseball games were canceled, skill functions were canceled,

businesses shut down. Many people thought they could take refuge in the subway, but there were so many shootings and robberies in the subway people didn't go into the subway, so people had to stay home. Then we had these reports about asthmatics are dying at a large rate, double the death rate, and you're saying, none of that happened. Yeah, none of that happened. Look, the air was ugly, it was unpleasant to breathe, there's no question about that. But it was not a public health event, and it's

not even really an unusual event historically. You know, wildfires have always happened. They happen wherever there are forests. Wildfires have dramatically declined over the past one hundred years, you know, to the extent there's been a slight uptick since the nineteen eighties. It's because we don't manage our forests anymore, and so they turn into tinder boxes during dry periods and catch on fire easily.

As far as like these, you know, the sort of dark day that New York City experienced June seventh of June eight those have happened throughout history. There's a record going dating back like seventeen o six. There was eighteen of these events between seventeen oh six nineteen ten. George Washington even wrote about one of these events in seventeen eighty in May when he was in New Jersey.

So these have always happened, will always happen. There's nothing unusual, and there's no need to alarm people unnecessarily about the dangers of breathing the air when there's no danger. You pointed out to quote George Washington. We're talking about the president. George Washington noted in his diary that on May nineteenth, seventeen eighty, and I'm not sure he was in a limo at the time seventeen eighty that Morristown, New Jersey, was cloaked in yellow days, as he

called them, because of the wildfires. Now, the wildfires in Canada are naturally occurring event nature causes it to transpire because either lightning mainly lightning, or man made causes. But there's two or three reasons why the forests are not being managed correctly. Number one is the papers not needed for newspapers anymore, but they used to be logging was a major industry in Canada, and largely logging has been stopped because of more reasons of the of the wacos that don't

think the forest should be managed, but two or three other reasons. How come in a sense Canada and the West are not properly managing the forest today. Please explain. Well, it's really unbelievable. You've got to blame green policies. Greens have you know, infected infiltrated, whether everyone describe it.

The government they they run uh you know, the forest programs in the federal government in states like California, in Canada, and they just will you know, they don't like logging, won't let it happen, They won't manage the forests um and then they exploit these fires which are bound to happen when you know, when forests become tinder boxes, they exploit it for their political agenda, which is climate US. It's really very twisted, and you know,

none of this stuff is new. They know this. I mean there's a federal government wanted to maintain forests better. All these fires start on public lands. They don't start on private lands because private land owners take care of their forests these start on public lands which are neglected, and I've got to conclude

at this point neglected on purpose so that they can exploit the hysteria. Let's talk about one issue that I know you've written about, and that is that evs electric vehicles are worse for the environment than gasoline powered cars because of where the ingredients of the batteries come from, the fact that whether it's solar panels or batteries, they can't be disposed of without spending lots of money. That the cars lose their value because no one's going to buy a used EV because

it's too expensive to get rid of the batteries and to replace them. Explain to the American people why for the environment an electric vehicle is worse for the environment than a gasoline powered car. Well, it really goes all goals back to where the materials come from. The materials come back come from strip mining

in foreign countries. And you know, I don't really have a problem with strip mining because we need to do it for some mineralists, but it's done in places like the Congo and Communist China and Indonesia that don't really have any environmental regulations, and so you know, the environment is literally raped for these minerals. You know, of course there's all sorts of human rights violations.

In today's New York Times, we've got a big article about how workers in Africa are getting sick from you know, the unhealthy mining conditions for EVM minerals and metals, and you know, adding insult to injury, there's no benefit from evs. Uh. You know, emissions don't drive warming. You know, there's been no warming in the past almost nine years, despite five hundred

billion tons of emissions. Emissions don't drive warming. So people are you know, essentially just virtue signaling in their evs while the environment is being destroyed in third world countries and worker health is being destroyed. Do we know how many thousands of children in Africa have been killed in these minds so that a tesla owner can ride around signaling his or her virtue? How many? How many African children have been killed because of EVS? Yeah, I don't know exactly

the number that had been killed. I don't even think they keep records because you know, they really don't acknowledge that it even occurs. But there are about forty thousand child miners in the Congo who mine in the most primitive and dangerous conditions. Yeah, you know, cobalt for EV batteries. And of course these minds are owned by the Chinese, so you can imagine how much they care about, you know, congo workers, especially children. I mean,

they're essentially slave laborers run by China. And of course you know they so they mind the they mind the cobalt and congo and then dangerous conditions, in humane conditions, and they ship it back to China, which is where all the cobalt is processed. And then Western EV makers, you know, you know, by the batteries and and so that you know, rich Westerners

can drive around their evs and feel good about themselves. So if you pick so Steve malloy, if you want to kill and enslave black kids in Africa, please buy a tesla. I mean, there are ought to be a note somewhere that these magical electric batteries made in China, the ingredients zincild and all these other exotic metals come from Africa, in which forty thousand little African boys and girls are deep in mines and caves. So that someone living in

New York, Cincinnati or Columbus or San Francisco can signal virtue. So if you want to enslave black kids, buy a Tesla. I mean, wouldn't that be a great message. Yeah? No, if you know, for listeners, just go on the internet Google, Uh, you know, Cobalt Congo children and you're just going to see, you know, pictures of these awful conditions and these poor children that work under them. Uh, you know, just so rich people can feel good about themselves. And you know,

and build thing is is that I can't ever state this. And these eeds are providing no environmental benefit to anyone. They cost more, there's no environmental benefit. They're they're a lot less inconvenient. You know, they spontaneously blow up. They you know, if everyone drove an EV, I think every garage, every parking garage in this country would collapse because they're much heavier. Um. You know, there's no way to build charging stations everywhere. This

is really a hair brained idea. But you know, the bid administration course has taken us down that road anyway, and as far as after five or six or seven years, friends of mine have gasoline powered vehicles which get cleaner every two or three years. The environment is so clean today because of technology and the brilliant some engineers and scientists that clean up unletted gasoline to make it

even better. And after five or six or seven years, it is traditional to pass on your car to a son or a daughter their first car, or pass it on to a grandchild as sixteen seventeen their first car. How many What is the cost after six or seven years of the thousand pound batteries in these vehicles. But when you pass on to your child, well, we got to get a new set of batteries because we have to try to kill some more black kids and congos, so I got to buy more batteries

from communist right China. Well what is the cost of replacing those batteries after six or seven years? Well, yeah, it's very expensive. We really don't know because there haven't there haven't been so many evs that we've had a lot of experience with this. But if an EVY battery goes south, it's very expensive to replace. You know, the average age of gasline powered car in the United States is twelve years because you gasling powered engines just works.

Are There's no way evs are gonna last so long because they're junk the batteries don't even really work that well when they're new. They're not going to work after twelve years at all. You're gonna have to replace them. It's going

to be very expensive. An auto repair shop, a great American named Dale Donovan has told me before that to replace batteries in a car that's six to ten years old can be anywhere from ten to fifteen thousand dollars, which is greater than the value of the car itself, which means people aren't going to do it, which means you've got to get rid of the batteries. And now you have to pay somebody to get rid of the batteries. Now.

Lastly, the power grid, assuming the Green New Deal, which is Liberals are forcing this down our throats, especially in blue cities and states like in California, would go or Gavin Newsom forcing by twenty thirty there will be no gasoline powered cars sold in California. Supposally, do we have a power grid sufficiently strong and resilient to provide the electricity needed for the changeover? No,

the present grid could not sustain, you know, an easy fleet. And what's what's really bad is that we're we're actually dismantling our grid right now, we're dismantling baseload power like cold plants and natural gas plants, and the Biden administration wants to get rid of all of these and they want us to run on just wind and solar. You know. Of course we can't build new

nuclear plants, so we're on wind and solar. And at the same time, we're going to burden the grid with incredible demands from not only eases, but heat pumps and all the other electrification plans that you know, the Gooberman has for us, and it's going to be a disaster, you know.

I think like last winter, last Christmas Day in the Tennessee Valley region, they had to go on unrolling blackouts and brownouse because Tennessee Dalley got whats coal plants and it got really cold and did not have the power to supply. And in California they told people a few months back, do not charge up your ev because we have a power grid problem, so don't charge it up. And if you're in Florida for a hurricane, you got to get out

of dodge in a hurry. You can't do that. I live in the Midwest and we have a lot of winners here with the temperatures minus ten degrees with a windshell of minus forty an electrical heat doesn't get the job done. I can't imagine living in Michigan, Minnesota, Maine, or Vermont what that must be like. We don't have the power grid and is expensive. It is killing African kids in the Congo that we're enriching the communist red Chinese. So Steve malloy, what is the reason to give me again? Why we

should drive evs and the government mandates it? Why there is no reason? I mean, it's not saving the planet. You know, emissions are not warming, the planet of the planet is not warming out of control. Evs are not going to stop anything or change anything. It's just, you know, I think the plant is just to make driving so inconvenient and so expensive that people give up their cars. Um. You know, the Greens have been after you know that we can't can't have roads, can't be parking anywhere.

Everything is just becoming more inconvenient. Roads are being swallowed up by bike lanes, you know. I mean the whole thing is nuts. And I mean they don't want us drive and they don't want us mobile. You know, cars have given us incredible freedom. I mean, you know, Americans are the freest people. And one of the reasons for that is because we have cars that can just go anywhere I can. I can drive four hundred and fifty miles in my SUV and find a gas station and go another for

fifty miles in any direction. And you can't do that in an ev Well. Government wants not freedom, they want control, and the liberals are imposing upon us without the debate. Nobody came to us to tell us to vote on this thing. It is an article of faith. One of the commandments of liberalism is electrification. The planet is come and get used to it when it's going to destroy the planet, take away middle class lives, kill a lot of kids in Africa, enrich the common is red Chinese, and not

help with the climate. And so that's that's the message of the Green New Deal, and it's being bought and sold and most Americans buy into it. And it begins with issues like the wildfires that are used by the media to promote a cause which is irrelevant to the success of our great nation. Once again, Steve malloy Junk Science dot Com, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, and sadly we may have to do it again. Sorry,

I think you got it. God bless America. Thank you, Steve Milloy, Bill cunning In The Grand American live with you every Sunday Night. Welcome to the Good I Billy Cunningham, thanks for listening this Father's Day Night. As I began some two and a half or so three hours ago. If you are a strange from your dad because of his behavior, maybe because

of your behavior. You're a son or a daughter, and somehow during the living years you are a strange and you just can't get along, Why don't you try one more time tonight, a little bit late or tomorrow, which is kind of a federal holiday Juneteenth, to reach out to your dad, one more effort, one more time to say, Dad, I'm sorry for what's happening in our relationship, and let's get together, let's talk about it. During the living years. I wish I had done that with my dad

many many years ago. It's a hole I might ever be healed. When I say each Father's Day Night, then I forgive him for what he's done. I accept his apology. Bill Cunningham, The Great American with you every side the other. I want to improve your marksmanship while saving AMMO and saving money. Get better faster with the Mantisex Dry Fire Training System. It's time to shoot.

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