Another “Those Were The Good Old Days” E-dition

image001Revered Former Southwest Ohio GOP Congressman Bob McEwen Explains How Dishonest D-RATS Played Us For Fools

WE’RE CATCHING UP, SO THIS E-DITION FROM THE ARCHIVES IS FOR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2023
TRUMP’S NINE-HUNDRED-AND-EIGHTIETH DAY OUT-OF-OFFICE

AND WE’RE REMEMBERING WHEN OUR GOOD FRIEND COMPOST CARTOONIST JEFF STAHLER WAS CHARGED WITH CRUEL INSENSITIVITY

AND REPUBLICANS FOR A GREATER CINCINNATI’S JIM BERNS WAS THEN-RUNNING AS A LOONEY LIBERTARIAN FOR CINCINNATI SCHOOL BOARD

JAN 20 THOSE WERE THE GOOD OLD DAYS

NEARLY THIRTY-TWO YEARS AGO…
image004Edition #70 (published on October 1, 1991) of the original printed edition of The Whistleblower (not the Newswire) was delivered to Persons of Consequence all over town. It was our “Silly and Banal” Issue, according to Cincinnati Magazine’s 1991 “Best and Worst” Awards, and our REALLY BIG STORY was all about the Cincinnati Post Editorial Cartoonist Jeff Stalker’s being charged with cruel insensitivity. Our TOP TEN LIST listed was the top ten Iraqi secret weapons programs discovered by the U.N. inspectors in Baghdad. There was an item about financially troubled Covington Landing, and Libertarian Cincinnati School Board Candidate Jim Berns was opposing the board’s 38% tax increase.image006

PAGE TWO featured another REAL EDITORIAL BY PUBLISHER CHARLES FOSTER KANE talking about how the news media was promoting that 38% school tax increase. REAL FACTS told how the Ohio Department of Commerce had bought five full pages of very expensive advertising in the Cincinnati Enquirer to list the names and addresses of people whom they had not been able to find in order to distribute some unclaimed funds. There was a report on that publicity stunt scam where WEBN’s “Wildman Walker” was supposed to stay up on a billboard until the Bengals won and game, and Bengals coach Sam Wyche was slammed in that week’s WHISTLEBLOWER LIMERICK CONTEST.image008

PAGE THREE featured CHEAP SHOTS taken at financially troubled advertising guy Ron Jackson, Cincinnati Councilman Tirade Yates, GOP City Councilman Martin Wade, and Hamilton County Commissioner Steve Chabot. There was the usual promo for Whistleblower Publisher Charles Foster Kane’s appearance on a local radio talk show, and Bunky Tadwell complained about magazines in ANOTHER GUEST EDITORIAL.image010

PAGE FOUR featured the REAL LETTERS FROM REAL SUBSCRIBERS, and during all those years, not a single one of those people has ever called to complain that their letter might not have been real. In ANOTHER EXCLUSIVE WHISTLEBLOWER REPORT, we discovered Hamilton County GOP Party Boss Gene Ruehlmann’s secret strategy for winning the 1991 Cincinnati Council Elections. The Whistleblower denied “inaccurate reporting” in CERTIFIED TRUE, and Elroy Stench was our UNITED APPALL PERSON OF THE WEEK. Plus there was an ad for the 38% School Tax Levy Increase, paid for by Citizens for a Mediocre Education.image012

PAGE FIVE featured Ken Camboo’s BLUEGRASS HOLLER, reporting what went on at the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce Awards Dinner, along with details of a gruesome murder case in Covington. Northern Kentucky Bureau Chief J. R. Hatfield’s CONVENTIONAL WISDOM COLUMN told all about what happened after the Northern Kentucky Convention and Visitor’s Bureau released its consultant’s feasibility study recommending a new convention center in Northern Kentucky.image014

And PAGE SIX included HOTLINE HANG-UPS, with some of the anonymous calls we received last week on the Whistleblower Hotline. And right before those FAKE CLASSIFIED ADS, Whistleblower Gossip Columnist Linda Libel had much to say about people like Enquirer radio-TV Critic John Kiesewetter, Jennifer Kent, Dan Andriacco, the Chippendales, Charlie Keating, and Jerry Springer.image016

This was one of our best all-time e-ditions.
That’s why we say “Those were the good old days.”
You can download that entire edition HERE.image003image001