Episode Transcript
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Let not your heart be troubled. You are
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listening to the Sean Hannity Radio Show
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podcast. You know, Valentine's Day
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Good Luck shop. This
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is wrong, shut
1:01
hit down, hit
1:03
down? What do you do up
1:06
in your community? What
1:09
do you do when
1:11
you're fuming? Rights under town?
1:13
What do you do? See?
1:31
How am I say it? I've been seed and
1:34
hello need lo? How
1:36
am I say it? I've been seed and pullo
1:39
need I'm said I've been see
1:42
You don't get it? Shut it down.
1:44
If you don't, don't get
1:45
it down, if you don't
1:48
f it ing down.
1:51
We don't do
1:56
all people. Peopletion
2:16
alright, clacho with a Seawan Hannity Show
2:18
right down, a toll free telephone number. You want
2:20
to be a part of this extravaganza.
2:24
We have new poll numbers. Yes, a
2:26
majority, a huge majority
2:29
of American support the
2:31
Muslim band, the temporary ninety
2:33
day refugee pause. Oh
2:36
my gosh, you would think Kelly Ann Conway
2:38
committed the greatest crime of the century.
2:40
We'll get to that today. Also,
2:43
Democrats now recognize they
2:45
can't win, and they're scrapping their all
2:47
night protests. Bill Crystal
2:49
has totally lost it and gone off the deep
2:52
end, saying that lazy white
2:54
working class should be replaced by new Americans.
2:57
Really, what is the new American? We just
2:59
replaced him. You're going to speak in such
3:01
broad in general and myopic
3:04
turns because Bill is bitter that he was so
3:06
wrong on Donald Trump. Pretty pathetic.
3:08
And we'll get to all of that today and so much
3:10
more that we have to touch on today. Um
3:13
now, um, what you heard
3:15
there is police
3:17
now had to make several arrests. This was in
3:19
Phoenix today as protesters
3:22
were blocking law enforcement
3:24
officials from leaving a U S Immigration
3:27
office in Phoenix, fearing that
3:29
a mother of two was headed for deportation.
3:33
Now, the protests surging at the Immigration
3:35
Customs Enforcement Facility the ICE facility
3:37
after Guadalupe Garcia
3:40
that AEOS was taken into custody
3:42
during a routine check in with the agency.
3:45
Activists said it was an attempt by President
3:47
Donald Trump's administration to deport immigrants
3:49
living in the country illegally who had
3:51
previously not been a priority for deportation
3:54
under the Obama administration. Fearing
3:56
the thirty six year old woman may return
3:59
to Mexico, her home country, dozens
4:01
of immigration radical activists
4:03
blocked the gates surrounded the office near
4:05
Central Phoenix in what the Arizona
4:08
Republic said was an effort to stop police
4:11
vans and a bus from leaving. And
4:13
the protesters were saying that Garcia
4:15
de Rios was in one
4:17
of the vehicles, which were used to transport
4:20
people in ice custody to detention
4:22
centers or to Arizona's
4:24
border with Mexico for full deportation,
4:27
and a Republic photo identified
4:30
a woman looking through the glass of
4:32
one of the vehicles and identified
4:34
it as her. Now, police meanwhile had to take positions
4:36
around the building confronted by demonstrators
4:39
who are chanting justice, justice, justice,
4:42
in both English and Spanish. And
4:44
you heard all of that there. Now
4:47
they were initially successful
4:50
in stopping the vehicles. You
4:52
know, you have people. We are living in a new era now
4:55
where there's a war on immigrants, said
4:57
the lawyer for Rios and
5:00
told The New York Times after leaving the Immigration
5:02
Building um this group
5:04
twenty Arizona and Immigration Advocacy
5:06
Group said Garcia Drejos came
5:08
to the US as a fourteen year old has two
5:11
children. She was arrested on Wednesday
5:13
while reporting to ICE an annual requirement.
5:16
Now, what they're not telling you he's here? Well,
5:18
why did they arrest this woman? What did
5:20
she do? You know? Why did this
5:22
happen? You know? Is it just because
5:24
Donald Trump wants to round up immigrants?
5:26
Is that? Is that the whole reason
5:29
for the arrest? Is
5:31
that the reason for the protest? Or
5:34
could it be that she did something else? Well,
5:36
it turns out that, according to the
5:39
Associated Press, the
5:41
woman was convicted of identity theft. So
5:44
she didn't respect American law, she
5:46
didn't respect American sovereignty.
5:48
She entered the country illegally, and
5:51
then she was found guilty and convicted
5:54
of identity theft. Now, I don't know how many of you
5:56
know people that have been victims of identity
5:58
theft. One of the reasons LifeLock dot
6:00
com is such an important sponsor
6:02
to this program and we're so honored to partner with
6:05
them is because they provide a service
6:07
that is needed now more than ever. Because
6:10
identity theft is and I don't
6:12
say it just because I like to read it. It's the
6:15
fastest growing crime in the country.
6:17
And I know people whose lives
6:19
have almost been turned upside down
6:21
and ruined, and years
6:24
of their life spent trying to
6:26
undo the damage of these
6:28
identity thieves. And what they do
6:31
is they basically get your information,
6:33
They pretend that they're you. They
6:36
rip off your retirement funds, they rip
6:38
off your your bank accounts, They can
6:40
rob you blind, they can literally
6:42
spend money, open credit card accounts
6:44
as all sorts of schemes, take your tax
6:47
refunds, and make your life
6:49
a living hell, and your name and
6:51
reputation are literally shot.
6:53
In other words, she didn't care about the country
6:56
that wasn't deporting her. She
6:58
didn't want to come here and be a all abiding citizen.
7:01
And whoever she was found guilty
7:03
of of this identity theft,
7:07
I guarantee you their life became, for
7:09
at least a period of time, a living hell. Because
7:11
now we think about this, let let's say it's your credit card
7:14
that they open in your name. Then without
7:16
the credit card companies are after you. And
7:18
now, by the way, your credit score goes down
7:20
the tubes, your credit rating. Now you can't
7:22
even get a credit card. And maybe they get
7:25
into your retirement account. Maybe you've saved your entire
7:27
life and you're ready to retire,
7:30
and all that money that you've been putting away
7:32
and counting on for your older years is gone.
7:35
Or maybe it's your bank account. Every penny
7:37
that you have worked hard and saved your entire
7:39
life is gone. Because that's
7:41
what identity thieves do. They
7:43
rob you blind without any
7:46
consideration for you whatsoever.
7:49
And the question here is, you know, now I'm
7:51
looking at the polls, most
7:53
Americans want the border secure. Most
7:56
Americans believe in Donald Trump.
7:58
There was a McLaughlan and Associates whole fifty
8:00
seven percent support Trump's ninety day refugee
8:03
pause from failed Middle
8:05
Eastern countries that are either
8:07
safe havens for terror, training
8:09
grounds for terrorists, or have many
8:11
known terrorists within the country that may
8:13
want to come to America and bring harm to you, the
8:15
American people. And Donald
8:17
Trump, your president, doesn't want to gamble with your
8:20
life like democrats want to, and
8:22
he's willing to inconvenience a few
8:24
people for the safety of
8:26
the American people, which he
8:29
is charged to uphold and as commander
8:31
in chief and keep us as safe as possible, which
8:34
is impossible at times. So my
8:36
question here is what is all
8:39
this about. You've got guys literally putting
8:41
their their legs underneath
8:43
police cars, protests,
8:45
are locking himself to a van carrying
8:47
this woman that is stopped by
8:49
protests. You know, do any
8:52
of these people protesting care about
8:54
the victims of her crime in the ap
8:56
article? Do any of them care about the
8:59
misery in the suffering that goes along
9:01
with identity theft. Let
9:04
me tell you, I I know people that
9:07
have had their credit rating destroyed,
9:10
have been ripped off, have had
9:12
to fight credit card companies, banks, and
9:15
and even their retirement plans
9:17
for years. It takes years
9:20
in some cases to fix the damage
9:22
that is done by identity theft. And
9:24
by the way, all the rest of us now are inconvenienced.
9:27
Also, you know, I was in Houston at
9:29
the super Bowl. You know, I didn't stay for the Super Bowl, but
9:31
I was there broadcasting Friday, and I was there Saturday,
9:34
and I took money out of a bank twice, and
9:37
every time, you know, I have Chase
9:39
Bank, whatever bank, City bank, any bank account
9:42
you have. Any time you take money out of your bank account,
9:44
it's like you better tell
9:47
your bank when they write you that yes it's you,
9:49
or else you can't take any money out they lock up your
9:51
card. So now I'm inconvenience
9:53
that my phone's ringing. Then I got to talk to an operator
9:55
and then I got a uh text back, one
9:58
for yes, two for no. And then I'm wondering,
10:00
is this some kind of fishing scheme. It's
10:03
a It's just unbelievable the damage
10:05
and the wreckage of this. So,
10:07
you know what, She's convicted of identity
10:09
theft. Didn't respect our laws and sovereignty.
10:11
Now the argument is, well you should what about the children?
10:14
Just children, Mr Hannity's just children. I
10:16
love children too, I really
10:18
do. Well if she cared, you
10:20
know, you're asking the American people to care more
10:22
about her children than she does, because
10:25
if she cared about her kids, she wouldn't
10:27
have done this. Think about it.
10:30
It's ridiculous. By the way,
10:32
breaking news sounder, if you made Jason
10:34
this is huge, you would think this is gonna end
10:37
the world as we know it. And it's
10:39
just news now, Kelly
10:42
Ann Conway, Kelly
10:44
and County. She went on TV this
10:46
morning and you know, of course,
10:48
what had happened to the boycott of Avanka Trump
10:51
and Avanka Trump merchandise
10:53
at Nordstrom's and they're discontinuing stocking
10:55
or clothing. And I have an inside
10:58
source at Nordstrom
11:00
that pointed out to me that one of their higher ranking
11:02
executives actually tweeted something out
11:05
uh that it was and clearly
11:07
was a political decision. And an insider
11:10
within Nordstrom told me it was totally political
11:13
and that they purposely did this
11:15
because they don't like Donald Trump. So
11:17
Kelly Anne is friends with Avanca.
11:19
I'm friends with Avonca. And then she went and she stood
11:22
up for her friend and anyway,
11:24
she you know, said well, I'm gonna give a free
11:26
commercial. She said, go buy it today.
11:29
Well, now you now saying go
11:31
buy it today, all right. She's sticking
11:33
up for her friend and the daughter
11:36
of the president, because the daughter of
11:38
the president, just like the ten year
11:40
old son of the president, has
11:42
been they've been unrelenting in their
11:44
attacks against the kids
11:47
against Avanca. You know,
11:49
poor Eric Trump, who raised tens
11:51
of millions of dollars for
11:54
a great cause. Had
11:56
to put his charity down because
11:58
it might be a conflict a venture, So millions
12:01
of dollars for charity and cancer are not
12:03
going to be raised. Yeah, these laws are
12:05
really smart and quote
12:07
well, she might have may have violated
12:09
the federal ban of employees from
12:12
using their public office to endorse products
12:15
regulation state. Okay,
12:17
what are we gonna handcuff Kelly an now for
12:20
supporting her friend? And really
12:22
this is big news for cable today.
12:24
That's the same people that ignored
12:26
the corruption of Hillary, the Clinton Foundation,
12:29
the quid pro quos, the pay to plays.
12:32
You know, this is ridiculous. It's
12:35
just just like we've been what we've been watching on display
12:37
is a bunch of cry babies on the left. And
12:40
after Betsy Divos and now Attorney
12:43
General Sessions have one. Now
12:45
the Democrats are gonna scrap their all night protests.
12:48
You know why because they got their asses kicked
12:50
and they lost and it's done nothing
12:52
and it's not gonna do anything in the future too. And
12:54
Neil Gorst's they're gonna lose lose that one as
12:57
well. Anyway, eight nine
12:59
four one, Shawn a toll free telephone number. We
13:01
have a lot of other news will get to today. Also, the
13:03
very latest on the battle over extreme
13:06
vetting is
13:09
left up building. Maybe we can
13:11
get back to bringing jobs
13:13
holds. That's jobs, Jo
13:16
b S. This
13:18
is the Sean Hannity Show.
13:29
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Order right now? We're
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all along. Sean Hannity Show, eight nine
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one, Sean, this is great news. I'll
14:36
tell you one thing that you know is building
14:38
and building, and building and building. I spent
14:40
a lot of time writing today
14:43
and I will unload tonight on
14:46
television on the Republican Party.
14:48
And the reason is is number
14:50
one, my interests, at
14:53
my desires. I don't
14:55
support the personality of people
14:58
for office as much as I do. What is their
15:00
agenda? What what are they
15:02
going to do? How are they
15:04
going to make the lives of the American
15:07
people who they're supposed to serve better?
15:10
And you know, I'm watching Donald Trump and I've
15:12
ticked off many times on this program all the things
15:14
that he's accomplished in such a short period of
15:16
time. And he's trying to move quickly
15:18
and trying to get his health care replace and repeal
15:21
and replace planned down. And
15:24
I'm thinking, all right, you know these guys
15:26
are with their long lunches and long vacations.
15:29
You know, they're talking about the economic
15:31
recovery plan in the spring. Can
15:35
we do it in the winter? When you you know, when
15:37
it's snowing outside, can
15:39
we do it, you know, faster than this? Why
15:41
are you so ill prepared? I
15:44
don't understand it. Um, you know,
15:46
these these politicians are
15:48
pathetic. This is what
15:50
about the people on food stamps,
15:52
out of the labor force, uh, in
15:54
poverty. That's what this election was about.
15:58
You know, stop the delay, right
16:00
the bill, past the bill. You
16:03
know, look at Trump's agenda today. He's meeting with
16:05
corporations. Will we'll get to those later in the program.
16:08
And he's saying, come on in, guys, oh, denouncing
16:10
Intel another seven billion dollars, they're going
16:12
to invest in Arizona. And
16:15
they're talking about the spring and maybe the
16:17
end of the year to repeal and replace Obamacare.
16:19
No, I want you to get it right. I don't want you to rush
16:21
it. But I would think after
16:24
seven eight years of saying you're gonna
16:26
repeal and replace something, you would have built a
16:28
consensus plan that was ready to go. What
16:31
have you been doing for eight years? It's
16:34
not something that I comprehend. It's
16:37
not you know, my team and I have been discussing
16:39
this. If nobody that
16:42
I'm looking at now, sweet baby,
16:44
James Linda, Lauren, Ethan,
16:47
Jason. Nobody goes out
16:49
for lunch any day, and if
16:51
they did, they be fired. I mean,
16:53
if something happens, if you're sick, is
16:56
there anybody Lenda more generous? If somebody is sick,
16:58
what do I say? Stay home? Right? If
17:00
you're sick, if you have a family issue, if
17:03
your cat dies, stay home. You
17:06
know. But when you're here, what do I expect?
17:08
I don't if you had, if you ever went out for lunch,
17:10
I'd be shocked. Have you ever actually
17:13
gonna ask? I'm actually really hungry. I need to go
17:15
right now? Is that okay? Yeah? Yeah, sure, go
17:17
in the middle of the show, super hungry. What
17:19
the hell is wrong with these people? I Am going
17:21
to unload on them tonight attend Eastern
17:24
on Fox. It's just time to do it. Nobody
17:26
else is gonna I will because my fidelity
17:29
and truth is to you. The agenda
17:31
is about you, fixing the country's about you. I
17:42
bet all of you are as frustrated as I am.
17:45
I bet because I know that
17:47
that all of us combined
17:50
you you look at your daily Let's say you are stay at home
17:52
mom and you have kids. Okay, what is your
17:54
day like, all right, you're up at six, you
17:57
you're raised to the kitchen. You make the launch
17:59
or you get this off, and you make sure they have the books,
18:01
and make sure they did their homework, and make sure the dog didn't
18:03
need the homework. You you maybe push
18:06
out a cup of coffee and your carry or whatever
18:08
machine you have, and you you shovel
18:11
some coffee down your throat and you're off and you're
18:13
gone all day. You know, that's
18:15
one of, if not the hardest job
18:18
in the world. Right, And then you gotta
18:20
take your kids to whatever activities they have. Then you
18:22
gotta watch and sit over them doing their stupid homework.
18:24
And then you gotta try and rack your brain and remember
18:26
stuff that they're never going to use in their life anyway.
18:29
Then you gotta learn all about world history
18:31
before they become a senior and they might get American
18:33
history. I mean, it's just never ending.
18:36
The job as a parent. I
18:38
mean, it's just it's mine numbing. How
18:40
hard people work. And let's say you
18:42
you work in business, Okay, you probably
18:45
you're in a competitive environment. You've
18:47
got people breathing down your neck, You've got
18:49
deadlines you gotta meet, you've got meetings. You gotta attend.
18:51
You've got new business, you've got to bring into your
18:53
your your place of work, and you never
18:56
stop. I mean, at least that's the people
18:58
that I know. That's a That's what
19:00
my life is like. That's what my life has always been
19:02
like. You know a lawyer, you know,
19:04
first year lost, first year out
19:06
of law school. Every lawyer I've ever known,
19:09
except my buddy John Gomez, who found
19:11
a way. He's the entire life he's been
19:13
able to find a way to sort
19:15
of just find a niche
19:17
that nobody else has and and make his
19:19
life work for him. And I give him, I give him a hard time
19:21
all the time about it because
19:24
he's he's been able to do this and
19:26
thread this needle his entire life. But he still
19:28
works hard. Don't get me wrong, But
19:30
I don't care. What if you're a contractor, you're
19:33
under pressure all the time to keep new business
19:35
coming in, get the work done properly,
19:37
on time, on budget, and
19:40
pay your employees, and then deal with all the
19:42
regulations of the government and then take out fike
19:44
at taxes in this tax and that tax. If
19:46
you're a doctor, you know, my doctor friends,
19:49
they work their asses off you know, I
19:51
know one of my doctor friends. He's fifty people
19:53
a day. I mean he's racing from
19:55
from one room to another all over
19:58
the place and sending it this one for a
20:00
test, this one for this test, this one for this test. Oh, we
20:02
gotta take this guy to the hospital now, and then
20:04
the whole day shot. Because he's saving
20:06
people's lives, and they get paid a fraction
20:08
of what they deserve, considering their four years
20:11
of college, three to four years of medical
20:13
school, their residency, their internship, and
20:16
then by the time they want to open up
20:18
a an office someplace, you
20:20
know what, then the insurance company say, well, you get twenty
20:23
dollars a visit. It's
20:25
impossible. And then you have student loans
20:27
that you're paying off to your fifty This
20:30
is what life is. Life is hard. I'll
20:32
never forget the road less traveled. Life is difficult.
20:35
You've got to recognize that truth. Nothing
20:37
worthwhile in life comes easily
20:40
to anybody. Everybody's
20:42
got to take risks. The only people
20:44
that I know that have the best life and
20:46
they're gonna deny. Well, Hannity, we've we've
20:48
we've got security issues. I was reading about
20:51
some representatives
20:53
can congressmen and women are upset that you
20:55
know, they're being protested at town halls
20:57
and they have safety issues. And by the way, we've got to keep
20:59
our elected officials safe. And there
21:01
are lunatics out there, and
21:03
I'm like, okay, I've dealt without my entire
21:06
career. I mean, seriously, and
21:10
it's part of the job of your republic figure.
21:12
Unfortunately, it's a sad, sick, evil
21:14
world out there, and you need to take all
21:16
the precautions. But I'm thinking, Okay, how
21:18
many vacation days do these people get? Seriously,
21:22
a whole lot. Most of them have safe seats because
21:24
of jerrymandering and in the collusion
21:26
and corruption between Democrats and
21:29
Republicans. Okay, we'll give you this
21:31
predominantly democratic district. You give
21:33
us this predominantly Republican district, and you
21:35
can't get rid of any of these people because
21:38
so often just name recognition gets them
21:40
re elected doesn't mean they're
21:42
doing a good job. You know. That's why
21:44
the case of Eric Cantor being
21:47
defeated by Dave Bratt was such a big
21:49
issue, or in the case of
21:51
I don't you know other there have been a few other
21:54
high profile cases we're
21:56
prominent elected officials. You know,
21:58
I think back, and what what is so infuriating
22:00
to me is I'm just looking
22:03
at my simple life, in
22:05
my world and in my
22:07
world, in my life which so many
22:10
of you share the exact same experience,
22:13
in my parents life and your
22:15
parents lives, in my grandparents
22:17
lives and your grandparents lives. My
22:19
grandparents came here with
22:22
nothing ten bucks fifteen in one
22:24
case, twenty five dollars in their pocket. They
22:27
had no friends, They lived
22:29
in a horrible conditions, and
22:31
they worked sixteen hours a day.
22:34
And then, of course, my father lived through the Depression.
22:36
My mother lived through the Depression, and that really
22:39
sucked too for them,
22:41
and both of them grew up pretty poor. Especially
22:43
my father was ridiculously poor, and his mom
22:46
died three months after his born complications
22:48
due to his his birth. And
22:50
then so he was shuffled around from family
22:52
member to family member, but it never stopped his work
22:54
ethic and my father, you know, would
22:57
work, and then on weekends he worked at Karl Hoppel's
22:59
as a waiter. And I'm eight
23:01
years old and I'm delivering papers and that's how I
23:03
got my money. And when I'm twelve years
23:05
old, at the Norwood End in West Hempstead,
23:07
New York. By this little pond
23:09
I next to a carvel. I washed
23:12
dishes every Friday, Saturday night and Sunday.
23:15
And I did that for over a year until
23:17
one day one Thanksgiving, the cook walked
23:19
out and he said, all right, kid, you're the late night chef
23:22
at thirteen years old, and I'm
23:24
making you know, stuff shrimp and and
23:26
stuff lobster and and hamburgers
23:29
and steaks and French fries. And I'm working
23:31
like a lunatic because the place was
23:33
always busy, and
23:35
uh, you know, I'd get my sat Pauli
23:37
girl and I'd go home happy as a pig
23:41
and mud. But I
23:43
never stopped moving washing dishes.
23:46
I mean there was no dish washing machine.
23:48
I did all by hand. When I
23:50
cooked, you know, it was run, run,
23:52
sweat and run. I love the sweat of being
23:54
a chef. For cook, I wasn't really more of a cook
23:57
than a chef, but I learned how
23:59
to do shrimps, campy uh fed accheny
24:01
alfredo, and stuff lobsters,
24:04
cooking live lobsters. You know, things
24:06
that are a thirteen year old kid never gets
24:08
to learn. And I was got pretty
24:11
good at it and then busting tables.
24:13
I remember working at the Merry Peddler when
24:15
I was fourteen fifteen years so, I remember
24:17
running through the dining room the whole night.
24:20
The entire night, I'd run through the dining room
24:22
and cleaning the tables and flipping over the tables.
24:25
There was a newsday
24:28
uh critic of restaurant critic
24:30
that gave it like she once said, it was a
24:32
restaurant I'd like to own. And
24:35
after that, the place was swamped with
24:37
people outside the door the entire night.
24:40
And I'd get there Friday night at six o'clock
24:42
and I didn't stop moving until four o'clock in the
24:44
morning. Because I also had a bar component to the
24:46
place. It was a pub, and then
24:48
I became a bartender. And on a busy night,
24:50
you get in at six and I'm making by
24:52
hand every banana dockery, every strawberry
24:55
dockery, every peanut altading machines, margharita,
24:57
all by hand. And literally,
25:00
you've got a service bar for an entire restaurant,
25:02
and you've got a full bar three or four people
25:05
deep. You move your ass. There's
25:07
no time to sit around. When
25:09
I was a contractor and I was a painting contractor,
25:12
all right, I had to get this house painted
25:15
by X date or I'm losing money
25:18
because I had some people working for me, and I'm twenty years
25:20
old. I was a full time contractor. And
25:23
then my buddy Andy fee and taught me how to hang wallpaper,
25:25
and then I became a pretty good wallpaper hanger, not like him,
25:27
but pretty good. And then i'd
25:29
then I'd have to do a bathroom in x
25:32
hours, where I'm losing money. I
25:34
didn't have time to to sit around and eat
25:36
lunch and go to dinners.
25:39
You know. Now occasionally I'll go to dinner, but I
25:41
mean, I don't even want to him so tired from working
25:43
half the time, And what's
25:45
my point in saying in all of this? Or when I'm laying tile,
25:47
you know how hard it is to lay individual
25:50
tiles and to float a floor
25:52
and to float a a bathroom,
25:54
to get it just so perfect, so it lays
25:57
down perfectly flat and looks
25:59
perfect, and you design it perfectly
26:02
so you don't have a little piece in the corner, but you
26:04
have it balanced out across the entire
26:06
either shower or bathroom wherever
26:09
you happen to be doing it. It's a lot of
26:11
work. You gotta move. There's there
26:13
was never any time for lunches.
26:17
And so I'm looking at Republicans and I'm looking,
26:19
Okay, eight years ago they started
26:21
the promise we're gonna repeal and replace Obamacare,
26:24
and they it's eight years later, Well,
26:26
we have nine plans, and we're working within the
26:28
system of getting another plan. Unlike
26:31
you got to be kidding me. I'm
26:34
frustrated. Who works
26:36
like this, who lives like this?
26:39
All of you imagine in your own lives. I
26:41
bet you, every single one of you listening
26:44
to my voice right now identifies
26:46
with how I work with I
26:48
identifies how how Jason
26:50
works, and sweet Baby James works, and
26:52
Linda and Lauren and Ethan and
26:55
everybody on my TV show. We don't this
26:57
is not reality for us that years
27:00
later you don't have a plan. You
27:03
gotta be kidding me. There's
27:05
no excuse for this. And
27:07
then we've got a president. I'm
27:10
it's so refreshing, isn't it. And by
27:12
Donald Trump does something wrong, I will call out Donald
27:14
Trump and say, wait a minute, that wasn't your promise.
27:17
But so far we haven't had to. He's
27:19
moving at the speed of Trump, which
27:22
is like an executive who's
27:24
serving the American people, taking
27:26
off his promises, checking him off his list,
27:28
and he wants to move. And then
27:30
you have the obstructionist Democratic Party. They're
27:32
harassing him. They they won't even give him his cabinet.
27:35
We still don't have a Health and Human Services secretary.
27:37
He took till yesterday to get Attorney
27:40
general sessions in place, and
27:42
which I think complicated the issue
27:44
out of the Ninth Circuit. But that's a different story we will
27:46
get to later in the program.
27:48
But you know, in in a short period of time, what he eased
27:50
the burden of the Obamacare regulations
27:53
and he's moving to repeal and replace, but
27:55
he said he wants to get it right now.
27:57
He hasn't been there for eight years like these other
28:00
people who should have had the bill written
28:02
ready to go, because that was their promise
28:04
for so many years. You know, he got us
28:06
out of t p P, which he promised. He
28:08
took actions to freeze regulations
28:11
and he's wiping out regulations day by day,
28:14
and he wants to get rid of seventy because
28:16
it's stifling business growth in this country.
28:19
He put in a government hiring freezer promise.
28:21
He went forward with no federal funds for abortions
28:24
abroad. He have five executive
28:26
actions to move Keystone in the Dakota
28:28
Access pipelines, issued executive
28:31
actions on construction. Now the border wall
28:33
is being designed. He's moving his ass
28:35
because he builds buildings and you don't have time
28:38
in the real world to sit around and eat
28:40
lunch and talk
28:42
about whatever. And
28:45
then we know he's he pushing
28:47
another promise of extreme vetting, that's
28:49
to keep you safe and not gamble with your
28:51
life like democrats are willing to do. He's
28:54
issued an executive action and rebuild the military,
28:56
which we desperately need. He promised
28:59
that he would defeat ice US, so within
29:01
thirty days. Within the first two
29:03
days of his administration, he issued an
29:06
executive action. He wanted a plan on
29:08
his desk in thirty days to defeat isis
29:11
thirty days. It'll be on his
29:13
desk in about seven days. He
29:16
instituted a five year lobbying ban
29:18
for the administration officials, which
29:20
is to drain the swamp that doesn't want these
29:22
guys all capitalizing on their service to their
29:24
country. And then he followed
29:27
through on one of the biggest promises which
29:29
is putting an originalist Neil Gorcut's nominating
29:31
him for the Supreme Court. And
29:34
I'm being told, well, we'll get to the economy
29:36
maybe in the spring or fall. I'm
29:39
like, I can't take it. It's
29:42
not how I roll. If
29:44
the election is as I said that
29:47
this election was about the forgotten man, forgotten
29:49
woman in this country. If
29:51
I'm right about that, what
29:54
good are we doing? What good are these
29:56
public service people doing?
29:59
If literally are waiting to
30:03
next year or the fall or
30:05
early summer to get
30:07
a budget done that is gonna get
30:10
rid of regulations, lower the corporate
30:12
tax rate to go seven
30:14
brackets to three brackets. What's so freaking hard
30:16
about this? To
30:18
to allow multinational
30:21
corporations to repatriate not billions,
30:23
but trillions that they'll invest in
30:26
the country, maybe further incentivize them
30:28
so they invest in Detroit and Milwaukee
30:30
and Cleveland and Philly, the cities
30:32
that needed the most, that have been hurt the most
30:35
under the Obama years. What's
30:37
so hard about that? Why does this have to take
30:40
all these months when you can do it now?
30:43
You know, finally we've got an education
30:46
secretary. Maybe she'll move forward with choice
30:48
and education for people, and
30:50
then of course the wall is being designed. Thankfully,
30:52
Promises made, promises kept, and
30:55
I'm just wondering. I
30:57
just don't understand it. I don't I
31:00
don't have the patience. There's
31:02
not one of these people that could work for me and survive,
31:04
Linda, Am I right about this? Just tell people, could
31:08
any of these people in Washington survive working
31:10
on the show? No, not
31:13
one, Well, Louie Gohmer could. I
31:15
would say
31:16
them the
31:18
Freedom Caucus guys, they're the only guys that want to move. They're
31:20
the only ones that have our sense of urgency,
31:23
the only ones that I know. And
31:25
all I'm saying is do the
31:28
job. You're this You're
31:30
supposed to be public servants.
31:33
Get off your ass, get off
31:35
your backside, and get to
31:37
work and start moving, not
31:39
at the speed of Washington, but at the speed
31:41
of Trump. Gonna have a lot
31:44
more about this tonight in my opening monologue
31:46
on Hannaday Tenny Eastern on the Fox News Channel. Yeah,
31:49
term limits would help too. Maybe, you
31:51
know, could you imagine me in the
31:54
Congress, I'd be screaming every day
31:56
and I could. I would actually like to see you battle
31:58
with Senator Warren think that would be really
32:00
interesting. I wouldn't have time for her. I
32:03
would ignore everything she says and does. Who has time
32:05
for that crap? Alright, So I have insomnia,
32:07
but I've never slept better. And what's changed
32:10
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33:06
The Court finds that, for purposes
33:09
of the entry of the temporary straining
33:11
Order, that the state has met its
33:13
burden of demonstrating that it faces
33:16
immediate and irreparable injury
33:19
as a result of the signing and implementation
33:22
of the executive order. I
33:25
find that the state has satisfied the
33:27
test that it is likely to succeed
33:29
on the merits of the claim, which would
33:31
entitle them to relief. I
33:34
find that the balance of equities favor
33:36
the States, and lastly, I find
33:38
that a temporary restraining order is in the
33:41
public interest. If
33:43
I were to apply the Nine Circuits alternative
33:45
test um, I would find that
33:48
the States have established a question, a
33:50
serious question, going to the merits,
33:52
and that the balance of equities tips
33:55
sharply in their favor. Pass
33:57
such, I find that the Court should
34:00
and will grant the temporary
34:02
restraining order. Well, let me ask about
34:04
the called just religious discrimination
34:07
claim to reach both the equal protection
34:09
and Establishment clause claims.
34:11
And I'm not entirely
34:14
persuaded by the argument, if only because
34:16
the seven countries encompass
34:19
only I think a relatively small
34:21
percentage of Muslims. I mean, do
34:23
you have any information as to
34:26
what percentage or what proportion
34:28
of the adherence to Islam worldwide
34:31
are our citizens or residents of those countries?
34:34
My quick penciling suggested something less
34:36
than fi I have not done that that,
34:39
but given that all those
34:41
countries are countries that have been previously
34:43
tagged as subjects of concern
34:45
about terrorism. Granted it's because
34:47
of perhaps radical islam sex,
34:50
so there might be a religious motivation
34:53
behind the terrorism. But I have trouble
34:55
understanding why we're supposed to infer
34:58
religious animus when in act
35:00
the vast majority of Muslims would not
35:02
be affected as residents of those
35:04
nations, and where the
35:07
concern for terrorism with
35:09
those connected with radical Islamic
35:11
sex is kind of hard to deny. You're
35:13
the key spot from this court, and the Spreme Court is very
35:16
clear that to prove religious discrimination,
35:18
we do not need to prove that this were harms
35:21
only Muslims or that it harms every
35:23
Muslim. We just need to prove that it was motivated
35:25
in part by a desire to harm
35:27
Muslims, and we have all that you
35:29
infer that desire if in fact the
35:32
vast majority of Muslims are unaffected,
35:34
well you aren't. In part, you can infer it
35:36
from intent evidence. I mean, there are statements
35:38
that we've quoted in our complaint, uh
35:41
that are rather shocking evidence
35:43
of intent to discriminate against Muslims, given
35:45
that we haven't even had any discovery yet. All right, it comes
35:47
down to the fundamental question. You first
35:49
heard activists Justice, you know, and
35:51
Culture at a great column about us today. A
35:53
maniac is running our foreign
35:56
policy and it's not Trump. If only
35:58
we were able to deport citizens, we could
36:00
use Trump's new policy of excluding
36:02
those who are hostile towards our country to get
36:04
rid of Judge Robart. You know. For me,
36:06
it's always been a very very
36:09
simple equation. On the legal side
36:11
of this, you have the issue does the president
36:13
have the legal authority to
36:16
do what he did? And the answer
36:18
is one yes. The
36:20
code is simple. The code is,
36:22
whenever the President finds that
36:25
entry of any aliens or any class
36:27
of aliens into the United States would
36:29
be detrimental to the interests of the United States,
36:32
he may buy proclamation and for
36:34
such period as he shall deem
36:36
necessary suspend the
36:39
entry of all aliens, any
36:41
class of aliens, as immigrants non immigrants,
36:44
or impose on the entry
36:46
of aliens any restrictions he
36:48
may deem appropriate. And by the way, if
36:50
you look at the last five presidents, Ronald
36:52
Reagan did this five times, in other
36:54
words, executive authority to exclude
36:57
aliens. In other words, the law that I just read you
36:59
eight US two, which
37:01
was cited in in the hearing.
37:03
And you have George Herbert Walker Bush one
37:05
time, Bill Clinton twelve times, George W.
37:08
Bush six times, in Obama nineteen times,
37:10
nineteen times, including you could
37:12
argue, by definition of the media, a religious
37:15
litmus test or a Muslim
37:17
band, which was never true, and it
37:19
is just part of a media lie that
37:21
is advancing forward. But the question
37:24
is fundamental and it's simple. Does
37:26
the president have the authority? Yes?
37:28
The second question is if
37:30
he has the authority, which he clearly does,
37:33
then is he what is his
37:35
decision here that after Obama
37:38
and Congress and he have deemed
37:40
these seven nations to be hotbeds
37:43
of terrorism and terroristic training
37:45
camps, that it is in the best
37:48
interest of the United States to vet
37:50
those people that we are generously
37:52
allowing access to our country to
37:55
go through a little inconvenience of
37:57
vetting for the greater good
37:59
and say, if the insecurity of citizens
38:02
that do have constitutional rights and
38:04
fundamentally that's it. And the issue
38:06
before the court is, did the judge
38:09
in this case Robarton in Seattle
38:11
and talking about the Ninth Circuit, do they
38:14
go beyond what their authority and powers
38:16
are? And the answer to that is clear. Christian
38:19
Adams is with us. He's the president of the Public
38:21
Interest Legal Foundation, editor
38:23
of PJ Media. And Hans
38:25
von Spakovsky is with us, senior
38:28
legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation. Han's
38:30
good to talk to you, my friend. I'm
38:32
a big fan follow your writings
38:34
often with the Heritage Foundation and find
38:37
you extremely bright and interesting. Well, thank
38:39
you, John, I appreciate that. Tell me your take
38:41
on it. And if I'm I'm wrong on any point
38:43
here, no, in fact, you're you're you'd
38:45
make a better judge than the judge out in Washington
38:48
State. Listen, in his entire six
38:50
pages of his order granting an
38:52
injunction, never once does
38:54
he mentioned the statute that you just
38:57
talked about, which is the relevant stat
38:59
at the executive order itself says this
39:01
is what it's based on. And while that
39:04
order has been getting all of the media attention,
39:07
uh, the media has not been covering the fact
39:09
that on the very same day that
39:11
the Washington State judge issued that injunction,
39:14
a judge in Massachusetts and none
39:16
in an almost identical case, we're a few to
39:19
an injunction. Why because he said
39:21
that statute provides the
39:24
president with all the authority he needs
39:26
to do exactly what he did, So that that
39:28
judge in in in Washington is
39:30
acting far beyond his
39:33
power and in fact, isn't following the rule
39:35
of law, you know, And can't we take it, hansa
39:37
step further. I mean, isn't the
39:40
first and main role
39:42
of a president to serve as
39:44
the commander in chief of the country?
39:47
Oh? Oh, absolutely? And and look,
39:49
the Supreme Court itself has said
39:51
the zenis of the government's
39:53
power is at the border,
39:56
when it decides who and what is
39:58
allowed into the country. That that is where
40:00
its power is at its strongest.
40:03
And that's why it's just ridiculous
40:06
that a federal judge is is stopping
40:08
this and substituting his judgment
40:11
or the judgment of the president on
40:13
on a matter that affects the
40:15
national security and foreign policy of the United
40:17
States. Agreed, well said Christian
40:20
adoms your thoughts, Sean, there is no constitutional
40:24
right for an alien to enter the United
40:26
States. The Constitution
40:28
gives Congress absolute authority
40:30
on this point, and Congress has delegated
40:32
that authority to the President in absolute
40:35
terms. I mean, this shows what
40:37
happens when an out of controlled judiciary
40:40
is matched with an out of control left
40:42
wing legal apparatus that brings
40:45
lawsuits to basically make America less
40:47
safe over and over again.
40:49
It's a dangerous situation. Trump
40:51
was right, he had the power to do it. The courts
40:54
are not acting in the interest of the American
40:56
people. You know, I want to You just said something
40:59
very deep and prof sound and a point that
41:01
I've been trying to make, and I think you said
41:03
it in a much better way than I have. And
41:05
what I've been doing is I've been pointing out this
41:07
finding by the Washington Free Beacon, which I thought
41:10
was a great catch on their part, and that
41:12
is that there was a big meeting
41:14
with David Brock and all these big Democratic
41:17
donors at a swanky resort in Florida,
41:19
and they were mapping out how to kick Donald
41:21
Trump's ask their words, not mine.
41:23
Anyway, they attended the retreat and they
41:26
came up with Democracy Matters,
41:28
a strategic plan of action, and it outlines
41:31
and contains information how to defeat Trump
41:33
through impeachment and win the midterm
41:35
elections in eighteen and quote file
41:38
lawsuits, filing lawsuits against the Trump administration.
41:40
Now you talk about this partnership. You
41:43
have a left wing judiciary and
41:45
you have a left wing activists
41:47
group of people that are out judge
41:49
shopping and correct me if you disagree with this. I
41:51
believe that Seattle was not by accident.
41:54
I think the Ninth Circuit is not by accident,
41:56
that it's all by design, and I think we could
41:58
probably expect a lot of Ninth Circuit
42:00
states to be the states where lawsuits
42:03
are filed. Well, that's right, that's
42:05
right, John. The left, the sorrow
42:08
splended left, has used
42:10
the courts as a political tool
42:12
when they can't win elections. They
42:14
send high paid lawyers, often
42:17
with the help of big law firms doing it for
42:19
free, to the to the courts to get their
42:21
policies enacted. The most Americans
42:23
disagree with if you read anything about
42:26
this judge, anything at all about
42:28
his biography, you know that he was the perfect
42:30
draw for the open borders crowd to
42:32
get it. You mean, the guy that cited Black
42:34
Lives Matter, the group that said, what do we
42:36
want dead cops? When don't we want them now? And pigs
42:39
on a blanket from like Bacon, the guy that cited
42:41
them. That's exactly right. You forum
42:43
shop for the right judge and you get
42:45
your radical open borders policy adopted
42:48
despite the will of Congress, the will of
42:50
the American people, and the proper order
42:52
of the president. Let me go to the issue.
42:54
Go ahead, Christians shot. I just should say,
42:57
look, you're absolutely right that they're going to
42:59
use the courts, because remember California
43:02
recently announced that the state was
43:04
hiring who Eric Holder, the former
43:06
attorney general, to lead the fight
43:09
against the Trump administration on everything
43:11
from immigration elsewhere. Look, they
43:13
have a state attorney General's office with forty
43:16
five hundred employees,
43:18
including a many lawyers, and
43:20
yet they're spending a fortune to
43:22
hire Eric Holder to litigate
43:25
against the Trump administration. Well, let me just
43:27
you know, I want to deal with the dishonesty
43:29
of the media, fake news. This you
43:31
know, Chuck Todd saying that this is a religious
43:34
test, and and so many people
43:36
reporting that this is a Muslim ban,
43:38
and it even came up in arguments, and even
43:40
the Ninth Circuit judge in this case, which
43:42
is known for its liberal advocacy in judicial
43:45
activism, even he said, by
43:47
my own estimation of the world's
43:50
Muslims are not included here. For example,
43:52
Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Azerbaijan,
43:55
Bahrain, Bangaladdesh with a
43:57
hundred and fifty six point one million Muslims
43:59
Burned i U EGYP ninety
44:01
four point six millions, Indonesia,
44:04
the world's largest Muslim majority
44:06
population a two hundred and fifty eight point three
44:09
million Muslims, Jordans, Kazakhstan,
44:12
Kosovo, Kuwait, Lebanon, Malaysia,
44:14
Moli, Morocco, Niger, Oman
44:17
Cutter Pakistan with two hundred
44:20
and one point nine million muslim Saudi Arabia,
44:22
Senegal, and I can keep going. And
44:24
yet the media constantly, repetitively,
44:27
so dishonestly reports it
44:29
at Easer either a religious litmus
44:31
test or be a Muslim ban. That
44:34
is, that is that is true, Sean, but
44:36
it looks it's even worse than that. If you read the
44:38
executive order, there's a paragraph in
44:40
it in which the President says priority
44:43
will be given to any individuals
44:46
who are being persecuted because
44:48
of their religious beliefs and
44:50
they are a religious minority in whatever
44:52
country they are in. Notice that
44:54
that is totally neutral with respect to
44:56
religions and is pure common sense.
44:59
If you're gonna be perfect, Christian, hang hang on to that
45:01
thought. I'll get right back to when we get back. I hope
45:03
you understanding through the constraints of time here.
45:05
And then we have Hans is going to stay over with us
45:07
as well, bringing
45:09
jobs back to America and
45:12
getting America back door.
45:15
This is Sean Ali Show.
45:28
Right as we continue, we've got Christian Adams,
45:30
President of the Public Interest Legal Foundation,
45:33
editor of PJ Media. Hans von
45:35
Spakovsky is with a senior legal
45:37
fellow at the Heritage Foundation. Christian,
45:39
I had to interrupt you mid sentence. I apologize.
45:42
Pick it up from where you were. Look. This is obviously
45:44
a product of the institutional left hatred
45:47
of anybody who wants to keep America safe.
45:49
They have the courts in their pocket. They have ABC,
45:52
NBC, CBS, the Washington Post,
45:54
The New York Times. All of these organizations
45:57
have no credibility. There are a tool
45:59
of the institutional left. They'll say anything
46:02
that hurts conservative constitutionalists. It's
46:04
what they do. They don't even tend to be non
46:06
partial. They're all in. And what we have
46:08
now is a president who's under attacked by these
46:10
tools, and just for protected country.
46:13
That's what makes it particularly sittening that you
46:15
know, I said, and I know I've
46:17
got brushback on this, but if anybody
46:19
comes in in this interim period where
46:21
where you have the legal zan
46:23
culture I think rightly described today a maniac
46:26
could judge has no constitutional
46:28
authority running our foreign policy. If anyone
46:30
comes in from any of these seven countries that could have
46:32
been vetted and they end up killing Americans,
46:35
I'm sorry. The Democrats and all
46:37
these judges and everybody involved will
46:39
have blood on their hands. Hans. Is that
46:41
accurate? Oh? Oh, it sure is. And look we
46:43
can we can. We have a specific instance
46:46
of a failure of vetting that resulted
46:49
and more than a dozen Americans killed, and that's
46:51
the San Bernardino terrorist attacks,
46:53
the the Arab man
46:56
and his wife. The obomasuration
46:58
had a policy of not checking
47:01
Facebook social media on
47:03
people they were letting in. They let
47:05
the wife in, she participated in this
47:07
terrorist murder street and if they had checked
47:09
her social media she it was phil
47:12
of je hottest propaganda
47:14
and warnings and that Hans.
47:17
Isn't it even worse than that? I've
47:19
seen a list of I think seventies
47:21
some odd people. I don't have the exact
47:23
number of foreign nationals. And
47:26
then the judge Robart in the Seattle case
47:28
where this originated, just said, I've heard
47:30
of nothing since nine eleven. Can you name of an instance?
47:33
They've got seventy six foreign nationals that we
47:35
were able to name and identify that in
47:37
fact have been involved in these types of crimes?
47:40
Correct, That is exactly
47:42
right. It's pretty scary, all right. So the bottom line
47:44
here is, you know, does it not put
47:46
into full focus the importance
47:48
of Neil Gorsch Christian
47:51
and what did you make a Bloomenthall saying
47:53
that Gorc was critical of Donald
47:55
Trump, who nominated him to the Supreme
47:57
Court, for being critical of the judicial
48:00
Jerry It was hearsay bluemin Fall
48:02
said something gorcis. We don't know whether
48:04
or not he said, and he probably didn't. We
48:06
we know that CNN and ABC and
48:08
everybody else repeated the lie, the hearsay
48:11
about what Gorsy said. But Seawan, it shows
48:13
you how important the Supreme Court
48:15
is to everything. Our borders
48:18
are integrative of our elections, how
48:21
we relate to the federal government, our Second
48:23
Amendment rights. The Supreme Court is the whole
48:25
ballgame. And that's why Trump, among
48:27
other reasons, won the White House because Americans
48:30
understand the threat to liberty and the role
48:32
of five justices play in possessing it. Last
48:35
question is I'm running out of time, Hans. Are you
48:37
confident Neil Gorci is the originalists
48:40
like Scalia that we've been told he
48:42
is, Well, if you base it on the
48:44
prior opinions he's written in the more
48:47
than ten years that he's been a Court of Appeals
48:49
judge, he would seem to be. Hopefully
48:52
he will be one of those Republican judges
48:54
who uh moves to the left
48:56
when they get on the bench, which unfortunately, as
48:58
you know, has been a problem. Listen, John
49:00
Roberts, Well, he's not as bad as David Suitor.
49:02
But you're right, all right. I guess you never do know right
49:05
until they get there. But it seems on paper. You're
49:07
right, Um, thank you both for being well. Us appreciate
49:09
it when we come back. Is the best, the
49:11
brightest, the smartest guy when it comes
49:13
to America and its path towards energy
49:15
and dependence in the country. John Hoffmeister, he's
49:18
the former cel of Shell Oil. He'll join
49:20
us next and then our news round up information overload
49:22
our In
49:37
just eight years, we've had our dependence
49:39
on porn oil, we doubled our
49:41
renewable energy. We've led the world
49:43
to an agreement that has the promise to save this
49:46
planet. But
49:49
without bolder action, our
49:52
children won't have time to debate the existence
49:54
of climate change. They'll be busy dealing
49:56
with its effects, more environmental
49:58
disasters, more economic disruptions,
50:01
waves of climate refugees seeking sanctuary.
50:05
This is with regard to the construction
50:08
of the Keystone pipeline, something
50:11
that's been in dispute and it's subject
50:14
to a renegotiation of terms
50:16
by us. We're going to renegotiate
50:18
some of the terms and if
50:21
they'd like, we'll see if we can get the pipeline
50:23
built. A lot of jobs, twenty
50:26
eight thousand jobs, great construction
50:28
jobs. Okay,
50:31
Keystone pipeline. This
50:34
is with respect to the construction
50:37
of the Dakota Access
50:40
Pipeline Dakota
50:42
Excess pypelice, again
50:45
subject to terms and conditions
50:48
to be negotiated by US.
50:51
Okay, this is construction
50:54
of pipelines in this country. We
50:56
are and I am
50:59
very insistent, if we're going to build
51:01
pipelines in the United States,
51:03
the pipes should be made in the United States.
51:07
So unless there's difficulty with that, because
51:09
companies are gonna have to sty gear up much
51:12
pipeline has bought from other countries.
51:15
From now on, we're gonna start making pipeline
51:19
in the United States. We build it in the
51:21
United States. We build the pipelines.
51:24
We want to build the pipe. Gonna
51:26
put a lot of workers, a lot of steel workers
51:28
back to work. Okay,
51:31
we will build our own pipeline. We
51:33
will build our own pipes. That's
51:35
what it has to do with like we
51:37
used to in the old days. Al
51:40
Right, twenty four Now till the top of the hour,
51:42
Sean Hannity, show our toll free telephone number.
51:44
We'll get to coming up shortly, one
51:47
Sean, if you want to be a part of the program. Now
51:49
there's President Obama claiming, oh, we've cut our
51:51
dependence on far in oil and
51:53
half and we've moved on to green energy.
51:56
And all I can think of is all the wasted money
51:58
quote stimulus money, the billions and
52:00
billions and billions of crony dollars
52:03
that went to companies like Clinger and everybody
52:05
else. And then of course real
52:07
action, not talk. Keystone
52:09
pipeline moves forward, the Dakota pipeline
52:11
moves forward, and of course the
52:14
President, I think, very very smartly
52:16
and very cleverly saying that, yeah, let's
52:18
let's make the pipe here in America anyway,
52:21
joining us now. He is probably the
52:23
smartest guy on the issue of energy
52:25
and the move towards energy and dependence in the country.
52:28
And he was featured in the movie
52:30
Pump. He's the former CEO of Shell Oil
52:33
and founder of the group Citizens for Affordable
52:35
Energy. John Hoffmeister is back with us. How
52:38
are you so good to talk to you? Doing fine?
52:41
Sehn? Thank you for the opportunity.
52:43
Is it really true that you took
52:46
till November six to figure out who
52:48
you're voting for? A little Bertie told
52:50
me, I gave it the full scope
52:52
and scale of the electoral process,
52:55
big important decision and the
52:57
country hinged on I think
53:00
to vote, and I did
53:02
take the entire time because I
53:04
wanted to fully let both candidates make
53:06
sure I could do what my conscience told me I
53:08
should do well. And you voted
53:10
for Donald Trump? Obviously? Did the president
53:13
voted? Yes? I voted for Donald Trump. After
53:16
how you agon How could you agonize
53:19
over that decision knowing what Trump was saying
53:21
about energy and knowing that Hillary was going
53:23
to be worse than Obama. Well, there's a long
53:25
history to the Clintons and energy, and
53:28
I was in part relying upon that
53:30
long history rather than on the
53:32
rhetoric of the heated campaign trail.
53:34
But in the end, I decided on Donald Trump,
53:37
and I'm glad I did. Right. Let me ask
53:39
you this, did President Obama tell us the truth
53:41
when he said we have half our
53:44
dependence on farn oil? Or is that like
53:46
him lying about creating jobs and creating
53:48
a perception with lower, lower
53:50
unemployment numbers that he did such a great job
53:52
creating jobs when we have the lowest labor
53:55
participation rate and more Americans
53:57
out of work since the nineties seventies, and
53:59
we have thirteen million more Americans
54:01
on food stamps and eight million more Americans in poverty.
54:04
He lied about the economy. Was he lying about
54:06
energy? In the pre shale days,
54:08
Sean, this is before the shale revolution
54:11
took over, the United States
54:13
of America was down to nearly
54:16
below six million barrels
54:18
of production per day of
54:21
domestic oil in a country that needs
54:23
about eighteen million. With
54:25
the shale formations, And I will tell
54:27
you Barack Obama did absolutely
54:30
nothing nothing. His administration
54:32
did nothing to help the shale
54:34
transformation. That was industry
54:37
lad and it was state led states
54:39
like North Dakota, Texas, Oklahoma,
54:42
Colorado. The state agencies
54:45
were the ones who did all the work. And
54:47
the e p A, the National e p A,
54:49
and the National Energy
54:52
Department and others did nothing. But
54:54
we have moved from less than
54:56
six million barrels per day production, we
54:59
moved as high as nine point two million
55:01
barrels per day domestic production.
55:04
So yes, technically his statistic
55:07
is correct, and for him to take
55:09
credit for it is the
55:11
the ultimate in hypocrisy
55:14
because he did nothing to support it.
55:16
I went to the White House. I tried
55:18
to talk to the people at the White House about
55:21
shale and about domestic drilling. I
55:23
was shut down. Every time I
55:25
tried, well, we did
55:28
have a revolution, and in you and
55:30
I both worked at trying
55:32
to help put people together
55:34
with jobs in North Dakota and
55:37
in Texas and an Oklahoma, and
55:39
we had a lot of success. Am
55:41
I right in my theory that
55:44
OPEC and the Saudis in particular
55:46
purposely drove down the
55:48
price of a barrel of oil for
55:51
the distinct purpose of driving American
55:53
companies out of business. I think it's
55:56
more nuanced than that. And you
55:58
you made and let me just explain it
56:00
this way. The Saudias
56:03
were grossly distressed
56:06
by the United States and its lack
56:08
of support for Saudi Arabia
56:10
in the Middle East. From Franklin Roosevelt
56:13
in World War Two all the way to George
56:16
W. Bush, there was an agreement
56:18
between the Saudis and the Americans,
56:21
will produce our oil, you'll have our back.
56:23
Well, during the Obama years, Obama
56:25
demonstrated he did not have their back.
56:28
They were on their own. So I would
56:30
say the stronger reason for
56:32
why the Saudis did create a
56:35
man made drop in the price of the oil
56:37
was more to do damage to Iran and
56:40
to Russia than to the United
56:42
States. But the US You're right, was
56:45
a victim of circumstance. The
56:47
US shale production was mightily
56:50
harmed by the geopolitical
56:52
decision of Saudi Arabia to take on
56:54
Iran and to take on Russia
56:57
because the US walked away from Saudi
56:59
Arabia. And yes, we were
57:01
collateral damage, serious
57:03
collateral damage. Half a million
57:05
lost jobs, and you
57:07
know, billions of dollars not spent in
57:09
this country that otherwise would have been spent.
57:12
But I think the real reason was fighting Iran
57:15
and fighting Russia economically,
57:18
which ultimately did impact the
57:20
US negatively. You know, I
57:22
agree with that. You see, I think America's
57:24
commitment to energy independence has
57:27
to move forward regardless
57:30
of what the price of a barrel of oil may drop
57:32
too, because I think that would be that type
57:34
of manipulation happens for all sorts of reasons.
57:37
Your theory fascinates me. I still think it was
57:39
more directed at the US that maybe
57:41
you do. But it's to me, it's it's
57:43
neither here nor there. It became a reality. Here's
57:45
what your question to you, Right, You're absolutely
57:48
right when you say we have got to become
57:50
invulnerable to the global
57:52
oil price, and we can if
57:54
we're determined to do so. Well,
57:56
that's my main focus. Now. The price
57:59
of a barrel of oil at to look at what it was today,
58:01
But what is it in the fifty dollar range? Now
58:04
change? Yeah? All right? So and
58:07
what was the low? What did a drop to twentysomething?
58:10
Okay? And so I would have been a good time, I
58:12
guess to buy at that point. And I knew it, but I didn't
58:14
have the guts to do it. Um. But the next
58:17
thing, though, is I don't trust the stock market.
58:19
I don't don't trust commodities. I just have
58:22
I have such a disdain for
58:24
for all these markets and all the manipulation
58:27
goes on, and I always feel that we
58:29
the consumers, are always the last
58:31
ones in, and we always get out at
58:33
the wrong time, and people that think they can play
58:35
the system lose. So here's what I want
58:37
to ask you. If Donald Trump
58:40
is committed, with the price of oil
58:42
where it is today, to energy
58:44
independence for this country for
58:46
national security reasons and for the
58:48
creation of jobs, knowing that that energy
58:51
is the lifeblood of any economy, especially
58:53
our economy, how long would it take.
58:56
I think it would take about a decade, A
58:58
clear decade, because here's the reason
59:01
we can produce more oil. But I think
59:03
this country would max out on
59:06
oil production at about twelve million
59:08
barrels a day just
59:11
not just because of the risks associated
59:14
and the fact that you just can't
59:16
you you've got to manage production
59:19
over time or you destroy the
59:21
credibility of your reservoirs. You
59:23
just can't overproduce. Uh
59:25
And and so twelve million is probably a sweet
59:28
spot. But here's here's where we get the other
59:30
six to seven million barrels a day equivalent
59:33
natural gas as an alternative
59:36
fuel for internal combustion engines
59:38
that will do it. And that's what would take the
59:40
extra time for the infrastructure to
59:42
be built, which is why I say ten years,
59:44
because we would need the natural gas
59:47
fields to be developed, we would need the
59:49
pipelines to be built, we would need refinery
59:52
systems for converting natural
59:54
gas to ethanol and methanol and
59:56
compress natural gas and liquefied natural
59:59
gas. And we would have to build more cars
1:00:02
that are capable of using natural gas
1:00:04
as well as oil. But the version
1:00:06
of the combustion engine. I know this
1:00:09
from my my time as a contractor in the
1:00:11
eighties when I lived in Rhode Island five years
1:00:13
John, And when I lived there, I
1:00:15
actually purchased a Providence
1:00:17
Gas Company old van and
1:00:19
it was the best purchase I ever made, at like seventy
1:00:21
some one thousand miles. Had a little bit of body damage
1:00:24
and ended up fixing most of it, and
1:00:26
but it was converted for all the time,
1:00:28
the Providence Gas Company had it into a
1:00:31
gas running engine, which is cleaner than than
1:00:33
fossil fuels, which is cleaner than gasoline
1:00:35
and better with emissions. And when what
1:00:38
they did is when they would finally sell the vans, they
1:00:40
would convert it back to gasoline. Because you can't
1:00:42
get enough natural gas to to fill
1:00:44
your tank obviously, So if they had the technology
1:00:47
back in the eighties and I had that truck, that
1:00:49
means the engine doesn't really need to change much,
1:00:51
does it. No, it doesn't. The engine is
1:00:53
really it's really the fueling system and
1:00:56
the firing system that is that
1:00:58
needs to change. The compression
1:01:00
engine itself, the internal combustion engine
1:01:02
itself doesn't really care what it's firing
1:01:05
on. It's just as long as it's flammable
1:01:07
and you can stay right there. That's want
1:01:09
I want to pick up on that point. And I don't mean to rush
1:01:11
it through here, but pop the next our
1:01:14
final round up and information
1:01:16
overload our all
1:01:43
right, as we continue. John Hoffmeister as well
1:01:46
us. He was featured in the movie Pump. The was
1:01:48
the former cel of Shot Oil, and
1:01:50
he recognizes as I do, the
1:01:52
number of jobs that can be created by
1:01:55
becoming an energy independent country. He
1:01:57
thinks we could do it in ten years. I'm hopeful we
1:01:59
can do it in less than that. And when
1:02:01
we are left, just a moment ago, we were talking
1:02:03
about converting the combustion engine
1:02:05
to run on natural gas.
1:02:07
And we are the Middle East of natural
1:02:09
gas. We have hundreds of years of supplies.
1:02:12
Correct me if I'm wrong, Mr Halfmeister, isn't
1:02:14
about that much? Yes, we have plenty
1:02:16
of natural gas for Decadian expenses,
1:02:19
and it's and it's clean burning. Correct. Yes, it's
1:02:21
half the pollution of gasoline.
1:02:24
And it's very easy to convert
1:02:26
a car that runs on gasoline to switch
1:02:28
it over to natural gas and do it safely. Well.
1:02:30
In fact, most modern built cars
1:02:32
actually have the capability already
1:02:34
built. In the movie Pump describes how
1:02:37
the fueling system and the software
1:02:39
that controls the firing system are already
1:02:42
equipped because in China and in Brazil,
1:02:44
the very same companies GM
1:02:46
Board, etcetera. Are making cars that
1:02:48
have to be ethanol compatible.
1:02:51
And so it's just a matter of software adjustment
1:02:54
and and the and so the cars the
1:02:56
car is ready made and want to make that won't
1:02:59
because it's cleaner burning. Isn't the
1:03:01
likelihood of repairs? In
1:03:03
other words, don't you reduce the likelihood
1:03:05
of the need for repairs within the engine
1:03:08
because of the way the natural
1:03:10
gas functions versus traditional gasoline?
1:03:13
In principle, yes, it's a cleaner burn.
1:03:15
It's a hotter burn because you're burning
1:03:17
ethanol high octane alcohol
1:03:20
fuel, which is a cleaner burn because
1:03:22
of the high octane, and nobody ending upon
1:03:24
the driver if the driver is a good driver. Yes,
1:03:26
that engine should get additional life
1:03:29
lifespan. You know, my friend was
1:03:31
the Inventor of the Year a few years back, Keith Koowski,
1:03:33
and he has this company called flame Spray, and
1:03:36
he actually sprays the core
1:03:38
of these engines so they can run at
1:03:40
that hotter, hotter temperature that you're talking
1:03:42
about. All right, last question, what happened when your
1:03:44
movie Pump came out and you were
1:03:46
advancing this notion about natural gas.
1:03:48
You had a lot of pushback from people what happened. Well,
1:03:51
we're still you know, the movie is still out.
1:03:53
It's a wonderful movie. You can get it off a Netflix.
1:03:55
And it is really describing fuel choice
1:03:57
where you can have in addition to gasoline
1:04:00
or diesel, you could also have natural gas
1:04:02
in different ways ethanol, methanol, c
1:04:04
etcetera, and or hydrogen or
1:04:07
electric battery. Your your choice. Driver,
1:04:09
consumer win, consumer choice. But the
1:04:11
pushback comes from the
1:04:13
auto industry in part, and it comes
1:04:16
from the oil industry in part
1:04:18
because guess what. They don't like the competition
1:04:20
and the right
1:04:22
now we're oil are nearly undercent
1:04:25
oil products for gasoline and diesel,
1:04:27
and so they don't like the idea of a competition. But
1:04:29
I say, I'm an oil man. Guess which companies
1:04:32
produce natural gas? Oil companies? And
1:04:36
I have to run. I hope you get
1:04:38
an audience with the President, because I think
1:04:40
you'd be as fascinated as I am to learn
1:04:42
from you all that you know and all the knowledge of
1:04:45
accumulated. When we come back, news Round of Information
1:04:47
Overload, the other topics, news of the day, and
1:04:49
our top story of course, the ninth
1:04:51
circuit and the whole vetting
1:04:54
of refugees and how necessary
1:04:56
it is for the country straight ahead. Yeah,
1:05:01
yeah, So
1:05:10
we want to help you realize these goals by rolling
1:05:12
back burdensome regulations and new
1:05:14
people are regulated probably as much as
1:05:17
almost anybody, or I can think of a couple of
1:05:19
industries that are even worse. Lowering
1:05:22
the overall tax burden and American businesses
1:05:24
big league. That's coming along very well,
1:05:27
and we're way ahead of schedule,
1:05:29
I believe, and we're going to be announcing
1:05:32
something I would say over the next two
1:05:34
or three weeks that will be phenomenal
1:05:36
in terms of tax I
1:05:39
just want to introduce Brian Kuzanna,
1:05:41
who's the CEO of Intel,
1:05:44
a great, great company, and
1:05:46
Brian called a few weeks ago and said, we
1:05:48
want to do a very big announcement
1:05:51
having to do with our country, but also having to do
1:05:53
mostly with Arizona and the
1:05:55
jobs and the great technology that
1:05:58
will be produced. So this
1:06:00
is Brian, and Brian, what did you say a few words
1:06:02
and maybe also talk about the product you're gonna
1:06:04
be making. It's amazing, because thank you,
1:06:06
Mr President. From this it's an honor to be
1:06:09
here today representing Intel, and
1:06:11
to be able to announce our seven
1:06:13
billion dollar investments in
1:06:15
our newest, most advanced
1:06:18
factory, FAB forty two
1:06:20
in Chandler, Arizona, that will
1:06:22
be completing that factory to make
1:06:24
the most advanced seven nimeter
1:06:27
semiconductor chips on the planet.
1:06:30
Intel is very proud of the fact that the majority
1:06:33
of our manufacturing is here in the
1:06:35
US, and the majority of our research
1:06:37
and development is here in the US,
1:06:40
while over of what we
1:06:42
sell is sold outside
1:06:44
of the US. They were consistently
1:06:47
one of the top five exporters in the
1:06:49
country and one of the top
1:06:51
two research and development spenders
1:06:53
in the United States. And we've been able
1:06:55
to do that even while the regulatory
1:06:59
and tax policy disadvantaged
1:07:01
us in the past relative
1:07:03
to the competition we have across
1:07:06
the world. And FAT forty
1:07:08
two is an investment in
1:07:10
Intel, but also the US is
1:07:12
future in innovation and
1:07:15
leadership in the semi connector industry.
1:07:18
And FAT forty two will employ approximately
1:07:21
three thousand direct, high
1:07:23
paying, high wage high tech jobs
1:07:26
at its peak, and over
1:07:28
ten thousand people in
1:07:30
the Arizona area in support of
1:07:32
the factory. And this
1:07:35
factory will produce, as I said, the
1:07:37
most powerful computer chips
1:07:40
on the planet, powering the
1:07:42
best computers, the best data centers,
1:07:45
autonomous cars, all
1:07:47
of these devices are the most powerful
1:07:50
computing devices on the planet. And
1:07:52
an Intel we have a simple saying.
1:07:55
It says, while other people predict the future,
1:07:57
we build the future. Seven
1:08:00
billion dollars going to be invested.
1:08:02
You notice how all of these companies go back to Carrier,
1:08:04
go to Ford, go to Fiat Chrysler,
1:08:07
go to the Ali Baba company,
1:08:10
go to this guy from China that's going to invest
1:08:12
and wants to create millions of
1:08:14
American jobs. All of these companies, they're
1:08:16
loving meeting with the president and president announcing
1:08:19
we're staying we're not gonna build in Mexico,
1:08:21
We're gonna build here. We appreciate the regulations
1:08:23
that you're gonna take away. We appreciate the fact you're gonna
1:08:26
go with the corporate tax rate. We like the
1:08:28
environment that you say you're going to
1:08:30
create. And Donald Trump is keeping his promises.
1:08:32
I mean, I've never seen, nor has
1:08:34
anybody else seen, or Democrats won't
1:08:37
admit it, but it's just a reality of truth
1:08:39
and a fact. This president is moving
1:08:41
at the speed of light. He's moving as
1:08:43
executives move in the real world.
1:08:45
He's making decisions like all
1:08:48
of us make every day, without going
1:08:50
through the painful process
1:08:52
of a bureaucracy. And of course, in the case
1:08:54
of Democrats like Chucky Schumer, the cry baby
1:08:57
obstructionists that don't want
1:08:59
this president, it into succeed. You know what the greatest fear of Democrats
1:09:02
is now that Trump is going to be successful,
1:09:04
that Trump is going to keep his promises.
1:09:07
Think of where we are now. He ordered
1:09:09
immediately the the easing of burdens,
1:09:11
the burdens of Obama Care and
1:09:13
is in the process of working towards repealing
1:09:16
and replacing. And as he said, he's only going
1:09:18
to do it when he gets it right. That might take
1:09:20
longer, you know. Or taking action to freeze
1:09:22
pending regulations and looking to reduce
1:09:24
regulations by s or higher
1:09:27
keeping a promise to withdraw the U
1:09:29
S from TPP, keeping a promise to
1:09:31
put a federal government hiring freeze
1:09:33
in place, keeping a promise that no federal
1:09:36
tax dollars will provide abortions abroad,
1:09:38
keeping a promise on energy,
1:09:41
and five executive actions advancing
1:09:43
Keystone and Dakota Access pipelines,
1:09:46
keeping a promise and issuing executive
1:09:48
actions, and now we are in the design
1:09:50
phase, in the beginning of the construction of
1:09:52
the border wall, with so many even Republicans
1:09:55
all he's never going to build that wall. Oh, it's it's
1:09:57
being built. Or his actions on extreme
1:09:59
vetting, which we're now we've been fighting in the
1:10:01
courts and discussing in detail, you know, also
1:10:04
issuing executive action
1:10:06
on rebuilding the military. Another campaign
1:10:08
promise issuing executive action on
1:10:10
a plan to defeat isis that
1:10:13
will be on his desk in about ten days from
1:10:15
now. Instituting a five year lobbying
1:10:17
band to drain the swamp. Another campaign
1:10:19
promise appointing an originalist to
1:10:21
the Supreme Court from the very list he gave
1:10:24
us before the election, Neil Gorsuch
1:10:26
to the Court. Now, the only thing that is
1:10:28
missing in all of this is getting
1:10:31
the Congress to get off their backsides
1:10:33
and move forward anyway, joining us now to discuss
1:10:35
Terry Jefferies, Editor in chief of CNS
1:10:38
News, Chris Han of the ever expanding
1:10:40
Chris Han Show for one hour a week on
1:10:42
Thursdays and has three affiliates
1:10:45
two hours a week, two hours a week and
1:10:47
has three affiliates nationwide and it's going gangbusters
1:10:50
up to five affiliates. Yet I'm up
1:10:52
there. Yeah, I'm doing some bigger
1:10:54
stops shown. I just I don't want to talk about
1:10:56
this show and some of your competitors. But wow,
1:10:58
I'm sure there's a big trade secrets here that you're
1:11:00
about to give out. But we appreciate it's you
1:11:03
do have a good send, even Terry Jefferies
1:11:05
cracking up. But Terry, I mean, I
1:11:08
know that there were these never Trump for people, and so
1:11:10
I got so disgusted with them during the election.
1:11:12
I just stopped talking about them, you know. And
1:11:14
I look at everything the President said he would
1:11:17
do, he's doing, and he's moving at this. We'll
1:11:19
call it the speed of Trump, a little shock and all
1:11:21
for d C. And the only thing that's
1:11:23
frustrating me is how pathetically
1:11:25
lame and slow Republicans are
1:11:27
in d C. Yeah, I agree with you,
1:11:29
Sean. I think, first of all, the President Trump
1:11:32
is doing an outstanding job. He is sticking
1:11:34
by his campaign promises, which
1:11:37
are great promises, and if he is able
1:11:39
to follow us through on them, he will
1:11:41
be a great president. And to do that
1:11:43
he needs the cooperation of the Republicans
1:11:45
and Congress they've got to be as tough
1:11:47
as he is. They got to fight for the things he's fighting
1:11:50
for. And you know, some of the things you've talked
1:11:52
about, these are dealing with long term
1:11:54
negative trends. We've seen in the
1:11:56
United States of America that President Trump is
1:11:58
going to try and verse, for example, with that
1:12:00
Intel clip your plan, and they're going to invest
1:12:03
money in Arizona and great jobs
1:12:05
in Arizona, and they're gonna export products
1:12:07
from the United States and other countries. We
1:12:10
just found out that when President Trump took
1:12:12
office, we had completed forty
1:12:14
one straight years of trade
1:12:17
deficits.
1:12:20
And you've got the data published by the Census Bureau,
1:12:22
correct and Sean. During that same time,
1:12:24
when we had forty one straight years of trade
1:12:26
deficits, what was happening to the middle class
1:12:28
and working class in America. We were losing
1:12:31
manufacturing jobs. We got to the point
1:12:33
where more people were working more
1:12:35
than nine million more people are working for government
1:12:38
than working for manufacturing. And
1:12:40
the median income of people
1:12:42
who graduated from high school but didn't go to
1:12:44
college was declining in real terms.
1:12:47
So and they were also being hurt
1:12:49
by the fact that illegal alien labor was coming
1:12:51
into the United States and undercutting their
1:12:53
wages, as as well
1:12:55
as US corporations bringing
1:12:58
their manufacturing overseas and hiring labor
1:13:00
over there. So President Trump is working
1:13:02
on reversing those major trends. We
1:13:04
need them reverse. The Republican
1:13:07
Congress sieves to support him in doing
1:13:09
that. Job. Got to correct all the problems that Reagan
1:13:11
caused back in the eighties. Basically,
1:13:15
we really got to go. Is this where you want to go?
1:13:17
Because Reagan created let
1:13:19
me give you the numbers. Because Reagan created twenty one
1:13:21
million new jobs, new jobs. Reagan
1:13:23
gave us the longest period of peacetime economic
1:13:25
growth in history, some quarters as high
1:13:27
as eight and nine percent GDP growth.
1:13:30
Obama never hit hit in
1:13:33
any year, the only president in history
1:13:35
never to hit three percent GDP growth.
1:13:37
Ever, Reagan doubled the revenue to
1:13:39
the federal government. So, you know, let's cut your nonsense
1:13:42
here and let's get to the facts and the issues today.
1:13:44
Even you should be inspired by Donald
1:13:46
Trump's you know, cutting through the BS bureaucracy
1:13:49
and keeping his promises. So he mentioned the
1:13:51
trade deficit which took off during
1:13:53
Reagan. We all know that. And
1:13:55
when Reagan created those jobs,
1:13:58
most of them were government jobs because
1:14:00
he tripled the size of government, tripled
1:14:02
the size of the debt. And yeah, these are these
1:14:04
are laughing problems that have been compounded
1:14:06
by future president. You know that's that's
1:14:08
not true. I mean, if you look at the actual data,
1:14:11
the trade deficits are bigger now. The manufacturing
1:14:13
element of the trade deaths, that is bigger than
1:14:15
now. As Sean pointed out, we just had
1:14:18
the first president in recorded history
1:14:20
who never saw a year three percent growth. We've
1:14:22
had eleven years, a record
1:14:24
eleven years in which the U. S economy has
1:14:27
not grown by as much as three percent. Ronald
1:14:29
Reagan did much more than that in many
1:14:32
years, and he had to work with
1:14:34
a Democratic House representatives
1:14:36
every single year he was in office, and he had
1:14:38
to go to the American people and defeat a
1:14:41
Democratic House representatives to get his
1:14:43
policies in place, including the policies, by
1:14:45
the way, that won the Cold War
1:14:47
during that period. We no longer face
1:14:49
the Cold War. There isn't a favorite union looking
1:14:52
to hegeminize the entire world.
1:14:54
But we have these problems that President Trump
1:14:56
is going to face, and he has a Republican
1:14:58
Congress. So the real issue now as Sean pointed
1:15:01
out, is all the Republicans and
1:15:03
Congress can have the moral courage to do
1:15:05
the things that need to be done that President
1:15:07
Trump is trying to do that will reverse
1:15:09
these long term trends in American society
1:15:12
that are not traceable to Ronald Reagan.
1:15:14
I wonder how Reagan would feel about
1:15:16
his policies towards Rush. I just wonder. I
1:15:19
I don't think he'd be too happy with them.
1:15:21
Ronald Reagan, by the way, Ronald Reagan
1:15:23
went to the Berlin Wall and he said Mr
1:15:25
Gorbachev tear down this wall because
1:15:28
he believed it was possible that
1:15:30
he could appeal to the conscious even
1:15:32
of Gorbachev to actually
1:15:35
roll back from the Soviet designs
1:15:37
are not only controlling Europe, but
1:15:40
in controlling the entire planet. Reagan
1:15:42
had diplomatic relations with the
1:15:44
Saviet Chingion the entire time
1:15:46
he was president, as did every single
1:15:49
other post where never
1:15:51
capitulated to the Soviet Union, which
1:15:53
is what it appearing to be happening. Now. We beat
1:15:55
the Savy Chunion, Trump isn't dealing with
1:15:59
I hear uh, I agree with you that he
1:16:01
beat the Soviet Union. He didn't capitulate
1:16:04
to the Soviet Union. He was what do you
1:16:06
think think about Barack Obama trying to
1:16:08
make a feel trade deal with commun of Vietnam?
1:16:10
Are you in favor of that? He didn't feel
1:16:12
that the Soviet Union or
1:16:15
Russia as it is today had the moral
1:16:17
equivalency of what we do in this United
1:16:19
States of America. So I think Rag will be
1:16:21
very disappointed with some of the things he's heard over the last
1:16:24
couple of weeks. Fine,
1:16:27
I don't think that Donald Trump thinks
1:16:29
the Russians are the Russian regime is some moral
1:16:31
equivalent United States of America. That's what exactly
1:16:34
what he said. It's exactly what he said on Super Bowl
1:16:36
Sunday. Maybe you don't watch football, but he did.
1:16:38
He did say that on the Super Bowl.
1:16:41
So right there, we gotta take a break. We'll
1:16:43
come back. I'll let you guys finish this on the other side of
1:16:45
the break. Eight hundred Dying for One. Sean is
1:16:47
our toll free telephone number. You want to be a part of the program,
1:16:49
We'll get to your calls at the bottom of the album.
1:16:52
Fighting the Trumpatan Liberal
1:16:54
media. One Day edit
1:16:56
time sew
1:17:00
on the Handity Show, Run
1:17:27
the band. They're trying to block the at least
1:17:29
you're stopping. This
1:17:31
is wrong
1:17:35
from
1:17:54
down, down
1:17:57
down? What
1:18:02
are you?
1:18:07
What
1:18:07
do you do? All
1:18:25
right? That was from earlier today. We'll
1:18:27
get into this more at the bottom of the hour. And protesters
1:18:30
in literally trying to stop
1:18:33
at law enforcement vans from leaving a US
1:18:35
immigration office and Phoenix is more of the snowflake
1:18:37
superstorm. Chris, I'm sure you're proud
1:18:40
of them. I'm sure you're proud of Madonna
1:18:42
and Ashley Judd and Ashton
1:18:44
Kutcher and Meryl Streep and
1:18:47
even Chucky Schumer that said and
1:18:49
cried on TV, even though he himself
1:18:51
supported banning Iraqis from coming
1:18:53
into America in a year ago, said
1:18:55
he didn't have a problem with a temporary band,
1:18:57
and he called the president an American. I think
1:19:00
even you have to be a little disgusted by your
1:19:02
own fringe in your party. I'm not discussed
1:19:04
at all. I think that what we're seeing
1:19:06
here reminds me of what we saw in two thousand
1:19:09
and nine, except for there's a lot more people involved
1:19:11
in it, and they are actually using
1:19:13
real facts and not alternative facts
1:19:16
to make their protests known. So
1:19:18
I think this is a great thing. I think that
1:19:20
conservatives are going to try to paint this is something
1:19:22
nefarious, which is what you're doing in this clip.
1:19:25
But I think there's something nefarious.
1:19:27
Do you think a woman that is do you think a woman that's
1:19:29
here in the country illegally that is guilty
1:19:31
of identity theft which can ruin people's
1:19:34
lives for years, should be deported. I
1:19:36
have no problem with deporting people who
1:19:40
yeah, right? And And why did Chuck Schumer in support
1:19:44
a temporary ban on
1:19:46
refugees? And why now does he say
1:19:48
it's on America? Is that politics? Chris ban
1:19:52
that he supported a temporary ban in
1:19:55
he supported Obama's ban of
1:19:57
Iraqis for six months, and now he says it's
1:19:59
on America? Is he a hypocrite? Real facts
1:20:01
on Is he a mask? Is he a
1:20:04
hypocrite? No, he is absolutely not.
1:20:06
Because you're comparing an apple to
1:20:08
an a ban. As a
1:20:10
band, he said he supported a temporary ban
1:20:12
of refugees, there was a real situation
1:20:14
going on with specific types of people
1:20:16
that were banned in that in that band, Let me ask
1:20:19
Terry Jeffrey. Is Chuck Schumer the cry
1:20:21
baby the biggest hypocrite in Congress? He's
1:20:23
one of the biggest hypocrites. There's so many big hypocrites
1:20:25
over there, Sean, if the heart is de German, who's
1:20:28
the biggest, that he may be the biggest
1:20:30
in a senior position of the United States Senate
1:20:32
right now. And I'll tell you another element of the hypocrisy
1:20:35
is we have the Islamic State
1:20:38
perpetrating genocide against Christians
1:20:40
and other religious minorities in Syria
1:20:43
and also in that part of Iraq they control.
1:20:45
And yes, they cornered the United States
1:20:47
Senate into unanimously agreeing
1:20:49
that that was the case last year.
1:20:52
And now you have President Trump put out executive
1:20:54
order that says, if you are a
1:20:56
member of a persecuted religious minority
1:21:00
and you want to get priority in getting
1:21:02
refugee status to the United States.
1:21:04
And one of these liberals come out and say, they say
1:21:06
this bias against Muslims. The
1:21:09
fact of the matter is, if you're a Shia Muslim
1:21:11
being targeted by Islamic State
1:21:13
in Syria, you would qualify under
1:21:16
Trump's order. But so too with Catholics
1:21:18
and Orthodox Christians, who apparently
1:21:21
these democrats do not want to help.
1:21:23
Says, we
1:21:25
know that the refugees coming
1:21:27
into the country under Obama were Muslims. All
1:21:29
right, we gotta leave it there. When we come back, your calls are
1:21:31
straight ahead.
1:21:51
They're going to treat
1:22:03
people shot
1:22:13
down,
1:22:14
shut
1:22:19
head down, shut head
1:22:21
count shut, hit down,
1:22:25
head down. What do you don't
1:22:27
hand up and your community
1:22:29
and under? What do you do
1:22:33
when you're human rights are under town?
1:22:36
What do you do? See?
1:22:53
How am I say it up and see? Hello?
1:22:57
Oh need how by saying op
1:22:59
and see? No
1:23:28
deationeration,
1:23:30
departation, demorational
1:23:32
deportation, departation,
1:23:37
deportation? All right, that's
1:23:39
the standoff at the ICE office
1:23:41
in Phoenix, protesters blocking
1:23:43
the deportation of an illegal
1:23:46
immigrant. Now what do we know about the
1:23:48
illegal immigrant? Well, you know the
1:23:50
person is being deported, but why what
1:23:53
does the woman do? As I've been telling you, police
1:23:55
made several arrests of protesters were blocking
1:23:57
the enforcement vans from leaving
1:23:59
the immigran Ration Office and Phoenix, fearing
1:24:01
that a mother of two was headed for deportation,
1:24:05
and the protests surged at the
1:24:07
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Facility
1:24:10
UH when Guadalupe Garcia
1:24:12
de Rios was taken into custody during
1:24:14
a routine check in with the agency.
1:24:16
According to media, reports. The activist said it was an
1:24:18
attempt by President Donald Trump to deport immigrants
1:24:21
living in the country illegally. Now
1:24:24
fearing that she would return to Mexico, they
1:24:26
went and blocked the gates. But what they're
1:24:28
not telling you here, and I think they probably
1:24:30
should, is the woman was convicted of identity
1:24:33
theft. Do you know how awful
1:24:35
identity theft is? Why is LifeLock one of
1:24:37
our main sponsors. Why do they do so well? Because
1:24:40
identity theft is America's fastest growing
1:24:42
crime. Go to LifeLock dot com. You lose
1:24:44
your identity, people become you. They
1:24:47
literally rob you blind, they use
1:24:49
your credit cards, they can rob your retirement
1:24:51
accounts, your bank accounts, your life savings,
1:24:54
and then getting your good name back is
1:24:56
next to impossible. I know people that have spent years
1:24:59
and years trying to fix the damage
1:25:01
because of identity theft. Anyway,
1:25:03
let's get back to our busy telephones here
1:25:05
as we say hi to Joe
1:25:08
Is in Brookhaven, New York. Joe, how are you? And
1:25:10
we're glad you called sir. Thank you,
1:25:13
Mr Hanny. It's a on. Uh
1:25:15
yeah, I want to talk about Senator
1:25:17
Schuma. Uh,
1:25:19
I am so MORTI funed embarrassed
1:25:22
that he's my representative. But
1:25:25
you see, you're like me. I live in New York and by
1:25:27
the way, you're more you have more of a New York
1:25:29
accent than even Linda. Let's talk
1:25:31
about it, Linda. Let's get some And you
1:25:33
think I grew up without the town's
1:25:36
parents. Well, that's right, I grew up to don't worries,
1:25:38
brother, I love it, that's fine. I love all accents.
1:25:40
Actually, me and my wife were watching
1:25:42
it and he's crying. I
1:25:45
couldn't believe it. They're
1:25:48
cutting heads off over there. They're
1:25:50
killing the Christians and murdering the terrorists.
1:25:53
The terrorists watching this, and this guy's
1:25:56
crying. How can I say, we'll see
1:25:58
I'm allowed to say on the air, you can, yeah,
1:26:00
you can say whatever you want, all right, But
1:26:03
this man, they're using the word on hinged between
1:26:06
him and Elizabeth Warren and that Corey Booker.
1:26:08
But we won't even go there. But what about
1:26:10
our military over there? Let's
1:26:13
watching this. You imagine how these commandum
1:26:15
my rings out there in army. They're
1:26:17
oversee and this is what they're shaying
1:26:19
from the representative back. He's
1:26:22
crying over a couple of refugees.
1:26:24
I am so proud of Mr Trump. Let Mr
1:26:26
Trump know that the
1:26:29
sixty one million or whatever that voted for
1:26:31
him, we're all. We're still here.
1:26:33
We haven't gone anyway. Don't worry Mr
1:26:35
Trump. Chiefs stopping him. Thank
1:26:37
god Mr Sessions is in. Uh,
1:26:40
let's let's keep them out. He's
1:26:42
doing a great job this. Uh
1:26:45
he's so hin. Then I see him. Then we're
1:26:47
watching it again and a couple of nights. You gotta understand,
1:26:49
we're like political orphans. We don't have representation.
1:26:53
And what a phony hip, what a phony
1:26:55
hipocrite standard.
1:26:57
I'm sorry to interrupt, but Lisa
1:27:00
Olden Congressman and Eldan he's
1:27:02
got our backs. He actually wrote me
1:27:04
a letter back when I told him about this sc My
1:27:06
friend told me, we're in a sanctuary county. Stuff
1:27:09
in what and DeMarco
1:27:11
to share it just changed it in the semi because
1:27:13
I called the Brooke Caven town Hall. I quoted,
1:27:15
they said, oh, you've got to call the uh
1:27:18
uh the So I called up to the Governor's
1:27:20
office and I got the representative. Then she
1:27:22
goes, well you have to put it in writings shah
1:27:25
for a response, I said, you tell me we're sanctuary.
1:27:27
He wants a sanctuary state. She
1:27:29
says, well, you know his feelings. I said,
1:27:31
are you kidding me? So? I want to
1:27:33
know something. Where is
1:27:36
the money going from these refugees?
1:27:38
Sean three hundred thirty millies?
1:27:41
Let me finish your point, three hundred and thirty
1:27:43
million Americans about that? Right?
1:27:45
We can't find educated people. We have to
1:27:47
go to Iran, India, everywhere else.
1:27:50
Who's paying for their college? From the girl
1:27:52
from Stony follow the money,
1:27:54
who's paying for them the listen,
1:27:56
listen, you got you gotta understand, and then
1:27:58
I really do a pre shape your thoughts, your
1:28:01
call. And we are political orphans,
1:28:03
and I think it's important that we recognize
1:28:05
that. But I
1:28:07
got it. I got no. But I'm saying, listen,
1:28:10
I'm making a point here. But when you add up,
1:28:12
and I appreciate the call. When you add up the
1:28:15
cost to the educational system in this country,
1:28:17
New York, especially California,
1:28:20
especially Arizona border
1:28:22
states in particular, they have been brutalized,
1:28:25
you know, and then you add up the cost of the health
1:28:27
care system and the impact that
1:28:30
you know, we're paying for all their health care, we
1:28:32
pay for their education. When they go
1:28:34
to jail, we pay for their incarceration and
1:28:37
the cost or in the trillions
1:28:40
and trillions of dollars. Americans
1:28:42
have the right to demand accountability.
1:28:46
We have the right to secure our
1:28:48
borders. There's nothing wrong
1:28:50
with defending our borders, especially
1:28:53
when so many people are
1:28:55
taking jobs away from Americans, when we
1:28:57
have the lowest labor participation rates
1:28:59
since that, and these we have crime
1:29:01
problems, educational cost, healthcare costs
1:29:03
that we're all bearing the burden of paying for. And
1:29:06
on top of that, then you run the added risk
1:29:09
that, well, if somebody comes to America because
1:29:11
they want a job, well, what about somebody crossing
1:29:13
the border because they want to drop a bomb
1:29:16
or or or whatever that
1:29:19
means of destruction and kill Americans
1:29:21
because they think this is what their
1:29:24
God is telling them to do. And
1:29:26
that is a great risk to this country.
1:29:28
The difference between me and
1:29:30
the difference between Donald Trump and
1:29:33
me and versus
1:29:35
these liberals, the Democrats, the left,
1:29:37
the lunatics out there, they
1:29:39
don't care. They don't care if you're
1:29:41
a victim of identity theft. They don't care about the
1:29:43
cost education, healthcare,
1:29:45
criminal justice. They don't care about the
1:29:48
safety and security of Americans. It's just
1:29:50
simple, basic common sense. They're
1:29:53
willing to gamble with your life. I'm
1:29:55
not willing to do that. They're
1:29:57
willing to say, well,
1:29:59
we can't inconvenience a few
1:30:01
visitors. I'm sorry. If you're a guest
1:30:03
in our house and we have a problem,
1:30:06
and it's called radical jihadis
1:30:08
at war with America, we have the
1:30:11
right to know that you're not one of them.
1:30:13
And that's just basic, simple common
1:30:16
sense. And all the charges
1:30:18
of racism and Chucky crying and
1:30:20
un American, well, he wasn't crying when
1:30:22
Obama did it some twelve times.
1:30:25
What it wasn't crying when a band iraqis
1:30:27
from coming here? Was that a Muslim band? Was
1:30:29
that a religious litmus test? Because
1:30:32
using their logic, it would be called that he
1:30:34
wasn't crying because Chuck is a hypocrite. Chuck
1:30:37
is now given into the radical base of
1:30:39
the Democratic Party because they're the loudest
1:30:41
voice. And Chuck is now going to
1:30:44
fight on and resist and obstruct
1:30:46
on everything he can, even though they
1:30:48
have failed spectacularly on
1:30:51
everything that they have tried so far, and now
1:30:53
they're even beginning to give up, and their focus
1:30:55
I think will move to Neil Gorsch and
1:30:58
whether or not they like it or not, Neil gore such
1:31:00
will be on the U. S. Supreme Court. Let's
1:31:03
get back to our phones. Good call. Appreciate it one
1:31:06
Sewan as we say hi to Chuck Is
1:31:08
in Georgia. Chuck, how are you glad you called ray
1:31:11
Sean? Thank you for taking my call. I really
1:31:13
appreciate it. Yes, sir, Um,
1:31:17
I've been a fan of years, for years. I'm I started
1:31:19
watching you I was thirteen and now I'm twenty nine,
1:31:21
so I really was raised with you. You You feel like part of the
1:31:23
family. Um,
1:31:27
oh my pleasure. I was watching I was listening
1:31:29
to Russia. I had just said I should say on Tuesday, and
1:31:31
he was talking, you know, he posed a question, what's
1:31:33
the one thing that can be railed Trump's agenda?
1:31:36
And just gut instinct out loud,
1:31:38
I audiobly said, doutlass gop.
1:31:41
And then when I was listening to your show the same day,
1:31:44
you just gave them a tongue lashing, and I was
1:31:46
just thinking, oh my gosh, we are selling the same
1:31:48
page. Because I
1:31:51
didn't know what Russa said. But I will tell you
1:31:53
that is my great fear Republicans will cave.
1:31:55
Republicans are going too slow. Look,
1:31:58
I hope you'll watch tonight's opening analogue,
1:32:00
and it's gonna be pretty brutal. I'll tell you right
1:32:02
now. I've I've been writing it all day
1:32:05
and it's I'm going right after the Republican
1:32:07
Party. They need to
1:32:09
get up to the speed of Trump. And
1:32:12
if they're not willing to get up to the speed
1:32:14
of Trump, then they need to get out of the way.
1:32:16
And it's really unconscionable eight
1:32:19
years later that they don't have a consensus
1:32:22
repeal and replace plan for Obamacare.
1:32:24
It's it's it's unconscionable. And
1:32:26
then to hear that that's their main focus,
1:32:29
and then they're given a deadline at the end of the year.
1:32:31
That means what We're gonna wait an entire year
1:32:33
till corporations can repatriate
1:32:36
trillions and we lower the corporate
1:32:38
tax rate to incentivize corporations
1:32:40
to hire people. You know, the people that
1:32:42
have been suffering eight years that have no jobs,
1:32:45
the people that have been suffering in poverty and on food
1:32:47
stamps. The American economy which has
1:32:49
been stagnant and and bordering
1:32:52
on recession. The whole eight years. You
1:32:54
know, we deserve better, and these
1:32:56
people need to get get off
1:32:58
of their asses and go to work.
1:33:01
And going to work means staying up late,
1:33:03
writing bills, getting it right,
1:33:05
and doing what they promised. And
1:33:07
I have no patience for the
1:33:10
speed at which they're going, and there's
1:33:12
no sense of urgency, which I
1:33:15
I think we have every right to demand for
1:33:17
them from them. And they
1:33:19
seem to be too afraid of the media, um
1:33:22
and pop culture to have the
1:33:24
same guts that Donald Trump has
1:33:26
and the American voter put him in for a reason,
1:33:29
and we want them to fall in line or we will be
1:33:31
all too happy to get rid of them. Yep,
1:33:34
listen, I appreciate it, but it can
1:33:37
That is my opening monologue tonight on
1:33:39
Hannity, and it's really important.
1:33:42
And I think we've got to put these guys on notice.
1:33:45
They really need a kick
1:33:47
in the ass. You know. I like to
1:33:49
move at the speed of Trump, you know, and
1:33:51
you think about it in your own life, and I
1:33:54
I just my crew and I here have been
1:33:56
talking about this a lot for the last three days.
1:33:59
And I know the schedule of Congress.
1:34:01
I mean, they're off like a hundred fifty days
1:34:03
a year. I'm like, I barely
1:34:05
get two weeks vacation at the end of the year, and
1:34:07
I crawled to the finish line at
1:34:10
the end of every year, and
1:34:12
I don't want extra time off. It's
1:34:14
not my nature. It's not I'm not the big take
1:34:17
a vacation guy and lay on the beach. You
1:34:19
know, when my family goes to a beach, I never go
1:34:21
there. I can't stand sitting there for hours.
1:34:23
It drives me nuts, and
1:34:25
I just you know, these guys have their their expension
1:34:28
of lunches every day and they do a lot of talk talk,
1:34:30
talk, talk talk. I don't know anybody
1:34:32
in their own business. There's not one
1:34:34
person radio or TV that works
1:34:36
for me that takes a lunch every
1:34:39
day. Every single person I
1:34:41
know has their lunch at their
1:34:43
desk. And in New York, you're kind of lucky
1:34:45
because they'll deliver it right to your building. Whatever
1:34:47
you want to eat, it gets delivered right there. And
1:34:50
it is beyond frustrating to me
1:34:53
that they don't have the urgency that
1:34:55
all of us have in our daily jobs. We
1:34:57
don't have the luxury of
1:34:59
going to lunch. We don't have the luxury
1:35:01
of putting our feet up. Yeah, all do
1:35:04
a gloss of lott with sir.
1:35:07
It drives me insane. When
1:35:09
I was when I worked in restaurants
1:35:11
that I was a dishwasher. I had to move
1:35:14
my ass. When I was twelve years old to cook at thirteen,
1:35:16
I had to move. A bus boy, I
1:35:18
ran, I sweat it all night, and to the same
1:35:20
being a waiter in a bartender on a busy night,
1:35:23
I wouldn't stop for ten hours. I wouldn't have a second
1:35:25
to breathe. And it's the same
1:35:27
in my construction business. I'd stay. You know, I've
1:35:29
stayed till two in the morning. I'd be back at seven thirty.
1:35:32
And they don't have that urgency. They're not in
1:35:34
touch with how Americans live, work
1:35:37
and how everybody else has
1:35:39
deadlines and urgency. Get
1:35:41
your ass in gear. And I'm
1:35:43
talking to Mitch McConnell and Paul
1:35:45
Ryan in particular. Guys, get
1:35:48
moving, stay at the speed of
1:35:50
trump. Get it done now. We've
1:35:52
been waiting for years. Stop
1:35:55
with the excuses. Go to work
1:35:58
like the American people go to work every
1:36:00
day. It's such a such a disconnect.
1:36:03
All the breaking news, the
1:36:05
analysis to help you make sense
1:36:07
of it, all this is the Sean
1:36:10
Hannity Show. All
1:36:41
right, that's gonna wrap things up with today, All right tonight
1:36:43
on Hannity. I hope you'll record my opening
1:36:46
monologue because I'm directing it right
1:36:48
at Republicans in the House and
1:36:50
the Senate, and I'm not talking about all of them, especially
1:36:52
the Freedom Caucus and guys like Louie Gohmert
1:36:54
and Pete Sessions and Marsha Blackburn that are not
1:36:56
in the Freedom Caucus. There are people that want to work
1:36:59
and get things done, but I'm tired of
1:37:01
the lack of urgency to fix the country,
1:37:03
and these guys need to get up to the speed of Trump.
1:37:06
We have Michelle malcol on that the latest on
1:37:08
the extreme vetting battle that's going on. More
1:37:10
media bias, it shouldn't shock you.
1:37:13
And what do you hear about a poll that shows
1:37:15
more Americans trust Trump and the
1:37:17
news media? Interesting? Also, the
1:37:19
left wing hypocrisy. Will go to the protest
1:37:21
that took place in Arizona. And that's all coming
1:37:24
up ten eastern tonight, Hannity on Fox.
1:37:26
I hope you'll record the opening monologue. Send it to your
1:37:28
congressman and your senator ten eastern tonight.
1:37:30
Thanks. For being with us back here tomorrow,
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