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April 25, 2025 • 30 mins

Carol Roth, 2x NYT Bestselling Author of "You Will Own Nothing" and a Recovering investment banker  and Dr. Carol Swain, Senior Fellow for the Institute for Faith and Culture and author of The Adversity of Diversity discuss the hot topics of the week

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, thanks Scotscha on an hour two Sean Hannity Show,
eight hundred and ninety four one Sean, if you want
to be a part of the program. Democrats doubling, tripling,
quadrupling down on Abrago Garcia and defending a guy that
we know an awful lot about his own wife, her
own handwriting accusing him of being a wife beater. That's

(00:21):
second and apart from the fact that two judges designated
and decided that they believe that the evidence was overwhelming
enough to declare him a member of MS thirteen and
now deported out of the country, admittedly in the country illegally,
that has become their cause. To leb and Tim Walls,
the vice presidential candidate for the Democrats, decided away in

(00:45):
let's play it.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Now, in this land of the Free and home of
the brave, we have university students being swept up, shoved
into unmarked vans, and fathers being tossed into Salvador and
gulags without I can't due process.

Speaker 3 (01:02):
So I want to be real clear about this. If
you say you love.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Freedom, but you don't believe freedom is for everybody, then
the thing you love isn't freedom.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
It's privilege.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Okay, not true. Two judges made the determination. The Alien
Enemies Act is very clear used by four prior presidents,
with the Supreme Court precedence that says that that decision
falls under the authority the executive authority of the President
of the United States and is not even subject to

(01:31):
judicial review. Don't let facts get in the way of
a good narrative. Just like the student that they're talking about,
Khalil is not from America, was allowed of student visa
and he's leading protests. Now, it's not just speech on
college campuses. Remember we coverage stories of people on Columbia's
campus and other campuses, you know, setting up their encampments,

(01:54):
taking over buildings and asking people whether or not they
were zion and if they were, they were not allowed
to pass. And then universities telling Jewish students, maybe you
shouldn't come to campus anymore and at home learning is
probably gonna work best for you, because they had no
intention of fixing what was obvious hatred and discrimination. Anyway,

(02:18):
here is Frederica Wilson instructing her constituents to threaten Republicans
over mass deportation.

Speaker 4 (02:26):
I've been given out the phone numbers to the House
of Representatives and to the it's one number. That number
you called and you threaten it, and you say this
is wrong. This is not America.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
This is not what we stand for.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
If I made a threat against an elected official, threaten them,
call and threaten them. Okay, that sounds pretty intimidating, but
it does fit into this assassination culture. Let's sit idly
buy Tesla dealersh getting bullets fired into them, and they're
charging stations and cars are getting molotov cocktailed and set

(03:08):
of blaze. You know, assassination calls for Elon Musk, Donald
Trump and of course the Prohamas movement and the left
is their silence has been deafening on all fronts of
every aspect of this. Anyway, here to discuss all of this,
we have Carol row, two time New York Times bestselling

(03:28):
author You Will Own Nothing. Doctor Carol Swain is with us,
a senior Fellow Institute of Faith and Culture, author of
the Adversity of Diversity. Welcome both of you back to
the program. Can you explain why, doctor Swain, this is
the hill that Democrats want to die on because it

(03:48):
defies all logic. This is an eighty twenty issue in America.

Speaker 5 (03:52):
I agree that Democrats behave in irrationally. They see racial
and ethnic minorities slipping from that grasp, and instead of
looking at themselves seriously doing a self examination, they seem
to be digging themselves in a deeper and deeper hold.

(04:13):
There's nothing that would suggest that the American people want
the kind of society that Democrats would impose upon them.
And when they talk about the rule of law the constitution,
it's laughable when you consider how they denied Republicans do
process at every step of the way.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
Yeah, I agree, because it's not true on top of it,
nor does the enemy aliens act. And remember Trende Ragua
and MS thirteen Carol Roth are organizations that have been
designated by the President foreign terrorist organizations. And by the way,
how else would you describe them? You know, this isn't

(04:55):
like a you know, the YMCA or you know the
Boy Scouts. These are our known hardcore terrorist organizations that
are involved in violence and drug dealing and all sorts
of stuff.

Speaker 6 (05:10):
If you woke up from a coma, you've been in
a coma for fifty years, and you said the first
thing someone says to you is the Democrats are trying
to keep violent gang members from other countries, people associated
with cartels, people associated with Hamas, the terrorist organization. They're
working overtime. Instead of fixing the problems for America, they're

(05:33):
working over time to keep those people who have no
business being in the country to begin with in the country.
The person in the comma would be like, You've got
to be pulling my leg, like this couldn't possibly be serious.
I wake up every day and feel like we're in
a simulation or somebody's gonna jump out and go, oh,
we're just kidding. We wanted to see a reaction because

(05:53):
it is absolutely so egregious, so over the top, and
as you said, eighty issue, I think this is like
a ninety five to five issue, Sean. There is nobody
who wants these violent criminals, people who are associated and
defending groups that kill and kidnap babies and rape women

(06:15):
and do horrible, un speakable crimes, that they want them
in the country. There's just it's just absolutely mind boggling
to see them continue to double and triple down on
this and make trips. They're going on trips to go
visit these people as they leave the country. It's just
as I said, it's just not even to be.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Believed, all right.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
So you have the vice chair of the DNC, doctor
Swain David Hogg, and he's saying that he wants he
doesn't think Democrats are strong enough and he wants more
younger Democrats in there. And anyway, he's very progressive, very
radical left more from what I can tell, and keeping
with the squad mentality and the AOC and Kasmin Crockett

(07:01):
and Bernie Sanders wing of the party. And anyway, he's
preparing to organize go all in on unseating veteran lawmakers
in favor of more radicalized Democrats. Are these are incumbents
that we're talking about now. Hakeem Jeffries has now taken
in another stab at trying to get this to stop,

(07:24):
saying he doesn't like this. And on top of that,
the new the head of the d n C, the
chairman of the DNC, Ken Martin, is trying to stop
David Hogg. But this is now, you know, out in
the open and intramural battle. But I don't see Hakeem Jeffries,
Chuck Schumer ever having the courage to stand up to
the radicals that seem to dominate that party has influenced

(07:48):
this week by the horrible pone numbers Chuck Schumer has
in New York, the lowest he's had in decades, and
AOC is now skyrocketing through the roof.

Speaker 5 (07:58):
But the Democrats, sorry, plode right before our eys. And
it doesn't bother me that the extremists are so loud,
because it's like the death meal of the party. I
wouldn't care if they were out of power for the next,
you know, one hundred years. So I'm going to say,

(08:19):
David Hogges, go forward.

Speaker 3 (08:21):
I'm with you, and I'm going to add to it.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
If they want to be the champions for men playing
women's sports, go for it.

Speaker 3 (08:28):
If they want to put.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
The rights of illegal immigrants, even frende ragua or MS
third team members, over the safety and security of Americans,
you go for that. If you want to claim it's
a constitutional crisis when you get exposed spending money abroad
to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars on
the Green New Deal and radicalism, the iiism, wokeism, transgenderism,

(08:52):
I might go for it. If you won't stand for
mothers that lost their children or young men that be cancer.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
You'd be that party.

Speaker 6 (09:01):
Yes, So the common sense part of me wants to
agree with both of you. But there is an indisputable
fact that attention has become one of the most valuable
currencies in our social media and tech enabled age, and
we have by giving attention to these absolutely horrible morons

(09:22):
like the aocs of the world, we have elevated them
and have given them more popularity. And unfortunately, you know,
from time to time and an uninformed populace will go, oh,
I know this person, I've seen them. I may not
know what it is that they stand for, and so
they're going to grab my vote. And that is the

(09:43):
part that scares me. I would rather that, you know,
we stop giving attention and creating the platform for some
of these absolutely horrible people, because even though common sense
should theoretically prevail, you know, we just spent four years
on or president that everybody clearly knew had dementia or

(10:04):
something of the of the sort and was not you know,
mentally there, and we absolutely had no idea who was
running the show. So we've seen those kinds of cover
ups before, and we've seen the laps and judgments, and so,
you know, I fear when you get a bunch of
those people who get a lot of attention and the
people who don't really understand their policies but know that

(10:25):
they've seen their face before that some point, at some
point down the line, that could come back to bite us.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
All all right, we continue now with Carol Roth and
doctor Carol Swain eight hundred and nine four one Shawn
our number. We'll get to your calls coming up as well.
A lot of this, a lot of where we'll be
in twenty six is going to be depending on how
successful the president's policies are. Now we've watched him, doctor Swain,
move at the speed of light, and he's done a

(10:52):
great job securing the borders. It's ninety seven percent more
secure than it was. That's number one. Now he's deporting legals,
even though he's battling the courts constantly and court you know,
judge shopping. Number two, he is successfully. It will take
time going to renegotiate free and fair trade deals that

(11:14):
we've not had in fifty or sixty years. But that's
that's a heavy lift that will take time. He's going
to open up you know, liquefied natural gas and oil
and coal in this country that'll take time to get
into the economic bloodstream. And that he's trying to solve
war in Europe and war in the Middle East. Not

(11:35):
exactly the easiest lifts in the world. He's kind of
picked hard issues.

Speaker 5 (11:38):
I would say that the American people trust Donald Trump,
and he's picking up support from minority groups and people
who were Democrats that would never saw themselves voting for
a Republican and so I believe the American people have
common sense. They see a president they may not understand

(11:59):
everything does, but they trust him. Sean, what I love
about President Trump is that he's not afraid of the media.
There's not a question anyone can ask him that he
can't give a reasonable answer, and so I believe the
American people will give him patience. And there are things
that people don't understand, such as teriffs, but people that

(12:21):
have watched President Trump, they know he has a great
track record. I mean, he always he's ahead of every
one asks, and I believe the American people will trust
him to always act in their best interest.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
And on Terras's Carol Rothvey have two issues to two choices.
We continue to allow friend and foe alike to rip
us off, abuse us, take advantage of us, and we
don't reciprocate, or we give him a choice, free and
fair trade or reciprocal tariffs.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Your choice, what do you want?

Speaker 1 (12:54):
And he's willing to take the short term hit which
is inevitable for long term financial gain and for fundamental fairness.

Speaker 6 (13:02):
Here's the issue for me on this Sean, and you
know that you know, financial and economics is my background.
The issue is that the Biden administration has left the
Trump administration with a hair on fire problem with our
national debt, with deficits to GDP, with the amount of
interest on our debt. And while trade may be an

(13:26):
issue that we could have a long debate about, you
know where that kind of falls in, it's not the
hair on fire issue. And the challenge is that the
Biden administration has basically laid these trip wires or movie
traps all over the place that if there's anything that's
done that lowers receipts, that lowers GDP, it could explode

(13:49):
the deficit and put us into a debt spiral, which
will take any of the patients that we all want
everyone to have off the table. So my challenge is,
I think the choreography here could be rewired to focus
more on deregulation, making the tax cuts permanent, doing the

(14:10):
things to boost the growth side first, to allow to
go in more surgically and address some of these trade issues,
particularly in areas where they're national security issues, like pharmaceuticals,
like shipbuilding, you know, defense products and the like. And
I'm just concerned that the context of the fiscal situation

(14:33):
that was left behind from the prior administration could Oh.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
It's hard, I mean, but I'll tell you, well, the
choices we continue to get ripped off, that's I mean.
So it's hard. It's not an easy call. I don't
want to get ripped off anymore. I'm tired of it.
I think I think that I think these countries will
make deals. I'm hopeful. There's a lot riding on it,
for sure, But you raise legitimate concerns. I'm just out
of time, though, I do appreciate you always. Carol Raw Thanks,

(15:00):
thank you, doctor Carol Swing, Thank you. Eight hundred and
ninety four one. Shawn is on number. We'll get to
your calls coming up in mere moments.

Speaker 3 (15:13):
We didn't talk about it. Yesterday.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
But Linda kind of only worked a few hours and
then she was she bailed on the show.

Speaker 3 (15:19):
He just took off. I did just kidding.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
I think, wait, which in fairness do you you never do?
But so you had something important to do, like I
used to with my kids. I had Daddy Sunday and
that was me and my son, and I'd we'd go
shopping together. We'd get all his favorite foods and I'd
come back and cook them for me. He loved the
way I cooked. He particularly love I don't know why.

(15:44):
I loved my bread and chicken cutlets. Or we'd cook steak,
you know, just ribs, whatever, whatever he wanted, and I'd
make it mac and cheese or you know, rice of
rony chicken flavor. I mean, just stuff that I won't
eat today, or very very very rare, you know, because
I'm all meeting egsitt cetera. And then when my daughter,
we did Daddy Daughter Day. And I've talked about this before,

(16:06):
and Daddy Daughter Today was simple. She gets to pick
one store. I hate shopping. I have the patience of
a gnat. However, whatever store she picks, she had ten
minutes to go in there get whatever she wanted. I'd
be running the clock, and when time's up, I said,
all right, we're done, go to the counter and we'll
check out. And she would go in there, and for

(16:27):
many years she was so slow, until once I took
her friend with her, and then the friend is filling
a shopping cart and she's like, oh, maybe I can
get a lot more stuff. And then I'd also take
her out to wherever she wanted to eat, and for
years that ended up being subway. I don't love subway.
I didn't love it then, I don't love it now.
And I said, I'd be like, sweetheart, no, we can

(16:47):
go get a steak. We can get anything you want, pizza, Italian, anything,
Now let's go to subway. For years I went to
subway anyway. You had a Linda Liam Day yesterday with
your youngest son. And I've known Liam since he's a baby,
was since he was born. He's a great kid and

(17:08):
now he's a football player and really good at it,
and so you had Linda Liam Day yesterday.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
Had to go what'd you do?

Speaker 6 (17:18):
It?

Speaker 7 (17:19):
Actually was so nice.

Speaker 8 (17:20):
You know he's been it's been so busy obviously with
the election and everything, so you know he had spring
break and we didn't do a whole lot. It was
only a couple of days. And he said, you know,
I would really like a day with you.

Speaker 7 (17:33):
And I looked at him and I was like, I
get it.

Speaker 8 (17:35):
You want to get out of school and he goes, no, Mom, really,
I would just love a day with you. I don't
see you, you know, I come in. You're always working,
or you're in New York or you're in DC. And
I was like, all right. So I was like I
got to figure out where I can do this. And
there really just is no good time, right, like we're
all working. There's never a good time. But I took
the second half of yesterday. I took him to a

(17:55):
place here called fun Zilla, which if you're a parent,
you know exactly what kind of place that is.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
It's trying fun. It sounds like a zoo, it sounds
like insane.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
So what was great was because we went at like
three point thirty.

Speaker 8 (18:11):
The kids are still in school. So we got there
and there's only two other kids there. It was like
he went out of his mind. We did go karts, trampolines, dodgeball, trampoline,
basketball trampoline, we did video games, We did foam jumpers.
I can't even tell you. It was ridiculous. And we
were there for three hours, which is a labor of love.

(18:34):
I will tell you that he had a blast. And
then he said, I wanted to go to what is
a very kind of like an upscale steakhouse around around
our house. But he likes their wings, and we're friendly
with the folks that work there. So we went there,
just the two of us, and he had wings and
a steak which he never even got to because he
ate so many wings, and he had garlic bread and he.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
Was like the happiest the place you went to rock
Rocos at the brick Rocos. Did they like fry the
wings or do they do what you do, which is
air fry them and ruin them?

Speaker 8 (19:06):
You know, I don't know how they make their wings,
but what I can tell you is that all of
my kids love them, but Liam really loves them.

Speaker 7 (19:13):
He eats them plane no sau says, no nothing, because.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
You you you've really been unfair to this kid. And
we had him on the air once, it's a couple
of years ago, and I kept saying, you would not
give your son a happy meal.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
It's called a happy deal.

Speaker 7 (19:27):
It's not happy. It's called a heart attack and a plant.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
It's not a heart Okay, a young kid is not
gonna have a heart attack from a freaking small little hamburger.
But don't I don't know a couple of good French
fries and you're like, no, no, no, no, he loves my
air fried french fries better than McDonald's. Meanwhile, he'd never
tried McDonald's. And then one day he's in studio and

(19:50):
I asked him, and finally he got to go to McDonald's.
I said, well, which french fries you like better? He goes, oh,
definitely McDonald's. And then you after, would you try to,
you know, get in his head, manipulate him and make
him say that he liked your air fried French fries
better than real French fries. And he felt bad, but

(20:11):
there was no equivocation on his part.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
We ought to pull the tape.

Speaker 8 (20:16):
I think, like all kids, they love fast food, and
other people take him for fast food. Him and my
mom will go, you know, because that's what grandma's do.
They spoil their their grandkids.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Uncle Sean will buy him as much as as many
happy meals as he wants.

Speaker 7 (20:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (20:31):
He doesn't get that with me, but he doesn't expect
it either. I mean, he got you know steel. Does
he get pizza, Yeah, we'll get pizza. We'll get pizza,
but we go to a restaurant, listen, we do. I
try to do pizza once a week for him because
he does love it, so we'll do it once a week.

Speaker 7 (20:47):
But I really do.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
I'll try to pizza mac does. He loves mac and cheese.

Speaker 7 (20:52):
He loves mac and cheese.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
And he likes McDonald's, except you won't give it to him, and.

Speaker 8 (20:59):
I will give him chick fil A, which isn't much better,
but it's better. It's better than McDonald's in my opinion.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
In your opinion, I have no problem with Chick fil A.
But you don't get them French fries.

Speaker 7 (21:10):
No, No, I'll get them the waffle fries. He loves them.

Speaker 8 (21:13):
And I'm just like, you know, I love that place
because it's a Christian place, so I you know, I
support it, and we're friendly with the folks that work
at the one around us, so it's all good.

Speaker 7 (21:21):
So he gets it there, it's fine, and it gets
a shake.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
I can't believe it that he's going to be wired
for the rest of the day. Let's go to CJ
in Washington State. CJ, how are you glad you called?

Speaker 9 (21:33):
Hi son, I'm good. Thank you for taking my phone
call up here in Washington State.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Oh, thank you. Don't you think every kid deserves a
happy meal to be happy?

Speaker 9 (21:42):
Well, I definitely fed my children happy meals. And my grandkids,
you know, they're they're they're good when they're when you
know grandmother are with them anyway.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
Uh well, yeah, I mean, I think it's the job
of grandparents to spoil kids too bad, and then the
good news is you can to give them back and
then you know, you can send them all jacked up
on sugar and not worry about it. Although there is
some truth to you know, these fast food companies, they
could do a little bit better, making things a little
bit healthier. I think French fries in America have like

(22:13):
thirteen ingredients and I forget which Maha person told me this,
and in Europe they have like three. Why don't we
make them that way? I'm sure they don't taste any different.

Speaker 9 (22:23):
I think they're working on it, and I'm hopeful that
we will see that happen in the near future.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Yeah, but I like a great hamburger. There's a really
cool place by me. It's a barbecue place that makes
a killer burger, and I get it on a lettuce wrap.

Speaker 9 (22:35):
Very good, sounds delicious, love, but.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
I pass on the fries I don't need now. I
did with Robert F.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
Kennedy Junior when we went to steak and shake, and
I got good because they're using the new tallow oil
and which is far superior than you know, all of these,
you know, other oils that are out there that we
tend to use on a regular basis, according to all
the experts.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
I'm just listening to them.

Speaker 9 (22:58):
Yeah, and you know what, we don't have steak.

Speaker 3 (23:00):
In seed oils the country.

Speaker 9 (23:01):
So I've never been to a steak in shake, so
I'll just have to take your word for it.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
There's a great bird. Can't believe I've never had one before.
It was really good, as you know. Anyway, what else
is on your mind?

Speaker 9 (23:11):
Well, you know what, I'm up here in Washington State,
particularly the Seattle area, and I'm a conservative, and I
am surrounded by progressive, uber liberal thinking family members. And
believe it or not, I've been married to my husband
forty years and he and I don't see eye to
eye politics, so we don't think. But the people that
I'm surrounded by, I mean, they suffer from severe Trump

(23:34):
arrangement syndrome. And they have fear like you would not believe,
fear that is like so palpable you can cut it
with a knife. And when I'm watching the news, particularly
I've watched Fox, I listened to Patriot thank God for
the Patriot Excess FM, and I just love what I hear.
It's sensible, it's rational. And then when I listen to

(23:55):
all the other news channels, if I can stomach them,
you know, it's discouraging because around my area it's very,
very one sided. And I just want to hear from
you that you know that we are stronger than what
I feel like in my community in my area. Remember
Seattle Summer of Love. It's really true. They were destructive,

(24:18):
they were horrible.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
Look, the left is always going to be here, but
remember and start at the start with the basics. They
threw everything they had at Donald Trump and conservatism and
we won. And I believe conservatism is and limited government
and greater freedom ultimately will win the day. I just

(24:41):
think what the president has taken on, which was his agenda,
is what he ran on. I don't think any one
of these items is easy. And I don't care if
that's fixing the mess of the economy that he inherited,
or the mess in Europe, or the mess at the border,
or the mess in the Middle East, or the mess
with energy dependence in this country. Everything that he's doing

(25:05):
is hard and it's just going to take some time.
He's also trying to institutionalize change and reform government forever
and go back to original principles. That's hard to what
those is doing is hard, and eliminating ways frauden abuse
is imperative. And so I just think we have to

(25:26):
let this play out and people have to show some
degree of patience and not expect he's going to snap
his fingers and the world's going to change.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
It's not how life works.

Speaker 9 (25:35):
Oh, I can't agree with you more. And you know what,
when he won the first term, I said this, the
reason they are afraid of him, or why he came
in or when he came in, was they knew that
he would catch them. And that is I know this
from the bottom of my heart that the left is
running scared because Trump is not afraid to call him out,

(25:55):
and that's what's happening. But the amount of things that
they have gotten away with, from the media mob to
the just all the propaganda and the brainwashing is it's
just it's it just blows me away. And I'm really
in the heart of it. We are right along there
with California and Oregon. We are the left coast and

(26:17):
I just you know, when he won the second term,
I was elated, and you know, I pray for him
and I pray for our country because you know, I
agree with you. It's like, I just want to be
left alone. I want to just have the freedoms that
I've always known, and I want my children to be safe.
I want my kids to just be kids. Lead the
kids alone, let them in a sense.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
I totally agree.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
And all of that is changing before our very eyes,
and really in record time what he's done and accomplished.
And we'll get into this next week, just as we
hit the hundred day mark. But he's trying. He's a disruptor,
he's an iconoclast. He thinks out of the box. He's
the old way of doing things. Is this is not

(27:01):
anything that he is interested in he's not interested in
what the establishment feels, which is, well, there's only one
way to do things, or the institutionalist feel He's turning
these things upside down and shaking them on their head,
and people are going to have to get used to
a new way to do things and change like that,

(27:23):
you know, fundamental change. Transformational change is alarming to people
at times, shocking to people, but it's also what is
in the best long term interests of the country. And
I think that we'll see over time that this is
going to pay off big time. That's my prediction.

Speaker 9 (27:43):
Yeah, you know, Sean, thank you, and I thank you
for being such a patriot and for just being out there.
And I don't know. Just like I said, I love
to listen to you. I love the whole Patriot channel.
I've learned so much. I feel like I am truly
an educated, thinking person.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
And well, I could just tell you this, I wouldn't
waste much of my time. And I don't watching these
idiots on MSD and C, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, and
I just don't. The only reason we play cuts of
them frankly is I I'm frankly abusive towards my staff

(28:23):
in this sense. I make them watch and listen to
things that I would never watch or listen to. That's
pretty mean, right, I think it sounds a little mean,
But it's important that we know what they're saying. But
I couldn't tolerate watching that crap for five seconds.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
I just couldn't. You know, if.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
They're just so off based, so full of hatred, so
radicalized that if they think they're going to be persuasive
with the way they've been acting since the election, they
couldn't be more off base than they are. And now
they're turning on each other. Usually it used to be
Republicans create circus, the firing squads, and they circle the wagons.
Now this time they've got the circular firing squad. We're

(29:05):
circling the wagons for once, and I hope it stays
that way. Anyway, I gotta run, CJ. God bless you.
Let night your heartbeat troubled.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
The final hour of the Sean Hannity Show was up next.
Hang on for Sean's conservative solutions.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
The average family saves close to one thousand dollars a month,
again on average. And anyway, well, you say, well, a
big company gave me a free phone. Okay, did you
look at the fine print, Because a lot of these
big carriers require you to sign up.

Speaker 3 (29:41):
For not one line, but four lines.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
Then you pay a massive activation fee, and then you're
paying one hundred dollars a month for stuff that you're
never gonna want, need or use ever. Now you can
get a free phone. Pure Talk has a much better offer.
You get a free phone with a qualifying plan thirty
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(30:06):
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Is style pound two to fifty Say the keyword save
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(30:26):
Galaxy with a qualifying plan when you switch to Pure
Talk Wireless by Americans four Americans.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
We'll continue all right, quick.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Break and your calls coming up this Friday, eight hundred
and nine, four one sean if you want to be
a part of the program.

Speaker 3 (30:38):
As we continue,

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