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November 21, 2024 32 mins

Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, author of March to the Majority, joins us to discuss the breaking news of the day, including Matt Gaetz and Alvin Bragg, the top cop in NYC who says everything is just fine, finding an illegal immigrant robbing his assistant from the Tren De Arugua cartel. Newt has not joined the show since President Trump’s big win, so this is the first time we will be getting his take on the victory. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, we have come to your city.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
And saying you a conscious.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
Will be entire and if you want a little banging here,
I come along Harry. And he's not president yet. I mean,
are you visiting another Hitler?

Speaker 3 (00:23):
Is that what you're saying?

Speaker 2 (00:25):
That's exactly what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (00:26):
As a country, it's very difficult for people to believe
that racism and misogyny they're just alive.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
And well, we're a soccer that the people who see
everything through the lens of race and sex see their
election loss as a result of racism and sexism.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
Freedom is back in style. Welcome to the revolution. We're
coming to your city. Don't the way are against and
saying you a conscious cell.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
Sean Hennity Show, more I'm the Scenes, information on freaking
news and more bold inspired solutions for America.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
Had our two Sean Hannity Show told free it's eight
hundred and ninety four one sewn if you want to
be a part of the program, you know, it's amazing
to me that so many people, the especially legacy media,
don't even realize that this has been a referendum election
on them. They have spent nine years demonizing, attacking, slandering, smearing, besmirching,

(01:35):
doing everything possible to Donald J. Trump, The deep State,
the Department of Justice weaponized, we had we had James
call me fifty one former Intel agents.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
We have Pizo abuse.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
All of this has gone on, and the American people
they heard it every second, every minute, every hour of
every twenty four hour hour day, every week, every every.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Year for nine years.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
And the American people don't trust the major newspapers in
this country anymore. That would be The Washington Post, the
New York Times, the LA Times USA today. They don't
care what they say. They don't care what is said
on CBS, NBC, ABC, they don't care what these late
night comics think. They don't care what the ladies of
the view think. They don't care about celebrity endorsements anymore.

(02:22):
And the American people and this was there's a new
poll that came out by John McLaughlin and it talked about,
you know, the post election issues and what propelled Donald
Trump for victory. Most people voted for Donald Trump, and
a lot of people that voted for commall voted just
against against Donald Trump. But it was his stand on

(02:44):
the economy and inflation that was twenty one percent of
the reason why he won immigration border security thirteen percent.
You know, his promise to save the country and to
fix the mess that he's going to inherit and his
good job record all contributed to this massive win of
the popular vote, the elector college vote. Again, we have

(03:07):
not had a Republican win the popular vote since two
thousand and four. Anyway, he's not been back on since then.
He wrote a terrific column about this new gingrich is
with us and it's the Trump American culture versus the
elite culture, which I think really captures why celebrity endorsements
are dead and meaningless. Legacy media is dead and meaningless

(03:29):
and has no impact. And even former politicians Barack Obama,
former First ladies Michelle Obama, you know, Beyonce, bon Jovie,
Bruce Springsteen, Taylor Swift, it doesn't matter in the minds
of people. But Donald Trump shows up at Madison Square
Garden with Dana White and Kid rock Well seemed to
matter there because the place was rocking. Anyway, mister speaker,

(03:52):
great to have you back. You called this from the beginning,
glad you're with us.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
Well, I was fascinated by the reception at the Ultimate
Fighting championship, and by the picture that was taken in
the airplane of five of them eating McDonald's, and it
hit me all of that.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
What's you by the way, did you say, did you
see RFK Junior's face like McDonald's, Well, I don't like McDonald's.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
Well, and I thought Don Jr. Had a great tweet,
but he just said, Okay, being healthy starts tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
That is a great tweet. By the way, it's not
going to happen for Donald Trump Beau, if you know him.
He loves McDonald's, by the way, so do I. I just
don't eat it.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
Well, and he's looking and he's also got some amazing
genetic pattern that allows him to have endless energy and
to eat McDonald's on a regular basis. But but what
hit me all of a sudden they came together for
me was that America loves sports, and we love sports

(04:55):
in an extraordinary range. The NFL routinely is the highest
rated TV show. You know, the final four in basketball
met me just get down the list, and that the left
doesn't understand. In fact, my newsletter at Gainershroe sixty tomorrow
is going to build on that theme and point out

(05:15):
that sports has a value set that is the exact
opposite of the left. That you know, sports example, believes
in winning and losing. They believe in hard work. They
believe if you do lose, get up off the floor
and go back and keep you know, keep trying. It's

(05:36):
essentially a meritocracy, and it is the exact opposite of
the left. And I think that that's what you what
you've had people talk about this cultural divide. They're usually
need sort of a Harvard fancy music and fancy book level. Well,
what you actually have as a cultural divide between probably
seventy to eighty percent of American people who basically believe

(05:59):
in the court values of competitive sports and about fifteen
to twenty percent who don't. Those are the folks at Harvard,
for example, who gave students a day off to mourn
when Trump won the election, or I think it was
Georgetown that provided a comfort room with warm milk and cookies.

(06:21):
You know, that's totally anesthetical to people who believe that
you go out, you try your heart out, you do
the best you can. If you don't win this year,
you come back next year, and you keep trying. And
I think what Trump came to personify was a return
to an America that is muscular, that is committed to winning,

(06:43):
that's prepared to take on big challenges, and that wants
the American people to have a chance to do great things,
not just the government. And I think it's truly a
watershed election made that way, as you point out, because
it's the culmination of a nine year struggle in which
the entire national establishment tried to destroy him and they failed,

(07:08):
and the American people propped him up, rallied to him.
And because it's not just about Trump himself, it's also
about these millions and millions of people who saw him
as the future.

Speaker 4 (07:21):
It's amazing. You did have great confidence going into this election.
And I was asking you privately, and I was asking
you on the air why you were so confident.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
I thought, I agree. I agreed with you.

Speaker 4 (07:35):
What gave me confidence that I and I didn't lie
to this audience because I never will lie to the
audience or else I'll be like legacy media and they'll
never trust me. But I didn't want to highlight what
well it was a phenomenon that was going on during
early voting, and that was and I had harped on
this for four years, and that is you've got to

(07:55):
bank your vote. It may not be the system we like,
but if you want to change the system, you got
to actually they win elections.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
So I was all day long.

Speaker 4 (08:03):
I was checking in with people on the ground in
Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and in areas where she would have
needed record turnout. The numbers weren't there. They weren't even
close to there, and I knew it was over. And anyway,
I mean, I'm grateful to this audience for many people
doing something they didn't want to do.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Well, I'm looking. I think it was very important because
as the Roosevelt Coalition is being replaced by the Trump Coalition,
we now have the people least likely to vote, which
is what the Democrats used to have, and so being
able to target and focus on those folks get them

(08:45):
to understand that you've got to go out there and
vote if you want the kind of future you believe in,
and if you want to stop the people who frankly
hear you about the future they would create. And I
think it did work. And I could tell a very
good friend who was in the Black Mountain, North Carolina,
right in the heart of the mountain region that had
been hammered by the hurricane. And he said, trust me,

(09:08):
if these people have to walk over glass, they're going
to go vote that they are so angry about how
bad FEMA is, They're so angry at Biden and Harris
that nothing is going to stop them from voting me,
even if they have to walk to the poles because
the bridge is out and they can't take their car.
And he was right. The size of the margins and

(09:30):
just staggering, And that was happening all over the country,
and you ass and this happened with Reagan about two
weeks out. People who kept telling the posters they were undecided,
said okay, I got to make a decision. And all
they had to say themselves was, you know, I better off.
And I was four years ago, I've experienced Trump and

(09:51):
now I've experienced Biden Harris. Which one do I want
for the next four years? And at that point, by
very big margins, they were breaking for Trump and against Harris.
And I think the elite media, look, they can't come
to grips of this because it is them. I mean,
if they would literally have to have a personality change

(10:13):
and probably a brain replacement, because what's being repudiated here
is the New York Times. You saw the numbers on MSNBC, which,
by the way, apparently may be sold and have its
name changed. You've seen the collapse numbers of CNN. The
only cable news that has grown since the election is Fox.
And I think that's because people have just broken away

(10:37):
from the left and have decided that that that's not
a world they want to hear from anymore.

Speaker 4 (10:44):
They also trust us. We tell them the truth. We
pointed out the truth about the economy, about immigration. All right,
quick break more of the former Speaker of the House,
New Kingrid's then your calls coming up eight hundred and
ninety four one Sean if you want to be a
part of the program as we continue, right, who can
continue now? Post election analysis? Former Speaker of the House,
New Gingrich is with us. In my lifetime, there have

(11:05):
been three big waves of the conservative movement. Reagan was one.
You gave me a front row seat to the New
Gingrich revolution, and I've had a front row seat with
Donald Trump. Donald Trump is really going into Washington this
time with the idea that he is going to change

(11:27):
Washington at its core and He's going to get rid
of all the ways fraud and abuse and restore constitutional
order and the principles of limited government and greater freedom.
You were the last person to balance the budget. You
did it four times. And my question for you is,
you know, if Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswami can, can

(11:48):
they really cut one point nine trillion dollars or two
trillion dollars in spending. I believe they can, But I
think that the left is going to freak out when
Donald Trump starts deporting people.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
They're going to freak out.

Speaker 3 (12:02):
I just sort a peace for the New York Sun
pointing out that Eisenhower deported over a million people in
nineteen fifty four. I mean, we have had this long
running challenge. We know how to do it. It is
going to happen. I think you know. The trick is
you focus. First of all, you're at the border under
total control. Second, you focus on criminals. Everybody's going to applaud,

(12:24):
and then you focus on unaccompanied males. Thirty five percent
of the illegal immigrants are males between eighteen and forty
who have no attachments, they have no family. There's no
reason we have to tolerate him being here. So by
the time you get done with all of that, you've
deported probably seven or eight million people, you haven't touched children,

(12:45):
you haven't touched families, and then you can work your
way through all this. At the same time, I would
urge we have to be very pro legal immigration. The
American people actually have actually support legal immigration by the
same margin that they oppose illegal immigration, and so you
can't become the anti immigrant party. You see the anti

(13:08):
illegal immigrant party and the pro legal immigrant party.

Speaker 4 (13:12):
What did you make of Matt Gaetz's announcement today that
he was withdrawing from consideration from age he decided to
do it. What was your reaction? And by the way,
this kind of happens in every administration, doesn't it.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
Sure? Yeah, Look, Trump was going to make twenty or
thirty big appointments and two or three of them an't
going to work out, and this is the first one
not to work out. I think what happened was Gates
thought he was being very clever by resigning early, and
it didn't occur to him that if you then become
nominated for a major job like this, everything's going to

(13:49):
come out. It is impossible to go through the Senate
without everything coming out, and I suspect last night he
realized that he would never serve if all this information
came out, and so you know, he did the right thing.
I thought it would take them another week. In that sense,
I think they reacted faster and smarter than I thought

(14:12):
they might. But again, you know, I don't want to
fully understand what President Trump was trying to achieve. Sometimes
you need to vet people, even if you like them.
You need to have opposition research to come in and say, well,
here's what we're going to go through before you name them.
And this has been true in every administration, and you

(14:34):
just have to live it out.

Speaker 4 (14:36):
Yeah, and I hope that a lot of the other
people get through. I really do, because I think he's
made some great choices. And anyway, the names I'm hearing
are names that will be far less controversial but very
very strong effective candidates. And we'll wait, watch and see
what happens there. Well, I'm sure you feel happy. I

(14:58):
think for the country, this is probably our one opportunity
to really restore constitutional order, to shake up the system
and its core, return to limited government and get rid
of waste for an abuse I hope we do it.
Do you think we will?

Speaker 3 (15:14):
Yeah? I think we will, And I think look, if
they message it correctly, and Trump is a genius of messaging.
Do the Democrats really want to be the pro waste,
pro corruption, pro bureaucracy party, I mean, really going to
stand firmly in line and say no to everything that
Vivac and Elon must come up with. I don't think so.

(15:37):
I think in the end they're going to realize that
they've got to go along with this. I will tell you,
and we'll talk about this inficial weeks. The great concern
I have is how we keep the House in twenty
twenty six. That will be the crisis of the Trump Revolution.
If we keep it, then I think we're in for
a long, long period of governing. If we lose it
and we're faced with the Democratic majority in the House,

(15:59):
we have a real challenge and it's going to.

Speaker 4 (16:01):
Be top I have an idea that I will run
by you off air in the days to come.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
Great, lucky you. That means you get another phone call
from me. How annoying is that?

Speaker 5 (16:11):
No?

Speaker 3 (16:12):
I love it. We've been a long partnership and we
actually occasionly done.

Speaker 1 (16:15):
Good occasionally that's true.

Speaker 4 (16:18):
Mister speaker, Thank you and thanks for all your work
to make what happened this election day happen. You've been
a voice of common sense and reason in the entire
way as usual.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Thank you, well, thank you.

Speaker 4 (16:29):
You're a National treasure Y twenty five till the top
of the hour, eight hundred ninety four. One shot is
on number if you want to be a part of
the program. Sad story down here in the Great State,
the Free State of Florida, actually so heartbreaking on so
many different levels. And I got a text this morning
from a friend of mine. He runs a moving company.

(16:51):
It's called Blue Line Moving. You know, blue line meaning
they support the police, and they have confirmed and he
he sent me a copy of this. It just broke
my heart that law enforcement, at least three Palm Beach
County deputies were involved in a major crash and then
later informed me that all three deputies passed. Can you

(17:15):
imagine what it's like for these families. I mean, they
are devastated at this moment, absolutely positively devastated. That brings
up the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, and your generosity helps
these families after this terrible laws You can't bring back
loved ones. Pas In Point Police Sergeant Christopher David Fitzgerald

(17:36):
of Temple University Police Departments to stay in fatal gunshot
wounds while attempting to arrest a robbery suspect. Now prior
to his premature passing, Christopher was nominated for Temple University
Police Department Officer of the Year. Now sadly it is
an award that he would receive post death. And Christopher
was a great father, husband, brother son, very missed and

(17:59):
thanks to your generosity, you're caring the tunnel to the
Towers Foundation do what they do best. They were able
to provide mortgage free a mortgage free home to his wife, Marissa,
their five children, all in honor of their forever hero.
He will be remembered by many for his passion determination,
like so many in law enforcements, so many that serve

(18:21):
this country and protect our country and anyway, it's it's
unbelievable dedication and he's going to be remembered for doing
all of that, improving conditions for residents in the surrounding
community and its heroes like Christopher that protect and serve
our communities, our country. That you will be helping. If
you'll join us here a team, Hannity, and just commit

(18:43):
if you can, to eleven dollars a month. If you do,
if everyone listening to my voice does, they can continue
this great work because it's really great work. The letter
T the number two, the letter T dot org. The
letter T the number two, the letter T dot org
for the Tunnel to Tow Foundation. All right, let's get
to our busy phones. Joanne is in the Free State

(19:05):
of Florida with me. How are you, Joanne? Glad you called.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
I'm great, Sean. It's pleasure to talk to you, and
thank you for taking my call.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
Thank you for calling. I hope you doing okay.

Speaker 4 (19:16):
Don't don't you feel bad for our friends that are
now experiencing in the cold weather in places like New York,
New Jersey, Illinois.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
I feel terrible for him.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
I don't. They choose to be there and I choose
to be here exactly. No.

Speaker 4 (19:35):
By the way, I do rip my friends a lot now,
like ha ha ha, very funny. When I hear it's
a really cold day or a big snowstorm, I'm like,
how's that snowshoveling coming? By the way, it's sunny eighty
two degrees today.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
Yeah, it helps field bustles.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
Exactly what's on your mind.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
I wanted to just mention this because I haven't heard
his name in a long time. But I think of
Rush Limbaugh, and I just think that if he was
here now with us, to have enjoyed this wonderful victory
that we're experiencing, he would be jumping for joy and
doing a little dance.

Speaker 4 (20:14):
I think he's looking down on all of us and
that he is smiling with Helen on loan from God,
and he is, you know now where he rightfully belongs,
where we all end up eventually. And you know I
said at the time of his passing, I was right then,
right now, nobody can ever replace the Babe Ruth of

(20:34):
talk radio.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
He just can't.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
Absolutely.

Speaker 4 (20:37):
And you know what he would want us to do,
and this I was certain he would want us to
double our efforts and do the work that he'd dedicated
and devoted his whole life to. And that was his passion,
his love of country, his belief in liberty, freedom, God, individualism,
meritocracy over statism, social uh, and he would be extraordinarily

(21:04):
happy for the country. You know, I've gone through different
stages since the election. First, my first reaction was just
utter relief and gratitude to every American and God that
this this disaster didn't occur, because it would have been
a disaster. The next phase where I am now is
like I'm rolling, I'm having to roll up our sleeves

(21:25):
and let's fix everything. Stage I want to do all that.
I will tell you this, I'm if Russia's brother David
has represented me my entire career. Russia's niece is my
personal assistant, and she is just an amazing human being.
And I love the fact that she was so young,

(21:47):
she never knew a lot of her uncle's career, and
I will show her things at times and she's like
blown away and just funny moments. You know, in Russia's career,
there was a moment where he guest hosts of The
Pat Sayjack Show, and it ends up that these people
act up was a big group of the time they

(22:07):
show up, they interrupt the show. He had to close
the show, the audience had to leave, and I'm sure
it wasn't fun for him at the time, but looking
back on it, that was who he was, and the
people would bubble and fizz and react to him in
ways that just cracked me up. And there was nobody
like him and they never will be again. I mean,

(22:28):
he really wasn't a very special He was a great
patriot and a special talented broadcaster that we can all
aspire to.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
Well, I agree with you, and you know, he was
humorous in a lot of ways. You just had to
get it. But I just wanted to take this up.

Speaker 4 (22:44):
By the way, people would get mad when he'd say
talent on loan from God. I mean, so he say that,
and they'd say it was blasphemous. I like, it's not blasphemous,
are You're really that's stupid. He's saying that any talent
he has came from God.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Right, it was so funny.

Speaker 4 (23:03):
I mean, if you weren't in on the joke, I mean,
like the left, they're so humorless, it was.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
It was really it was just a special show.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
Well, I don't want to start bassing the left, but
I agree completely with many many of the things that
you have promoted. And really I've only started paying attention
to politics since Donald Trump became involved, you know in
twenty fifteen. Now, most of my adult life, I was
like busy doing my own things. So I wasn't paying attention.

(23:34):
But I know all the players now and I know everything,
but I just wanted to bring his name up. I
just wanted to have people remember him and just think
about how how happy he would be, and how exuberant and.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
Just so he'd be.

Speaker 4 (23:52):
He'd be just spiking the football like Linda, every second
of every day. He'd be spiking it, you know, and more.
But I also believe he would see this as I do,
and he would express it obviously in his own unique way.
And that is as the biggest, greatest opportunity we now
have in our lifetimes to literally embrace the principles of

(24:15):
limited government and greater freedom and constitutional order.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
I mean, this is it.

Speaker 4 (24:21):
This is probably the only chance we'll get, and the
one thing we have in Donald Trump as a president
that is not afraid to rock things and shake up things.
And that's what he's doing and that's what he's gonna do,
and he'll be successful. I really believe that. And well,
and by the way, he's going to need our help.
And when that moment comes, I will deputize everybody again

(24:43):
and tell everybody, call your senator, call your congressman, make
sure that they vote the right way here. Those moments
are coming, I promise anyway, God bless you, Joanne.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
I appreciate your call. Thank you.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
Eight hundred and nine four one Shawn our number, Jack
at North Carolina. Jack, how are you glad you called?

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Sir?

Speaker 5 (25:00):
How you doing show?

Speaker 2 (25:01):
I'm a big fan.

Speaker 3 (25:02):
How you doing, buddy?

Speaker 1 (25:03):
I'm good man?

Speaker 5 (25:04):
How are you?

Speaker 1 (25:04):
What's going on?

Speaker 3 (25:06):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (25:06):
I just wanted to call and you let you know
that I'm one of them dirty, smelly Walmart truck drivers
that's been out here driving. And I predicted weeks before
the election, Like I said him, I don't even know
if you called a tweet or send an next to
David Webb and Megan Kelly way before the election that
Donald Trump would get over three in electoral votes.

Speaker 6 (25:24):
I think that truck drivers should be polls thry.

Speaker 5 (25:25):
We know more about going on in the country than
than these guys that do the polls. I mean, you
drive around. You can tell when you're in a liberal city,
when you're in a conservative town or whatever by just
looking at the yard signs. And to me, it was
a no brainer. I knew he was going to win
in a landslide.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
Well, you know, it's interesting you say that.

Speaker 4 (25:43):
First of all, no, you happen to be a great American,
and we wouldn't have a single thing to buy in
any store if it wasn't for America's truckers. And we
have to thank our truckers, We have to thank our ranchers,
we have to thank our farmers, you know, the people.
Then the unsung heroes, which by the way, is what
the Patriot Awards are all about. And I get to

(26:05):
host it this year. If you go to Foxnation dot com,
I hope people in the New York area will get tickets.
I'm even going back to New York for a day
to do it, which for me is like a big
heavy lift. That's the only that's the only part. I'm
honored to do it, I really am. And I do
anything because we honor unsung heroes like you, and you're
one of them. The people that work hard, play by

(26:27):
the rules, pay their taxes, obey the laws, raise their kids,
go to church on Sunday, you know, and deserve a
better life and not to have to settle for a townhouse,
as the Washington Post was suggesting, suggesting Trooking has been
in a terrible recession. I have friends in your industry.
I know the industry well, and guess what help is

(26:48):
on the way. Diesel prices will be down. I predict
to you right now, a year from now, the price
of diesel will be a lot lower than what it
is today, and that'll help out all truckers and hopefully
a lot of that money will be in your pocket.
A lot of money will help save consumers. If you
lower the cost of transportation, that means that they can

(27:10):
lower prices at the store and we'll all benefit. So
I wish you the best, and next time, next next
election cycle, call in and give us your predictions.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
Okay, no problem, Sean.

Speaker 6 (27:22):
You another thing that's they go to us. As far
as truckers go. The Secretary of Transportation is an important
role and I just wish you whoever takes that position
understands trucking the way with the hours of service and
everything else like that.

Speaker 5 (27:35):
I mean, I have never really heard anybody talk about
the fact that not only the trucks use diesel fuel,
but now we also have what they call diesel exhaust
fluid that has to be filled up into the trucks.
Also thanks to Obama back when he was president, which
is the additional cost that gets filled in to your
fuel expense.

Speaker 4 (27:54):
It's unbelievable. And pothole Pete spending what a billion taxpayer
dollars on making roads less racist. I'm like, huh, what
are you talking about? And I don't know these said
Thank god we won this election anyway, Jack, you're one
of the people that makes this country great. Thank you
for all you do every day. Appreciate it. Let's go

(28:15):
out to California. Say hi to Steven next on the
Sean Hannity Show. Hey Steven, how are you.

Speaker 7 (28:22):
I'm well, Shawn. Thank you so much for taking my call, Sir.
I really appreciate everything you do. Just listening to you
day in and day out and all these beautiful people
that come together your show just reinforces how great America is,
and how great our country is, and what good people
we have and how much we care about our country.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
Agents. We really are a good people.

Speaker 4 (28:39):
We're not a look, we're not perfect people, we never
have been, but we strive to be a better people.
That's what Christianity teaches us. The first thing you're admitting
is you're you're a sinner, a failure, and you're seeking
to be better. You're seeking redemption, you're seeking repentance, which
comes from the Latin to have a change of heart.
So you are out a person all that's true.

Speaker 7 (29:02):
Yes, sir, which brings to the point. It's sir. Do
you think you put up the names of those officers
ever since Trump? That bullet just missed them. I fell
my way back to God. I'm trying to pray more
off that. I'd like to pray for those officers. If
I do their names, you.

Speaker 4 (29:14):
Know what, we'll put that up, Linda. Would you put
that up on our website. I know from my friend
that runs the moving company that something is going to
happen soon, and when that does, I'll make sure I
make it front and center on my website.

Speaker 1 (29:28):
That's a great idea, Okay, And then I.

Speaker 7 (29:31):
Wanted to get to my point. It's kind of funny quizzes.
And I appreciate you taking this call. I know you
know Mark Levan, and I know Trump, and Trump knows him.
I know you guys are have a good relationships.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
Thank me, God bless us.

Speaker 7 (29:44):
Hello America, Mark Levin here.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
I missed the producer man number five. Get off my phone.
You're big dope.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
I love it.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
I'll say it. Nobody else will say it. There I said,
he's great. Uh My suggestion is that.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
By the way, could you imagine life Liberty and Levin
and Levin's radio show of Kamala one.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Could you imagine he.

Speaker 7 (30:11):
Would lose his mind, he'd like steam come off his head.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
But my gosh, sir, maybe Biden was righting.

Speaker 4 (30:18):
Maybe our a bunch of garbage.

Speaker 7 (30:22):
He used to be our attorney general. I mean he
has experienced who will take him on and I'll smart him.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
I mean, this man is nobody smarter.

Speaker 4 (30:32):
Mark was actually the chief of staffer at ME, so
a lot of people don't remember that back in the
era of the regular era. Look, Mark's one of my
dearest friends in the world. I think the world of him,
and he's one of the smartest guys I know. And
I just know him, and he's very dedicated committed to
his shows. And you know, it would it would. I

(30:52):
just don't think it would be practical for him at
this point in his life. He just had a pretty
severe operation and he's he's in fuller recovery mode. Thank god,
He's going to be okay. And but I mean he's
going to be there the work that Mark does on
the air, to me, is more vital than any role

(31:13):
he'd be able to fill in the administration. That that's
just my my own humble opinion. He's that impactful, he's
that smart, he's that good as I'm sure the president
is going to get a good attorney general. I think
he Matt Gates told me personally, he said, my odds
are like percent.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
He knew going in. He didn't he didn't want to
be a distraction for the president.

Speaker 4 (31:36):
And you know, obviously this report was going to be
difficult for him and his family. And I think that
I understand why I did it. That's just I totally
get it. And by the way, it's it's kind of
par for the course. This is all part of what
happens when a new administration comes in.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Anyway.

Speaker 4 (31:56):
Eight hundred nine one shown is a number. If you
want to be a part of the program, quick Break
will come right back. More of your calls straight ahead.
Tell free it's eight hundred ninety four one.

Speaker 7 (32:04):
Sean.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
As we continue,

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