Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, let its get a simple man, and that
can only mean one thing on this radio program, all
things self proclaimed simple man. That means all things Bill O'Reilly,
All things Bill O'Reilly at bill O'Reilly dot com. Is
an upcoming book called Confronting Evil, Assessing.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
The worst of the worst.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
And of course, we will, as per usual, not be
given Bill O'Reilly a cupcake interview. We get very very
deep in the paint with those interviews. Mister O'Reilly, sir,
how are you happy Wednesday?
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Thank you? Thanks for mentioning the book. It'll be out
September ninth, and putin mal Hitler and the Ayatola Homania
on the cover, eight others inside and what we find
out a putin that's the lead for the book. So
I think you're going to be interested. We'll get it
to you and probably a little left Memorial Day, we'll.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
Have a galley, you know what.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
You've always very generous and give me early copies of it,
and I do appreciate that.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
I do.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
I feel like I'm in the know when I get that.
You will not be surprised to know. I checked out
bill O'Reilly dot com and I read your take on
the Democrats, your current take on the Democrats, and I
think you was spot on. He said, they're not trying
to solve difficult situations. They're solely interested in opposing Trump.
(01:20):
I call that reverting to form. That's all they really know.
And he said, you know, what are the Democrats solution
at thirty seven trillion dollars in debt to illegal drugs
being smuggled in from Mexico, and I'd add China to that,
to ending wars in Europe and the Middle East, to
the yearly trillion dollar trade deficit, to preventing a ran
(01:42):
from building nuclear weapons, to the exploding costs of health care,
and you rightly pointed out about Biden, he had no
specific plans to improve any of these things. I would
argue that he made things dramatically worse and handed off
a mess to the Trump administration. And it looks like
the party is carrying on in Joe's tradition. I would
(02:03):
even argue that they've they've they're in the middle of
a massive identity crisis and seem to be leaning towards
the radicalism that defines their party today, which is even
further left than Joe. But you know, what are they offering,
bill except Kasmin Crockett, AOC the Squad and Bernie Sanders' grandpa,
(02:25):
Bernie Well.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
I think there has there should be a law that says,
if you go on television and criticize a policy, then
you should have to have a better policy, and then
it should be a misdemeanor if you don't, so you'd
be handcuffed right on the set of the Hannity television
program and led away. Because it's such a waste of
(02:49):
time and insulting to people watching and listening on the
radio when you get critics up there who say, oh,
the times are terrible, that said, and then you go, well,
what would you do instead? Are you okay with a
trillion dollar a year deficit in trade? I asked that
(03:11):
question last week to James Carvil. I don't know whether
you saw that or not part of the town hall
we did, and carbal I did not.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
What was his answer, Carbo's gotten crazy.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
The old James Carble that was part of the era
of big government is over, the end of welfare as
we know it. You know that Carvil's gone. He's just angry,
very very angry, and seemingly a times crazy but he's one.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
Of the main critics of this tariff situation. And then
very simple, Okay, it might not work, that's true. I
believe it's going to work. My sourcing on it says
that this meeting in Switzerland this coming weekend with the
(03:57):
Chinese and the American delication is the first step to
stopping this trade war. And it's a serious meeting.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
By the way, I know it's a serious meeting. I
have my sources as you have yours, and I could
tell you and this is what I've been predicting from
the beginning. This is economically you can use an analogy
and say it's mutually a sure destruction. Kinda needs access
to our markets. That's why they have to come to
the table. Now we have things we need from them.
(04:29):
Now American consumers want cheap items. That's part of it.
But the more important part of it is Kinda, unlike
most of the rest of the world, was smart enough
to go forward with these rare earth minerals, and for
the time being we are getting we will be independent
of it by the end of the Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
We do need that.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
So it's in everyone's best interest to make a deal,
which I think it will be hard to make, but
will happen.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Yeah, I agree that the trade war is not going
to come to a a much worse level than it
is now. So then once people's fears are laid and
the sock market begins to take on some momentum and
the dollar firms overseas, then I suggested that if it
(05:18):
all kicks in the way President Trump's vision has it
kicking in, that trouble will go into Ronald Reagan's territory. Remember,
Reagan in his second term was celebrated after a bumpy
first term. After Carter destroyed the American economy, it took
a while for Reagan to put it back together. It's
(05:39):
the same statement.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Now, we suff at a recession for the first two years,
and remember it took him much longer than it's seems
to be taking. Assuming the one big beautiful bill gets passed.
It's it took Reagan two years to get his economic
bill passed, and that killed him in the midterms.
Speaker 3 (05:57):
That's right, and his approval rating was low, but part
of that is because you be shot and almost killed.
So they took him off the map for about three
quarters of a year. As they wrote in Killing Reagan.
But when you said that Biden is really shocking, and
I'm not using that word in an overstatement. It is
(06:20):
really shocking on how he ignored, not just couldn't do it,
He ignored these unlievable problems just turned.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
He didn't just ignore them, Bill, he lied and said
that they didn't exist. He said the border was closed
and the border was secure. He said inflation was transitory.
I mean every you know. He just denied the truth
and reality of everything, and the deficit, the debt went
through the roof and denied that too.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
In the media covered for him, and.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
That's why you had that shock. When Trump comes in
and tries to correct all of them at the same time.
And you can debate whether maybe he could have spaced
it out a little bit and lessened the pain, but
they had to be confronted. You just cannot have an
open border, and Trump that's just big victory so far.
(07:15):
And then when you're looking at a thirty seven trillion
dollar national debt where people don't understand that before he
left office, Biden signed paperwork that would have extended the
debt ten trillion more dollars, crazy funded and people don't
(07:35):
understand why those is necessary why Musch came in. Yes,
wasteful spending, crazy stuff, Sure, that was the headline. But
when you had an administration, it was basically just okay,
every single thing, every spenditure you could possibly have. In
ten years, we had a fifty trillion dollar debt. And
(07:57):
I'll give you one example, because this is a big
Democratic began the talking point medicaid. Medicaid is so far
out of control because states like California use federal money,
which funds most of Medicaid to the states, to pay
the health costs of undocumented migrants. They use it for
(08:19):
social programs like dance lessons in poor neighborhoods, things like that.
And there's no Biden made no attempt to rain any
of this in it all, none of it. And so
then when you have a new president coming to go
maybe going to stop all of this because we simply
cannot continue on this bankruptcy projection. And then you get
(08:43):
to his party going no, no, you can't stop anythingding,
I don't know one program the Democrats want to stop
or cut outside of the Defense Department. Do you know
one problem?
Speaker 2 (08:54):
No, not at all.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Well, here's what I see, and this is what I
think you're you're completely on the right track here, and
hear me out on this. Those already headed towards two
hundred billion dollars identified that they can find waste, fraud, abuse, corruption,
and instill savings in some discipline in the budgetary process.
(09:20):
Since the president even began threatening tariffs, over eight trillion
dollars from countries and companies has been committed to be
spent in this country on manufacturing in the next four years,
including auto manufacturing, pharmaceutical manufacturing, semiconductors, things that are important
to national security. The tax cuts that will be made permanent,
(09:42):
including no tax on tips, social security, or overtime. Well,
Reagan dropped the top marginal rate from seven eighty to
twenty eight percent. Revenues to the government doubled. Unfortunately, Washington
spent a buck twenty five for every new dollar he
brought in. And add to that the president's commitment energy dominance,
which is I think the area where we become an
(10:04):
energy rich nation. That to me, foundationally is what gets
us to what you are describing as a period of
great economic hope and prosperity. And added to that is
the Republican Party under Donald Trump will become the party
of hard working men and women again, because opportunities are
(10:25):
going to be be you know, abundant in this country
for high paying career jobs.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
Look, if Trump realizes the potential that he has laid out,
and that the American economy becomes more self sufficient, then
he will go down as one of the greatest presidents
in the history of the country, despite all of the
rhetoric and all of the controversy and all of that,
(10:54):
because the American people, you hear Bernie Centers and Alcasio
Cortez and crafts out, are the income disparities? Are the
billionaire is oligarchy? All of that? Well, how do you
ever think you're going to close that if you don't
have an infrastructure that pays workers more money? See that,
(11:14):
That's a question I would ask Bernie Sanders. He couldn't
possibly answer it, because Barnie's not that smart. Okay, But
you're you're screaming up there about income inequality. That's all
you do.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Yes, you mean the tour that he took with AOC
on a private jet. Is is the private jet part
of the oligarchy that they're fighting?
Speaker 3 (11:37):
That shows their their sensitivity to the issue. But they
don't understand how you have to restructure an economy to close.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
That in See, you and I care about the same thing,
and I'll use your your term for it, the folks.
Because we were the folks, we are the folks. In
other words, our backgrounds make us very sympathetic to the
people that really do make this country great. The people
(12:09):
that listen to this program, that watch our shows, uh,
and have been so loyal to us over the years.
They're the people that make this country great. Bill, And
they're the ones I'll use another bill, O'Reilly term, that
have been hosed by their government for years. We had
four years of complete inaction, denial, and outright lying, and
(12:29):
these problems have got dramatically worse. And Donald Trump, with frankly,
with lightning speed, is addressing all of these big issues
at once. It's a very heavy lift, but it's it's
it's necessary if we're going to save the country.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
You know, it's interesting because Trump and Musk are so wealthy.
It's just beyond comprehension. I mean, they don't have to
worry about any kind of building.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
You're kind of right up there, O'Reilly. You know, you're
pretty close.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
Well not nut zone believe me. But you would think
that they might not care because a lot of Olivegard's
billionaires don't. But it seems and the last time I
talk to President Trump, I do most of the listening
when I talk to him on the phone, I don't
(13:21):
really badger him or anything. It seemed that he was
distressed by the failure of the American people to understand
the bigger picture, what you get from the tariffs. It's
difficult to get the deals he thinks he's going to
get them. But anything worth having is difficult. Can your
(13:43):
mom tell you that? Everybody my mother told me.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
If it's anything worth while in life is hard.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
That's right. But if Trump can succeed in changing the
American economy from basically a service to a manufacturing thenuig's
will rise much faster than if you kept the status quo,
which the Democrats want to do. See, it's okay to
(14:14):
say oligarchs, billionaires, income, read you know all of this,
But if you don't have a plan and they don't,
how are you ever going to improve anything? And that's
the campation that I have because I don't think these
people are genuine.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
We appreciate you, Bill O'Reilly all things O'Reilly or Billoreilly
dot com.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
And uh, good to talk to you, my.
Speaker 3 (14:34):
Friend, same thanks for having me.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
What is this.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
Guy's name on MSDNC. I guess he's a regular contributor.
What is it Ellie Missedall? Miss Ellie Misstall?
Speaker 2 (14:47):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
Do you know who Ellie Mistall is? He's some professor
or something. You know anything about him? You know anything
at all?
Speaker 2 (14:54):
I know he's a liberal hack. I think that encompasses
all of my thoughts on Ellie Mistall.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
There you go. This is what he said. An MSDNC
has just gone off the rails. They are out of
their minds. Just just listen to what he says.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
Along the rails. Boy, ol, boy, you're feeling good today?
Being kind? I'm being kind. Listen.
Speaker 4 (15:16):
If I get shot, if I get murdered by an
undocumented immigrant, please tell my children.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
I did not care that they were undocumented.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
I get shot, I get killed by an illeus. I
don't care that it's an illegal I care. I care
that our government literally had the most preventable national security
unmitigated disaster and allowed you know, twelve fourteen, fifteen, whatever
the number is, unvetted illegal immigrants into this country, including
(15:49):
known terrorists, murderers, rapists, violent criminals, cartel members, and gang members. No,
that would bother me, and I wish my family could
actually sue them. Of course, it's difficult to sue your
federal government for screwing up. As far as I'm concerned,
these individuals that let this happen blood on their hands, period,
(16:11):
end of sentence. They're responsible, and the whole time we
need Congress to act well. Donald Trump proved that was
a lie too, on top of the lie that the
borders closed and the border secure. Let me take you back,
because this issue of Joe Biden is cognitive state, another
big lie and collusion with the legacy state run, legacy
(16:32):
media mob and Democrats. They're all now defending themselves from
these idiotic statements they made. Circle back Chensaki saying, you know,
I have a hard time keeping up with him. And meanwhile,
years earlier, we were pointing out what a cognitive messy is.
And let's go back to March of twenty twenty four,
(16:53):
Liberal Joe, Liberal Joe on his show, this is what
he said about Joe Biden being his best self right
now intellectually et cetera.
Speaker 4 (17:03):
Listen, start your tape right now, because I'm about to
tell you the truth and f you if you can't
handle the truth. This version of Biden, intellectually, analytically is
the best Biden ever, not a close second.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
And I've known him for years.
Speaker 4 (17:22):
The Prasnskis have known him for fifty years. If it
weren't the truth, I wouldn't say.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
It really intellectually, Really, this is March of twenty twenty four.
There's not a single person with eyes in there in
their head that can see that that would agree with
that stupid statement. So I guess we should all go
(17:48):
f ourselves. Oh okay, Liberal Joe. Now why do I
say that? Because now, Liberal Joe, because he has such
great judgment in people, is prasy AOC as someone that
can carry the democratic message forward. I love him saying this,
to be very honest, let's play it.
Speaker 4 (18:08):
I understand that AOC may be more progressive than a
lot of people. I also understand that she's one of
the most articulate, exciting people in the democratic fields.
Speaker 2 (18:21):
He goes out with Ernie Sanders and yeah, she.
Speaker 4 (18:24):
Just draws so many People's very good, very effective in hearings.
They need somebody young like AOC. And again it's not
about ideology, you know. They she can carry the message
forward for a Democratic party that really needs to reach
out the younger Americans.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Really, I mean, he's got liberal Joe is just this
great ability to you know, ascertain the character of people
that are in high office or potentially of ambition to
run for high office. All right, let's get to our phones.
Let us say hi to Rick and Rhode Island. Rick,
where are you Rhode Island? Glad you called?
Speaker 2 (19:01):
Sir?
Speaker 5 (19:02):
Hey, Sillan used to talk to you, my friend.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
Nice to talk to you. What's going on? Where in
Rhode Island do you live?
Speaker 5 (19:08):
I live in Eastern Providence, right? And where did you
live when you were here?
Speaker 2 (19:12):
I lived in Warren.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
I wasn't that far away, maybe fifteen minutes away from
where you are.
Speaker 5 (19:17):
You were in Warren. I graduated nineteen seventy nine Warren
High School.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
Wow, I mean you know what? It was a great town,
very New England. I love the architecture there. For a
short time I worked for Blount Marine in Warren, Rhode Island.
Speaker 5 (19:35):
My dad and my dad was electric in a Blount
Marine for twenty three years.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Your yo, your dad worked for Bloun Marine.
Speaker 5 (19:43):
Yep, he was headn electrician for twenty three years.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
I was on your mind today.
Speaker 5 (19:48):
How stupid the Democrats think that we must be to
keep saying that, Oh I never saw Joe Biden with
any decline. He was fine. He was so sharp we couldn't.
Speaker 6 (19:58):
Keep up with him.
Speaker 5 (19:59):
Oh he got more are done in the day that
most people get done in a month. Come on, in
the meantime, we're watching him shake hands with people that
are not there, say that he met with foreign leaders
that died twenty years ago, calling on reporters that that
I had also passed away, can't find his way off
the stage or walk a set of stairs. And they're saying, oh,
he was sharp as attack. We never noticed any decline.
(20:21):
They must think we're so stupid that we're just going
to say, oh, they never saw any decline. Oh we
must not have saw what we think we saw. Come on,
what do you think showing.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
The fact that they're sticking to the lie. Still, let
me let me just sum up how right you are?
Why playing this.
Speaker 7 (20:41):
The political coverage. Look some of the political players and
some of the let me ask ritrophy question.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
That kind of sums it up. Rick.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Anyway, good call my friend, all my best to my
friends in New England. Uh, let's say hi to Mike
and Mississippi. Mike, how are you glad you called?
Speaker 8 (21:19):
Doing great? I'm doing great. Mister Hannity, how are you
doing today?
Speaker 1 (21:23):
I'm good man, I'm doing good today. You sound like
you're doing good. I love when people are upbeat. You
know what, there's a lot in life that's not perfect.
There's a lot we should be grateful for, and it
sounds like you have a grateful heart. I can hear it.
Speaker 8 (21:35):
Everybody asked me how you doing? And I just tell
them any better?
Speaker 6 (21:38):
And I couldn't stand it.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
So I'd love that answer.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
You know what the worst part is is like, you
know when you say casually, oh, how's everything, and then
somebody goes on a long rent telling you how miserable
their life is, and you're like, why did I ask?
Not that you don't want to, you know, sympathize with
people or have empathy for people, but there are moments
where like, uh, I shouldn't have asked that.
Speaker 8 (22:01):
Question, right, but you kind of feel bad about it.
Speaker 5 (22:04):
Sometimes I give it you do you do.
Speaker 8 (22:07):
You a great American, sir. Listen to you all the
time in my truck when I'm driving up and down
the road keeping America.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Rowland, Well, thank you for what you do in.
Speaker 8 (22:19):
Crockets and the Democrat Party in general against people in wheelchairs.
I don't get it.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
I don't get it either.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Look, I've had situations in my career when I'm on
the road that for security reasons, I've gotten I've gotten
treatment that I don't want, need, or ever desire. And
(22:49):
then sometimes security people overrule you, depending on what the
scenario or situation is. I've had such such situations where
you know, I've had threats or situations where people are violent,
and you know, I saw the incident at the airport.
It sounds like she was this was just an entitled incident,
And you know what, I'd rather just wait in the
back of the line, you know, just like when I
(23:11):
go to the grocery store, I wait online, I've picked,
I try and picked the shortest line. Then I just wait,
or I just do my own self check out, which
I always love doing and because I think I'm really
fast at it, and I find those barcodes quick and boom,
boom boom, boom boom.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
I packed my own bags. I'm out of there. I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
I mean, I sometimes you don't know, and I'm not
making an excuse for it or her. But I can't
tell you how many times I've been walked into events
through kitchens and back areas of hotels in the course
of my life. And it's only because when you're a
public figure, there are people out there that don't like you,
(23:51):
and it puts other people also in a situation that's
not safe, and I don't like to do that to
other people. It can get a little more complicated, hated
and nuanced. But I'm not making excuses for her. That
seemed pretty entitled to me.
Speaker 8 (24:05):
Yeah, well, what brought it to me like that was
what she said about the governor in the wheelchair, calling
him Governor hot Wheels and all that, And to me, that's.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
I was just mean. Let me let me play with
let me remind people what she.
Speaker 9 (24:19):
Said, because we in these hot ass Texas streets. Honey,
y'all know, we got Governor hot Wheels down there. Come
on now, and the only thing hot about him is
that he is a hot ass mess honey.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
So so yes, and she thinks she might be the
future and the leader of the Democratic Party. She said
that I don't know, but I might be. I don't
think so. Mike and Mississippi, we can all learn from you,
my friend. God bless you, and God bless your family.
Speaker 8 (24:53):
Buddy, hik Sean.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
Thanks quick break, right.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Back, more of your call straight ahead, eight hundred and
ninety four one, Sean, if you want to be a
part of the program as we roll along.
Speaker 10 (25:01):
Today, Next our final round up and information overload hours.
Speaker 1 (25:17):
All right, we get back to our busy phones. Eight
hundred and nine to four to one. Shawn is a
number few want to be a part of the program,
Asher Illinois, Next, Sean Hannity Show.
Speaker 11 (25:26):
Hi, Sean, thanks for having me on.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
Thank you wondering.
Speaker 11 (25:31):
I was wondering about Israel. What's what's like the whole
policy going on in the White House and between them
wells the new attack. I don't know what's going on really, well.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
We we thought we had an agreement, uh with the Hooties.
My guess is in a message to Iran. You know,
Trump used bunker buster bombs to pound the hoodies in
a submission, and then they got in touch with the
White House said they don't know Moss, they didn't want
anymore now. The Supreme Political Council, the huti's Presidential Council,
(26:06):
stated that they have indirectly informed the US that continued
escalation would impact the President's plan visit to the region,
emphasizing that this was the only message conveyed to me.
I read that as the Iranians got to them and said,
how dare you say? No Moss and the fights over
(26:26):
and we're gonna not listen to Iran That's my interpretation
of it. I see, I think, and the net result
will be they're going to continue to get the crap
pounded out of them, and there's not a damn thing
they'll be able to do.
Speaker 6 (26:42):
Right.
Speaker 11 (26:42):
Also, I had an idea for President Trump that in
honor of the US twenty fifth birthday, he should polish
the Statue of Liberty and make it back to the
copper color. Make like a nice ceremony.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
I mean, that's not a bad idea, not a bad
idea at all.
Speaker 11 (27:00):
Pretty good enough.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
It's two it's two.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Hundred and fifty, by the way, but you know's not
let's not split hairs. Yeah, all right, ash I appreciate you.
God bless Texas Cherry. How are you glad you called.
Speaker 6 (27:13):
Hi? Sean fan since nineteen ninety six from the Sean
Hannity and Alan Colmes days.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Well, thank you, my friend.
Speaker 6 (27:20):
What's going on the eleventh Amendment? Sean? In there, it
has a closet Citizens and subjects of foreign States do
not have the judicial power of the United States, and
shall not be construed or extended to any suit in
(27:41):
or in law or equity.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
MM.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
I'm I'm pulling out my Constitution because I have it
right here in front of me, as I always do.
And the text of it is, is that an amendment
of the Constitution, you know, ratify this is seventeen ninety
five restricts the ability of individuals to bring suit against
states of which they are not citizens in federal court.
(28:08):
It was adopted to overrule a Supreme Court decision, and
in that case, the court held that states did not
enjoy sovereign immunity from suits made by citizens of other
states in federal court. And it establishes the federal courts
do not have the authority to hear cases brought by
private parties against the state. There's a lot to this
(28:30):
and it there's a lot of legal What is your
biggest point of it? Because the judicial power of the
United States shall not be construed to extend to any
suit in law or equity commenced or prosecuted against one
of the United States by citizens of another state, or
citizens or subjects of any foreign state. You're talking about
the foreign State provision.
Speaker 6 (28:51):
Yes, sir, And it has to do with the people
conclaiming that the due process is due to people that
are not citizens states, but are citizens of a foreign
state under the fifth and fourteenth Amendment.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
So yeah, I think your interpretation is correct based on
the actual reading of the Amendment. I do, and I
think it's legally some but I got to run them
up on a heart break here. Thank you, my friend.
Eight hundred and nine four one Sean. If you want
to be a part of the program, Look, it is
not every day that you meet great people. And I
met two great people. One great person, but him and
(29:29):
his father. I'm talking about Peter Harris, and it was
him and his dad that showed nothing but a passion
for putting real healthy food on your table. And one
of the great products I've been telling you about grainberry
cereal pack with antioxidants. Now, when it comes to dinner,
they have this product that you want to remember. It's
(29:51):
called Silver Palette Pasta Sauce. It's incredible. It's not your
average pasta. Now, Silver Palette they use a blend of
holes and Horizano and California tomatoes. Is no added sugar,
there's no junk. It is clean, honest ingredients, garlic, basil,
extra virgin olive oil, family owned, quality driven.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
It is delicious.
Speaker 1 (30:13):
And when you go grocery shopping, don't forget the name
Silver Palate Pasta sauce. You can get classics like Marinara
low sodium, Marinera, tomato basil, and of course there's Silver
Palate pizza and vodka sauce, the best I've ever had.
You're gonna love it. Just remember the name when you
go grocery shopping, Silver Palate Pasta Sauce, and you'll never
(30:37):
go back to what you're using.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
Currently.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
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