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November 18, 2025 28 mins

Today's event spotlights Toyotas launch of a $13.9 billion battery plant in Liberty, North Carolina, amid historic investments reshaping American manufacturing. Sean Hannity frames this story within the broader surge of industrial growth under President Trumps economic doctrine, emphasizing supply-side policies, strategic foreign relations, and national security imperatives especially the need to make pharmaceuticals and semiconductors in the U.S. Guests and highlights include discussion of global leaders like MBS at the White House and trumpeted successes from companies such as Apple and Goldman Sachs bringing jobs back home. Hannity stresses why this wave matters: it's more than jobs it's about economic independence, reduced reliance on foreign supply chains, and a revitalized future for American workers.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Thanks to all of you for being with us. Right
down our toll free telephone number. If you'd like to
be a part of the program, we'd love to hear
from you whatever's on your mind today. We might get
calls in even this hour eight hundred ninety four one
sewn if you want to join us now. NBS is
at the White House today. I know a lot of people.
I want to talk a little bit about the economy today.
I want to talk about immigration today. I want to

(00:20):
talk about crazy Democratic socialist what's happening with the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
They're out of their minds.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
And what it means for that they're in the middle
of a crackup of the likes of which, the proportions
of which, the magnitude of which is incalculable. And we'll
get to but I want to start with this with
MBS being in town, and maybe with foreign policy, maybe

(00:47):
it's not top of mind. I know a lot of people,
you know still were you know all of these things
that President Trump has announced about the economy. There is
a lag time between when when the president puts his
economic policy in place and we begin to significantly feel
the impact of it. We've already seen the price of

(01:10):
gas go down. We've already seen, you know, certain indicators
implation has gotten under control. For example, the President has
mentioned over and over again, and it doesn't mean anything
if it's not impacting your life yet. So it makes
sense to me that we have you know, anywhere between
you know, fifteen and eighteen trillion dollars in committed investments

(01:30):
in manufacturing. Many of them are critical for our national
security needs, and that would be we have been wholly
dependent on pharmaceuticals from abroad rather than manufacturing them here
in this country. Remember, you know, Obama famously said those
jobs ain't coming back. Well, they're coming back. And we

(01:51):
cannot allow ourselves as a nation to ever be dependent
on other nations for our pharmaceuticals, especially, you know, in
light of the lessons we should have learned from COVID.
For example, we also have been too reliant, too dependent
on other countries for semiconductor chips, and in this day
and age, that's unforgivable. Well, the President has resolved that problem,

(02:15):
and trillions of dollars are going to be spent on
production of semiconductor chips. The President has made it impossible
for other nations to manufacture their automobiles and have any
shot of selling them in the US. So manufacturers now
are building out facilities all around the country. Every major
manufacturer abroad is investing billions and in the end trillions

(02:40):
of dollars combined. I'll give you one example, and if
you live in North Carolina, we're going to tell you
about all these job opportunities as they come up, as
they become available. I want all of you in this
audience to be on the cutting edge of knowing where
these trillions are being spent and the jobs that will
be created as a result of them, starting with you know,
shovels in the ground and building out massive facilities, et cetera.

(03:06):
The latest example was on Fox Business today, Toyota announced
they have officially begun production of the new thirteen point
nine billion dollar battery manufacturing center in Liberty, North Carolina,
while committing an additional ten billion to bolster US manufacturing
in the next few years and today's launch of the

(03:26):
first US battery plant in the US additional US investments.
You know, this means if you're in Liberty, North Carolina,
and maybe you're not happy with your current job position, maybe,
just maybe you might want to just figure out how
to get in touch with Toyota and the North Carolina
battery manufacturing plant, and there might be an opportunity there

(03:47):
for you.

Speaker 2 (03:47):
This is going to be one of many.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
I mean, we know that Apple has committed five hundred
billion dollars a half a trillion dollars to build out
their facilities in Texas. Okay, if you live in Texas,
you might want to start looking into how you might
want to apply for various jobs and availability of jobs
because maybe people that are currently working for Apple, or

(04:12):
maybe a lot of these jobs are coming from facilities
abroad that could be a high paying career job opportunity
for you. Similarly, we know that Goldman Sacks is going
to be building out an eight hundred thousand square foot
facility in Texas. We know that Citadel Ken Griffin is

(04:32):
moving has started the process already as moving you know,
all of his multi billion dollar private equity firm to
Wall Street South, you know, everywhere from Palm Beach, Florida,
straight on down south through Miami, Florida. Again, opportunities and
a better lifestyle and lower taxes and less crime and

(04:54):
a better quality of life. And that is the same
with every private equity firm, every Wall Street firm, every
investment firm, every big bank. They're all moving, and so
that means opportunities. And I just want this audience to
be on the cutting edge of where the new economy
is moving. And the only thing I can urge all

(05:15):
of you. And I don't really care what your age is.
I mean, you know, sixty is like the new forty.
And that's not a cliche. That's just a reality, Linda.
I don't know anybody that retires at sixty two anymore,
sixty five anymore.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
No, definitely not.

Speaker 3 (05:30):
I've never even heard of that.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
I vaguely heard of it, but I mean, it just
is not a reality for most people anymore.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
And listen, if you want to give me a early retirement,
I'm all in. Let me know.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
You can retire tomorrow if you want. Hey, that's not nice.
I don't want you to, I said, but if you wanted.

Speaker 3 (05:48):
To, you should lead with that, lead with kindness.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
I want you, I want you to be happy. I'm
the one that has said you can work remote any
day you want. You don't have to ever communicate with
me because I know you're working. You know, you're you're
behind off. Every day you work hard.

Speaker 3 (06:04):
I shouldn't talk to you right now, communicate to you.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
What's that I should.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
Stop communicating with you right now.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 3 (06:12):
Because she just said I don't have to communicate with you.
Forget it.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
I'm just joshing. No, I don't.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
It doesn't matter where you are. Technology is allowed it.
I know you're working hard. I don't have to. There's
no question about your working hard. In your spare time,
you're thinking crazy things. But that's just a good off
the other day, No good off, will you?

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (06:33):
I like Linda when she's angry, and Linda would always
say to me, I like it better when you're pissed off.
You do better shows when you're pissed you do. I
try to purposely piss you off.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
If you were here, it's a macular my face. You
do an awesome show for the next hour.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Yeah, okay, but I know you're a crop maguy.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
You'll kill me.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
I want you to know you purposely try to get
under my skin and get me annoyed, don't you.

Speaker 3 (06:53):
Yes, every day I get paid to do it.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
No, you don't get paid for that. I don't like
to be aggravated. So all of these things were coming online.
I'm going to get it back to the economy in
a minute, but I want to just tell you something.
With NBS at the White House today. You know, some
people may roll their eyes. Why is President Trump? Well,
when I went on the Gulf State trip with the President,
and we went to Riod, and we went to Abu Dhabi,

(07:20):
and we went to Katar, not places I ever thought
i'd visit in my life. By the way, Riod, oh man,
it was brutal. I mean I told you about that
one community I saw Linda that they had built these
very nice homes, nice neighborhood, and then it's like the
neighborhood stops. You know, they built out all the homes
in that neighborhood and then all you see is an

(07:42):
arid desert. I would have a hard time with that
view every day. And then walking out in nothing but
stifling heat. I mean, you can't breathe type of heat.

Speaker 2 (07:53):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
I just prefer being near water, ocean, real ocean. Abu
Dhabi is fake ocean. At least guitar they have real ocean.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
As it was.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
I learned a lot while I was there. But you
need to understand something here. I hate the term new
World order because that has so many, rightly so negative
connotations with it.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
But Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Has understood the strength and the value of the of
access to our economy and the need of other countries
to have access to our markets, and he has leveraged
that for the benefit of the American people. Again, maybe
economically you're not feeling it yet. However, if the past

(08:39):
is any indication of the future, I'm very strongly convinced,
as a strong supply side economic person that what we
saw in Reagan's term and Trump's first term is going
to be duplicated. And I expect, you know, if I
had to put a guess on it, the second quarter
of next year, we're gonna going to be benefiting from

(09:01):
the trillions and committed manufacturing dollars from the you know,
incalculable amount of money to the economy because of the
President's energy dominance policies, the largest tax cut in history
with you know this, this added provision for manufacturers, bonus
depreciation is what they call it. They get one hundred

(09:23):
percent deduction on building out their manufacturing centers, which is
like putting accelerant on incentivizing manufacturing to do it sooner
rather than labor later, to get these jobs online, which
then ultimately helps build out our strong economy, which is
what we want with low inflation, lower interest rates, you know,
better opportunities for home buying, higher wages, you know, lower

(09:47):
unemployment rates, all of which I believe is going to happen.
But there's one thing. As I was watching the President
in the Oval Office with MBS today, did I tell
you the story of what happened with BS? And and
when I when I needed I saw Marco Rubio's main
guy and I at this prep at the we landed

(10:08):
in Riod and I immediately A'm like shuffled to this
luncheon and I had a seat at a table and
I'm like in the middle of the room. I'm not
anywhere near the dais. And anyway, I see Marco's guy
and I go, hey, could you have a second? I
want to I wanted to tell the Secretary of State something.
It was private, it was personal, it was nothing bad, nothing,
you know, just something that I needed to tell him.

(10:31):
And he goes, yeah, just come on up with me.
I'm like, no, no, no, I'm not going near the daist.
If I told you the story, Linda, I think so.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
But tell me again. Let me hear a little bit more.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
Telling you again. See if you recognize it.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
You know, it's hard for me. It's hard for me
to keep up with you, you know intelligence.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
So all of a sudden, I go up there.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
I accomplished my mission, and I'm beginning to walk away,
and Dan Scavino goes up, mister President, there's Sean Hannity.
And I turned around, said I, mister President, mister crown Prince.
He was sitting next to NBS and anyway, so the
presidents starts saying, that's the most powerful guy at American
media right there. He's being funny, he's joking around, and

(11:09):
MBS just looks and smiles, and I go, miss the President.
I'm sure nobody up here has a clue who I am.
The guy next to President Trump, you know, dead pants,
I mean, just goes Hannity, just like that, and then
the guy next to him goes John Hannity, Fox News
nine pm Eastern.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
I'm like, whoa.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
And then they said radio seven hundred station, sixteen million
to thirty million a month, you'll welcome.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
All right.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
So but that was a pretty cool moment. Now I
say this is you know what you see happening. The
only reason there is such a fundamental misunderstanding of the
Trump doctrine. It actually infuriates me because it's being used
by some people that claim to be maga and they're

(12:00):
really not. And some justify America first as being isolationism
under Donald Trump, and it's the Trump doctrine, it's not
their doctrine. And the fact that they purposely distorted it
many people frustrates me. But there's no reason getting into
a debate over it. But the Trump doctrine is very clear,
no forever wars, and I agree with that doctrine. The

(12:23):
Trump doctrine does not mean isolationism. However, the Trump doctrine
we learned in his first term, he had no problem
defeating the Isis Caliphate using military might, and the world
was a safer place. He had no problem taking out Solomani,
the world's worst terrorists from Iran General Solomoni, and the
world's better because of the President's actions. The President took

(12:45):
out Bagdadi and associates. I have no problem with that either,
because the world's a safer place there. The President dropped
the mother of all bombs on Afghanistan in his first term,
and then the president took out Iran's nuclear sites because
he said Iran can't have nukes another Not one of
those military actions ever resulted in a forever war. However,

(13:08):
all of them made the world individually and collectively a
safer place. The only reason that MBS is at the
White House today, the only reasoned countries in the Middle
East are willing to be a part of the solution,
something they have resisted for decades. In terms of this
Israel and you know, really radical Islamic conflict, is because

(13:33):
all of those countries have been in fear of a
nuclear armed Iran, in fear of Iranian hegemony. The President
began this in his first term, culminating in the Abraham Accords.
And now he's got these countries that really are wont
to transform and transition their economy away from just a
completely energy oil based economy into new endeavors. And that's

(13:57):
what they're doing.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
Now.

Speaker 1 (13:59):
Do I completely trust a lot of these countries, I
do not. Do I think some of them are duplicitus
I do do I think the President is fully aware
of all of it, absolutely don't ever think that Donald
Trump is a fool. However, he is effectively leveraging access
to US markets and its benefiting you in the end. Again,

(14:20):
it's going to take time to get into the economic bloodstream,
but it's actually happening. Look at Liberty North Carolina. Look
at what Toyota is doing. That's one of many announcements
we'll have on this show. All right, So Iran after
losing the nuclear facilities, and I mean, you think of
what Israel did against the They took out the top scientists,

(14:41):
they took out nearly the top ten hamas in terms
of leadership, They took out Inzraala, they had the pager
attack on all the deputies in Hezbalah, in Lebanon. I mean,
the fact that this country of nine plus million people
or is capable of what they do is spectacular, but

(15:03):
it's really a matter of survival for them. And anyway,
now in Iran, local authorities have enforced to mandate water rationing,
and the situation is so dire that their president recently
warned that unless the region experiences rainfall, the city may
need to be evacuated altogether. The crisis extends far beyond

(15:24):
Iran's capital humulatively. Water mismanagement prolonged the drought, inefficient irrigation
practices sounds like California to me. Overreaction, I'm sorry, over
extraction of groundwater is now ruining life as if it
wasn't ruined already because the regime has been spending all

(15:45):
of their money on fomenting terror rather than helping their
own citizenry. This is the irony, This is the sickness
of terrorism. You know, the fact that all the money
was given to Hamas our tax money, by the way,
over the years, Israel's money. The rest of the world
contributed all this money for schools and hospitals and infrastructure,

(16:07):
and what have they built the most sophisticated, you know,
terror tunnel network in the entire world, and it is
I mean, it's all over the place, rather than making
a better life for the people, you know, we hear,
oh there's genocide in Gaza. Well, the genocide right now
is happening by Hamas. That's killing everybody and assassinating people

(16:29):
in the streets. Anyway, the reasons have everything to do
with their skewed priorities of the ranean ruling clerical regime.
This theocracy. True to their revolutionary pedigree, the Iranian iatolas
have been consistently putting guns over better, pouring billions of
dollars into the country's nuclear program, which now doesn't exist,

(16:51):
and they're burgeoning arsenal of bigger and bigger ballistic missiles
that they think will one day overwhelm Israel's defense systems
because this is where their mindset is, you know, magic.
It's sort of like criminals. I've always said that if
criminals that are really smart and come up with the
most sophisticated ways to rob you, you know, these identity

(17:13):
thieves for example, that's why you need LifeLock dot com.
But they spend all this time doing stupid things. And
if they ever did, you know, focus their attention on
something smart and productive, it would be amazing. The Crown
Prince just left the White House and said that Saudi
Arabia will be upping their investment commitment to a trillion dollars,

(17:33):
up from six hundred billion that was pledged in May,
and so I would say that is a successful day
for the country and people. The President spending too much
time on foreign affairs, well, okay, the president had a
lot of fires to put out, so you know, when
those fires are out, that gives him time to focus
more on the American economy with trillions of dollars more

(17:56):
than he had at the beginning of the process. And
it's really remarkable by the way the House voted on
the Epstein files. You know, that's interesting to watch for
a variety of reasons. I'm finding it fairly entertaining to
watch because it's in many ways a hoax, and you know,
uh yeah, I think it was like everybody, only one

(18:17):
person voted against it, because what we're learning is, you know,
it never made sense to me that the pressure was
always on the Trump administration the second they came into office.
Release the files, released the files, release the files. Well,
some of those files include kitty porn and you know,
really sick stuff that I don't think victims should have

(18:37):
to be subjected to again. But putting all that aside
for a minute, and the President has been warning that
there's a reason Joe Biden's administration they had it, they
didn't release it. Nobody ever, you know, demanded that they
release it. Now we're finding ex Treasury secretary, former head
of Harvard and now Harvard professor law or in Summers

(19:01):
announced plans to step back from public commitments amid the
fallout of the release of the emails between him and
Jeffrey Epstein, where Jeffrey Epstein basically is acting to the
person that will secure women for him. And by the way,
at the time, remember he was convicted, it was a
guilty plea in two thousand and eight for sex crimes

(19:22):
and then he got a sweetheart deal. But I'm deeply
a shamed somer set of my actions and recognize the
pain that they have caused. And anyway, Summers and Epstein
had a close relationship, discussed women, politics, have it related
business and hundreds of emails. Now what do we know
about Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein? And this is why,

(19:44):
you know, did maybe it was there ever in exchange
where Epstein said horrible things about him. I bet Jeffrey
Epstein despised Donald Trump. They had reporters communicating with him,
advising him, wanting, you know, cajoling him to release information
that's negative to Trump, whether free or not. Whatever Jeffrey
Epstein has to say about Donald Trump is meaningless to

(20:06):
me because you got to understand that any of you
that have ever been a member of a country club.
Let me let me tell you about country club life.
One of the worst things that can happen if you're
part of a country club is to be spectacularly kicked
out of a club. One of the biggest clubs in
Palm Beach, Florida is a club called Mara Lago. Prestigious,

(20:32):
expensive to join, expensive to you know, buy a cheeseburger.
I think it's like two hundred bucks for a cheeseburger.
That's you know, the honor you get to join a
country club. And you know, Donald Trump threw this guy
out because of his behavior with young women, and he's
been frank about it, and was frank for years about it. Now,

(20:54):
if Jeffrey Epstein had any damning information on Donald Trump
and all all those intervening years is what twenty was
it twenty five years ago, Linda something like that. It
was well over twenty years ago. Don't you think Jeffrey
Epstein would have released it because he was totally, completely
and utterly, you know, rejected and humiliated by Donald Trump,

(21:16):
who threw him out of his club. If the guy
had something on Trump, you think Trump would have been
so cavalier about throwing him out of his club, whether
he's running for office or not. I tend to think not,
you know. And as the President said, we have nothing
to do with Epstein. The Democrats do. All his friends
were Democrats. I hate to see that deflect from the
great job we've done. And he said, I'm all for

(21:39):
releasing the files. Not a problem. And Trump said, you know,
you know, he would absolutely sign that bill. You know,
there's a twenty fifteen clip of presidential candidate Donald Trump
bringing up Epstein Island before anyone knew who Epstein was.
The island was a cesspool. He said, just ask Prince Andrew.
This is before he ever became president. He'll tell you

(22:01):
all about it. A guilty man does not mention something
he wants to hide. A guilty man does not throw
somebody out of his club as spectacularly in such a
high profile fashion the way Donald Trump did. In my opinion,
maybe did Jeffrey Epstein say horrible things about Trump that
you're going to read and say, oh my gosh, he's terrible. Yeah,

(22:23):
I bet he did, because he hates the guy that
embarrassed him, humiliated him. Even reporter asked Chucky Schumer, why
wouldn't the Epstein files have been released the last four
years when Biden was in office, and Chuck Schumer's just
he's now like he's Joe Biden checked out. That's the
question every American is asking, what the hell is he hiding?

(22:45):
I'm like, yeah, what is he hiding? What was Joe
Biden hiding? Who is he protecting? And the question was
asked the Keem jeffries, why should Americans trust you? And
House Democrats when Plaskett was texting Epstein during a hearing,
Epstein is doing everything he can do to screw Republicans
if he had this information. Now, David Shone's been on

(23:07):
this program and he was representing Epstein by the end
of his life, he said over and over again. Epstein
said not and I don't have anything on Trump because
he said that would probably be the quickest way to
get out of this. And he said he had nothing.
But you know, to me, it's just one big distraction.
And the sad thing is is people that consider themselves
conservative and phone hook line and sinker into this whole

(23:29):
swamp thing. But you know what, there's not there's some
people in our movement that are not very smart or strategic.
Nor did they understand the Trump doctrine? Nor do they?
You know, It's interesting because as I look at some
of them, Linda, how much fire did I come under
when I was an early supporter of Donald Trump by
my fellow conservatives? Five alarm, five alarm? And I took

(23:53):
it every single day, didn't I sure did? Or did
Glenn Beck Ben Shapiro. I like Glenn Beck. If I
like Ben Shapiro too, I have nothing against either one
of them. I wish them all the best. They're beating
the hell out of me. How many years do you
think in a row?

Speaker 2 (24:07):
Almost? Dailey four? About that?

Speaker 3 (24:10):
Yeah, but I owe it to.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
My audience to be forthright with my audience.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
And by the way, when it comes to twenty twenty
eight and who, I'm going to do my own vetting,
and then I'm going to tell you who I like
the best.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
How do you like that? Linda? And I might be
different than other people. How do you like that, Linda?

Speaker 3 (24:30):
That sound like me to you? I think it sounds
a lot like you. I'm voting for the dog.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
You're voting for the dog.

Speaker 3 (24:37):
Yeah, I would vote. I would vote for a four
legged friend over most of these humans. I'll tell you that.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
AOC to shut down her fellow progressives move. Now you
have an ally of Zoran Comi Marxist Mumdani running against
Hakeem Jeffries, and now AOC has to come to the
aid of Hakeem Jeffries. Oh, I don't know if it's
particularly you know, yeah, not really sure. But anyway, forty

(25:03):
four percent they have an unfavorable view compared to thirty
three percent of socialism. I think Kakeem Jefferies is in
way more trouble than he thinks.

Speaker 2 (25:13):
Outgoing New York.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
City Mayor Eric Adams says that Jewish New Yorkers should
be concerned for their safety after he takes over.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Wow, oh that was it. Let me go back to
what Bill Maher said yesterday.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Let me play this from the weekend because I got
to just tip my ad to the guy because it
was brilliant.

Speaker 4 (25:30):
Listen, Democrats must recognize that Zuran mom Danni is the
future of the party. Unfortunately it's the Republican Party. We've
run this experiment many times and the results are always obvious.
In nineteen ninety Venezuela was wealthier than Poland, but then
Poland finally free of Soviet style economics when all in

(25:53):
on capitalism, and now their economy is as big as
Japan and people there have high wages, low inflation, car vacations, homes. Meanwhile,
Venezuela traded capitalism for Hugo Chavez's socialism for the twenty
first century, which turned out to be, like socialism in
the last century or any century, a mess. They turned

(26:17):
one of Latin America's richest countries into one of its poorest,
low wages, high inflation, shortages, outages, eight million people fleeing.
If you think New York can somehow reinvent this wheel,
you're in for a rude awokening.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
A rude awokening. Bill Maher doesn't like me. I don't
particularly like him and his personality. I've interviewed him over
the years. I want nothing to do with it. But
he's interesting. I give him a lot of credit. The
reason I think he's successful and John Stewart are successful

(26:53):
is that not like Kimel, Colbert and Fallon, and that
is they're actually thoughtful, more intellectually honest, and you know,
provocative in their own way. Trust me, they're never going
to start liking Donald Trump, either one of them They're
not going to start liking conservatives, any of them. By
the way, we have a lot of news on the

(27:17):
on the immigration front. Governor DeSantis announce Florida has arrested
more than six thousand illegals since he became president. Tom
Holman wants New York City saying that they will see
an increased immigration enforcement before Mom Donnie takes office. Biden
released a wanted legal alien terrorist into America. We now

(27:39):
found this is another one on top of the one
from New Jersey. Greg Abbott is now designating America's largest
Islamic activist group a foreign terrorist organization. He's talking about
the Council of American Islamic Relations.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
Ow that took me by surprise.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
A leading Senate Democrat is forced to fire a staffer
who mpersonated an immigration lawyer while pretending to free a
criminally illegal and a pro open borders. Senator Tommy Duckworth
has agreed to fire one of her staffers after he
faked being an immigration lawyer in a bid to get
a criminal alien freed from jail. I mean, is there

(28:23):
any is there any way that you know, any any
line that some of these people won't cross you gotta
wonder sometimes

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Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

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