Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, we'll come in to your city, gets us and
saying you a conscious cell, will be high hill and
if you want a little bang and yunie, I come along.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Just to be clear, Biden should not have run again.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
And to be even more clear, he failed this country
in the most important job that he had.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Did you really not have any idea that he was
not fit to serve a second term?
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Casey, we're looking forward.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
We are stuck with a madman with a corrupt president
in the Oval office, and we should have given ourselves
a better chance to win.
Speaker 5 (00:43):
Afradom is back in style.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
Welcome to the revolution.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Will come in to your city way gets as saying
you a conscious cell. On Hannity Show, more be I'm
the scenes, information on freaking news and more bold inspired
solutions for America. All right, thanks Scott chown An hour
(01:11):
two Sean Hannity Show, eight hundred and ninety four one Sean,
if you want to be a part of the program.
So I started my radio career in nineteen eighty seven
and full time in nineteen ninety my first professional gig.
And so I've been on the air, what thirty six
seven years, whatever, whatever the number is, it's it's up
there twenty nine years, thankfully on Fox News. Thanks to
(01:33):
all of you. I don't succeed unless you listen and watch,
and I'm very grateful. We now are on nearly seven
hundred and seventy stations around the country and we're we're
extraordinarily grateful. And in all the years that I have
been covering politics, there is one, well, there's actually two
(01:54):
issues that are constantly led about and demagogued by the left,
and it's at that needs to end because they are
often manipulating people that are are in the most dire
need of certain government services. And for example, when New
Gingrich was Speaker, they worked on a deal to balance
(02:17):
the budget. It was the last time we ever balanced
the budget. They balanced to four straight years. And the
deal came out to be an increase in medicaire to
spending seven percent a year every year for seven years,
twice the rate of inflation at the time. And it
was called by Democrats and demagogue by Democrats as a cut.
(02:39):
It was not a cut. It was a seven percent
increase every single year. That they do the same thing
with social Security and they try to scare seniors anyway,
joining us now to talk about it. He's in his
new role as the seventeenth administrator of the Centers for
Medicare Medicaid Services, and what he intends to do is
(03:00):
remedy all of the broken bureaucracy that exists in these
branches of government and bring better medicine to every American
in the country. And we welcome back to the program
our friend, doctor Oz. Sir, how are you sean?
Speaker 2 (03:14):
God bless you? Everything you said was one hundred percent right,
and I'm particularly sensitive to the accusations made by the Democrats,
and just to reinforce what you said. In every single
scenario that we have looked at, we are spending more
money on Medicaid, not less more money on Medicaid, but
the atrocious way that we have been throwing money at
problems without getting benefits, and oftentimes just throwing it at
(03:37):
fraudulent efforts. It's doning to be and you should be
aware to the listeners as well. These sometimes are foreign
government supported endeavors. But when we've got people on Medicaid
in multiple states and we're paying full bills for these folks,
it costs a lot of money. When people have dual
insurance on Medicaid and in the exchanges, for example, and
no one's telling the federal governments we're paying those bills
(04:00):
up to fourteen billion dollars a year total, just another area.
And why is no one telling us, because well, if
you're not paying for something, you don't keep track of it.
And I should point out I've got the big guns
with Miami. Gleeson is joining me if she's from the
US Dove Service, because so much of this I want
to applaud Dosee for it's not just about cutting stuff.
They've been building stuff, building alliances, making folks work like
(04:22):
normal businesses do. So they're actually collaborating, not interfering with
each other. And that's one of the reasons I'm so
optimistic of our ability to make a difference in the
healthcare budget. But the President said it, We're going to
do it. He said, we're going to love and sherish
these programs. Is exactly what we're going to do.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
All right, Well, let's bring in your Doge partner. Because
by the way, I'm a big fan of doche I'm
a big fan of Elons. I know Elon you know,
has had to get back into the many business as
he runs, but he did save astronauts. He is working
on a way to help the blind see and those
with spinal cord injuries walk. He created the best car
(04:56):
ever invented and engineered, and I know because I own
one and I gave one away on this program as
a contest. On top of that, he has found hundreds
of billions of dollars in waste, fraud, abuse and corruption.
How is those involved in this?
Speaker 3 (05:14):
Yeah, So, as you know us those service is about
a lot of different things, but one of the main
things we're working on right now is also modernizing systems
and bringing modern technology to the government. So on this effort,
we're partnering with CMS to create a modern digital ecosystem.
So in every other part of your life, banking, shopping, travel,
we have these seamless personalized services that in healthcare, patients
(05:38):
are still foxing records and logging into dozens of portals
and in most cases it feels like nineteen ninety nine
instead of the current time. So we really want to
change that. Imagine logging in with your fingerprint or your
face like you do on your phone, and having your
full medical history at your fingertips with an AI assistant
that can really help you in a personal way manage
your chronic conditions like diabetes or art Right now, for.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Many years, I'll say this to both of you, and
you get both way in here. I've been interviewing a
guy that runs Atlas MD, and he created a system
which is Concierge's Care fifty dollars a month. It's out
of Wichita, Kansas. Doctor Josh Umber is his name. Fifty
dollars per adult, unlimited medical attention twenty four to seven.
(06:25):
Telemedicine is a part of it. You can see a
doctor every day of the week if you want to
ten bucks a month for kids. He would negotiate directly
with pharmaceutical companies. You'd get them at ninety five percent
discount and walk out with the medicines after your exam
and tell Amedicine certainly, I think is a big part
of the future. But it showed that everybody, if they
would couple that doctor oz with catastrophic care, that they
(06:48):
could have concierge medical care. I have concierge medical care
because I have friends like you that I can call
any hour of the day or night and you would
pick up the phone and help me.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
You might ask, why does everyone have that there are
probably one hundred and fifty people who control most of medicine,
and they run the big endeavors, and it is not
in their best interest for this to exist, and so
it sort of falls to the wayside. One thing I've
learned that the centers for Medicare and Medicaid is, you know,
we're moving a close to two trillion dollars of US
tax payer of money in these different ways. We're trying
to take care of folks, and it is unbelievable what
(07:23):
a big target we have on our back for fraud tours.
But it's also remarkably easy to get programs into us
that take advantage of systems, and the small guys have
a difficult time penetrating. It's a large incumbents tend to dominate,
so Amy, for example, which talks about this digital transformation,
it makes it transparent. The President has had numerous executive
orders around this issue, around pricing of drugs, around making
(07:45):
sure that's interoperability, which means the different hospitals have to
share their records with each other, around no surprises. So
we actually go to the hospital, you know what's going
to cost you same when you I'll just pass it
to you, because this stuff is hard to do. But
when you've got the best engineer in the world, the
biggest companies, the top AI groups, they're all saying, we're
going to be meet, we're going to put our swords away,
(08:06):
and we're going to work together because we trust his administrations.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
Yeah, yeah, Amy going, I want to give you a background.
By the way, you're an American healthcare technology executive and
government official. We're currently serving as the acting administrator for
the US Department of Government Efficiency for DOZE, which is
pretty impressive. So what we're really talking about here is
the work that doctor Oz is doing, coupled with his
(08:32):
years of experience as a heart surgeon in the hospital
system and modernizing the system and making it more efficient
and saving money at the same time and making people healthier.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
Yes, I think we have this amazing opportunity with doctor
Oz's leadership, to fundamentally change the way the healthcare system works.
So this is also deeply personal for me. My daughter
has a rare disease and she sees twelve doctors across
six health systems in four different states. She takes twenty
one pill the day and has to handwrite those medications
on a pay per form every time she goes to
(09:04):
see the doctor, and so we really need to change
this system to where she uses all these technical tools
like everyone else. Spotify can make a recommendation to her
that's exactly what she wants to listen to in the moment,
because it knows her patterns and what she's listened to.
And so we need to kind of have that same
thing where there are modern tools in your day to
day life that are personalized, have your medical history and
(09:27):
can then give you recommendations to stand up and take
some extra steps when it's the appropriate time, or to
rest when it's others, and to help you figure out
the best diet for you and when you should go
to the doctor and do that. So we're really trying
to ask all parts of healthcare to join in this
effort so that we can make real changes this year
and then continue to build on that over time. The
modern technology exists, we just need to bring it to
(09:49):
bear and healthcare.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Doctor Oz, let me go back to specifically what you're
working on, and you're dealing with both Medicare and Medicaid,
and we're talking about now we're dealing with states and
the federal government and the involvement in healthcare. You can
talk about the work work requirement, the amount of money
that is being paid out. For example, Medicaid payments should
(10:13):
never be more than what seniors get on Medicare, the
modernization of Medicare and Medicaid using information technology like Amy's
talking about here, Well, why don't you give the big
overall vision for it.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
We want the American people to understand this is a
two way street. To be patriotic, a true patriot, you
have to take care of yourself. Because if when I
dive into these issues of Medicaid, which was critical to
the reconciliation build getting past this morning, you'll understand that
the path to solvency in our healthcare system is to
make people healthier. There is no better way to reduce
(10:48):
healthcare costs. Seventy percent of the money that we spend
is driven by chronic illnesses. The times that you and
I talk about all the time off there because it
makes us feel better, because it's pretty good deal. It
feel better while you're actually saving money for yourself and
the rest country. So let's get into nitty gritty of this. Essentially,
what we're let's report is sharing is that we have
gotten made it very hard to be healthy in America,
(11:09):
especially for the kids who are the canaries in the
coal mine, and we cannot afford this morally, we can't
afford it financially. Our health economy is growing at around
two to three percent faster than the general economy. It's
already twice as expensive to get health care in America
than any other country in the world. Every governor of
business says that what's strangling their state budget is the
healthcare bill is going up so fast they can't keep
(11:32):
up with crowding on education other services. So what we
went to Congress with and they were great working with
these ideas, and I want to plug their leadership. And
the President was unwavering in this. He says, we're going
to protect Medicaid and Medicare for the people. It was
designed for the people who are vulnerable, the young, the old,
the folks who are disabled. And if you're a working,
(11:54):
age able bodied person, then you should try to get
a job now. If you can't get a job, or
if you can't get educated at go to school, if
you can't volunteer, if you can't take care of someone
else in your family, then we're going to ask you
to step off the roles, because if someone was living
in your basement and getting free health care and they
didn't participate at all, at some point you'd say, guys, enough,
come on you guys, to help yourself a little bit.
(12:15):
That's the bigger story here. That's why the work requirement
is so strongly favored by eighty percent of Americas and Sean.
This is amazing to me. Democratic voters support this, but
the Democratic Party will not am stunned by this. They
continue to vilify what I think is a very noble
effort by the president to make a seismic shift that's
long overdue. And the reason you might say is why
wasn't their work requirement, Well, there was no need for one.
(12:38):
When medicare and Medicare were created in nineteen sixty five.
It never crossed anybody's mind that you wouldn't be encouraged
or are made to work before you would take the
public handout. No one would have thought of doing that.
But now, for a variety of reasons, that's become a
bit of the norm, and it's extraordinarily expansive, which takes
it to your second point. Medicare and Medicare Aid. If
(13:00):
they're going to get paid differently, it shouldn't be very minimally.
That's not what's happening now. Medicaid patients and people who
have not contributed their whole life and paid into the
system like Medicare patients have Medicaid recipients, which again there
it's an obligation we have as a great society take
care of our people. All great societies do that. That's fine,
But if you're on Medicaid, you should not be paying
(13:22):
more than Medicare pays for a doctor service or for
a hospital for medication. It doesn't make any sense to
expect that, yet that has become the norm around the country.
We're going to course correct a lot of these issues.
The first step was is Reconciliation bill, but the real
money saving the big We're going to do all this.
But when we've done all that, the most important thing
you'll hear about it a lot for the next year
(13:42):
is what Amy's talking about, which is a digitally transformed
healthcare so it resembles more what the rest of your
life looks like.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Yeah, all right, well, take a break, we'll come back.
We'll continue more with doctor Oz who is joining us.
He is now the administrator for the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, and he's working with Amy Gleeson, who
is with Doege. We'll get to your calls also coming up,
and Brian mast and Jimmy Fayla and much more as
(14:09):
we continue. All right, we continue now with doctor Oz
who is now the administrator of the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services. How do we get a better bang
for our buck and how do we get better health
services for the American people. That's all part of a
huge effort that is underway with this entire MAHA effort.
Amy Gleeson also works with DOGE and is well versed
(14:33):
in how to offer better care at lower prices for
the American people to save money. We spend more for
capita than any other industrialized country with the worst medical results,
and we certainly have plenty of room for improvement. We've
got to innovate. I mean, we pay more for healthcare
in this country, especially for people in their older ears
(14:55):
oly years, rather than any other industrialized country. Amy, and
we have some of the worst results. And this is
what I think the MAHA movement is going to be
most successful. A lot, and I think we've got to
have a top to bottom check on everything. So I'm
pretty optimistic that between what you're doing and what doctor
Oz is doing and what Bobby Kennedy is doing, I
(15:18):
feel confident we're going to get there, and I hope
people will embrace these changes.
Speaker 3 (15:22):
Yes, I think we can show some real progress and
start to build momentum. For example, we're building a national
provider directory that can kind of serve like Google Maps
for healthcare. Right now, just even the simplest thing of
finding the right doctor that meets the needs of your
situation is very difficult, and that makes it hard for
innovation in the private sector to also get unlocked. It
(15:43):
also makes it hard for people to even pick the
right insurance plan for Medicare plan when they come into Medicare,
or even in your commercial plans. And so by starting
to do these kind of things, we can really start
to move the needle of technology and healthcare.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Amy Gleeson, we also will pray for your daughter and
wish are all the best. Doctor Oz, thank you, as always,
thanks for what you're doing. We appreciate both of you.
We will continue to update this audience about all the
progress that you're making and we appreciate your time today.
Speaker 6 (16:10):
God bless you, thank you all right.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
Twenty five now till the top of the hour, eight
hundred and nine to four one sean if you want
to be a part of the program. Longer days means
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no safe simply say you got to admit. This week
was kind of like Senate beatdown week. First it was
Marco Rubio with Senator Van Holland and when Van houns,
I regret ever voting for you, and he goes, oh,
that's good. That means I'm doing my job, and then
he went after him. You know now that the guy
you're having margaritas with meaning talking about this Abrego Garcia guy.
(18:25):
And then we had a Robert F. Kennedy Junior just
to a total total beatdown. What was it, Senator Patty Murphy?
We played that yesterday. You know, what have you ever
done in the in the thirty years you've been in
this body to help improve people's health? And the answer
is nothing. And then we had Lee Zelden's sparring with
a congenital liar Adam Schiff at the EPA hearing yesterday,
(18:48):
and here's how that went down.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
What is it about this grant that you and EPA
believe is problematic enough to freeze this funding and put
potentially thirty one thousand children at risk?
Speaker 7 (19:01):
Center?
Speaker 1 (19:01):
Which who's the grand applicant?
Speaker 4 (19:04):
This is to the city of Santa Anna.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
Are you the big and are you through every single
list of the grant?
Speaker 3 (19:12):
Well?
Speaker 1 (19:12):
The way with that wind up? By the way, I
understand that you are an aspiring fiction writer. I see why.
Speaker 4 (19:18):
Oh yeah, well, I understand your view that you can
cut half of the agency and it won't affect people's
health or their water, their air.
Speaker 8 (19:29):
That to me is a big fiction, mister Zelden.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
It wasn't a good comeback. It really wasn't he tried
hard though? Anyway? Eight hundred nine four one, Shawn, if
you want to be a part of the program, let
us get to our busy phones. Jackie in the United
Socialist utopia known as California, how are you, Jackie? Glad
you called hi soon?
Speaker 7 (19:52):
How are you?
Speaker 1 (19:53):
I'm good, I'm glad you called.
Speaker 7 (19:55):
Yeah, I'm so glad. So my black start boiling yesterday.
I'm going to run through it quickly for ye have
time for other callers too. I'm in South African, sixth
generations in Africa. My parents still up their farms in
South Africa. Imposa sat in that White House yesterday and
begs for money. Do you not think that President Trump
(20:16):
was going to ask him about the brutal farm to texts,
the torture, the mutilation, and the rape. The victims that
always include the elderly, the children, and the farm workers.
It is so said the level of brutality that that
cannot be political or morally be justified. The matter. The
historical content didn't know.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
What the president did yesterday with the with his counterpart,
the President of South Africa was masterful because he had
pictures and names, and he kept saying, see this one dead,
see this one dead, this farmer dead, this farmer dead,
this farmer dead. And then he showed image is in
(21:00):
a video of the graves of many people that were killed.
And what you have is a genocide that is taking place.
And you're right. And they came there wanting money and
not expecting to be challenged. But they went to the
wrong world leader if they thought they were going to
get a free ride.
Speaker 7 (21:18):
Yeah, this man was caught with eighteen million ran so
African ransketched in the house that he has. His explanation
was that he sold wild class by slow and people
don't talk about it. How corrupt this has only brought
to people's attention. Nothing was done about it because somebody
robbed him and that money. They went into his house
(21:40):
and so Africa and robbed him. On the personal side,
my family and this is you know, there's so many
stories I've been out of I live in California, but
there's so many stories that I listened to that my
family called that that tell me every single day they
listenly were attacked. Everybody that I speak to. La family.
(22:02):
It's got a dogs, these dogs that they have on
the farms squeasoned before a bootle attack. That's what they do.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Well, they're trying to say, and they tried to compare
this to eminent domain, and that's not what it is.
They're just confiscating people's property and if people don't cooperate,
even if they do cooperate, they're murdering them. And it's
institutionalized and it's got to stop. In terms of the
actual number, I've seen different numbers, but it is happening
(22:31):
on a pretty widespread basis.
Speaker 7 (22:34):
There's no infrastructures. There is no electricisty for weeks, there's
no water for weeks. My mother's ninety four years old.
She course me the whole time and tell me there's
no plan and there's no knowledge to report South Africa
and people are corrupt. No matter what you give to
the South African government, it will always be stolen. If
you drive around in Victoria and the capital, the mansions
(22:58):
belongs to the politician. These people dying on the ground,
they didn't a fruit to eat, but they have of
course they've got nineteen to any but no knowledge her
to run the country.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
It's said, you're describing way too many countries on the
face of this Earth. And that's why I hope this
Memorial Day people stop and pause and realize and appreciate
that we live in the greatest country God gave men,
and we were on the verge of becoming a European
disaster if we didn't, if we did not vote in
(23:29):
the last election the way we did. I'm very sorry, Jackie.
I hope that maybe the President is got this guy's
attention enough that this comes to an end. Racism in
any form is evil and repugnant, end of sentence. It
doesn't matter. Racism is racism anyway. I believe we're all
(23:50):
God's children. Appreciate the call. Eight hundred and nine to
four one, Shawn our number if you want to be
a part of the program. Randy is in Missouri next
on the Sean Hennity Show. How are you, Randy? Glad
you called.
Speaker 8 (24:02):
Doing fine, Shohn and it's a pleasure to speak with
you today, you know, with all the world's troubles. And
then we hear Claire McCaskill talk about the intelligence of
the American people. Now that really brought up a lot
of ghosts and a lot of old thoughts, because you know,
she's been on the government cross most of her life.
You know, she was the prosecutor in Jackson County, Missouri.
(24:25):
She was this state auditor, you know, auditoring fraud, all
the good things. That makes me wonder, Claire, you've worked
for the government your whole life, and you and your
husband worked sixty or seventy million.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
So, you know, I got to.
Speaker 8 (24:39):
Thinking about that and looking back about where. You know, again,
she was a prosecutor, she was an auditor, and he
was just an insignificant partner on little income housing where
they were getting government money. Well, as soon as she
took term office in two terms, that company and he
(24:59):
was a mind minor person there. But we're awarded one
hundred and thirty one million dollars in federal funds. I mean, Claire,
come on, maybe we're dumb, but we're not that dumb.
Speaker 1 (25:12):
Listen. Every name we've been called has not benefited the
Democrats politically. I mean, we've been called irredeemable, deplorables. We've
been called, you know, bitter Americans that cling to our God, guns, Bibles,
and religion. We've been called garbage. We have been called racist.
We've been called sexist, fascist, misogynist, homophobic, xenophobic, islamophobic. We've
(25:37):
been portrayed as people that don't care about the elderly,
that we want dirty air and we want dirty water
and that's our plan for the country, and we've been
called stupid. So there's nothing that they can say that
matters anymore. And you know now that it's kind of
really come to the forefront, the level of cover up
(25:58):
on so many different issues, not the least of which
is Joe's cognitive decline. The good news is is that
legacy state run media and the Democratic Party you know,
as of now, are dead. The legacy media, I think,
has lost credibility forever. Democrats will they try to will
they try some transformation and try to act as though
(26:21):
they are people that they're not, probably at some point
when they keep losing elections. But if they're if their
most prominent voices are AOC and Jasmine Crockett and the
Squad and Grandpa Bernie. I think we're in good, pretty
good political shape for now. But you know what, we've
always got to be vigilant. Remember Reagan's admonition, you know,
(26:42):
freedom is just one generation away from extinction. Don't ever
forget it anyway, Good call, my friend, don't worry about
clairemer Caskell, who cares about her? Anyway, back to our
busy phones, let us say hi to Lynn and Michigan.
Hey Lynn, how are you glad you called?
Speaker 5 (26:57):
How are you Sean?
Speaker 1 (26:59):
I'm good, thank you? It's on your mind today?
Speaker 2 (27:01):
Well?
Speaker 5 (27:01):
You know, first of all, I just want to say,
after listening yesterday, do you go back and forth with
Linda about the way she pronounced sauce? Linda, I just
want to let.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
You know silver palette pasta sauce. Yes, go ahead. How
do I say it? Continue?
Speaker 5 (27:16):
Saus you Lynn by saying I got your six just
in case Jim Calmey's listening. That means I've got her back.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
I hope he's listening.
Speaker 5 (27:27):
That's great there.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
I mean, but you know that it's not sauce. Everybody
like prag New York. It's walk coffee. I mean, there
are certain dead giveaway words, and she doesn't even try.
Speaker 5 (27:42):
Well.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
I mean, I I can play old tapes of my
show when I started in radio and I had I
got news for you brother, you said afterwards yesterday, and
you said it just like that afterwards. That's right. That's
definitely accident will kick in occasionally when I'm very tired,
if you want to know, if I'm like I got
wiped out out last week because I got no sleep
while I was in the Middle East. None And when
(28:05):
I get tired, I can slip back into a little
bit of my New York accent. But remember I was
gone out of New York for sixteen years and then
I went back for Fox. But I'm so glad to
be out of there in the free state of Florida. Well,
I'm just hand anyway.
Speaker 5 (28:22):
You spelled burner because I want one, boy, And you know,
if you wouldn't have spelled it, boy, I would have
been having trouble finding that one. But now I'm going
to take some entertainment out of it and going to
my local gun shop because I know they listened to you,
and I'm saving up to get one of those. And
then I get enough money, I'm going to say that
I'm there because showan handed he sent me for a burner.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
Handy sent you for a burner after my own heart. John,
all right, I'll tell you what, Lynn, stay on the line.
I'm going to send you a burner. CLU. This way,
you know you can save up for something else that's
more important. Okay, although there really is nothing more important
than protecting yourself in your family. And the great thing
about the cl is you can easily conceal carry it
(29:04):
in your purse. It's not a big deal.
Speaker 5 (29:06):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
All right, stay on the line, don't hang up. Linda
will work. What's the point.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
She may have something else to say. I mean, we
got distracted with the sauce talk. What else did you
want to say?
Speaker 7 (29:16):
Lane?
Speaker 5 (29:17):
Well, you know, I just wanted to get to this
whole Biden cancer cover up. And the more I think
about it, it really I'm really angry.
Speaker 6 (29:24):
About this, and the fact that the Dems now are
saying that all investigations into the autopen should be stopped
and any investigation into all that. No cancer diagnosis.
Speaker 5 (29:36):
Does not erase criminal activity, and you know you have the.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
Cognitive thing is far worse as far as I'm concerned.
There's elder abuse that needs to be investigated. But more importantly,
national security issues are at hand here, and who was
running the show and who knew what and what did
they know when did they know it? I want answers
to those questions because that put the country at risk,
(30:02):
and was he really the guy that was using the
auto penett somebody else decided that they were to surp
his power as a duly elected president and decide for
him what their agenda was. We need, we need an
answer to that.
Speaker 5 (30:17):
And then you, I mean, you throw in like Houn
on Biden's laptop. That was an indictment served up on
a silver platter. And that's what I want to know,
is what criminal activity or what act of corruption must
happen before we see arrests and accountability.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
Well, they got away with a lot. I mean, the
Russia collusion hoax went on for three years. And now
I went through a list last night of all the
things we got right. We got that right. It took
us three years, a very small ensemble cast. We got
it right on radio and TV. We got Pfizer right
on radio and TV. We got the double standard with
top secret classified information right, and everyone else in the
(30:54):
media got it wrong. We got Joe's cognitive state right,
they got it wrong. We got the charges that album
Bragg brought up against Trump. We were right the statute
of limitations had run out. It wasn't a federal crime.
We were right about that. We were right about the
valuation tomorrow a lago and then I have my list
from the past. I was right about Richard Jewel, we
were right about Ferguson Missouri. We were right about Duke Lacrosse.
(31:17):
We were right about UVA. You know, at some point
it's not an accident that we end up getting everything
right and they get everything wrong because they have been
corrupt and abusively biased. But the good news is is
nobody paid attention to them in this past election. They
have lost the trust forever of the American people. And
Jake Tapper capitalizing it makes me nauseous. Stay on the line, Land,
(31:40):
you're getting a cl from our friends at Berner. You're
gonna love it. Eight hundred and nine to four one,
Shawn is our number. If you want to be a
part of the program. Congressman Brian Mass will be with
us at the top of the hour. We'll talk about
the Golden Dome and Memorial Day and much more as
we continue. All right, when we come back, we'll check
in with Congressman Brian Massed about the Golden Dome that
(32:01):
the President laid out this week, and later Jimmy Fayla
and much more as we continue