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July 19, 2024 30 mins

 Dr. Peter Navarro, former Director of the U.S. Office of Trade & Manufacturing and author of the new book, The New MAGA Deal: The Unofficial Deplorables Guide to Donald Trump's 2024 Policy Platform, was released from federal prison on Wednesday of this week in Miami. He joins today following his speech at the RNC and to discuss the release of his new book.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, thanks Scott Channing our two Sean Hannity Show,
eight hundred and ninety four one, Shawn, if you want
to be a part of the program. We are only
one hundred and eight days away until election Day, only
fifty nine days away from early voting beginning in the
Great State of Pennsylvania. Later on, Dave McCormick will join us.
He is the Republican senatorial candidate from the Great State

(00:22):
of Pennsylvania, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. We'll get to all
of that. Peter Navarro has a new book out. I'm
going to tell you about that. We're going to put
it up on Hannity dot Comments, on Amazon dot com,
bookstores around the country. But you know, he spent two
months in prison and frankly, he had nothing, no reason
to be there. Last night, President Trump calling on Democrats

(00:46):
to stop the weaponization of our justice system and labeling
people an enemy of democracy. Here's what he said.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
And we must not criminalize dissent or demonize political disagreement,
which is what's been happening in our country lately at
a level that nobody has ever seen before.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
In that spirit, the.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Democrat Party should immediately stop weaponizing the justice system and
labeling their political opponent as an enemy of democracy, especially
since that is not true. In fact, I am the
one saving democracy for the people of our.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
Contract, and he is indeed anyway, Peter Navarro joins us.
He has a new book out. It's called The New
Maga Deal, The Official Deplorables Guide to Donald Trump's twenty
twenty four policy Platform, and it's on Hannity dot com,

(01:50):
Amazon dot com now bookstores around the country. Peter, welcome
back to the program. And on a personal level, I've
always been very fond of you. I've known you for
a long time. I watched very very closely everything that
was going on with you. It broke my heart to
see you the day that you went into prison. You've
been there for how many months now, four months now,

(02:12):
and now you're finally released, and I want to talk
to you about it. But I'm sorry you had to
go through that. I really mean that with all my heart.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
Jod I consider your brother in arms man. We've gone
through a lot. When I was in with the Boss
for four years and the administration, our past would frequently cross.
I remember a fond night when we had to do
the convention for twenty twenty at the lawn of the
White House. If you remember that with the screens, I

(02:41):
do you.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
I was up on a platform and you were right
below me. I do remember.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
Well, yeah, but look, I want your listeners to understand
one thing. I'm fine, we're soldiers. I took a figure
to bow at the president, took a literal one the
other day. The theme of my speech at the convention

(03:05):
was I went to prison so you won't have to.
And what I meant by that, Sean, is that my
case is probably the purest case of the weaponization of
our government, not just our justice system, because what I
explained was the other tagline is if we don't control
our government, their government will control us. And I went

(03:29):
through how the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, all involving
Democrats weaponizing their powers, put me in prison. It was
the House j six Committee and a Democrat majority holding
me in contempt for what honoring executive privilege, defending the
constitutional separation of powers. Democrats did that. It was the

(03:51):
Democrat Attorney General Merritt Garland who indicted and prosecuted me
for a crime which the Department of Injustice itself had
said for fifty years was like, that's not a crime.
If Congress comes to Colin with a subpoena for a
senior presidential advisor under Department of Justice rules, there was

(04:12):
my duty, my duty, Sean to do what I did.
And let's not forget Eric Holder and more recently Biorcis being.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
He had to add to the les Lowist Learner. I mean,
there are a lot of names we can we can
list here of Democrats that were holding contempt just like you,
but they weren't prosecuted and they would not send to jail.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
And then and then the judges, I mean, Sean, with
these politicians and black rogues. I mean, just like Judge
Juan Marshaan, what a disgusting individual did in Manhattan in
the star Chamber of the century to Donald John Trump.
I had this judge named Ahmet Meta, and he stripped
me of every single defense before my case even went

(04:56):
to a jury. And then I had a jury pool
in DC District of Columbia which was ninety five.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
You had zero chance. Can I be very blunt? You
had no shot, no chance at all whatsoever. It was.
It was a done deal before you ever stepped in
a courtroom. Let me ask you this, because you could
have gone on. You could have gone in and you
could have pled the fifth and you could have walked

(05:24):
out of there and there would be no legal issues
at all whatsoever. You would have had the right to
do that. And I watched very very closely, even the
moments when you were walking into prison that day, and
you explained what the principle of executive privilege meant, why
you took the stand. You knowingly did it with the

(05:45):
risk of going to prison. I know you fought it
with everything you had. I know you fought for appeals.
By the way, now Steve Bennon is in prison for
the same exact reason. He'll be there for four months also,
But you did it anyway. And you know, I always
kind of admired you. You're you're a tough guy, You're
a fighter. And on the other hand, I felt terrible

(06:07):
for you because and I'll ask you about your prison experience,
but I can't imagine you know, walking in there, you
think this is going to be a cake walk, because
it's not.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
Well, let's talk about the principle of the matter. And
you're back our first President George Washington, when the Jay
treaty got negotiated, he got subpoenaed by Congress, and he
went to Congress and said, look, I don't have the
authority to summon you to the White House to these congressmen,
and you don't have the authority to summon me to Congress.
And that was John. That was when this doctrine of

(06:39):
executive privilege was born. And there's numerous Supreme Court decisions,
a lot of them around the Nixon error, which talk
about the importance of what they call candor and confidentiality
and communications between the president and his advisors as a
way of having the best possible decision making. And what

(06:59):
was different from me and a lot of the other
remote everybody in the j six who got subpoena was
I was in the White House when all my brothers
and sisters got subpoenaed. Right, It was Kelly and Conway,
it was Don mcghann, it was a Rob Porter, it
was everybody picks. But at that time, in twenty nineteen,

(07:24):
when it happened, Pat Sibaloni, the White House Legal Counsel,
issued letter after letter explaining that advisors like us have
absolute testimonial immunity to protect executive privilege. And book Shaan.
When the J six Committee started coming after everybody, the
Boss knew, I knew, a lot of people knew. There

(07:47):
was only one agenda there and that was to Troy
to stop Donald John Trump would be in the next
president and I when they came at me, it was
in my DNA servant in the White House, It's like,
that's an illegal, improper subpoenia. You don't have the authority.
I'm a hold of my ground and I am the
first person ever in the history to do it. But look,

(08:08):
it's going to the Supreme Court. That's where I said
from the very beginning this case would go. And it's
a landmark constitutional case. I'd pray to God Jean that
the Supreme Court doesn't duck it because it's a beautiful
case to present.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
But Peter, look at what we've now learned. They destroyed
so much of the evidence that they quote had gathered,
meaning the J sex Committee. We know that, for example,
they ignored I have on tape that there are five
people in the days leading up to January sixth, including

(08:47):
President Trump and his chief of staff, and the acting
Defense Secretary and his chief of staff, and the chairman
of the Joint chiefs. Four of the five I have
on tape saying that Donald Trump called for for National
Guard troops. Muriel Bowser, who was never called before the
JA six committee, in writing, denied the national Guard troops

(09:10):
that Donald Trump was willing to call up and wanted
to call up. We know that the Capitol Police Chief's son,
I've interviewed him, and he was begging for National Guard
troops because of new actionable intelligence in the days leading
up to January sixth. They didn't listen to him either.
They didn't bring in Nancy Pelosi. They didn't bring in

(09:32):
Chuck Schumer, they're in charge of security for the Capitol.
They didn't bring in you know, they didn't bring in
the very key people that could have brought a very
different narrative. And you spent four months in prison over this.
It's unreal to me. This is not the US that
I expect that we should be living in.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
You see what they're doing Tolston Journal report in Russia.
I mean it's I got the same treatment. Okay, communist
Chinese court at the end of the day. But the look,
the beauty of my case is it truly got nothing
to do with JA six it's a pure case of
a subpoena going to a senior presidential advisor, an alter

(10:14):
ego to the president, and the question is whether Congress
has the authority to do it. I stand for the
principle that they do not. I stand for the constitutional
separation of powers. And it's really going to be important,
Sean for the future that the Supreme Court say that
I was right and they shouldn't have done what they

(10:36):
did to me. The idea of sending me to put
that made keep your eye on him because he's a
judge in another case with President Trump himself, he's an
Obama appointee. His wife. I hate to bring in family,
but his wife forks at the largest Democrat lobbyist and
campaign contribusion fundraiser right there in DC, basically bought his

(11:00):
way into the court, and he's trying to use me
as a stepping stone to get to the Supreme Court
on the Democrat side. And he put me in prison,
didn't release me pending appeal when he knows that the
likelihood of my case being overturned on appeal is high,
very high, because of what the case stands for. So

(11:23):
but look if John at the end of the day.
I have no regrets about what I did. It was
the right thing to do. And if it turns out
to be the landmark constitutional case that sets the law
on the doctrine of executive privilege and constitutional separation of powers,
It'll be worth it. And even if I lose. Look,

(11:44):
this is what we do. We stand up for principal Trump.
People do not bend, We don't break. And when you
know what right, let me ask you this bullet. You know,
the least I could do is go to prison for principle.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
All right? Quick break more with our friend Peter and THEVA,
former director of US Office of Trade and Manufacturing. His
new book is out. It's called The New Maga Deal,
The Unofficial Deplorables Guide to Donald Trump's twenty twenty four
policy Platform. We continue now with Peter Navarro. He has
a new book out, The New Maga Deal, The Unofficial

(12:18):
Deplorables Guide to Donald Trump's twenty twenty four policy Platform.
Let me ask you this. Tell us the prison you
were in. Tell us what it was like, how did
the other prisoners react to you, and what's it like
to have your freedom ripped away from you?

Speaker 3 (12:32):
Well? Let me, yeah, what kept me going in prison
in a lot of ways. You mentioned the New Maga
Deal Booknewmaga Deal dot Com. What I was doing in
there as I was in prison was that book was
getting printed up. And let me just say this, Well,
what's important to me now with the answergy over who
the nominee is going to be on Democrat side, I mean,

(12:55):
that is chaos personified. I think ultimately what we're going
to have to do is argue the presidential case on policy.
And that's where I tried to anticipate this. And one
of the biggest critiques Shawn that in twenty twenty two
in the congressional election was Maga equals extremism. And the
whole idea of the New Maga Deal a book is

(13:18):
to give people two things. One a broad understanding of
what we really stand for, which, simply gating back to
twenty sixteen by Donald Trump, is strongly manufacturing the defense
and industrial bases, things like fair trade, things, secure borders,
which is probably the most important issue right now, and

(13:40):
an end of the analyst wars. And you think about
Ukraine and what's going on in the Middle East, and
so we've got to beat them all in the policies.
Never mind that transgender destruction of women's sports. But we
have to be able to articulate that and that's what
I was trying to do now in prison. You will
you won't be surprised at this. You may remember Donald

(14:03):
Trump passed something called the First Step Act. I don't
know if you remember that twenty and it's one of
two pieces of landmark prison reform. The other is the
Second Chance Act. And interestingly enough, because Carmer, you know
what that is, it was a counter response to Joe Biden. Okay,
Within the prison community, Joe Biden is known as Joe

(14:26):
mandatory minimum Biden. Okay, he's the guy that devised these crushing,
over exaggerated sentences putting first time offenders away for like
fifteen years. I mean, it's an abomination. And what's interesting here?
And I don't think I'm.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
Getting well, let me ask you a question. Could you
hang on a couple of more minutes? Can I hold
you through the break? They have time? Or are you
in a rush?

Speaker 3 (14:53):
Whatever you need, John, you're the man, right.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Doctor Peter ban Navarro is with us four months out
of prison. Just Relea spoke with the R and see
this week he has a brand new book out. You
got to read this book. We have it on Hannity
dot com, Amazon dot com bookstores now all across the country.
It's called The New Maga Deal, The Unofficiable, Unofficial Deplorables
Guide to Donald Trump's twenty twenty four policy platform. More

(15:17):
with Peter on the other side than we'll get to
your calls. Eight hundred ninety four one Shawn is a
number exposing government waste and abuse of your liberties every day.
Sean Hannity is on right now, all right, twenty five

(15:37):
to the top of the hour. Your call's coming up.
Eight hundred and nine four one Shawn our number if
you want to be a part of the program. You know,
a violent crime is committed every twenty four hours, I'm sorry,
every twenty four seconds in our country. Can you believe that?
And with our broken legal system, if you dare to
defend yourself with your family, well you might be one

(15:58):
of the people actually put behind as we watch criminals
go free every single day with no bail, and defund
and dismantle and reimagine the police. But you know, we've
got to a point where we're fighting to keep our
god given second Amendment rights, and yet we risk losing
every single solitary thing if we actually use them in

(16:19):
a situation that warrants it.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
Now.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
Luckily, the solution is simple. Become fully prepared before, during,
and after any God forbid self defense situation ever arises.
Do it as soon as possible. I have been a
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and with the us c C eight, not only do
you get firearms safety training, education, but you get self

(16:43):
defense insurance. So if God forbid that moment happens, you
stay out of prison and with your family and freedoms
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you to text right now Hannity my last name, h
A N N I T Y to to to two.
They're going to send you a free family defense Guide.

(17:05):
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Do it before it's too late. Text Hannity to eight
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(17:25):
to to two and check it out. We continue now
with doctor Peter Navarro. He's the former director of the
US Office of Trade and Manufacturing. I just got out
of prison after four months. He's written a new book.
It's called The New Magga Deal, The Unofficial Deplorables Guide
to Donald Trump's twenty twenty four policy platform. And now

(17:46):
you just got out of prison four months.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
You know.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
I spoken to Paul Manafort, for example, and he was
actually on during the convention this week, and Paul Manifort
spent nearly a year in solitary confinement and that year
and he wrote this in his book, and I asked
him about it this week on air, about what it
was like, because in solitary confinement, I mean, it's a

(18:11):
pretty miserable existence. I was kind of shocked to hear that.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
You know.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
One of the things that kind of helped sustain him
was he'd listen to Rush twelve to three eastern, he'd
listen to Me three to six eastern, he'd listen to
The Gray One, Mark Levin six to nine eastern. And
then often the prison guards, who were very nice to him,
would often put on My TV show for the guy,
and he said it helped him. I did not know

(18:37):
at the time that this was happening. What was prison
like for you? How were you received by those prisoners?
Everybody knew who you were, everybody knew your case, everybody
knew that you really didn't have to be there. Had
you gone to the j sixth Committee and just pled
the fifth, you would have walked away. But you decided
you were going to take a stand on principle, kind

(18:59):
of like Benon did.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
Well, let me thank Paul Manner for before I just
before I went in, I had a nice long conversation
with him about how to handle the situation. And the
thing I took away with him from him was the
virtue of routine, Seahn. So every day I had a
set routine in terms of keeping my physical health well

(19:24):
when you're working out, giving my mental health well, by
working on finishing a book about this whole problem with
the law, and I kept a diary of being in prison.
So I had all that going on, and then I
developed it.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
Now, were you in a camp? Did you were you
like in a dormitory? Were you going to sell?

Speaker 3 (19:47):
What was it like? Let's make they call it a camp,
but it's not that Miami facility is like a hybrid.
It's surrounded by by barbed wire. They they've got some
violence offender that worked their way down into it. Uh,
four dorms, fifty guys in each, two hundred total. We

(20:07):
had COVID go through a couple of times, you know,
one guy was and then everybody would get it. The food.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Did you did you get COVID in prison?

Speaker 3 (20:15):
I did, and I'd never gotten really. You know, if
I'm out on the outside, I'm able to do what
I need to in terms of of a healthy diet,
the hydroxy which I'm a fan of, and you know,
I can fight it off. But there because you get
in such a weak in state from the from the
from the diet they feed you.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
But well, tell me about the diet. What are they
not feeding his steak every night? I get it.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
It's yeah, breakfast. There's supposed to be a national prison
diet Sehan, but they don't abide by it. So in
the morning you get like this, this just cereal and
skim milk is pretty much sometimes an apple sauce. They
call us. Remember the old days when ketchup was a
vegetable play know that kind of stuff like that, And

(21:04):
oh no, no, no, it's a very protein deficient diet.
You have to supplement with the commissary food if you
can't afford it with which I could, but a lot
of guys couldn't. And the commissary you got to have
this job, Sean. It's like they get like like one
hundred percent markups on stuff. You if you spend one

(21:27):
hundred dollars in a Walmart, you get about forty dollars
worth of stuff at the Commissary. I mean, it's just
and the worst part and unfortunately, Sean, I don't take
any medicines, no prescription medicines, but the medical care there
is absolutely awful and it's very hard when you come
in to get your prescription drugs. And one of the things,

(21:48):
you know, look, I could, I could stand up for
these guys better than anyone because the other guys would
get retribution on them from the system. But there was
one case, for example, evening, this guy comes to Big
guy comes to me. He's in tears and pain his stomach.

(22:08):
He looked like he was pregnant. It was he was
like having a tremendous problem. And I had to go
to the guard because they wouldn't do anything. I said look, uh,
this guy, he had two choices here. You know, he
goes to the hospital and lives, he stays here and dies.
And it was that that close, okay, And the guy
looks at me, he calls we get him out. The

(22:30):
guy has a virgens of surgery for three hernias, and
you know, he comes back and he was very thankful
for the help. Right. The other thing, which was funny
in a way, you know, it's like everybody when when
a new inmate comes in, everybody wants to know whether
he was a snitch, whether he pleaded and got you know,

(22:50):
snitched on his phone. You well, that was the beauty.
There's not exactly the same equivalent of you know, standing
up and not responding to a congressional subpoena and not
snitching in whatever it was. But they thought I was
coming in a stand up guy, and they all like

(23:11):
Trump before the First Step Act. This thing, Shane, It's
really important politically because I think it could actually at
the margin, move enough voters in some of the swing
states to make a difference. The short thing is Biden
is not enforcing the First Step Act and three to

(23:33):
six to twelve month delays and the release of prisoners
means more taxpayer costs.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
That's outrighteous that that's so wrong. This guy follows no laws.
He doesn't even follow Supreme Court decisions, you know, as
exemplified by the student loan, you know, vote buying schema
has But let me go back to this. So you're
dealing with prisoners. I mean, you're not the youngest guy
that he used to be. But you're great shape, You're

(24:01):
you're healthy, you fit. You don't have protein in your
diet that they should be feeding you, so you have
to buy it at the commissary. I don't know what
you were buying, but if you want to tell us,
I'd love to know. But how did they treat you?
I mean, was everybody nice to you? I mean, you
weren't sitting there at night wondering if Bubbo was going
to attack you?

Speaker 3 (24:21):
Were you there? There were moments here, you know, I
saw some things that that would that would lead you
to believe that there's there's danger there.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
But look as time, but not you specifically, You were
not targeted people did Look did did people generally leave
you alone or generally be nice to you?

Speaker 3 (24:43):
Well? They never left me alone. Because he wanted to
talk to me about Trump. They were all, hey, what's
Donald Trump really like my help? I mean, by the
end of it, it's like, here's the thing, this is
really important, Sean. I developed a team of inmates within
the prison assist ramatically fight the lack of enforcement of

(25:03):
the first step back. I'm taking this, dude. Matt Gates
has been helping me. We're trying to get get Comber
and the Judiciary Committee. It's a five billion dollar problem.
It's a scandal, Sean that I have uncovered. It's five
billion dollars involving over sixty thousand inmates and their families

(25:24):
because the Biden administration is not enforcing the first step back.
Think about that. These guys go to prison for breaking
the law, and they're stuck in prison longer than they
should be because the Bureau of Prisons in the Biden
administration is breaking the law. And if I can get
a little love, you're listening, Jim Jordan, Comer Gates is

(25:45):
helping Biggs. I can blow up a five billion dollar
scandal in the Bureau of Prisons and get taxpayers five
billion dollars.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
It's this well, Jim Jordan will take your call. I
know that for a fact, he absolutely would take your call. Continue.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Now.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
Pete Navarro is with us and he just got out
of prison, former director of the US Office of Trade
and Manufacturing under Donald Trump, and out of prison, he's
written a new book. It's called The New Magga Deal,
The Unofficial Deplorable's Guide to Donald Trump's twenty twenty four
policy Platform. I'm so sorry, and I mean this sincerely
that you had to go through that. I'm glad you're

(26:24):
on the other side of it. It shouldn't have happened.
Let me ask a final question. You knew, and I'm
sure your lawyers told you that if you would have
only gone into the JA six committee and pled the fifth,
you would have walked out and you would have walked free.
You did not have to do this, but you thought

(26:44):
the principle was too important. Tell me about why, because
because I'm trying to put myself in your shoes. Yeah,
I'd probably say, you know what, screw it, I'll just
plead the fifth. What do I care because I'm not
telling you anyway. You're not forced to, you're not compelled
to tell them. And if you did just that, you
wouldn't have gone to prison, and you wouldn't have had

(27:04):
to experience it, but you felt the principle of executive
privilege was that important that you were willing to do it.
That shows me, number one, the type of person you are.
Maybe I'm not as strong as you. I don't know,
but I would have just looked at them and said,
you know what, I'm not letting you put me in
that position. But you felt strongly about it, and I admire.

(27:29):
I admire the fact you stood on principle. But I
wonder you ever think at any point I should have
just pled the fifth and gotten out of there.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
No, no, not for a second. Show I don't regret
a thing. Here's the thing. The difference between me and
probably everybody else who got a subpoena for J six
was my lived experience in the White House, and my look.
I saw my colleagues, Kelly and Conway, down Thegan, Porter, Hope, Hicks,

(27:56):
all these people were subpoenaed over these impeachment things, right,
and they held firm and more importantly, the pat sippoloona
White House legal counsel, issued letters about the importance of
testimony immunion and Department of Justice policy. And I read
all that stuff and for me in my day DNA

(28:18):
that when Congress comes to call them, you got to
defend the constitution. So when I saw to inform that
Jay six committee, Okay, and I had talks. I don't
like to talk much about talks with the Boss, but
we had one, and it was it's in the public
record now about these subpoenas. And he and I both
knew we could see that the only reason they were

(28:40):
doing that was not to get to the bottom of
what happened, but to put Donald Trump in prison and
keep him out of the White House. And I wasn't
going to participate in that. I said from the outset, John,
I said, look, the President has invoked the privilege. That's
a fact, not mine the way, that's the law. And
if you want me to test, which I would be

(29:01):
happy to do, just go and ask the President to
waive the privilege. Now here's the thing, Sean. They never
did that.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
No, they never did.

Speaker 3 (29:11):
Well call to the president because the irony in all
of this. I would have been one of one of
the JA six people on the stand who would have
been exculpatory. I mean I wrote about it.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Well, there were a lot of people that would have
been exculpatory. The people that would have testified that Frum
called up the guard and Muriel Bowser would have been
you know, it would have proven that. Well. Why did she,
in writing deny the troops. Why did Nancy Pelosi and
Chuck Schumer not not call up troops? Even NBC reported

(29:45):
there was actionable intelligence in the days leading up to this.
Why was the Capitol Police chief son I brought in?
But you know, Peter, I'm glad you're out. I'm sure
it was really unpleasant. I do admire the fact that
you're a man of principle. I really do. I really
urge people to get a copy of your book. We're
going to put it on my website, Hannity dot Comments

(30:05):
on Amazon dot com. It's in bookstores around the country.
It's called The New Maggot Deal. The Unofficial Deplorables Guide
to Donald Trump's twenty twenty four policy platform. I know
I kept you a lot longer than I thought I would,
but I am an I do appreciate your time I've
known you. I appreciate our friendship, and I'm glad you're
home free. And my best to you and your fiance

(30:29):
and your new life and your new lease on life,
and I wish you the best.

Speaker 3 (30:33):
All right, my brother, you keep doing what you're doing.
You're the best at it.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
I don't know about that. I'm trying though. I'm trying hard.
I promised, Peter. Thank you, my friend. Eight hundred nine
four one Sean. This can't happen in our country. It
just can't. But it's happening. This is what the weaponization
of justice is

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