Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
That we'll come in to your site going the way
I get tales and saying you a conscious sound.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Will be fire high Alan, and if you want a
little banging your yin.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
You ain't come along.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
Okay, I know how it is to be spoken, but like,
oh well, the Democrats need to just really the house
is literally on fire and y'all still looking for the keys.
Speaker 5 (00:26):
The damage that the twenty twenty four campaign has done,
the damage that this decade has done through Democratic brand
is almost unfathomable.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
Well here's an alternative thought.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Make your own dinner, mega, make your own sandwiches, wipe
your own tears, troll amongst yourself with Elon, and leave
us alone.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Fradom is back in style. Welcome to the revolution that we're.
Speaker 6 (00:50):
Coming to your site going the way.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I get talas and saying you a conscious sound. New
Sean Hannity Show More I'm the Scene is information on
freaking news and more bold inspired solutions for America. Stay
right here for our final news roundup and information overload.
All right, News roundup and Information Overload hour. Here's our
(01:17):
toll free telephone number. It's eight hundred and nine point
one Sean. If you want to be a part of
the program. So we had we had oral arguments yesterday
in the United States Supreme Court. And it's a high
profile case involving the right of transgender miners to receive
gender transition care such as puberty blockers hormone therapy. One
(01:42):
of the most closely watched, potentially impactful cases to come
before the High Court this year. Anyway, this case centers
on a Tennessee law that bans gender transition treatment for
adolescents in the states by in the state, and by
the way, that's the case in about twenty states, Unlike
say Minnesota, California, they allowed gender affirming care with our
(02:04):
parental consent. Separate issue, but it's related the petitioners in
the case of the ACLU, which is now suit to
overturn the Tennessee law on behalf of parents of three
transgender adolescens. This case was argued by the first transgender
(02:24):
attorney appearing before the US Supreme Court. The questioning was
fascinating at times. Here's sam Alito citing multiple sources showing
the risks of gender affirming care outweighing the benefits, which
totally negated and contradicted the arguments that were being made
(02:48):
against the law and what's fascinating about it. At the end,
Alito actually said, would you like to retract your previous
statement and your brief and change it, because what you're
saying is total bs. Basically, Listen, in your petition.
Speaker 5 (03:03):
You made a sweeping statement which I will quote, overwhelming
evidence establishes that the appropriate gender affirming treatment with puberty
blockers and hormones directly and substantially improves the physical psychological
well being of transgender adolescens with gender dysphoria. That was
in November twenty twenty three. Now, even before then, the
(03:28):
Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare wrote the phone
they currently assess quote that the risks of puberty blockers
and gender affirming treatment are likely to outweigh the expected
benefits of these treatments, which is directly contrary to the
sweeping statement in your petition. After the filing of your petition,
(03:50):
of course, we saw the release of the CAST report
in the United Kingdom which found a complete lack of
high quality evidence showing that the benefits of the treatments
in question here outweigh the risks. And so I wonder
(04:12):
if you would like to stand by the statement that
you made in your petition, or if you think it
would now be appropriate to modify that and withdraw the
statement that there is overwhelming evidence establishing that these treatments
have benefits that greatly outweigh the risks and the dangers.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Then you have, which I think was a pretty fascinating moment,
just as Sodomyo r saying well, every medical treatment has risk.
Even taking an ask.
Speaker 7 (04:41):
For it cannot eliminate the risk of detransitioners. So it
becomes a pure exercise of weighing benefits versus risk, and
the question of how many miners have to have their
bodies irreparably harmed for unproven benefits is one that is
best left.
Speaker 8 (04:58):
I'm sorry, counselor. Every medical treatment has a risk, even
taking asprom. There's always going to be a percentage of
the population under any medical treatment that's going to suffer
a harm. So the question in my mind is not
do policymakers decide whether one person's life is more valuable
(05:24):
than the millions of others who get relief from this treatment.
The question is can you stop one sex from the other?
Speaker 2 (05:32):
No, that's not the question that is before the court.
But that's a separate issue, separate and apart. Then you
have Justice Katanji Brown Jackson comparing the ban on sex
changes for kids to bans on interracial marriage. Listen to this.
Speaker 4 (05:51):
That was sort of like the starting point. The question
was whether it was discriminatory because it applied to both
races and it wasn't necessarily or whatever. But you know,
as I read the statute here, excuse me, the case here.
Speaker 2 (06:05):
You know, the court starts off.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
By saying that Virginia is now one of sixteen states
which prohibit and punished marriages on the basis of racial classifications.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
And when you look at the structure of that law,
it looks.
Speaker 4 (06:16):
In terms of incontinuing you can't do something that is
inconsistent with your own characteristics.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
It's sort of the same thing.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
So it's interesting to me that we now have this
different argument, and I wonder whether Virginia could have gotten
away with what they did here by just making a
classification argument.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
The way that Tennessee is in this case unbelievable. I mean,
it's almost like a surreal court at this time. Anyway,
in the courtroom yesterday watching oral arguments, Roger Severino, a
vice president domestic policy at the Heritage Foundation, and Donald
Trump's former Director of the Office of Civil Rights and
(06:54):
Attorney General for the State of South Carolina, Alan Wilson,
both here to discuss. Roger will start with you. What
was your take in the court room?
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Well, it was electric seeing that the ACLU and pre
leguar were called to the carpet by Justice Alito, by
Justice Thomas really exposed them as the Emperor without any clothes.
As you pointed out, the evidence is not overwhelming that
this helps children, and in fact, I think the most
telling question was when Alito said, is there evidence that
(07:25):
this actually reduces suicides in genderice for youth and strange
from ACLU said no, there is not evidence that supports this.
So the number one argument that the LGBT left has
been making that either you have a live girl or
a dead boy, that sort of emotional black male they've
put on children and doctors pushing in and you have
(07:46):
to do this because lives are online was false. This
does not actually help that at all. There is no
evidence Britain has backed off of it, and that's a
key point. Can a state act to protect vulnerable children?
Vulnerable children from a lifetime of being patients a lifetime
of harm and sterilevation, because once you get on this treadmill,
(08:08):
it's aatrogenic it keeps you on it. When if you
just flip puberty tickets course overwhelming you, over ninety percent
of kids grow out of it. You used to be
a thing called tomboys. Right now people say, oh, no,
you're not a tomboy, You're actually a boy, and that
ideology has hurt kid and damaged them for life.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
What is your take, Attorney General Alan Wilson, Well, what I.
Speaker 9 (08:27):
Was seeing Justice Soda my Ore and Justice Jackson engaging
is what we call the the It's a fallacy, a
straw man fallacy, where you take a legitimate argument, you
replace it with a bad argument, a straw man, and
then you attack the bad argument. Justice Jackson used interracial
marriage and tried to apply or analogize that to this
case of transitioning minors through basically genital mutilation or chemical castration.
(08:51):
And then so to my Ore used the idea of
taking aspirin with that genital mutilation or chemical castration, and
they were applying false for all men fallacies to attack that,
and I thought that was absolutely horrific. Here's the thing.
Sean in South Carolina has a law just like Tennessee,
which is why I was there. But states have a
general police power to regulate and place reasonable restrictions on miners.
(09:14):
We place restrictions on miners on whether they can sit
in the front seat of a car, whether they can
buy tobacco, whether or not they can buy alcohol, whether
or not they can even consent to having sex. And
we put these reasonable restrictions on miners to protect them.
The other side is making the argument that having your
genitals mutilated or being chemically castrated to gender therapy is
not as bad as telling a de minor they can't
(09:36):
smoke a cigarette. I mean, states have a right to
protect the health and welfare of miners, and they're trying
to punch holes in that through these ridiculous arguments. And
again I'll remind you so to my ore was the
same person who used the argument in the presidential immunity
case that Donald Trump could use Seal Team six to
assassinate his political opponents. What a ridiculous thing to say.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
I got the impression Roger Severino that Justice Kavanaugh and
and other justices that they were sort of leaning on federalism,
and we're feeling and seemingly telegraphing that they believe it
should go back to the states. Did you get that impression.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Yeah, in this sense, they didn't want to constitutionalize the question.
They want to say an I think Chief Justice Robbers
as well. They said, you know what there is, this
is a medical issue. We're just a bunch of lawyers
that happened to be judges, and you want us to
put in the position to say that that we're going
to decide over the state of Tennessee and other states
that we're going to constantly.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
By the way, that was really highlighted by Soda mayors,
you know, making the statement about comparing this to aspirin.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
Oh, of course, and states, Look, testosterone, that's one of
the drugs that are issue here. You can't just walk
into a GDS and say, hey, I want some testosterone
or I want to do it because I want to
bulk up. You can't. It's a Schedule three substance. Yet
they're acting as if it's something that is like aspirin,
which is nonsense. And one thing that Biden's lawyer said
(11:01):
that really really annoyed me. She acted as if human
beings are like Plato that all it is is you
add testosterone to this human being and you get male characteristics.
You add enters into this human being, you get female curse. No,
you're born male or female, And it really matters what
that baseline is. And it's critically important for the health
of these kids that the state is able to take
(11:22):
that into account. You don't block puberty if you don't
have an actual illness of precocious puberty. Right, there are
medical reasons to use these drugs, and they're non medical reasons,
and the state is the one that's able to say
the risks are too great, and especially here, we know
the risks are overwhelming as opposed to sit lating major tickets.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Course, way do you think. I know it's hard to
glean listening to oral arguments which way the court is
going to go here, but I kind of got the
strong impression you're in the courtroom. You may have a
better perspective than me. Alan Wilson, State Attorney General for
South Carolina, but I got the impression that they're not
going to be successful in this effort, and the states
(12:01):
will be able to make whatever laws they want. But
then there's a whole other level of constitutionality here, and
that is parental rights. Of my view, because states like
California and Minnesota allowed genda affirming care for minors without
parental consent, that to me is completely unacceptable because that's
the elimination and removal of all parental rights.
Speaker 9 (12:24):
Sean, I got the distinct impression that the Court, at
least the majority conservative members of the Court, did not
want to go down this rabbit hole. This is a
very slippery slope. Obviously, one of the questions was raised,
I want to say it was Justice Alito or Kavanaugh,
how this would affect men and women's sports, and they're
trying to not have these two things kind of be
conflated with each other. So I got a distinct impression
(12:45):
based on the questions of at least five of the
six conservative members of the Court. Justice Gorgious didn't ask
any questions that I heard, but from the questions that
I heard asked by the conservative members, they seem very
skeptical and cynical about opening Pandora's box. There's a reason
you have twenty five states passing these restrictions, in the
other states are not or going the opposite direction. There's
a reason why the UK, Chile, Norway, Sweden, Finland, all
(13:08):
these countries around the world are backing up from this
because the science is so unsound. And I don't think
or at least there's so much conflict and there's so
many different varying points. I don't think the Court wants
to put itself in the place of being the arbiter
of what is good and bad science. And I think
they're going to lead that to the states. So I
don't think that they're going to rule for the government.
I think they're going to rule with the State of
(13:28):
Tennessee and all the other twenty five states like ours
who passed similar laws.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
All right, quick break, right back. We'll continue more with
Roger Severino, more with the Attorney General of South Carolina,
Alan Wilson, and then your calls coming up. Eight hundred
and nine to FOURT one Sean as we continue. We
are in Long Island for the sixth annual Fox Nation
Patriot Awards. Donald J. Trump in the House tonight. It's
going to be a blast. I hope you'll watch on
(13:53):
Fox Nation. All right, we continue now. We're discussing Supreme
Court oral arguments from yesterday. With Roger Brino and Attorney
General for South Carolina Alan Wilson. What do we do
with states like California. I know it wasn't an issue
or part of this particular case being argued before the court,
Roger Severino, but what do we do about California? What
(14:15):
do we do about Minnesota? What do we do about
I guess elected officials that think they know better than
parents and they want to be able to offer such
care to minors without parental consent. To me, that's unconscionable
because in many cases these treatments are irreversible and it's
a lifelong decision, and somehow they think they know better
(14:38):
them than parents. And I'm sorry, but I think parents
ought to have a say in their children's healthcare. I mean,
for crying out.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Loud, yeah, you're absolutely right. And California is trying to
get in between the parents and their kids by becoming
a so called gender sanctuary state where if you have
any inkling that you want to get this sort of treatment,
and I hesitate. I don't think people call it gender
affirming because if a father wants to say to a son, hey,
I want to support you in being a boy, you
(15:06):
know that's gender affirming, right, And what they're saying is
to take a kid away from the parents, behind their
backs in the schools and say to a boy, yeah,
we think you're a girl, and we're going to treat
you like a girl without telling your parents. We're going
to give a new name, new pronoun and not tell
your parents. And by the way, in Sayta California, there
are cases where parents have lost custody because they have
(15:27):
not gone along with state gender ideology. Talk about the
interference with parental rights. Now, this was lurking in the
background of the case. It wasn't raised and it won't
be decided, but that's going to be the next issue.
Canna state in like California.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Oh, that's definitely going to be an issue and parents
will will that eventually will appear before the Supreme Court.
There's no doubt about it anyway. Roger Savarino, thank you,
Attorney General South Carolina, Allen Wilson, thank you. Eight hundred
and ninety four to one, Shawn on number. If you
want to be a part of the program, this is
what's right with America. You're listening to the Sean Hannity Show.
(16:00):
Hi twenty five to the top of the hour, eight
hundred and nine to four one Sean, you want to
be a part of the program. Uh, don't forget. Tonight
eight o'clock it starts the sixth annual Fox Nation Patriot Awards.
I have the honor. I'm gonna be the MC this year.
The recipient of the Patriot of the Year will be here.
We are in New York, my triumphant return to Long Island,
(16:23):
And yeah, obviously it's sold out, but it's gonna be
a fun night. I hope you can watch Foxnation dot
com and it's gonna be It's just gonna be a
great night. We basically, we honor people that never get
any credit. We honor unsung heroes. We honor the people
that really make the country great and do great things
that nobody ever hears about. And it's so different from
(16:44):
the Academy Awards, the Grammys, the Tony's, the Cmas, this
and that awards. Only I ask is that nobody in
the audience, if I crack a joke, is gonna come
up on stage and slap try and slap me in
the face. Good luck to them if they do, since
a will be nearby. Not that I need him. He's
trained me well. But it's going to be a fun night,
Donald Trump Patriot of the Year. It's going to be
(17:06):
a very emotional night in many ways, and I think
it will inspire you. And I'm very honored to be
a part of it. I only wish it was in Florida,
not New York. It's my only complaint. It's a little
baby complaint. It's not a big complaint anyway. You know
the feeling when you're about to cut into that delicious,
juicy steak. It took all the time to prepare. You're
(17:27):
hoping it tastes as perfect as it looks on the outside.
You cut into it, well, you don't have to worry anymore. Ever, Well,
what do you mean, Hennady, I'm going to give you
the answer. Chef iq Sense. It makes it possible you
will be a master chef. It'll be perfect every single time. Now,
(17:47):
how is that possible? It is a modern, completely wireless
cooking dermometer that eliminates undercooking overcooking of your food no
matter how you cook it.
Speaker 7 (17:56):
Now.
Speaker 2 (17:56):
Chef iq Sense designed to withstand extreme heat. It can
even survive in your deep prior whether you're grilling or
roasting or baking chef iq Sense. It guarantees that your
chick and your pork, your meat, your fish is going
to come out exactly to your preferred income. And using
chef iq Sense, it's simple. You insert the wireless probe
(18:17):
into your food, You choose your desired done this on
the chef iq app, and it's going to tell you
it's ready. It's perfect every time. You'll get it perfect
every time. If you're looking for a great gift for
a loved one or yourself this holiday season, anyway, go
to their website chefiq dot com, or just go stop
by your local Costco. You can pick one up there
(18:37):
and join the hundreds of thousands of us. Frankly, the
cook perfect meals every time. You can burn your food,
you can undercook your food, you can have to put
your food back in the fire. No perfect every time.
Chefiq dot com very disturbing and it's almost mind thembing
how hateful people can be. So you have the former.
(19:00):
This was on media Eite, the liberal website, and it
says we want these executives dead. What do you mean
you want these executives dead? How do you say such
a thing? Now? This was said by Taylor Lorenz melting
down in an extended celebration of what happened to United
(19:21):
Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson. He was gunned down in the
middle of New York City. This happened yesterday morning. The
NYPD Commissioner, Jessica Tish said the shooting was not a
random act of violence, but had all the hallmarks of
an assassination. I want to be clear at this time,
every indication is that it was premeditated, pre planned, and
(19:43):
a targeted attack. Anyway, we want these executives dead. This
is a former Washington Post New York Times so called journalists.
You know, she did everything here but basically throw a
party after this guy was assassinated. You know, this executive,
the CEO leaves behind two sons, a wife, she was
(20:07):
shattered by her husband's murder, and Taylor Lorenz sees this
as a cause of celebration and apparently did it online.
In her first post referencing Thompson's deaths, she shared a
post about how Blue Cross Blue Shield, one of United
Healthcare's competitors, will no longer pay for anesthesia for full
(20:27):
length for some surgeries, and some people wonder why we
want these executives deb Wow, pretty sick stuff. And you know,
legislative idea somebody writes and she says she endorses it.
Healthcare executives and their families must be on the cheapest
plan their company offers, and they aren't allowed to seek
(20:48):
other care. Okay, here we go nationalize healthcare. Now listen
to this. And this is not the only case. This
is what's frustrating about this. There are many other people
all over social media. And here's one lunatic I don't
know who it is, you know, calls, you know, celebrates
the killing of this CEO, calls for more insurance CEOs
(21:11):
to be killed. And by the way, meanwhile, the FBI
is going after you know, moms that that go to
school board meetings and peacefully protesting pro life people, you know,
looking at them as possible domestic terrorists. Listen.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
So, the the CEO of the multi billion dollar United
Healthcare insurance company was shot and killed this morning in
New York City. And I will say that it is
it is pretty tragic that the shooter was only able
to get one of them.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
But it's a good start.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
I mean, it's it's a good, good foundation, good we
can only only move up from here. And before any
of you come at me with oh my god, I
can't believe you'd say that, go.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Fund yourself, Seriously, go fund yourselves. How many husbands do
you think have had.
Speaker 6 (21:58):
To bury their wives because wise cancer treatment was denied?
How many parents do you think have had to bury
their children because whatever healthcare treatment the child needed was denied,
or they had to jump through hoop after hoop after
hoop after hoop until finally the treatment the sickness had
progressed so far the treatment just wasn't an option anymore.
(22:20):
So yeah, I would say that this is probably a
good start, a.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
Good start assassinating the CEO of a major healthcare company.
I'm telling you, as Bob Grant used to used to say, Hey,
ladies and gentlemen, it's sick, it is getting sicker. Well
this is, you know, pretty sick, Adam Schiff, I'll tell
you that, really sick and dark and evil. And if
(22:46):
you don't like their policies, well just go to your
Obamacare exchange. How how much you want to bet a
lot of these critics, and I'm not I'm just guessing
here were big supporters of Obamacare keep you doctor, keep
your plan. Average family saved twenty five hundred dollars a year. Yeah, well,
millions of Americans lost their doctors, millions lost their plans.
(23:11):
Almost forty five percent of the country has one Obamacare
exchange option. And oh one little other detail, the average
premium has gone up anywhere between two and three hundred
percent per American. So much for saving money. Anyway, to
our busy telephones, we go. Let's say hi to Mary
is in Wisconsin. Mary High, how are you glad you called?
(23:31):
Thanks for being well. Let's welcome to the sixth annual
Fox Nation Patriot Awards. We are in Long Island, We're
in New York. It is my triumphant return.
Speaker 10 (23:41):
I just want to talk about the prefrontal cortex. That
part of the brain that is behind the forehead does
not mature until the late twenties for boys and girls,
and that part of the brain is responsible for decision making.
Prior to that maturity of that part of the brain,
the only thing that matters to that child is societal
(24:02):
acceptance and pure relationships. So that is why people can
talk them into taking things to change their sex that
they think they can do.
Speaker 3 (24:12):
That.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
By the way, you're you're raising a great point. Men's
brains do not fully form. Well, some people women may
argue never, I'm just saying, but they don't fully form
till they're about twenty five or twenty six years old.
Now that's if you follow the science. But putting that
(24:34):
part aside, we're talking about miners here, and then you
got the added burden of government thinking they know best,
and government thinking that they should make the decision, and
frankly just push parents off to the side that bothers me.
Speaker 10 (24:52):
And if every parent would know that you should not
tell your child that this is okay to take this
drug to prevent you from everyha having a baby someday
until you're twenty seven.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
Well, but let me play devil's advocate. They're going to say, yeah,
but what if the parents don't want the child to
make a life altering decision and that they should wait
to adulthood to make sure that they're really serious about it. No,
I want what I want when I want it now.
And there's the state saying, sure, you want to eat.
You want to eat McDonald's for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and
(25:25):
snack in between on pizza and hot dogs. I mean,
that's pretty much what the state is saying here, I think,
and that's the state of California, the state of Minnesota, right.
Speaker 10 (25:37):
And even Wisconsin. And I tried calling a clinic to
inquire about what they're doing, and they said, do you
have a child here? And I said no, and they said, well,
we can't talk to you. But I think you know,
it all started with Obamacare when you were talking about it.
Then up until you're twenty six years old, you could
pay for your child to have healthcare, but you couldn't
(25:59):
know what are getting health care from.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
You know what this is? This is nuts. This, all
of this ends January twentieth. Donald Trump's not going to
put up with this. And you know what, when it
comes to schools and DEI and the workplace and education,
how about we return to very simple fundamentental basic things
at school, reading, writing, math, science, history, and maybe how
(26:25):
about the Golden rule and you can replace every HR department.
You know, love God with all your heart, mind, body,
and soul. I guess you can't mention God in the
workplace either, although if you're Chick fil A you can,
and you can dictate whatever policy you want, and you
should be in a free society. But and then you know,
treat your neighbors the way you want to be treated,
(26:46):
treat others the way you want to be treated, and
treat people with respect. There you go. I can sum
it up in one page, and then you can get
rid of hr departments all around the country.
Speaker 10 (26:56):
Hella ojah. And you know every child, every child should
know the time commandment because some of them I never learned.
They don't learn that at home. Shall not know, thou
shall not lie, which for.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
The nineteen sixty they were back to back Supreme Court
decisions about prayer in school. They used to have prayer
in school, Bible reading in school. We never became a theocracy,
as liberals now argue. Anyway, I got a role. Thank you, Mary,
appreciate the call. Let us go to Anne in East
Tennessee next on the Sean Hennity Show. Ann, how are
(27:28):
you glad you called? I think your area got really
hit hard by Curri Kane Helene also like North Carolina.
Speaker 11 (27:34):
You know we did. And I really appreciate you taking
my call today. I wanted to let you know, and
we're so thankful. You had mentioned people helping people, and
you know the true test of this is something like
a disaster like Helene. I personally was in a tent
until a few days ago. I have a home. It's nothing,
(27:56):
no mansion, but it's a comfortable, small home which I
still can't access because my driveway has a landslide of
about a quarter mile in it. So I've been displaced,
and so many people down here are very very forgotten.
Speaker 10 (28:10):
You know.
Speaker 11 (28:10):
We're right outside of Boone, North Carolina. Cove Creek in
the Boone area, by the.
Speaker 2 (28:15):
Way, is where the grand family is from.
Speaker 11 (28:19):
Yes, it is, And I'll tell you I have to be.
I have to tell you that I would not be
with a roof over my head if it weren't for
Samaritan's Purse. The Rubicon Guys, Grindstone Ministries, a couple of
folks like that who came out literally went door to door.
We're still living in an area just over the Tennessee
(28:41):
state line, in a little area called Trade, population four hundred.
And that's the only main road that goes between Stay
Booned in eighty one any of the big major highways.
And it's a gorge with a cute little creek in
it that basically erased homes and the roadway. It's due
to be opened at the first of the year. But
we're really forgotten here. The news has not covered this
(29:05):
part of the country, Ashville certainly, and just as bad
as shape that there are some enclaves here that without
the help of people helping each other in the communities,
in these groups, they literally have come out and you know,
over two days give us a place to live, just
one hand at a time, moving literally tons of rocks
(29:28):
and sand and silt so that we could actually have
a place to sleep. I'm so grateful for that. But
I just want the world to know that we are
all still here. We're in a lot of different places
down here in the South, and we are grateful for
you know, some of the donations that have come in.
By the way, FEMA showed up I think a week
(29:49):
and a half ago, which is so fabulous of them.
Speaker 2 (29:52):
Did you get your rejection letter yet, because that's next
you know, I'm.
Speaker 11 (29:57):
Not going to go. I just don't think it's something
I want to get involved. I don't know all the
rumors swirling around.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
But well, I don't think if you need assistance the government,
if the government doesn't protect us. This is why law
and order matters. If we don't have a strong military
that protects us from our adversaries, if government isn't there
for Americans during natural disasters, but yet they're given, you know,
(30:24):
hundreds of billions of dollars to Ukraine and to Africa,
and you know, to every country around the face of
the earth, and we're not taking care of Americans first.
That's why I like Congressman Stuby's bill, which says, now,
if there's a natural disaster, we're gonna stop foreign aid
and take care of Americans first. And in the meantime,
(30:45):
I urge you, I have to run because of the
constraints of time. I apologize. But Samaritanspurse dot Org Operation Helo.
We have a link on Hannity dot com Neighbor Helping Neighbor.
These groups need help so that they can help our
neighbor in need because Joe and Kamala pretty much abandoned them.
It's unbelievable. Eight nine four one sewn. As we continue, right,
(31:08):
that's going to wrap things up for today. As we
now head into the Fox Nation the sixth annual Fox
Nation Patriot Awards, Donald Trump Patriot of the Year. We
honor unsung heroes that do amazing work, inspiring work every
single day. Hope you'll tune in. It's on Foxnation dot com.
All begins at eight pm Eastern time. Hope you'll join
(31:32):
us tonight. We'll see on Fox Nation and watch Donald Trump.
This should be great. It's always going to be great.
Let's make America great again. See you tonight. Back here
tomorrow