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February 11, 2026 31 mins

Sean Hannity is joined by Bill O'Reilly for a sobering look at the decline of San Francisco — from the homelessness crisis in the Tenderloin to the rise of organized drug networks tied to Honduran nationals operating in plain sight. O’Reilly lays out what he witnessed firsthand: open-air drug markets, lax prosecution policies, and city leadership that has failed to restore order despite billions in funding.

The conversation turns to Gavin Newsom and what Hannity and O’Reilly describe as broken promises to clean up California’s streets — even as the city hosts glamorous Super Bowl events blocks away from tent encampments. They also examine the role of corporate influence, including Apple’s NFL partnership and the halftime show selection, and what it says about the commercialization of major cultural events.

The hour closes with a broader conversation about election integrity, voter ID laws, and whether some Republicans are doing enough to defend confidence in the electoral process. It’s a sharp, investigative hour focused on leadership, accountability, and the widening gap between political image and reality.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
All right, Leonard's simple man. That can only mean one
thing on this radio program, and that is all things
self proclaimed simple man, he's anything but simple in my view.
That means all things Bill O'Reilly, all things Bill O'Reilly
or Bill O'Reilly dot com store O'Reilly. Sir, how are you?

Speaker 2 (00:21):
I'm okay, just back from hanging with Bad Bunny.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
You went to the Super Bowl? How was it?

Speaker 3 (00:28):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (00:29):
Well?

Speaker 2 (00:29):
I was there as a reporter. We're going to do
a special on a collapse of San Francisco.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
What are you don Lemon?

Speaker 5 (00:36):
Now?

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Are you going to do this reporting activism thing.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
I'm a legitimate reporter. We're going to do the collapse
of San Francisco. And then I did take way on
over to the super Bowl. You know, all game is all.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
There were a lot of woke people there. What was
the reaction. Did you run into any Hollywood A listers?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
I did? I ran into bon Jovi. I've known a
long time. He's okay. But the big reveal is that
my new best friend is Gavin Newsom and he sends
his best to you.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
All right, tell me tell all.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I ran into him and a long conversation with him,
and he invited me on his podcast. Have you done that?
Have you done this podcast?

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Oh, he's never invited me on a podcast. But we
used to text, you know, intermittently, nothing serious. And his
last text to me, I've not revealed it publicly, I'll
tell you privately was very very, very mean and I
probably should make it public, but I don't know if
that's the right.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
Thing to do. It's a context to making it public.
It's fine. If you're just doing it to make him
look bad, then it's probably best not to do it,
would you.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
My response was classical, though, I wrote back, that's not
very nice.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Yeah, and that's all you gotta do. I did run
to Nancy Pelosi.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
Wait a minute, go back. I want to talk about me.
It's all about me. It's all about mine, It's all
about number one on mommy My, What I think, what
I know, what I want? When I love what I say?
You've heard the song Toby Keith. But in all seriousness,
so you talked. What did you guys talk about? Did
you tell him you're doing a story about the decline
of San Francisco? Did you tell him you know, yes

(02:22):
to the podcast? Because I think that I don't think
he has the appetite to be confronted over his failed policies.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Well, I did tell him as I do the podcast,
and then we ran into the CEO of YouTube when
it was powerful men in the world, and that's where
we'd wind up. I think, you know, we're we're kicking around.
How many people would listen to that, I think between
fifty and eighty million, so I would be quite an event.
But I kept it fairly social. I thin get into politics.

(02:59):
But the it was a little bit interesting because I
did a stand up in front of her mansion in
Pacific Heights, where they don't have a almost problem because
everybody's got private security. It's a big mansion, beautiful, beautiful area,
and her house is very nice. Now, while I was
doing that stand up, there were armed guards outside the

(03:24):
house and they knew me and all that, and they
are are you going? And they one guy came up
and say, you know, ambush Nancy and I said, no,
I'm not going to see that. We don't need to
do that. We're just doing a little bit of a
history here where she lives and what her take has
been on the decline of her hometown. It's not her

(03:46):
hometown she's from Baltimore, but on our town. And you know,
the guy was fine with He couldn't stop me. I'm
in a public place. So then later on at one
of these shushi parties, she's there with mc hammer the wrap.
I love that.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
I like mc hammer.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
So he comes mc gems over and very polite, respectful
PELOPSI takes one look at me. I didn't know an
eighty four year room and could still sprint, but that's
what she did.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
You see. I'm glad you're following a little bit my footsteps.
We were a little ahead of you. So years ago
I sent people to her home in that gated community
that she lives in, and we also went to her office,
which is about a mile in the other direction, and
in between is one of those open drug zones, which

(04:40):
I'm sure you probably saw and videotaped, sure, And that's
where people would be defecating in public and urinating in
public and shooting up drugs in public. So a mile
from her house in one direction and a mile from
her office in the other direction is this open air
drug area. And what I always was wondering was, you know,

(05:01):
he lives in a multimillion dollar home with multimillion dollar neighbors,
the neighbors that are multimillionaires, and why didn't they all
get together and say, we need to fix this, And
why didn't they donate some money and build out a
homeless shelter of some kind, a place where people could, say,

(05:21):
get two or three meals a day, get some treatment
if they're addicted to drugs, alcohol, or have mental illness,
maybe provide them a place to take a shower. And
then my conclusion is is that the left liberals are
only generous with other people's money. They don't want to
do that themselves.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Well, I don't think, as you will. He even sees
this stuff because she can get around San Francisco without
going through the Tenderloin and the other inner city areas.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
It's a mile from our house and a mile from
our office. Bill, I don't think she could miss it.
How does she not know what's going on. She's supposed
to represent that area.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
But she doesn't see it. It's so appalling, it's so horrible,
and I was right in the middle of it. They
thought Dirty Harry was back when I walked through, And
you know, we talked to a bunch of people who
had been in there, we found out an amazing thing.
Here's the headline for the Hannity Radio audience. I did

(06:23):
not know this. So it's a twenty four to seven
drug market out in the open. As you said, the
local authorities and the cops are furious. The San Francisco
police are not the problem. They are absolutely out of
their minds angry about this. But the judges will not
prosecute and the DA will not prosecute. So if you

(06:46):
take drug criminals in pushers, they don't even bother with it,
and that's why you have it. So it's twenty four
to seven drug market. Okay, you know who's selling the drugs,
Honduran undocumented migrants.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
Did you tell Gavin why you were out there?

Speaker 2 (07:07):
No.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
If you go back and I'm gonna, I'm gonna help
you with your expose that you're putting together. There is
a tape. I believe it's in twenty twelve, thirteen, or fourteen.
I forget the exact year. I could actually pull it
up and play it for you and Gavin as mayor
of San Francisco announcing his plan to end homelessness in
San Francisco. Yeah, well, well, I mean, did you bring

(07:31):
any of this up with him. Did you tell him
why you were out in California or did he think
you were just there for the Super Bowl?

Speaker 2 (07:37):
No? I didn't. I didn't talk politics for them at all.
And he invited me on the I didn't even know
he had a podcast, but that would be an event,
so I didn't get into that at all. Wasn't the
right setting.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
Listen, Bill, let me let me tell you about Gavin.
I know everything about Gavin. Gavin is a full time podcaster,
a full time Trump stalker, a full time tweety bird.
Now he's a full time author in a world traveler.
The one thing he doesn't do is his day job,
which is to be the governor and fix his state.
It's a sanctuary, the sanctuary city of San Francisco, LA,

(08:09):
and the sanctuary state of California. They're going bankrupt in
spite of having the highest income taxes, sales taxes, gas taxes,
corporate taxes. And now they have a referendum that they
are putting on the ballot in November that would be
retroactive to January. That would be a wealth tax of
five percent on billionaires and twenty out of twenty one

(08:30):
billionaires surveyed said they were leaving the state. Mark Zuckerberg
just moved to the Free State of Florida. Larry Page,
one of the Google founders, just moved to the Free
State of Florida. Ken Griffin, Free State of Florida. And
you see one person after another after another. This is
what's going to eventually chase you out of New York.
And you're gonna call me asking where you should buy property,

(08:51):
and I will help you.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
I live in your garage.

Speaker 6 (08:55):
Now.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
My garage is my dojo.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
It's probably the equivalent of three houses. Look, I want
to make one more point about what we found out
about there in the expose. So there are Hondurans who
are controlling the drug trafficking not only in San Francisco
but in Oakland, very violent people. Usually in cases like this,

(09:19):
the federal government will will make a joint task force
with local state officials to root out this kind of
organized crime, but California will not cooperate. So the Hondurans
know it and they are just out there now. There
is an army of these people that are drug addicted,

(09:42):
substance abuses, mentally ill. An army. The estimate is between
ten and thirty thousand and San Francisco is not that
big a town. And it's going to happen in New
York City, you mark my words. The same thing is
going to happen to New York.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
I hate to tell you it's already happening. It's been happening.

Speaker 2 (10:01):
It's horrible.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
But you don't go to New York City very often.
You're in the suburbs in your own manship.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
Most of the drug open air markets are in the
Bronx and then down in Washington Square in New York City.
But it's not like this. This is like Calcutta, India.
This is how bad this is and it's shocking. It
should never happen in America. And that's why I was
out there. And then from that low point, I go

(10:28):
to the wealthiest people in the world, in the world
who were at all these parties in the Super Bowl.
It was really a contrast.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
Let me play Gavin Newsom. It's actually the year was
two thousand and eight. I was off on my timeline.
I apologize for that. This is him, as mayor of
San Francisco, swearing and promising that his plan will end homelessness.

Speaker 6 (10:50):
We believe fundamentally, that food selves hunger, that shelters soft sleep,
and that housing salces homelessness.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
And if we're going to solve.

Speaker 6 (11:00):
The problem of those that are out on the streets
that we define as homeless, we better solve the housing
problem if we're going to have an impact.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
And that's why we.

Speaker 6 (11:10):
Established this framework, what we called a ten year Plan
to end chronic holeness in San Francisco.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
The ten year plan has come and it has gone,
and the homeless problem has got exponentially worse. Well, see
the fact I'm on to Gavin Newsom. That's the reason
Gavin doesn't like me anymore. I've got Gavin down, I
got his record down, pat and let me tell you
he becomes the Democratic nominee, I will make sure every

(11:36):
person in this country knows everything that you could possibly
know about Gavin Newsom.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Well a job. Let me give you a couple of
other things. So, the city and state, the city of
San Francisco, State of California has spent almost two billion
dollars to build homes for these people. But none of
the people want to go in homes because they are

(12:03):
dominated by drug pushers. That's where the dealers live. You
are not drug tested. So if you want to go
into a shelter, they don't drug test you. You are
not even search for weapons. So the people on the streets,
I said, why don't you just go to the city housing?
They go because we'll be killed.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
All right, quick break more with all things simple man,
Bill O'Reilly, All things O'Reilly. Check it out at Bill
O'Reilly dot com. More with Bill on the other side
as we continue, than your calls. Eight hundred and nine
to four one Shaw continuing now all things self proclaimed
simple man. That means all things Bill O'Reilly. Check out
O'Reilly at billoreilly dot com. How do you think all

(12:45):
these people in New York City? I think we're up
above twenty. I know you've had a horrible cold spell there.
I feel very bad for the people in New York.
My friends, they've been complaining to me bitterly about it,
and I know you've had this cold spell, and mom
Donnie fuses to take these people off the streets eighteen
and people have been freezing to death, dying of hypothermia.

Speaker 2 (13:06):
Bill eighteen dead because ma'am Donny won't remove people from
dangerous situations. But that's what The communist philosophy is that
human life doesn't matter, all right, So I'm not surprised
about that. Everything is to the state. Your allegiance isn't
to yourself, it's to the state. Aman Donnie is a communist,

(13:30):
That's what he is. But the decline in New York
is going to mirror the decline in San Francisco.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Well, it's all bad to me because it's a human tragedy.
And I believe every human being was created by God,
and I believe that if given the right help, and
that would include what you're suggesting, Yes, you give them help.
You teach people how to fish. You don't give them
a fish. They have to be drug tested, and they

(13:55):
can have a warm bed. They have to make sure.
You have to make sure they're safe and secure. They
can't have people with weapons going into those homes. If
you provide people a shower and drug testing and and
drug you know, counseling, et cetera. You know, that's all.
You know. The state is going bankrupt bill in spite
of the highest tax burden in the nation, and it's

(14:16):
going bankrupt because they're providing all these services for illegal
immigrants and medicals going bankrupt. All right, I do have
one more question. If you want to hang through the
other side of this break, do you have a minute
or you have to run? All right, because I have
yet to ask you what you thought of the Great
Halftime Show, and I know you probably loved every minute
of it. Anyway, eight hundred sean, if you want to

(14:39):
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(16:03):
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Bill O'Reilly hanging with the rich and famous at the
Super Bowl. But what did he think about the halftime show?
That's next? All Right, we're holding Bill O'Reilly over because
I didn't ask him the most important question. We spent
a lot of time talking about Gavin and San Francisco

(16:26):
and Nancy Pelosi. Okay, so you went to the Super Bowl.
Did you see other conservatives there or were you pretty
much it?

Speaker 2 (16:34):
Well, I don't categorize myself ideologically. I'm more of a
traditional guy. There wasn't you. There weren't regular people at
the game. Now let me clarify that.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Oh boy, now you're about to get into trouble. Go ahead,
get in trouble. I don't care. It's on you, It's
not on me.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
Trouble is my life. Most of the fans in the
stadium seventy thousand were either rooting for the Seahawks or
New England. They were on tours that they put together,
and I would say the Seahawks outnumbered the Pats about
two to one. Fandom. There weren't any random people there

(17:14):
because the tickets were so high top ticket, secondary market
thirty thousand dollars. The lowest ticket I saw was four thousand.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
Did you get a freebee? Did somebody invite you as
a guest or did you pay?

Speaker 2 (17:27):
The people that I'm working for paid my way. Okay, So,
as you know, I am the original culture Warrior. I
had a book out Jesus had of the almost twenty
five years ago Culture Warrior. But I'm not as active
there as they used to be. However, the Devious Rabbit's presence.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
That the Devious Rabbit's presence. Yeah, we're talking about bugs money.

Speaker 2 (17:56):
This rabbit was the headliner. How that decision was made
and I found out you ready, it.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
Was made because of Rock Nation and Beyonce and her
husband and their relationship with the NFL.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Not quite, it was made because of Apple. So I
am you know, you know my background. I'm an investigative reporter.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
And oh good grief, give me the give me the
real scoop here.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
Okay, here's the scoop. Apple invested upwards one hundred million
dollars in the National Football League this year through sponsorship
and other things that Apple put together special events. In return,
Apple got to choose who the halftime talent was. Apple

(18:56):
wanted the Devious Rabbit to sell Devious.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
Rab But you're talking about Bad Bunny. Keep going.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
Listen to me, don't interrupt. This is important. Apple wanted
the Devious Rabbit to sell world wide down loads, which
it succeeded in doing so. The one hundred million dollar
Apple investment in the National Football League will probably lead
to four or five hundred million in downloads of Bad

(19:27):
Bunnies music. That's why the rabbit was on the stage.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
So here's an interesting phenomenon post super Bowl because you know,
the Turning Point had an alternative halftime show. Kid Rock
was featured in it. And as we're country artists, et cetera.
So the last song that Kid Rock performed was Till
You Can't. I'd never heard the song before and I
loved it. It was a I think it was a

(19:54):
rendition that he did of it.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
Yeah, I think it's new.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
And okay, guess what. It went to number one on
the download charts and Bad Bunny Song was number three
the day after the super Bowl. What do you think
of that?

Speaker 2 (20:08):
But that's just in the USA. Apple Maker have it's
money overs run with the rabbit. It is an amazing
thing happened.

Speaker 1 (20:17):
When did you come up with the rabbit? Why do
you call him the rabbit?

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Well, because that says, Look, my surname is William, they
call me Bill, so bet evius rabbit. I am just
calling him by his baptismal name.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
And I'm going to give you my exit observation about
the whole thing. And you know, one of my complaints
about the Left is they bubble and fizz about everything.
Trump doesn't says, and they feign this fake, phony, fraudulent
outrage all the time, and they're always upset all the time,
bubble and fizz like Alka Seltzer all the time. And

(20:53):
I knew when bad Bunny Bugs Bunny whatever you want
to call him, mister rabbit, I don't care, was selected
that it was not going to be a halftime show
that most of America would like. And I just accepted
that reality that the NFL is a business and they're
making their decisions for whatever reason. Part of their decision

(21:15):
I believe is they have adopted some DEI some woke
I hope it doesn't come back to bite them one day.
They may want to pay a little closer attention to
what happened to Bud Light with the Dilla Moulvaney controversy,
because there are tipping point moments for people. But I
had no expectations that I was going to like the
halftime show. And when he told people to learn Spanish,

(21:39):
I think that was a pretty good indicator that it
was all going to be in Spanish. But none of
it bothered me, Bill, I don't care. I cared more
about it being a horrible game. It was not a
fun game to watch. The game's leading up to a
phenomenal and I cared more about that.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
I agree with you. I didn't care, but I had
a question. He keeps grabbing his crotch. Is he worried
that it's not there? Why do you do it?

Speaker 1 (22:03):
I did Michael Jackson do it? I have no idea
I have it? Is Madonna do it? I have no idea.
You have to ask them.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
There's powder for that. Anny.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
I'm not going to ask how you know that. I'm
not going to ask how Bill o'reiley knows that. But
if you if you know that to be a fact,
why would I ever doubt Bill O'Reilly.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
All right, mister sport So you got a lot of
powder going on.

Speaker 1 (22:29):
Uh huh, okay, you try and wiggle out of that one.
All things simple, man, Bill O'Reilly at billoreilly dot com.
Glad you had a good time. Look forward to your report, sir.
Eight hundred nine four one, Sean. If you want to
be a part of the program, let's get to our
busy phones. Kelly Missouri on the Sean Hannity Show.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
Hi, I'm doing great. How are you doing?

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Good man? What's going on?

Speaker 3 (22:51):
I got it cut things I've been saying here listen
for a second on the bad Bunny Dale. I think
you answered it correctly that those of us that live
in the United States said that thing to number one
because Kid Rock did a phenomenal job. The question I
have is is, you know, we got this Voting Act

(23:14):
coming that we need to get passed. And as as
an American legal alien, how many Republicans do we have
in office that are there to support Trump? Two and
forty four.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
In the.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
Now they have a one vote margin in the House,
three votes in the Senate. But you know you're starting
out usually without Tom Massey in the House. I mean,
it's very, very complicated, unfortunately, and I know that you know,
Speaker Johnson is trying to rally the troops and get
this thing across the finish line. I like the idea
of putting Democrats on the record being against voter id

(23:58):
and election integrity. I think just like if they want
to defund ice, I'm okay putting them on the record
for that. If they support sanctuary cities and states, I
want that to go on the record too. They voted
against the largest tax cut in history and voted for
the largest tax increase in history. I want that on
the record. If they want a defund, dismantal nobail, I
want that on the record. I want it all on

(24:20):
the record.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
But we need sixty votes. And we have a lot
of Republicans that got voted in just like we voted
in Trump because we understand his message and we agree.
And I listen to you every day, and I know
you've got a lot of people that listen. But we

(24:44):
should be doing the same thing to all of those
Republican congressmen and senators that got voted in because of
what we wanted and the change that we want, and
people should know that they're not supporting what we want.
You know, it makes us stand back here and look
at this. You know, it's kind of like the comment

(25:04):
you made on Gavin there's some that man. If he gets,
you know, the opportunity to run for president, you're going
to tell everybody about him.

Speaker 7 (25:13):
I'm a I know I know that this voter I
D bill, the House is readying to vote on this
bill that will mandate voter I D for voters across
the US.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Why would any Democrat be against that? Why would any
Republican be against that? You know, This to me is
simple basic fundamental election integrity, so people will have confidence
and results. It would create a new federal proof of citizenship,
and you know, in the voter registration process, impose requirements

(25:47):
for states to keep their voter rolls clear of in
eligible voters. And I would think that everybody would want that.
The only reason Democrats don't want it that I can
think of, is they want they have nefarious and tensions.
That's my conclusion.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Republican officials to be called out if they don't support
Trump because they got in there because we wanted him
to do the things that he's doing, and it's going
to take some of that to make it happen. We
stand here on the outside. I know in my local community.
You know, the politics are just as bad at the
low end as they are the high end. You know,
and I've said it, and maybe it's not realistic, but

(26:25):
you go into office knowing you're going to make X
amount of dollars, and we've had presidents and everyone else
that went in broke and came out multimillionaires. Maybe some
of that' stestin arts needs to start getting posted because
they're truly more worried about what they're going to make
and how they're going to make their millions, as opposed
to doing what we want as the American people.

Speaker 1 (26:47):
I had a Congresswoman Omar and our family in just
a two year period of time go from a networth
of fifty thousand to potentially as high as thirty million dollars.
I'd like an answer to that question. But why, you know,
understand this about many members of Congress that this is
going to be the best job in their life, the

(27:09):
highest paying with the best benefits that they're ever going
to get. I mean that to me speaks volumes. I
like the idea of you know, successful citizens serving for
a short period of time and getting the hell out.
You know, I've always said term limits is a bad idea,

(27:29):
but a bad idea whose time has come. This way,
people will go in and they're not thinking about getting
re elected, and thinking about doing their job, serving the
people in their district, and then going home and going
back to doing what they do best.

Speaker 5 (27:42):
That's my opinion, and I think we need more people
like yourself that are are putting that message out there
and letting people see what's truly going on so that
next time they go to the poll.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
They go, Man, this guy was just in here to
make money. He wasn't in here to do what we
voted them in to do.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
Well said, very well said, I vote for you to
run for office. I think Kelly for Congress in Missouri.
I'm in I'm voting for you. Appreciate the call, my friend,
God bless you. Jeff is next to North Carolina. Hey, Jeff,
how are you hi?

Speaker 4 (28:20):
Sean?

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Thank you?

Speaker 1 (28:22):
What's going on?

Speaker 4 (28:22):
I bless you? So my question is on this kidnapping
of Savannah Guthrie's mother. Are there any other theories out
there that you know about or you could talk about
that other than money. It just seems like this is
not about a ransom. It's not about money.

Speaker 1 (28:43):
I mean, people, I can I can just run through
a list off the top of my head. And I
want to be clear, I'm not speaking specifically about this case.
But does she have life insurance?

Speaker 4 (28:54):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (28:55):
That would mean if she if she was found and
she had passed, which I and which old you know?
Does somebody benefit from that? Could this be a way
maybe somebody doesn't like Savannah Guthrie. Yeah, it could be
that too. I mean there's a million possible motives in
all of this, and it just is extraordinarily difficult. But
you wouldn't target usually at an eighty four year old

(29:17):
woman in bad health. That's what makes this so alarming
for so many people.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
Right.

Speaker 4 (29:23):
So there's no there's no talk of something political or
some lunatic that's trying.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
To make You know, in this day and age, with
everything that we see going on with any would anything
surprise you? I hate to be you know, nothing really
surprises me anymore.

Speaker 4 (29:42):
Yeah, I hope it's nothing like that.

Speaker 3 (29:44):
I really.

Speaker 5 (29:45):
I pray and I pray.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
Listen. I'm praying she just gets found in good health,
alive and well taken care of. And I don't know.
I mean, I'm sure they've checked local pharmacies to see
if her medications or the medication she was on, maybe
somebody got them for I don't know. I just don't know.
As every day passes, historically the odds go down that

(30:09):
she'll be found alive. But I'm not willing to go there.
My hope is, my belief is is that law enforcement
has invested, the community has invested, and that we're gonna
get this guy. We had our big break yesterday, and
I hope it leads to the to finding and arresting
the people or person responsible. That's got to be our

(30:31):
prayer and the point, the larger point is yeah, every
life does matter. That's gonna wrap things up to today.
We have a lot going on on Hannity tonight. Speaker Johnson,
by the way, we'll join us on the battle of
the Fight for the Save Act and we'll check in
with Speaker Johnson, Jim Jordan. But we have Jonathan Hunt,

(30:53):
Harvey Levin, Nancy Grace, Greig Jarrett, Nicole Parker. We've got
investigators left right sideways, and we'll try to break down
the latest developments in the case of missing Nancy Guthrie
and all praying for her safe recovery. That's all happening
nineties tonight on Hannity. Please set your DVR so you
never ever ever miss an episode. We'll see you tonight.

(31:15):
We'll be back here tomorrow. Thank you for making this
show possible.

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