Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, we have come to your city.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
Want way, I get.
Speaker 3 (00:06):
Sing you a CONSCIOUSCI will.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Be entire little.
Speaker 4 (00:12):
Tell and if you want a little.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Banging again, I come along.
Speaker 5 (00:18):
We have to put our country first for at least
a period of time. We have to fix it because
together we can truly make America great. To get it
for all Americans. So I want to just tell you
what a great honor this is. I want to thank you.
I will not let you down. America's future will be bigger, better, bolder, richer,
safer and stronger than it has ever been before. God
(00:41):
bless you, and God bless America.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Thank you much.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Freedom is back in style.
Speaker 6 (00:47):
Welcome to the revolution, coming to your city.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Got away?
Speaker 1 (00:56):
I get thousand saying you a conscious sill.
Speaker 6 (01:00):
The New Sean Hannity Show, more him the scene, his
information on breaking news, and more bold inspired solutions for America.
Speaker 7 (01:11):
Thanks Scott Shan An hour two Sean Hannity Show. Toll
Free is eight hundred and nine to four one Sean.
If you want to be a part of the program,
as I feel like I should be given out a
countdown or an admonition, please vote as if the future
of the country's future depends on it, because that's what
I've been saying every day, and again, my heart is
(01:32):
filled with gratitude, appreciation, thanks. I know the people in
this audience went out in massive numbers and voted. Many
of you did something you didn't want to do or
like to do. But I'm hopeful that we can change
the way voting goes on in this country. There are
other countries that you know, went to more sophisticated systems
(01:53):
of voting only to go back to paper ballots. And
by the way, paper balloting is way more sophisticated than
you think. I mean literally, to make sure that it
is a legitimate ballot, they have you put it under
like a purple light or whatever they call that thing,
and and you blue light and you could just tell
whether or not it's real or not, as there are
(02:14):
checks and balances that you probably wouldn't think of. You
think you're just writing a name down on a piece
of paper.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
It's not like that.
Speaker 4 (02:20):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (02:20):
But anyway, there's there's so much to get to. What
is what is interesting now is we have a very
short window of time in which a lot of decisions
have to be made and a lot of people are
gonna have to be hired. There's gonna be a lot
of talk. I've listened to some people I see on
(02:42):
on social media, et cetera. You know, people just just
salivating at the thought of you know, retribution. Uh and
and yeah, we're gonna get to the bottom of Liz Cheney.
Liz Cheney is the least important person in my life
right now, and she's absolutely irrelevant. Do I think we
should find out what happened to the files for January
(03:03):
sixth and things like that? And do I think we
need to look at how the Department of Justice was weaponized?
Speaker 1 (03:09):
I do?
Speaker 7 (03:10):
Do I want do I want this new Trump administration
to ever do to any any Democrat what was done
to them? Never they This has to stop. It's not
good for the country. You don't weaponize the justice system
to go after political opponents. That would be an abuse
of power. And I believe that occurred, and we need
(03:32):
to get to the bottom of it and put in place,
you know, a structure and a system to ensure that
that sort of thing never happens again. Anyway, Here to
be with a Senator Eric Schmid of MISSOURIUS with us.
He himself a former Attorney general. Eric he was out
on the campaign trail in the final days with President Trump.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Well, first of all, what was that like for you?
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (03:56):
It was great. I mean he is you know, Sean
islesss and so we were doing, you know, three four
rallies a day, traveling from state to state, and you know,
as an interview with him and JD. Vance, I'll travel
with JD as well. When they were working really hard
in delivering the right message, right, which was she broke it,
We'll fix it. Are you better off?
Speaker 2 (04:17):
Now?
Speaker 4 (04:17):
Think we're four years ago, and I think that resonated
and I think, honestly, as people are reflecting back on
this thing now, they were pitch perfect on that message
the whole time. It was the economy, it was the border,
it was we're not respected around the world. We were
energy dominant under President Trump. None of those things are
true now or that you know currently. But the policies
are what made President Trump's so popular despite the Democrats'
(04:41):
efforts over the last four and eight years to demonize
him and marginalize the supporters. That people spoke right. Our
republic will be revived because the people had been empowered.
They showed up, they voted and proved that you know,
this vast censorship enterprises Democrats put in place fifteen million
people here illegally, and American people don't want They rejected it.
And it's a bright day in America. There's no doubt
(05:04):
about that.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
It really is. Let's talk about now.
Speaker 7 (05:07):
We have a very short time to build a government
out and I had read reports, for example, that the
Biden administration, anticipating the possibility that Donald Trump could win again,
have been appointing people inside of important agencies like the
DOJ just to have sort of like a check on
(05:30):
Donald Trump and his administration, which I would find totally
completely unacceptable. Is that true if you read the same thing,
have you heard the same thing?
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (05:39):
I think that you know. And we're going to go
back next week and Senate and in the House for
this whatever this Lane deck session looks like. And my
guess is Chuck Schumer is going to try to continue
to move activist judges across the finish line before January.
I would be surprised if he didn't try to do that.
I wouldn't be surprised if they try to unleash some
of these, you know, agency rules or guidance letters. The
(06:02):
good news is that we can come back with the
Republican House, Republican Senate, and President Trump and you can
through the Congressional Review Act get rid of many of
those things. That's why the sweep, although it's not finalized
in the House, is so important. It's important as we
deal with this tax legislation next year to make sure
middle class families get the tax relief they deserve. There
are so many things on the line, But yeah, I
(06:22):
wouldn't be surprised if they're trying to place people in
then I think, no matter what agency, that is job
number one for the new headed to make sure those
people are gone. I think there's going to have to
be a real house cleaning of some of these individuals
that are that are embedded in these agencies that were
engaged in this weaponization of government. It's unprecedented.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
You know.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
I was on your show before our talking about Sean
the Missouri versus Biden lawsuit where the censorship enterprise was
exposed before Elon Musk bought Twitter. It was further amplified
with the Twitter files. But that's the kind of thing
we cannot have that in this country. The good news,
as the American people rejected it but I do think
there needs to be real reform in personnel changes in
(07:04):
all of these agencies.
Speaker 7 (07:06):
Okay, I agree wholeheartedly with that, But what do you
do about people with permanent appointments that may have a
biased against Donald Trump? I mean, we saw what happened
the first time, and that's a little scary to me
when you have people within your own governments kind of
sabotaging an administration that has been dutifully elected by the
(07:27):
American people.
Speaker 4 (07:28):
Yeah, well, I think there's lesson learned, right. I think
when President Trump was in office the first time he
was Brandon Washington. You saw that kind of what do
you want to call it, the administrative standing the deep
state really resisted a lot of the things that he
wanted to do. He has a clear mandate, and I
think it's incumbent upon whoever is in these top jobs
to empower people to make sure that for the folks
(07:49):
that are brought on board, that they're on board with,
you know, with the vision here, and that's going to
come down to leadership. I think President Trump is in
a much better position than he was the first time,
because you know, there's just there's one of a more
lead time I think for him, he's much more familiar
with the position of people around him, understand what the
stakes are. He's got four years, Sean, He's got four
years to make good on these promises, which are its
(08:12):
entirely possible to do. I think the American people gave
him that mandate. I mean, I don't know about you, but,
like you know, the numbers we're going to have in
the Senate, the you know, him sweeping the battleground states,
all the Senate candidates essentially rode many of them great
candidates that rode the cotails of President Trump's same in
the House. And then to win the popular vote. I mean,
it's just remarkable. I think it's the first time in
(08:34):
several decades the Republican's gotten above fifty one percent, you
know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
It's yeah, I think it was two thousand and four
as the last time.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
Yeah, well, it's certainly winning the popular vote, but I
think getting above a certain number of the psident Trump
had it made it before that, So either.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
It was before that. You're absolutely right.
Speaker 7 (08:50):
Let's talk about all the different issues that he's been
dealing with, and every lawyer that I have been talking to,
it says that you know was soon in a find
out whether or not they want to take this issue
of law fair or weaponization even further. We're going to
find out soon. You have this judge Morshawn who ruled
(09:11):
against Trump, and you know, I'm not sure what we're
going to see come out of him.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Nothing would surprise me.
Speaker 7 (09:19):
Then you have the other case you probably heard from
the New York Attorney General, Letitia James. I interpreted that,
by the way, as a political move more than anything else,
that she's prepared to respond to the results. This was
an unprecedented fine against Donald Trump in that case. Evaluation
of Merilago by the judge in the case of eighteen
(09:41):
million dollars when it's over a billion dollars, it was insane,
and they stuck to that the whole time. Even former
Attorney General Bill Barr, who served in President Elect Trump's
first administration, as calling on all these prosecutors at the
state and federal level to dismiss these pending legal cases
against Trump before he takes all office. And what he
(10:01):
said is do the right thing and dismiss the cases
and respect the people's decision. American people have rendered their
verdict on President Trump and decisively have chosen him to
lead this country for the next four years. You cannot indict,
you cannot, you know, imprison it as a matter of
practice and law, an American president, it doesn't happen, It's
(10:26):
never happened, it won't happen. But you know, there's such
hatred toward him. I'm not sure if I'm not sure
how any of these people are going to act well.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
I think that there's been a rebuke against that kind
of law fair as you mentioned. I mean, the election
was decisive, and I think it's important that you know
the story here is Joe Biden gave a speech after
the November midterms in twenty twenty two where he said,
I'm going to do everything I can constitution it makes
your president Trump never gets in office. What did you
see after that? You saw these zombie cases were resurrected
(10:57):
one by one. Jack Smith's case, Fannie Willis case, Alvin
Bragg's case, Letitia James. They got the call and by
the way, there's evidence now that there were lawyers in
the White House talking to them. The number three person
at DJ went to New York to Gate and that
prosecution is all very coordinated. And so the good news
is you were talking about people were talking about they
saw it. They viewed this not just as President Trump
vers Kamala Harris, but I think as a cause. Is
(11:19):
is this the direction we want our country to go in?
Speaker 2 (11:21):
Right?
Speaker 4 (11:21):
Do we want to become some third world and Nana republic?
And the American people said, no, we don't want to
do it. So all these cases now have been falling
apart one by one. The Document's case that was dismith
in fact, the judge rule that Jack Smith was improperly
appointed in the first place. Those cases are going to
go away. Jack Smith has indicated as much. The judge
Vershan like, there's just no way he's going to sentence them.
(11:44):
By the way, that case is already on appeal Sean.
And the reason why it's on appeal is that immunity
case that the Supreme Court decided that said, look, you
can't be criminally prosecuted for official acts as president, and
they use those communications, they use evidence now would be
thrown out as the groundwork for some of those charges
in New York and by the way, in Atlanta as well.
(12:06):
So each one of these cases now from the political
verdict that was rendered in the Supreme Court decision about
what the law is. They all go away, and I
think that's a good thing for the country.
Speaker 7 (12:16):
Well, evidence that was presented was presented from the time
it was president and the Supreme Court case would negate
all of that. At a minimum, they would need a
new trial and not be able to bring forward that
quote that evidence. All right, quick break, we'll come right
back more with Senator Eric Schmid. He was traveling in
the final days with President Trump all around the country.
We'll get to your calls coming up as well. Eight
(12:37):
hundred and ninety four one Sean, if you want to
be a part of the program. All right, we continue
now Senator Eric Schmidt of the Choeme State Missouri. As
we continue, it's very interesting, I think we can make
a lot of conclusions about how poorly the Democrats ran
this campaign. The big switch ERU, she didn't get a
single vote in a primary, et cetera, et cetera. The
(13:00):
worst closing argument I ever heard is Republicans are Nazis
and they're they're fascists and their their garbage and they're racist,
and that went on and on. But can we not
conclude here that the weaponization of justice and law fair
has been rejected resoundedly in a massive way by the
(13:20):
American people.
Speaker 4 (13:22):
Yeah, they saw what they were doing to President Trump,
and they rejected it. They saw exactly what was happening.
They saw through it. This whole threat to democracy argument
didn't land Sean because the only political party that was
trying to keep the other, you know, political opponent off
the ballot, trying to jail their political opponent and engaged
(13:43):
in censorship, which is a threat to democracy, was the Democrats. Right,
that was all they had because I think the other
takeaway he is you're now seeing this multi ethnic, working
class coalition that's been brought to the forefront. Now, I
mean President Trump won among Hispanic men. You had double
the number of black men vote for President Trump. You've
(14:03):
got now truly a party of the working class. I
grew up I know you did. I grew up in
a blue collar neighborhood in Saint Louis area. My dad
works seven days a week in the big night shift.
I love that the Republican Party now that is the
home for working class people, and that is a broad
based party. The real challenge in this election sewn was
typically they may be more low propensity voters. I mean
(14:23):
they don't vote all the time. Like the guy who
listens to Joe Rogan podcast. He may not be voting
every election. Well, they showed up. Our challenge moving forward
is to make sure they continue to show up, to
make sure we deliver on those promises to make this
economy work for them. We bring those jobs home, we
make sure we have a secure border, we have peace
through strength. Those are all things we can deliver on
(14:43):
and our core, I think core mission is to make
this country great again. They believe it, and we've got
a new coalition. I think it's exciting. But yes, they
did reject the centicism. They did reject us too. They
did reject every half the country being called garbage, half
the country being called fascist. It didn't work all All
they had was the stoke fear, and the American people
rejected all of it.
Speaker 7 (15:04):
It really is amazing, and it was the worst closing
argument I think I've ever heard in any presidential campaign.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
Would you agree with that as well?
Speaker 4 (15:11):
Yes, Usually your closing argument is I want your vote
because you know, here's what we have in common, and
here's what I want to deliver for you.
Speaker 7 (15:17):
Well, if you're if you're an elected official and you're
running for basically reelection or or of an increase in position. Right,
if you're looking for promotion like Kamala Harris, don't you
have to point to some success that you have had
and she had none.
Speaker 4 (15:34):
She had none. And here's the other thing, Sean, is
that the most important commodity when you're when you're running
for officer office holder, I think is authenticity. Right. You
people have to believe you're authentic. That's actually who you are.
President Trump is authentic. I mean he's you know, he's
working at McDonald's. When you're on Trump forse one, going play,
there's McDonald like he's an authentic guy.
Speaker 7 (15:55):
See the McDonald's Kentucky Fried Chicken. I know the whole menu,
but it is none of it is healthy. But McDonald's
is usually the top item. Listen, Eric, I would keep
you longer. I'm just running out of time, but I
do appreciate you and all the hard work you've done
and hope to hear from you soon.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
Thank you, sir, Thanks Sean.
Speaker 7 (16:13):
Right, Senator Eric Schmidt of the Great State of Missouri
at twenty five now till the top of the hour,
eight hundred and ninety four one, Shawn, if you want
to be a part of the program, so glad you're
with us.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
Linda, are you feeling good today? You feel good? Are
you happy? Are you content? Has?
Speaker 7 (16:29):
Has the hateless gotten bigger smaller? Are you feeling full
of joy? Do you feel the joy is finally you know,
sunk in that Donald Trump got reelected for you.
Speaker 8 (16:41):
I can't say that I feel joy because I feel
like that word has been hijacked by Kamala and her
lunatic liberal followers.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
I'm never going to say I feel joy ever again.
Speaker 8 (16:50):
Probably I'm thrilled that the rightful president is in office.
President Trump is phenomenal. He's an amazing human, amazing human
being saved by God. I have nothing but words of kindness, love,
and admiration for that man. He is just an inspiration
to everybody.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
It's the backsliding stop that we reflect. Oh no, I
have a hateless, full of gratitude and.
Speaker 8 (17:14):
No, forget about it. No, I hate everybody. I like
President Trump. I love President Trump, you know, but.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
Everybody else am I on the hate list? I'm just curious.
Speaker 3 (17:21):
I mean, it depends on the day. It's Thursday.
Speaker 8 (17:23):
You might be all right, you know what I mean,
It depends I think you're good today.
Speaker 7 (17:28):
The days that I should annoy you the most is
when your phone goes ping, ping, ping, ping ping.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
You know it.
Speaker 3 (17:33):
That doesn't bother me.
Speaker 7 (17:34):
A rapid succession that happens on the weekend at all.
You know, there has to be times you're like out
of dinner and it's like ping ping ping, ping ping.
Speaker 3 (17:43):
Don't go to dinner. I'm gonna work, ahol, look like
you so okay, you don't.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Go out to dinner making dinner. Whatever you happen, i'vet I.
Speaker 8 (17:51):
May tell you what January twenty first, November sixth I
said I would take a deep breath, and I have.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
And it's November seventh. Probably took it last night.
Speaker 8 (18:01):
And then, you know, I think January twenty first will
be the first day that I'll be like, all right,
I'm ready to go out and really enjoy.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
The world again.
Speaker 7 (18:10):
Now, yesterday it was a hard day for me. I
mean when I said I had no sleep the night before,
I had none, and I just I just.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Drove through it.
Speaker 7 (18:19):
But a couple of my really close friends said, you
look kind of tired on TV. I'm like, well, I
haven't slept in forty eight hours. What do you expect
from me? Give me a break.
Speaker 8 (18:27):
I think we were all afreie to go to sleep too,
you know, everyone to stay up and watch those elections
and watch those numbers and make sure that everything came
in the way it was, and it was changing so rapidly.
It's like, I don't think I could have gone to
sleep if I tried.
Speaker 7 (18:40):
But if you recall, I was on Fox News. It
was about nine thirty in the evening, and I told
everybody exactly how the night would play out.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
And I was exactly right, was I not?
Speaker 2 (18:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (18:51):
You were anyway, It's sort of like ef Hutt and
people are like wow, And I said, I don't really
want to go and go over our skis here, but
let me go over my skis and I'll tell you
exactly what's going to happen. Anyway, thanks to the USCCA,
they are offering all of you their instant access life
saving resource. It's called the us CCA Concealed Carry and
(19:13):
Family Defense Guide. You get it simply by texting my
last name, Hannity to the number eight seven two to
two two. I mean, the bottom line is, the world
is a more dangerous place. Hopefully it will start getting safer,
Hopefully defund, dismantle, no bail madness comes to an end.
But until then, well you we're dealing with more lawlessness
(19:35):
than ever before, and so you've got to protect yourself.
You got to protect your family. And if God forbid,
that moment comes and somebody breaks into your home, your business,
wants to kill you, your family, your employees, well you
might have to take action. In your mind, you think
you're going to be the hero, okay, and you're going
to take out whatever threat there happens to be and
save your life and the life of everybody you love. Now,
(19:58):
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(20:22):
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Speaker 1 (20:43):
Simple.
Speaker 7 (20:44):
Just text my last name Hannity to eight seven to
two to two two. I strongly advise that you look
at their membership safeguards for you and your family. If
God forbid that moment happens, text my last name Hannity
ha and n it wide to the number eight seven
two to two to two and do it today. You know,
I've been pointing out a lot of liberal hypocrisy and
(21:05):
insanity and madness, and it's out there.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
I think.
Speaker 7 (21:10):
One of the scariest things I heard and one of
the most chilling things I've heard. We talk about what
goes on in our school systems all the time. We
talk about you know, there are people that think it's
perfectly fine to offer gender affirming care to students, like
in California, to pon tim without parental consent. I actually
(21:31):
believe in parental rights they will do this in California
as well.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
This is madness to me.
Speaker 7 (21:37):
I think that parents were not potted plants and that
we ought to have a say in something that might
forever change our children's lives. Couldn't even be a controversial issue,
and I actually do think it played a part in
people's voting in this past election. So here you have
(21:58):
this guy, his name is Leonard Serrato. Way do we
find this on social media? He actually proudly defined who
he was. Is that how he did it? Yeah, you
know the details behind it? Or is it just his No?
Speaker 3 (22:10):
I mean he just this is his social media.
Speaker 8 (22:13):
But I mean he has that he works there, He
has that, you know that he's you know, got it
out for his students, his family, his friends.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
But he's loud and proud about the fact that he's
at Oregon.
Speaker 7 (22:22):
Right, So he doesn't hide the fact that he's the
assistant director for fraternity sorority life at the University of Oregon.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Right, that's on his social profile. Wow.
Speaker 7 (22:33):
So he takes to TikTok, I have no access to
my social medium, That's why I have to ask these
questions anyway, And he tells people who voted for Trump.
Now again, this is the assistant director for fraternity sorority
life at a college university. Listen to what he's telling
(22:54):
people who voted for Donald Trump and what they ought
to do.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
Try.
Speaker 9 (23:00):
My sadness is over. My anger has set in. I
am a very petty person, and I am very proud
of that. Love it about myself, actually, and so I
say this in the most disrespectful way possible. I don't
care if you are my family. I don't care if
you're my friend. I don't care if we've been friends
(23:22):
our entire lives. You can literally go for yourself if
you voted for Donald Trump. If you are so sad
about your groceries being expensive, get a better paying job,
do better in life, get an education, do something because
you are stupid, and I hope you go jump off
(23:45):
of a fridge.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Wow.
Speaker 7 (23:47):
Now, Linda, we kid around about your hate lists, although
it's very real, but we kid around about it a lot.
And then that's why you know, now that it's post election,
I'm gonna have to have that call with your pastor
I'm gonna have to talk about the issue of potential backsliding,
which we you know, we have discussed a number of
times in fun on this program.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
You don't want anybody to die. You just don't like people.
It's a very big difference.
Speaker 8 (24:10):
I think there's a big difference and these people. You know,
there was a girl last night and I'm gonna find
this video for you, but she came out and she said,
I would like to do a group fund where we're
going to find a way to kill the president. Can
anybody tell me how to get a hit man? And
I'm like, yeah, that's not a joke. That like, the
Secret Service should be at her house immediately. Sorry that
(24:33):
your feelings are hurt, Sorry that your your choice didn't win. Really,
it's it's terrible, but this man won overwhelmingly. So you know,
the temperature of the nation is not with you. It's
the opposite of you. And you're just gonna have to
learn that. You know, nobody cares about your feelings. We
care about the facts of the nation. So they're like,
all right, well we don't like that, so we're just
gonna kill them. I'm like, they already.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
Tried that twice. I mean, I think people like that
are just unhinged.
Speaker 7 (24:58):
That's why the rhetoric gleitting in to the final days
in this campaign was so over the top. I mean
it is. It is a pretty chilling time to our
busy phones we go Washington State. Jeff, We'll start with you.
Glad you called, sir, Thank you for checking in, Thank.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
You for taking my call. New to listening to the show.
I try to watch you every night on your on
your broadcast for the last at least four years. If not,
I set my DVR for you. I just deeply thank you,
deeply want to thank you and your colleagues, Laura Jesse,
so many more, Mark Levin, some of the truth tellers
(25:34):
out there for just keeping it real with us without
without you guys doing what you do. You guys and
gals doing what you do. I believe that the election
would have not gone the way that it did. And
we need you guys. We need the Charlie Kirks, we
need the Dan Bonginos. We need you guys. And I
(25:54):
just want to thank you from the bottom of my
heart for just spreading the truth on a daily and
nightly basis for us.
Speaker 7 (26:03):
Well I kind of look at it. First of all,
thank you for your kind words. I also have been
saying to everyone listening to this program, and I tried
to I tried to express the best way I possibly
could and convey as much urgency about the moment that
I felt the country was facing in the lead up
to Tuesday, and everybody they rose to the occasion, and
(26:27):
people went out and voted, and people that are low propensity,
in mid propensity, and high propensity voters all voted. And
some people that don't like voting early they did it anyway.
They understood the principle that being down hundreds of thousands
of votes on election day when the polls open is
a risky proposition. And I'm very I'm thankful to all
(26:48):
of you because in many ways I kind of look
at what I do as im a spoke in the wheel.
I might have some of the bigger platforms than other people,
but you know what, it's no more important than every
one of you that voted.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
It really isn't. I don't view it that way.
Speaker 7 (27:07):
And for the for the names of many of the
names you mentioned, you know, Mark Levin, Dan Bunge, and
the friends of mine, thank me, God bless us. You know,
I'm very proud of the work. I'm grateful for the
work that they do. You know, the way what I
view this job and how I approach this job is
to provide a service. I'm of the service that I'm
providing is news, information and as entertaining a way as
(27:30):
I can that I know you're not going to get
anywhere else, and and that to me is a mission.
It's not not even so much a job. It's at
this point in my life, it is a mission. And
I work because I love it. I'm grateful that I
have it. And you know, unfortunately we don't win every election.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
We wanted.
Speaker 7 (27:53):
This one to me meant maybe more than any other
one in my lifetime, to be very honest with you,
because I felt like I didn't think we'd be able
to recover if the stated policies of Kamala were implemented.
I felt it was. It was that much of an
inflection point for the country. But God bless you, my friend.
Your kind words mean more than you know. Right, quick
(28:15):
break right back to our phones. We go eight hundred
and ninety four to one, shown us on number. As
we continue, Look, it is one of the most consequential
elections in history and one of the best things to
come out of this. I think we had the least
supportive administration in history towards our friends, our allies, the
only democracy in the Middle East, and that being Israel.
(28:37):
And now we will have the most supportive president that
Israel has ever had back in office. And by the way,
in Swing States, I saw numbers this morning among Jewish Americans.
The numbers were dramatically higher for Donald Trump. Interestingly, even
Arab Americans that want peace, that don't idea with the
(29:00):
radicalism and and don't want Iran to have hegemony in
the Middle East, you know, are going for Donald Trump
because they know that the Iranians days are numbered when
Donald Trump is there.
Speaker 2 (29:14):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (29:15):
And anyway, and Donald Trump, along with Prime Minister Netan Yahoo,
I mean, they have basically declared war against the rest
of the entire Middle East, and and those countries will
unite against this