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August 8, 2025 28 mins

Join Sean Hannity in a lively discussion with Isabel Brown and Catalina Lauf as they dive into the controversy surrounding Sydney Sweeney's ad campaign for American Eagle genes. The woke left's reaction, the rise of young conservatives, and the importance of reclaiming American culture are all explored in this episode. Don't miss out on the insights and perspectives of these rising conservative stars!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Coming up next our final News round Up and Information
Overload Hour.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
All Right, News round Up, Information over Load Hour, toll free.
Our number is eight hundred and nine to four one
sean if you want to be a part of the program.
So I'm still fascinated with the Sydney Sweeney controversy, and
I don't think there should be a controversy. I mean,
the idea that you have a young attractive person, male

(00:25):
or female that has put in an ad campaign should
not really ever be news. The idea that it's a
gene commercial in this case it's American Eagle gens should
not be controversial either. And the fact that they do
a playoff of oh, okay, we have an attractive young
person and they're doing a gene ad and oh he

(00:47):
has great genes.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Oh what a play on words.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
And somehow these lunatic, woke, you know, triggered leftists are
trying to make the claim that this is eugenics, this
is not see Germany.

Speaker 3 (01:01):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Simultaneously, like a week and a half later, Beyonce comes
out with a gene ad for Levi's Okay, another example,
young attractive woman in this case that's in an ad campaign.
There was no controversy over this one, and what's the difference.
I don't see any difference anyway. Here to weigh in

(01:23):
on all of this Isabelle Brown, the host of The
Isabelle Brown Show. She's at the Daily Wire Catalina Loff
is with us political commentator. Here's a book coming out soon.
Time to choose, Reclaiming Liberty from the Swamp. Welcome both
of you to the program, Appreciate you both being here.
Isabelle will start with you. I couldn't be happier, especially

(01:44):
in light of what happened to bud Light and Dylan
mulvaney and bud Light and Anheuser Busch having no clue
what their audience thought.

Speaker 4 (01:52):
Of woke absolutely correct, and this really signals sean a
seismic shift in culture away from what's the loudest voice
is are demanding. These companies bowed down to with every
manufactured outrage issue of the day, be it the black
squares on Instagram, Pride Month, flags, the Women's March, or
anything in between. I think what you're watching is powerful entities, companies, universities, celebrities,

(02:16):
influencers and politicians alike realize that the base in America
is conservative. The vast majority of people, especially young people
under the age of thirty five, are done with wokeism
and we just want to be able to laugh again,
which I think is what this campaign really has sparked
in the hearts of so many people around the country.

(02:36):
The play on words about great genes and the ability
to poke fund at some of the craziness over the
last few years is a reminder that it's okay to smile,
it's okay not to take everything so seriously, and it's
okay to celebrate beauty and beautiful people again as well.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Let's get your take, Catlina, what are your thoughts on this?

Speaker 5 (02:54):
Imagine if the left had this much outrage for something
that mattered, you know, like the border invasion, the Biden
administration for example, instead of an ad over a beautiful
young girl, you know, our country would be in a
better place. But this is exactly how Sean the woke
left scrambles to remain relevant. They take these cultural moments

(03:14):
below them up to push their agenda. Which this tactic
was laid out by Marxist groups as early as the
seventies and they're still using it today. But the fact
that so many young people in particular on TikTok, for example,
a small minority, but they're still outraged by this is
indicative of where our culture is today and how we

(03:34):
are taking back that culture. Is about's point, you know,
some of these young minds have been so conditioned to
be brought up in these culture wars that an ad
like this is somehow you know, they find racism and
become outraged by it. It's ridiculous, it's scary, but it's
also the positive point is that we are taking our
culture back, and it's within these moments, these cultural moments

(03:58):
that have a really powerful influence on young minds. Especially.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Was there a double standard in the reaction of people
when it comes to Sidney Sweeney versus Beyonce is a bo.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
Oh, absolutely sean and it's of course really indicative of
that mental conditioning. Catalina is just mentioning that anything remotely
associated with classic Americana imagery, even down to a beautiful,
blonde haired, blue eyed actress, which has always been a
bit of a phenotype in Hollywood, has to be indicative
of racism or Hitler or Nazis or even eugenics, which

(04:34):
is often the word that I'm being thrown around, especially
on TikTok with that very vocal minority who's outraged about
this particular ad. Of course, these are the same people
who will go march in the streets of our country
on behalf of planned parenthood founded upon legitimate eugenics in
our country's history, and who have absolutely raged against the

(04:54):
idea of racism for the last several years. But there
is this note of casual or e and overt racism
in promoting a white person all of a sudden having
to be associated with eugenics or Nazism as it's undercurrent here.
And make no mistake about it, that very much is
the direct result of initiatives like the sixteen nineteen project

(05:15):
and this idea of systemic racism that has been pushed
through every level of the American education system.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
Why is it so wrong, Catalina to recognize that it's
not a bad thing that famous people or people that
are attractive are usually chosen over maybe more people that
are not famous, not overly attractive. Why is that so

(05:41):
shocking to people? Because that's the way it's always been,
and nobody got all outraged about it in the past.

Speaker 5 (05:48):
And you know, Mammy Millennial is like myself and Isabelle
as well. We live sort of in this in between space.
You know. We grow up watching like Baywatch in the
nineties or Bond movies with Bond girls, and grew up,
you know, with Victoria's Secret Models. These were the female
figures that our millennial generation grew up with. They embodied
sort of this peak femininity in America before all of

(06:11):
this woke DEI stuff. So a lot of us know
what natural beauty is in Sydney. Sweeney not only embodies that,
but it's also this moment Isabelle's point two about Americana,
this all American girl persona, in taking back that culture
and celebrating femininity and beauty in this day and age.
So many young people, I know you all have seen it,

(06:34):
you know, ads of men dressing as women, wearing makeup
like those. Our advertisements are considered art nowadays and it's worshiped.
So it's about time that we stood our ground, took
our culture back, brought back sanity. And I'm so happy
that American Eagle doubled down on this and they refused

(06:54):
about down to the woke mop.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
I actually have my own idea. If I was anheuser
Bush and they still have never gotten back to where
they were in terms of sales because of the Dillon
Mulvainy disaster. I mean, they was so out of touch
with their own audience. The most ironic part of that
whole ad campaign is he never drank bud Light. I mean,
when that statement came out, I was like, you gotta

(07:17):
be kidding me. But putting that aside, if I was
Anheuser Busch today, if I was in charge of bud
Lights marketing campaigns today, you know what I'd do. I'd
hire Sidney Sweeney tomorrow and I'd do an ad campaign
with Sidney Sweeney just to send the message we hear you,
loud and clear, Isabelle good bad idea?

Speaker 4 (07:38):
I think we're going to see a lot more of that.
Sean and Sydney is in the face of many, many
ad campaigns for major leading companies across the space. In
the last few months. You're also watching attractive, all American,
even very Christian, male actors start to be the face
of similar ad campaigns. There's a young man who plays
one of the lead characters and the most popular show
among teenagers today the summer I Turned Pretty, who's also

(08:01):
gracing the cover of many, many ad campaigns from these
big companies.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
Islands that's up there as well.

Speaker 4 (08:09):
But this young man is absolutely incredible named Gavin, who
very much shares his faith on the public stage. He's
a young married actor in the midst of Hollywood, constantly
telling young people they should never consider marriage. And I
think we're watching this cultural undertow that really transcends just
Sidney Sweeney, who's unfortunately or fortunately depending on how you
look at it, really become the face of this cultural

(08:31):
backswing and the pendulum shift back towards normalcy. I really
truly believe what we're watching now is the result of
the American people saying enough. We are done with companies
telling us we have to support I don't know, tucking
bikinis for children, as Target tried to several years ago.
We're done with companies donating our profits that we are

(08:52):
giving to them to organizations like BLM or Planned Parenthood.
What we really want is a celebration of our values,
of our culture, of our identity. And it's okay to
claim that there is an archetype of an American identity. Again,
for so long you would be considered a white supremacist
or a racist to say that, which is of course ridiculous,

(09:12):
But to know that we are retaking pride in our
country and building sort of a new American dream for
this next generation that the rest of the world can
be inspired by, really humbles me and really speaks to
I think the character of this next generation Gen Z
as we continue to come up into adulthood.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
You know, I love the fact that more and more
young people are becoming more conservative. Linda just to shake
in her head. She can't even believe. I know that
Love Island, there's a show that really exists. But I
do think that there is a new generation of conservatives
that are standing up and speaking out Catalina that we
never heard before.

Speaker 5 (09:47):
No, we've been to and you know, it's been much needed.
The culture wars, whether it's the infringement on political and
economic freedom, everything that has happened over the last few
decades in this country. We're at a turning point and
it's time that our generation stands up. You know, people
in the past have you know, every generation has their

(10:09):
own moment of leadership and their own moments where people
need to rise up. And I think this is our
moment for millennials, it's our turn to carry that towards forward.
That was really the inspiration behind my book, Time to Choose.
It really is a turning point here in our country
and where we want to have and what are country
is going to look like twenty fifty years from now.

(10:29):
And I also wanted to point out the greatest hypocrisy
about the woke last and how the young people who
who are almost they are almost manipulated by the wokeism
and the socialist topic. You know, the same people who
called this ad racist and say things like they hate capitalism.
I like to point out that for the Levi jeans

(10:50):
that Beyonce was promoting, those costs around two hundred dollars
for a pair of jeans, whereas the American Eagle jeans
that Timmy Sweeney was promoting are half the price. So
you have one brand trying to cater to people with
this luxury elite look everything that you know, the woke
left says they hate about America, this capitalist, elitist culture,
whereas here American Eagle cells are so much more approachable

(11:13):
and affordable. And I think people are finally waking up
to this. You know, our generation is finally waking up.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
All right, quick break, right back, we'll continue. It's great
to hear young conservatives that actually are making a difference
in a new generation of conservatism emerging. We'll have more
with Isabelle Brown, hosts of The Isabelle Brown Show at
the Daily Wire. Catalina Loft is also with US political commentator,
shares a book coming out soon, Time to Choose, Reclaiming

(11:42):
Liberty from the Swamp. All Right, we continue now with
Isabelle Brown. She is the host of the isabel Brown Show.
She's with the Daily Wire, and Catalina Loft is also
with US political commentator, author of the forthcoming book Time
to Choose, Reclaiming Liberty from the Swamp. Let me ask
you both the question, how is it possible? Where did
you both get your influence from? I mean, I was

(12:04):
a conservative in my teenage years, and I listened to
the great pioneers of talk radio. Had a profound influence
on me. But even though it's becoming more common to
hear both of you so young and so articulate, and
your platforms are growing bigger and bigger by the day,
and I'm very happy for both of you, where did
your influences come from. I'm just amazed by it.

Speaker 5 (12:25):
Catalina very much came from my family. You know, my
mother immigrated here legally from Guatemala. She just wanted to
strive for the American dream. And so those values of
what she fled from the corruption, the civil war, everything
in her home country to find freedom and opportunity here.
That was very much a part of my upbringing, as

(12:47):
well as you know, my father small business owner. You know,
we always had you know, you on Fox News listening
to Mark Levin, Russe Limbaugh, all of the great that
were influencing.

Speaker 3 (12:57):
Thank me, God bless us. I'm done. That's it.

Speaker 5 (13:01):
You input significantly.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Oh that's really you know what, Honestly, everything does really
start back with your family, doesn't.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
It really is amazing, Isabelle. How about you?

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Warrior influences you're young, your conservative? Where did it come from?

Speaker 4 (13:14):
Sir? Does that foundation of family is everything? And I
would say that was certainly my primary influence in life.
I was raised by two Catholic lawyers, so we talked
a lot of politics and religion around the dinner table,
even though those are the two subjects they say you
should never talk to your family about. Our parents were
very passionate about their children being involved, aware, understanding what

(13:35):
was going on in the world, and we could make
up our own mind, but we better have the evidence
to back it up. But beyond that, I think generationally,
I was born in nineteen ninety seven and the first
year of gen Z, and I was among the older
ones of us who still remember a time before the
constant cultural impact of the Internet, you know, in the
midst of COVID and the world being thrust maybe against
our will in many ways, into the metaverse, so to speak.

(13:58):
I actually do credit social media and the Internet for
this generational shift. You'll often hear from particularly conservative older
Americans that everything on social media and YouTube and podcasts
is all degenerate content. It's destroying our society, it's poisoning
the minds of the next generation. And I'm finding the
opposite to be true. Without a doubt, without TikTok, Donald

(14:19):
Trump would not be sitting in the Oval office today,
Without podcasts, some of these leading voices targeting young people,
we wouldn't be seeing the resurgence of masculinity today. And
without young female voices like myself, Catalina and so many others,
you're not going to see the same response from women
of quitting our dating apps and throwing away our birth
control that you're now starting to see culturally. So some

(14:40):
of these voices that have seized the metaverse in many
ways are changing the universe and our country on the ground.

Speaker 6 (14:46):
As we know it.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
Well, both of you give me a lot of hope
for the future. It makes me know that the future
of this country is going to be in good hands
if we could ever help you.

Speaker 3 (14:56):
The one of you, please let us know.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
God bless you and your work and your your personal
lives and everything in between.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
We really appreciate you.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
Thank you, Sean.

Speaker 5 (15:04):
God bless you too. Thank you, God bless you.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
Eight hundred and nine to foot one, Sean. If you
want to be a part of the program, you know
it is. Actually having these two guests on these these
young women. It's pretty amazing to me. It gives me
a lot of faith. And then you guys have guys
like Charlie Kirk and others that young people are becoming
more conservative, that they're outspoken about their conservatism, that they're

(15:31):
not buying into this woke ideology of people. I think
it's beyond impressive and I'm glad that people are discovering
young conservative voices because I mean, that's the next generation.
And as Reagan admonished, you know, freedom is but one
generation away from extinction. Every generation has it on their shoulders.

(15:53):
It's their responsibility, Linda, that they've got to do their part.
And if we don't have young people coming up, you know,
behind us, then the movement will, you know, stop dead.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
And it's tracks. We can't have that.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
And let me tell you aeother thing. And this is
a little known fact. So the person who books those
two girls is a very dear friend of mine. She
is a female owner operated PR company out of DC.
She and I have known each other for a long
time working in this business. And I reached out to
her and I was like, Hey, I want to do
a fun segment looking for some strong conservative chicks. YadA, YadA, YadA.

(16:26):
And she's like, oh, I've got these great girls.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
So you said to this book or you said I
need strong conservative chicks.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Yes, I said, I have a segment that I want
to do and I want to talk to strong conservative
women that can speak to this. I'm not looking forward
what you just said.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
You said, you do know that you're politically chicks.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Is not politically incorrect. I'm not here for the sensitive
you know, sally's as we call them.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
By the way, that was so funny earlier in the
program to when I called that guy's sensitive sally. I mean,
if the guy said he was a marine, is no
marine that I've ever met that is that sensitive? But
putting owther high, I agree, I just never met it,
but met that person. But it really is refreshing to
hear it. I mean, I was a bit of an

(17:12):
anomaly when I was a kid because I was weird though,
and I'm still.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
You're a bit of an anomaly. Now I got news
for you.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
No, there's no disagreement. I'm a complete and total loser
in my real life. I admit that to anybody. You
you don't you acknowledge it?

Speaker 3 (17:28):
Right?

Speaker 7 (17:28):
No?

Speaker 1 (17:29):
I said you were an anomaly. I don't know where
that became synonymous with loser.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
But all right, why am I an anomaly then? In
your view?

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Well, because you've maintained like you're a lot like Trump
in that way. If I look back and I look,
you know, twenty years ago, and Stanger's in the studio today,
so he can back me up on this. You know,
you have not changed. You're kind of like, you know,
this stalwart conservative your whole life. You're a little more
team now than you were twenty thirty years ago. Stanger can.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
And here to this age, this slug yeah test that
yeah we SLUGO once said to me he used to
be the general manager at the local station I was
at from ninety two to ninety six in Atlanta, and
he goes, You're a diamond in a rough and in
the rough, and I'm like, what does that mean? And

(18:19):
they had done research on the station and on everybody
that worked on the air, and it came back that
everybody loved my opinions. But I had a little bit
too much New York in me, and I was kind
of rough back in the day. But I had grown
up listening to the likes of Bob Grant, and I
wasn't really my authentic self, hadn't found my true voice

(18:40):
on radio or on TV yet, and I would I
kind of acted the way I thought a radio talk
show host should be.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
Well, I mean, you're also a New Yorker that they
stuck in Alabama and Georgia, So there's a little bit
of there's some new one.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Definitely a Mark Edge.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Yeah, you know, that's not That's not how they that's
not how they act. So they're like, the hell's wrong
with this guy? Meanwhile, you were just anybody else in
New York would have been like, he's.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
Fine, looks at it.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
I don't know these Look, it's not shocking that that
you have young attractive men and women that are chosen
to do ads. That is as old as commercial advertising
as ever existed. That is a common practice. And I
don't care if it's Sidney Sweeney. I don't care if
it's Beyonce. I don't care if it's whoever it happens

(19:28):
to be. And the only mistake bud Light made is
they totally went woke thinking that they were doing the
right thing. I assume, I'm not sure who made the
decision and it they just completely showed that they didn't
know who their audience was, which is where I think
Howard Stern has gone south.

Speaker 3 (19:46):
Well, not going to get paid.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
Go ahead, do you want to finish that thought? And
then I'll tell you my thought on bud Light.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
Go ahead on bud Light.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
You go, okay. So the bud Light thing is interesting
because the woman who made the decision to hire. The
trans is like, you know, fairly new, you know, and
somebody who is all about you know, new age marketing
and how we can reach you know, a different demographic
and reintroduce bud Light, you know, because it was sort
of like, you know, that was like one of those

(20:13):
you know, old faithful you know, like bud Light's the
beer people have been drinking. You father drank it, your
grandfather drank it, YadA YadA. So they're trying to appeal
to a new audience. And so that particular marketing person
was like, you know how we're going to appeal to
new We're going to ask trans. I'm like, what you
know that is? That's called making a hard left and
finding no way to come back to it. So they
fired her, and of course upper management said, we had

(20:36):
no idea. Now, working for a big company, I can
say that there are people in the ranks that make
decisions and it's not like the president and all the
corporate you know, CEA level folks know everything that's going
on at every turn. So I will give bud Light,
you know, an Anheuser Busch sort of like, okay, I'll
give you a nod on that that is possible but
that reputation brand. I think your idea is a good

(20:57):
one to bring in somebody like a Sydney Sweeney to
bring all back home.

Speaker 2 (21:00):
You had some woke marketing agent that made the decision.
Certainly upper management should have caught it, and they didn't.
By the way, I was never going to bring up
there are these I am really pissed off at one thing,
and it may sound like I'm standing with feminists on
this issue. Well, first of all, the WNBA has a
lot of problems, a lot of problems. I do not

(21:23):
like the treatment of Caitlin Clark. I don't and I.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Don't really care about the treatment of Caitlyn Clark. Because
Caitlin Clark had an opportunity to speak out about it
and she didn't. She might be all.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
Agree, good luck, well I think, I think yeah, But
there was a lot of pressure for her not to.
And Caitlin Clark is doing more to bring awareness and
fill seats in the WNBA because of incredible talent that
far surpasses and there are a lot of talented people
in the WNBA. But I don't think anyone shoots as

(21:55):
well as her. I've never seen anybody in the even
in the NBA that can shoot as well as her
in some.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
Cases, I don't know that much about basketball, and I'm
not going to pretend like I do, but boy, if
I was going to talk about basketball, I'm a much
bigger Sophie Cunningham fan. Because Sophie Cunningham is just a badass.
She's just in your face. She doesn't give a rip,
she's cursing people out, she's playing her game.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
It's great, yeah, but one thing I don't like.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
I mean, I wish I wish everybody would realize that
a rising tide lifts all boats. I wish people would
realize that the more successful Caitlin Clark is, the more
opportunities there will be for other women in the WNBA.
And I think this hazing that she's had to go
through and this constant negative attention, I think a lot

(22:46):
of it's been unfair.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
That's my tas it's unfair.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
But the reason it's unfair is not because of her.
She's very so Caitlyn Clark is very talented, right, and
she's out there and she's doing her thing, and people
are mad that she's getting attention for doing her thing.
And my problem is just come out and say, listen, ladies,
I'm here to play just like the rest of you.
I can't determine who gets attention and who doesn't get attention.

(23:09):
I am like, yeah, the spotlight's on me right now,
and the spotlight's going to be on you next week.
You know, I haven't heard Kitlyn Clark.

Speaker 2 (23:15):
She doesn't just hit three point shots. She hits shots
that are nearly from half court, and she hits it
with regularity. If she's on fire, there's nobody it's lights out,
and she can sit and handily carry a team to victory.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
You can look at lots of tape of the WNBA
long before Caitlyn Clark. These women beat the crap out
of each other. Okay, there is a far lower bar
for when they step in. I mean they are rough
the men in the NBA. I mean literally they get
like a little nudge and they're like, well, the women
are like on the ground in a brawl, and they're like,

(23:50):
all right, you know, if you guys could stop, that'd
be great. It's a completely different game. It just is
all right.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
And I don't know why people are throwing sex toys
on the floor. That's pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (24:00):
Well, it actually is not gross. It's silly, but it
actually was a trick from a meme coin. They were
trying to get some attention because the name of.

Speaker 3 (24:10):
The cryptocurrency traders.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
The cryptop Except for my Florida Panthers, you should never
be throwing anything at any athlete on any field on
the ice because somebody could end up getting hurt. Although
my Florida Panthers they have rubber rats that we throw
on after every victory and it's kind of accepted that
that's the practice. It is funny. I mean when they

(24:33):
won't rubber rats. Why, Okay, you know nothing about sports.
Why am I talking to you about sports? You don't
know a thing? You don't even know across Why rats?
It just is it just became a thing. It's well,
one person started it and then everybody started it.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
No, but my point is it's the it's the Panthers, right,
so then you're throwing rats.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
Yeah, that's hard to explain. Joe, North Carolina, what's up, Joe?

Speaker 3 (24:57):
How are you hey?

Speaker 7 (24:58):
Sean pleasure to talk to you. Wanted to bring up
a topic that has hit our schools that is greatly
affecting the work ethic of the up and coming generations.
My wife's been in teaching where in North Carolina fifteen
years ago. It started in North Carolina, so it's got
to be everywhere in the country. You get a fifty
if you don't turn in an assignment in the lowest

(25:20):
grade you can get. It is a fifty on a test,
and it's training kids that you do nothing and you
get a reward for it. And that's what you're seeing
in the work ethic of our kids across the country
is they don't have to put any effort in. They
get a fifty, and then all of a sudden, you
can get a sixty and you passed.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
I can tell you from my experience in hiring a
lot of people over the years, there is definitely a
generational divide when it comes to work ethic. Now, there
are major exceptions, there are some exceptional young people out there,
but there's also an entitlement factor that I can't comprehend with.

(25:59):
So I don't want to sweep with a broad brush,
but it's frustrating when I see it. Thank you, Joe,
have a great weekend, Tom Minnesota. You're on the Sean
Hannity Show.

Speaker 6 (26:09):
Hi, Hey, Sean, it's the pleasure again. To speak with
you and thank you for all the work you do.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
My comment congratulations on Tampon Tim and Fatah the likely
new mayor of Minneapolis.

Speaker 6 (26:23):
Good luck with that, oh God, And I can't He's
got to be tossed out along with Ilhan. But I'm
not in that district, so I have no say about
those idiots. But the reason I'm calling is about the
presence idea of another census. And my prediction is that
the left, which is already going crazy overt, is going

(26:45):
to say that it's unconstitutional. Now, my point is that
the Constitution mandates a census every ten years, but it
does not forbid more censuses than that, and I think
that they should have one every four years after the
presidential election. And because I think that if they just

(27:07):
reapportion all the representatives correctly, especially with all the population
losses from the blue states, that it might mitigate the
losses that the president might have at the midterm.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
I'll tell you what's going to mitigate it more.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
First of all, this is Republicans only playing the game
and playing by the rules the Democrats made themselves. They
are the masters at jerry mandering. As we've been pointing
out and very few in the legacy media will point out.

Speaker 3 (27:35):
But the.

Speaker 2 (27:37):
Bigger determination in terms of the outcome in twenty six
is going to be what elections are always about, peace
and prosperity. And I've repeatedly told you that we have
foundationally set this country up for economic success and a
boom the likes of which we have not seen probably

(27:59):
in two general I'm hoping and praying that I'm correct.
And if that's the case, everybody's going to benefit. Every
American will benefit. The fifteen trillion dollars is just too
much money in manufacturing jobs to ignore. And whenever you
cut taxes, you stimulate economic growth, and energy dominance will

(28:20):
also contribute greatly. Right, that's going to wrap things up
at today. I can tell you on good authority that
next week is going to be an insanely busy news week.
Let's see if I'm right. Let's see if my sources,
as per usual, are right again. Anyway, I hope you

(28:42):
have a great weekend with you and your family. God
bless you all. Thank you for making this show possible.
We will see you on Monday. Have a great weekend.

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