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Sept. 30, 2022 - Sean Hannity Show
35:03
Biden Finally Losing It? - September 29th, Hour 1
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So what is the United States border policy?
You know what our policy is.
Our policy is to enforce the law.
I think that Democrats, if the election is about uh who is the most extreme, then they're gonna win.
Um, if it is a referendum on the president, they will lose, and they know that.
With a straight face, Ken McCarthy says a maga republic can restore faith in our elections.
As we say in my faith, bless me, Father, for I have sent Joe Kamala, Chuck, Nancy.
Let's send them all a nice message on November the 8th.
What?
Get out and vote.
It's only 40 days until election day.
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Uh for the better part of today, I have friends in Fort Myers.
I have friends in Naples, Florida.
I have friends in Sarasota, I have friends in other parts of Florida.
I mean, this Ronda Santis actually called it a the flooding in particular from the Hurricane Ian, a 500-year event.
That's how bad it is.
Um, you know, I'm I'm I looked at images all over Fort Myers.
I mean, the pier's gone.
You have what looks like a a three-block, three blocks in from the Gulf Shore.
Uh, it looks like everything was pretty much destroyed.
Just wiped out on the beach that I've seen in Fort Myers.
The flooding, I've never seen anything like it.
You know, downtown Naples, Sarasota, Fort Myers.
I mean, it is it is that bad.
Uh, I know rescue efforts are now underway.
I've been checking in with the governor's office, Senator Rubio, and Senator Scott's office.
Uh, so they are doing everything they can.
I'm a little concerned.
Uh some sheriffs are saying, uh, my buddy Carmine, uh Marcino down in in Lee County said, you know, they they may have fatalities in the hundreds.
Uh, we don't know that to be true yet.
We're hoping that's not the case.
I would not at all be surprised that there is some loss of life.
Um, but anyway, we've we've got to wait and see.
We'll find out.
But the one good thing that I I was impressed with, the staging that took place prior to this hurricane reaching land.
Uh, I I showed it on TV last night.
They have what look like in one, and the this was only one of thirty-three locations of trucks from uh these power companies lined up, ready to go to in and and make the repairs that are gonna be necessary.
Now it's not gonna be quick, it's gonna be long, it's gonna be arduous, it's gonna be difficult um to get people's power back up and running.
It's they've got to get their internet back up and running, their cable back up and running, their satellite TVs that back up and running.
Um, none of this is gonna be easy, and then we're gonna have to assess the damage and and people are gonna have to rebuild their lives, but this is not good at all.
Um it is uh it's just sad.
By the way, your president Joe Biden yesterday.
Imagine if Donald Trump was president and he did this.
Imagine if Donald Trump spoke at a Democratic Governor's Association fundraising dinner and was taking shots at Democrats while the hurricane was hitting.
Because that's what Joe Biden was doing yesterday.
You know, and here's another odd thing.
Why is there no White House press briefing scheduled for today?
Because that sounds strange too.
And then Hurricane Ian continues its its rampage through the rest of Florida.
You know, it's gone through Central Florida now as it's taken the exact path we've been telling you now that it was gonna take.
Joe Bastardi will will check in numerous times.
Uh I want to send out a real warning across, you know, to all our friends in South Carolina.
Buckle up.
Your your coast is about to get hammered.
It's a tropical storm now, but it will return to hurricane status when it hits the shores.
It looks looks like it's headed right towards Charleston, South Carolina.
That is a direct path to where this thing is headed.
And it's possible of course I talked to Joe Bastardi earlier, and he'll join us at the bottom of this half hour and and numerous times during the show today.
Um and he said they they might have storm surges of nine feet.
So expect a lot of flooding on the shores of South Carolina when this thing hits, and I assume we're gonna have a lot of destruction there as well.
But anyway, Biden's speaking at the Democratic Governors Association taking shots at Republicans, and I'm like, imagine if Trump did this.
Anyway, so um and and frankly, they're really uh it was true, and I think only because of press reports that finally Joe Biden reached out to Governor DeSantis, you know, he's having all of these mayors and and cities in Florida, but he neglected to call the governor.
He called him last only because it was becoming a political issue.
That's my take on it.
But to not have a briefing today seems, you know, beyond negligent to me.
Um I know that Orlando got hit very, very hard.
Do you know if you shut down Disney for a single day and Disney Parks experiences, products, etc., you know, their revenue annually is like seven billion dollars, seven point two billion dollars.
Um that averages out to about I'm sorry, quarterly, their quarterly numbers in the first fiscal quarter of of uh 2022, seven billion dollars from Disney Parks experiences products, etcetera.
So over ninety days, if you if you extrapolate that out, it's about eighty million dollars a day.
And when you close it down, uh so it's it's just bizarre.
After tweeting we should use they them promo uh uh pronouns for the uh hurricane Ian to annoy DeSantis.
Uh remember this guy Vinman, Alexander Vinman, his wife tweets out, she then has to delete her tweet.
I mean, is this where people's minds are at in the middle of a hurricane?
We'll play some tape later.
The media, the mob politicizing the hurricane.
We've had hurricanes since, you know, we started keeping records.
1920s, we can go back and see which hurricane hit what place, at what time and where.
Hurricane season is there for a reason.
It's been there all of our lives.
Good grief.
It's uh is there anything people won't politicize these days?
Uh one funny moment, Linda, I don't know if you saw this.
Uh Florida reporter put a condom on a microphone during a broadcast uh on MBC.
I how that happened, I don't know.
Apparently the the microphone was getting wet, which you really can't let your microphone get wet.
I can sympathize with that aspect of it.
You would have thought that maybe they would have prepared for something other than that.
Uh, but um listen, here's the sad part of this.
And I know they're gonna get power up.
I know that we're gonna get food, water supplies to people.
I know that we're gonna have temporary housing set up.
I you know, Florida's super prepared for this hurricane.
I'm I've not seen such preparedness before.
Now, because it takes up such a large geographic area in the state of Florida, you know, imagine if look at Florida.
It's okay, so you have Florida, you have the the southwest coast of Florida.
So Naples is about what, 90 minutes from Miami, some about that.
So right north of Naples is Fort Myers.
Fort Myers really took the biggest brunt of all of this.
But Naples got hammered as well, too.
I know because I had a place in Naples for a lot of years, and I'd go down in the wintertime occasionally and spend time there, not much.
As you know, I r rarely take off.
But anyway, so it's a beautiful, beautiful part of the country, Southwest Florida, wonderful people.
And anyway, so yeah, Fort Myers, and then to the north of Fort Myers, you have Sarasota, to the south you have Naples.
I mean, the flooding, it was I just am shocked at it all.
You have I saw images of people literally swimming in their living rooms, you know, just to show people how bad this is.
And all of these people now are gonna have to rebuild their lives.
And yeah, the the eventually the water will recede.
Yeah, the insurance companies will come in, Yeah, they'll get some money to rebuild, but you know, we're looking at two years down the road before their life gets back to normal.
And people work so hard to get some stability in their life, and then something like this, uh you know, natural disaster like this happens.
Our our prayers are with everybody.
I know that the American people will step in and and help as much as they can.
It's gonna, it's just gonna take time.
Um, but pay attention now where we're headed next here.
South Carolina, your coast is gonna get hit with hurricane force winds and flooding.
Uh, we're expecting surges as high as nine feet, either Charleston or a little east of Charleston.
Uh so pay attention to that, or a little northeast of Charleston.
We'll get an update from Joe Bastard, though, at the bottom of the hour.
Uh politics is not stop.
Um, I don't know.
I mean, what I used to say on this program because during the election, the campaign I saw Joe was weak and frail and a cognitive mess, and I knew exactly what they were doing.
They're hiding him in the basement.
All of these Democratic Senate candidates, uh, Mandela Barnes, Mandela Barnes, and and John Fetterman and Raphael Warnock.
Um, all of these people, they're all hiding.
There's no Democratic gubernatorial candidate, there's no Democratic senatorial candidate that wants to debate a Republican because they can't defend their party and the policies that they ultimately do support.
So they'd rather hide.
And we're seeing this phenomenon play out in every state, every bellwether state.
You need to know what's going on.
You know, there's a reason that Joe Biden is out there demonizing half the country with his MAGA Republicans or evil speech.
There's a reason Barack Obama stepped in this weekend and and said, Well, the reason people don't like Joe's immigration policies is they don't want people of color uh changing the you know the texture, whatever he's some comment to that effect.
I'm paraphrasing, but he played the race card.
Uh there's a reason Hillary Clinton compared Trump supporters at a Trump rally in Ohio to Nazis.
Um, because they can't run on their policies.
As I've been telling you, they can't run on the economy, they can't run on inflation, they can't run on their disastrous energy policies, which was abandoning energy independence and begging other countries for the lifeblood of our economy.
They can't run on border security, they can't run on law and order because everybody knows they're the party of defund, dismantle, and no bell.
They can't run on foreign policy because it's been one unmitigated disaster after another.
They can't run on any of these things.
But Joe, you know, so he goes to this event and he's he's introducing people that are there, Corey Booker and some other people.
Now, he was there in part to praise the recently departed Congresswoman Jackie Willarski.
And now even the mob in the media is realizing Hannity's right.
Now they're not saying Hannity's right.
He's a cognitive mess, but listen.
What happened in the Hunger event today?
The president appears to look around the room uh for an audience member, a member of the I want to thank all of you here for including bipartisan elected officials like representative governor, Senator Braun, Senator Booker, Representative Jackie.
Are you here?
Where's Jackie?
I didn't think she wanna she was gonna be here to help make this a reality.
Okay, she's dead, Joe.
You were there to honor her in part.
I mean, it was so stunning that his White House press secretary, Corinne Jean-Pierre, she was asked repeatedly by the mob.
Now, the mob never asked her really hard questions.
The only person in that room that does is Peter Deucey, and she did not have an easy time answering.
Listen to this.
What happened in the Hunger event today?
The president appeared to look around the room uh for an audience member, a member of Congress who passed away last month.
It seemed to indicate she might be in the room.
So the president was uh, as you all know, you guys were watching uh today's event, a very important event on uh food insecurity.
The president was naming uh the congressional champions on this issue.
He said, Jackie, are you here?
Where's Jackie?
She must not be here.
I totally understand.
I just I just explained she was on top of mind.
I'm trying to do a head around the response.
If the late Congresswoman was top of mind for the president and her family was expected to be here, and that's what he was thinking about.
What what was he looking for?
I'm not trying to be starting here.
No, okay, and I'm actually saying what he said there.
And again, I think people can understand.
One more time back to the question about Congress will not sure why.
Why?
Why one more time?
The confusing part is why, if she and the family is top of mind, does the president think that she's living and in the roof?
I don't find that confusing.
No, that's not confusing.
Linda, is that confusing at all?
No, not at all.
No, not one bit.
Oh, and when do we I'll play when we come back?
Kamala Harris visits the DMZ, praising America's alliance with North Korea.
God, I we are so screwed.
Please vote in 40 days.
Please, pretty please with sugar on top and a cherry on top.
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This is the Sean Hannity Show.
Let's go, Brandon.
Where's Jackie?
I assume those t-shirts are being made as we speak.
Kamala Harris visiting the DMZ and praising America's alliance with North Korea.
Listen.
So the United States shares a very important relationship, which is an alliance with the Republic of North Korea.
And it is an alliance that is strong and enduring.
The gaff comes just a day.
What is it?
What is the latest one?
She just cannot help herself.
I don't know what's worse.
Where's Jackie?
Or, you know, the the alliance with North Korea.
You just can't make it up.
It's like lost in space.
You know, and with the Biden case with this poor deceased Congresswoman Wolarski, you know, um, the guy that has our nuclear football didn't know that the woman that he was calling out.
Where is she?
Oh, she's uh maybe she didn't come.
Oh, I guess she's not here.
Um, he was supposed to be honoring her memory at the time.
But I guess they didn't spell it out clearly enough in the teleprompter or go over it enough with Joe before the test.
She's dead.
She died in August.
It was a tragedy.
It was a car accident.
Terrible.
He put out a statement about it, but I guess he forgot.
Uh, it is officially a recession, as we've been telling you.
Joe Biden and the Democrats have been denying it.
Uh, the U.S. economy, now the Commerce Department's final second quarter GDP measure has confirmed what we've been telling you, which is the truth, that the U.S. is in a recession.
The U.S. economy shrank for the second consecutive quarter in three months, ending in June.
And according to the final estimate of the Bureau of Economic Analysis, meeting the criteria, in other words, the exact definition of what a recession, two consecutive quarters of negative growth.
And that happened in the first quarter, and that happened in the second quarter.
That means we are in a recession, in spite of all the lies that they are telling you.
It's pretty amazing that they get away with these lies.
Um, we have some uh we're gonna update you on some political races today.
Blake Masters out in Arizona, Doug Mastriano, the gubernatorial candidate from the great Commonwealth of uh Pennsylvania will join us.
The Attorney General Ashley Moody of Florida will check in with her, the latest on the efforts there.
We've been in touch with Governor DeSantis, Senator Rubio, Senator Rick Scott.
Uh there, it's all hands on deck.
They've they were prepared for this, but the the devastation is real.
Holding them accountable.
Sean gets the answers.
No one else does.
America deserves to know the truth about Congress.
All right, 25 to the top of the hour, 800-941 Sean.
If you want to be a part of the program, Fort Myers, it was just devastated.
So I have friends of mine that live in Fort Myers.
And remember, they would I don't think Fort Myers had just missed the evacuation zone.
Early predictions were this was going to probably land a little little north, more towards Tampa, which is north of Sarasota, but Sarasota, Fort Myers, Fort Myers in particular got hit the hardest.
Naples got hit really, really hard.
You know, this is the flooding has been astronomical.
So I'm looking at all these videos and pictures that people have been sending me that I know from the area all day, and I've I can't believe it.
I mean, boats are thrown around like they were like toy boats and a in your kid's bathtub.
I mean, just all over the place.
Saw one picture of a boat literally on the front lawn of somebody's house, like an inch from the house.
Um the flooding, you can see it goes on for miles and miles and miles.
The property damage is just massive.
I can't even begin to describe the magnitude of it.
Governor DeSantis called it a 500 one and a 500-year event.
Uh it may end up being damage-wise, the worst hurricane in Florida's history, because it covered such a large geographical area of Florida.
We we don't know about loss of life yet.
Uh I'm sure there's probably some.
I'm praying it's it's not the case.
Uh and you can just see, I mean, people in real time, even as we were doing the show yesterday, what were writing me and show me pictures of the of the flooding, it was massive.
And now it's about rescue to see if anybody needs help or assistance and getting help to those people as quickly as possible.
Uh, then you've got the cleanup and recovery efforts.
In the meantime, you got to get people temporary shelter and housing.
Uh, you got to get them basic necessities, food, water, you know, clothing, the things that they're gonna need uh to at least survive in the interim until hopefully they can begin the process of rebuilding, and that's that's gonna be a couple year process.
It's gonna take a long time.
Uh anyway, the storm is not over.
Um, especially if you're in South Carolina, I want you to pay very close attention to our friend Joe Bastardi, uh, the official meteorologist of this program.
He'll check in with us throughout the day to update us.
But he's at Weatherbell.com.
Also wrote the book, The Weaponization of Weather in this phony climate war.
Um, well, uh first I got to give you a tip of the hat.
You had been you've been calling this right for a long time.
You were more right than the National Weather Service in terms of the location.
You thought it might come in south of Tampa.
You ended up being correct.
Uh, and I'm not criticizing anybody.
Weather is not an absolute science by any means.
Uh, you know that as well as anybody.
Uh, but this this was a bad one.
The storm surge was real, the flooding is real, the disruption of lives is real, the damage is real.
You've seen the images, it's it's awful.
Yeah, and I'll tell you what, it gives me more appreciation to some extent for uh some storms uh that have hit that uh I I look at until I actually saw what happened.
I see the picture and said, Well, that can't possibly happen.
And then you actually go and experience this dramatic pictures of what happened in 1954 in downtown Providence, where you see these pictures of these boats that are piled up uh, you know, down in down in Florida now.
Well, downtown Providence, all the boats were just I mean, big, huge miners were just deposited on the street.
And the power of these things uh is such that you you really have to know what you're doing if you're going to stay in them.
Okay.
You know, we've got some guys that uh chase the storm.
I didn't go down to this one because of the fact that uh, you know, it was going to be the peninsula.
Uh I I probably would have gone if it were, you know, Pensacola or something like that, where you get in and get out real quick.
But you uh and you say, well, why would you do something like that?
It's because you observe what's actually going on, and then you take that appreciation for what you observe and try your best to convey it to the public.
Because you're helpless in these things, and there's not much we could do about it.
Now the the thing with Tampa, uh the way their bay was shaped, if you had that going in north of Tampa, the way it went in north of uh Naples and uh Port Charlotte like that.
I mean, you as bad as this was, it'd be even be worse.
It's a it's a bigger metropolitan area area.
So the second part of the storm that we uh started analyzing here on Sean's show a couple of days ago was that there would be a second hit.
And you've seen the track gradually come out uh into the Atlantic, where we were saying, I'm not trying to, you know, be pompous or but you gotta tell the story, and it's gonna be a hurricane.
And I'm looking at it now, and it's not going to be nearly as strong as what it was in Florida.
But again, let me review with the audience.
There are winds gusting to 55, 60 miles an hour, not only with the tropical cyclone on the Florida coast still, but all the way up to the North Carolina coast.
Now imagine 50, 60 mile an hour wind shoving water back into the coastline, and then here comes the storm plowing straight north into it.
And the landfall is going to be very, very close uh to Charleston.
I keep going back and forth as far as is it east or is it west of Charleston?
I can't really make that call yet.
But Charleston is still going to have uh a big significant event, as will areas down southwest of Charleston, Kiawa, and some of these other places, but then the area up the coast, you know, Myrtle Beach, Georgetown, some of these places that got hit pretty hard in Matthew and Florence, uh may uh have to deal with uh uh the maximum amount with this storm too, and that's coming tomorrow.
And it will continue because folks it's uh it's using some extra energy, the very thing that'll eventually kill it, the cooler air coming comes in.
If it fades in slow, it's like feeding a blanket into a fire.
It'll help it stay together for a while, and it'll use those processes and probably uh maintain tropical storm force winds all the way into North Carolina tomorrow night, and that means power outages in there, and then it'll rain itself out in the mid-Atlantic states on Saturday and be going after the water.
Let me let me make sure we'll walk people through this in a in a logical way.
So one if there's one good thing that came out of this, the storm moved a lot faster than everybody was anticipating, right?
It went through a lot of things.
I would not I went, I would well, we would thought it would get out over the water uh three this afternoon, it got out about ten, so it moved somewhat faster.
When you say a lot faster to be, I think, well, twenty miles an hour didn't move that fast.
But they're like horses running to water.
Once they get inland, right?
You know, that's it.
They want to get right back to power refuel out there in the water.
That's right.
So as predicted, it we it hit in Fort Myers, it went north to Sarasota, Naples, the those areas got hit the hardest.
Then as you rightly predicted, it made an upward turn left towards the I-4 corridor, right over Orlando, and it's it just passed through, for example, the Jacksonville Ponta Vidra area, now hitting a little bit of Savannah, the southeastern portion of Georgia, heading out to sea, it's gonna gather up strength.
It's a tropical storm now will become a hurricane status again.
Then it's gonna pound the shores of South Carolina, the beaches of South Carolina.
Uh looks like if if we had to pick it's it's gonna be Charleston or a little east or west of Charleston.
We don't know exactly where, but right in and around that area.
Now, when that happens, what do we expect that's gonna happen in Charleston?
Uh because I got to imagine flooding is a big problem there.
Yeah, well, first of all, the center is located east of Cape Canaveral.
And the weather that you're talking about that's pounding away on the north coast of Florida has been pounding away, is to the northwest of the center.
But the the storm center didn't actually come up all that far That far.
But the strong winds, I mean Daytona Beach, I mean it was unbelievable watching them this morning.
They're calming down a bit now.
So you ha so what you have here is you have the low level swirl, you can see it vi vividly, about seventy miles east of the Florida coast.
Yeah, this arc of very heavy rain and strong winds to the northern.
But I need Joe, I need to refocus you so people have information.
So I'm sorry.
It's it's now hitting that northern part, northeastern part of Florida, southeastern part of Georgia.
It's gonna regain its strength.
It's a tropical force winds now and come in as a hurricane into the coastal area of South Carolina, and that means and and if I had to s if we had to guess it's a direct hit on Charleston, could be east, could be west of Charleston, and do you expect flooding there and then we'll go from there?
Yes.
Uh and what kind of surges are we looking at?
Well, right now the hurricane center is up to four to seven.
I could see some places seeing as much as much as a nine foot surge out of this because of what's going on before.
But keep in mind the weather is arriving way in front of the hurricane.
By the time we get to nine, ten o'clock tonight, things are going to start closing in on the South Carolina coast.
That's why, you know, the hurricanes are a hundred miles southeast of uh St. Augustine, they're getting pounded, right?
So you know that that so uh i if we're talking about the practical weather rather than focused on the center coming ashore at about one or two tomorrow afternoon, that weather gets in there late tonight and tomorrow morning is rocking and rolling already as the center approaches and again, I think it I think it reaches Charleston uh noon to two around the Charleston area, then goes inland, and you know, the the coast is the same.
And that's noon to two tomorrow.
That's noon to two tomorrow?
Yeah, that's right, and it continues as a significant storm inland after that.
But I want folks to understand the reason why uh Sean brought up Jacksonville's getting it, is because this is a big storm.
So what's that?
The storm, the center is down to the southeast, but they're getting they're getting walloped along the north coast of Florida from it.
So you can imagine as it comes north and approaches South Carolina, the show begins before the main actor even arrives.
And that's a that's the big problem.
One of the things as I as I look very closely at the cone of this, um once it goes in towards Charleston, it seems to continue to make a leftward turn where it will, you know, uh parts of North Carolina are gonna be hit hard, uh more of the western part of the mid to western part of the state, uh, and then it'll make its way sort of like splitting uh halfway into Kentucky, halfway into West Virginia.
So is it gonna head into the midwestern part of the country and not head up the east coast as originally projected to go?
No, what happens is it becomes what we call barraclinic storm, so it's like by the time it gets to southwest uh Virginia, it's just a low pressure system, and there's a secondary system.
Some of the energy comes out, reforms off the out it goes.
Remember the process of hard.
Right, so it'll it'll head from Kentucky and West Virginia will go into Ohio and Indiana.
Is that what it'll be just no, no, no?
No, it'll be uh it'll just be by the time we get to Saturday, it'll be a regular old low pressure system that we look at.
And you you you don't you won't need to track the center anymore.
There'll just be rain.
There'll be rain trying to come up in the Pennsylvania, New Jersey.
That rain will then break off and head off to the east, and you'll leave the you'll leave what's left of this over the central Appalachians.
Uh I don't think there's anything that can activate it.
Like sometimes we see storms inland three days and all of a sudden there's a big flood.
I think it just basically rains itself out in the central Appalachians.
I think once we get to Saturday noon, the show is over, except for what would be tur I term it uh uh Nor'easter in Virginia and places like that.
I don't think it's that it's nothing they haven't seen.
What do you think of all of these people?
Uh and I can play the media politicizing this whole thing.
Please don't.
Well, I mean, all right, I won't play it.
But you you know what they're saying.
Well, you know, look let's go back just real quick.
We only have a minute left.
And when you talk about hurricane history, and you know it as well as anybody I know.
We've had her a hundred years ago we had hurricanes.
We had really big hurricanes.
Uh as long as long as I've been alive and my parents have been alive, we had hurricane season, tornado season.
We have something called Tornado Alley, where we know that tornadoes are more prevalent.
So my question to you is why are they trying to say that this is, you know, the phenomenon?
It's not a phenomenon because it's been happening uh at least as long as we've been keeping weather records, hasn't it?
Yes, it's because they're weaponizing weather in a phony climate war to push an agenda that has nothing to do with science and everything to do with the breaking down of the foundational values of this country.
There's your answer.
All right, we're gonna get uh more with Joe Bastardi.
Update South Carolina, hope you're on high alert, tropical storm now, but it's coming back as a hurricane to the coast of South Carolina.
Uh, and you need to be ready for that coming, and then it will head to North Carolina, Kentucky, that area, and Ohio, uh, especially Southern Ohio, Northern Kentucky.
You're gonna get hit some as well.
Uh Joe Bastardi, Weatherbell.com, also author of the book, The Weaponization of Weather and a Phony Climate War.
800 941 Sean is our number.
If you want to be a part of the program, we'll check in 40 days till the midterms.
Uh Doug Mastriano, Gubernatorial Candidate Pennsylvania, Blake Masters, Senate Candidate Arizona, and the Attorney General of Florida, Ashley Moody.
She will weigh in on the damage down in Florida and give us an update what's happening down there, and your calls 800-941 Sean, our number.
Look, companies that have a sole purpose to keep your personal information safe online, you know, they also can become victims of cyber attacks.
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Now they do have a big butt here.
No customer passwords, thank goodness were compromised.
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Music Hannity uncovers the real truth.
Real truth about the politics of DC.
He's your watchdog on Big Brother every day.
Manity is on right now.
All right, we're going to be updating you all throughout the day.
The latest in the aftermath of the damage, the wreckage, the carnage of this awful hurricane.
And there's a lot of flooding and a lot of people in need.
With uh Joe Bastardi throughout the day.
Blake Masters, Senate Candidate Arizona will check in 40 days from the midterms.
Doug Mastriano, Gubernatorial Canada PA will join us.
We'll check in with the attorney general.
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