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July 29, 2023 - Sean Hannity Show
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Aging Washington - July 28th, Hour 3
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Coming up next, our final news roundup and information overload hour.
All right, news uh roundup information overload hour on this Friday.
Toll free on number 800-941 Sean.
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Uh before we get back into all things that we've been discussing all week, and and we have great detail and new new information for you tonight on Hannity, 9 Eastern on the Fox News Channel, as we previewed Devin Archer's uh testimony, which should be blockbuster on Monday.
Um there are other things that happened this week.
If you go back and this whole issue of Dylan Mulvaney and Bud Light, and then the the reaction of Bud Light customers, I mean, it was swift, it was sure, and their market share, even the market cap, I mean, it just dropped precipitously.
You know, they went from the number one beer seller in the country to number four.
And one of the things that I started to worry about, maybe it was a week into this, and I began to see the the numbers and the sales numbers begin to fall, and the boycott begin and the boycotts stick and take hold.
And I was getting nervous.
I didn't like what I saw happening.
And I wasn't I it's not that I care about the the corporation Anheuser Bush.
I don't care about them at all.
But I was thinking about all these guys that have routes, usually end up paying a significant amount of money and investment to get that route and and you make part of the profit share with the company and whatever, however, the agreement is is worked out.
Um I was worried if this continued and was extended long term, that that eventually these were the people that were gonna get hurt.
And the people that worked in the you know, where they brew the beer and the warehouses and the factories and the truck drivers and everybody in between.
I knew that in the end, they would be the ones that suffer, and likely not the the idiots, the dopes in management that caused this thing from the get-go.
And they had opportunities.
I I I'm pretty convinced if they would have just come out and said, you know what, we screwed up, we made a mistake, we didn't really think about it.
Um we apologize, we're sorry, it's never gonna happen again.
And and we ask all of our Bud Light supporters and fans, uh, you know, to give us another opportunity.
Well, sure enough, they didn't do any of that, and every attempt they made was worse than the previous one at making this go away.
Anyway, now they're laying off two percent of their workforce.
Now that's you know, nearly 500 people, 380 people to start with, probably more down the line are coming.
And these are people now that have really good career jobs with a with a company that I'm sure have probably good benefits and paid them well, and now they're getting laid off through no fault of their own.
And I'm not blaming the people that decided that hey, their values are out of touch with my values, but this was a predictable result.
Anyway, Joe Conch is with us, author of the bestseller, come on, man, Fox News contributor, also Carol Roth, entrepreneur, author of You Will Own Nothing, Steve Miller, uh, president of America First Legal and former senior advisor to President Trump for his entire first term.
Uh, welcome all of you to the program.
And I just wanted to change gears a little bit on a Friday, Steve Miller.
I don't know.
I mean, that's where my mind went.
That's where I knew that this this eventually would head, and I feel bad for these people now that are losing these these jobs.
I know the the job market's pretty good right now.
However, they probably like the jobs they had, otherwise they would have left.
Well, I I agree, Sean, that it's very sad for patriotic Americans who were depending upon Bud Light to be an ethical company and to do the right thing and are now suffering as a result of it.
But I think it's important to direct a hundred percent of our IR at the CEO and board of that company, and to call for all of them to be removed and to be replaced with leadership that understands their base and all of those jobs and then some will come back.
As you mentioned, they could have cut this thing off in the first minute by saying we disavow, we apologize, we're holding the appropriate people responsible, and it'll never happen again.
That's all they had to do.
You don't need to hire a PR expert.
You can just use your brain for ten seconds and figure that out.
Well, let me tell you why they didn't do it, Steve.
And if you disagree, tell me.
They didn't do that because they then feared a backlash from quote the trans activist community.
Well, I'm sure they did, but the these groups, as you know, you know so well, Sean, because you've lived through this for so many years with these I've lived through my own boycotts.
It sucks.
Right.
They the the leftist groups, they use fear and intimidation, but they don't have the numbers on their side.
It's all fear and intimidation.
If Bud Light had ignored the trans crowd and said we're sticking with our customer banks, their sales would have gone up.
In other words, the people that are boy the people on the left, the trans crowd that was trying to boycott them, the gender and queer studies crowd, don't buy Bud Light.
They probably have like Cosmos or something, right?
They don't buy Bud Light.
And so that is not their core brand.
And so if they had chosen to stick with their core brand, just like you, Sean have done better than almost anybody in public life for so many years, their popularity would have gone up and up and up and up.
Yeah.
Uh Carol, uh New York Times bestselling author, what do you say?
Yeah, so actually I talk about this and you own nothing, and there's something else very insidious going on because you have to ask yourself, why would Bud Light make this decision in the first why are these corporations making these decisions?
And it's three simple letters.
It's ESG.
Basically, it is business social credit.
And what they fear, more than their customers abandoning ship, is the bullying of these huge investors, the black rocks, you know, that control trillions of dollars.
What they don't want to have is their job at risk or not being able to get capital for the long term and branded as part of not going along with the crowd.
So they are willing to make these ridiculous decisions and sacrifices because they fear that more than the blowback from the customers.
And as these this ESG infiltrates uh the business community, we're seeing these crazy decisions being made, and it's being made, Sean, with our capital in many cases, because they're the ones who are in charge of the pension funds and the retirement funds that are used to bully these management teams and boards of directors into making decisions that don't benefit the customers and don't benefit the shareholders,
but benefit the agenda of a handful of people.
Let's get your take.
Joe Conju, you're the media expert.
You should have your own media show on Fox in my view, but nobody listens to me.
Oh, well, look, Sean, if the marketing people of Bud Light just did their homework and looked at the numbers, the public sentiment around, for example, should there's a Gallup poll that was released recently, should biological males only be permitted to play on sports teams that match their birth gender.
In other words, should men compete against women, transgender men compete against women.
Seventy percent of Americans in this country say no, they should not.
And that's up eight points in just a year from the same Gallup poll.
So the trend has been, even though the media has been, yay, pro-trans men playing against women in sports, uh, the public is saying that should not happen.
So Bud Light should have seen the trends and said, why should we try to appeal to a fraction of a fraction of the population?
And because what?
We're afraid of a social media mob on Twitter that actually doesn't exist, doesn't reflect real life?
That's the whole thing here.
Kegsman, so it started off pretty in the mor uh pretty early in the morning and then went through the afternoon and it was hot.
Block story, and that we're not we're not gonna go off on the tangent.
So you admit that you had you had uh consume way too many adult beverages, is that what you're saying?
Well, it wasn't my fault.
Uh the the the bartender What do you mean it wasn't your fault?
It's the bartender's fault.
They overserved me.
And you know.
But anyway, here's the point.
There was a there were there were two Bud lights on the table.
Now you sound like a liberal blaming somebody else for your drinking.
All right, I take full and complete responsibility.
Anyway, the point is, Sean, there were two Bud lights in front, not kind of near me, right?
I I just happened to sit down at a table.
And then people went ballistic at me on social media.
How could you be drinking that?
How dare you?
This is unacceptable.
I'm like, well, I'm a bourbon guy, so no, that's not even mine.
But uh just from that little By the way, I can confirm that.
You know, you're not a beer drinker, you are a bourbon guy.
Correct.
Makers, Mark Blanton's uh a man's drink, Sean.
Uh, but I just could not believe the backlash.
And and once that toothpaste is out of the tube and an impression is made about a particular product, Bud White's not going to recover from this.
You could say, well, over the years people may come back.
I think now they they're synonymous now with woke culture and transgenders, and that's not where you want to be as a beer company.
All right, quick break more with Steve Miller, Joe Concha, Carol Roth on the other side.
Part of my interview and town hall with RFK Jr.
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And I'm Carol Markowitz.
We've been in political media for a long time.
Long enough to know that it's gotten, well, a little insane.
That's why we started normally a podcast for people who are over the hysteria and just want clarity.
We talk about the issues that actually matter to the country without panic, without yelling, and with a healthy dose of humor.
We don't take ourselves too seriously, but we do take the truth seriously.
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All right, we continue now with Steve Miller, Joe Concha, Carol Rother with us.
You know, I can't get away from our top stories of the week as uh two simultaneous things happening.
Obviously, we're looking forward to Monday Devin Archer's testimony.
Uh we should, it's gonna be a deposition given before the House Oversight Committee.
Uh the treatment of the Bidens, what happened in that courtroom this week uh with with Hunter Biden, and they try to sneak in the U.S. uh agrees to not to uh criminally prosecute Hunter for any federal crimes related to the case.
The deal reads they tried to bamboozle this judge and sneak that in uh that would have would have made that would have been a deal that would have prevented future prosecutions in light of all the whistleblowers and all the new information we have while simultaneously piling on even more charges uh for Donald Trump and the document case.
Stephen Miller, how does this all play out?
Because you want to know the charge that I think is the m the the deadliest of all of them.
The idea that Joe Biden now is engulfed in a real Biden bribery allegation scandal with a lot of evidence now accumulating Uh that in fact he was up to his eyeballs in all these foreign business deals.
Yes, well, our foreign adversaries and the nations around the world that are paying the Bidens, like for example, all these companies and entities that are linked to China.
They're not paying that money for fun.
They're not paying that money for nothing.
They're paying that money because they believe and they know that money that is given to Hunter results in action from Joe.
And that's what the issue with Barisma is all about, right?
The firing of the prosecutor that is investigating the company, Burisma, that is funneling money into the Biden family.
That's as clean cut and as clear as a foreign bribery case as you could possibly imagine.
Which also means that you're betraying the security interests and the national interest of the United States of America for cash.
Now consider And the pr and the president is compromised.
Yes, he is a he is compromised.
And it means that other countries presumably have extortion files on him, have blackmail files on him, have dirt on him.
Well, we now know during all this this entire period, Hunter was addicted to crack.
Yes, which also makes him a huge liability when you think about the fact that he has access to his father, presumably, and we notice with the classified documents that were strewn around the garage, he has access to all kinds of state secrets potentially, and this guy is on drugs, is then completely and hopelessly addicted.
So just close by saying on this point.
Now compare the fact that they're trying to immunize Joe Biden, immunize him through this plea deal for Hunter from criminal scrutiny over his foreign business dealings.
Well at the same time, they were trying to incarcerate President Trump for life over a document dispute over a document dispute who has the right to possess documents with no allegations whatsoever that any of these documents were used in any foreign influence scheme whatsoever.
It is a library dispute over which the president, by the way, has the right under the law to retain possession of the records.
But they want him to go to jail for life.
And they want Biden to be completely immunized, even from an inquiry.
You know, Joe Contra, from a media perspective, boy, it's interesting how they ignore all things Biden.
And they're so obsessed every second minute hour of every 24 hour day, every every week, every month, every year.
Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Donald Trump.
And the next time you hear a so-called journalist say, Well, I'm here just to speak truth to power and hold the powerful accountable.
you're not.
You're only looking at one party in terms of holding them accountable.
And we see it in the nightly news every night where whistleblower testimony last week and Shipley and Ziegler were so credible.
And yet ABC News, which is the top ranked news program in America right now, it's 9 million people still watch that 22 minute newscast and they didn't even touch the story.
Not like, oh, they reported and they dismissed it.
They mocked it.
No, they wouldn't even report it.
Bias of omission is the most insidious bias we have out there because you're not telling the American people things that are profoundly newsworthy like, to Stephen's point, is the president of the United States compromised by the likes of China?
I don't know.
That is so much bigger than anything Watergate ever was, certainly bigger than the Ukraine call by Donald Trump that he got impeached over.
And now the question is if Republicans Republicans go ahead with impeachment, you know how the media is going to treat it.
They will dismiss it, mock it, they'll call it weaponization of the gavel, and and that's the uphill battle that Republicans have if they go down that route.
We're up on the clock.
I'll give the final yes or no, Carol Roth.
Will Joe Biden be the nominee in 2024?
Uh you know, it all depends on what the press does.
If the press start coming after Joe, that's the signal that they don't want him involved, so then that would be a no.
If they let give this a pass, then somehow they want to ride out with him.
That'll be the canary in the coal mine.
You're right.
I totally agree with you.
Anyway, thank you all.
Stephen Miller, thank you.
Joe Concha, thank you.
Carol Roth, thank you.
All right, don't forget Hannity tonight, nine Eastern.
we come back part of my interview at the town hall with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
We'll be right back.
All right, 25 to the top of the hour.
Top free on numbers 800 941 Sean.
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Uh all right, so earlier this week, um in New York City, we had a massive crowd, a couple of thousand people show up for a town hall where Robert F. Kennedy Jr., uh very successful event.
And uh it just got I find him interesting.
I don't think he's gonna get the nomination, but he may surprise us up to this point.
He's surprised a lot of people.
He does have some conservative views on immigration, on biological men playing women's sports, uh, other conservative positions, um, is uh is a nice guy.
Um as I said to the audience before the show, I'm like, you don't have to agree with everything he says about vaccines, which everyone talks about.
Everyone seemed to want me to get into a fight with him about vaccines, and I'm like, I want to hear his views.
And everybody has to be smart enough when you're listening to anybody on medical issues to make your own decisions, do your own research, check in with your own doctors, take factor in your medical history, your current medical condition, and I just trust people are smart enough to do that.
Um, but you know, he does have strong physicians on these.
Anyway, here's uh part of that interview.
A guy asked me, uh, a New Yorker editor who interviewed me a couple of weeks ago, said to me, What qualifies you to be president?
You've never been in Congress, you've never been a governor, you've never been in the Senate.
And for me, that's probably the best qualification.
Because I'm not I'm not saying anything bad about people.
I think most people who are in public office are there because they want to be good citizens, they want to be good public servants.
But the system nowadays tends to go up you.
And, you know, to run for senator in this stage on it costs 100 million dollars.
And that means that you have to spend most of your time jetting between Southampton and Palm Beach in Los Angeles and hang out with billionaires who are gonna give you money.
My job over the past 40 years has been suing government agencies for corruption.
Well, we don't have free market capitalism in this country.
We have corporate growing capitalism.
We have a uh we have a system of cushy socialism for the super rich, and this uh brutal,
a kind of brutal, savage, merciless capitalism for the poor, and it's all designed to strip mine the middle class in this country of all of their equity, all of their assets, and move it to the upper echelons, and and you know, the COVID lockdowns were the final straw.
COVID lockdowns.
We created a billionaire a day, and this was Trump and Biden of 500 days of lockdowns.
We created a billionaire a day.
We moved four trillion dollars from the American middle class to the super rich.
We the people who came into the lockdown with 30 but with a billion dollars increased their wealth on average by 30 percent.
And you can, you know, we closed 3.3 million businesses.
The probably the greatest expert on how to handle pandemics in history was a scientist, an American scientist called D.A. Henderson, who's credited with obliterating the smallpox, the smallpox disappeared from the world by you know, by when I was a kid.
He's the guy who's credited with doing it.
And when the uh when the public health agencies started saying we're gonna look do mass lockdowns, he came out of retirement and published a series of papers saying you never do that.
You're always gonna cause what first of all, you cannot stop a respiratory virus with lockdowns.
You're going to actually amplify it because they spread indoors.
Well, you're locking people in.
There were states that didn't lock down.
Right?
It's the word right.
So what did you say?
There were states that did not lock down.
And there are side-by-side studies, for example, in Minnesota and Wisconsin.
South Dakota never shut down.
Right.
Schools in Florida opened in August of 2020.
Yeah, and I mean in-person learning.
And what all the orthodox protocols said is that you quarantine the sick, you protect the vulnerable, and that you let the population continue because when you shut down businesses, that kills people.
Unemployment kills people.
It kills people.
And if you took those policies on, do you not run the risk if there's more human contact, a virus we didn't know a lot about early on, we still don't really even know enough of them as far as I'm concerned.
What would you have done differently?
I I would have done everything differently.
I mean, number one, the first thing specific.
The first thing that they should have done is to use, you know, they use the internet in many, many ways, usually to censor doctors, physicians who are trying to say, hey, you know, I'm using a treatment, a protocol that actually works.
I'm using therapeutics that are work.
Those people are silenced.
We should have done the opposite.
We should have used the internet, and we now have this extraordinary resource to link ourselves to the 15 million frontline physicians around the world, and have them report what treatments were they using.
What was what working?
We know now there were dozens and dozens of therapeutic drugs that were off the shelf drugs that obliterate.
Well, you're talking about HCQ.
Are you talking about hydroxy?
I remained in hydroxychloroquine, but Fim tit of air, many, many, many others.
And then I think there's a list.
I think I think uh I've seen a list that Pierre Corey and and Dr. McCulloch I have published in the Peter McCullough of about 20 different drugs that were just devastatingly effective against those.
But the the problem was not only did they not focus on those, but they tried to prevent the public from getting access to them.
And the reason for that was because there's a little known federal law that says you cannot give an emergency use authorization to a vaccine.
If an existing therapeutic drug that has been approved for any purpose proves to be effective against the target disease.
So if they had admitted that hydroxychloroquine, which they knew from day one that it worked against uh against COVID, they could not have killed their 88 billion.
What?
After the fact came out and said that taken early, it mitigated symptoms.
That's what I took out of that.
And there were other studies that followed.
I never saw one on Ivermectin that showed it was effective.
However, monoclonal antibodies seemed to be a a therapeutic that worked very well, but that was also experimental.
Well, the the thing is you don't know about those studies because the press is not reporting them.
I want you to look at this tape and tell me if you think he's fit for the job.
Take a look.
Let's go, let the world.
We cheer for Muslim athletes like Kareem Al-Jub...
and Joan Shingang, Shingang, Shingang, Koawa.
Ban on transgender Americans.
I met alone with him, just he and I, and a simultaneous interpreter 68 times, 68 hours.
68 times more than 16 hours.
All right.
God save the Queen, man.
Thank you very much, Mr. President.
We really appreciate it.
And we love you.
Thank you.
I might add if I didn't, I'd be sleeping alone.
You have to explain.
I better explain that.
Someone don't know what to talk about.
My wife's a filly girl.
All right, where are we going?
Well, we're going to win and we're going to help.
We have plans to build a railroad from the Pacific all the way across the Indian Ocean.
By the way, I met with uh those guys that fly over shortly.
You heard of how many?
Okay.
Do you believe that he is physically, mentally, cognitively strong enough to lead our country?
This world is a dangerous place.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. uh Robert Kennedy Jr., you know that this is a dangerous place.
Is he cognitively strong enough to be your president?
Well, he's never been very good with words.
Do you really think he's up to the job?
No, but I I wouldn't, I'm not reluctant to say that for partisan reasons, Sean.
I what I've tried to do during this campaign is avoid personal tax on people.
I will say, I will say whether he's up to it or not, whether he's making his own decisions, the decisions that are coming out of the White House are bad decisions.
Right.
And you know, the uh the Democratic Party does not censor people in my experience.
Um we're not the party of war.
We're not the party of the neocons dictating foreign policy.
We're the party of the middle class, and we're the party of working people, and that's not where the party is anymore.
Ukraine, because of our pushing the Ukraine into the war on two occasions.
Well, let me tell you, let me let me answer your question.
In 2019, France, Germany, and Russia all agreed to the Minsk Accords.
That year, Zelensky ran for president.
He was a comedian.
He had no political experience.
Why did he win?
Because he he won ran on one issue, signing the Minsk Accords.
As soon as he got in there, Victoria Newland and the White House told him he couldn't do it.
That Putin sends 40,000 troops in.
That's not enough to conquer the country.
Clearly, he wanted us to come to the negotiation.
He wanted somebody to come to the negotiating table.
Zelensky came to the negotiating table, signed a new agreement that was the Minsk Accords too in 2022, and that would have allowed Dunbaz to stay, and Lugansk to stay to remain as part of Ukraine.
We said Putin signed it, Zelensky initialed it, and Putin in good faith began withdrawing troops from the Ukraine.
What happened?
We sent Boris Johnson over there to torpedo it.
Because we don't want peace with we want the war with Russia.
If you're president, would you come to the defense of Taiwan, our ally?
No, no, President, no presidential candidate with any prudence would answer that question.
Our our uh our policy, our policy towards Taiwan is strategic ambiguity, and that makes a lot of sense.
You don't want to project your enemy what you're gonna do in a certain case, or embolden your friends to go to war thinking that you're going to support them.
So that's been our policy.
I was um describing an NIH funded study.
First of all, it's not surprising that a disease uh uh would target would have uh a disproportionate impact on certain races.
Many diseases do.
And is it this is a and I was just uh describing a 2021 study that was funded by NIH that was performed by a half a dozen at least scientists, three of the three lead scientists from Cleveland Clinic.
And that study showed that the the docking site for the uh on the fur and cleave of the a of the uh co COVID virus was particularly compatible with certain races.
it doesn't mean that those races disproportionately died, but chiefly with African with people of African descent.
Right.
Next of Caucasians, the least of all people from Finland.
And uh and uh people and and certain German Germanic races.
And and ethnic Chinese were also the uh uh least least uh or less susceptible and Ashkenazi Jews.
All right, but there's no suggestion ever that somebody designed it to be that way, that it was designed to preserve certain races.
I was not suggesting that.
When Congress, a congressional committee reinvestigated between 1977 and 1979 on the House Elect Assassinations Committee, they concluded, and they saw a lot more documentation and had a lot more witnesses than the Warren Commission ever saw.
They concluded that my uncle was killed by a conspiracy.
And most of the people, for example, Richard Schweitzer, who was the first head of the committee, publicly said uh JFK, John, the president of the United States was that the CIA was involved in the murder of the president of the United States.
And that's quotation.
Most of the people on that committee at that time believed it was the CIA, that it was believed certain people in the CIA.
So you were seven at the time, seven or eight.
I was uh I was ten when my uncle was killed.
I was fourteen when my father was killed.
Oh um, you know, the and today there is overwhelming evidence.
All right, that took place of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., my town hall with him from earlier this week.
We're gonna try and get all the candidates in.
We've done a number of them so far.
All right, that's gonna wrap things up for today.
Hannity tonight, nine Eastern.
Please set your DBR every night, nine Eastern.
Joe Tacopina, the president's lawyer, uh, will get full analysis of the dirty trick that uh Hunter's lawyers tried to pull on the judge this week that backfired.
Uh we'll get a preview of next week in Devin Archer's testimony.
Uh Joe Tacopina, Greg Jarrett, Brett Tolman, New King Rich, Miranda Devine, Mary Catherine Hamm, Joe Concha, John Levine, Charlie Hurt.
We'll load it up.
Say you D VR tonight and every night, nine Eastern Hannity on Fox.
We'll see you tonight.
Back here Monday.
Have a great weekend.
Thank you for making this show possible.
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