Wanna play our kids all saying you will come to sell.
We'll all be flying.
Our little children.
And if you want a little bang in your yin yang, come along.
And after Roe was eradicated, Mag MAGA radicals opened the floodgates for draconian and cool bands on women's choice across America.
Biden does.
I saw him yesterday making that speech.
I mean, I'm sorry.
He's cadaver like.
But his brain is good.
He's still great.
And when I was vice president, things were kind of bad during the pandemic.
And what happened was Rock said to me, Go to Detroit.
Help fix it.
Wanna make a difference?
Difference.
Wanna be heard?
Wanna change?
T minus 165 days until election day.
Get out and vote.
Vote.
Vote.
Yeah, we have coming.
Don't play our guilt all saying you will conscious songs.
From coast to coast.
From border to border.
From sea to shining sea.
Sean Hannity is on.
Hey, Sean Hannity on a well-deserved long holiday weekend.
And I hate to see him go, but you know what?
I love it when I have a chance to be with all of you.
It is Rose.
I've been with you before many times.
And I'm so glad to be here with you again today.
So I've got lots to talk about.
We've got so many great guests coming up.
I want to throw the phone number out at you right now just so you can get your calls in because I want to talk to you about so many things.
I want to talk about Israel.
We're going to talk about the economy.
I want to talk about what the football players said about women in the workplace.
That was Harrison Butker.
And I have a little take of my own that I want to share with you, but I'd love to hear from you as well.
The phone number is 800-941 Sean.
That's 800-941-7326.
941-7326.
And um also I follow me, please.
I would love it if you would do this.
My websites are Roseunplugged.com, and I also have a women's ministry page, and that is she is called by him.com.
And if you subscribe, you will you'll receive my weekly newsletter.
It's free.
And uh we always get a lot of prayer requests.
Lately, we've been getting a lot of prayer requests.
I wonder why.
Maybe because it looks like everything's going to hell in a handbasket, possibly.
But Facebook is Rose Unplugged, and also She is Called by Him.
Instagram, Rose Unplugged with the number one after it.
And Instagram for the ministry is She is Called by Him.
And I have a podcast.
You can hear it.
It's Rose Unplugged on Apple, Spotify, Rumble, YouTube, everywhere.
It's on all platforms.
You know, I want to talk to you all today just a little bit about hesitancy.
Because you know, I I think about how so many of us feel that we are to go out there and make a difference, that we are to stand up for what we believe is right and true.
And yet there's that hesitancy.
You know you feel it sometimes.
And who can blame you?
I do too.
When you're being labeled at school board meetings for being a terrorist because you spoke up when others are criticizing you or you're being attacked at work or other places in your neighborhood because of what you believe in.
Sometimes we become reluctant to act because of that hesitancy.
But you know what?
Future generations are counting on us.
And, you know, and I want to talk to women too.
Listen, ladies, I know this is rough because you carry the weight of the world on your shoulders, and if you've got children, it's even a heavier burden than the rest.
But women who have pushed through difficult times and use their gifts to lead movements, raise up strong family members, and nurture others are the women we want to think about.
And I wanted to actually talk to you about how much influence we really do have as women.
And and guys, you're included in this conversation as well, because I have examples of men and women who have done great things, but guess what?
They had to push through the hesitancy.
They had to push through the reluctance.
They had To actually get up and make a stand.
And sometimes that's scary.
And we are living in scary times, make no doubt about it.
But we've got to put our influence to use.
And we've got to push through the hesitation beyond our comfort zone and do what we believe we are meant to do and what why we were here in the first place.
I'm going to just take you back to scripture, number one.
That's my first example.
Don't worry, I'm not going to stay there.
I'm going into other places.
But I think this is a really good story to be reminded of.
And that is the story of Jochebed.
She does she devised a very clever plan to save her son's life.
She loved him so much.
Now you know who she was, right?
The mother of Moses.
And at the time that he was born, the Pharaoh had just about had it.
A second decree went out.
All children, male children under the age of two needed to be thrown into the Nile River, not kidding you.
That is exactly what was going on.
She defied him after she had her son.
She kept him hidden for three months when she could no longer hide him at home.
She devised a plan.
And I'll think about this as a parent.
She knew that one choice to keep him at home was certain death.
The other choice that she had could mean death, but it was a decision she had to make and a chance she had to take.
And she did.
She put together a waterproof basket, sends it down the Nile.
It just so happens her daughter Miriam is there, and he's in the reeds, and Miriam points the baby out to the Pharaoh's daughter.
The Pharaoh takes the baby as her own.
And then Miriam suggests that the Pharaoh's daughter ask a woman to come in and nurse the child.
And the princess agrees.
And guess who it was?
It was Moses' mom that came.
Miriam ran and got her, brought her back.
So, and let me tell you something they paid her to nurse her own child.
But I bring this story up because that took a lot of courage.
She had to put aside any reluctance to act, any hesitation that she might have had and choose the difficult thing to do.
As a result, think about this.
That son of hers led a nation out of slavery.
Amazing.
And then I've talked about Queen Esther before, you know the whole story.
In the end, the bottom line there with that story is that that famous line, you know it.
How do you know that you were not here for such a time as this?
What Esther did, and she was living a very comfortable life.
She didn't have to do anything.
But she did.
And she needed to provide relief and deliverance for a nation, the Jewish nation.
So my question to you is how do you know that you haven't been born to this nation for such a time as this?
Because what she did saved a nation of not just that, the Jews weren't just delivered, they were empowered because of her boldness and her courage.
Read the whole story.
You'll see what I'm talking about.
But neither she nor her uncle, who encouraged her to go to the king and make her request, had the power or position alone to deliver those people.
It was only when they acted together that they were able to lead God's people away from the threat of death.
And then I've talked about the founding fathers before, that moment where they hesitated when they were about to sign the declaration of independence.
We are declaring ourselves independent from tyrannical rule.
And they knew what that could mean, their very lives, their fortunes, their sacred honor.
And there was an account about the hesitancy in that room as they were preparing to sign.
And nobody was really anxious to pick up the pen and sign until John Witherspoon stood up.
And he said, There's a tide in the affairs of men.
Do you perceive it now before you?
To hesitate is to consent to your own slavery.
They signed.
It took courage.
They had to push through the reluctance to act, the hesitation that they were feeling.
They signed.
And then I want to give you a somewhat more recent example because I love the story.
And we don't talk about this kind of thing so much.
But Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, they were really good friends.
And it came out of the suffrage movement.
But you know what?
I want to go even back further before they began the suffrage movement.
Because they were working on the anti-slavery movement.
They were so involved in that.
See, what happened at that time was the second great awakening.
By the way, before those men fought in the revolutionary war, those men wanted independence from a tyrant.
There was a great awakening, spiritual awakening.
And that is what emboldened them as well.
So here we had a second great awakening.
One of the platforms of that second great awakening, the thing that the pastors were talking about was abolishing slavery.
It had to be abolished.
They said it was a sin, that slavery was a sin.
So these women were influenced by that second great awakening, and they're working on the abolishment of slavery.
And then they start thinking to themselves and talking to each other.
And they say, you know, we do believe that all men are created equal.
Absolutely.
That's why we are so committed to this movement.
But if we believe that all men are created equal, then we've got to believe that women are as well.
And thus began the suffrage movement.
They were greatly influenced by the second great awakening.
And don't you think for a minute that they didn't experience times of reluctancy, they didn't experience times of hesitancy because the men didn't want them to vote.
They didn't like the whole idea.
There was probably breakups in the family, arguments at the dinner table.
But they took that courageous step.
They moved beyond the hesitancy.
And they took that courageous step.
But here's what I want to share with you about that story.
They never got to false, see the end result.
Because Susan V. Anthony wrote her friend Elizabeth Katie Stanton on her 87th birthday.
It was printed in a local newspaper.
It was in 1902.
And she wrote this it is 51 years since we first met.
And we have been busy through every one of them, stirring up the world to recognize our effort.
We little dreamed, though, when we began this contest, optimistic with the hope of youth that a half a century later we would be compelled to leave the finish of the battle to another generation of women.
Wow.
A half a century later, they never expected that they would have to turn that battle over to another generation.
My question to you is when we look around us and we see what's going on, when we see our liberties being taken away from us, when we see a country that we barely recognize, even in our own lifetime, that we barely recognize.
Do we want to turn the battle for our freedoms to turn the battle for our love for this country and whatever it takes to save and preserve our freedoms?
Do we want to turn that over to another generation?
I know that you're saying no, we don't.
But it's going to require us to become courageous.
It's going to require us to move out of that safe place, that place where we've become complacent, to move away from the hesitancy and do what we believe we have been put here on earth to do.
No, I don't know.
It might be different for you.
Maybe you should run for the school board.
Maybe you should be voting in this presidential election because a lot of you are saying, well, I don't like either one of them.
Blah, blah, blah.
You know what?
Nobody's asking you to date anybody.
We have a country to save.
Who's the right person to do that?
And you know that.
King Solomon, a very wise man, once said a very long time ago: anyone who was Among the living has hope.
And you know where true hope comes from.
The one who created it.
And that comes by trusting in God.
And I believe, and I love the one, I'm going to end with this before we go to break.
The quote from Ronald Reagan.
Let us be sure that those who come after us will say of us that in our time, we did everything that could be done.
We finished the race.
We kept them free.
We kept the faith.
More of the Sean Hannity show after this.
And then I'll take your phone calls too at 1800-941.
That's 800 941 7326.
9417326.
Stay with me.
Hey there.
I'm Mary Catherine Hamm.
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.
So if you're into common sense, sanity, and some occasional sass.
You're our kind of people.
Catch new episodes of Normally every Tuesday and Thursday.
On the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
Hey there.
I'm Mary Catherine Hamm.
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.
So if you're into common sense, sanity, and some occasional SAS.
You're our kind of people.
Catch new episodes of Normally every Tuesday and Thursday.
On the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen.
My name is Rose.
I'm sitting in for Sean Hannity today, and I will take your phone calls this afternoon.
The phone number is 800 941 Sean.
That's 800 941326.
And also I just want to say thanks so much to Josh McCarthy, who is over here at WDBO Studios in Orlando.
They have allowed me to use the studios once again.
It was almost a year ago that I was here last.
So thank you, Josh.
And I got to see my buddy Joe Kelly, who's on the air here at WDBO.
And 100-year anniversary tomorrow for WDBO.
If you get a chance, let them know that you wish them a very happy anniversary, happy birthday.
That's awesome.
100 years.
So anyway, we'll take Tim right now, who's calling from Arkansas.
Hey, Tim.
Hi, Rose.
How are you?
Well, thank you.
How are you?
I'm good.
I want to talk about action steps.
I really like to get your input.
You know, I see this battle that we're in of good versus evil.
And I see, you know, Biden as an example canceling student debt for those who went to college, but I don't know why he would do that or why we would allow him to do that.
I see him uh allowing You can't do it really, but go ahead, technically, but go ahead.
Well, I think so too, but he's doing it.
Open borders by his executive orders that we're allowed millions and millions in.
And I and the list just goes on and on on.
You know, like if you're accused in the January 6th event, not convicted, but accused, then you can't run for president.
And so my question for you is I see these things and and I hear these things, and I think, my gosh, that's that's not right.
What what practically can an average American what can we do in practical steps to turn the tide on many, many of these issues.
That, Tim, is a very thoughtful question and heartfelt, I can tell.
But you know, I have to say that in my opinion, I think every one of us has a job or a duty, and I believe that only you can answer that question.
And I believe that seeking out direction from God is really important, particularly right now, Because what we are facing right now, and you kind of touched on this, these are we're making everything political issues, but in the end, there are more spiritual issues than political, and I'll go more into this as we get into the program today.
Thanks for that call.
An honor to be sitting in for Sean Hannity today.
My name is Rose.
Check me out on social media, Rose Unplugged, and my podcast, Rose Unplugged on all platforms.
Joining us today is President Trump's former senior director for National Security Council.
He's now the director of National Security Heritage, and he brings a very unique perspective on the events that are occurring right now in the Middle East.
And also I want him to give us some history on what happened and talk about the great accomplishments from the Trump administration where Israel is concerned.
So please welcome to the show, Robert Greenway.
How are you?
I'm fine.
Thanks very much.
Uh thanks for having me.
How are you?
Absolutely.
I'm doing very well.
Thank you.
Hey, one of the first things I want to talk to you about, because it's really top of mind for me right now.
Everybody is familiar with George Clooney and his wife, Amal.
And just recently, I think it was earlier this week, she was one of the legal experts who had recommended that we go after with an arrest warrant, not we, but the international courts go after Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas leaders.
And I think there was another one in uh Israel that she wanted to serve arrest warrants for for war crimes.
And so as she said that uh she and other experts in the international law unanimously agreed to recommend that the ICC and their chief prosecutor, Kareem Khan, look and seek out those warrants.
Khan said that he intended to do so.
Now, I know he said that on Monday, I think, and usually they say this kind of thing could take months, but the idea that this is something that they are interested in, and it also it seems to me, Robert, as an attempt to strike a false moral equivalence between a democratic country that's only defending itself against terrorists and uh uh and a butchery uh butchering and horrifying Hamas terrorist group.
Uh you can't make that moral equivalence between the two.
They are not equal in any way, and to suggest that they are and should both be served warrants uh on war crime charges, it's just it's amazing to me.
Well, yeah, we are exactly right, and that's why I think there's been outrage.
And it's the reason why the United States and other countries, including Israel, never signed the Rome Agreement that established the International Criminal Court, precisely for this reason.
It has a history, like too many multilateral international organizations of pursuing very narrow political objectives.
Look, it's more interesting to look at what the ICC is not investigating.
They're not investigating the Uyghur genocide in China.
They're not investigating the chemical weapons use and the crematoria to get rid of the bodies that Bashar al-Assad in Syria created.
Uh, and they're not effectively looking at ISIS, uh, Al-Qaeda, and so on.
The list is long as distinguished.
What are they looking at?
The only democratically elected government that is by all international standards uh uh, you know, pursuing a campaign and minimizing civilian casualties and taking great pains to do it.
So look, it this is a the type of organization that we've railed against for reasons they've given us yet another reason.
Now, the reality is that this is gonna impede travel for Israeli citizens that are under this indictment.
So both the Prime Minister and the defense minister during a time of war are now not going to be able to travel to European capitals to coordinate aid and other uh critical activities during a conflict, and it sends exactly the wrong signal of moral equivalence that you pointed out.
And and that has been the concern with the court all along, and it needs to be defunded, it needs to be uh severed in all cases.
Its legitimacy is absolutely absent.
I I just found this absolutely astounding.
I can't even believe it's like you scratch your head and say, How did we get here?
Where is just I this isn't even logical in any sense, but you know what?
We've been watching as events have unfolded since October 7th, and none of this seems right.
And I have to tell you, uh honestly, Robert, I just recently on my podcast interviewed Stefan Hess, and he was a child who was taken into Berg and Belsum, and he survived, and his sister survived, and his mom and dad.
Luckily, they all as a family were able to make it through.
But the stories that he told were horrifying, but I couldn't help think about some of the butchery and and horror that we watched unfold on October seventh.
And then to see support for they they say Palestine, but come on.
This was an a terrorist attack on the Jewish people.
And it just it's the world seems upside down to me right now.
It really does.
It absolutely does.
And and it's disconcerting to say the least, especially when it shows up inside the United States.
It's bad enough to see this in other parts of the world, but we see this on college campuses.
Most of these people couldn't point out Israel on a map to tell you about the issues of the history, and nonetheless they're carrying banners and they're animated about it.
And obviously there's an infrastructure that's supporting this.
But you're exactly right that this is the kind of thing we look back historically in the 30s and went, well, surely that can't happen again.
Surely we would never tolerate that type of behavior, and now we're watching it again inside our own borders, and it's being exploited by multiple parties, I think, and that convergence is disturbing.
And the fact that these terrorist groups now have found affiliated individuals now, and and there's an open border where we know they are infiltrating and numbers that are just staggering to comprehend the threat to you know to Americans uh as well as not Jewish Americans, but all Americans is absolutely off the charts.
And uh this is something that's gonna require concerted attention to reverse.
Oh, absolutely.
Now you have a unique perspective on the Abraham Accords, and I think that to bring that up right now is significant because you know there was such a great effort that was made by President Trump.
A lot of presidents said that they were going to do some of the things that Trump did in the Middle East, but they never really did.
And Trump has said that he had a lot of pushback from heads of countries and so forth.
And and I in fact I kind of remember him telling a story about how he didn't take any calls until he announced, you know, uh that it was a done deal.
And I just thought it was a beautiful thing that happened.
And he just said, let's just do it.
You know, and he said people were angry for you for a few days and they all went back to the table, and you know, it it he ended the everyround nuclear nuclear deal.
He said um that he said once was the most important thing that was more important than anything else that he had done.
But when you look at you you ha you can bring to us a perspective that many of us, you know, really can never experience uh during that time.
Would you share a little bit of what you were thinking when all of this was playing out?
Sure.
And I know it seems for most that it happened suddenly, it happened quickly, and it all happened, you know, within the span of a few months at the tail end of the Trump administration.
Um and it's certainly true that we didn't advertise the negotiations.
The conversations were kept with a very small group of people.
We're talking about 15 people on the US side and uh a smaller number at each of the countries involved.
The reality is it took years to get to that point.
And what I mean is that the approach that President Trump took to the Middle East uh from the very beginning was confront our adversaries and ISIS and Iran chiefly, deny them access to resources, eliminate their leadership, and then embrace our partners and allies and work to support and strengthen their position so that we don't have to have this disproportionate presence of American resources in the Middle East in perpetuity.
And he effectively did that while managing global markets.
We took Iran and Venezuela off the oil market and kept prices at fifty-five dollars a barrel, and Americans didn't have to pay the burden that they're paying now.
So not only has the Biden administration ushered in a concerted effort not to attack our adversaries or constrain their resources, we're providing them unlimited access on Iran over a hundred billion dollars since January 2021 they're using to fuel terrorism, including groups like Hamas.
And instead, what we're doing is an unprecedented international campaign to undermine the democratically elected government in Israel, our closest partner in the region.
And so the world is, as you said before, upside down.
And our partners in the region are not just scratching their heads, not just frustrated, they're despondent and they're deeply concerned about the U.S. approach to the region.
And add to it that Americans are paying 20% more because of disrupted shipping and trade lanes, and obviously uh a lot more at the pump for gas because of this mismanagement.
So it impacts us all, whether we like it or not.
Yeah, and one of the things too that I thought was significant was that it proved that the Palestinian issue wasn't at that time, it was no longer an obstacle.
I mean, he just found his way around it.
I just thought it was the most clever thing.
I thought it was amazing.
Um how he per Go ahead.
Yeah, no, it's exactly right.
I mean, look, if you talk to people in the region, and I spent you know most of my adult life there, um you know, they're the primary threat to their national security is Iraq.
And and second would be terrorist groups like ISIS when they control that much territory.
Right.
And their their third concern is is long term economic integration with their neighbors, right, to make their their long term goals, knowing they have to transition from a petro uh based economy to something else.
And all those goals led President Trump to rightly get to the conclusion that the future here was was integrating and normalizing diplomatic relations with Israel.
The Israel uh U.S. uh the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not a vital national interest of the United States.
Iran and its nuclear program certainly is global energy markets and trade certainly are.
Yeah, I mean, it was a game changer too.
You know, in the Middle East, because uh all the opportunities that you've discussed, the economics of it all, um it just all led to growth in that area.
Now let me ask you this.
Um based on what you can see happening right now, uh a new unrest is unfolding in the Middle East.
How how what are your thoughts of the future uh about the future and and everything that was accomplished uh during the Trump administration?
How do you feel when you look at things right now?
Are you concerned?
Because I I read something Linda had sent me a tweet that you had sent out, and this was almost uh half a year ago.
It was in October of 23, and you talked about all of the things that happened, and there was no war.
You talked about moving the embassy to Jerusalem, no war, um, getting out of the nuclear or Iran nuclear deal, no war, and all the things that you undertook during the Trump administration.
When you look at those accomplishments, here we are now, after everything that we've seen happen since October.
Are you hopeful that that things can turn around?
Have we just has the the whole everything that has been invested in that area?
Has it been disrupted?
Well, it's been significantly disrupted.
And this is the worst I've seen in the region in my lifetime.
I think you'd have to go back to 1979 to find a similar convergence of crises across the region simultaneously in the economic and security domain.
So this is a serious problem, and all the result of bad policies pursued by the U.S. and the Biden administration.
Now, that I think that this can be reversed because the fundamentals are still there, our partners and allies all still want the same things.
We still have convergent interests, and I think we have the capability and then we certainly have the desire, I think, to go back, hopefully in a new Trump administration.
And I think we can reverse it, but it's gonna take time.
Now that's assuming that Iran doesn't test a nuclear weapon.
Right.
They're at nuclear thresholds, the closest they've ever been.
They had 500 centrifuges online when we transitioned the Biden administration.
They now have over 5,000.
They're a week away from enough dissile material to test a device.
So if they don't develop a weapon, because if they do, we have to pursue protect you know, a more complicated approach.
But in the interim, and absent that, I think we can reverse it.
It's going to take time, but it's necessary, vital, and I do think it's possible.
And I hope that we have the time.
I really do.
I have like two minutes here, real quick, very quick.
The butcher of Iran, I couldn't believe that the State Department released that statement and and expressed their official condolences for him and the foreign minister and all and the other uh and the delegation.
But I that was just an outrage.
I mean, just is there anybody there that understands what's going on in the world today?
That's the question I've got.
Yeah, yeah, it it's absolutely mind-boggling.
The UN, you could almost see them doing it because that's what you'd expect out of Turtle Bay.
You know, doing it was bizarre.
The State Department, absolutely bizarre, the chaplain on the Senate floor.
It it's absolutely staggering that a man responsible for 4,000 innocent civilian deaths uh and making that perfectly legal in Iran and endearing himself as the Supreme Leader gets condolences.
It's absolutely mind-boggling.
But it shows you just how disconnected and what an alternate reality the Biden administration is living in.
Yeah, it's really scary.
I have to say, thank you so much for everything, not only being on the show today, but everything that you did as well as the uh senior director for National Security Council.
I appreciate you.
Uh, you're very fortunate you played a great big beautiful part in history, world history.
Robert Greenway, thank you so much for joining us today.
My pleasure.
Take care.
All right, we'll be back with more.
I want to weigh in a little bit more about the Butcher of Iran coming up and your phone calls at 1-800-941-Shawn, 800-941-Shawn.
Welcome back to the Sean Hannity show.
My name is Rose, and I'm sitting in for him today.
So listen, uh, I only have a couple of Minutes, but there's a couple of things I want to go through.
We do have phone calls.
I would love it if Ralph would hang on the line because Ralph, I'm actually going to address that subject coming up.
Do you guys remember the commercial I can bring home the bacon, fry it up in a pan?
Oh, I'm going to talk about that and I'm going to play that for you.
I remember that when I was just at the age that that could have influenced me and might have to a certain degree.
So we're going to talk about that.
Also, coming up, we have Derek Morgan.
He's the executive vice president of the Heritage Foundation.
We're going to talk to him about the economy.
We're going to talk to him about all of the that we are paying a $7.7 billion bailout for student loans.
And when I say we are paying, we are paying it.
That's right.
You and I, not to mention oil being released from our reserves.
We're going to talk about that coming up as well.
But before we get to all of that, I just want to quickly give you the phone number so you know to call in.
We'll take your phone calls 800-941-Shawn 800-941-7326.
Also, please do me a favor, will you?
Check out my podcast.
It's Rose Unplugged.
You can find me on Apple, Spotify, Rumble, YouTube.
And the thing is, I would love it if you would follow, like, listen, of course.
And then my website is RoseUnplugged.com, Facebook, Rose Unplugged, Instagram, also Rose Unplugged with a number one.
But I do have a women's ministry.
And I'm told by one of my employees that we're getting a lot of prayer requests in just after we even started the show today.
We do take the prayer requests.
They are, listen, nobody needs to know.
They're anonymous, but we have a team of women that pray for you when you send in those requests.
And you can do that at sheiscalled by him dot com.
All right, make sure you give me a call.
I want to talk to you and also stay tuned so that you can hear what we have to talk about with Derek Morgan and the economy.