Sean Hannity confronts Iranian nuclear intransigence, detailing President Trump's blockade and the resulting $435 million daily economic hemorrhage for Tehran. Guests Tim Stewart and Daniel Turner analyze how Saudi surplus now fuels China and India while U.S. mine-hunting secures the Strait of Hormuz to starve terrorism funding. The episode pivots to a heated caller debate where Hannity rejects conditional forgiveness, contrasting Matthew 18 with unconditional grace, before addressing the Carlos Brown Jr. incompetence ruling and concluding that strategic pressure, not just diplomacy, defines modern conflict resolution. [Automatically generated summary]
Transcriber: CohereLabs/cohere-transcribe-03-2026, sat-12l-sm, and large-v3-turbo
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Strait of Hormuz Oil Flow00:14:53
This is an iHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
All right, news roundup and information overload hour.
Here's our toll free telephone number.
It's 800 941 Sean.
If you want to join us back to our top story of the day, and that is the Iranian talks fell flat.
The Iranians are absolutely mind numb, and they're just the dumbest people on the face of the earth, or at least those people that are in charge.
I've had to feel bad for the Iranian people because they just suffer as a result of this radical regime that has been in power for 47 years.
And Even going into it, President Trump said, regardless of how the talks go with Iran, we're going to win.
And he's right about that.
Let me play the president announcing the blockade against Iran after these marathon talks.
I have a hard time understanding why this thing even took 21 hours.
The president had six very specific demands of the Iranians, and they come in with four ridiculous demands.
And it should have been the answer is no.
Either you accept these, you have an hour to say yes, and then either they take it.
And accept it, or they get what's coming.
And what's coming is coming, period.
Anyway, here's the president announcing the blockade against Iran.
Well, we're going to be blockading.
It'll take a little while, but it'll be effective pretty soon.
We didn't get there on the important issue.
They want to have nuclear weapons.
They're not going to have nuclear weapons.
I've been saying that for 30 years.
I would never allow that to happen before I was in politics.
And that country will not have nuclear weapons.
Most countries shouldn't be allowed to have, but that country will not have.
Nuclear weapons.
But we had a very intensive negotiation, and toward the end, it got very friendly.
And we got just about every point we needed, except for the fact that they refused to give up their nuclear ambition.
And that's the only point, frankly, to me, that was the most important point by far.
Now, the president expanded on that, not just the blockade, and he said this before they don't have any cards.
And the idea that they think.
They're going to get away with extorting the entire world.
It's just not going to work by them thinking that they're going to mine the Strait of Hormuz.
They're not going to mine the Strait of Hormuz.
We've already created two passage lanes as we speak.
The president is saying here they don't have cards, and it's not going to work because we're going to open the Strait of Hormuz to some traffic.
And if the Iranians dare try to interrupt that, they're just going to be obliterated further.
Here's what the president said.
Well, they reacted.
You know, it was very interesting.
It started off weak.
They came in like they had the cards, but they don't have the cards.
Their army, their whole military is obliterated.
The whole place is obliterated.
And, you know, as you know, levels of leaders are gone.
They're literally gone.
Comedy's gone.
The whole thing is gone.
The whole place is gone.
They have one thing that they can do.
They can say, well, gee, we're going to put a mine someplace in the, just a mine.
We'll drop one mine, two mines, ten mines.
And that will, if you have a ship that costs a billion dollars, you say, well, you know, I'd prefer not getting whacked by a mine, losing my ship or damaging it badly, at least.
And so that's a little bit of a thing that they can do.
Military might and military power don't do it, but you know, it's extortion and they're extorting the world.
Now, the president added one point, and that is the price of oil and gas could be a little bit higher, meaning from where it was before, not after.
But anyway, here to weigh in on all of this, we have Tim Stewart with us.
He is the president of U.S. Oil and Gas, and Daniel Turner, founder and executive director of Power of the Future, a national nonprofit.
By the way, Tim, I saw your organization took a shot at somebody.
As it relates to gas prices in California.
And you said, no, the straight-or moves is not the cause of high gas prices in California.
And I was like, there goes your organization again.
You just keep telling it straight, and they don't like it.
No, they don't.
And I'm glad that we're able to do it because that's, you know, you've got to get the story out.
That was a real con of from California.
And frankly, it was nice to be able to school these members of Congress from time to time because they have the advantage of being able to say something and then move on, and nobody ever calls them on their BS.
So it was a good weekend, Sean.
It's good to be with you.
All right, let me start with the news as it relates to oil.
Oil market researcher Rory Johnston pointed out over the weekend dozens of very empty, large crude carriers are moving towards the U.S. Gulf Coast.
That means they're going to do pickups in other places.
If you look at, for example, correct me if I'm wrong, 80% of the 20 million barrels of oil per day that goes through the Strait of Hormuz, the vast majority of it has been replaced via the Saudis pre war surplus.
The oil that the Iranians are allowing to go to China, Indian safe passage, and so on and so forth, and alternative routes and methods of getting oil around the world.
Is that accurate?
It is, you know, and crude will inevitably flow.
That's just how it is.
And events like this have a tendency to sort of reorder the distribution and supply chain networks.
That choke point for about 20 million barrels a day, like it says, 20% of the global production.
This blockade is really interesting because ultimately it's going to hurt the Iranians and the Chinese more than anybody.
The Iranians are making $435 million a day.
That's their economic damage.
That's between lost exports and disrupted imports.
That's $13 billion a month.
All that's going to China.
And so China all of a sudden has lost its discounted crude premium that they had as an advantage for they have over the rest of the manufacturing global economy.
They were happily buying that discounted crude.
Now they're feeling the pain.
It's kind of nice to see them suddenly demand unimpeded shipping through the strait.
It was like, where have you been for the last six weeks?
Yeah.
Let me get your take, Daniel Turner.
I think the president also suggested that, you know, once the conflict is over, this will ultimately.
In spite of the Iranians claiming that they would have the right to control the strait, we're talking about international waterways.
That's never going to be the case, is it?
No, and I've seen calls for the president to rename it the Straits of America, which I just think is hysterical.
President Trump has made it very clear that he is going to be the world leader.
America is going to be the world's leader when it comes to oil and gas policy, not OPEC, not the Middle East, not Russia.
And hopefully, if the American voters don't fail us, hopefully not presidents like Joe Biden when he went to Saudi Arabia.
And begged them to produce because he was shutting down production domestically.
President Trump sees that the world runs on oil and gas.
We can wish it were other.
I don't personally.
Some people do.
We can wish it were other, but it is not.
The world runs on oil and gas.
Everybody needs it.
And if America controls the world's oil and gas supply, we as the ultimate force for good will set a tone for the world for peace and for prosperity.
That's his very clear vision.
And I think we need to give him the leeway to enact it so that we have a better world.
Tim, what do you make of the U.S. Navy that began?
The Strait of Hormuz mine hunt, and that they've already been able to kind of create multiple passageways that they know at this point are safe of any Iranian mines.
And I don't think the Iranians are going to be able to put out any new ones.
How important is that, or do you have to worry about the Iranians at its narrowest point?
My understanding is the Strait of Hormuz is about, what, between 20 and 24 miles, depending.
So that makes it a bit of a target for any tanker going to. through that area, I don't know how easy that would be to protect.
Yeah, this is kind of what's been missing over the last couple of weeks, Sean, is actually having U.S. Navy presence there.
And I think last time you and I talked, I said it's one thing to have your tanker insured by Lloyds of London.
It's another thing to have your tanker insured by Lloyds of London and escorted by the United States Navy.
It's a much greater security level.
So I think this is what's been missing.
And again, it's been fascinating to watch this play.
I got handed to the president.
You break the enemy's blockade by blockading their blockade.
Which is what he's done here, and then open up these routes.
And when you have Navy minesweepers and Navy destroyers and Navy air cover, it certainly changes the dynamic and adds that additional level of security that the transporters have needed.
So I think you're going to see things really start to move here this next week or 10 days, and that's going to impact global oil prices as well.
Yeah, I agree with that.
Now, the Iranians can't make their own gasoline, can they, Daniel?
And in other words, the U.S. naval blockade is going to exploit that.
For the Iranians, they just need to get their oil out of there.
And the blockade, more than anything else, isn't it going to be designed to prevent Iranian oil from leaving the area?
Yes.
And this is what we did in the first administration with the enormous sanctions that they had on Iranian oil, not just on the country itself, but targeting those countries who buy Iranian oil.
And so this is a more forceful way of doing that.
Remember, we've allowed the world to make this country rich and powerful, we've allowed other countries to buy their oil.
And what do they do with their money?
They foment terrorism.
And then when they foment terrorism, the world then points its finger at America and says, hey, America, fix this problem.
Right?
So this is preemption on a different level.
And by preventing Iran from becoming rich and powerful, we are preventing future bloodshed.
Remember the people used to scream, no blood for oil?
This is the ultimate no blood for oil because we will not have one country, one insane country with their religious caliphate to bring jihad around the world.
We will not have them have the resources.
To do that.
So, this is the ultimate peace strategy.
It's aggressive.
It's bold.
It scares the crap out of Europe, who has given up their domestic oil and gas supply for climate insanity.
But it is setting the world on footing for peace and prosperity.
It's the first president who has ever done this with a real strategy in mind to end this threat once and for all.
All right.
So, here's the next most important question Tim Stewart.
Can we have this blockade and still keep our ships?
At a distance, in other words, that we're not going to have American warships escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, which I think would put a very big target on them at a very short range for the Iranians.
Is this something the Americans can accomplish from a distance, a safe distance for our Navy?
I think they can.
Again, and it's not just having a destroyer escort.
It's being able to have an underwater drone.
It's being able to have air cover.
It's being able to have the intelligence that is needed.
And so, again, the one thing, Sean, we never bet against the United States military.
We never bet against the United States oil and gas industry.
It's a fool's bet on both of those things.
Well, I guess what I'm saying here is if they hit an American Navy ship for them, that's going to be a symbolic victory in their minds.
And I don't want to give them any victory.
Yeah, and it's a symbolic victory, but it'll be followed up by some pretty strong retaliation.
And I think the presence made that very clear.
There's much of this just the optics of more than anything.
And to your earlier point, being able to have that free flow of traffic from everybody but Iran is going to be really, really important.
All right, quick break.
We'll have more talking about the price of oil now a little below $100 a barrel.
It went down from earlier today where it launched.
Anyway, Tim Stewart and Daniel Turner on the other side, and then we'll get to your calls 800 941 Sean this Monday as we continue.
All right, we continue.
Tim Stewart, President, U.S. Oil and Gas.
Daniel Turner, Founder, Executive Director at Power of the Future.
As we discuss oil prices on the world market and what the president is now doing with this blockade in the Strait of Hormuz.
By the way, I saw what you had put out there because you fired back at Ro Khanna, the California Democrat, who said.
And what you said was pretty funny.
You said high gas prices in your district aren't Trump's war.
They're Sacramento's doing in this account that you run in direct response to Roe Connor.
I mean, what are they paying?
$8 a gallon out there now?
Yeah, it's between $6 and $8.
And it's 100% California's own doing.
And this is, again, to our earlier point the politicians have a tendency to try and deflect as much as they possibly can.
But California's mess is California's mess.
The province is spilling over to becoming a.
A U.S. national security issue because, frankly, the West Coast refinery industry is what's supplying the U.S. military and the U.S. Navy.
And you can't have a California policy shutting down refineries and not allowing the Navy to have access to fuel, jet fuel, and diesel fuel.
How much does it cost, Daniel?
I'll ask this as a last question.
At $100 a barrel, how much does it cost to produce a gallon of gasoline?
At $100 a barrel to produce.
You know, our American industry is profitable around $65 or $70, right?
So when gas gets too low, the industry is pumping, but they're not actually making money.
Contrast that with countries like Saudi Arabia, where they're profitable at $9 and $10 a barrel, mostly because they use slave labor.
They have no OSHA.
They have no regulatory infrastructure.
But a lot of that, the reason why our profit margins are higher also is just a lot of government bureaucracy.
It's a lot of government nonsense.
It's a lot of taxes.
When you go to the Exxon station and fill up your car, The one making the most money on that gallon of gas is government.
It is not the producer.
It is not the gas station clerk himself or the owner of that gas station.
It is government.
Government is the biggest driver of oil prices.
Now, they claim that they're going to use these tax dollars for roads and bridges, but yet every time it's election season, we all say we don't have enough money for roads and bridges.
So where the hell does the money go?
The Heart to Forgive00:13:44
Well, I guess that's a question for Nick Shirley to figure out next.
But we could have much cheaper oil and gas.
We could have much cheaper utilities nationwide.
If government would get out of the way, California being the worst example, but even the best states are not great when it comes to punishing this industry, which is our lifeblood.
Daniel Turner and Tim Stewart, thank you both.
Old Inspired Solutions for America.
This is the Sean Hannity Show.
All right, this Monday, let's get to our busy phones.
Let's say hi to Steve in Colorado.
Steve, hi, how are you?
Glad you called, sir.
Thank you for having me on, Sean.
Well, thank you for joining us.
What's on your mind today?
Well, you've been talking about forgiveness and you're getting tired of it, but you're finding that it's a very sensitive subject with a lot of people.
And I just.
Oh, no.
Linda Bicker.
Okay.
I am so over this topic.
How many times can I repeat the Lord's words?
Well, maybe it'll, when you get the bigger picture, maybe it'll settle down.
Are you a pastor?
I am.
I'm a retired pastor of 30 years.
A retired pastor.
Good thing you're retired because it's very straightforward.
The Lord's prayer, you know, lead us not into temptation, you know, so on and so forth.
These words are very, very clear.
Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those that trespass against us.
Forgive them, Father, for they know not what they do.
70 times 7 is how many times you're supposed to forgive somebody.
You're not supposed to have a hate list and think that you're going to go to the pearly gates when God calls you home and say, Well, you made me, and ignore the fact that He gave you a roadmap on how to become a better person and embrace your salvation, in which you've been given through nothing that you've done yourself.
What's so hard about that?
Well, I just think you haven't quite looked at enough passages.
I want to give you one more John chapter. 18 or Matthew chapter 18, verse 15 and following.
I got a couple of questions for you.
Does God forgive everybody?
I think forgiveness has been offered to everybody.
If it's a matter of whether or not you want to confess your sins, admit that you're wrong, and repent, which from the Latin means to change one's heart, and that you seek forgiveness.
So the person has to ask.
That's found in, and there's a three step process in Matthew chapter 18, verse 15 and following.
That goes through that, go by yourself, take one or two more, take the whole church.
And if they won't ask, say, Yes, please forgive me, I've done wrong, then it says treat him like a heathen and a publican.
Here's another question When Jesus was hanging on the cross, did he yell out to the crowd around him, I forgive you?
Oh, he said, forgive them.
They know not what they do.
And who was he addressing?
His Father in heaven.
Forgiveness is two directional.
I can always forgive somebody to God.
Well, but he also said to Peter, he said, you know, blessed art thou, Peter, because you know who I am.
When Peter said and declared that you are the Christ, you are the Son of the living God, and Jesus said that flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but my Father revealed it unto your heart, and it's upon this foundation that I will build my church, and the gates of hell won't prevail against it, and what you bind on earth.
Shall be bound in heaven, and what you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven, correct?
Yes.
I'm not sure what that has to do with forgiveness.
But it has a lot to do.
In other words, what you bind on earth, if you bind your forgiveness for somebody, whether or not they ask for it or not, then that is bound in heaven.
Yeah, I'm not sure those two go together.
The forgiveness.
What you bind on earth should be bound in heaven.
I mean, what's so hard?
Whatever you ask in my name shall be given to you.
That's not complicated.
Ask and you will receive so that your joy may be full.
You had no idea.
I studied, I went to a seminary and I studied all this.
Okay, and I know opinions differ, but this has seemed to help a lot of people for me over the years.
I can always forgive to God.
I cannot forgive to the person until they ask.
If they will ask, then I'm bound to forgive them.
And we stop.
But that's not the teaching of Jesus.
If Jesus says, anything you ask in my Father's name shall be given to you, does he not say that?
Yes, but who are they asking?
So if you are asking God to forgive another person, whether they ask or not, they're forgiven, aren't they?
No, no, don't conflate the two passages.
I'm not conflating the two passages.
I mean, it's very, there's no ambiguity here.
You know, whatever you ask in my name for my Father will be given to you so that your joy may be full.
Does it not say that?
It does.
I'm asking for this conversation to come to a quick end.
There you go.
So my joy can be full and we can move on.
I love this guy.
First of all, it's so nice to have another person.
Here we go.
What?
What?
I'm being nice.
I'm saying something nice.
It's very nice to hear from someone who knows the Bible as well as this person does.
Because I don't consider myself an expert in the Bible.
What I do consider myself an expert in is a few aspects of the Bible, one of which is my understanding of forgiveness repent, rebuke, repent, and then forgive.
It's not in the order of I just forgive you.
And to his point, if you come to me and you say, Listen, I'm really sorry.
I shouldn't have stabbed your daughter and come into the country illegally.
Will you forgive me?
Then it's up to me to sort of overcome what's happened.
Now, I could tell you firsthand that I would never forgive anybody that hurt one of my children.
But there are people that do it.
God bless them.
It's not for me.
But that's.
Kirk had a very powerful moment that the whole nation watched.
Yeah, that's good for her.
I could never do it.
I would have been completely opposite from her.
I never would have been able to handle it that way.
And I would never go up on stage to do it.
You'd show up in court and try and kill the person.
Absolutely.
And I would be proud of it.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Yep.
You know it.
You just summarized that Matthew 18 passage for me very, very clearly.
And let me.
No, she did not.
I mean, you two are conspiring here to rationalize a way.
It's a very strict command.
Forgive others as you want to be forgiven, period.
You will be forgiven as the testimony is.
I'll tell you what, if I did what the minister told them, I wouldn't expect forgiveness.
You've got to ask for it.
No, that's not true.
It doesn't say that.
If I did something really bad, as we forgive others that ask for forgiveness.
It doesn't say that.
It's implied.
Oh, it's implied.
Now you're going to put Jesus' words implied.
I love this stuff.
You make it up as you go along.
No, I'm asking the pastor.
I'm not an expert.
Pastor, what do you think?
Is it implied?
It's a simile.
The word as is a simile.
You cannot interpret that verse, Sean, literally, so that literally if I forgive somebody else.
Then God will forgive me.
I can't interpret the Lord's Prayer, God's own words, literally.
I shouldn't interpret it literally.
Like, what other part of the Lord's Prayer should I not interpret?
I'm saying you just don't have a complete understanding.
It's a well known fact that to get good people.
So you're making up your own understanding.
That's my point.
No, I'm not.
I'm highlighting other passages that are relevant.
Right, good.
Listen, both of you can go up to the pearly gates together and sit there and hope that you can argue with Jesus that he made you this way.
It's his fault that you have a hate list.
No, you know what's going to happen?
I'm going to get to the pearly gates and be like, man, I give you a lot of credit.
You worked hard with Sean.
Good for you, Linda.
You really tried.
That's what he's going to say to me.
You know, you just imagine it away.
You just imagine, you know, whatever you think is going to happen.
Thank you, Pastor.
And he's going to say, why didn't you follow my commands?
I gave you a simple command to forgive other people and you wouldn't do it because you're too stubborn and prideful.
That's right.
Now, I admit I'm stubborn and prideful.
And I repent of my sins.
Yeah, I'm sorry I feel that way, but if you hurt me or my family, I'm not sorry.
No, you're not sorry you feel that way.
You're full of.
Now you're lying.
Well, I'm sorry to the Lord.
I'm sorry to the Lord.
I'm not sorry to anybody else.
Oh, good.
All right.
This discussion is dying.
I can't take it anymore.
I really can't.
Let's move on.
Let's move on.
Good idea.
All right.
Let's say hi to Don in North Carolina.
What's up, Don?
I'm from the beautiful Charlotte, North Carolina.
Great place, man.
Love it here.
I've been here 40 years.
But I'm going to tell you, last week.
Yeah, that Carlos Brown Jr., the one that killed Ira Zaraska, I'm not.
The Ukrainian woman on that train.
Yes, sir.
Ukrainian woman that he killed her on that train.
He went to court last week, and they threw it.
They didn't throw him out of court.
They just threw it.
They said he was incompetent to stand trial, incapable, sorry, of standing trial.
So they said, come back in 30 days.
Now, my question to you, Sean, is he was, by the way, he wasn't incapable of getting welfare, he wasn't incapable of getting.
EBT.
He wasn't capable of getting a free train pass or many other things he got, but he's incapable of standing trial.
So they're going to bring him back in 30 days.
But my thing was, even if he is capable of standing trial, who cares?
He's not innocent.
I mean, it's right there.
Everybody's seen it.
It was a horrible, horrible thing that our Democrat mayor and our Democrat sheriff, I don't know if you remember seeing him, but didn't know what part of the Constitution he works under.
Uh, they're both Democratic, it's a the whole Jewish diction, all the.
And you have this horrible Senate candidate that was then governor Roy Cooper that let this guy out.
Oh, he's horrible uh yeah, yeah.
My thing is Sean, number one is, just just tell the guy he's, he's guilty.
I don't even think they should put him in jail, people like this.
Why should we give him three meals a day?
Just just yeah, I hate, I don't I, yeah.
I'd like to say, just you know, put him in the lecture chair.
Um, i'm gonna, i'm gonna put you down in the category of law and order, safety and security first, And I'll pull you out of the defund, dismantle, no bail, reimagine the police column.
I agree completely.
You couldn't be any more right.
Why can't judges be held accountable for this stuff?
He was let go 14 times he was able to walk out of that court.
Every one of them, every person involved in this guy's case, frankly, as far as I'm concerned, has blood on their hands.
They're guilty.
Yes.
Never should have been out.
No, you're right.
I agree.
Welcome to the stupid justice system of the radical left, because that's what it is.
That's what's on the ballot in November.
Anyway, my friend, I'm going to move on.
Appreciate the call.
Don, 800 941 Sean, our number if you want to be a part of the program.
Keith in Alabama.
Keith, what's on your mind?
Hey, Sean.
It's good to talk with you.
We go back a long way.
I never forget in the early 90s being in Huntsville and how my dad.
Thank you.
There's two people you can listen to, and that's Rush and Sean.
And he said they'll guide you the right direction.
For his forgiveness, to give a brief history really quick, my wife's mother was killed by a drunk driver.
My wife's Diddy was murdered.
He was shot in the back.
My only child lost his life to a medical malpractice.
So we understand what it's like to forgive.
You and Linda both are right to an extent.
You are supposed to forgive people, but there's one thing about it.
You can say you forgive all day long with your lips.
Unless it's in the heart, there's no forgiveness.
And Linda says they need to come to you, if I understood correctly, and ask for repentance.
I believe that.
I believe they have to have a broken heart.
No, I disagree completely.
I think you should forgive regardless of whether they ask for it or not.
Did anyone ask Jesus on the cross to forgive them?
Let me explain that, Sean.
I'll explain that to you.
The reason I say that is because if that was the case, everybody would go to heaven.
But unless you come to Christ and ask him to forgive you with a broken heart and contrite spirit, in my belief, you don't go to heaven.
And Christ doesn't.
Ask you to do anything that he wouldn't do himself, but you have to have a heart that's ready to forgive.
But that's on their end.
I'm not talking about their end.
I'm talking about on the forgiveness end, whether they ask for forgiveness or not, you should give forgiveness.
You've got to have the heart to forgive.
You've got to.
You know, for example, there have been people that have come to me over issues over the course of my life, and they've said, you know, can you forgive me or I'm sorry or I apologize?
And I said, I already have.
That's great.
And that's in your heart because through the gospel and through the word of God.
But that's what I'm saying to Linda.
Linda's saying that she can keep a hate list and not forgive these people.
And I'm saying that's not what that prayer suggests.
Well, no, you're exactly right.
You can't have that hate in your heart.
You've got to have her forgive for it.
Forgiving Your Pastor00:01:52
Exactly.
Thank you.
Now we finally got somewhere.
It took this long.
I hope this is the last call.
Did you hear that, Linda?
It has to come from you.
You sound a little hateful, Sean.
I don't know.
What I'm trying to be hateful.
I'm getting, I'm just going, this topic is exhausting me.
The Lord is exhausting you?
Oh, that's too bad.
No, your insane interpretation of religion and the Bible is exhausting to me.
But you know what?
I'm going to tell you this, Keith, but I'll give you my last word on this I forgive her.
I haven't asked for it yet, so you can't do it yet.
I'll let you know when I'm ready.
But that's not part of the prayer.
That is.
You should forgive your pastor.
There's a simile.
The word as is a simile.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
I was listening.
This discussion is officially over.
Over.
No more calls on this topic.
We're done.
Amen.
We have exhausted this to death, but I forgive you.
Amen.
That's going to wrap things up for today.
Hannity tonight, 9 Eastern, on the Fox News Channel.
You don't want to miss this show.
We have Jack Keane.
General Keane will join us.
Lindsey Graham will join us.
The demise of Mr. Fang Fang, Eric Swalwell, out as running for governor.
We'll get reaction from Steve Hilton, who's now leading the pack.
John Ratcliffe, the CIA director, apparently new Ukraine impeachment evidence exposing how Democrats withheld exculpatory evidence.
Anyway, Greg Jarrett will join us as well as John Solomon.
And Brianna Lyneman, CEDBR tonight, Hannity, 9 Eastern on Fox.