want to show the world that new yorkers will never forget what people did for us following 9/11. every year on the 9/11 anniversary we take volunteers from new york and send them to some part of the country where they had a disaster and help folks rebuild. nice to meet you. the tallest thing there is the grain silo. it s definitely a little culture shock. rebuilding homes or barns or churches, it s our way to say thank you. more than half our volunteers are not from new york. people from all the small towns that we ve helped, they keep showing up to help the next community. they re from louisiana and california and indiana and illinois. every year you keep seeing more t-shirts from more locations. we re going to get new as much as we can. i think katrina, we just jumped on his bandwagon. this whole paying it forward thing is just contagious. it s like this big dysfunctional family reunion of all these disaster survivors who get together and do a barn raising. you re bangi
it is national felt hat day. oh that s great! i love a good felt hat. what can go wrong with a felt hat? i m sure the workers in 18th and 19th century england wouldn t agree with that. you probably don t know, but the felt was made from mercury which over time poisoned the hat makers giving them dementia which is how we get the expression mad as a hatter. and they were giving workers bad tremors. and i guess you don t care as long as you have your dumb felt hats. i am aware of the history. as always, ignorance is bliss. must be nice. let s welcome our guests. she has the same name as a guy i met once at a barn raising. fox news contributor jedediah bila. danger. he is so dry he could cause a