welcome to the special edition of hannity . happy new year we start tonight with highlights from the first ever red state blue state debate between florida governor ron desantis and california governor gavin newsom. take a look. let s get started. everybody ready? as we speak, there is a phenomenon playing out across the entire country. americans are leaving blue states in droves in favor of red states. you can see numbers on the screen right now from the years 2021 and 2022. these particular numbers are stark in the state that you lead in the case of governor newsom. according to the u.s. census, this is where the numbers come from. in 2021, 2022 california has lost 750,000 residents to other states. governor desantis, during that same two year period you gained 454,000 residents from other states. so governor desantis, we had a coin toss. i was not part of it. i missed it. apparently governor newsom won the coin toss. you chose to let governor desantis have the first quest
and welcome to this special of hannity. happy new year. now, tonight for the full hour, we ll highlight some of our big interviews from 2023. we start tonight with highlights from the first ever red state blue state debate between florida governor ron desantis and california governor gavin newsom. taka govern santis ae a look.t star well, let s get started. everybody ready? te all we are as we speak, theres is a phenomenon that is playings out across the entire country. americans, they are leavingr blue states in droves, in favor of red states. you can see numbers on the screestatesyou cas n rigm the year 2021 and 2022. these particularyears numbersst are stark. in the state that you lead sa in the castee, you, governor newsom, according to the u.s. census, this is where the numbers come from. ,e in 2021, 2022, california, california s lost 750,000 residents to other states. governor desantis, during that same two year period, you gained 454,000 residents0 re from oth
diamond at the white house. and this is cnn. closed captioning brought to you by meso book .com. we offer a free book on mesothelioma call for the free book and receive so much more call 1 808 31 37 100. you re back live in the cnn newsroom. i m jim acosta and washington. we begin this hour with the supreme court opening a new round in the escalating legal battle over abortion. last night, the high court blocked rulings by lower chords that placed restrictions on the commonly used abortion pill, medford crestone. it has been used by millions of women over the two decades. it s been on the market the late night decision. sends the case back down to the fifth, sick it a circuit court of appeals and delivers a temporary victory to those concerned about abortion rights 10 months after the supreme court overturned roe versus wade for 49 years, legalized abortion was the law of the land in the united states. some states had restrictions on how and when abortions could happen, but f
So outer space still remains almost impossibly far away. Thats very sad. But that wasnt the only option. He also offered one other next best option for humankind. He called it, quote, much more realistic than space travel. He declared that what we humans must do at this point in Human History is that we must move into the sea. We should become sea dwellers. Quote, between cyber space and outer space lies the possibility of settling the oceans. We may have reached the stage at which it is economically feasible or where it will soon be economically feasible. It is a realistic risk. I eagerly support this. The idea was that we should basically build new teeny, tiny personal cities, citystates, unlike Shipping Containers that are floating in the ocean. Impossible and the only way that human sorry, humans can ever be free again is to move into space, presumably with no girls allowed. If we cant move into space, we have to move into the oceans. Weird dude, right . That is why i thought it wa
that they immediately there was just a tremendous sense of heartbreak. and it didn t feel like it was s just for the ukrainian people andfor th ukraine. it really felt like that that this would happen at this point in human history. i thought about my kids immediately that this was something that would affect them. and i thinmething that wouk hast anything like what s happening on those front lines. and in that country. those people. but of course, it s just the the amount of collateral damage is going to continue economically. i think, as psychosocial, socially. l ti and it s a real tipping point in terms of how this country, a country that i love also, are we going to hold on toratio?