10⧸19⧸17 - (Rand Paul and Jason Buttrill join Glenn)
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 54 minutes
Words per Minute
168.80927
Summary
The timeline for the attack is in conflict. The man who could clear all of this up is interviewed on a comedian s talk show. Who made that decision? And why did it have to be Ellen DeGeneres? Glenn Beck breaks it down.
Transcript
00:00:15.680
Okay, I didn't think this was even possible, but the Las Vegas investigation continues to get even more bizarre.
00:00:21.760
It has been three weeks, and neither the FBI nor the police have given us a possible motive.
00:00:27.940
We haven't seen a single surveillance video, a photo.
00:00:32.240
On top of that, not only do we not know what's going on, but the police seem not to know either.
00:00:38.760
They've released three different timelines for the attack.
00:00:41.980
All three seem to revolve around and conflict with the time hotel security guard, Jesus Campos, entered the shooter's room on the 32nd floor.
00:00:55.180
Now, Campos is the most significant eyewitness to the attack, so everyone is trying to get his story.
00:01:05.380
He was set last Thursday to do just that, and all the major news outlets gathered at the Vegas hotel, minutes before the interviews were set to kick off, he just vanished.
00:01:16.960
The security union rep was told that he was taken for a minor emergency clinic for health reasons, but that's the last time anybody saw him.
00:01:28.240
Not even his neighbors knew where he was, until yesterday, when we found him on the set of the Ellen DeGeneres show.
00:01:41.560
Here we have the key witness in the worst mass shooting in modern history.
00:01:54.740
The man who could clear all of this up is interviewed on a comedian's talk show?
00:02:06.060
I mean, was this to ensure that no hard follow-up questions would be asked?
00:02:10.420
I want you to know, I'm not a conspiracy theorist on this at all.
00:02:13.400
I think what they're covering up is the hotel just really dropped the ball.
00:02:19.400
I think it's just people covering their own butts.
00:02:23.620
And that's how the interview played out yesterday.
00:02:30.200
His account of the events seemed to confirm the third timeline police released last Friday.
00:02:39.040
He was shot in the leg by paddock around 10.04.
00:02:44.700
He was also quick to add that he radioed for backup as soon as he was shot.
00:02:56.780
Even Anderson Cooper, he might have asked why it took the officers 13 minutes after he was shot to reach the 32nd floor.
00:03:08.900
It was, it was also two minutes after paddock had stopped firing on the, uh, on the crowd.
00:03:17.360
An investigated journalist might've said, why, why was it taking so long?
00:03:21.960
Did the hotel take their time informing police?
00:03:29.340
Ellen made sure to mention that this was the only interview Campos would give.
00:03:43.680
We may never know, but as every day goes by, this story just gets weirder and weirder.
00:04:07.400
Uh, here is, uh, here is Jesus Campos on, uh, you don't, you don't have them yet?
00:04:19.500
Well, when we get them, will you, will you alert me?
00:04:22.720
Um, you know, it's, what's really bizarre is, and again, I don't think this is because this was a setup or anything like that.
00:04:32.940
I think this is, uh, the hotel security not being competent.
00:04:41.560
Something happened and somebody is covering their butt for insurance reasons or illegal reasons.
00:04:53.340
They think to be able to, uh, uh, not get in trouble with either the shareholders, the insurance company or the law.
00:05:04.340
I'm doing better each day, um, slowly but surely, just, uh, healing physically and mentally.
00:05:10.200
I just want to mention all the people that assisted that night, uh, whether it was Metro, the FBI, uh, the community especially coming together to help everyone in need.
00:05:19.900
Everyone came together to help that night, even in the darkest hour.
00:05:25.480
There was a metal bracket holding the door in place.
00:05:27.780
And when you saw that, did you think, that's weird? Why would somebody put brackets on a door?
00:05:32.200
Yeah, that was, that's just, uh, out of the ordinary.
00:05:48.680
I went to go lift my pant leg up and I saw the blood.
00:05:53.640
That's when I called it in on my radio that shots have been fired.
00:05:56.960
And no follow-up question, why did it take so long?
00:06:06.240
Our chief researcher who's been watching this, uh, story unfold for a while, Jason Batrill is, uh, with us.
00:06:12.920
Jason, would you agree with me that it's not a conspiracy?
00:06:18.100
But the way that it's being handled, it's fueling people that want to find a conspiracy theory in these things.
00:06:24.800
And you could tell on this, uh, you know, in this interview that Ellen already knew the answers to all the questions.
00:06:33.120
She was literally there just to set him up and cue him into the timeline and the story that they wanted to be told.
00:06:39.680
So there literally was no, like, yeah, but why, why did this happen?
00:06:44.280
Like, so who is it, who is it do you think is pulling the string on this?
00:06:48.480
Who, do you have any, any, any idea of who he might be protecting or why this is happening?
00:07:00.660
Um, and seeing that this is his only interview, he either got paid a lot of money for it.
00:07:07.140
Which he didn't, they, they talked about that actually in there.
00:07:10.360
He, they donated, I think, $25,000 to a charity on their behalf.
00:07:17.220
So, so, so who's pulling the strings on this one?
00:07:22.320
I mean, he doesn't seem to want to do interviews.
00:07:24.360
And so isn't there a possibility that he just said, look, I'll do one interview.
00:07:29.800
I mean, there's, you know, he's an individual, right?
00:07:34.320
He doesn't have to do interviews with all these journalists to get the truth.
00:07:41.200
Cause he obviously didn't look comfortable when he was doing this.
00:07:46.000
But so, but why did he show up last Thursday to get this brief with all, why'd they confirm
00:07:57.400
So that could be explained again, if we go with, with, with Stu's theory that he's uncomfortable.
00:08:04.900
He got stage fright on Thursday and just couldn't just, you know, just hyperventilated.
00:08:11.080
And they took him for a, you know, to a minor medical place because he was just having a
00:08:16.600
And that's just, that doesn't mean that that's a, that's the truth, but that's a plausible
00:08:22.420
And, you know, again, the guy's also recovering from a gunshot wound, you know, like, I mean,
00:08:26.720
maybe he doesn't feel like running around on camera everywhere.
00:08:29.740
I don't think I would, you know, I traveling to Vegas and going on the most high profile
00:08:37.760
Well, I mean, you know, it's a different type of interview, right?
00:08:41.420
You're not going to get deep questioning from Ellen.
00:08:43.300
Like she's, and that's the entire point, but that might be what he chose.
00:08:48.680
I mean, Ellen's going to present him as a sympathetic character, which I think he is.
00:08:56.440
I guess I'm more apt to buy into somebody is, is trying to keep this out of tough questions
00:09:08.200
for insurance reasons or, or whatever, and, and not having anything to do with the shooter,
00:09:14.360
just having everything to do with how they responded.
00:09:17.020
Somebody dropped the, but there's, there's too much time went by way too much time.
00:09:30.860
And they, they, you know, this went on for a long time.
00:09:37.440
They've never released any of the footage of him coming in.
00:09:41.780
And they said, uh, you know, a week later, well, you know what?
00:09:48.140
How does your computer system not tell you that?
00:09:50.500
There's definitely been some weird stuff being reported in the, in the differences of the
00:09:54.720
And I don't think, again, I think it is something, some incompetence that happened at the hotel
00:10:02.320
and the hotel is panicked because guys, you didn't have this.
00:10:12.240
I think, I think that's exactly what they figured out in that prep session.
00:10:14.980
Cause they said there was a member, there was a rep from the security union and there
00:10:18.760
were reps from the MGM grand all in this room prepping him.
00:10:22.620
So I think as they're just rapid firing questions coming at him in from different angles to
00:10:27.220
see if he would trip up, whatever that they were like, look, there is no way he can get
00:10:31.140
through this without somebody looking bad, whether it's the police on this side or it's
00:10:37.420
So I think they were like, you know, forget it.
00:10:38.900
I think there's already, um, some lawsuits that are being filed, right?
00:10:42.620
I mean, so they're going to obviously have some liability on this and, and surely there
00:10:47.900
are people within Mandalay Bay, MGM that are trying to minimize that liability.
00:10:53.460
I think that's absolutely true and could explain this.
00:10:55.420
I'm not, I'm not shooting down the theory of that.
00:10:59.680
Um, but I mean, also like when it comes to the timeline, it's like, well, yeah, it was,
00:11:04.460
it, it seems weird in retrospect, especially when we know that the, the sort of scale of
00:11:09.660
But I mean, remember the security guard, the reason why the security guy got shot is because
00:11:14.800
He went up there to investigate something that was weird, right?
00:11:26.780
We, we don't know this yet and me may never know it at least until there's a real report
00:11:31.180
But I mean, I don't, you know, Jason, you're, you've done security for, for years, you know,
00:11:37.820
The people who are working security for Mandalay Bay, if they believe there is an automatic
00:11:43.340
weapon going on, are they going to just race up with nothing to, to that floor?
00:11:50.200
I mean, I'm not saying it's, I'm not saying it's not the right thing to do.
00:11:53.160
I don't, maybe they're supposed to, maybe you just send up 25 security guards.
00:11:59.720
You know, if you said, if this happened in a holiday inn, no, no, no, nothing.
00:12:04.400
But you're talking about a casino, which is, which is, you know, has more cameras than,
00:12:13.780
But they wouldn't have cameras inside the room.
00:12:16.580
Have more cameras, meaning they have their own, you know, they, they, I'll bet you that
00:12:22.620
each of these casinos has their own holding cells for, for people until the police arrive.
00:12:28.980
I mean, they have, they haven't hired the guys that you see at the mall.
00:12:33.740
But I mean, to, to arrange the sort of security that would be required to push back against
00:12:40.580
I mean, that's not, it doesn't seem like an insane amount of time.
00:12:43.840
So there, there are active shooter scenarios that they would have rehearsed and already
00:12:50.400
And there are armed security in, in these hotels.
00:12:55.320
Now, if, if they would have, so there's something that's very, that every security industry knows
00:13:00.500
is they have checklists specifically for liability.
00:13:03.900
So in, in some of these cases, they'll go down and say, did you do this?
00:13:07.960
Now I want to point out that I think Campos, it sounded like he did everything correct.
00:13:14.560
Then he was, then he also mentioned that he got off the radio and then switched to cell
00:13:18.020
phone, which is exactly per procedure to clear radio traffic.
00:13:21.380
So Campos, by all intents and purposes, sounds like the hero that they're telling him to
00:13:28.460
Were they following that checklist in the security office afterwards?
00:13:31.000
The first thing would be call 9-1-1, call police.
00:13:34.800
Now, if they skip that, I could see why they'd be like, oh crap.
00:13:39.220
Even if it was a mistake, they're just, and now looking at it and saying, wow, we should
00:13:43.280
Because they didn't, I'm, my guess would be they, they, there was a trip up in that liability
00:13:47.180
checklist and now they're like, okay, since this happened and it goes to that timeline,
00:13:53.800
Now we're open to these million dollar lawsuits and that's why they did this.
00:13:57.880
And I think it's something, I think it's something small, something relatively insignificant to
00:14:03.260
the average person, but to an attorney with millions of dollars on the line, they're just
00:14:12.560
I've heard people too questioning the, the afterwards.
00:14:17.180
They do get up there and they don't enter right away.
00:14:21.080
What, what, you know, the reporting from the people who were there is he had wires, which
00:14:24.720
we found out later were camera wires, but wires running from outside the building in
00:14:28.740
or outside the room in under the door into the room.
00:14:33.460
And they waited, you know, like an hour basically to actually go in.
00:14:37.100
Wouldn't it be if you, if there is no shooting and they seem to believe this guy was, had killed
00:14:43.700
himself, although they hadn't confirmed it yet.
00:14:45.560
Uh, if you, there was wires running in there, you're thinking explosives, right?
00:14:50.980
You have to clear probably that entire wing of the Mandalay Bay before you would actually
00:15:03.560
And they can't just barge in because they don't know what's been happening.
00:15:06.000
And they also wouldn't know how many shooters are up there.
00:15:08.120
There could be 20 shooters up there for all they know.
00:15:10.220
So yeah, I don't critique the way the police handled it when they got there.
00:15:13.060
I just, I'm, I'm just a little bit curious about how long it took them to get there.
00:15:20.340
There's so many things that they have to check for, but they can't just go willy nilly barging
00:15:26.100
And I know they said what it was, I've heard eight and 11 minutes at that time from the
00:15:30.060
time you radio to the time they actually got up there.
00:15:32.160
I mean, I know you've, you know, you've been to these casinos before it's two minutes just
00:15:36.400
I mean, it's, uh, there's not a, that is not a, uh, I agree.
00:15:39.440
I mean, I, I, I, I, I don't know what happened.
00:15:44.240
I don't think there is a conspiracy with, with the shooter or with police, or it was a setup
00:15:50.940
or anything that you're reading online from this, this nonsense.
00:15:54.760
I do believe that something small happened and people are covering their butt.
00:16:00.160
And the reason why I keep bringing this up and I, and we're focusing on this is this is
00:16:09.440
Something small, something, somebody trying to protect their asset with the first three
00:16:15.820
letters being emphasized and, uh, and on, on all they do is put, put him on Ellen.
00:16:27.000
They don't ask him and corner him into anything that he's going to do.
00:16:30.380
So everybody can walk away and then have a fresh start at the trial.
00:16:35.360
So don't give them any ammunition for the trial that we're going to have a hard time,
00:16:41.320
you know, defending, even if it wasn't, um, uh, even if it wasn't that they did something
00:16:50.360
He may be so loose and so, you know, bad at this that, you know, he could say something
00:17:01.100
And I just wish that we could put the million dollars and millions and millions of dollars
00:17:08.520
in the rear view mirror and just do the right thing for the Republic right now, which is
00:17:15.980
So help you God, if you travel for business, you know, that it's a game of wins and losses,
00:17:28.920
opening the overhead bin right above your seat and finding that there's room for your carry
00:17:38.520
Buying your next business trip with upside.com huge win for several reasons.
00:17:43.380
One, you are going to spend such little time making these decisions there.
00:17:51.560
I think it's like 85 minutes trying to book all of their travel.
00:17:58.440
So they have put together the best available prices for flights, hotel, and rental cars,
00:18:06.500
And you can, I mean, you have to verify the first time you're going to use it.
00:18:10.180
You're going to spend 90 minutes, um, probably just like everybody else.
00:18:14.840
Um, just because you're going to go, well, I got to be able to get a better price than
00:18:20.680
It's got to be available and you're not going to find it.
00:18:23.900
They also show you ways that you can even get less, uh, you know, be charged less for
00:18:31.840
You leave an hour earlier or an hour later, et cetera, et cetera.
00:18:35.260
And they will show you ways that you can save your company even more money.
00:18:39.300
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00:18:45.780
That's why upside has, uh, the six star treatment from customer service specialists.
00:18:53.540
They will help you do it to reduce the time, reduce the confusion, make sure you're on track.
00:18:58.000
And every time you save money for your company, you're incentivized because you get money back
00:19:09.280
Um, you know, you get a guarantee of a hundred dollar gift card to Amazon for your, just for
00:19:15.520
And every time that you book something and you save money, they just add money to that
00:19:20.280
hundred dollar gift card from amazon.com right now, because you deserve a better business
00:19:44.800
No, there's nothing, nothing happening with the shooting.
00:19:51.880
I mean, it's the shooting thing is, is ridiculous.
00:19:55.240
But I do have a conspiracy theory that is gaining traction now.
00:20:00.060
And, uh, and the white house refuses to, uh, talk about it.
00:20:06.960
Well, they just, they haven't answered questions.
00:20:10.480
They, what they're, nobody is even, uh, they're afraid to even ask the white house.
00:20:38.920
So, is Donald Trump hiding the fact that his wife doesn't want to be seen around him and, uh, therefore he's using a body double?
00:21:32.340
There is a, there is a CNN video shot from Friday that claims to show that Donald Trump
00:21:40.440
is standing on the White House lawn with an imposter.
00:21:44.820
Notice right away, by the way, if you're happy to listen to this, Glenn's spinning of this
00:21:59.200
So, the theory seems to be that Andrea Wagner-Burton, she posted on Facebook that she found the
00:22:15.880
She said, not only is the First Lady dressed like a cartoon version of an undercover spy,
00:22:22.380
but at the three-minute mark of the video, for some odd reason, Donald Trump says, my wife,
00:22:32.600
Well, no, I, no, he says Melania, maybe you heard Melina, or you can't spell, but that's, you know,
00:22:43.680
and watching the video, that's exactly how he talks.
00:22:46.560
My wife, I mean, he talks about himself in third person.
00:22:52.920
I mean, Donald Trump said to that person over there, Melania.
00:22:57.100
I mean, according to an Inquisitor article, searches for Melania Trump double.
00:23:09.660
Now, I think it's important to point out that since no one was searching for Melania Trump
00:23:17.880
body double on Thursday, a 250% increase is not that big of a deal.
00:23:31.540
Melania double conspiracy, according to Wagner Burton's post, has been shared over 100,000 times,
00:23:38.460
and there are people jumping on the fake Melania bandwagon.
00:23:42.060
I will tell you that if I have time today, I am going to be talking to the artist in our art department
00:23:48.240
and just ask if they want to screw off for 20 minutes, because I kind of want to get in on the body double bandwagon.
00:23:57.080
Well, all this traffic, all this internet traffic, it's up 250%.
00:24:00.880
I mean, nobody was searching for it on glennbeck.com.
00:24:12.360
Now, the question is, if I may take this one step further.
00:24:18.360
Who is Jeff Sessions talking about yesterday when he is testifying in front of Congress about imprisoning journalists?
00:24:33.320
Will you commit to not putting reporters in jail for doing their jobs?
00:24:36.580
Well, I don't know that I can make a blanket commitment to that effect, but I would say this.
00:24:43.000
We've not taken any aggressive action against the media at this point.
00:24:54.960
But is it possible that this is coming from the Melania Trump body double?
00:25:00.620
I'm sketchy now whether I want to jump into that with both feet.
00:25:05.820
Because that is clearly, I mean, considering the point, I mean, just all the evidence, which shows that you talked about one and then the other in that order.
00:25:13.580
It shows me, as an observer, that what they meant by not jailing any journalists meant traditional journalists who are avoiding the Melania Trump story.
00:25:33.700
This conspiracy world would be a fun thing to do.
00:25:39.580
If you didn't care, if you didn't care the damage that is being done to the country because of this, it would be the greatest thing ever.
00:25:48.700
It really just has to come to a point where you've written off the country.
00:25:56.800
If you don't care about any of that, it would be great, wouldn't it?
00:26:04.240
You can always say the next person is in on it.
00:26:10.400
Now, I don't have any evidence of this, but I think I've just tied this together.
00:26:20.640
You have to care about, you know, no survival, et cetera, et cetera.
00:26:32.120
He's going to, he's going to Mars because he's behind all of this.
00:26:39.080
I mean, now we have a legitimate source, Glenn Beck, saying it.
00:26:47.880
I mean, I haven't seen it tweeted yet, but I'm going to believe it's out there.
00:26:54.840
Now, you know, seeing that we now spent some time showing you how conspiracy theorists work and do their job.
00:27:04.940
Let's go back to Jeff Sessions and really look at what he did just say.
00:27:26.220
Will you commit to not putting reporters in jail for doing their jobs?
00:27:30.120
Well, I don't know that I can make a blanket commitment to that effect, but I would say this.
00:27:35.900
We've not taken any aggressive action against the media at this point.
00:27:44.240
Or any point in the future, if they're doing their job, no, we won't put them in jail?
00:27:53.880
I mean, that doesn't seem like a hard question to answer.
00:27:56.360
This is a gift, right, to Sessions, the way it's worded, which is, of course, of course you don't put them in jail for doing their jobs.
00:28:05.380
Like, yes, you can put them theoretically in prison.
00:28:08.300
And even if you are, you're taking this stance where you're going to be tougher on the media and you're going to start pursuing the media in these controversial ways, you can still say, of course we're not going to put them in jail for doing their jobs.
00:28:23.100
That was a very disturbing, very disturbing remark.
00:28:36.900
That there's no, you know, you don't have to bank that one.
00:28:49.620
You could just be like, look, yeah, we didn't think they were doing their jobs that time.
00:29:07.660
I mean, think of the signal that that just sent to the rest of the world.
00:29:12.280
Think of the signal that that sends to all journalists.
00:29:15.960
The government may become a government where we begin to jail journalists.
00:29:22.520
And we already know the last president loved to do this.
00:29:27.260
Did it more than any other president in history.
00:29:34.300
Some of the press did ring the bell on that one, but not as much as you would hope with Barack Obama.
00:29:38.720
Because there were some media sources that were pretty pissed off about that.
00:29:43.140
And they did talk about how it was, you know, these things were Woodrow Wilson tools, utilized more than anyone in history to go after journalists.
00:29:53.760
This is, again, if Trump were to say this, and he did, basically, a couple weeks ago.
00:29:59.740
You know, we talked about it as, well, it's bluster.
00:30:03.440
You know, that's what O'Reilly was talking about when he was on.
00:30:05.540
He was like, yeah, you got to look at that as just essentially bluster.
00:30:07.660
He wants people to talk about the media and look at what they're doing.
00:30:09.940
But he's just saying it in a way to get up a lot of attention.
00:30:16.340
And he says, you know, I don't want to make a blanket statement about this.
00:30:20.000
There was one made a long time ago in the Constitution.
00:30:28.500
It is an absolute blanket statement covering everybody.
00:30:35.620
It is something you have the right to express yourself.
00:30:40.420
You have a right to be a journalist and do reporting.
00:30:57.760
They don't like it because there are no secrets anymore.
00:31:02.880
And so when you have a citizen press, that makes people in power very uncomfortable.
00:31:08.480
And we've got to watch this line, especially with what's happening.
00:31:12.640
We'll talk about this probably next hour with what's happening with Facebook and the ads.
00:31:17.840
The government is now starting to say, you know what?
00:31:23.200
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
00:31:26.500
No, I don't want the government regulating anything on the Internet.
00:31:31.660
You start having them regulate things on the Internet.
00:31:34.840
It doesn't stop because what they're going in for right now are regulating the ads that are bad for the republic, that are bad politically, that are causing more turmoil.
00:31:46.140
Well, I've been warning you for a while that Russia is doing this.
00:31:53.100
They're still denying that Russia is doing this.
00:31:56.500
But suddenly, everybody's very interested in regulating ads.
00:32:04.840
No, all of you clowns on both sides have denied Russia when it was politically expedient for you.
00:32:13.360
This is about silencing the voices in our own country that don't agree with the two parties.
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I have the I have the Lincoln, which is, you know, a pretty big one.
00:33:12.800
And I will tell you that the number one complaint on Liberty Safe is I should have bought a bigger one.
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You my first safe that I bought was this little teeny safe and I just wanted it for some documents.
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And then I started putting, well, I want that picture in there.
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You when you when you really think about what's valuable and what you don't want to lose.
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There's there's even a lot of stuff from the kid's childhood that you have sitting in the bottom of a Liberty Safe.
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So if I can just geek out for just two minutes, just allow me to geek out.
00:34:54.960
Trying to fill the shoes of Carl Sagan, which is an insult to Carl Sagan.
00:35:07.440
And I think Ray Kurzweil is an absolute genius.
00:35:15.240
He's been predicting kind of like the technology of the future pretty accurately for a long time.
00:35:21.820
He's the guy who invented, you know, text to speech and and the electric synthesizer piano.
00:35:31.200
And he's now the head of Singularity University, which is looking for artificial intelligence and being able to have humans live forever.
00:35:46.900
So he's in this interview with Neil and Neil is just talking down to him and, you know, saying, you know, you're like a cult leader.
00:35:58.120
And Ray looks at him and said, well, that's kind of what that's a play on.
00:36:07.500
Obviously, he's never read a single word that Ray has had.
00:36:11.220
It is it's insulting and it just it just pisses me off because you get so few chances to listen to Ray Kurzweil actually have a deep, meaningful conversation.
00:36:26.040
And when you see this guy come in and you're like, OK, well, that'll be I mean, you know, he'll have some smart way.
00:36:41.160
He's he's popular in this like Twitter world of science where you can come out with like the catchy one liner to shut down your opponents.
00:37:03.000
But he's been all over the GOP for not cutting spending.
00:37:06.120
He is the guy who was instrumental in the latest on Obamacare.
00:37:36.120
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00:38:44.720
Okay, Hillary Clinton might want to stop talking about so much Russian collusion.
00:38:49.600
In 2010, the Obama administration and the U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment approved a deal that allowed Russian Atomic Energy Agency called Rosatom to buy a majority stake in Uranium One.
00:39:06.380
Uranium One was a Canadian company with significant uranium mining rights in the U.S.
00:39:11.600
Now, the Committee on Foreign Investment reviews all the deals that could result in foreign control of American business that has anything to do with national security.
00:39:22.600
This deal gave Moscow control of 20% of the U.S. uranium supply.
00:39:40.920
In 2013, Rosatom bought the rest of Uranium One, meaning Vladimir Putin now controls one of the largest uranium producing operations in the entire world.
00:39:59.260
Some did report, but for some reason, this story never gained any traction.
00:40:05.840
Maybe it's because everybody thought, oh, Vladimir Putin, he's our friend.
00:40:09.860
The new bombshell twist to the story was reported by The Hill this week that starting in 2009, the FBI investigated Russia's efforts to infiltrate the U.S.
00:40:21.280
And with the help of a secret U.S. informant working with the Russians, the FBI compiled evidence of bribery, kickbacks, extortion, money laundering, and such in the U.S.
00:40:39.580
FBI also had evidence that Rosatom and Uranium One officials donated millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation.
00:40:53.040
The FBI also has evidence that Rosatom and Uranium One officials donated millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation, even while Clinton was secretary of state and while she was on the Committee of Foreign Investment, which approved the purchase of Uranium One.
00:41:10.120
Hillary did not disclose those donors to the Obama administration, even when she agreed to do so.
00:41:16.760
So why would the Obama administration sign off on those deals when the FBI had several years of corruption evidence against Rosatom?
00:41:28.220
Why were they never briefed about this FBI poll and its findings?
00:41:32.660
And why would Congress never look into the link between Hillary Clinton, the Clinton Foundation, and the sale of Uranium One, even after The New York Times reported it in 2015?
00:41:45.960
I think you need a follow-up book just to address this shady chapter of your political career, because the American people deserve answers.
00:42:06.260
Here is Rand Paul on Tuesday talking about the GOP.
00:42:10.840
I think the biggest holdup is not people like me.
00:42:20.120
But I do want the biggest, and I will agitate to make sure that everybody across the board gets a tax cut.
00:42:25.040
I think the problem really is on the other side.
00:42:27.240
There are three or four people who don't want this to be a tax cut at all.
00:42:31.060
They want it to be exactly revenue neutral, meaning that we will cut taxes on half the people, and we will raise taxes on the other half to make it neutral.
00:42:39.760
I've always been a believer that you make it deficit neutral by not raising other people's taxes but by cutting spending.
00:42:46.000
So I have many entitlement reform bills that are out there.
00:42:48.820
I can't get a Republican to sign on because they give lip service to smaller government, but they're afraid of their shadow, and not a damn one of them, really, are really for cutting spending.
00:43:05.560
I'm kind of annoyed that Republicans forgot what it meant to be conservative, and they put things through that they have no intention of doing.
00:43:15.580
I mean, it used to be there were some conservatives who believed that we should try to restrain spending.
00:43:21.920
We put these self-imposed restraints, and we exceed them all the time.
00:43:25.740
So we've got Lindsey Graham and John McCain have now spent nearly $2 trillion off budget, and they're insisting on more.
00:43:39.120
And Lindsey Graham and John McCain are bankrupting our country.
00:43:43.800
It's the biggest threat to our national security.
00:43:46.400
And thank John McCain and Lindsey Graham for doing it.
00:43:52.220
There's no one in the Senate or the House that there's – I mean, is there a group of you guys that are standing together?
00:43:59.520
I think there has been in the past, and I think what they've been sold is a bill of goods by leadership that, oh, it doesn't matter anymore what's in the budget.
00:44:10.740
It's basically the budget is just a vehicle for doing Obamacare repeal.
00:44:15.120
Well, then they didn't repeal Obamacare because we lost like six or seven Republicans who said they were for repeal, and then they changed their mind.
00:44:22.460
So now they say, oh, the budget doesn't matter.
00:44:27.940
It's like saying, oh, we don't care what's in our platform.
00:44:30.080
Why don't we put that we're for single payer in our platform because it doesn't matter what's in our platform?
00:44:37.520
And what I'm so upset about is that the Republican Party, we're turning out to be a bunch of hypocrites who say we care about the debt, and yet the debt gets bigger and bigger under us.
00:44:47.740
Yeah, it's not only – I mean, you've already pointed this out.
00:45:04.200
Well, I'm going to give them a chance to vote on a couple of things, but I can tell you I'm getting pressure and my arm twisted not to introduce any amendments to the budget.
00:45:12.280
But I'm going to introduce my first amendment will be this.
00:45:14.960
There's $43 billion in it that is above the spending caps that's put in an account that is immune to any kind of surveillance, the account that spent $2 trillion, the overseas contingency account.
00:45:32.340
Starting 15 years ago, we started saying, you know what?
00:45:35.240
We're at war, but we're not going to account for the money.
00:45:38.580
We're not going to appropriate it as we should through the defense budget.
00:45:41.880
We're just going to put it into an account that exceeds all the caps, and then we're going to pretend like we're fiscally conservative.
00:45:47.840
And the liberals said, well, you can do that, but then you've got to give us more emergency money for welfare.
00:45:52.180
So we've got the welfare and the warfare crowd come together.
00:45:55.720
Look, George Bush, the debt went from $5 trillion to $10 trillion under George W. Bush.
00:46:01.140
Under Obama, it went from $10 trillion to $20 trillion.
00:46:03.500
And now we're going to do it again because Republicans are not serious and honest about really wanting to cut spending.
00:46:10.000
So in the budget, in the first year of this budget, and this is a good thing, there's a $96 billion entitlement cut.
00:46:16.780
And I ask them, okay, who has the bill that does that?
00:46:19.760
Which committee is studying entitlement reform?
00:46:21.800
There is no bill, there is no one studying it, and there is absolutely no intention of doing it.
00:46:28.740
So wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, you're moving to it.
00:46:32.600
So they said that they were going to cut, but then they took no action after they passed that.
00:46:42.740
But my point is, why don't we have budget reconciliation instructions?
00:46:47.400
These are the instructions that through simple majority, we could do entitlement reform.
00:46:55.260
I'm going to put an amendment forward today that says, through a simple majority, through the budget process, we can do entitlement reform.
00:47:05.800
Because I guarantee all of leadership will vote no, and most of the Republicans will vote against doing entitlement reform.
00:47:11.200
I'm also going to give them the chance to vote on Obamacare again.
00:47:14.400
I guarantee most of them will vote against considering instructions to do Obamacare repeal.
00:47:20.720
And then I'm going to try to cut the money that they've put in that's above the spending caps.
00:47:24.260
And I will lose probably overwhelmingly because Republicans are not serious.
00:47:32.260
They go home and they say they have a problem with the debt.
00:47:34.800
And the debt gets worse under Republicans because they're not serious.
00:47:38.820
So this, to me, sounds like a gauntlet being thrown down at the feet.
00:47:50.600
I think what happens is they're going to get their budget through because I'm the sole and only voice who says we should stay within the spending caps.
00:48:00.560
So I don't have anybody else to join me, but I'm going to raise hell doing it anyway.
00:48:05.240
You can't get Mike Lee to even help you on this?
00:48:10.180
I mean, I have, you know, the thing is, is that I'm going to stay where I am because the thing is, is look, they tell me the budget means nothing.
00:48:17.560
They tell me it's a piece of toilet paper and it doesn't mean anything.
00:48:22.520
I say, well, if it doesn't mean anything, why don't you let me put into it a conservative vision that we shouldn't spend too much money?
00:48:30.360
And they say, oh, no, we can't change it because John McCain and Lindsey Graham want unlimited military spending.
00:48:35.640
And I say, well, that's bankrupting us as well because then the liberals come back and want unlimited welfare spending.
00:48:42.960
There's more of those who want unlimited spending than there are conservatives.
00:48:46.680
If I had one or two other persons, two other senators to stand with me, we could dictate what's in the budget.
00:48:57.920
And we can have the audience call them right now.
00:49:03.240
And that's a sad fact is that nobody cares about the budget.
00:49:07.880
And we're just going to do this to get to a tax cut.
00:49:12.500
I told the president this weekend, I will vote for the biggest tax cut that comes down.
00:49:21.000
But I just can't just give up being a conservative and say, oh, I'm not for spending cuts.
00:49:25.600
That's my whole principle is the way we would balance a tax cut is with spending cuts.
00:49:32.280
In fact, you know, the the the the roaring 20s was caused by the spending cuts first and the tax cuts second.
00:49:46.460
It was amazing to see you standing behind the president as he signed.
00:49:53.400
I hate to describe it as an executive order because it was just a clarification of the law that allowed people to buy insurance in ways they've never been allowed to buy before.
00:50:05.340
And the reason why it was amazing is because you and people like you were the biggest enemy of Donald Trump, according to his side.
00:50:16.720
You know, it was the Freedom Caucus and the and the small government constitutionalists that were causing all the problems.
00:50:22.320
And in the end, you were the only one that could get anything done.
00:50:25.240
This is going to be bigger than many people imagine.
00:50:28.700
There's up to 50 million people in our country who could possibly get insurance through health associations.
00:50:35.460
National Restaurant Association has a couple of million restaurants, 15 million employees.
00:50:40.160
Can you imagine if you worked at McDonald's and right now you have no insurance, but then they said, oh, you can join to be part of a 15 million person group insurance plan and you're going to be able to get the leverage of having 15 million people tell big insurance that they're going to have to come down on their prices.
00:50:58.340
There's 28 million people right now under Obamacare who don't have insurance.
00:51:02.000
I think this allowing individuals to join groups could potentially help a lot of that 28 million.
00:51:07.520
There's 11 million people in the Obamacare individual market.
00:51:10.780
Many of them have had 100 percent increase in their premiums.
00:51:13.820
This has a good chance of letting them get insurance that isn't so expensive.
00:51:17.140
Now, how long does it take for these, you know, these like the Restaurant Association to be able to go in and do it?
00:51:28.420
The realtors, the retailers, the franchisees, a lot of them are excited about it.
00:51:35.900
So the regulations probably won't come out for a couple of months.
00:51:38.600
When they do, it'll be too late for 2018 because people buy their insurance in 2017 for 2018.
00:51:44.040
So really, we're looking, unfortunately, at 2019.
00:51:51.020
And on whether or not it's executive order, I think it's important to know that an executive order that undoes,
00:51:55.420
one does, an executive order that was overreach is a good thing.
00:51:59.220
So I think you have a natural right, a natural liberty to associate.
00:52:03.300
And the Supreme Court has upheld this several times.
00:52:05.580
You have right to peaceable assembly, but you also have the right to associate for economic means.
00:52:11.940
So if you and I want to get together in an association to get purchasing power,
00:52:15.820
I think there's actually a First Amendment protection of that.
00:52:18.260
Either way, what President Trump has done is looked at the original health care law from the 70s,
00:52:26.900
The regulators of Clinton, Bush, and Obama got it wrong.
00:52:35.500
And this is the interpretation we think is most consistent with the bill.
00:52:38.560
I think as long as that's allowing freedom and not creating a new government program
00:52:42.260
but allowing you the freedom to buy something, I think that is an appropriate use.
00:52:45.820
So let's quickly, I've only got about a minute and a half left,
00:52:52.420
This is testimony from Jeff Sessions yesterday.
00:52:56.780
will you commit to not putting reporters in jail for doing their jobs?
00:53:00.700
Well, I don't know that I can make a blanket commitment to that effect,
00:53:04.380
but I would say this, we've not taken any aggressive action against the media at this point.
00:53:27.520
In fact, the thing about the First Amendment is it protects all speech,
00:53:31.320
even offensive speech, and probably most particularly offensive speech,
00:53:36.840
If I tell you I love Glenn Beck, you're not going to want to censor that.
00:53:39.480
If I say something mean, that's what people want to censor.
00:53:42.180
But you have to have dissent and criticism in a free society.
00:53:46.080
My goodness, if you can't defend the First Amendment, where are we?
00:53:54.300
And Rand, I appreciate all your hard work and the hard stances that you take.
00:53:59.200
And I'm sure you get a lot of trouble on Capitol Hill and maybe some trouble back home.
00:54:07.580
See if we can get a hold of Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, Ben Sasse.
00:54:20.580
See if we can get any of them to go on the record of why they won't stand with him on this.
00:54:26.680
I can't believe there's nobody in the Senate, but, you know.
00:54:31.260
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00:56:17.580
Metcalfe's Law is a theory that explains basically how networks of people work.
00:56:26.760
Like, one fax machine is worthless because nobody has a fax to receive.
00:56:32.520
But once all your friends have fax machines, it becomes very, very valuable.
00:56:35.880
And so you look at things like, you know, he could predict that Facebook was going to, you know, do a certain thing because it had to hit.
00:56:45.640
If once it starts to hit this number of users, then it's going to explode and exponentially growth.
00:56:50.160
He's using Metcalfe's Law now to look at Bitcoin.
00:56:54.540
And he says he believes that Bitcoin will reach $25,000 per coin in five years.
00:57:04.320
That's about five, almost five times what it is right now.
00:57:08.340
So that means that, what's his name, the Julian Assange, it could become one of the more wealthy people on the planet.
00:57:21.260
Because the government forced them out of using regular currency.
00:57:25.740
So they took all of their investment money and put it in cryptocurrency.
00:57:30.220
And they've already made 50,000% on their money.
00:57:33.620
Yeah, Assange likes to bring that up because that was what happened.
00:57:36.760
When they tried to stop WikiLeaks, they blocked all the credit card transactions for donations.
00:57:41.100
So he was forced to take only Bitcoin when Bitcoin was worth very little.
00:57:47.140
I mean, really, before that, it was back in the days when it was double digits, $10, $12.
00:57:59.180
I don't think that's what the government intended at the time, but it's worked well.
00:58:03.840
So they believe that as soon as the next generation start to store any kind of wealth, they're going to store it in Bitcoin.
00:58:25.040
And he thinks that if things would really catch fire in the monetary system, that it could go up to $75,000 of Bitcoin.
00:58:41.520
I'm not showing up for work the day after that happens, just so you know.
00:59:05.180
So I got an email yesterday from somebody, and they said, Glenn, you have got to talk about this Donald Trump thing with the widow.
00:59:24.160
And I read what he supposedly said to the widow.
00:59:29.880
Now, there's a lot of stuff leading up to this that is just, I mean, I don't know how to explain him.
00:59:37.360
But what he said, but what he said, apparently, to the widow was, your husband knew what he signed up for.
00:59:47.260
Now, is that, you know, could that have been phrased better?
01:00:01.460
You know, he died in the line of duty, and he was a very brave man.
01:00:06.660
And we thank you for his service, and, I mean, he died for a cause, and that's why he was there.
01:00:16.460
And I wish it would have turned out differently.
01:00:19.040
You know who I've heard that exact phrasing from?
01:00:24.540
You know, I've heard that from a million times, people who are in the military that have come in here.
01:00:29.180
They tell us that every single time, I knew what I was doing.
01:00:36.260
I mean, I knew that was the risk, and I was right there.
01:00:39.980
Whether you do it at that moment, or whether that's an important thing for the president to say to a widow is questionable.
01:00:44.760
I think where this fell apart is, first of all, Mr. President, pick up the phone.
01:00:58.520
But he was on a speakerphone, and so it didn't feel personal to her.
01:01:07.180
Now, does anybody really have a problem with the president saying that?
01:01:12.640
I mean, I don't think this is something that any of us really, truly have a problem with at all.
01:01:19.960
Other than we feel for her and think, yeah, it was poorly phrased.
01:01:27.920
And gosh, you know, she wouldn't have said something like that because it is poorly phrased.
01:01:35.500
This is becoming the biggest scandal now of all time.
01:01:44.180
I mean, it doesn't seem like it's living up to those sorts of standards, right?
01:01:51.020
You know, but the reason why it is is because instead of saying, you know, the conversation between his wife and I is confidential, and I'm not going to characterize it or anything.
01:02:10.220
Even if she came out and she said, he said he was going to come over and light me on fire.
01:02:16.380
The president, if asked, did she say she was going to light you on fire?
01:02:29.380
Instead, some crazy congressman comes out and says, he said this.
01:02:41.820
To me, it doesn't seem like that big of a deal.
01:02:55.680
The bluster is just making things worse, always, over and over and over again.
01:03:06.160
Then, did you hear what he said about General Kelly's son?
01:03:11.520
And the reporting today on this, because General Kelly's son died in 2010, he apparently did not get a call from Barack Obama.
01:03:18.620
Something conveniently overlooked by the media.
01:03:21.240
Because, and I will say, in Trump's defense, you know, he didn't say no president has ever made a call.
01:03:28.960
He just said, I don't know what the policies were.
01:03:31.260
Like, you know, a lot of people, some people wrote letters, some people called.
01:03:34.140
And the media translated that as if he was making this definitive statement that Barack Obama had never made a phone call in his life.
01:03:45.340
But the media, I think, mishandled that, first of all.
01:03:47.860
But Trump's defense was, say, well, ask General Kelly if Obama called him.
01:03:54.720
Apparently, he knew that Kelly didn't get a call.
01:03:56.840
But Kelly didn't necessarily want that fact to be part of this debate.
01:04:09.160
And this is this is the biggest problem with the the president, his mouth.
01:04:25.320
Just just saying what is on the top of your head.
01:04:33.140
And for him to say that about General Kelly now is throwing tension between him and General Kelly because General Kelly was like, I don't please don't throw my son into this.
01:04:45.500
I don't want my son being politicized between two presidents.
01:04:49.560
And we don't know for sure if he didn't want that.
01:04:51.800
He's apparently is a guy that does not talk about this very often.
01:04:54.800
And, you know, if you watch the General Kelly press conference that happened last week, you know, for people who might be in the audience that are nervous at times about what Trump is doing, even though you like some of the policies, you might not like the way he handles things.
01:05:17.560
You realize that the people surrounding Trump, you know, Trump is tweeting about stuff and he's doing all these things all the time.
01:05:27.200
But I mean, General Kelly is a pretty serious guy.
01:05:29.940
You know, Bob Corker can say all he wants that, you know, Trump is risking World War Three.
01:05:34.500
Who knows more about a General Kelly or Bob Corker?
01:05:37.240
I'm fully confident in Kelly and Mattis having their as long as their hands are there and they're being respected.
01:05:43.340
I feel, you know, it is a calming influence on, you know, on a guy who I don't think necessarily is is a level hand.
01:06:12.880
And I'd like her to make the statement again because I did not say what she said.
01:06:17.720
I had a very nice conversation with the woman, with the wife, who is sounded like a lovely woman.
01:06:26.640
And most people aren't too surprised to hear that.
01:06:31.580
Let her make her statement again and then you'll find out.
01:06:35.720
Let her make her statement again and then you'll find out.
01:06:41.740
And unfortunately for him, it is good to have a good memory, which I don't have.
01:06:49.120
That woman sounds an awful lot like, you know, I did not have sex with that woman, Miss Lewinsky.
01:06:55.340
I mean, just luckily for him, though, say the name.
01:06:58.420
He doesn't remember the congresswoman's name either.
01:07:02.300
I have no idea who I'm talking about right now.
01:07:17.620
My wife and I needed to update our bedroom badly.
01:07:21.640
We bought a house a few years ago and we just left the curtains in that, you know, came
01:07:26.620
with the house and they were really, oof, oof, they were bad.
01:07:30.140
But, you know, your bedroom is usually the last place that gets anything.
01:07:34.460
So it was a Saturday morning and we decided to email blinds.com.
01:07:39.460
We got online first and we started looking at things and I'm like, I don't know any.
01:07:43.160
And so we emailed and wanted to get some, you know, one of their designers online because
01:07:52.220
And so we asked the, asked for a designer and I expected them to call back, you know,
01:07:58.280
next week or you'll have an appointment in two weeks.
01:08:00.820
They immediately wrote back and said, we're ready right now if you want to.
01:08:04.220
So we FaceTimed and took them into the, took them into the bedroom and said, here's what
01:08:12.840
They sent us pictures back with different options.
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If you mismeasure or pick the wrong color, they'll remake your blinds or your curtains
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01:09:17.560
So this week, Star Wars, The Last Jedi, the star John Boyega, who is John?
01:09:29.300
The African-American former stone trooper, right?
01:09:34.200
He said he was teasing that there is a gay storyline between his character and Poe.
01:09:50.200
In the original, the one that came out a couple of years ago.
01:09:52.920
So in this interview, he said that filmmakers have the responsibility to bring more LGBTQ
01:10:00.260
inclusion, both behind and in front of the camera.
01:10:05.960
Don't you think that, I mean, gay storylines are everywhere.
01:10:15.200
And is it, is it a bigger percentage of the population than, I mean, and, you know, gay
01:10:24.280
people in Hollywood that there's, there's a large, probably a larger, uh, gay population
01:10:30.720
in Hollywood just, you know, because of the art thing, uh, than there probably is, you know,
01:10:38.540
I don't mean, I don't know, but I mean, you know, there's a lot of gay people in Hollywood
01:10:43.800
now, he, he, he's saying that we, uh, just because you hire the same sort of people, you're
01:10:53.120
You, you, you, you don't have, you want a higher quota.
01:11:04.020
I think it's the variety of, uh, the, you know, the natural flow of different relationships
01:11:10.020
I think that, uh, he said, I think that Oscar is always looking at me with love in his eyes.
01:11:18.400
And they realized he either needs to chill or come out.
01:11:23.340
There was a rumor that was going around about this, that if you kind of take some freeze
01:11:28.340
frames out and kind of go through the storyline, for example, one of the storylines of that
01:11:32.140
movie was that, uh, Finn, uh, basically borrows the coat of the other guy and wears it around
01:11:46.880
Uh, and then, you know, they are looking into each other's eyes and holding each other
01:11:51.740
Of course, they're celebrating living through an almost disaster.
01:11:56.940
I don't know if we will live through a disaster.
01:11:58.740
I don't know if I would look at you and say, hold me, Stu.
01:12:05.000
I mean, I, you know, I thought I'm a, you know, I'm a huggy guy.
01:12:15.560
No, there is, but I don't know if my, my instincts just say, I want to hold you for
01:12:22.420
Well, I don't know that it's, it's not like they spooned in the movie.
01:12:27.660
It was like, you know, I don't want to hold you, but let me wear your jacket.
01:12:34.160
The jacket really didn't seem to make any sense in the movie either.
01:12:37.660
Well, of course, cause you didn't see what was happening off screen.
01:12:42.680
He was wearing the same clothes, but they didn't want to look like they were wearing the same
01:12:51.680
If two people were trying to be subtle, just trying to be subtle, they came in the other
01:12:58.360
person's clothes that they were wearing the day before guys.
01:13:08.780
Can you see a star Wars character having like a walk of shame back after like a, a late night
01:13:17.640
Can you have a late, a walk of shame on the millennium Falcon?
01:13:20.040
Uh, I think it, I mean, none of them have been on screen, but I think the millennial
01:13:26.560
Falcon probably is most at home with a walk of shame.
01:13:33.340
Well, Han Solo, certainly we all, we all know Han was hooking up with everybody.
01:13:36.900
But I mean, you know, let's not forget Luke and, and a princess Leia were making out
01:13:42.560
You want to say, what does that look like after dad, dad, kill her, kill her.
01:13:48.260
Cause the moment he finds out about Luke, uh, about his father, uh, which I, isn't, I
01:13:54.420
don't think there's a spoiler alert on that one anymore, but the moment he finds out that
01:14:01.660
he's your father, his father, you know, Darth is his father.
01:14:05.000
Luke has the understandable reaction of trying to take in that his father is like the most
01:14:12.420
But like six hours later, it's all about him kissing his sister at six hours later.
01:14:17.420
He's realizing, I think as soon as I know that that's my father and I do the math, I'm
01:14:23.240
like, holy cow, that's my dad, which means she's my, I just at least wipe my lips at least
01:14:29.740
naturally just kind of go, okay, you're my dad.
01:14:34.160
I mean, there's, there's an initial reaction of, I was making it with my sister.
01:14:39.800
I think it comes, it comes pretty, it comes within the first five minutes.
01:14:43.720
I will say there's a definite trip to, to a CVS.
01:14:47.120
You're hanging out in the oral B section with various mouthwashes.
01:14:53.720
Do you have anything I can clean my mouth out with?
01:14:58.040
I don't know if there's a product for that yet.
01:15:03.600
Why isn't there representation of people who make out with their sister?
01:15:11.400
On the internet, I think you could probably find it.
01:15:15.220
I don't know what it's called, but there's something.
01:15:24.700
That was, to me, that was the ickier part of Star Wars.
01:15:35.680
No, there's a lot of planets blowing up, but I feel like the incest was really notable.
01:15:38.620
See, it's kind of like somebody should have been, you know, on the ship going, I'd just
01:15:41.720
like to point out that these two were making out and none of you have said anything about
01:15:49.040
Maybe that's what that new hamster thing is going to do.
01:15:52.520
He's going to be like, by the way, did you see that like a hundred years ago, Luke was
01:15:57.800
I just want to point out the incest part of the storyline.
01:16:00.500
Mike and his roommate knew they only had seconds to make a last ditch escape from their home
01:16:23.500
The flying embers and the smoke swarmed everywhere.
01:16:27.100
As the fire singed their hair and burned their eyes, they ran into the SUV, praying to God
01:16:57.100
Trying to open the gate so they can get their SUV through.
01:17:29.560
Mike and his roommate survived, but others have not been so lucky.
01:17:34.460
The Northern California wildfires have claimed at least 42 people so far, but that is expected
01:17:39.480
to go way up as we begin to search and send search and rescue teams out to comb through
01:17:48.840
5,700 homes and businesses have been reduced to ashes.
01:17:55.560
To put this into perspective, the wildfires have consumed an area larger than New York City.
01:18:02.840
This has been the deadliest wildfire epidemic in Californian history.
01:18:10.920
And yet, out of the smoke and the debris comes hope.
01:18:23.120
Lauren lost the most precious thing in the world to the Santa Rosa wildfires.
01:18:33.200
He had baseball cards dating back to the year 2000.
01:18:35.660
He had 17 jersey, 10 hats, two baseballs, one of them signed by the entire team.
01:18:41.520
Lauren wrote to the baseball team about his plight.
01:18:44.380
He said, to the Oakland A's, I love watching your A's games.
01:18:50.280
I want to play at Mark West Little League in Santa Rosa.
01:18:54.260
I played baseball in my backyard all day, loving the A's and making my own game.
01:19:00.240
In my backyard, we won six World Series in a row.
01:19:05.580
But my house burned down in the Santa Rosa fire and my saddest thing was that my A's collection
01:19:15.180
And the president of the A's moved so much by Lauren's letter, he promised a completely
01:19:18.620
outfit to nine-year-old and his family and new athletics gear.
01:19:22.520
People from all over the country are now sending Lauren their Oakland A's memorabilia in an effort
01:19:30.180
It is the simple things in life that change our experience.
01:19:36.920
Never underestimate the generosity of humanity in small and seemingly insignificant ways.
01:19:47.680
As the wildfires in Northern California become contained, remember that the fire in a man's
01:20:17.240
Ben Sasse had to apologize to Ted Cruz yesterday for spilling Dr. Pepper on him.
01:20:28.580
Sorry to have added to the drama and distracted you for a minute.
01:20:31.160
I was paying enough attention there that I dumped a Dr. Pepper on Senator Cruz.
01:20:34.760
So that's what was distracting us on this side of the dais.
01:20:45.520
Not that you're here to, you know, rake any embers on this fire and try to get it to burn
01:20:54.200
I would obviously, I mean, you know, Cruz doesn't need me to tell him this.
01:20:58.060
He's got a legal background, but I would absolutely sue.
01:21:00.940
First of all, I would sue Sasse for the assault.
01:21:04.840
Secondly, I would file another lawsuit because when a Dr. Pepper goes down, that's a human
01:21:17.020
Well, so Sasse responded and asked about the spilled soda on Cruz.
01:21:28.000
That's when Cruz responded on Twitter, instructing his staff not to allow Ben Sasse
01:21:34.100
to come into his office and touch his supply of Dr. Peppers.
01:21:40.660
Sasse responded with a comment about Rafael Cruz being part of the conspiracy to kill
01:21:56.380
It escalates kind of quickly there from the soda to the murder of a president.
01:22:02.640
Cruz, however, replied by sending a very cryptic message that some may recognize as the language
01:22:10.400
of the Zodiac killer, which obviously, if you don't know, Ted Cruz was the Zodiac killer.
01:22:21.020
To which Ben Sasse responded, aha, I found Raphael in this code.
01:22:34.020
It's nice to see that a couple of people in Washington seem to actually like each other.
01:22:44.680
Ben Sasse has really played this really well all the way along.
01:22:57.880
You could never convince me he's not trying to run for president of the United States.
01:23:04.600
He could come up and say, Glenn, I'm I've signed a document in blood that says I'll never run for president.
01:23:17.340
He is he's just he's just appearing in all the right places.
01:23:23.520
I mean, I think he has been critical of Trump and some people who like Trump, you know, obviously don't like that.
01:23:31.080
However, most of the time it's been on stuff that is pretty clearly, you know, he was on about the First Amendment statement that Trump made the other day that even his own FCC head is saying is not reality.
01:23:50.140
He said basically, yeah, no, we don't we don't pull licenses because of content reasons like that.
01:23:56.840
But I mean, you know, he's sass has hit him, I think, on the right things.
01:23:59.720
And he's been supportive of Trump on some of the stuff as well.
01:24:06.260
He's he's funny, which is, you know, he has a good understanding of how to use social media, which is fairly rare in Washington.
01:24:16.020
You know, ask Mike Huckabee a way to not use it.
01:24:23.800
So, I mean, it's it's kind of an interesting you're right.
01:24:29.920
I mean, no matter what you think of Donald Trump, the odds of him losing a primary are incredibly low unless it gets a lot worse.
01:24:38.260
I mean, assuming assuming that, you know, Donald Trump, you know, wouldn't win, you know, in a primary or, you know, wouldn't run in 2020.
01:24:49.040
Then I think Ben Sasse would run if he if if Donald Trump said, I'm not going to win.
01:24:55.540
Nobody's going to take on Donald Trump and primary him.
01:24:59.600
I think somebody will probably attempt it, but I don't think it's going to be successful.
01:25:02.600
And I don't think it's going to be someone like Sasse with a with real upside of actually eventually becoming president.
01:25:07.200
It's going to be that it's going to be that John Kasich type of guy who's like, well, what else is he going to do?
01:25:15.720
I could have taken out the trash, but I decided why not run for president?
01:25:24.840
My guess is from that Kasich sort of establishment rather than constitutionalist.
01:25:28.960
I will tell you, I saw a I saw a story here that where is it on?
01:25:39.740
This actually comes from, I think, the Huffington Post.
01:25:43.240
Now, listen to this, because you can't get more conservative than Mormons, right?
01:25:47.300
They haven't voted for they haven't voted for a Democrat for president since John F. Kennedy.
01:25:56.080
So it's a little conservative for millennials in Utah, one of the most conservative states in the nation.
01:26:01.820
It's been long undesirable to call yourself a Democrat.
01:26:04.680
Now, nine months into Donald Trump's presidency, it's increasingly a taboo to identify as a Republican.
01:26:10.440
And what they're saying is in this in this article is that people are not they're just not identifying.
01:26:17.920
Millennials are not identifying as either Republican or a Democrat.
01:26:21.300
They don't the findings are not scientific, but many millennials said they are motivated by individual candidates and causes, not by political parties.
01:26:31.020
Very few offered praise for the president, most identified as a moderate, said they were more liberal than their parents.
01:26:36.240
They distrusted both traditional news and social media and said that they felt it caused nothing but polarization.
01:26:43.260
One of the guys said, see if I can find it, that it was really only the people that were trying to cause conflict on campus that were the ones really talking about politics.
01:27:00.040
Everybody else is talking about principles and the political people they felt were really starting to become the ones who are just trying to cause conflict.
01:27:10.260
Everybody else is like, look, I don't care about the parties.
01:27:13.600
And I think that the Republican Party taught Ted Cruz was right.
01:27:20.380
But Ted was right when he said last week that, you know, the Republicans are over in 2020.
01:27:26.680
They're over in 2020 if they don't enact something significant here now.
01:27:34.300
He was like, oh, you know what? I'm not going to blame myself.
01:27:36.140
I'm not going to blame myself for this. This is the Congress is supposed to bring these things to me.
01:27:44.940
It's not his job to push the legislation to initiate it.
01:27:55.020
You're in Congress. You're an elected member of Congress.
01:28:02.300
He'll sign whatever you want. He said it over and over again.
01:28:04.900
No, I know. Pass something and he will sign it.
01:28:07.180
Yeah, I was talking technically his job was that.
01:28:10.080
But you're right. He doesn't need to. He doesn't need to do that.
01:28:12.720
They have both houses of Congress. They can't get their crap together.
01:28:18.600
And if they I mean, I think the parties are done.
01:28:21.800
You know, the Democrats are in probably even more trouble than the you know, than the Republicans.
01:28:27.080
I mean, look, they're still talking about maybe Joe Biden would run.
01:28:36.440
That in Bernie Sanders, who is he I mean, who's older?
01:28:41.820
They're you know, they're both in their 70s, right?
01:28:49.240
Amazing. Did you see the comments from Nancy Pelosi, by the way, because you mentioned the Mormon thing, which made me think of, you know, here's a here's a group of people that are typically well mannered and conservative, as you point out.
01:29:03.960
Nancy Pelosi now is saying, doesn't Mitt Romney look good to us now?
01:29:07.720
Now, it's interesting that she would bring that up, because, first of all, longstanding tradition, whatever the new whoever the new guy is, is worse.
01:29:16.540
If they bring the most mild mannered person ever to run after Donald Trump, they will say this guy's worse than Trump.
01:29:25.580
They're already saying when they were talking about when they were talking about impeachment for Donald Trump, they were already saying, no, no, no.
01:29:35.800
Pence, it just goes to prove exactly what you just said.
01:29:44.140
And the newest person's always the worst devil.
01:29:46.880
They were calling him Satan and a terrorist for all those years and because he hated gay people so much.
01:29:51.760
So then the leader of the pack that next election in 2008 was Rudy Giuliani for a while.
01:29:58.040
Giuliani, a guy who's been outspoken on gay rights and it's socially moderate.
01:30:05.320
No matter who it is, it's always going to be worse than the last person, which is why people finally give up and say, you know what?
01:30:14.660
Who's going to make you guys shut up because you guys don't like anybody.
01:30:18.960
And that is that's something that we have to watch and guard against.
01:30:23.000
We have to make sure we're not sending that message back.
01:30:26.680
I think that there's nobody reasonable because.
01:30:43.300
That's better than you have absolutely no answer.
01:31:05.000
Maybe we get the researcher on it and we'll do a special.
01:31:15.620
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01:32:44.520
Conan O'Brien and his family were out to dinner in Santa Monica last year when his daughter
01:32:48.400
began to screech, oh my gosh, oh my gosh, oh my gosh.
01:32:51.720
Conan said, I thought a Cessna had just plowed into the sidewalks and burst into flames.
01:33:00.460
The source of the pandemonium was the arrival of what Mr. O'Brien's children deemed bigger
01:33:10.940
The late-night TV host, who took a picture with them, recognized them as the stars of
01:33:22.720
Studio C has achieved sizable popularity on the internet despite or perhaps because of
01:33:28.000
its super-scrubbed brand of clean humor, such as a skit about a soccer goalie named Scott
01:33:44.040
It is hysterical, hysterical, who continually blocks shots with his face.
01:33:58.880
The performers are employees of the Utah BYU school and have to adhere to its honor code.
01:34:06.000
Um, they have banned innuendo, cursing, politics, even the word gosh, because it sounds too much
01:34:17.840
It has racked up more than 1 billion views on YouTube, a third the size of Saturday Night
01:34:26.720
This is a soccer video you're talking about, 55.7 million views.
01:34:34.680
Um, still, some have found reasons to be offended.
01:34:38.360
One viewer wrote to complain about a joke at the expense of a character with a hernia,
01:34:45.100
Others objected to a bit where people shot at a cat.
01:34:48.600
Another chastised cast member for using the word butt, suggesting that it would be better
01:35:01.780
Um, even without swearing or references to sex, they can tack into, uh, tap into comedy's
01:35:09.560
Uh, Conan, a former writer for Saturday Night Live, who now hosts his own show on TBS, says
01:35:13.740
the cleanliness of Studio C's humor was almost an afterthought to him.
01:35:17.140
What got his attention was the craftsmanship of the skits, particularly their solid endings,
01:35:22.360
something that he has always found, uh, challenging.
01:35:25.980
I've never noticed a sketch comedy show having trouble with endings, though.
01:35:32.800
I've never noticed that on all sketch comedy shows ever produced.
01:35:36.000
If you've never watched Studio C, my kids watch it religiously.
01:35:40.580
I mean, they have, my son is probably maybe 47 million views of those 55.
01:35:48.420
Uh, they love Studio C and they'll just watch it on YouTube clip after clip after clip
01:35:59.520
There's another one that's really funny about, uh, a doctor that has found a way to, uh,
01:36:05.480
take the birth pain from the mother and transfer it to the father.
01:36:17.760
No, I hope science is never, please don't pursue that.
01:36:37.200
Let's say hello to our good friend, uh, Pat Gray.
01:36:43.360
Hey, by the way, the way you said that, have you seen, uh, the good doctor yet on, I think
01:36:50.520
There's only two episodes out that I've seen, but really, uh, I've only seen the first episode,
01:36:59.380
ABC is a television net, uh, a television network is a television is something that you watch
01:37:08.680
Uh, and a network used to be a collection of those shows that you would watch for free without
01:37:17.520
I don't long time ago, ancient past, uh, but I thought it was really good.
01:37:22.060
I thought it was, I thought they portrayed it's a, it's a story of a, of a, uh, surgeon.
01:37:32.860
And so it's the same kind of thing where, you know, house was just a jerk.
01:37:40.400
And so he doesn't relate well to people and, uh, says, you know, the honest thing at all
01:37:48.340
Uh, and, and there are people that, you know, don't want him in the hospital and he's, he's
01:37:54.680
And it, it, in the first episode, it really kind of, uh, is, is really fascinating because
01:37:59.900
it says, um, uh, that the chief of staff is, is trying to justify to the board why he
01:38:06.860
Um, and he said, because how long ago was it that we didn't have women doctors?
01:38:10.740
How long ago was it that we didn't have black doctors?
01:38:17.280
And because we can't relate to him, we're going to say, no, he shouldn't be a doctor.
01:38:26.780
I wonder, I wonder if it will help us look at autistic people differently.
01:38:33.420
Was, do you know what, when they said, uh, autistic savant?
01:38:51.520
Well, I don't know if all autism, autism was deemed to be.
01:38:55.900
I'd never heard of autism when I was growing up.
01:38:58.840
The only, the only thing I know idiot savant from was Rain Man.
01:39:11.840
If it would have been, if it would have been known as autistic now.
01:39:18.820
Welcome to, to my world where we finally have gotten to the point where you can invite
01:39:24.900
a drag queen wearing a five red tip demon-like horns and clown face to read stories to children
01:39:47.440
It's at the Michelle Obama neighborhood library in Long Beach, California.
01:40:13.040
Uh, he posted an Instagram photo of him reading to the kids and he said it was one of the
01:40:17.300
best experiences I've been given as a drag queen.
01:40:20.160
It's so important to have representation and normalize all the letters in LGBTQIA plus
01:40:27.580
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, there's some new letters here.
01:40:39.620
queer, got it, intersex, which is, uh, it's, you're, just don't act like you don't
01:40:58.120
No, we just, well, we are not going to lower ourselves to explain it.
01:41:00.820
We're not going to, we're not going to do that.
01:41:07.100
How long is this thing going to get before we run out of space?
01:41:14.180
It looks, at least, so they're like, so they're like, you know, plus, because there's so many
01:41:20.520
letters, and then we get into the, what is it, the Cyrillic, uh, alphabet, uh, and the
01:41:27.540
metric system, and the metric system, and then the Greek alphabet, so we could be here
01:41:31.660
So, I think this is just an effort now, uh, to see if there's any outrage we won't accept
01:41:41.640
Is there anything we won't tolerate them around our children?
01:41:45.440
One of the little girls has butterfly wings on her back.
01:41:48.080
As she's looking up at this person with five frightening demon-like horns, white clown
01:41:56.300
face, dressed in an evening gown, reading, you know, it's okay to be different to them.
01:42:03.860
I mean, you know, we gotta, now it looks like we have a Satanist drag queen and clown face
01:42:25.260
Now if it's off the rack, I don't think so, Sochi Mochi.
01:42:43.860
I don't know if you've seen this, and I think we have audio.
01:42:57.360
Uh, he's not just Jewish, but he's also gay, which complicated things a bit with his
01:43:13.920
Uh, he's leaving the movement now, and he's coming out as gay.
01:43:20.080
When I was 18, I think it was just after Lewisham, I joined the National Front.
01:43:41.840
You've got the same police system, same enemy as well, and it does unify you.
01:43:46.060
It was Jewish people, immigrants, the far left, anybody who imposed a left-wing agenda,
01:43:51.480
plus anybody who disapproved of what I was doing.
01:43:55.380
So anyone who disapproved of what he was doing, which would turn out to be all the people
01:44:04.260
At what point did, well, Nazism start to be attractive to you?
01:44:12.080
I must have been about 11 years old, 11 or 12 years old.
01:44:15.680
Well, my father was very right-wing, and I think I took it a bit further than him.
01:44:21.100
Because even though I didn't get on with my dad, I wanted to basically emulate him to
01:44:26.040
And father was, when he wasn't knocking us about, he wasn't there, he was quite, quite
01:44:36.260
When he was there, he was, uh, used to wield the rod quite severely.
01:44:43.640
Um, he was an ex-NCO from the Royal Horse Guards, so he imagined he wasn't predisposed to any sort
01:44:53.440
So, he was beaten with a riding crop, so he immediately, uh, you know, became a Nazi.
01:45:05.260
I, uh, you know, I, you know, I got into my dad.
01:45:21.260
You can feel hopeless as a parent, and this is a good example of it.
01:45:24.380
It's like, you're Jewish, and your kid grows up to be a Nazi.
01:45:27.900
Like, you really can't, you cannot affect these kids.
01:45:33.080
I mean, without any joking, how did I raise a son that became a Nazi?
01:45:40.120
It's weird to hear a gay Jew Nazi talking like he's the fifth member of the Beatles.
01:45:50.180
Maybe the Nazi party would be better off if they, they all had English accents.
01:45:57.180
I was thinking about rounding some people up today.
01:46:04.440
The Equifax breach impacted 143 million consumers, and it just got bigger.
01:46:13.440
And if that's not bad enough, Yahoo announced that their 2013 breach impacted all 3 billion user accounts.
01:46:21.400
That's triple the number of the original estimate.
01:46:25.720
Once your information has been exposed, it doesn't just go away.
01:46:30.060
It can be sold onto the dark web for months or years after a breach.
01:46:49.140
I remember when LifeLock came out maybe in the 90s, and I thought, who needs that?
01:46:56.460
LifeLock uses proprietary technology, easy for me to say, to help detect a wide range of identity threats.
01:47:15.120
And if there is a problem, a U.S.-based identity restoration specialist is going to fix it.
01:47:19.760
Nobody can prevent all identity theft or monitor all transactions at all businesses, but LifeLock is the best in the business.
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Go to LifeLock.com, call 1-800-LIFELOCK, use the promo code BECK, get 10% off.
01:47:31.160
If you use the promo code BECK, 1-800-LIFELOCK, 1-800-LIFELOCK, or LifeLock.com, promo code BECK.
01:47:51.620
Operation Barbecue Relief was in California last week.
01:47:59.160
They've been operating now, I think, in seven states, and they have provided now almost, well, over half a million meals just in the last few.
01:48:09.920
Um, 565,000, they just, yesterday, they served 53,000 meals in California at the wildfires.
01:48:19.720
Um, they are headed home to recharge soon, uh, and be ready to support when called on again.
01:48:26.240
We are proud, uh, sponsors at Mercury One, uh, they, with, uh, one of the first things we do is we go in and we feed the first aid, uh, and first responders and the people who are, you know, affected by these things.
01:48:41.320
Stunningly, we've aligned ourselves with a barbecue charity.
01:48:46.300
It's amazing, though, because you don't have any food.
01:48:49.300
And, I mean, this is warm, good, nutritious food.
01:48:53.180
Um, and we were able to help provide relief from the hurricanes and the fires and everything else, um, because of you, and we appreciate that.
01:49:01.280
We want to let you know you can, you can help us out.
01:49:04.380
We do our annual fundraising ball, and this is to cover the expenses of, you know, vetting these organizations and accounting and everything else and some of the other projects that we're working on.
01:49:14.140
And so when I get on the air and I say, hey, 100% goes to this hurricane, 100% goes to this fire, you know that 100% goes there.
01:49:25.600
So every year we do a fundraiser, uh, and we're doing a couple, uh, one, we're giving away a brand new 2017 GMC Canyon pickup truck.
01:49:34.720
I just bought a, I just bought a pickup truck from these people.
01:49:45.180
There's, uh, a total of, I think 7,500 tickets, um, that are going to go out.
01:49:54.540
Uh, and you could win this brand new pickup truck.
01:49:58.060
We're going to be drawing, uh, during our gala fundraising event, which, uh, is an American cowboy is the theme this year.
01:50:09.580
If you would like for more information, you can go to mercury one.org slash M one, the number one ball M one ball.
01:50:20.060
And, uh, also we would love to have you, um, come to our, uh, our ball itself.
01:50:27.760
We're honoring somebody, um, that is pretty remarkable, uh, that I don't, I don't know if I'm allowed to announce it yet.
01:50:36.220
So I'm not going to, but we're honoring somebody that is, uh, that is, uh, coming in.
01:50:46.540
So, but there should be some really, this is going to be a really amazing, uh, night.
01:50:51.220
If you would like to come, uh, you can get, get your tickets there for mercury one.org slash M one ball.
01:50:57.560
Tanya and I will, uh, uh, be, uh, be there and I don't know if we're hosting it or if we're just there.
01:51:04.340
I'm not sure they don't ever tell me until I, I actually show up, uh, Senator Cruz and Senator Sanders did a debate.
01:51:11.620
And I think this is the debate that needs to happen.
01:51:15.380
Um, you know, you have a socialist and a constitutionalist.
01:51:18.680
If, if we can, uh, let's, uh, play the, uh, cut Sanders versus Cruz must be defeated.
01:51:26.880
Bernie tries to compare the Republican tax plan to Robin hood.
01:51:30.920
The other thing they do in order to pay for their tax breaks, you know what they do?
01:51:36.220
They cut Medicaid over a 10 year period by $1 trillion thrown 15 million Americans.
01:51:50.460
So what this is in fact is a proposal, which is right on the floor of the Senate right now.
01:52:03.940
Remember, this is the great hope for the democratic party.
01:52:15.940
And I got to say, I think Bernie fundamentally misunderstood that story.
01:52:20.340
Robin hood was robbing the tax collectors who were collecting too much taxes from the working
01:52:28.440
men and women and taking it for the rich in, in Bernie's analogy.
01:52:32.020
It is the Democrats who were King John and the sheriff of Nottingham and Robin hood is
01:52:38.060
saying tax collectors, stop hammering people who are struggling, who are laboring in the
01:52:43.920
Stop taking it to the castle to give out to your buddies.
01:52:47.980
You notice Bernie's going to tell you all this free stuff he's going to give.
01:52:56.300
What they won't tell you is that under Obamacare, the profits for the insurance companies doubled.
01:53:00.980
When you have Washington giving out goodies, the big guys do great.
01:53:11.800
Ted Cruz, this is the debate we should be having.
01:53:19.780
Let's have that debate and forget the clown show in Washington.