Heather Lind accuses former president George H.W. Bush of patting her behind while they were taking a picture in 2014. Bush apologizes, saying it was a mistake. Glenn Beck says it's not a mistake at all.
00:08:48.260Uh, and it was, you know, in, in, in full standing and, uh, pressed his junk against her, uh, on her shoulder because she was sitting down and I don't even know how he, uh, what did he do?
00:10:45.180Um, to, if I'm in a wheelchair and I'm Glenn Beck and I'm a hugger and I'm a, I'm a guy who, I hug you and I'm a, I'm a, I'm a, I'm not a, I'm not a serial groper or anything.
00:11:41.440And, uh, Katie, he, the picture is Ellen DeGeneres standing next to Katy Perry, who, uh, as is normal practice, wearing almost nothing, um, from her belly button to her head.
00:16:15.520I don't know if you saw the TV show last night, but we did something on Fusion GPS that if you don't know what's really happening on this, boy, we broke it down in like 10 minutes on the chalkboard.
00:16:28.740It was really funny and really good way for you to understand it, showed you all the connections, showed you how crazy this thing is, and you will understand it in the end.
00:16:39.000You can find it at TheBlaze.com or GlennBeck.com.
00:16:42.000If you're a subscriber, make sure you're watching the 5 o'clock show.
00:16:46.020We're breaking down the two biggest stories of the day in a way that you can understand them and they make sense.
00:16:53.440And next week, we begin with a series of chalkboards.
00:16:59.220And next week's series is What is Socialism?
00:17:03.380And we're going to teach this in bite-sized pieces over four days so you and your kids can watch it.
00:17:13.100And every night you can walk away and have a conversation on, okay, so what does that mean?
00:19:42.880But, you know, there's a lot of asterisks around this claim, but Elon Musk is a good example of this.
00:19:48.100Elon Musk made a lot of money in the capitalist system and he decided one of the things he wanted to do was do all this green stuff.
00:19:54.520So he built Tesla, he's built all these other, you know, solar companies, he's working on the Hyperloop, all these things that he thinks are going to be very helpful to humanity.
00:20:02.320And I may or may not agree with many of them.
00:20:04.760A lot of them, I don't care about his claims when it comes to the environment, but he makes a really good car.
00:20:10.500Now, there are a lot of asterisks around that with government funding that I don't agree with.
00:20:13.720But I will tell you, if he didn't have the government funding, he just would have found a way to make the car cheaper.
00:20:36.840You know, I would, I would like to, I'd love to have, boy, I've never used this word before in a positive.
00:20:44.260I'd really like to have like a symposium sometime next year with some of the best minds in the country, not only the conservative minds, but also the futurist minds on how does, how do you, how do you get a message out?
00:21:05.620I think the days of, of people like me are numbered.
00:21:10.880I worry, and it has changed in the last six months, and things are becoming more and more clear on the railroad lines that have been laid by companies like Google, YouTube, Facebook, and even Apple is poised to get into it.
00:21:32.220How do we, how do we, how do we pay for news?
00:22:28.400They're already there telling them who should be, uh, dropped, and who's, who, who has an opinion that is important, and who has an opinion that isn't important, which is offensive, what isn't.
00:22:43.220Because that's who Google and YouTube are now listening to, which brings me to a story yesterday, um, that we talked about.
00:22:52.640And if you have any money, and you are looking to help somebody learn and gain some knowledge, uh, in a, in a very, um, effective way, I want you to make a donation to Prager University.
00:23:12.180Um, Prager University is, Dennis Prager, what he has done, and his team is unbelievable.
00:23:18.000And what they have done is truly remarkable, and they make these five-minute educational videos that, look, if you have a different opinion, you, you may not like it because they're very effective.
00:23:31.360But you can't tell me that they are inaccurate.
00:23:36.180They are done by some of the greatest minds alive today, and they are now being censored on YouTube and being demonetized, which means you can't, uh, they can't make money on them.
00:23:50.520They operate on donations because I don't know how many thousands of dollars each of these videos cost, but they're not cheap to make.
00:23:56.980And so they have been making them on donations because they, they can't rack up the views like the Young Turks did, who are complete conspiracy theory guys, completely discredited, and yet they'll sell for a billion dollars.
00:24:16.360Prager U is never going to be able to cash out at a billion dollars.
00:24:19.340No company is ever going to buy Prager U.
00:25:10.260I have been watching you and cheering you from the sidelines for a long time and I want to do everything I can.
00:25:17.280And I've already pledged to you that Mercury One is going to, um, give you a, uh, a percentage of everything that we raise for education because I think you guys do unbelievable work.
00:25:27.880Um, so, um, Marissa, tell me what is happening at YouTube.
00:25:35.460So I'll tell you something really interesting, how we heard about this to begin with.
00:25:40.180About a year and a half ago, we got some emails from students.
00:25:43.940You know, we have this student group called Prager Force.
00:25:47.000They're essentially our ambassadors on campuses across the United States.
00:25:50.580And they started emailing in saying, hey, what's going on?
00:26:35.520The guidelines said that videos that are censored are usually pornographic and graphic and, uh, hate speech and, and violent.
00:26:42.660Obviously, anybody in their right mind would watch our videos and agree with us that these videos are none of the above.
00:26:49.420Um, so we started looking into it further.
00:26:51.600We heard crickets from YouTube for almost a year until we launched a petition this, this past summer and got close to 300,000 signatures.
00:27:01.360At that point, YouTube finally responded to us and said that they're reviewing our videos.
00:27:06.520And we have this in writing, by the way, they review our videos and they deem them, uh, inappropriate, uh, and only appropriate for mature audience.
00:27:15.360So the very audience that we're trying to reach is essentially blocked from reaching our videos.
00:27:21.720So, so the audience can get a handle on this.
00:27:24.240This is the, you know, these are the same kind of people that say that we have to teach about transgendered,
00:27:30.560transgenderism to our kindergarten classes.
00:27:34.460Yet students in college, uh, cannot handle, uh, why isn't communism hated, uh, as hated as Nazism, uh, or, um, or the Ten Commandments, thou shalt not kill.
00:27:51.020You can't handle that, but a kindergartner can handle transgenderism.
00:28:01.260I mean, that is, that is our exact point.
00:28:03.100And, and that's the point that our students and our viewership was making.
00:28:07.740So, you know, we can't allow the left to take over the university, to take over the internet as they have done with the university.
00:28:16.180Uh, if we lose the internet, which is obviously the, the, the way people get information these days, then, then what's left?
00:28:24.700Yeah, this is the, this is the new, uh, Hollywood.
00:28:28.540And I mean, I, I think, um, uh, for instance, Facebook, I think is replacing is a replacement for the telephone, the television, um, the, uh, newsroom, uh, talk radio.
00:28:41.780It's, it's all forms of communication that we have had.
00:28:45.480And if you lose in Facebook and you lose with YouTube and Google, you're never going to be found.
00:28:54.120Do you, do you know that Marissa, we have a internal, uh, a bunch of internal documents from media matters where they say they are already in house at YouTube and Google advising them on what should be cut and what should remain.
00:29:15.520I mean, from, from the way that they've been dealing with us, it's, it's, it's, it's not a surprise to me that they have, it's, and by the way, it's complete hubris as well.
00:29:25.520They believe that they can get away with it.
00:29:27.900They believe that people on our side won't fight.
00:42:06.680And there are people that are saying this is going to be worth billions and has already made people millionaires many times over if they invested early.
00:42:18.980And it is still pretty early on Bitcoin.
00:42:57.540Tell, explain for people who don't really understand Bitcoin as simply as you can, what it is.
00:43:06.520It's tough to say in one sense, and I'll try.
00:43:09.380Bitcoin is a real revolution in technology because it's taken encryption, which has normally been what they call centralized control.
00:43:23.760You know, things like banks would have controlled your security or Equifax, and they've decentralized it into a database that's managed on multiple computers.
00:43:34.340So nobody really has control of the encryption, and it breaks everything up into multiple pieces, and it's stored everywhere around the world.
00:43:43.640And when you want it, it sends out a beacon to pull all those puzzle pieces together.
00:43:50.860So it's a revolutionary way to prevent fraud because now multiple, multiple computers have to confirm what's happening.
00:44:00.460But it's also incredibly, incredibly robust.
00:44:04.680It's the equivalent of this field of science called biomimicry, the idea that nature can establish the best type of systems.
00:44:12.560Blockchain and Bitcoin may represent the best way for people to personally secure all their information in a digital world.
00:44:21.980Okay, so now that we are looking at a world where paper is becoming more and more meaningless, literally and figuratively, nobody is really using paper dollars.
00:44:37.300I mean, I don't know the last time I, you know, except for tips, you know, reached into my wallet and pulled out currency.
00:45:26.960Um, you know, or, or for every pound, there's almost a thousand dollars of digital money, um, digital money and securing money is really the first logical application of blockchain, you know, because you can prevent what they call the double spend problem that someone could say, Hey, I've had dollar here.
00:45:45.660And then they try to spend it twice with blockchain, the network says, no, that you're trying to double spend it.
00:45:53.040You know, we've got a million computers that say, uh, it just traded hands already.
00:45:59.480So Tom, why do you think that Bitcoin, and do you think it's, it's going to last?
00:46:06.280Why do you think Bitcoin is going to go up to, uh, 25,000 in five years?
00:46:15.760So what's, what's been, the developers of blockchain didn't want to enrich only people who invested and created the network.
00:46:24.300They wanted to create value for all the users.
00:46:27.080Um, it's the nature of blockchain and how the miners work.
00:46:32.000That's, and, but Bitcoin acts so well as a digital store value.
00:46:36.900I think we, you know, for your older listeners, they might say, Oh, I own gold.
00:46:41.280They need to think about how the millennials view their life and they view Bitcoin as a store of authentic store value.
00:46:48.980And it's, it's for seven years, it's never been hacked.
00:46:51.780So it's, it is, it is the most uncorruptible network.
00:46:54.480If Bitcoin captures just 5% of the market for alternative currency, so not money or not financial markets, but just alternative currencies, it would be worth somewhere between 25 and $55,000 per unit in five years.
00:47:13.320And it's a conservative estimate, arguably, because one, we're saying only 5% of, uh, alternative currencies.
00:47:20.940If we say 5% of all currencies, the number is, is significantly larger.
00:53:58.420Anyone paying attention knows now is the time to prepare.
00:54:00.740Everything is upside down and inside out.
00:54:04.480I know you know that we don't have a guarantee on what tomorrow is going to bring, but everything's going to change.
00:54:14.460You know, I've been talking about that 10-year period where the world's going to be turned inside out, and it'll be like the Industrial Revolution.
00:54:57.820May I suggest that you, not just for emergencies, because emergencies are happening all the time, and I think the world is going to shake its foundations in more ways than one, and you want to be prepared.
00:55:13.780Get their 102-serving survival food kit, price starting at less than $1 per serving, that's breakfast, lunch, and dinner, 102 breakfast, lunch, and dinners for $1 per serving less than?
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00:56:59.560I don't necessarily know if that's going to happen.
00:57:01.140But still, what I'm thinking, my philosophy on this is, you know, what are you going to go out and blow on a really nice weekend?
00:57:09.100Let's say you want to go do some really nice, you want to stay someplace, you want to skip one of those really nice things and just put that money and put it into Bitcoin and just let it sit there.
00:57:23.340I mean, at worst, you missed a really good weekend that might have cost you $1,000.
00:57:29.260So, put that in there because you don't care if you're going to lose that and then just let it ride.
00:57:35.740It's gone up 30 times since Donald Trump came down the escalator.
00:57:39.040That's how recent this is, 30 times your money.
00:57:41.100But quickly, the thing that I think this audience would like is there's a limited amount of them.
00:57:45.340It can't inflate because there's a limited amount of them.
00:58:49.060Because of the New York Times, we the New York Times is saying that Clinton and the DNC lied to the American people for the last year on this.
00:59:04.700It's a stunning article coming from the New York Times.
00:59:09.660It is an absolute indictment on the corruption of the DNC and the Clinton administration.
01:00:10.360He is apparently a credible guy, but now is doing private private work compiling dossiers.
01:00:18.340This is the guy who compiled the dossier that, you know, Donald Trump was, you know, taking golden showers, which to him could be a completely legitimate thing.
01:02:10.220I don't know what you're talking about.
01:02:11.600However, they did reimburse him for some of his expenses.
01:02:17.060So why is the FBI and Steele connection really important here?
01:02:22.100Because CNN reported via anonymous source that the Steele dossier was used as part of the justification to get the FISA warrant approved.
01:02:31.700Now, FISA is a secret court that if you think something bad is going on, you can go to this secret court and they can issue all kinds of what traditionally we would have said illegal things.
01:02:45.260And this is what when Donald Trump said, they're spying on me.
01:02:48.860They're tapping my phones at Trump Tower.
01:02:55.020And it was done using this dossier of the golden showers.
01:02:59.880Now, here's the here's the problem with this.
01:03:06.120This warrant was was was was given based on a dossier on Donald Trump that the FBI had to know was actually being funded by one presidential candidate to discredit the other presidential candidate.
01:03:29.880I mean, conflict of interest at best comes in play here or worse, but it actually gets much worse than this.
01:03:39.680And this is where Donald Trump is dragged into this.
01:03:41.940Remember the June 16th meeting with the Russian lawyer and Don Jr at Trump Tower?
01:03:47.800OK, this is this is a meeting that, you know, we had no idea.
01:03:53.480Well, if unfortunately, first it was just this woman.
01:03:57.760Then we found out it was another guy and then another guy and another guy with an attorney.
01:04:01.800We now know for sure that one of the guys in that room is a Russian immigrant that was admitted, has admitted to having Soviet counterintelligence.
01:04:12.800He was a counterintelligence officer for the GRU.
01:04:17.200But what he specialized in was really important.
01:04:21.020What he specialized in was, quote, subversive political influence operations involving disinformation and propaganda.
01:04:33.700Now, why is this relevant with the fusion GPS?
01:04:37.960Yes, because who had the Kremlin hired to represent them?
01:04:46.340The Kremlin had hired this guy and the woman that met with Don Don Jr, whose expertise was disinformation and subversive political influence.
01:04:58.940They hired the Kremlin hired them and they hired fusion GPS.
01:05:27.520They saw that this company was coming in fusion GPS with these two Russian spies that we now know are Russian spies who had subversive political influence operations in their history.
01:05:44.320Meeting with the guy who wants to be president and they don't think that maybe that this this this this dossier might be tainted because they're working with the Kremlin.
01:05:55.960So the FBI misses the Clinton campaign.
01:07:17.360OK, do you agree with me that a fusion was involved in preparing a dossier against Donald Trump that would be interfering in our election by the Russians?
01:07:27.560I don't want to say I don't want to say.
01:07:58.620And if they knew that that dossier came from the Clinton campaign and they were using it for a FISA court and he also knew Lindsey Graham's question is really important.
01:08:12.880If they would have used if they have fusion GPS used and created this document, which we now know is true.
01:08:21.080Wouldn't you say that is the Kremlin influencing trying to influence our election?
01:08:44.520Putin is playing a long game and he is separating us.
01:08:48.740He is trying to get us to be either for Hillary Clinton or against Hillary Clinton, for Donald Trump or against Donald Trump.
01:08:59.040Instead, we should be for the rule of law over the rule of the jungle.
01:09:09.200This is the most corrupt story I have ever seen in my lifetime.
01:09:16.160And this ties again to what I'm going to lay out on a chalkboard tonight at five.
01:09:24.080The beginning, we're going to do a whole week on it.
01:09:26.980The beginning of the Uranium One story.
01:09:32.740The Russians now own 20% of our uranium because of bribery.
01:09:39.060We know that now because a gag order has finally been lifted and it opens up a whole can of worms on Clinton and what she and Bill and the Clinton Foundation were doing.
01:13:28.160I put 10% of my money in gold, and I do it as an insurance policy for insanity.
01:13:34.980And if you can't tell me that the world has gone insane, and I don't know what papers you're listening to or reading or what what you're watching or listening to world is insane.
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01:15:31.260They send me a big box of stuff that has all the ingredients, fresh, organic, really delicious ingredients that have, they're really kind of like different.
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01:16:08.140I actually like this pizza with a purpose.
01:16:11.160I don't happen to agree with their purpose, but I like the idea.
01:16:14.460People doing something that is meaningful to them.
01:16:16.980That was the motto of the Boston area restaurant, Dudley Doe.
01:16:21.080They serve the usual fare, pizza, coffee, and economic justice.
01:16:27.720The idea that we have is to take whatever profit we're able to generate and share it with the workers to give them the proper reward for their efforts.
01:18:09.420But what would have been nicer is for the employees and the clients, if they were still able to go to work and be able to have the pizza that they liked.
01:18:23.780Here's what people need to understand.
01:18:32.360Money is just something that enables you to do the things that you care deeply about.
01:18:40.560Now, this is a fact that capitalist-minded people that have businesses, they better get this or they're going to go out of business.
01:18:52.480And capitalist-minded people, they are able to share the money and success to exponentially more people if they just make a good product.
01:19:07.940If Dudley Doe struck a good balance between taking care of their community and taking care of finances, taking care of their business, they'd still be in business today.
01:20:46.320So, then he decided, we got in the vehicle, we went all the way down to Detroit, and then on our way back, he had stole gas from a gas station,
01:20:56.580and then he threw our phones out of the vehicle and took us to a house near his dad's house.
01:21:05.660And that's where we were kept for two days.
01:21:08.660My sister ended up getting released, and that's how the cops ended up finding us.
01:22:31.540Yep, I was living with my mom and dad when I turned 14.
01:22:34.640I went out and I was washing dishes at a bar and grill in town.
01:22:39.740And then I was working at McDonald's and factory work and, you know, anything really just to get by.
01:22:45.420And when did you reach out for government assistance?
01:22:50.220Um, I've actually been on government assistance since I was 18 years old.
01:22:55.320I don't know why it took them three years to decide that they wanted to know who the father was, or really what their reasoning is.
01:23:05.240And so, when they asked you who the father was, what was your response?
01:23:09.280I told them, because they told me that if I didn't, uh, comply with the, the survey online, that they would take my government assistance away.
01:23:22.280And did you tell them that this was a rape?
01:23:25.700There was no way to tell them, because it's all on the computer.
01:23:29.560Like, there's no box to check or anything.
01:23:32.520So, I put in all the information, and then when it got sent to the prosecutor's office,
01:23:37.300when I went up there to sign all the paperwork, the first thing I told them that this was a rape case.
01:23:44.080And they said, well, this is still standard procedure.
01:29:27.300And then sold the property off to some people that I know.
01:29:30.080And they said, hey, we want you to go write your songs there.
01:29:32.680So every day for six weeks, I started off at this cabin.
01:29:36.320And I wrote the songs for this new record.
01:29:38.060And, you know, my faith is very important to me.
01:29:40.540And one thing that I've done in my personal life is every year I sort of just spend some time at the beginning of the year just praying and seeing if there's a certain theme that's going to rise up in my own personal life.
01:29:51.260And I felt like the theme was in two small words.
01:29:54.700But put together, it's a mighty message.
01:29:58.220You put those words together and it's like, okay, what does it look like for me to go all in in my life like never before?
01:30:04.740For me, I'm driven by the thought of I want to reach the end of my life with no regrets.
01:30:09.540Now, I know that's next to impossible, but if that's my aim, maybe I'll have a few less regrets than I would otherwise.
01:30:17.280And so really every song on this record was inspired by the question of me in that cabin every day before I picked up my guitar, just kind of asking God, what are the areas of my life where I've been phoning it in, where I've been coasting, where I've been going through the motions?
01:30:52.940But I felt like God kept redirecting my attention to the small and saying the little things are the big things.
01:30:58.000So for me personally, if I'm being totally honest, it was, I felt like God was showing me inside the four walls of my own home and saying, Matthew, it's time for you to go all in like never before as a husband to your wife.
01:31:09.180We've been married 14 years, but I felt like, what if the next 14 years could be even better than the first?
01:31:15.160You know, it's time to go all in as a dad to your kids.
01:31:17.800You're traveling all the time, you know, and what's funny is in your lobby here, my eight-year-old daughter's watching this interview right now.
01:31:25.340Why? Because of my answer to that challenge to go all in.
01:31:29.300Interesting, you came up with that and you took that guidance while you were alone in a cabin.
01:31:36.400Well, for me, I do so much talking in my life that I start to realize how rarely I actually listen.
01:31:42.840And I found like when I finally stop and like listen long enough to, you know, hear what maybe God's trying to tell me, man, something special takes place.
01:32:17.980Just, just, just master one small little thing and it's, it's, it's remarkable how game changing that is.
01:32:25.400I was talking to, um, I was talking to some friends and I said, you know, I wonder if we're not, uh, I may have even used the words all in.
01:32:34.120I wonder if we're not, uh, all in, uh, like Peter was.
01:32:58.720That's one of my favorite stories in the Bible of like, and, and you think about it, like Peter was this guy that was so hot and cold.
01:33:05.180There were, there were moments where he was like, you know, top of the line, like just un, unwavering in his faith and devotion.
01:33:12.340And then the next minute he's denying that he knew the guy that he said he served.
01:33:16.960But then when he was so defeated after what he had done, he denied knowing Jesus.
01:33:21.800He, he went back to this defeated life and said, I'm just going to go back to being a fisherman.
01:33:27.500And I remember, I think that's one of my favorite moments because I think there's a lot of people who at one point in their life, they were all in.
01:33:34.480Like we had that innocence of our youth where anything was possible.
01:34:15.860I will tell you, as you're talking, I keep thinking of Frank Sinatra because a lot of the Frank Sinatra songs, My Way, That's Life, all of that is.
01:34:26.200And I love a lot of the Frank Sinatra songs because of that.