11⧸17⧸17 - "Nothing but a game and a show"? ( Rep. Matt Gaetz & Bill O'Reilly join Glenn)
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 52 minutes
Words per Minute
162.38615
Summary
Glenn Beck talks about the Senate passing the largest tax code overhaul since the 1980s, the Al Franken plan, and Elon Musk's Tesla Roadster. Glenn also talks about elves in the wall and how they can make you stupid.
Transcript
00:00:17.700
The largest tax code overhaul since the 1980s passed through the house yesterday.
00:00:32.860
The real work on this plan goes down in the Senate.
00:00:35.620
And probably the most interesting thing about this tax plan doesn't even have anything to do with tax reform.
00:00:49.720
After the Senate gets done revising the thing, individual tax cuts will be about $3.7 trillion.
00:00:57.260
But it will also raise revenue by $2.8 trillion.
00:01:03.400
When we say raise revenue, what we mean is new taxes.
00:01:08.560
The Senate's version is a marked improvement over the houses.
00:01:14.440
They improved it by increasing the child tax credit from $1,000 a child to $2,000.
00:01:20.420
But they are also, and this is the big one, repealing the Obamacare individual mandate.
00:01:32.920
What was deemed the largest tax code overhaul in decades is, in reality, a tax plan that will be negated by inflation in 10 to 15 years.
00:01:49.980
The tax cuts make it better than what we have now, but in some cases by, you know, 0.5%.
00:02:00.680
The only age-defining issue out there is health care, and this bill could be the first salvo in scuttling Obamacare for good.
00:02:16.440
A couple of days ago, it was announced that the Alexander Murray Insurance Company bailout would likely be included in this spending bill.
00:02:30.680
This would basically negate the ultimate goal of repealing the individual mandate, and that ultimate goal is to cause Obamacare to fail, right?
00:02:43.380
The Alexander Murray bailout ensures that insurance companies and hospitals can continue their cartel.
00:02:56.360
Monthly premiums are now up to $2,100, and they're rising.
00:03:01.660
Those costs alone completely wipe out your child tax credit.
00:03:08.940
If your goal is to try and scuttle Obamacare, what good is repealing the individual mandate if you wind up bailing out all the insurance companies?
00:03:20.740
If you skimped on tax cuts to finally put a nail in the coffin of Obamacare, you better be prepared to go all the way.
00:03:30.220
Stop the Alexander Murray Obamacare payments, or all of this is nothing more than a game and a show.
00:03:54.000
I've got a lot of things that I want to talk about, you know, the Al Franken stuff, the tax cuts.
00:04:03.400
But I would really like to talk about the new Elon Musk unveiling of the semi-automated semi-truck yesterday and the Roadster.
00:04:25.980
If you can get a long range without having to spend all the money on gas, there's a lot to be gained there.
00:04:32.180
And the good thing is, you know, the electricity that powers it actually comes from elves in the wall.
00:04:42.620
It's because this energy comes directly from these elves.
00:04:56.180
And that generates the electricity that powers these things.
00:05:04.100
Now, a lot of people think that the electricity doesn't come from magic elves in the wall.
00:05:11.720
Yeah, I want to bring up deniers just to show how stupid they are.
00:05:14.440
They believe that the electricity that comes out of the wall that you would plug your electric
00:05:19.640
car into comes from some sort of coal-fired electricity or some plant that's just belching a lot of smoke into the air.
00:05:32.500
They say it's a natural gas as part of the equation?
00:05:34.780
They think that you can dig up these little black rocks and then burn that.
00:05:49.160
But I will say, the Roadster, 0 to 60 in 1.9 seconds.
00:06:01.040
However, and in typical Elon Musk, he was like, I mean, this is just what we have in the prototype,
00:06:07.180
inferring that it's going to get better than that.
00:06:11.580
But you can put your $250,000 down now to get a founder's model for when it comes out.
00:06:17.680
So you've got to set aside the quarter mil for a few years, and that will give you not
00:06:22.480
the car, but the opportunity to buy the car when they tell you what it costs.
00:06:30.640
I mean, it's a down payment on the car, but you will still owe more money on the car.
00:06:35.180
They have no idea how much it's going to cost yet.
00:06:38.380
Actually, you can put $50,000 down for a regular one.
00:06:43.840
And I guess at that point, it's a couple hundred thousand.
00:06:49.420
Because the Bugatti Veyron and the ones that are coming after that.
00:06:53.100
You know, you're going to get into $2 million for that.
00:07:01.300
Do you think the top speed is going to be around 250, which would be slower than the Bugatti?
00:07:05.980
He said, I don't want to get into the top speed now, but it is over 250.
00:07:13.500
But you can get up to almost 300 in the Bugatti now.
00:07:16.740
So electric cars are never going to be, they're not going to compete necessarily as well at
00:07:22.200
a top speed level, but they're faster, 0 to 60.
00:07:24.820
The things that you would actually use in a car are faster with the electric cars.
00:07:33.880
Yeah, I would agree with that, but I don't know if I use 0 to 60 in 1.9 either.
00:07:44.040
When we had, they brought them in here and test drove them.
00:07:46.760
And one of my favorite things to do, which is really safe, by the way, if you're a driver,
00:07:50.780
is you get on the on-ramp and what you do is you slowly accelerate into traffic.
00:08:03.040
What you do is, you know how sometimes, like, let's say you were to spill a cup of coffee.
00:08:17.380
So, you know, you drop something, whatever, you need to make a phone call, something like
00:08:24.100
So, let's just say that happened on the on-ramp for an undisclosed reason.
00:08:27.800
And you were to stop on the side of the on-ramp.
00:08:34.140
And you wait until a car going at full speed passes you, going 70 miles an hour.
00:08:41.400
And then you mash on the gas pedal, which is not a gas pedal in this particular case.
00:08:55.560
And it's incredible because it jerks you back like you're on a ridiculous six flags roller
00:09:01.540
People don't understand the constant acceleration.
00:09:04.500
When you first drive a Tesla, it has no gearbox.
00:09:24.940
I think the one we drove was like around three seconds or 2.9.
00:09:28.900
But, I mean, anything under six seconds feels pretty fast.
00:09:33.800
Like, if you get a, you know, I don't know, a decent Mustang, right, that you'd buy from
00:09:39.320
a Ford dealership, it's going to go somewhere under six seconds, maybe.
00:09:48.760
I mean, those are, you know, really, really like supercars under four seconds.
00:10:05.300
He said, if anybody is a fan of Spaceballs, you know that there's only one speed above
00:10:12.300
Now, Ludacris is the speed that you type into your, on your screen of a Tesla.
00:10:19.460
You pick the kind of, you know, you want an economy speed or whatever.
00:10:24.300
And you can hit Ludacris, which means I don't care about how long the battery is going to
00:10:43.740
And Ludacris speed was the fastest speed in Spaceballs, with one exception.
00:10:59.600
This audience, you know, when it comes to politics and talking about the environment, like Elon
00:11:04.300
Musk would be very annoying to talk to about these topics, because he wouldn't agree with
00:11:11.260
I love this guy is living the billionaire life the way I would live it.
00:11:15.720
I want a giant bank tube that goes from Los Angeles to San Francisco in four seconds.
00:11:34.140
However, you listen to that guy and and he's like, oh, no.
00:11:38.480
I mean, of course, we all know that, you know, you can bore under somebody's house.
00:11:42.840
And if you're 100 feet below, you can't feel anything.
00:11:47.260
I mean, you know, you won't even notice that there's a whole highway underneath you.
00:11:55.740
You're parsing this thing in a way that that's not making my point exactly, because, yes,
00:12:02.960
But my point is, if I had billions of dollars, I would try stupid, crazy stuff.
00:12:08.440
OK, so you would most stuff, but it wouldn't necessarily be successful.
00:12:14.480
And I think a lot of Elon Musk's ideas would fail.
00:12:19.060
I mean, like, I don't know that his solar plans will be hugely successful.
00:12:24.100
He's tried a lot of crazy ideas and not all of them have worked.
00:12:27.820
But, you know, when you when you like have like, OK, I'm going to build some solar panels.
00:12:32.080
I'm also going to build a rocket ship and have it land again.
00:12:35.900
When that one works, I kind of give you a pass on everything else.
00:12:59.300
This is the first guy that has said we're going to Mars.
00:13:11.040
He rented a big aircraft hangar out in California to to introduce his new driverless truck.
00:13:21.880
And then at the end, the truck opened up and a roadster drove out because he did, you know, the Steve Jobs thing.
00:13:30.180
I think open up the back of the truck and this roadster came out.
00:13:34.380
This is him at the end of it in full-fledged, ludicrous mode for Elon Musk.
00:13:52.340
This will be the first time an electric vehicle breaks a thousand kilometers.
00:13:55.700
A production electric vehicle will travel more than a thousand kilometers in a single charge at highway speed.
00:14:01.000
You'll be able to travel from L.A. to San Francisco and back at highway speed without recharging.
00:14:13.740
The point of doing this is to just give a hardcore smackdown to gasoline cars.
00:14:39.040
So I want to talk to you a little bit about time and how it flies.
00:14:48.720
It's Thanksgiving next week and then, you know, then it's Christmas and then we start it all over again.
00:14:58.260
So this summer I came home and Rafe's voice changed and it freaked me out.
00:15:11.280
And all of a sudden it was like, you know, he had a cold and so you didn't notice it for a couple of days.
00:15:22.320
And then the cold cleared up and he was, hey, dad.
00:15:31.220
I don't know if I'm, I don't know if everybody else was prepared for that.
00:15:40.080
Do you remember Growing Pains when I think it was Ben with a little kid and all of a sudden he was like, hey, dad.
00:15:51.300
And so the biggest challenge is, you know, trying to find the, no, trying to make sure that time isn't lost with the family.
00:16:07.720
So making the most with the moments that you have with our kids is so important.
00:16:23.400
We've, you know, we've played it in all situations.
00:16:26.540
And in those 30 minutes, I'm telling you, you will learn more about how your kids think than any other activity.
00:16:32.540
Somebody who was playing wrote and said, what we enjoy about Say Anything is you get to know more about everyone playing.
00:16:39.620
You're sharing ideas and personalities with each other.
00:16:44.460
You will sit there and we'll play anything, say anything.
00:16:48.960
And Tony and I will walk out afterwards and say, did you know that?
00:16:54.080
It's really a brilliant game because you're making connections with everyone around the table.
00:17:06.860
Say Anything is on sale right now at Target for $5 off.
00:17:10.580
Get Say Anything before they sell out for the holidays.
00:17:29.560
Wall Street Journal had a story that I just can't get over.
00:17:37.860
As we're talking about the high-tech world, there will be those who are trying desperately to justify their jobs.
00:17:45.360
The headline, Google Schmoogle, reference librarians are still busier than ever.
00:17:50.080
Now, people don't know what a reference librarian is, perhaps.
00:17:56.140
A staff member at the Carnegie Library in this city's Oakland district answered her phone in a cubicle late the afternoon of November 1st.
00:18:04.300
A woman wanted to know who would be pitching for the Dodgers that night in the final game of the World Series.
00:18:16.140
After taking the call, the 28-year-old reference librarian recalled a library patron who once asked her whether barcodes on store merchandise contained the mark of the beast, the symbol discussed in the book of Revelation.
00:18:32.440
She looked it up on a website and found the answer is no.
00:18:37.400
She says, the story goes on, though online searches are now at the fingertips of most people, many still prefer to call or visit a library.
00:18:50.500
Others recognize librarians have search skills and access to databases that search engines can't match.
00:18:57.800
So I read that and I thought, oh, I wonder what that could there's got to be some evidence of something.
00:19:08.000
But now I'm reading it with the search engine by my side.
00:19:11.440
And she talks about, you know, you can there's some things you just can't find online, like, you know, what was the weather forecast on your birthday?
00:19:22.300
I yes, it was partly cloudy and 43 degrees the day I was born in the city I was born in.
00:19:36.940
Um, uh, librarians generally are happy to receive questions, partly because they serve lots of people, uh, and helps them justify taxpayer funding.
00:19:47.340
Uh, she said, uh, uh, one person, uh, wrote just last year because there's no stupid question.
00:19:57.480
Uh, one person wanted to know how to make a guillotine.
00:20:01.940
So she sent him the, uh, the schematics of how to make a guillotine, but secrecy or privacy is paramount.
00:20:12.560
So she didn't tell him, but she didn't tell anybody about that.
00:20:18.480
Perhaps if somebody is asking how to make a guillotine, perhaps that's something that maybe you should tell someone about.
00:20:43.200
It's available now, uh, on demand, the entire series on Antifa.
00:20:52.560
And is there a way to be against fascism and not join fascists?
00:20:59.120
Uh, you can check that whole thing out now at, um, uh, at the blaze.com slash TV.
00:21:06.000
The whole series is, uh, up and available for you now.
00:21:10.540
Um, I wanted to talk to, um, Congressman Florida, Congressman, uh, Matt Gates.
00:21:15.980
Um, he is demanding now that Sessions appoint a special counsel to investigate uranium one and the Obama Clinton era scandals.
00:21:25.140
Now, um, uh, I think the uranium one thing is a really big, uh, news story, but not for the same reason that I think a lot of people, uh, do.
00:21:37.580
I'm interested in hearing, uh, the Congressman's point of view on what happened with uranium one.
00:21:48.560
Can you tell me, what are you, what are you looking into with uranium one?
00:21:53.260
And what do you think the real scandal is here?
00:21:57.060
We've got to find out if the Clinton foundation was essentially used as a money laundering operation to sell off influence to the state department.
00:22:07.120
And one of, there are many different tentacles that branch out from that.
00:22:11.080
One of those tentacles is the uranium one deal where you have all of these payments being made by Russians to Bill Clinton and the Clinton foundation.
00:22:20.020
At the same time, you have Hillary Clinton serving on the CFIUS board, raising no objections to this uranium one problem.
00:22:27.640
The reason why I think it necessitates a special counsel is that the very players, uh, Bob Mueller, Rod Rosenstein, um, you know, uh, the, the individual, uh, sure.
00:22:41.920
Eric Holder, the very people, uh, who had continued to have influence at the justice department and at the FBI very well may be fact witnesses in the uranium one deal because they had an obligation to come out and show us this real pervasive Russian influence through bribery.
00:22:59.700
But you've pointed out, Glenn, on your, a variety of your platform, that the key to this entire deal is going to be the testimony of the informant who knew that the Russians were actually talking about bribing U.S. officials to influence our uranium assets.
00:23:16.720
And so I don't think that the current kind of Jeff Sessions, Bob Mueller, um, regime can look into that.
00:23:24.380
I think that you've got to have a special counsel appointed.
00:23:27.600
And if you don't do that, then you've really got an inequitable application of justice.
00:23:32.820
You got a special counsel looking into the president.
00:23:35.060
And by the way, it's the very same guy who should have told us about uranium one.
00:23:39.840
So, so here's, here's my concern, Matt, that this becomes, uh, focused around the Clintons.
00:23:47.220
Um, and the Clintons may indeed be guilty as hell on this.
00:23:52.220
Um, however, um, I think the bigger scandal is that the FBI had done a seven-year investigation.
00:24:01.140
Um, they had all of this information of corruption at the highest levels, and it was not brought to this committee.
00:24:10.980
Nobody in the, uh, committee apparently was alerted a year before they, this committee stopped China from buying a, uh, gold mine.
00:24:21.960
Because they were afraid that that might somehow or another open the door for a country like China to have access to our uranium.
00:24:33.200
And, and, and how come the committee wasn't informed on this FBI investigation of seven years?
00:24:48.320
The very people who've been going after the president.
00:24:50.320
And so, you know, that's one of the reasons, frankly, that Bob Mueller has a conflict, because, you know, he should have been the one indicating that this was a problem.
00:25:00.620
And by the way, there are plenty of examples where the FBI brings information to the CFIUS board, which Secretary Clinton had a role in and served on.
00:25:10.580
And they, in fact, uh, I mean, there was a case recently where a Japanese company was looking to buy some telecom assets in the United States.
00:25:18.920
And the FBI was giving regular updates and information to CFIUS about that transaction.
00:25:27.540
Meanwhile, you've got the Russians engaged in bribery, making huge payments to the Clinton Foundation.
00:25:33.740
And you don't have that same degree of transparency and sharing of information.
00:25:39.820
And so that's why I think it's absolutely essential for the Congress to be involved.
00:25:44.700
I mean, a lot of people forget that Congress has an oversight responsibility.
00:25:51.860
And right now, I fear that we need more members of Congress out calling for a special counsel, joining Jim Jordan and Ron DeSantis to actually 20 members of the Judiciary Committee have been demanding a special counsel for three and a half months to look into these systemic failures.
00:26:12.100
So, um, we're talking to Congressman Matt Gaetz from Florida who wants a, uh, a special counsel to investigate the uranium one, uh, deal.
00:26:25.740
If the goal is not to just get Clinton, if the goal is to look out, look into what the hell happened with the FBI, because I think there are, there are two bigger issues here.
00:26:39.440
And that is Russia is influencing us and we have evidence of it, a mountain, uh, seven years of evidence of it.
00:26:52.280
Why did the Obama administration gag the, uh, the informant?
00:26:59.080
Why at the, why was he who signed the pleading?
00:27:02.600
You know, you know, you know, you know, whose name is on the signature block for the pleadings before the courts, feeling off the information of this informant.
00:27:13.220
And so, I mean, when he was the U S attorney in Maryland, he was involved in the litigation to seal off information from this very informant.
00:27:22.420
And so the, again, the, the people at justice and at the FBI are witnesses and, you know, either through their acts or through their omissions may be implicated in some wrongdoing.
00:27:36.740
This can't solely be about bringing one person or one set of people to justice, though.
00:27:43.160
We've got to look at what systemic failures brought us to this point.
00:27:47.460
And moreover, is there an ongoing influence that's occurring, that's undermining our country, undermining our uranium assets that we may not know about until we do this investigation?
00:28:01.220
The reason why we should have a special counsel, one, who, what politicians were involved, if any, what was the role of the FBI and how did, why did it happen the way it did?
00:28:16.360
And, and, uh, the second thing is to find out what's happening with Russia.
00:28:23.540
They are clearly, um, infiltrating both parties.
00:28:29.080
They are clearly doing everything they can to weasel themselves into our system.
00:28:35.360
And nobody is, we're so busy fighting with each other.
00:28:43.800
And, you know, I would encourage you, Glenn, and all of our listeners to check out the article that was published today in the Hill, where some of Christopher Wray's emails raise a lot of questions.
00:28:55.820
Christopher Wray, of course, you know, deeply involved with, with the FBI and with justice.
00:29:00.440
His wife was a political candidate who was being financially supported by the Clintons.
00:29:06.140
At the same time that was happening, we've now got emails where Christopher Wray is saying that the investigation of the Clinton email scandal wouldn't be handled through the normal procedures and the normal course of business.
00:29:20.300
It was going to be handled at headquarters in a special way.
00:29:24.320
Again, this reinforces what makes Americans so angry about the Clintons.
00:29:28.760
There's one set of rules that governs all of us.
00:29:31.680
And then there's sort of special treatment, special procedures that always seem to apply to the Clintons.
00:29:37.080
So breaking news, you know, even today in the Hill on some of those emails, showing us how deep some of these systemic failures may run.
00:29:52.720
And I would stand with you for calling a special counsel, as long as it is not a partisan thing.
00:30:01.580
We look I think people are sick of of special deals being cut on either side of the aisle.
00:30:09.360
People in Washington need to live by the law, period.
00:30:28.080
Congressman Matt Gaetz, Florida Congressman, you can find him at Matt Gaetz dot com.
00:30:34.640
Look for that story on the Hill and call Congress and ask them to appoint a special counsel to investigate Uranium One.
00:30:52.800
Right now on the blaze dot com slash TV, the show that Glenn, you do, of course, every night.
00:30:57.540
We're already in production on a on a week long series on Uranium One.
00:31:02.000
I think it's going to air at the beginning of next year.
00:31:04.260
But one of the things that I thought was really important and you brought it up towards the end is the defense from Hillary Clinton and her people are is essentially like, well, we we couldn't have we weren't the only people on this panel.
00:31:19.320
And, you know, we didn't we didn't we didn't necessarily directly approve this.
00:31:23.600
And I assigned that to someone else and I didn't have responsibility.
00:31:26.600
And these payments came in at different times and they have, you know, they have arguments for certain accusations made against Hillary Clinton, which is why it's so important that this not just becomes another Hillary Clinton issue.
00:31:39.600
The thing that's really interesting to understand here with Uranium One is what Russia was trying to do.
00:31:48.940
Because even if you say Hillary had nothing to do with this, even if you say Hillary had no responsibility, which I mean, when I look at it, it seems to be a stretch to get there.
00:32:00.000
But even if you want to believe that and consider her completely innocent, the Russians, again, were trying to interfere with a major national security issue and trying to manipulate our politicians, our systems and did so successfully, whether you think they lucked into it or it was intentional.
00:32:20.460
And there was a quid pro quo. Either way, you get to a place where Russia, again, throughout the Obama administration, and I believe through that now beginning with the Trump administration, is trying to continually affect what our general functions are here in the United States.
00:32:35.860
The things that keep us safe and separate and and and and a constitutional republic that we all want.
00:32:41.920
Those things are constantly being interfered with by this one nation.
00:32:46.280
And if we don't figure out what they're doing and get ahead of them, they are going to hit us even harder than these things.
00:32:51.580
We hit we're trying to really spend our time and our resources on trying to explain in in simple ways using a chalkboard, the connections and these complex stories.
00:33:11.660
They're like, yeah, Clinton was selling our selling us out to Russia.
00:33:15.580
And that's pretty much all, you know, I'm telling you, we just finished production on this Uranium One series yesterday, and it is so clear.
00:33:32.140
You'll have to decide because I don't know what happened.
00:33:36.380
I'm just telling you something is really wrong.
00:33:38.740
It looks like something's really wrong with the Clintons, but I can't figure out exactly how they affected this deal.
00:33:47.140
But there was far there, far too many coincidence and far too much money.
00:33:56.400
Yeah, it was a nine figure thing, all from Uranium One and all of the players of Uranium One.
00:34:02.560
Now, and at the time that this is going down, that's quite a coincidence because they're still not giving.
00:34:17.540
But when you look at what the FBI and their involvement, something is very wrong here.
00:34:25.700
And it's not just I think even if you want to look at this, a partisan thing, I think because it came out in 2016, it was looked at as a big Hillary Clinton story, which she's a big part of the story.
00:34:37.240
But I mean, several other officials in the Obama administration are tied into this.
00:34:42.780
And honestly, Bill Clinton, there's almost a more direct line directly to Bill Clinton.
00:34:51.800
And took tons of money in speeches and things like that.
00:34:55.340
You look at this at Eric Holder's another big one that's that's involved in that.
00:35:01.640
But he as he as Matt Gaetz pointed out, I mean, Rod Rosenstein and Mueller and McCabe and some people that are still serving in the Trump administration and looking into Russia.
00:35:18.440
This is a seven year investigation that is I mean, has Russia nailed to the wall when you know the facts of this case and what they have on Russia?
00:35:37.300
If we take Clinton and the and the board at their their word.
00:35:46.920
And I tend to believe that the information wasn't shared because Obama, his administration, gagged the guy who was the was the chief, you know, a jaybird.
00:36:01.360
He's the he's he's the guy who who was there for seven years assembling all of this, witnessing all of it.
00:36:09.600
And when you hear what he has to say, it's pretty stunning.
00:36:16.920
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00:36:47.980
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00:36:52.140
I want you to go there now at protect and defend dot com, protect and defend dot com.
00:36:59.480
You're going to get a free booklet on how to protect your family in ways that you just can't imagine.
00:37:04.000
But also you are going to be if you become a member, you are going to have somebody protecting you after you pull the trigger.
00:37:26.200
Bill O'Reilly, the news of the week, how he saw it.
00:37:58.440
As investigators approached, they realized the ink was human blood.
00:38:05.020
The blood was the blood from Sharon Tate and her unborn child.
00:38:11.260
Tate had thrown a dinner party with her friends earlier that evening.
00:38:17.040
That her life would be over by the end of that evening.
00:38:21.580
Under Charles Manson's instruction, members of his, quote, family invaded the Tate home and viciously killed everyone inside.
00:38:30.200
Then they sat down and had a bite to eat at the dinner table.
00:38:33.940
One of them took a fork and stuck it into Sharon Tate's belly.
00:38:40.820
The next night, Manson rode with his followers to the home of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca.
00:38:51.460
But in 1972, a ruling by the California Supreme Court found the state's death penalty law at the time unconstitutional.
00:39:00.620
And California taxpayers have been paying for it.
00:39:04.460
His sentence was changed to life in prison with with the possibility of parole.
00:39:14.360
But now Manson may finally get the punishment deserves.
00:39:21.260
Sources now say it's only a matter of time before he passes on.
00:39:24.740
Charles Manson will die in bed, content with living a long life, a luxury that Sharon Tate, her unborn son, and nine other victims of Manson's insanity would never know.
00:39:40.180
So here's hoping that the grim reaper comes, I don't know, swiftly, not too swiftly, painfully.
00:39:50.940
And then Manson can start doing his time on his real sentence.
00:40:12.000
Bill O'Reilly from BillOReilly.com and the new book, Killing Lincoln, which is in stores everywhere.
00:40:29.960
Hey, Beck, you know the grim reaper man on Manson, huh?
00:40:35.380
Have you followed the story of the women that adore him?
00:40:49.840
And that has not been in the news lately, but it's still around.
00:40:53.560
You know, like the Moonies and the Scientologists and the cult following.
00:41:02.280
They get these vulnerable human beings, mostly damaged, mostly with terrible childhoods and
00:41:12.760
And they love-bomb them and they put them into circumstances where they do horrible things.
00:41:17.580
Or they're manipulated to go out and make money or whatever it may be.
00:41:25.020
And, you know, a lot of people don't even know the man's name under 40 and how heinous he was
00:41:34.000
That crazy hippie, anything goes era of three or four years where it was just totally out of control.
00:41:41.000
You know, Bill, I did a monologue yesterday on TV about, you know, the last two mass shootings.
00:41:47.760
The last two mass shootings, one in California and one here in Texas, both of the people had
00:41:55.640
Both of them had outstanding charges of spousal abuse or domestic abuse of some sort.
00:42:04.860
Both weren't qualified to have guns, and in both cases, either the Air Force or the state of California
00:42:14.380
didn't follow through and make sure that they didn't have guns.
00:42:19.220
If you look at the mass shootings in America, 57% of those guys have domestic abuse in their background.
00:42:35.000
I did, and I got hammered by the, you know, I keep calling it the far left,
00:42:41.400
but I think it's the fanatical left or the, you know, hateful left.
00:42:47.620
I said, Beck, just along the lines of what you're putting out, that this is the price of our freedom
00:42:53.260
in the sense that in the Reagan years, the ACLU came in and made it almost impossible
00:43:05.320
No matter how crazy you are, all you got to do is go to any big city and sit there and watch.
00:43:15.000
Psychotic people walking around, talking to themselves, punching walls, menacing strangers,
00:43:24.320
Because the ACLU came in in the 80s and said, these people have rights.
00:43:29.880
You can't even bring them into Bellevue for observation unless they do something that is
00:43:35.520
I mean, it always gets down, though, to these things to where, you know, I want to be able
00:43:42.280
to put people who are seriously disturbed and make sure that they are getting medicine
00:43:49.920
However, you know, if you look at what we opened up and what, you know, the state of mental
00:43:55.940
institutions were in the 70s and beyond, they were frightening places.
00:44:05.880
But you have to basically say, the American people have to say, and they're going to have
00:44:13.920
I mean, what we're doing now on BillOReilly.com, and you're doing something similar on The Blaze,
00:44:19.680
is basically we're telling people, you have to take your country back.
00:44:26.680
We can provide information and we can provide venues, but you have to do it.
00:44:32.560
And, you know, people understand that other people can be dangerous.
00:44:38.740
But if I call the police today and I say, my neighbor is screaming and yelling and maybe
00:44:43.840
hitting his kid and acting in a way that's dangerous, in my opinion, police can't do anything.
00:44:49.880
They can't do anything unless there's a complaint sworn out or they witness something.
00:44:54.580
And so that when these people go out and then they want to get a gun, it's easy for them
00:45:02.980
And even if it were harder, they'd still get the gun if they wanted it.
00:45:06.040
So people ought to know where we are and that these things are going to continue to occur,
00:45:12.060
these mass shootings and violence, because we are a free society.
00:45:16.460
And this is what we have decided, that we're not going to take action against any individual
00:45:25.040
Bill, isn't that, I don't know, a needed condition to have authorities?
00:45:32.080
So you're taking them into condition because you think they might be distasteful or erratic?
00:45:40.300
If there's evidence, all right, that a person is acting in a way that is dangerous to the
00:45:49.120
In the case, let me ask you, let me clarify this.
00:45:52.920
I'm specifically talking about in Texas and the shooter in California.
00:46:22.480
I'm a little worried about the government having power to decipher what they think is
00:46:34.240
In a local town like the Texas town, Sutherland, okay, if you know that there's a guy who's
00:46:41.920
menacing people and has guns, then the authorities should be able to go in and bring him in for
00:47:04.620
We had a producer, Tiffany, who just absolutely loved her family as a sweet girl and everything
00:47:16.940
Something happened, and there was a bone broken.
00:47:19.400
Well, my gosh, she had the state in her house for months and questioning and watching.
00:47:26.400
They suspected that she was involved with that?
00:47:36.180
And if Tiffany had a good family lawyer, the family lawyer could have prevented that.
00:47:42.420
And unfortunately, in our society, we all have to protect ourselves with family lawyers
00:47:48.480
and everything else because it's a dangerous place.
00:47:52.460
But the overarching is that right now, dangerous people, people who everybody in Sutherland knows
00:47:59.600
are not acting rationally, can get guns and then go out eventually and shoot people.
00:48:09.200
Both of the perpetrators were not supposed to have guns legally.
00:48:13.040
But that's the government, and that's the full...
00:48:15.780
That's the absurdity of the left saying, oh, gun control can solve the problem.
00:48:19.860
Gun control's never going to solve the problem.
00:48:21.740
You've got 360 million people running around the United States at any given time.
00:48:26.460
And the government's going to track every one of them down and make sure they don't
00:48:31.720
It drives me crazy I don't even listen to the argument anymore.
00:48:35.840
There's a point of just being aware of your community, and I think, you know...
00:48:40.180
These people a lot of times stand out to the locals, and you should be able to be able
00:48:46.620
The authority should have the power to put people under observation in some kind of civil
00:48:59.700
You used to be able to swear out, if you were a family member, that, look, my son or
00:49:05.220
daughter, my husband or wife, acting irrationally, we've got to get somebody to look at them.
00:49:16.820
I mean, if this is the first time that this has changed, where usually, you know, somebody
00:49:22.760
is in the news because they were, you know, eating the eyes out of every dog in the neighborhood,
00:49:27.400
and people are always like, you know, I knew him.
00:49:33.540
This is the first time, the shooting in Texas, that everyone I heard was like, oh, yeah, he
00:49:45.040
I mean, all of their countries in the Islamic world knew that these people were dangerous
00:49:53.100
And then after the fact, they all, oh, yeah, yeah, we knew.
00:49:57.020
You see, look, what we have now is a country that's frightened to do anything.
00:50:01.780
You know, so if you observe something, you don't say anything, you don't want to get sued,
00:50:05.220
or you don't want to be in the middle of a controversy.
00:50:06.940
That's a sea change than the way it used to be in America in the 50s, 40s, 30s, whatever
00:50:13.560
it may be, where neighborhoods actually banded together and protected each other.
00:50:21.780
Would this be okay for authorities to step in and do something?
00:50:24.540
Let's say that someone was saying that their Corgi and Maltapoo were premium members to
00:50:31.420
Would that be something that you think if someone was tweeting something like that to
00:50:37.640
their huge audience that their two dogs are premium members to BillOReilly.com, would
00:50:49.940
No, your dogs don't have wallets because your dogs don't have plants.
00:50:55.460
We did a big town hall meeting on BillOReilly.com, which everybody can see over the weekend, and
00:51:00.160
they should, because the theme is take your country back.
00:51:05.460
The last question was, Bill, do you have any other pets besides Holly?
00:51:12.380
Because Holly the Corgi has become a superstar, as you know, on Twitter or whatever.
00:51:20.360
You, Holly, is getting offers you wouldn't believe.
00:51:26.280
Holly may, listen, Holly may be substituting as a host on Meet the Press.
00:51:32.700
And you'd get a better, you'd get a better view in the world if that happened.
00:51:38.420
So Stu is taking that out of context to mock not only BillOReilly.com, but Holly and Fiona
00:51:56.300
When emergencies happen, our thoughts and prayers go to those affected, and we kind of
00:52:02.000
hope that we don't find ourselves in a similar situation.
00:52:05.920
If you don't plan, if you don't educate yourself, you are not going to rise to the occasion.
00:52:11.560
You're not going to rise to the level of your highest expectations.
00:52:14.260
You're going to rise to the level of your preparation and knowledge.
00:52:18.360
My Patriot Supply has helped Americans prepare for emergencies for almost 10 years now.
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00:52:41.600
I mean, I opened one up and like, okay, so what happens if like things really melt down?
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You open up an MRE and you're like, I'm never eating that.
00:52:50.240
And then somebody in the household will go, you'll eat that if you're hungry enough.
00:53:00.000
If a crisis strikes your neighborhood, your family, you're going to be glad that you acted today.
00:53:39.720
Yeah, I'm helping him out with his charity tonight.
00:53:51.960
And your audience should know that Beck is a very generous individual.
00:53:57.160
My audience would really like to know if you're a generous individual.
00:54:02.660
I think you know that we have done very much to help children and vets.
00:54:28.600
Do you want me to stew or what do you want me to do?
00:54:41.900
I was just going to warn you that Chuck Norris is not a big man, I mean, but he can kick you in the throat.
00:54:53.840
I'm actually working on something that I hope to unveil on Facebook later this weekend.
00:55:00.500
I'm working on the ultimate AR, and I'm going to show it to Chuck Norris and get his approval on it.
00:55:14.180
Yeah, an AR, you know, an AR, you know, like an AR-15.
00:55:19.200
And we should point out that Chuck Norris is not needed to beat up Glenn.
00:55:23.260
I mean, really, Holly the Corgi would be the favorite in a battle.
00:55:31.720
So, Bill, let's switch gears here and talk a little bit about the Uranium One story.
00:55:40.860
Um, the Iranian One story is being, you know, dismissed by the left as, you know, a hoax, and it's just anti-Clinton.
00:55:51.680
And the way it's being approached by some, it does seem to be just about Clinton.
00:55:56.240
This is a huge story that really is not only about the Clintons, but about the FBI.
00:56:01.060
And what the FBI knew and why they are gagging, um, really important, uh, witnesses.
00:56:09.280
What is your take on what happened with the, with, uh, Uranium One?
00:56:15.480
Um, you have to assume that nothing in the long run is going to come of this Uranium One story.
00:56:26.140
So, people hoping that they're going to see an indictment of Hillary Clinton is just never going to happen.
00:56:32.660
Much, much more likely is the fusion GPS story.
00:56:37.160
But let's stay on Uranium One and answer your question.
00:56:41.600
There's something wrong in this investigation, which was headed by Mueller, who was the FBI chief at the time,
00:56:55.200
And it was a, it was a seven year investigation with mountains of evidence, uh, showing compiled by the FBI.
00:57:03.980
Why did they, why did they deep six it when somebody actually went to prison for it?
00:57:10.820
They did find some and somebody was sentenced to prison.
00:57:13.600
So, why didn't the folks know about it and why didn't Holder, the attorney general, hold a press conference and explain what happened?
00:57:21.140
There's, there's your, those are simple questions because, Beck, as you know, I'm a simple man.
00:57:30.720
Why did the attorney general of the United States and the FBI chief, who's now the special counsel in the Russia, Trump stuff,
00:57:37.400
why did they not hold a press conference and tell the American people what the deuce happened?
00:57:43.880
And so the deuce is doing what it's wear on the Glenn Beck program.
00:57:54.020
So then when we come back, I want to stay with Russia and go to fusion GPS and, and how the FBI was involved in that as well.
00:58:18.520
With Bill O'Reilly from billoreilly.com and his new book, killing England, which is out now and great for the holidays.
00:58:25.320
Um, bill, let me, let me switch gears to, uh, um, to Russia and fusion GPS and my, my concern on all of these stories.
00:58:39.120
Um, but I don't hear this from the media saying, let's, let's stop making this about Clinton and Trump and let's make this about Russia and the influence that they have over both parties.
00:58:52.940
Um, okay, but you're not going to get traction with the American people about, if you take it that way, here's my take on fusion GPS.
00:59:03.360
And this is why I think this story rises above all the other stories as far as things could happen.
00:59:11.740
You have a organization that was hired by, uh, Democrats and the Clinton campaign paid six figures to dig up dirt on Donald Trump.
00:59:27.260
Um, they may have been paid even more than a million dollars when it all comes in right now.
00:59:32.820
The house intelligence committee is demanding fusion GPS is bank records.
00:59:37.940
So we would know exactly how much they were paid and by whom, but the Clinton campaign has already admitted.
00:59:44.520
They kicked more than a hundred thousand to these people and, uh, other democratic entities that did as well.
00:59:50.640
And one Republican entity, uh, the Washington beacon.
00:59:57.720
So anyway, you've got a paper trail that can be subpoenaed.
01:00:02.200
You've got hard evidence, not he said, she said, none of that hard evidence.
01:00:07.180
Now the, the co-founder of a fusion GPS, uh, testified this week in front of the house Intel committee in a closed door session about 35 seconds.
01:00:17.740
After the session was over, one of the Republican members of the house Intel committee call Fox news and spilled everything, which is what happens.
01:00:26.480
And apparently this guy, uh, took the dirt that, uh, some English guy uncovered, which it turned out to be, well, there, there we go.
01:00:37.180
Is that Holly or is that, uh, Fiona, you know, Fiona or Holly?
01:00:57.620
So anyway, look, uh, the guy who's in charge of fusion GPS takes the dirt that's given to him, doesn't check it out, tells the committee, oh, I didn't check out any of it.
01:01:22.020
But if you're a public figure in this country, you can't sue for defamation.
01:01:26.440
So anyway, this can actually be proven that this was an intrusion in our election.
01:01:35.520
And therefore, people might be able to go to jail here.
01:01:46.520
Uh, are you telling me that your, your reelection campaign kicked a hundred thousand over to this crew and you didn't know it?
01:01:54.240
So that's why I'm saying this is the big story.
01:01:56.740
So what is the difference between, and I say this as a, as somebody who is targeting the media and also Hillary Clinton on this, but it can be played the other way as well.
01:02:07.420
What is the difference between Hillary Clinton, um, going out and, and accepting information that I believe they knew was coming from Russian sources.
01:02:18.380
I mean that, you know, uh, the Christopher Steele, who was the, you know, MI5 guy, uh, you know, said it was from Russia, his Russian sources.
01:02:31.980
What is the difference between that and Donald Trump jr.
01:02:41.100
I don't see anybody who's going to say, Oh, I, if it, look, if you're in a political campaign and somebody says to you, Oh, I got dirt on your, uh, your opponent.
01:02:52.320
You're going to send somebody to meet them there, but that doesn't mean you're going to pay.
01:02:56.260
And, and you're going to, and you're not going to check anything out.
01:03:01.920
If it got all this money and check anything out, they just put it out.
01:03:06.880
Any, any, but any human being running for office now can be defamed by bogus made up crap.
01:03:18.120
And I mean, that, that is a threat to our Republic.
01:03:21.680
But I, but I think, but I think I, I agree with you, but I, uh, the other threat is the Russians were playing both sides.
01:03:31.520
And both of them though, we don't know exactly who gave fusion GPS, the bogus dirt.
01:03:40.140
So, and I don't think we'll ever know that because we don't have subpoena power in Russia.
01:03:45.680
That made a, that makes the case, uh, against Trump stronger.
01:03:51.080
And, and one of them used to be the, the chief of the KGB disinformation, uh, service for, for disrupting political campaigns around the world.
01:04:01.520
You're going to have, look, I'm not trying to defend anybody here.
01:04:07.160
If there's hard evidence that Donald Trump and his campaign chieftains, all right, entered into some alliance with Russia to smear Hillary Clinton and the democratic party.
01:04:24.220
So may I suggest word of the day chieftains, chieftains.
01:04:28.780
That's an Irish, that's an Irish kind of rock group, pop rock group.
01:04:47.160
Um, well, I'm just sorry to tell this Irishman I'm German.
01:04:56.100
It's like, I should have known that Beck's beer.
01:05:00.900
And, uh, and luckily all my, all my people were over here.
01:05:10.720
And this is another, another brilliant segue for a plug.
01:05:15.420
It would be more brilliant if you didn't point it out.
01:05:20.320
But one of the heroes, the guy who turned the continental army around was a German.
01:05:33.860
And nobody, we have a von Steuben day parade in New York city.
01:05:41.820
But this guy, he came over from Germany, Prussia, and, and he whipped the continental army into
01:05:51.240
And the guy was thrown out of Europe because he was gay.
01:05:55.340
Von Steuben was thrown out of the Prussian army and kid nowhere to go.
01:06:03.900
Did our founders, did they, did they know that bill?
01:06:11.700
Benjamin Franklin was the guy who got von Steuben on the boat to come over.
01:06:16.820
Everybody knew von Steuben was thrown out of Europe because he was, uh, you know, it was
01:06:24.720
And, and, uh, and, and everybody knew it, but the guy was a brilliant, uh, commander and
01:06:32.200
Washington didn't want him at Valley Forge, but had to take them.
01:06:35.320
And if you read killing anyone back, you would know all this.
01:06:41.460
And, and, but, uh, getting back and more, I'm hoping German.
01:06:46.520
And, uh, you know, we wouldn't be having this conversation if not for him.
01:06:51.620
Do you know that we were just a few votes away from having German as our official language?
01:06:57.980
Did you know, if you were to read one of my books, you, you would have known that, uh,
01:07:02.200
but I read them all, but, but I can't retain everything.
01:07:10.200
So, uh, Bill, you know, one of the things that actually, uh, the last thing on the German
01:07:14.980
thing is I never understood why it's, you know, in Congress, you know, all of our documents,
01:07:26.600
And, um, and the word of the day again is chieftain.
01:07:32.020
You know, um, getting back to, uh, to all of this, you know, we spend a lot of time,
01:07:38.060
we in the media on, uh, all of these so-called scandals, uh, fast and furious and the IRS and
01:07:45.080
American people get fed up because nothing ever happens.
01:07:51.940
I'm going to tell you this, this G, this fusion GPS, this is going to lead someplace and people
01:07:59.260
should pay attention to this because this was absolutely rotten, dirty garbage, and it
01:08:12.640
And if Hillary Clinton and her campaign would deepen and, and, you know, Podesta, the Podesta
01:08:18.320
brothers, John Podesta and the other guy, the other guy quit his own firm.
01:08:23.260
And they close, they've closed, they're closing the Podesta group down and, uh, restarting a
01:08:31.220
It, it, it kind of, yeah, it, it kind of says something bigger is on the horizon.
01:08:37.860
Why would you, why would you just get rid of the Podesta group?
01:08:51.980
And to me, and of course, you're never going to see this in the New York times, never going
01:08:56.180
to see it in the Dallas morning news, never going to see it because these,
01:09:00.640
these people who love the democratic party and want this kind of progressive government
01:09:06.380
to be imposed, all right, they know the danger.
01:09:13.080
John Podesta was the guy who ran Hillary Clinton's campaign.
01:09:18.760
His brother, Tony had to quit his own firm where he was making millions of dollars, had
01:09:29.780
So this is a big, big story coming down the train, but unless they listen to you and me
01:09:44.240
Bill, it's always a, it's always a pleasure to talk to you at, uh, uh, on Friday.
01:09:53.020
I was wondering though, I was, I, I, I, I'm, I was thinking about going to a big family
01:09:57.940
gathering and a lot of people don't, uh, necessarily, you know, enjoy my, my brand of, uh, of, of politics.
01:10:06.900
And I was thinking, I was wondering if I could rent you out, uh, and just have you show up.
01:10:14.900
Just, just have you show up at the dinner table.
01:10:29.900
You can, of course, get Bill's number one bestseller, Killing England Everywhere.
01:10:33.480
And, uh, you can also check in on how his, uh, two dogs are doing, uh, billoreilly.com.
01:10:43.280
He'll cover all of that for you at billoreilly.com.
01:10:48.420
You know, the only person I know that has corgis besides him is Queen Elizabeth.
01:10:53.880
The, the, the, the connections just keep getting deeper and deeper.
01:11:02.920
I think he's covering his deep, deep connections with the queen.
01:11:07.060
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01:12:19.740
Family on Long Island say they survived a fire thanks to their beloved pet.
01:12:30.200
The, uh, home went on flip up in flames overnight, but they all got out safely.
01:12:35.800
Um, uh, Susan and Peter McEnvoy have two young children.
01:12:42.160
They told the neighbors they were sleeping when the flames erupted, but they were awakened by their longtime family cat.
01:12:48.920
Now this is where the story falls apart for me.
01:13:02.820
Sadly, the cat named Houdini went missing as presumed buried amid the rubble.
01:13:19.860
You know, you're, you know, it's 65,000 emails now and you're going to people.
01:13:38.980
And they do despise you because you're a person.
01:13:43.640
It's just, that's the only, no, my, my hatred for cats is longstanding.
01:13:48.640
Uh, I was, I was dating a girl, uh, and, uh, you know, it ended up to be my first wife and,
01:13:57.680
I knew nothing about cats and, uh, this is very revealing by the way.
01:14:02.140
And, uh, you know, it was an outdoor cat, which I didn't understand and, um, and very dirty.
01:14:09.580
And so I decided, you know, to give this cat a bath.
01:14:14.280
Ah, so this is a, you've been personally injured by the species.
01:14:27.580
They actually, that damn cat was getting the bath.
01:14:43.160
Cats do not wake people up when there's a fire.
01:14:48.280
That cat may have woken that family up just to say, open the damn door so I can get out.
01:15:05.700
You know, if you always found Al Franken a little creepy, we now have confirmation.
01:15:29.060
Yesterday around this time, Los Angeles radio news anchor Leanne Tweeden accused Al Franken
01:15:33.660
of forcibly kissing her in 2006 when they were in Afghanistan as part of a USO tour.
01:15:40.120
The kissing part of the story sounds, you know, pretty juvenile on Franken's part.
01:15:45.240
Doesn't appear to be the worst part of what Franken did, however, on the flight home.
01:15:54.080
And they took a photo of Franken either groping or looking like he was about to grope her chest
01:16:05.160
When she got home, she was even more humiliated.
01:16:08.120
The incident happened two years before the citizens of Minnesota elected Franken, the guy
01:16:13.940
who played Stuart Smalley on Saturday Night Live, which I never really understood as funny,
01:16:21.640
but maybe it was just in the traditional sense.
01:16:29.880
Now, just like Roy Moore's, you know, handwriting in the yearbook, we're probably going to
01:16:33.820
have, you know, days of photo analysis trying to figure out whether, you know, Franken is
01:16:45.780
Franken apologized, saying he realizes the photo's not funny now, which actually means he
01:16:53.740
And as for the forced kiss, Tweeden says Franken wrote a script for the two where they had to kiss.
01:17:00.180
She says he wanted to rehearse the kiss backstage, but he forced a very vigorous French kiss.
01:17:10.280
She said she immediately shoved him away with both hands, ran to the bathroom to wash his taste out of her mouth.
01:17:18.840
Franken says he doesn't remember the rehearsal skit going quite the same way.
01:17:23.000
Who could have seen that one coming in Franken's apology?
01:17:27.140
He says he respects women, blah, blah, blah, and asked for a Senate ethics investigation on himself.
01:17:40.940
A Senate ethics investigation is what you order when you don't want someone to get into trouble because literally nothing ever comes out of those.
01:17:50.780
So don't even bother with the paperwork on the ethics investigation.
01:17:55.320
We have photographic evidence of Al's ethics and Al's respect for women.
01:18:02.240
Now, Al Franken is a professional comedian only because professional is defined as something you do that you get paid for.
01:18:13.920
But a guy like that doesn't get elected senator and, you know, and suddenly become Ward Cleaver.
01:18:19.300
The only surprise here is that it took nine years for something like this to come out about Al Franken.
01:18:43.600
Can you remind Glenn to tell his brush with fame story of being in line with Al Franken at an airport trying to rebook for a canceled flight?
01:18:59.100
It was the day after the election, not the election.
01:19:03.640
OK, so it's 2004 and everybody is in this airport.
01:19:09.840
I mean, you look around and it's like, hey, that's Tom Brokaw standing in line.
01:19:16.420
It's one of those weird things about elections, particularly in the primaries, that all the big media from New York and L.A.
01:19:23.440
and everywhere piles into Des Moines or some city in Iowa or New Hampshire, and then they're all together in these really weird circumstances.
01:19:30.940
And you see these people that you recognize all over the place at like Dunkin Donuts.
01:19:37.780
So we were in the airport and we're all standing in line.
01:19:48.800
And Stu and I are standing there and I'm just like, frickin Al Franken, man, what a loser.
01:19:55.000
And this is the time he's he's hosting like the left wing talk show.
01:20:10.460
I have a picture of this because I knew nobody would nobody would believe me.
01:20:25.460
OK, so I have some verification that we were at least in the same airport together.
01:20:33.580
And he says to the to the person behind the counter.
01:20:36.940
Now, you have to understand, hundreds of people are in line.
01:20:42.100
I don't know if I've ever been in an airport as crowded as that was that day.
01:20:45.220
Hundreds of people in line and there is a snow or something happened and all these flights
01:21:03.060
And surely there has to be some mechanism for people like me.
01:21:12.220
So it was said in a way that was about 10 times as snotty and condescending as you just said it to.
01:21:20.440
Oh, it was so it was just it just it was just such verification of what these people think about themselves
01:21:33.360
Yeah, it was it was 10 times as offensive as do you know who I am?
01:21:40.360
Like like surely there is a much nicer plane in a hangar someplace where people like me go.
01:21:51.620
Redirect me to the celebrity airport is what he was asking.
01:21:59.560
And he was, you know, he had done Saturday Night Live and he was doing the left wing talk show,
01:22:04.740
Now he actually has like those benefits he wanted probably from back in the day.
01:22:13.040
You know, I love the way that I love the way that everybody said, you know, oh, my gosh,
01:22:17.040
you know, he asked for the Senate investigation, which means nothing really means nothing.
01:22:22.640
Nobody literally nobody ever has anything wrong with their Senate investigation.
01:22:29.360
There's like I can't even remember what it is, like 300 investigations to zero, 300 investigations.
01:22:40.600
It's like literally nobody gets in trouble with a Senate investigation.
01:22:44.180
OK, so, you know, everybody's saying, yes, that's right.
01:22:49.840
However, Roy Moore doesn't need the investigation.
01:22:56.520
I think Roy Moore probably is somebody that shouldn't be in the Senate.
01:23:01.480
But I love the fact that it's like we're going to investigate Al Sharpton, but Roy Moore, we
01:23:19.240
I mean, Menendez was under an actual trial, a corruption trial.
01:23:24.940
We've talked about it here, but you've heard about it fairly rarely, I would say in the
01:23:35.740
Now, what's what's crazy about this speech is I was watching it and he's giving this.
01:23:46.140
And I'm trying to square it because underneath on the chyron, underneath on the lower third
01:23:51.520
of the TV, it said Menendez trial ends in hung jury.
01:23:56.740
And I'm like, wait, he's saying basically he won, but he never did.
01:24:06.480
It's the craziest damn thing you've ever heard.
01:24:09.160
To those who left me, who abandoned me in my darkest moment, I forgive you.
01:24:14.740
To those who embraced me in my darkest moment, I love you.
01:24:21.460
To those New Jerseyans who gave me the benefit of the doubt, I thank you.
01:24:28.080
To those who have a doubt, I'm going to work harder than ever before so that there is no
01:24:33.260
To those in the press who did their job and did it with professionalism and even to some
01:24:49.820
I believe you showed others what a professional press is all about and why that freedom is
01:24:58.620
To those who were digging my political grave so that they could jump into my seat.
01:25:06.380
I mean, almost word for word, that could have been Tom Brady's speech after the Super Bowl
01:25:12.220
I mean, it's like you didn't win the Super Bowl, dude.
01:25:16.240
In fact, you weren't even innocent in the corruption trial.
01:25:26.260
It could have been just one person going, I'm not changing my vote.
01:25:31.080
I mean, it's like, dude, you're going back inside again.
01:25:40.200
I mean, and they don't know if they will, whether they'll go after it again, but they
01:25:45.220
I think a lot of it comes down to, I haven't seen a report of what the split was yet.
01:25:48.880
If I were part of the prosecution and I was part of the government's case and I saw him
01:25:54.180
come out and say that, I'd be like, we're getting that son of a bitch.
01:26:00.900
Look, being charged with corruption and winning the trial.
01:26:04.620
Sure, there's a moment of personal relief, but this is not like the most glorious moment
01:26:37.840
Another, as if I knew there was one in the first place, another young millennial has reportedly
01:26:45.500
sold her virginity for millions on the internet.
01:26:52.660
Did you know there was one that had already done this?
01:26:56.180
I feel like we did cover one of these stories a few years ago.
01:26:59.480
No, back in April, a Hong Kong businessman paid $2.5 million for an 18-year-old Romanian
01:27:10.400
Just yesterday, we outlined that millions of millennials in the United States are starting
01:27:15.260
to trade sex for their next debt service payment.
01:27:22.920
As what we believe is a clear trend in millennials are resorting to sex for a real simple get
01:27:28.220
out of debt option or the chance for a better life.
01:27:31.800
The latest demand for virgins is coming from a businessman in Abu Dhabi.
01:27:51.440
He has agreed to pay $2.9 million for the virginity of a 19-year-old part-time student and model
01:28:01.100
The model, Giselle, is astounded by the overall outcome of the auction and says a Hollywood
01:28:09.040
actor and Russian politician were also in the running.
01:28:30.800
Have you, do you know what happens in Russia with the politicians?
01:28:40.180
You're going to have to be more specific in this particular story.
01:28:46.240
So she, so she's got, she's got a Hollywood actor, a Russian politician, and she's excited
01:29:00.040
Here she, here she is trying to sell herself for the dream come true.
01:29:13.520
I'm a part-time model as well as a part-time student.
01:29:16.280
I want to sell my virginity at Cinderella Escorts because I want to be able to pay for my school
01:29:24.820
I think I should be able to do what I want with my body because it's my choice and I feel
01:29:32.440
I want more opportunities to arise for me by doing this and hopefully good things will
01:29:40.100
I think usually selling yourself, you know, selling your virginity to the highest bidder to
01:29:47.980
You know, I think, I think it's logical to assume that good things will follow in the
01:30:00.240
And it's the same sort of society that will sit there and defend that, you know, that,
01:30:06.440
that sort of development, you know, selling your virginity that will sit here and she's
01:30:10.840
all the people who have been talking about the cretins of guys.
01:30:15.440
We'll support her because she said, I think it's my right to do whatever I want with my
01:30:20.900
And you can't, you can't oppose anything with that bumper sticker attached to it.
01:30:28.900
Tanya and I, one of the first to have the new wave mattresses from Casper.
01:30:33.060
What Casper did is they, they developed a really great foam mattress that does not trap the
01:30:42.660
Then they took three years of research and everything else and all of the data and the,
01:30:47.280
the, you know, the, the sleep science that's being developed.
01:30:53.920
Uh, and they attached it to a new mattress, a patent pending support system that mirrors
01:31:02.980
And it is especially built for people, uh, like me who, you know, have chronic pain either
01:31:08.980
in your hips or your knees or your, um, your shoulders or whatever.
01:31:12.260
The Casper wave mattress is a complete breakthrough for sleep.
01:31:16.680
And the leading designers and engineers in the field are the ones who designed it.
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Now you can try it in your own home for a hundred nights, risk-free with free shipping
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All you have to do is go to Casper.com and use the promo code back.
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See site for details, terms, and conditions to apply.
01:31:53.720
We're not even going to talk about the individual mandate, are we?
01:31:57.700
I want to make sure, just so the audience is clear.
01:32:00.200
With the current culture of the news, we have approximately two opportunities a year.
01:32:05.280
This is like a biannual thing where we can discuss a policy that affects the nation.
01:32:15.160
And I've brought it up to you several times because there's this whole claim going out
01:32:19.640
about 13 million people are going to lose their insurance if the individual mandate
01:32:24.100
They're saying it over and over and over again in the media.
01:32:28.360
And we could go through and dissect how that's not true so people know.
01:32:31.380
They can explain that to others who might ask at the Thanksgiving table, right?
01:32:37.360
Would you rather hear about the explorer that was looking for the lost tribe of headhunters
01:32:46.860
Or how about the movie employees that catch a couple having, quote, really fast sex at a
01:33:02.360
Well, after that, I want to get to the individual mandate breakdown.
01:33:14.920
Well, but now if you've promised the really fast sex story...
01:33:21.060
Okay, so they keep saying 13 million people will lose their insurance.
01:33:29.680
About 6.5 million people outside of the 13 million are unquestionably going to be doing
01:33:35.940
better in their lives because of the individual mandate repeal.
01:33:39.460
Because right now, they don't have insurance anyway, and they're paying an average of about
01:33:43.560
$500 to the government for the privilege of not having insurance.
01:33:49.080
So it's a $500 rebate to 6.5 million people that are low income who can't afford insurance
01:33:55.460
All of them will definitely be better off by the individual mandate.
01:34:00.600
They don't have to pay the fine anymore, right?
01:34:03.940
So 13 million people are going to lose their insurance according to every media source on
01:34:08.540
That is a projection in 2027, by the way, by the CBO.
01:34:13.140
But it does not say that those people will lose in health insurance.
01:34:15.960
40% of the number are people who are currently on Medicaid, okay?
01:34:19.660
The individual mandate won't repeal their access to Medicaid.
01:34:22.980
The CBO is trying to make you believe that for some reason, 5 million people who currently
01:34:28.400
have highly subsidized, almost free coverage for Medicaid will instead choose to reject their
01:34:34.780
insurance from Medicaid, which is almost free, just because they don't want to avoid the penalty
01:34:44.140
And even if it did happen, they wouldn't be losing insurance.
01:34:46.480
They would be choosing not to take the free insurance from the government, okay?
01:34:51.720
Another 15% of this number, 13 million, are people that currently have insurance through
01:34:57.520
So again, no one's going to lose their insurance here.
01:35:00.180
The CBO is saying that these people that currently say, yeah, I'll sign up for benefits at work
01:35:05.100
will now switch that decision to, no, I won't sign up for benefits to work just because they
01:35:17.800
And again, even if it did, it wouldn't be losing insurance.
01:35:20.280
There's another about 4% of the 13 million, which includes coverage under the basic health
01:35:25.300
program, a program that is 95% subsidized by the government.
01:35:29.100
But those people, too, are just going to decide, no, I don't want that 95% subsidy anymore.
01:35:33.540
But what about the 13 million that are going to lose their insurance?
01:35:50.420
Who is daring to challenge me to the armadillo race tomorrow at the Mercury One Fundraiser.
01:36:02.740
I'm not going to be able to pick my dillo, though, right?
01:36:15.040
Well, there's got to be some computer glitch or something that is funneling the people.
01:36:26.380
You can see the race at mercuryone.org slash armadillo.
01:36:29.680
More importantly, you could place your bet on one of us, not Jeffy.
01:36:40.680
Is that an American, as a human being, you want Jeffy to win something?
01:36:44.720
You want his entire streak of nonstop losses to be broken at 114 years old?
01:37:05.800
In today's world, that should be enough to get him kicked out of the race.
01:37:08.780
Yeah, we were talking about this a moment ago, where this woman who sold, or girl who
01:37:14.300
sold her virginity, she's 19 years old, for $2.9 million to somebody in Abu Dhabi.
01:37:20.200
That is apparently something to defend in our culture from the left.
01:37:27.300
But Louis C.K., who asked a woman, because he wanted to do things to himself in front of
01:37:33.880
her, which she agreed to, and then later felt bad about, he loses his career for that.
01:37:39.920
So if this 19-year-old sells her virginity and later feels bad about it, will it become
01:37:45.720
She will be a victim of this powerful man that took advantage of her?
01:37:52.740
I mean, it's a powerful, rich man taking advantage of a 19-year-old that is in a sorry state.
01:37:59.440
And yet, the same people who are upset in Hollywood are the same people that will applaud
01:38:13.800
And by the way, I think there's a chance that he regrets it faster than she does.
01:38:19.280
Oh, I think, yes, speed-wise, he will regret it very quickly.
01:38:23.540
If you have to pay almost $3 million to have sex with somebody, that's pretty desperate.
01:38:31.860
And then the inflation is incredible from the documentary Hostile, which showed these.
01:38:44.700
This is more public, so maybe that's the reason.
01:38:46.400
I'm having dinner tonight with Chuck Norris, and I don't know what to talk about.
01:39:00.560
A lot of times, I'm just at, like, Whataburger.
01:39:02.100
I don't know what to talk to him about, really.
01:39:25.280
I mean, what do you say to a guy who goes to Colt and says, hey, I want you to design a gun about me and for me.
01:39:44.920
It has Chuck Norris' face engraved in gold on the side of the gun.
01:39:51.980
Now, I don't have many weapons at all with my face engraved in gold on it.
01:40:15.520
So that's going to be up for auction tomorrow, along with everything else.
01:40:20.140
And there's some things that you might want to bid on, and you can't go to the auction,
01:40:25.160
but you can join online, and it happens tomorrow night.
01:40:29.540
And if you happen to be someplace and you want to buy, you know, for instance, this gun
01:40:33.040
or one of the other things that are up for auction, we've got trips, and we have some
01:40:38.460
really cool pieces of history that we're going to auction off.
01:40:52.240
This had never even really been seen until I bought it, and we've made a watermark copy
01:40:59.000
of it that is suitable for framing, and it's beautiful.
01:41:02.120
And if you would like to get a copy of that, you can go to mercuryone.org and bid on it.
01:41:09.700
Plus, Aaron Watson's going to be performing tomorrow night.
01:41:33.960
You can grab your tickets at mercuryone.org slash m1ball and you can find everything about
01:41:46.260
And we'd love to have you or just at least a $5 donation to help keep the doors open.
01:41:50.260
We're going to announce something tomorrow night about the Nazarene Fund that is really,
01:42:06.180
I have not been that surprised since Richard Simmons came out of the closet.
01:42:14.500
Well, if he comes out of the closet, I'll be just as surprised.
01:42:23.220
You know what has disturbed me, though, out of everybody that has been revealed here is
01:42:57.620
They make sure that they're not Ruskies, that they're real Americans.
01:43:13.100
You know, I was defending him with Jackie, with my wife, when it first came out, because
01:43:16.880
you know, you're at butt level when you're in the wheelchair.
01:43:21.540
Honestly, I thought it was a joke that was just trying to make himself feel comfortable
01:43:28.740
Once I realized, wait, they're now saying he did it when he was younger.
01:43:37.500
Well, I said, he's, you know, he's old now and he's losing his functions and he's losing
01:43:46.500
And she said, no, that just means that he's had that propensity his whole life.
01:43:52.660
And now I'm starting to think maybe she's right.
01:43:56.020
Because I think you can make that argument with him being 93 years old.
01:43:59.880
And as it came out that it was younger, it was kind of kind of strange.
01:44:03.620
And I think it was Ben Shapiro that pointed out, can you imagine if a 79, 89 year old
01:44:10.100
Bill Clinton was going around patting women on their butts during photo ops, how we would
01:44:16.460
I will say it would not be a positive reaction.
01:44:23.680
I mean, you know, if he was even senile, if he was in the wheelchair and he was making
01:44:29.160
a joke and he was putting his arms around people and patting, there's a difference between
01:44:42.320
So I might have given even Bill Clinton the benefit of the doubt.
01:44:45.960
If you're senile, you pretty much get a benefit of the doubt for everything.
01:44:48.280
And when you're 93 and you're being pushed around in a wheelchair.
01:44:50.520
But my thing would be keep him away from the public.
01:45:05.180
That way he won't have to check to see if they're roost kings or not.
01:45:13.220
The New York Times has a column, A Christian Case Against the Pence Rule.
01:45:19.500
And it goes on to describe why, and this is all over the place, I guess, not just the
01:45:25.560
But it's this idea that the Pence Rule, which isn't really the Pence Rule, I think he said
01:45:29.020
it once in an interview, that he doesn't go alone.
01:45:35.460
And that is, I think, more of a defense against you getting into a romantic relationship that's
01:45:43.460
Or someone accusing you of something that you didn't do.
01:45:48.220
Or leaving the impression to others that something might be going on when it's not.
01:45:54.760
It's not really, like, the left keeps pushing back on this and saying, oh, you can't be alone
01:46:01.520
Maybe you just shouldn't sexually assault them!
01:46:09.760
What were we having a conversation about yesterday, Stu?
01:46:15.740
We were in a shoot, and so we were kind of standing around, and we were talking about
01:46:20.600
this, and Stu said, you know, how long is it going to be, you know, before somebody
01:46:27.700
And we were joking that there's just no mojo with me, so, like, it's just not going to
01:46:38.360
The negative testosterone numbers are probably part of that.
01:46:41.020
So we were talking about it, and, you know, one of my protectors was there, and he said,
01:46:48.940
you know, sir, there's no way that anyone can say anything, because we're with you all
01:46:58.760
So, though, again, they, you know, they're paid by you, right?
01:47:06.020
But, I mean, it would be interesting to see how that would play, because they would just
01:47:10.200
Again, when this happens, it's someone targeting you, right?
01:47:17.160
And apparently, a lot of people knew about that this was kind of a thing.
01:47:20.020
Well, they keep saying that, yeah, he just does that.
01:47:30.460
Like, I think there's an argument to be made, you know, as you point out, like, he's senile.
01:47:34.600
If he's doing something like this, let's just say it was just the senile stuff, right?
01:47:39.600
That doesn't mean, though, that it's okay for the woman, right?
01:47:42.440
Like, she shouldn't be handled that way just because he has problems.
01:47:46.360
It's up to you to make sure that they don't get close to women's...
01:47:50.380
He doesn't get close to women's boss if that's what he's doing, and he's saying he's senile.
01:47:53.580
And in a number of these instances, Barbara was there.
01:48:00.020
Did you see the thing about Sylvester Stallone?
01:48:17.480
The account is strange in that it seems that she actually did agree to have sex with him.
01:48:24.640
And then he invited someone in, and she didn't say no, but she did not want it, basically.
01:48:41.280
He's not commented on it at all yet, I don't think.
01:49:00.900
And so when they're done, he says, I want you to meet so-and-so.
01:49:05.240
And he forces her, and then the two of them go at her at the same time.
01:49:16.300
And, I mean, do we know what the age of consent is?
01:49:25.040
But it was also during the filming of Over the Top.
01:49:28.780
As you know, there's a long history of arm wrestling movies that lead to good outcomes.
01:49:43.280
Finally, somebody has cracked open the world of arm wrestling.
01:49:51.180
As there is a pent-up demand for Pat Gray Unleashed, which comes up on this particular network,
01:49:56.180
here in just moments on Blaze Radio and the Blaze TV.
01:50:03.480
I want to talk to you a little bit about Goldline.
01:50:07.180
As you know, I believe things are dramatically changing.
01:50:23.480
You should have just the amount of money that you're willing to walk away and completely lose.
01:50:41.880
At the beginning of summer, it was like at $1,100.
01:50:44.120
But last weekend, it had fallen down from $75 to $55.
01:51:12.260
So when the world goes mad and continues to do what they said, first of all, that they would never, ever do,
01:51:23.540
People have been doing this since the beginning of time.
01:51:28.200
The money becomes worthless, and they have to return to the gold standard.
01:51:32.560
So my insurance is, eventually the world's going to return to the gold standard, and I'll have something.
01:51:39.760
If you would like to be smart and look at gold as an insurance policy with me,
01:51:52.580
Right now, Goldline is offering free gift cards and qualified purchases,
01:51:58.720
And they'll give you a free American lapel pin just for calling in to learn more.
01:52:03.180
Make sure you read their important risk information.
01:52:05.000
Find out if it's right for you by calling 866-GOLDLINE, 1-866-GOLDLINE, or goldline.com.
01:52:24.440
Well, we're headed off for a week for Thanksgiving.
01:52:30.500
I hope you have a great Thanksgiving with your family.
01:52:32.880
Remember, we're just a phone call away, so when the family arrives,
01:52:37.200
and you feel like you really need somebody to tell them to shut up,
01:52:40.240
just call us, and we'll put us on the speakerphone, and we'll deal with the relatives.