9⧸1⧸17 - Big changes at Glenn's company (Todd Staples, Poland's Mateusz Morawiecki & Bill O'Reilly join Glenn)
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 52 minutes
Words per Minute
167.90453
Summary
Blaze Radio Network, on Demand Hurricane Harvey is about to be the second most costly natural disaster in U.S. history, trailing only the devastation from Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Gas is coming, the waters are receding, and there is a flotilla coming from Europe.
Transcript
00:00:07.760
Hurricane Harvey is about to be the second most costly natural disaster in U.S. history,
00:00:15.660
trailing only the devastation from Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Yesterday we had a chemical
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plant have a couple of explosions because there's no electricity. The chemicals that were made there
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needed refrigeration. They hit critical temperature yesterday and blew up. The gas,
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I wouldn't call it a gas panic, but people are a little freaked out here.
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I looked on the gas app today to find out which gas stations around me have gasoline. In my
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neighborhood, there were three. Yeah, there's a lot of them. What, that had gas? That had gas, yeah.
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Yeah, yeah. They all started being shipped in. On my app, there were three gas stations. That's
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pretty good. I mean, I don't know. Maybe you're living in some nice place that they're shipping
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it in, but I need to know about it. A friend of mine last night went to the gas station at 10 o'clock,
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didn't get home till 1 a.m. here in the gas. But in Texas, this probably was preventable,
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and we'll tell you about that. And there is no reason to panic. Gas is coming. The waters are
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starting to recede. And there is a flotilla coming from Europe. The Europeans, try this on for size,
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are sending the United States refined gasoline. And it's on ships on its way here to the United States.
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There's a lot that's been happening this week. And we begin there right now.
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I will make a stand. I will raise my voice. I will hold your hand. Cause we are one.
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I will beat my drum. I have made my choice. We will overcome. Cause we are one.
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The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck program.
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Bill O'Reilly's coming up in just about an hour. We also have the deputy prime minister of Poland,
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who happens to be in town. And he's like, look, I sping by. I'm like, okay. So he's going to be,
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I don't know why he sounded like Dracula there for a second, but he's going to come by and talk a
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little bit about what's happening in Poland. What's really fascinating to me is Poland is,
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I believe, the only European country that has not had a terror attack.
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By the way, in completely unrelated news, they are also the only country that hasn't allowed any
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of the refugees in. But let's not concentrate on that. Also, Todd's strange coincidence.
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It is. And just a coincidence. There's no correlation. Todd Staples also, he's the president
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of the Texas Oil and Gas Association. He is going to be joining us today as well. I think,
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is anybody coming with me tomorrow? I'm going down to Galveston tomorrow. We're loading up. We
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can't get, we can't get the gas to go down and offload, you know, this, this tractor trailer full
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of water and food and blankets and everything else. So we're loading up the DC-9 and putting
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pallets of water and food and everything else. And we can get jet fuel. So we're going to fly
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into Houston tomorrow and offload and, and do some work in the kitchens tomorrow and help people try
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to get their life back. And then just offload it onto the tarmac and just let people come get it
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there. It's like, it's at the tarmac. We're going to Vegas now. Good luck. Uh, it's, it's weird.
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This gas thing, how people, at least in my life, how people are now like, it's the first thing this
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morning, my daughter, dad, should we buy a Tesla? I'm like, okay, you just want a Tesla. Stop it.
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It happens so fast though. You go from, oh, I can get gas every minute of my life. It's the easiest
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thing in the world to, oh my God, I'll never have to, I'll never pull up to a pump again. Well,
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that was the reaction. Uh, yes, most of yesterday, but seriously, there were, I mean, there was very
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few gas stations that didn't have gas on my way in this morning. Not my experience, but yeah, I did
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have several that I went to last night to try to put gas in my car. And of course, all of them had
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no gas. There's one gas station that had gas and the line was a quarter mile down the street. Well,
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that's what this, this, this woman that I know did last night. She went out 10 o'clock at night and
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she's like, Hey, they got gas there. I'm going to go get gas. She didn't get back home until one o'clock
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and the gas station was right around the corner. She just stood it. It's just stood in line.
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I mean, it's the, it's the, it's the gas crisis of the 1970s. I mean, just at a very, very light,
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short form here in Texas. However, in the 1970s, you did not have Uber and Lyft, uh, which is how I
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got to work today. Is that really how you got to work? Yeah. Cause I, I was like, I was low enough
00:05:04.680
that I was like, if I get here, I might not, if there's not a gas station right around here,
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I might run out. So that's, that is the problem. That's why, you know, we're having to, to fly to
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Houston tomorrow because if we bring these trucks and we all just pack it up in our cars, cause that's
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what we're going to do. Just caravan down, pack it up on our cars. We're not sure any of us can get
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back. Like you can't, you, we might get gas here, then go down and then come back. Are we going to
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make it? Are you going to have gas when you get back? Should we buy a Tesla? I know. Yes,
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we should. Wouldn't we, shouldn't we? There's just going to be so many things when the crap
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really hits the fan. There's so many things that, for instance, this is, this is why, uh,
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what's his name? Uh, Carol Quigley who wrote the book in the 1960s. What was that book?
00:06:01.880
Quick anybody? Carol Quigley. We just talked about that the other day. No, it's the one that
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predicted there'd be no more war as we knew war. It would be a new kind of thing where nobody does
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it right. Carol Quigley. Remember that? Yeah. This is a, this is a book. What? Yes. Tragedy and hope.
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Yeah. The tragedy was the world wars that we had gone through. And then the hope was at the end of
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all wars because, uh, we're tied together economically and financially, and there's no
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way we're going to have war. Of course, the only thing, one line in like an 800 page book,
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one line that just says this, the only problem is that, you know, the whole thing would collapse if,
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if the world that would ever come against, you know, a barbarian kind of people that lived in caves
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and didn't care about a national order. Oh, okay. So the other little problem is because we don't
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have the wars that are really serious, we'll just have perpetual war that will never end. Yeah,
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but don't, but that'll be small war. Don't worry about that. That'll be small war. A little teeny war
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that continues to kill for decades. So last night, my son and I are talking about, um, he, he likes to
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have, you know, a little history off. And, uh, he's like, yeah, yeah, let me, let me, let me,
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let me tell you about something. And, uh, so last night, I don't know much about ancient Greece.
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And, uh, and last night he was telling me about the Trojan war and he said, I should have been
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listening to him cause now I can't remember if it was six to, I think it was 15 years or something
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like that. He said, dad, the Trojan war that, you know, nobody made, nobody made any ground until,
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you know, the Trojan horse. And I'm like, is that true? There's a Trojan horse thing really even true.
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And he's like, yeah, it's true. And it's the only way that the Greeks made any headway,
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uh, was at that point, it was a stalemate. And he said, it went on forever. It was like 15 years.
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And I said, you know, our country has been at war now for 16 years. Oh boy.
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Stu is upset. Come on with that. It's such a stupid stat. It's not, it's not a real statistic.
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What? It is not. It's a silly. You're right. You're right. Oh my gosh. Oh my gosh. Wait,
00:08:16.940
wait, wait for this one. Wait for this one. Wait for this one. By the way, I don't really mean it this
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way. Just Stu is going to get really pissed off. Stu. Uh, yeah. The only reason why it's not a real
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statistic is because no president has actually declared it a war. If they would have declared
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it a war, then, then we would have been done with it. And it, yeah, they don't even declare
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it because of the federal reserve. That's not where I'm going. Um, I mean, I'm sorry. Like,
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you, you know, you, first of all, everyone always says that we're still in technical war with,
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with in Korea. Yes. Right. So then if that's true, then it's not our longest war because Korea
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is still going on, which I think is a stupid technicality as well. And that's why this thing
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I think is a stupid technicality. For example, um, you know, yes, it is a war and yes, it's
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important. And every single person that's over there fighting, I mean, like it's incredible
00:09:08.720
what they've done. And, um, every time we lose someone, it is incredibly tragic. However,
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it is not comparable to world war two. It's not comparable to these previous wars because
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of the death toll we have chosen as a country. And again, I think this is part of what, what
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you talked about in tragedy and hope is that we've chosen as a country to fight wars in a
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different way. And we have talked about it, how it's not like, it's not a lot, it's a lot
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harder to win. They take longer. We kill a lot less civilians. We get a lot less of our own
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troops killed. For example, we've lost more people this year in boating accidents, ship
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accidents than we have during the war in Afghanistan. Now, is it a war? It is a war. And yes, technically
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it's still going on. However, it's a completely different, you cannot compare it. We would
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lose that in five minutes in world war two. I agree with you, but I'd have to ask my son
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Rafe about the Greek war. I would imagine it was the same kind of thing that the country
00:10:04.660
was off to war and it wasn't really affecting the everyday people. When wars don't affect
00:10:10.880
the everyday people, they tend to go on and on and on and people don't really care because
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they're not really affected by it. But it's not that you don't care. I mean, we all care
00:10:22.020
about this. I don't think the average person even really knows where we are. I don't think,
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and I don't know how to say it, that they don't care like, I don't care if anybody dies. It's
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not that. They don't care because it's not affecting them. They're not paying attention
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to it. You know, it's like, I don't know. Ask them, where are we? Why are we there? What's
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our objective? They won't know. The average person won't know. So I don't mean that it's
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like, they don't care. They don't, they don't know what they don't even know. And nobody's
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That's true. I mean, it has, it's a totally different scale. I mean, back in world war
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two, we all knew, I didn't know. I mean, Jeffy certainly did. Um, you know, uh, Jeffy's
00:11:04.240
children, Jeffy was starting to lose it about the time of world war. Yeah. Well, his great
00:11:08.040
grandchildren fought in that war though. And, uh, but I mean, like, you know, that was, I mean,
00:11:12.460
the effect on communities and, and, you know, it, I know it was horrific and it, you know,
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any war is, is awful. I, you know, it's not to downplay it at all, but it's, it's just,
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it's a situation where I think the media uses that stat that this is America's longest war
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just to be, to criticize the military and say, we're at war forever. That's not what I'm saying.
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I know, but that's, but you're, you're saying it maybe in a different way, but the stat in
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itself is meaningless when you compare it to other wars. If you're saying it's our longest
00:11:41.520
war, you're using that to compare it to other wars and it's a meaningless comparison. I don't
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want to be at war. I don't want to be at war either. I don't be at war. I don't, I don't
00:11:49.800
want our military firing guns. I don't, I mean, unless we're there to win it and win it
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quickly. I don't want, I don't want them fired upon. I don't, I don't want, I want a strong
00:12:01.480
deterrence, but I don't want to be in conflict. And when we're in conflict, I don't want to
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do what Carol Quigley and tragedy and hope suggested. And that was just fight it in a
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limited way. So then there's no real victor and no real pain anywhere. Cause our economies
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all depend on each other. No, no, that's immoral. That's putting our economies over right and
00:12:27.160
wrong. If a, if a war is worth fighting, then fight it with everything that you have,
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kill it and then come back. Yeah, we just don't do that. We don't. I just don't. We haven't
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done it since, since that book came out that it's been the exact opposite of that. He said,
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he said in that book, and by the way, if you don't know, Carol Quigley, he was a Harvard
00:12:49.100
professor. He was a consultant, if you will, for, you know, all the way president, I think
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FDR, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy. Then he came back for Nixon and maybe a little Ford.
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I'm not sure, but he was, he was a close advisor to the presidents and he was the guy who helped
00:13:08.380
come up with the cold war and mutually assured destruction and everything else. And he said,
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the whole thing is changing. Now, the problem is, is that everything that Carol Quigley said
00:13:18.480
was a solution is now our Achilles heel, because now you do have people who don't care about
00:13:27.700
anarchy, who are, we have them in our own streets. We don't have to worry about ISIS. We have them in
00:13:34.380
our own streets. We have the Nazis calling for destruction of our government and our system.
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We have the anarchist and Antifa doing exactly the same thing. Hell, we have our own professors
00:13:46.860
in our universities calling for that. Well, that is exactly what Carol Quigley said. This system
00:13:54.500
cannot contain or fight against. It will lose. We are, if that is the way the world is going,
00:14:03.200
and it is, then we are sitting here as a, as a, a sitting duck, just like the English were when they
00:14:14.500
said, everybody, we're going to play by the rules. We're going to line up in rows where these really
00:14:20.300
bright red jackets. So everybody knows exactly where we are. And you just hold the line. Um,
00:14:26.920
they're behind the trees. You hold the line. They are not playing by the rules. We're playing by the
00:14:33.280
rules. The West is playing by the rules. And when that happens, according to Carol Quigley, who helped set
00:14:40.740
this globalization, you know, stuff up, that won't work. That won't work. It will destroy the system.
00:14:48.420
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weekend. SimpliSafeBeck.com. You're listening. You're listening. To the Glenn Beck Program.
00:16:07.540
The Glenn Beck Program. Mercury. The Glenn Beck Program. 888-727-BECK.
00:16:18.740
So here is something that you're not going to hear everywhere. Uh, Harvey is not a result of
00:16:27.160
global warming. Uh, no. You bastard. No. What? No, no, no. And for those of you who are like,
00:16:33.260
ah, Glenn Beck, he seems to be making excuses for global warming. No, no. No, it's bigger than global
00:16:38.980
warming. Uh, I just, this coming from a really good source, uh, a website we've never heard of,
00:16:45.720
and, uh, they lay out a pretty strong case. This is actually the federal government. Hurricane Sandy
00:16:53.380
was not a major hurricane, though it caused major damage. How many remember the scenario with
00:16:57.920
Hurricane Sandy? Miraculously, weather forecasters somehow knew seven days in advance that Hurricane
00:17:02.860
Sandy would make an unprecedented 90 degree westerly turn exactly where it did. Can you stop for a
00:17:09.240
familiar? It does. Okay. So let me, let me tell you something else. So I'm listening to, uh, I'm
00:17:16.520
listening to Pandora yesterday and miraculously this radio station just knows exactly what I want to
00:17:23.840
hear. Miraculously, it just kind of sorts through all of my likes and dislikes and it's miraculously
00:17:30.960
just finding these songs. Is that, or is there someone living inside of my house that knows
00:17:39.820
everything about me that's picking those things? Now it could be AI or it could be somebody living
00:17:46.080
in the house. AI doesn't know that you only like Barbara Streisand. Exactly right. Can I tell you
00:17:51.580
something? Computer modeling and, and, and weather forecasting has not gotten better. As we know
00:17:59.620
from Joe Bastardi yesterday, there is no way you can read those models. No, there's no way to predict
00:18:07.740
the weather. Right. What? Come on. How did they all know in advance? It's like they have a
00:18:15.760
giant industry to predict these things on a daily basis or something. It's crazy. Ties it all in here.
00:18:22.100
I'm an engineering. It's not just a dangerous proposal. It's long since been a lethal reality
00:18:27.060
for some 70 plus years. As Harvey was making landfall, the radio frequency microwave transmissions
00:18:32.780
being used by the weather makers to manipulate Harvey were undeniable. Thank you. Deniable.
00:18:39.960
You can't use that word if it is deniable. No, can I tell you something? Did you, did anyone
00:18:43.760
in the Houston area, did anyone in Houston area, did you notice that your microwaves were
00:18:48.680
being used all of a sudden and you didn't have a bagel in it? Why were you putting your
00:18:53.260
bagel, your, your microwaving your bagel? Yeah. I mean, don't make, that's your number
00:18:59.280
one use of a microwave that you go to is a bagel. Mine is actually, mine is more like
00:19:03.540
in the hot chocolate realm. Okay. Uh, but, uh, anyway, so did you notice that your microwave
00:19:08.540
was being used? Huh? I bet they didn't. I bet they didn't notice that. Hey, let me ask
00:19:13.660
you this. Your house is underwater. Your microwave working still? No, they're destroying the evidence.
00:19:21.780
I'm just saying it's undeniable. It is undeniable. I mean, what would be the purpose of sending
00:19:28.660
Harvey into Houston to wreak havoc on it? Uh, okay. Um, wow. You are, you know, I guess
00:19:34.020
I remember when I was young and naive. Yeah. I'm just a tad confused as to what the end game
00:19:38.560
is. Because the global establishment, the military industrial complex wants to seize
00:19:44.480
control and overthrow the United States. The big bankers are in on it. They're collapsing
00:19:50.120
the economy to keep you afraid. And, uh, there's a big global change because we're been at war.
00:19:57.120
This is the longest war ever, you know, and they're bringing the troops into the United States.
00:20:02.040
That's what's happening. Okay. And let me tell you, Barack Obama is never going to leave
00:20:05.900
the Oval Office. I don't care what you say. Wait, but Donald Trump is wearing a mask. That's
00:20:10.620
Barack Obama. You're listening to the Glenn Beck Program. Mercury. The Glenn Beck Program.
00:20:22.300
Man dressed as Spider-Man came into a Texas shelter yesterday for the Hurricane Harvey evacuees.
00:20:29.000
Uh, the children went nuts. You know, you never, you never think of this from the child's perspective.
00:20:35.980
Imagine what this is like for a child to all of a sudden, it could either be really, really fun
00:20:42.220
or what a nightmare that would be, um, to lose the house and be, you know, sleeping on the floor of a
00:20:49.640
convention center for a while. Of course, probably better than the parents, but glad to see somebody was
00:20:55.900
thinking about the kids. Also listen to this local father of triplets saved another single father of
00:21:01.180
triplets from his flooded home in a place called Orange, Texas. Nolan Greenwood. Nolan Greenwood is
00:21:09.100
a single father of triplets. Last night he was wrapping up some of his, um, you know, rescue efforts and he
00:21:19.280
heard that there was a single father of one-year-old triplets that was stuck in their home.
00:21:28.160
He has been a single father of one-year-old triplets himself. He said, we decided to do whatever
00:21:37.080
we could to get the family safe. We were able to load them up and take them to high ground where they
00:21:43.120
could be shipped to Lafayette or Alexandria mission complete. Now this is what is, this is what his
00:21:48.280
best friend of 40 years said. He said it was actually really touching because he saved a life
00:21:54.460
of a family that was the mirror image of his own. He had lost his wife about a year earlier, about this
00:22:02.500
time. Being a single dad with triplets has been really tough on him, said his friend. It's pretty
00:22:08.060
emotional. I don't mean to be a big baby here, but what are the odds? This is divine
00:22:12.960
intervention. If that's not the definition of divine intervention, I don't know what is.
00:22:20.960
Now imagine you are struggling. You're coming up on the first year anniversary of your wife's death,
00:22:27.860
the birthday of your children, the triplets. You're a single dad of triplets. I mean, that's a
00:22:35.860
lightning strike. How many, how many single dads of triplets are there? So he's a single dad of
00:22:44.100
triplets. He's struggling at this time. He happens to be, you know, helping people out and he finds
00:22:52.300
out, he finds out that there is a dad in the area that they're serving who is a one year single dad
00:23:00.120
of triplets and he has to go save. I mean, what are the odds? Seriously, only a weather, a government,
00:23:07.300
a government weather machine could have done that. Seriously. Really the only, really the only
00:23:12.240
answer. I mean, the odds have got to be three to one, four to one. I would say almost, I mean,
00:23:18.180
maybe not four to one, but three and a half to one. Come on. I mean, really, they might be a little
00:23:23.160
really higher, higher than that. Interesting. We'll have to get this story to geoengineeringwatch.org
00:23:28.360
and see what they have to say about it. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Because unless they say,
00:23:32.500
unless they say, yeah, let's, let's greenlight the fact that yes, Harvey was manipulated so that
00:23:38.700
they could get these two fathers together. That's really, that's a really incredible story. It is.
00:23:44.540
He said, doesn't matter what color or race you are. None of that matters out here. The whole point
00:23:49.600
is you got to love your neighbor and get people out. We have to save each other. So white people who
00:23:55.580
are driving around in boats, don't see black people and just drive past them. They, they go
00:24:00.140
ahead and put them in the boat. Well, unlike the enlightened New York city dwellers who do that
00:24:05.480
with taxi cabs all the time. No, in the racist Houston, that's not happening. No, isn't that,
00:24:10.820
isn't that weird? But why did you expect the white people had the boats and the black people?
00:24:14.720
Well, I was about to do the other two, the other, the inverse of that with the black people driving
00:24:19.440
the boat past the white people. Right. But you didn't, but I didn't. And you started with the
00:24:24.680
white, you started with the white supremacy there. Once again, the white person comes first.
00:24:30.240
That's the kind of stuff that Pat will now be bringing you every day. Pat is, we've announced,
00:24:38.260
in fact, I think we're announcing right now for the first time that Pat is going to be doing his
00:24:43.900
own show following this program, three hour, uh, unleashed Pat unleashed because that chain around
00:24:53.340
his neck is starting to chafe just a little bit, a little bit. Yeah. Uh, and, uh, so that'll be on
00:24:59.780
blaze TV and blaze radio starting a week from Monday. Yes. Right. Yes. Uh, can you, um, there may be
00:25:06.920
slightly, slightly less mentions of the word love? Is it undeniable? It's undeniable. It's undeniable.
00:25:23.940
Take me with you. Oh gosh, I wish I could. When I proposed this, Stu was like, I, I, I, I, I,
00:25:33.360
I, I can go too, right? I can go. Isn't there something like a Stockholm syndrome that's supposed
00:25:41.180
to happen with you guys? We really love our captor. Really good to us. Right. Right. Okay.
00:25:55.080
I'm really excited for that. It's, it's going to be on, if you're a blaze TV subscriber, you get to
00:25:59.100
watch it and it's going to be on blaze radio every single day. Uh, the, uh, the Pat Gray,
00:26:03.940
uh, show, what do you know what you're calling it yet? That's great. It's something I think we're
00:26:08.860
going out on a limb and calling it Pat Gray. Oh my gosh. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's
00:26:14.020
interesting. What was very clever. What made that show? I don't understand the choice. We did a lot
00:26:18.140
of focus groups. We did a lot of focus groups. Yeah, we did. We went to a big New York agency and
00:26:23.840
said, we have all of these options, uh, and we don't know where to, and they did some focus
00:26:28.600
groups. It costs about half a million dollars. And they said, what do you say? We're going out
00:26:34.300
on a limb, either boxy, but good or just Pat Gray. Yeah. I went with Pat Gray. Even though
00:26:44.440
boxy, but good was tempting. It was tempting. We liked it. So, uh, Pat's going to be doing that
00:26:52.940
yesterday. Uh, you know, in case you've read it, hopefully you, you know, you got it from
00:26:57.600
my post and, you know, and, uh, you can believe whatever you want. Um, but, uh, yesterday we
00:27:04.420
made some changes here. Cause as I've been talking about for a while, um, and I said yesterday
00:27:09.740
on the air that, um, I met with some banking people just this week and they were talking,
00:27:15.060
I said, you know, I, I think the days of, of business being done the way it's always been
00:27:22.740
done is over. And I don't think people really understand that yet. And I've been warning you
00:27:29.260
for a long time. There's going to come a time to where we're going to cross this line and
00:27:36.520
all of the changes that the industrial revolution brought over a hundred years. Remember they went
00:27:42.600
from Americans went from a farming community to a, uh, culture living in the cities on top of each
00:27:51.240
other with radio communication and automated machines and cars and everything else that took
00:27:58.560
about a hundred years to flip the entire society over. There's going to come a time where it's going
00:28:05.620
to happen in a 10 year period and it will be as dramatic if not more so, but in a 10 year
00:28:12.480
period, I've been warning that that time is coming. And I've been saying, I don't know
00:28:17.760
when that is happening. I still don't, but I believe I'm betting that we've just crossed
00:28:24.440
the threshold. I think we are, we've just crossed the Rubicon, uh, of, of change and there's no
00:28:33.340
way this is going to slow down or stop now. And it's going to affect everyone. And as I was
00:28:39.740
talking to these bankers, they said, um, they said that's happening in our business. That's
00:28:45.220
happening. We said, we're seeing this in every business that if you don't disrupt yourself
00:28:50.920
and I mean, seriously disrupt yourself, you're not going to make it. And we started talking
00:28:56.820
about how does a bank invest when, when there is no such thing as like a CapEx expense, when
00:29:04.200
you can't say, Hey, I need, you know, a loan for $2 million for this software system or for
00:29:09.420
whatever, when two years in that software system could be completely outdated and replaced by
00:29:18.180
something that, you know, is a free app. And he said, I don't know. We haven't figured that
00:29:24.980
one out yet. So we're just in this really weird world of chaos and we're making some changes here
00:29:33.860
to, uh, reduce the chaos and try to try to explain your world and have it make sense.
00:29:41.160
Going over to the blaze radio also is, uh, Jeffy, uh, Jeffy is going to be, um, operations for the
00:29:49.700
blaze radio. Um, and Jeffy, no, nobody really knows this. Jeffy is, uh, just a anchor around
00:29:57.360
all of our necks. We tell them all the time. Most people don't know this, but Jeffy, uh,
00:30:04.560
when I worked at WFLA, Jeffy was pretty much running the place. Um, yeah, you were. Um, and,
00:30:13.240
uh, and he is big behind the scenes. A lot of people say, I don't know what Jeffy does,
00:30:19.640
for a living. He actually is, uh, he's responsible for the blaze radio. And he's going to, um,
00:30:28.880
fully take over that position, uh, beginning Monday is or Tuesday, uh, as well. Really cool.
00:30:35.400
I will say, uh, on this, uh, we've been talking about, you know, all these things that are going
00:30:40.520
on. There's been, you know, the hurricane stuff we've been talking about. Can I eliminate you from
00:30:45.260
this conversation for one minute? Can I take the one back? Is there a sports analogy coming? Okay,
00:30:51.380
good. Yes. Uh, Houston in need of some good news. The Houston Astros have just acquired Justin
00:30:57.380
Verlander. Wow. For their playoff run, which is a huge deal. I mean, they're already one of the
00:31:05.720
best teams in the league. This is, uh, I mean, I knew they were thinking about that, but I didn't
00:31:09.580
think it was possible. It's a small piece here with what's going on in Houston. And it's hard
00:31:14.060
to take any joy, but I mean, if you're a sports fan in Houston, that is a huge move. Yeah. And
00:31:19.340
just, just went down. And the Astros, by the way, are coming back to town and they're going to play
00:31:23.480
at Minute Maid on Sunday, which seems really soon. I mean, that they don't seem ready for that,
00:31:28.840
but yeah, they're going to play at Minute Maid Park on Sunday. Start a three game. I'm really
00:31:32.180
interested to see how, now that the waters are receding, um, how, you know, cause like half of
00:31:39.280
that city, you know, not affected more than half of that city, just not affected, but the parts that
00:31:44.620
were affected or like that did quite bad, what is going to happen? We should get somebody on that
00:31:50.840
knows about, you know, black mold and what happens in cities like this. What, how, what is the percentage
00:31:57.840
of that city that's going to be able to survive? I mean, what happened? I don't even remember this.
00:32:04.720
What happened in new Orleans? Cause new Orleans is the same kind of weather. How much, how much was
00:32:09.600
the mold problem in new Orleans or does anybody, anybody care? I mean, yeah, I don't know. I mean,
00:32:15.040
it was so many other bigger problems than that in new Orleans. Uh, and I'm sure the same thing is
00:32:18.860
going to be happening here. I don't, I don't know the fallout of that. It had to be terrible. Yeah. I mean,
00:32:23.020
they were tearing down neighborhoods. So it must've been, I don't know if that was because of mold
00:32:27.660
or just because of the water damage. I mean, ugly, it's going to be bad. 20 trillion gallons of
00:32:34.780
rain fell on Houston, $97 billion estimated in destruction alone. The governor has 32,000 shelters
00:32:44.000
across Texas. 94,000 homes are destroyed. 10,000 rescued by federal forces. That doesn't include
00:32:53.500
the good Samaritan rescues rescues. I can't imagine what the good Samaritans, just people
00:32:58.680
helping each other out. I'm sure more than 10,000 with the federal 47 dead at last count.
00:33:05.900
The count is climbing faster now because they're going into the flooded homes and really, really
00:33:13.340
sad. That'll be a really, that's, that was creepy during Katrina. We're here where you see people
00:33:18.260
walking down the street and you see the spray paint, you know, remember the circles with the X
00:33:22.820
and then it had the number of dead, um, in there. I mean, imagine that job. These guys are going to
00:33:28.600
meet the rescue workers, recovery workers are just going to be walking around waiting for water to
00:33:32.080
drain out of houses to see if there's people inside. I mean, I mean this, the next couple of years
00:33:38.160
there is going to be absolutely horrific. Anyway, our thoughts or prayers, um, are with them. And if you
00:33:43.920
would like to help us, um, we're on our way to, um, um, to Houston this weekend and we're bringing
00:33:50.400
over all kinds of stuff. We're just loading up a DC nine and flying it in because you can get jet
00:33:57.800
fuel down here. I'm not sure how much, uh, fuel we can get for all of the volunteers and everybody
00:34:02.520
else that we can get down there. Um, but, um, if you would like to help us with that, you can donate
00:34:08.080
to mercury one.org mercury one.org. We sure would appreciate it. Now this, have you ever wasted an
00:34:17.340
afternoon or 90 minutes trying to book travel? That is what the average person spends. If you're
00:34:23.620
doing business travel, you spend about 90 minutes trying to book that wasting time, pricing flights,
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going back and forth, pricing the hotels. Now the only site that you need is upside.com. And here's
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the upside difference. You're going to save money because they bundle the flights and the hotels
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together for one pricing. And then they say, Hey, I know you want to be here. There's one block
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South. There's a hotel that will save you X number of dollars or for one hour delay. Um, and you leave
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an hour later on a flight, you're going to save this amount. They bundle all of that together, which
00:35:03.660
allows you to save more than you can save any place else. Plus after that, they reward you with a gift
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restrictions to apply. Minimum purchase is required seaside for complete details, but it is upside.com
00:35:35.860
Glenn Beck program, triple eight, seven, two, seven back. Mercury.
00:35:45.340
Bill O'Reilly is coming up next. Has it been, has it been refreshing this week for anybody else? And
00:35:53.440
maybe it's just because we've been busy because we're in Texas and with everything else going on
00:35:57.440
that I haven't played the game of politics at all for the week. But for those who have just been
00:36:04.140
paying attention to, you know, real things like, Hey, let's save this person's life.
00:36:09.660
Hadn't it been refreshing to not talk about politics for a week?
00:36:13.320
Yeah. It's a minor, uh, minor upside of this week. Yeah, no, I mean, you know, it is a minor upside,
00:36:20.780
but, but yeah, honestly, when you, when you think back, I'm just so focused right now on not wasting
00:36:27.640
time. Just, just, just do, let's just do the things that actually matter and change the world
00:36:34.860
or change our life and stop worrying about all the things that you don't have any control over.
00:36:40.340
It has reminded me that people are actually not horrible monsters all the time, right? There
00:36:45.480
actually are people who are pretty good. And as we've seen in Texas, the vast majority are that way.
00:36:54.120
If you want to get involved, you can join us at glennbeck.com, theblaze.com slash TV,
00:37:00.840
uh, or make a donation, mercuryone.org. Bill O'Reilly's next.
00:37:13.500
Congress returns from break. Hurricane Harvey, gas shortages, Antifa, Nazis, chaos.
00:37:37.200
Or is it? Bill O'Reilly is here to narrow down the things that everything's been happening this
00:37:44.760
week to the things that you need to pay attention to and what they really mean. Bill O'Reilly joins us
00:37:50.880
I will make a stand. I will raise my voice. I will hold your hand. Cause we are one.
00:38:00.480
I will beat my drum. I have made my choice. We will overcome. Cause we are one.
00:38:09.440
The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck program.
00:38:17.000
Bill O'Reilly from billoreilly.com. Nice to have him join the program once a week. Give us a recap of
00:38:26.740
the things that maybe we have missed or the media has missed, uh, and his look at the news. We have
00:38:32.060
to start with a hurricane Harvey and the aftermath bill. Welcome to the program. Hey Beck, I gave you a
00:38:38.200
nice plug on billoreilly.com about the charity work you've been doing through that mercury charity.
00:38:42.900
Thank you. So congratulations to you. It's very good work. Thank you very much. So Bill,
00:38:47.840
what is, first of all, give me your thoughts on the overall, uh, state of the media this week
00:38:53.860
with the coverage of hurricane Harvey. Well, I mean, it's two, two pronged, the actual hard news
00:39:01.940
coverage, pretty good. Um, and, uh, I think that the organization that the state of Texas showed
00:39:11.080
I think governor Abbott really did a nice job. Um, he's amazing governor. Um, yeah, calmed a lot
00:39:17.220
of fears. Uh, the state looked in control of the rescue efforts. Um, and unlike the Katrina
00:39:24.700
situation where the whole city collapsed, Houston and Galveston and Corpus Christi got hammered,
00:39:31.280
but they didn't collapse. Yeah. And so I thought the coverage were reflected that that's the, uh,
00:39:37.260
hard news coverage, but then of course, um, they, they, they try to politicize it. They being the
00:39:43.080
hate Trump media. And then it got devolved into chaos. Okay. So let's, before we get into that,
00:39:48.520
let, let me, let me go here back to, to Texas. When you saw Katrina within three days, society
00:39:55.500
generally melts down of three days without, you know, a police force when people realize there's
00:40:02.660
nobody coming to help people, bad guys within 72 hours, start to roam the streets. And they're
00:40:08.700
like, I'm going to do whatever I want. We didn't really see that here. Is that a, no, is that a
00:40:14.760
Texas thing? Is it a cultural thing? Is that a, uh, uh, uh, uh, a result of the waters being so high,
00:40:23.020
the bad guys were stuck in their house. What do you think happened?
00:40:25.420
Well, I think it was an organizational thing where, um, the state and the city and the counties,
00:40:32.500
they didn't lose control of the process. So they were on the scene visible. Um, when you turned on
00:40:39.180
your television, you said you saw law enforcement, saw national guard, you saw administrators. And
00:40:45.040
there, there wasn't a sense as there was in new Orleans that it was totally out of control,
00:40:50.960
without a control of the rain. But, um, other than that, the rescue efforts were coordinated.
00:40:58.700
Um, it seemed that there wasn't an opportunity for the bad guys or just as many bad guys in Texas
00:41:05.240
as there are in Louisiana. Sure. Sure. I mean, it's unfortunate, but our society has 20% of people,
00:41:11.420
uh, I believe that will commit evil when they can't 20%. You believe it's 20%. I do. Why do you
00:41:20.320
believe that? It used to be lower because of the, uh, uh, devaluation of religion, uh, the secularism
00:41:29.520
that's risen up where it's me first, what's good for me, the internet, certainly, uh, you can be as
00:41:37.680
evil as you want. And then other people find other people worse than you. All of these combinations,
00:41:44.220
uh, have risen, um, the potential for destruction, uh, I think doubled it since the greatest generation
00:41:51.800
in the fifties. Do you believe that there is something that is curbing that or a way to curb
00:42:00.540
that? Because if we're, if we've doubled it since the greatest generation, uh, which I believe you're
00:42:06.740
probably right, what are we doing to change that? What's the force that stands against that bill?
00:42:14.100
Well, the force that stands against it is individual courage to do the right thing
00:42:20.340
because you don't have an organized force to stand against it. I mean, if you look at the,
00:42:25.600
the amount of people who go to church weekly, I mean, that is in my religion, Catholicism
00:42:31.700
is dropped into the low twenties now. Um, so we have become a secular society where France,
00:42:38.240
so you don't have that. We used to have that religious bulwark that, you know, if you did
00:42:43.420
something evil, it was a sin and you would pay a price that's gone, um, for most Americans. So it's
00:42:50.000
an individual choice now. And the media condones a lot of evil stuff. Did you see that this opioid,
00:42:57.900
this opioid thing is a great example of that? I mean, instead of holding individual people
00:43:03.240
responsible for taking these unbelievably dangerous, pernicious drugs that, uh, harm their families and
00:43:10.960
their children, we don't do that. It's always somebody else's fault. So that's, uh, you know,
00:43:16.800
where we are as a society. And when you have that, um, the potential for mayhem is amazing. And that's
00:43:24.520
what you saw in Louisiana. When, when, as you rightly pointed out, when the authorities weren't
00:43:29.900
visible, when no help was coming, these 20% of evil people did evil, but you didn't see it in Texas
00:43:37.820
because the authorities were there and the response was organized. Um, there was a story in the Huffington
00:43:44.440
Post, going back to the media today, story of the Huffington Post, um, today that talks about
00:43:49.760
the racist rain in Houston, uh, how the rain is only falling on the worst parts and the minority
00:44:00.940
and the poorest sections. And they're the ones who are getting hurt. Um, can we go any further into
00:44:10.100
insanity bill than now saying that the rain is also somehow racist? Yeah, I didn't see the article,
00:44:18.180
but it doesn't surprise me that the far left is always going to politicize and always make a
00:44:24.180
racial incident out of every single thing. However, it is true that poor people, no matter where they
00:44:31.500
are in the world, do not have the resources that, you know, middle-class and wealthy people have
00:44:38.600
so that, you know, you live in a better neighborhood. Um, you have a stronger house.
00:44:44.360
Well, except hang on just a second, wait, wait, wait, except for in progressive places like New
00:44:49.120
Jersey, the very, very progressive where all of the rich people have built their houses right there
00:44:54.900
by the freeways and the oil refineries and the chemical factories. You see that all the time in
00:45:01.160
those very progressive places like, uh, New Jersey, that's where the rich people live. And they let the
00:45:06.760
poor people have the nicer sections of New Jersey because they're more enlightened either that or that
00:45:12.600
doesn't happen anywhere. Um, okay, go ahead. The point, the point that everybody should understand is
00:45:21.440
that, um, this country is very generous. All right. We're the most generous people on earth,
00:45:27.640
the individual Americans. Okay. And that will help everybody who needs help, but the media will
00:45:36.220
always make it into somebody's bad. And it's probably conservatives who are bad or capitalism
00:45:44.060
that's bad or Republicans that are bad and they'll tie it in. I mean, the best example this week was
00:45:51.240
when, uh, Chris Cuomo of CNN went off on the global warming stuff and, and then Kellyanne Conway had a
00:45:58.100
pretty good idea. He's going to, you know, knock that off for a couple of weeks. We'll get back to it,
00:46:03.500
but let's save the people that need to be saved now instead of politicizing it, Chris, but they
00:46:09.000
can't help themselves back. Bill, when you, when you look at everything that has happened this week,
00:46:16.020
um, you know, you had, uh, I think it was slate had an article out yesterday about how there's
00:46:22.280
nothing special happening here in Texas. Um, people are animals and when they're afraid and there's a
00:46:29.260
disaster, they bind together. That is not what happens with animals. That is not what happens
00:46:36.920
in every society. When there's a disaster, it's very easy to go into dog eat dog, uh, kill or be
00:46:45.060
killed. That's the natural animal instinct. When you see what's, uh, happening, uh, where people are
00:46:52.920
just coming in from all over and helping and the way people are behaving right now, is that a, uh,
00:47:00.120
is that a learned trait or is that the natural animal man? Well, I think it's a learned trait.
00:47:08.460
I mean, I think people who are raised in homes that say to their children, look, it's not all about
00:47:14.740
you. So when you get an opportunity to help somebody do it, um, and that is the majority still
00:47:22.400
in America. And I, I don't want to paint too ghastly a picture of this country. I will stand
00:47:28.620
by my premise that 20% of us are evil or, or capable of evil, but the others are, are, are very,
00:47:36.960
you know, helpful and in the small towns and they band together to help people. And that's
00:47:42.600
what you see in Texas. What did the press miss that you thought this is the point this week?
00:47:49.500
Um, I, it was more of my job basically is to, uh, call out irresponsibility. So that's where I'm
00:47:59.460
focused in on. And I thought the CNN white house correspondent is a Lenny. I think his name is
00:48:07.020
when he got on the air and said that Trump has no empathy and was speaking just to his crew. And
00:48:15.420
that's a quote, I just said to myself, you know what? You're an idiot. You're a hard news reporter.
00:48:22.000
What are you reading somebody's heart now? He has no empathy. And he, he, he makes a statement to the
00:48:28.280
nation and that's just talking to his crew. That's the most blatant stupidity. And it just shows
00:48:34.760
the out of control bias that's in place at CNN and other, uh, I will, I will tell you,
00:48:40.920
I kind of stuff that I saw, you know, rather than you were much closer to it than I was,
00:48:46.520
you know, the heroism that was going on. And it was plenty of that.
00:48:49.400
I was, I will tell you that, uh, you know, I am not, I don't stand where you stand on Donald Trump.
00:48:54.300
Um, I'll, I'll, I'll praise him when he's right and, and criticize when I think he's wrong. Um,
00:49:00.400
but he's, he's my president, but he's not my guy per se. Uh, I will tell you this. I about blew
00:49:07.580
gasket after gasket this week when I saw the press doing things like worried about Melania's shoes.
00:49:15.260
First of all, every, every woman in the country should be saying, how did she walk across the
00:49:21.900
white house lawn in five inch stilettos, let alone going down there? Who cares? The president
00:49:28.600
wasn't getting into boats. She didn't, she knew she wouldn't be getting into boats. She'd step off
00:49:33.600
the tarmac out of the plane, go someplace. They'd talk, they'd get back on the plane. What is the
00:49:39.340
problem? That's what I mean about it. It doesn't matter what the federal government's response was.
00:49:47.680
If the federal government's run by Trump, it's going to be bad. We'll find a way to make it bad.
00:49:52.120
We wake up in the morning and we say, how can we make Trump look bad so we can get him out of office?
00:49:57.920
That's what's going on. These news agencies are committed to destroying him. Go ahead.
00:50:05.540
When we come back, Bill O'Reilly on the other things that have been happening. For instance,
00:50:11.080
the tax reform the president has talked about this week, North Korea launching another missile and the,
00:50:18.060
the effects of not only Hurricane Harvey in gas and oil and what that could mean down the road,
00:50:26.380
but also we now have another hurricane barreling in. This one is Hurricane Irma. It looks like it's
00:50:33.280
tracking today to go through, as Joe Bastardi told us yesterday, through Puerto Rico or Hispaniola
00:50:40.660
and do some real damage. There are also some charts that are showing it maybe going up into
00:50:47.780
Florida, possibly the Carolinas, and some actually showing it going into the Gulf. What should we do to
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Rules and restrictions to apply. This is the Glenn Beck Program. Mercury.
00:52:29.460
This is the Glenn Beck Program. So let's look at the political fallout here, Bill. What do you think,
00:52:36.320
joined by Bill O'Reilly from BillOReilly.com, what do you think the political damage is on any side?
00:52:45.700
I think the real political damage this week has been done to the media. I think the media is seen for
00:52:52.820
what they are, a grotesque distortion of what's really important. I think even people who don't
00:53:01.080
like Donald Trump kind of watched the media and went, give it a rest, guys. I mean,
00:53:04.480
jeez, for the love of people, the love of people are dying and struggling. And I think they wanted to
00:53:10.280
see the good news. They wanted to see people coming together. And I think the media exposed
00:53:15.560
themselves even deeply, even to their own side, if you will. And I think that's the one that has the
00:53:24.240
hardest fallout from this. Do you disagree or where am I wrong?
00:53:28.860
No, I, you know, I'm not, see, I'm a fact-based guy. So let's look at two facts. All right. And this
00:53:35.860
will, I think, back up what you're saying. Number one, the ratings on cable in prime time
00:53:42.000
for the coverage of Hurricane Harvey have been mediocre. And people did not flood in to watch
00:53:50.240
this coverage. Pardon the pun. Yeah. All right. Now, why? I don't know. But when I was in the chair
00:53:57.000
at eight o'clock at Fox, we would have doubled what they did. Because in every hard news situation,
00:54:03.200
we did tremendous numbers. People came in because we did a factual presentation. So on all three of
00:54:11.300
them, people just didn't watch very much. Then on yesterday, Thursday, a poll came out, Fox News
00:54:20.520
poll. And it asked the 1,000 registered voters, who do you think's a bigger threat to the country,
00:54:29.440
white supremacist or the media? And it was close. It was about 47 to 40 white supremacists. But then
00:54:40.820
when you factored in, when you factored in the people who said both, it got 49, the media to 47
00:54:50.540
white supremacists. So there's no doubt that Americans, all right, and I'm going to let the
00:54:59.460
far left, because they like what's happening to the media, because the media is on their side now.
00:55:04.680
But most Americans aren't ideological, and they know the fix is in. Whether it's a storm, whether it's a
00:55:11.920
health care debate, whether it's Trump, you know, wearing a hat, it doesn't matter. They know they're not
00:55:19.600
going to get the truth. They're going to get some preconceived, let's get Trump, as I talked about
00:55:24.600
last, last segment. So anyway, you're right, in the sense that the media is damaging itself by being
00:55:34.560
foolish. And I don't think it's ever going to come back. I don't think this cycle, I think this,
00:55:39.620
people have another alternative they didn't have five years ago, they have their machines,
00:55:44.380
they go to their computers, and go on whatever website they want to get on and get the news that
00:55:49.340
way. So when you have that convenience, why go to a, you know, a vehicle that doesn't tell you the
00:55:55.880
truth? Why? I don't, I don't, I don't. I don't either. So let me give you this story. Pat, do you
00:56:02.120
have the story from Google that just broke? And I don't know, I don't know the site, etc. But this
00:56:09.520
bothers me, when you see sites like Der Stormer, which I don't like at all, but can be just taken
00:56:17.880
off the internet, because a guy gets up in the morning, in his own words, watch the interview
00:56:21.940
with him on Vice, in his own words, got up in the morning and decided they're not going to be on the
00:56:27.760
internet anymore. It's kind of a spooky thing. Here's the latest from Google today. Yeah, the site,
00:56:34.740
Liberty Conservative, which I'm not familiar with at all, is saying that Google sent them a message
00:56:40.500
that if they don't take down one of their articles that Google considers hateful, Google is going to
00:56:45.760
choke off all their ad revenue. They'll lose all of it. So it seems like extortion. It seems like
00:56:54.700
censorship. So what happens there, Bill? Because we are moving into it. I mean, I have to see what the
00:57:00.320
article is. I mean, you certainly can't have an article anywhere. They did not link the article.
00:57:06.260
Yeah, you can't have an article that says you should attack and hurt people. You can't have that.
00:57:12.800
That's why this guy at Dartmouth got in trouble, this Antifa guy, the professor at Dartmouth,
00:57:18.340
who got chastised by the president of that Ivy League university. Okay. Because he was basically
00:57:22.940
saying, yeah, you know, if you're an Antifa guy, yeah, yeah, you can prepare for violence.
00:57:27.680
Back in just a second with Bill O'Reilly from Bill O'Reilly.com.
00:57:44.220
Bill O'Reilly from Bill O'Reilly.com. DACA is in the news today. DACA is the Barack Obama mandate that
00:57:56.380
says, you know, we're just not we're not going to go after, you know, children who have been here and
00:58:00.540
the dreamers and just not going after them. This is something the president said he would stop on day
00:58:05.380
one. And then in February, he said DACA is a very, very difficult subject for me. To me, it's one of
00:58:11.380
the most difficult subjects I have because you have all these incredible kids in many cases, but not in
00:58:16.360
all cases. And in some cases are having DACA and their gang members and their drug dealers, too.
00:58:21.600
But you have some absolutely incredible kids. I would say mostly and quote.
00:58:26.780
OK, so there are 10 states now that have threatened to sue the federal government if they don't stop
00:58:32.520
DACA. And there's there are 10 days away from this this drop dead date of the states coming together
00:58:40.020
and saying we're going to sue you unless you stop this. They could announce the White House could
00:58:46.100
announce something today, but I don't think he's going after DACA. Do you, Bill?
00:58:51.100
I do. I think he'll do a modification of it. And this is where Kelly comes in, the chief of staff.
00:58:58.900
This is what he does. Remember, General Kelly was the head of national security,
00:59:05.420
a vice of Homeland Security. And he knows this inside and out. So it's his policy that's going to be
00:59:11.880
announced, not Trump's policy because Trump doesn't know what to do. If he knocks out all these kids
00:59:18.700
and says they have to go back, then you know what's going to happen. He's a racist. He's this. He's that.
00:59:23.840
I mean, another cycle of this starts. So what I expect Kelly to do is some kind of nuanced thing.
00:59:30.060
Say, look, we're going to revoke the Obama thing because it's just too broad. It's too general.
00:59:35.080
But if you were a child and brought here by your parents and have been here for 25 years and a good
00:59:41.580
citizen, I'm going to give you a chance to have a hearing on that. That's the way to handle it with
00:59:47.580
some nuance and some touch rather than do what Obama did, which is say, oh, you all can stay.
00:59:53.680
If you're an MS-13 member, you can stay. I mean, come on.
00:59:56.580
So this is not what the people who, you know, the people who voted for Donald Trump,
01:00:02.220
and I don't mean all of them, but some of the people who had real clout, they do not want that
01:00:08.520
nuance. I understand that, but he's got to govern. I mean, Trump has got to, what the problem with
01:00:15.780
the president right now is that he's having a hard time governing because he can't get plurality.
01:00:22.560
He can't get majority. He can't get support. And it's so bad if he doesn't get this tax cut
01:00:28.200
passed in the next 50 days, because that's all they have. Congress is all working before Christmas.
01:00:33.540
He's done. He's got to get it done. He's got to get something passed. So he's got to be able to
01:00:39.520
govern. And I understand campaign promises. And then, you know, I know Trump 30 years. I know what
01:00:44.000
he was out and he was doing. But, you know, if he if he comes in and he says, look, I'm just going to
01:00:50.360
be. It's my way or the highway. And it's going to be the highway for him. He's got to govern.
01:00:56.020
He's got to convince people. And this tax cut, this is everything now. And if he doesn't get
01:01:01.860
this done, then all the independents and all the people who aren't pro Trump, pro Trump is about
01:01:07.340
33, 35 percent of the population right now, voting population. That's pro Trump. There's about 20 percent
01:01:14.580
persuadable. Yes. And that put him in the White House. OK, but if he loses the 20 percent
01:01:20.040
persuadable, then he's he's done. And the 20 percent, I believe that 20 percent
01:01:26.360
persuadable are people who are just hardworking. They're not, you know, they don't want to stand
01:01:32.720
with the communists. They don't want to stand with the Nazis. They want they don't want to shove
01:01:36.260
everybody out of the country. They just want common sense rule of law and give me a break.
01:01:42.680
Get out of my bedroom. Get out of my bank account. And the break is the tax cut. And that's that is
01:01:51.720
everything now for Donald Trump and his administration. So I do believe that he's going
01:01:59.380
to do some kind of nuance on the DACA thing. I could be wrong on that. I'm looking at it from
01:02:04.920
a Kelly point of view, because I know Kelly is behind the whatever's going to happen.
01:02:08.920
And, you know, that's how you have to analyze this. You guys, OK, who's the driver on this?
01:02:14.540
And the driver isn't President Trump. The driver is Kelly. So that's what I expect to happen.
01:02:19.260
I would think the driver is also his family. I mean, you know, I think his I think his family
01:02:24.820
and I don't think Donald Trump actually believed, you know, they're all coming in here. They're all
01:02:29.160
racist. I mean, they're all rapists. I don't think that's that's not how he.
01:02:32.880
But he said that to me. He this is what you know, he said that to me. That soundbite came
01:02:38.840
when I did the interview with him. And the context of that soundbite is that we were talking about
01:02:44.500
people smuggling people into the United States, taking people from Central America, Honduras,
01:02:50.620
Guatemala, and bringing them across Mexico and into the USA. That was the context of Trump's remark.
01:02:58.080
And he says a lot of these guys are rapists. A lot of these guys are brutal. He was talking about
01:03:02.900
the trafficking, not the guy telling the fields in Monterey. And it just got so distorted by the
01:03:12.420
media who hates him that it became true. Wait, so he'll lie often enough. It's a truth. Joseph
01:03:18.080
Goebbels, the Nazi minister of information. OK. And so when he said it to me and I went on the show,
01:03:24.960
I was back to me. Remember, I said, look, that's not what he said. I do remember that. But I do also
01:03:29.780
remember him and I'm fuzzy on this. I'll have to go back. But I do believe he also said those things
01:03:34.640
in in press conferences and speeches. Did he say to you first, Bill? Because I know he said that in
01:03:38.820
his announcement speech, he said that. Yeah, but I did the first interview after the announcement.
01:03:44.320
The first one was done by me. That is a palatial tarot. And one of the things was the law.
01:03:52.140
And then off the wall question came, well, why do you need a wall? And then he said,
01:03:57.920
because we have these terrible people smuggling poor souls into the USA and they're raping them
01:04:04.280
and abusing them and and all that. And then the media just took that and said, oh, Trump's calling
01:04:10.840
all Mexicans rapists. It was this is, you know, I said today this week on my podcast that I am I have
01:04:19.660
a very hard time covering Trump because I see sometimes Trump does bad things. Sometimes he
01:04:27.080
makes bad mistakes. It's my job to point that out. But I'm giving him the benefit of the doubt because
01:04:33.220
I know how hateful and dishonest the media is towards him. So actually, it's harder for me to
01:04:39.500
cover him than it was to cover Bush, the younger or Obama, because that circumstance existed to some
01:04:46.860
extent with Bush, the younger. But it's not nearly to the extent. So I'm giving Trump the benefit of
01:04:52.520
the doubt. A lot of times when I in the past wouldn't. I was tough on him in my interviews
01:04:58.100
in the campaign. If you go back and look at them, they're the toughest interviews he did.
01:05:02.560
So when you one time in Detroit, he said I should see a psychiatrist.
01:05:06.100
Right. I do. I do. I do remember that. And I do remember thinking, finally, somebody has said it.
01:05:14.780
So, Bill, let me let me go back to let me go back to tax cuts. Do because it's not just the
01:05:23.100
media that doesn't like him. He has he has isolated himself from the Washington power players as well.
01:05:32.500
And I'm I'm perfectly fine with that myself. But he needs some coalition on Capitol Hill for for tax
01:05:40.900
reforms. Can he can he get that done? You know, I don't know. I mean, who knows? But when you go
01:05:47.660
into Mitch McConnell, the most powerful guy in the Senate, hey, you're an idiot. It makes it a little
01:05:52.560
hard. Right. So what I expect is and he's already doing it now. He's going to have a little leadership
01:05:58.080
meeting at the White House. Again, this is a Kelly thing. He's going to bring in McConnell and
01:06:03.020
Speaker of the House, Ryan. And he's going to bring in Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. And for a little
01:06:08.740
tĂŞte. Yeah. OK. I don't know whether he can get it. I know that McCain's always going to give him a
01:06:15.120
hard time. Always. 100 percent hard time from John McCain because he really hates him. McCain hates Trump.
01:06:22.840
So you'll always get a hard time there. And that's what derailed the health care thing.
01:06:29.180
But he might be able to pick off three or four Democrats to vote for the tax cuts. That's all
01:06:34.280
he needs if he can get most of the Republicans. So it's going to be it's going to be a high drama.
01:06:39.100
No doubt. Last question on North Korea. North Korea fires a missile. They were very strategic.
01:06:45.220
They they flew that missile really high up in the atmosphere. So it wasn't technically violating
01:06:53.440
the airspace of Japan, but a ballsy move. They're going into the worst. They I think they've had
01:07:01.160
the worst drought. They've had the worst crop season they've had like in 50 years in North Korea.
01:07:06.580
They're going into probably famine this this winter and they're going to have a hard cold winter as
01:07:16.020
well. They can't sell anything overseas. This makes North Korea a little cagey. I think that's why they
01:07:23.880
are they're pushing as hard as they can. What should be done on North Korea at this point?
01:07:30.100
Just wait. Just wait. Um, you know, squeeze them economically, um, pound China, not to buy their
01:07:38.800
coal. That's the only thing they can really sell now. Um, but just wait, we should not, we should
01:07:44.180
not strike, we should not strike nor respond to these missiles, right? Not yet. Not yet. Uh,
01:07:52.840
they killed somebody. You're going to have to respond. Um, let me say this, unless they strike
01:07:59.340
first, should we be thinking about anything military, uh, involving our military? You know,
01:08:06.300
you can do a few surgicals like they did in Syria, uh, with the poison gas situation. You can do that,
01:08:12.780
but not a whole massive, uh, attack on the country. Bill O'Reilly, what do you have planned for Labor Day
01:08:19.980
weekend? You know, uh, I wrote a, an interesting column for my, uh, billoreilly.com deal on, uh,
01:08:27.220
the value of work and then how it's made this country, the greatest country in, uh, history
01:08:32.300
of civilization. I'm going to reread, uh, killing England out September 19th, because I have to go
01:08:37.980
on all the shows in a couple of weeks to promote the book. Uh, and this plays right into the statute
01:08:43.400
thing because they're coming for Washington and Jefferson. And we'll tell you what those men were
01:08:47.540
really like. Did you read any of the book yet? I have. It's really good. And you're just,
01:08:51.960
you're trolling for compliments and I'm not going to give them to you. Um, but yes, I did. Uh, real
01:08:57.360
quick. Can you pre-order it on, uh, can you pre-order it on the blaze by the way? I don't think
01:09:02.300
so. I don't think so. I don't, we, we sell, we sell Amazon, Barnes and no billoreilly.com. Do it
01:09:07.240
on billoreilly.com. You get a 50% off the other killing book spec. That's a great deal for you.
01:09:12.380
That's a great deal. If you hadn't have shipped them to me by bulk, just to get me to give them
01:09:17.560
away, use them as kindling something. But billoreilly.com, uh, his new book, uh, on the
01:09:23.800
American revolution is phenomenal and it comes out in a couple of weeks. You can pre-order
01:09:27.480
it now at billoreilly.com. Thanks Bill. We'll talk to you. Have a great weekend. All right.
01:09:31.680
You too. Thanks. Uh, our sponsor. Is it true that if you took, uh, one copy of each of the
01:09:37.180
books Bill has written over the past year, you could build the entire wall between here and
01:09:41.220
Mexico? Yes. It would also reach to the moon and back 47 times. Oh wow. Wow. Yeah. So many books
01:09:47.460
that guy's written. I did two quick stories on billoreilly. Um, about 10 years ago, I am
01:09:53.460
sitting in his office and he's like, Beck, the books, man, go stop writing, stop writing
01:09:58.740
all the books. And I'm like, no, Bill, it's, it's actually a really good thing. And I explained
01:10:03.860
to him, you know, all the history and you know, yada, yada, yada, and how the book business
01:10:07.920
worked and that conservatives really read a lot. And they'll build a library. If you, if
01:10:13.760
you give them the, the historic knowledge, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, you got to
01:10:18.240
stop at the books. Okay. And then, uh, five years ago back, nobody's going to watch TV
01:10:24.540
online. Nobody's going to watch TV online. Okay. So anyway, um, here's, here's our response
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You're listening to the Glenn Beck program. You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.
01:12:31.560
We have, uh, Todd Staples. Um, he's going to be joining us here in a few minutes. He's the
01:12:36.620
president of the Texas oil and gas association. Reason why we bring him on is, you know, what
01:12:41.740
is the plan here in Texas alone? Uh, you're driving around and you're sometimes last night,
01:12:48.820
a friend was three hours in line at, at a gas station. Um, Pat said he was driving in today
01:12:54.900
and he was having a hard time for, was it, was it used to this do having a hard time finding,
01:12:59.700
um, a gas station that actually had gas in the pumps and you took an Uber in. Yeah. I mean,
01:13:04.360
I don't, it's not a statewide shortage. It's just like the Metroplex, right? And it's some stations
01:13:10.900
like there are gas stations with gas. It's just that, you know, people, you know, get there,
01:13:15.260
they make a run and they make sure they fill up right away. And it's, it's, it's drying up
01:13:20.200
individual gas stations, which is just, it's just turning into a big pain in the butt. And it's,
01:13:24.680
it's interesting because then, then there was a rumor last night that this is all a creation of
01:13:29.140
the media and that they created this hysteria, which created the gas lines and it was a media
01:13:34.680
created event. And actually we should have plenty of gas. So I don't, we're going to find out. I
01:13:40.140
don't even know. We'll, we'll find out. I will tell you this media created event. Uh, I don't
01:13:45.900
know. Here's, here's the thing. When somebody starts to say things like yesterday, Hey, I
01:13:51.060
stopped at four gas stations and they didn't have gas and they didn't have gas. That is
01:13:55.740
something that spreads like wildfire. You don't, you don't need the media. You have everybody
01:14:00.580
on Twitter and Facebook going, Hey, I, yeah, here's a picture of the fourth gas station that
01:14:05.360
I went to today. Look, what's on the pump out of gas. Then media picks that up. You pick
01:14:11.200
that up. We all do. You're right. It doesn't help when everybody says I've got to go get
01:14:15.960
my lawnmower filled. Well, that's going to help run out of gas, but there is a disruption
01:14:21.620
in the, in the, there is in the lines. Yeah, I think there is now they're fixing that. And
01:14:28.100
we're going to get to the bottom of that and what that's going to mean, no matter where you
01:14:31.260
live coming up. So the alt left Antifa is growing here in the United States in Philadelphia. They
01:14:59.080
just had a big meeting. They're going to eradicate 21st century slavery. What is that? Well, they,
01:15:06.400
they want a revolutionary abolitionist movement. They're raising funds now for an underground
01:15:13.120
railroad to help people escape the state because quote, the civil war was never resolved and the
01:15:20.100
system of slavery just transitioned into the prison industrial complex. So they are going to help,
01:15:25.440
I guess, prisoners escape in an underground railroad. Um, and they are basing themselves
01:15:32.680
in Philadelphia because of Philadelphia's rich revolutionary tradition. They are, they're
01:15:38.720
calling now, um, they had workshops and they're calling the police, our enemies in blue. They're
01:15:45.600
seeking to abolish all gender. They're calling on members of Antifa to steal tools and lands so they
01:15:53.540
can build their own state independent of the United States. And they plan to build local defense teams
01:16:00.400
and councils. They also are, uh, extolling the revolutionary movement in Syria. They say that
01:16:09.100
they are, uh, going to build a worldwide movement towards communism. Uh, they are, they dress, they're
01:16:17.280
dressed up in all black. They're, they're carrying machine guns. The video is absolutely astounding.
01:16:22.640
Uh, it looks like an ISIS video. And that's what the press says is fine. Antifa, that's going to come
01:16:31.700
back and backfire on them. America is not a place that looks at communists and say, well, they're better
01:16:38.740
than the Nazis or the Nazis. They're better than the communists. No, we made this decision long time
01:16:44.620
ago. For 50 years, we fought this war first against the Nazis, then against the communists. They're both
01:16:50.100
bad. And it seems like you can't get that message anywhere in the United States. Instead, where's that
01:16:56.780
message coming from? Places like Poland. Poland is more United States than the United States is.
01:17:07.880
You don't believe me? I have the Deputy Prime Minister of Poland on with us and we begin right now.
01:17:26.780
Trump. I have made my choice. We will overcome. Cause we are one. The fusion of entertainment and
01:17:36.600
enlightenment. This is the Glenn Beck Program. Poland's Deputy Prime Minister, Matryas Morwetsky is
01:17:46.420
with us. Uh, welcome, Prime Minister. How are you, sir? Do I call you Deputy Prime Minister? I'm not
01:17:53.140
sure what the protocol is. Both is okay. Okay. Thank you very much. Thanks for having me. I'm very
01:17:59.820
fine. How are you? Very good. We're glad you're here in the United States. I know you've been, um,
01:18:03.720
talking to key business leaders and political leaders in the, um, United States, and I appreciate
01:18:09.240
you taking some time out and talk, talking to me. I am impressed, uh, with the former Soviet
01:18:16.000
republics, um, because they, they know what's happening in the world. Can you tell me your
01:18:24.260
view from across the water on the things that you're seeing happening here in America? And
01:18:29.140
I don't want to make this about politics, but what are you seeing that is growing up within
01:18:34.940
Sure. Now, like, like, even these days, the, uh, a very big, uh, uh, military, uh, exercise
01:18:43.980
start in Belarus done by Mr. Putin, which is, uh, uh, indicating the, um, uh, how dangerous
01:18:51.940
and how aggressive Russia may be. And we should not forget about this Russian hacks on emails and
01:18:59.080
all what they are doing in the hybrid and conventional war in Ukraine is, uh, indicating
01:19:05.300
that, uh, they, they, this is still their main way, how they do politics. Like today, Poland
01:19:13.080
is, uh, is, is, is a safe country. We are a strong country, but, but we, we need, uh, very
01:19:20.120
close cooperation. Uh, like we, we, we have, we have historically all the way from Kosciuszko
01:19:25.920
and Pulaski, we have fought during the war of independence. And then in our soldiers are
01:19:31.760
in Iraq and in Afghanistan together, hand in hand with American soldiers. And the, the,
01:19:37.780
all the idealists who think that maybe we should, we should not think about the, the defense policy
01:19:44.200
too much because everybody wants to live in a peaceful, uh, world. It's, it's, it's, it's
01:19:49.480
great, but it is, this is not, not true. Uh, and, and, and this is, uh, this is one aspect
01:19:55.060
of how I think that, uh, the proximity to Russia, we can explain how, how difficult it
01:20:00.960
is. And, you know, the proximity is really like if there was between New Jersey and New
01:20:06.560
York, we, we can feel the hot breath or, of Russian bear at our neck.
01:20:11.400
Tell me, tell me, tell me what that, uh, that means talking to the deputy prime minister
01:20:15.100
of, um, of Poland. Tell me what that means to you, because here in America, we've been so
01:20:20.980
isolated and our universities have stopped teaching that. Well, I don't know if they
01:20:25.960
ever did, but teaching that communism is a bad and a, a killer that is only surpassed
01:20:34.280
by disease. You lived through it. The people of Poland live through it. Tell, tell me what
01:20:40.320
communism, what America should know about communists.
01:20:42.980
Of course, we live, we live through this. And, and, and, well, like I myself was in,
01:20:47.980
in, in prison and my, my father who was fighter, fighting in the solidarity times during the
01:20:54.180
eighties, he was, uh, in prison for a long time. And, and the transformation which started
01:20:59.980
in 1989 was, was by far not complete because the same, I just give you an example, the same
01:21:06.400
judges who have, uh, maybe passing sentences on, on the, um, the fighters for free freedom in the
01:21:14.100
eighties, um, uh, like my father or father or myself or many of my, uh, my friends, um, the same
01:21:22.220
judges are today judges in the Supreme court. This is, this is what happens in, uh, if, if the, if the,
01:21:29.480
there is not a real deep transformation, uh, in, in, in a system, which, which is, which is,
01:21:36.100
which, which was okay because there was not any bloody revolution in 1989, 1990. But then,
01:21:43.420
then I, I ask everybody to understand why we would like to have this second transformation
01:21:50.480
today and why we, we have the worst, the worst judiciary system amongst all the 28 countries
01:21:57.120
of the European union. And we want to, uh, deeply reform this. And then the counter attack of all
01:22:03.220
our enemies is, is, is, is so visible. And who is among the, amongst those, um, those, uh, attacking
01:22:10.760
us? Of course, post-communists and top communists are there because they feel very well in a system
01:22:16.560
which is vague, which is, which is not bait based on meritocracy, which is based on, uh, on
01:22:24.120
corporationism as we call it in Poland, lots of dependencies on different corporations, lawyers,
01:22:29.640
uh, judges, and so on. And we don't like, we, we, we want the system to be more Republican,
01:22:34.660
more democratic. Uh, and, and, and this is why we, why we, uh, we have so many, uh, in
01:22:42.160
comprehensions around us and misunderstanding. Are you concerned at all, um, deputy prime minister
01:22:47.380
of Poland, are you concerned at all about the rise of, of, uh, heritage groups as they're
01:22:54.560
calling themselves, you know, the Jobbix party, um, or the golden dawn here in the United States,
01:23:00.640
the, the Nazi party, we've got extremists on both sides and it's in some ways beginning
01:23:06.440
to look like the 1930s or 1920s, um, in Europe, all over the world. You concerned about the rise
01:23:13.320
on both sides? I am concerned about the rise, uh, you know, on, on both sides and in Europe,
01:23:20.320
it's, it's, it's, uh, in particularly visible on the left side, but there are also some examples
01:23:27.320
on the right, like Marie Le Pen, uh, in France. Uh, therefore first precondition prerequisite
01:23:33.320
for safe, safe Poland, safe Europe, safe world is, um, to prevent terrorist attacks and to really
01:23:42.420
deal with the mass migration policy like the Australia did, or like America did. Australia
01:23:50.480
has managed to stop the flow by securing own borders and the European borders are not secure.
01:23:56.540
Millions of refugees come, uh, every month, every year to, to, to Europe. And then you can see all
01:24:03.880
those pictures of terror attacks all over the place, in particular in France or Germany.
01:24:08.480
Why is Poland is safe? We don't have it. Right. Why is Poland the, the, if I'm not mistaken,
01:24:14.720
um, you're the only main country in Europe that has not been hit by a terrorist attack. Why?
01:24:20.540
Yeah, that's, that's, that's correct. Absolutely. Recently in Spain, in Barcelona, before that,
01:24:24.920
in the UK, in many places and France and, and, and in Italy and Germany. So we are the,
01:24:31.020
the only of the six countries which did not experience. So why?
01:24:36.000
Terror, terror. This is because we, we treat security with, uh, very seriously. We, we do not
01:24:43.900
allow for the Islamic, uh, migrants and Islamic refugees to come without, um, a very, uh,
01:24:52.040
thorough scrutiny by our, um, by, by our social security and, and so on. Uh, sorry, but I was
01:24:58.740
secret service and, and, and our special services dedicated for this, uh, those activities. And,
01:25:04.940
and this is, and this is the, the, the, the main reason Germans and French, uh, our friends and
01:25:11.020
partners, they have allowed for virtually millions of, of, of those refugees. And among them, there are
01:25:16.640
many decent people, good people, but unfortunately there are many not so decent people, very bad people.
01:25:22.700
And they, they, they are, they are, they are attacking here in all sorts of, in many different
01:25:29.280
ways. They are attacking our civilization. They hate Christianity. They, they hate Europe. So I think
01:25:35.780
that we have the right, we, we are the, the, uh, in the, the, the hairs of the, of the Christian
01:25:43.940
civilization. And we have the right and obligation to defend it for the next, for next generation. So we,
01:25:50.740
we, we can allow for, for, of course, for migrants. And for instance, in Europe, we, sorry, in Poland,
01:25:56.640
we, we do our job too, because we, we have, uh, um, accommodated one and a half million Ukrainian
01:26:04.600
population. Many of them are refugees from Eastern part of Ukraine, where there is war
01:26:10.140
because the Ukraine was attacked by Russia. So we are doing our part. We contribute to calming down
01:26:16.540
the situation and we go the middle route. We try to persuade our partners in Brussels that this,
01:26:23.860
this, this, this refugee policy is very dangerous, uh, for, for the whole Europe. And we have to
01:26:29.540
preserve our borders. We have to have safe countries. I'm talking to the deputy prime minister of, um,
01:26:36.360
of Poland. How concerned are you that if the world doesn't wake up, we are, uh, going to be reaping
01:26:47.520
the seeds that are being sown right now. And, and perhaps that ends in yet another, uh, global conflict.
01:26:55.800
Well, I, this, this, this is probably to your opening remarks, uh, the, the situation is probably not
01:27:04.980
that bad as it was in, in the thirties, uh, with Hitler and Stalin and, and, uh, weak democracies
01:27:11.280
and so on. But I am concerned that the situation might go in the wrong direction. Therefore, there is
01:27:17.300
this old, uh, Latin saying, which is, you know, we have to be well armed and well, uh, and well
01:27:27.800
equipped, and we have to contribute to, uh, military spending. And by the way, Poland is not amongst the
01:27:33.900
five richest countries in NATO, but we make sure to be one of the five who comply with the two percentage
01:27:40.160
points of GDP military spending rule. And which was, which was actually realized by the president Trump
01:27:46.880
when he was in Warsaw just two months ago. And, and we are very, very reliable ally. And I think
01:27:54.120
the, the, the article five of the Washington treaty is a very important element of the whole, uh,
01:28:00.880
architecture of peace going forward. Uh, another one is, is, is also dealing with the security of
01:28:07.760
our own borders, like, uh, America does, like Australia does, but in Europe, many countries are not
01:28:14.340
doing their part. So, so our advice to our European friends is, is to really concentrate on our own
01:28:22.080
security, uh, and to eliminate all those extremes from the left and from the right. Uh, some of them
01:28:28.920
may, they have to be, uh, brought to the table and, and persuaded in a civilized way by, but some of them
01:28:35.340
who are really extremists, extremists in, in France and in Germany, some, some, uh, Islamic parties and so on,
01:28:42.240
they, they should be taken under microscope and, and, and should be so, we should be so vigilant
01:28:50.680
Poland's deputy prime minister, Matryas Morawiecki. Thank you so much, sir.
01:28:54.920
If I, if I could add just one sentence on behalf of the government of the Republic of Poland,
01:29:00.060
I would like to express my sincere condolences on the, on the terrible tragedy caused by the hurricane
01:29:06.900
Harvey. Uh, so we are very sad about this. And if, if the government of Poland could, could do anything
01:29:12.500
to help our American friends, our, the, the people from, from America, we, we could, we could do, uh,
01:29:22.960
It, it, um, gosh, that's nice to hear. Um, thank you so much. We appreciate that.
01:29:33.980
Yeah. And I think you can hear what, you know, why is he over here in America? What are they doing?
01:29:39.400
Obviously they are worried about the bear. Obviously they're worried about what is coming on their own
01:29:46.740
border and they are looking to find some allies in America. They are more America today than we are.
01:29:56.420
Uh, and they are looking for some allies in America. They'll say, Hey, is anyone going to help us stand?
01:30:01.340
Cause the big, bad wolf, or in this case, the big, bad bear is coming back.
01:30:08.960
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Wasn't that nice to hear from, you know, a world leader? I mean, it almost brought me to tears.
01:31:37.680
Here's the, you know, the incredible deputy prime minister of, of Poland at the very end. Wanted to
01:31:44.100
squeeze in, Hey, anything that we can do for you. I mean, that is so nice. It's so rare from people
01:31:50.920
in other countries to say good things about the United States and to feel badly for us when tragedies
01:31:57.060
happen here. So that was, that was really nice. Quite a juxtaposition against the, uh, Charlie Hebdo
01:32:02.720
thing from earlier. Oh my gosh. They were calling everyone in Texas Nazis and cheering for their
01:32:06.960
deaths. That's amazing. Guys, we knew those guys were not good people. I didn't know they were that
01:32:11.020
bad. We did. That's pretty bad. You saw what they were printing about the prophet Mohammed and Jesus
01:32:17.360
and everybody else. They don't believe in God, right? Like if you're an atheist, offending Mohammed
01:32:22.360
is, or Jesus is nothing, right? These are real people that are actually dying right now. They're calling
01:32:27.940
them Nazis and cheering on their death. They have no reason to do that. I guess it's just
01:32:33.140
the, it's just the stereotype of Texas that everybody here is. So they have a reason to
01:32:38.860
make, uh, you know, Jesus having sex with Mohammed. They don't believe in him. Yes. But that's
01:32:47.580
not a reason to do it other than they like to just stir it up. They like to mock religion,
01:32:53.020
which they think is fake. And so like there's no, they have no reverence. We have a sanctity
01:32:57.400
element when it comes to religious figures. They don't. So it's understandable. What we did with
01:33:02.660
them is not say we love what you stand for. We said, we understand the human torture that has gone
01:33:09.480
on in your, in your, in your company. We, we, we stand with you because we're human beings and we
01:33:14.780
hate to see other human beings be tortured. Um, we don't have to agree on religion. We don't have
01:33:19.480
to agree on any topic, but we still feel because we're members of humanity and we feel that with you.
01:33:25.660
Yeah. And, and all they had to do, I mean, I agree with everything you're saying. I guess
01:33:29.400
I just had such low expectations of them that I like, like, like, I'm like when I saw that
01:33:35.860
yesterday, I'm like, yeah, it's Charlie Hebdo, of course. Yeah. I mean, I, to be clear, I thought
01:33:41.600
they were not, I did not think they were good people. Right. And now I think they're even
01:33:46.440
worse. Yeah. So I'm just surprised that you can, if you can't stand up and say, man, a lot
01:33:51.720
of people are dying, completely innocent people against a natural disaster that aren't Nazis.
01:33:58.300
You're, you're, you're not only cheering on their death, but you're also calling them basically the
01:34:03.480
worst people that have ever lived. I guess without any evidence at all. The difference is I thought
01:34:07.380
they were bad to about the 100th power and it seems they're bad to about the 10,000th power.
01:34:12.420
Yeah. That's a big difference. It's just a degree of badness that we're discussing here.
01:34:16.760
And exponential growth is quick. So when you go more 100th power to 10,000th, that's a big
01:34:22.140
jump. It's a big jump. Yeah, it's pretty big. Yeah, it's pretty big. I'm going to Houston
01:34:29.500
tomorrow and we're delivering a pallet after pallet after pallet of food and water and, and
01:34:37.740
supplies for the people of Houston. If you would like to help us out, we sure would appreciate
01:34:44.480
it. Um, your donations are welcome. All of it will go to the food and supplies, uh,
01:34:51.240
send it to mercury one.org, mercury one.org. And we'll bring back some stories over the
01:34:56.620
weekend on social and back on Tuesday, the head of the oil and gas in Texas to tell us
01:35:03.240
what all this means coming up. Glenn Beck program, mercury.
01:35:09.680
The Glenn Beck program. Guy, I am guessing is very, very busy. Uh, we don't want to waste his
01:35:16.080
time nor yours. Uh, Todd Staples is with us. He's a president of the Texas oil and gas association.
01:35:23.060
Um, there is a problem here, or at least a perceived problem, uh, that we are having a,
01:35:29.360
uh, a shortage of gas. I can tell you that a friend of mine was at a gas station for three
01:35:35.860
hours waiting in line for gas. Um, our refineries have gone down. This is going to affect, obviously
01:35:42.660
it's affecting, um, the state of Texas, but it's going to affect the price of gas and the
01:35:47.520
price of oil all around, uh, the country and perhaps the world. Todd is joining us now to, uh,
01:35:53.780
tell us what's happening. First of all, Todd, thanks for all of your help this week. I imagine
01:35:59.140
you guys are extraordinarily busy this week, but it has been a unprecedented Glenn that the,
01:36:05.220
the catastrophic proportions have had far reaching impacts. And I think you summed it up. Well,
01:36:11.540
the good news is that men and women in the industry, the frontline workers are, they have a plan. There
01:36:18.640
is a recovery plan that they are implementing. We, Texas is important. Uh, our refining capacity
01:36:27.040
along the Texas Gulf coast that was, uh, severely, uh, um, sidelined because of Harvey from south of
01:36:35.440
Corpus all the way to Beaumont, Port Arthur area has taken capacity to refine crude offline. It has
01:36:43.100
gone beyond that though, into the entire fuel distribution system. Our terminals are impacted.
01:36:48.720
The pipelines are impacted. Uh, even roads remain closed. I think, uh, I 10 is still closed in
01:36:54.760
portions to get product from Louisiana truck into Texas. And so the good news is that there is a
01:37:01.320
systematic process that is underway. Uh, the coast guard has, uh, reopened some, the port of Corpus.
01:37:08.780
I think Galveston and Houston are seeing some marginal improvements there. Uh, refineries are being
01:37:15.240
attempted to be brought online, starting where the storm hit first in the Corpus area, and then
01:37:20.560
working its way up. Safety is of paramount importance as this is conducted. As you can
01:37:27.220
imagine for the workers that have to go into these dangerous areas, but also these are very complex
01:37:33.300
systems and they are working to bring them up in the proper fashion so that the, we can return to
01:37:39.280
normalcy as soon as, as possible. But it is a process just like the water receding and the power
01:37:45.220
again, being back online and the millions of people that, uh, are being displaced and have to
01:37:50.040
repair their homes to get back in, to get normal. That same process is occurring here.
01:37:55.000
People don't understand the, the, the oil and the gas and the chemical, um, process. When you come
01:38:01.860
down to Texas, you'll see these refineries and they look like cities. Each refinery looks like a
01:38:06.120
gigantic city with one building on fire because they're burning off the excess. Um, but, but
01:38:12.200
petroleum is in everything. It is in absolutely everything all the way down to what do you
01:38:19.540
think keeps your little, uh, your pills? What do you think that is on the outside of the
01:38:23.040
pills that keep in the medicine? That's a petroleum product. Um, and these, these plants are, as you
01:38:29.460
said, extremely complex, like nuclear power plant complex for safety. How long does it take
01:38:38.020
to walk in and turn the key? However, it is to fire one of those things back up and get back into
01:38:45.760
full production again? So a lot of it is determined based upon the severity of the impact to the
01:38:53.980
particular facility. But, uh, if things are normally okay, it takes a few days to get that refinery
01:39:02.960
up and running. So you have some refineries that that process has begun. And we have people that
01:39:11.820
are stationed in the emergency command center that you see governor Abbott on TV from regularly that
01:39:18.640
are getting, uh, real time, uh, updates to provide to the governor on, um, the process there. So we will
01:39:26.480
know just as soon as possible, uh, those that have, uh, in, uh, suffered damage, they're going to take
01:39:34.540
longer. Uh, but our, the system is designed to start getting input and product from other states,
01:39:44.600
governor Abbott and, and our state agencies have requested significant amounts of waivers for the
01:39:50.880
types of fuel blend, the transportation hours that can be used, uh, the taxing consequences and issues
01:39:58.800
that all come into play that, that a lot of these things have been restricted. Our partners have been
01:40:04.240
extremely responsive, recognizing that, you know, if you want gas in your pickup or car, you expect it
01:40:11.500
to be there. We expect it to be there as well. The fuel distribution system is complex. And so the process
01:40:18.700
is being worked in, the plan is being implemented is the good news. What does this mean to the rest?
01:40:23.840
The bulk of our audience is outside of Texas, obviously. What, uh, what does this mean for the
01:40:29.680
rest of the country? They're seeing gas prices go through the roof. How long before that gets under
01:40:35.200
control? Any idea? Well, um, some areas will receive relief quicker than others based upon just
01:40:44.060
logistical challenges that you have to deal with. I think we, I think all of our leaders have stated
01:40:52.300
that if consumers will go back to their normal buying patterns, that the pressure will be relieved
01:40:59.820
sooner than later. For instance, you really probably need fuel for a couple of days rather than a couple
01:41:06.380
of weeks. And we've, we've heard reports of people filling up everything they have. And just the reality
01:41:13.480
is product is being delivered. I talked to refineries this morning that are producing at maximum
01:41:19.900
capacity. They're utilizing all of their resources to get to these impacted areas. But I think what
01:41:26.040
this demonstrates, you know, president Trump has talked about energy dominance, energy security starts
01:41:31.740
with a, a robust domestic supply system. And this is what is being implemented. This is what's being
01:41:39.100
conducted and being used. I think consumers across the country need to recognize that this storm was
01:41:46.420
catastrophic. People are doing everything humanly possible to safely get these systems back online
01:41:55.200
and these pipelines that supply fuel to the Northeast. And so they are literally working around the clock.
01:42:05.460
And there is no timetable, I don't think, Glenn, that you can point people to and say, hey,
01:42:11.820
tomorrow, everything's going to be back to normal.
01:42:15.220
Are you concerned? My theory is, and I don't know if you're the right person to even talk to about this,
01:42:21.060
but my theory is, is that as we have these plants offline, we're not buying more oil. I mean,
01:42:28.220
we don't, you know, we got to go through the reserves and it's got to be an orderly system.
01:42:32.300
Um, so we've got stuff that is kind of built up that we've already bought, et cetera, et cetera,
01:42:37.000
that should have been refined all this week and parts of last week. Um, is this a big enough shock
01:42:42.040
to the system to make the price of oil for any significant period of time go down that would
01:42:51.540
Um, that is a big question and I would love to take that baited and to give you my opinion,
01:43:00.260
but let me, let me refer you to the American Petroleum Institute who API.org and their energy
01:43:07.880
tomorrow.org statement. They've got a hurricane response and market effect. Okay. And so if I want,
01:43:14.500
as far as market response, I want to, I want to get you to these economists that study these issues,
01:43:21.000
um, and, and let them be the ones to answer that, because I think that'd be, that'd be a more fair
01:43:27.080
response rather than me giving you a partial answer. I, I appreciate that. I appreciate your,
01:43:31.440
um, uh, willingness to be candid on that. Is there anything that before we let you go that,
01:43:35.900
that Americans need to know besides don't panic and bring your lawnmower, um, to be gassed up,
01:43:43.240
anything Americans need to know, or anything that we can do to help?
01:43:47.240
Uh, I think the things that Americans can do to help is to go back to your normal
01:43:51.620
buying patterns, recognizing that this is a big storm and it has a big impact.
01:43:58.140
Um, Americans need to know that at every level of government to, uh, first responders at the local
01:44:05.400
level and mayors and judges to the governor and the entire team in Texas to across the nation,
01:44:11.680
people are working together to mitigate the disruption of their lives. I'd call some
01:44:16.740
Louisiana counterparts this morning, Oklahoma counterparts yesterday, people are working
01:44:21.320
together. So relief is on the way. It is a, uh, a very, um, complex process and it's being done
01:44:29.600
in a way that Americans can be proud, recognizing that their needs need to be met. And people are
01:44:35.820
Todd Staples, president of the Texas oil and gas association. Thank you so much. I appreciate
01:44:41.380
You bet. Sponsor this half hour is a Delta defense. This is the United States concealed
01:44:46.660
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01:44:51.740
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01:45:14.820
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Donald Trump, uh, yesterday donated, according to CNBC, a million dollars of his own money to
01:46:42.500
Harvey, uh, efforts. We commend him for that. That's really cool. It's really cool. Um,
01:46:48.860
if you, uh, have five bucks, every dollar counts, and we sure would like you to, uh, donate, uh,
01:46:55.720
at mercury one.org, uh, all of the money raised, every penny of the money raised goes to the cause.
01:47:02.900
And we would, um, sure appreciate it if you would donate now at mercury one.org. Uh, we're well over
01:47:10.380
a million dollars now, uh, just from the five and $10 donations that are coming in. And that a lot of
01:47:17.040
that money is going directly to feed the people who are at the George R. Brown convention center.
01:47:21.660
We're, we're working with the organization that is providing the 25,000 meals every day,
01:47:26.700
um, beginning today. So we need your help. Uh, and you can do that at mercury one.org. I'm going to be
01:47:33.700
out, um, in, I think Galveston this weekend. We're loading up an airplane full of, uh, stuff because
01:47:43.300
we're not sure we can get all the volunteers and everybody down and back. Uh, so we're loading up
01:47:48.480
an airplane and we are just bringing all kinds of food and we'll give you some coverage on social
01:47:53.200
on that. So you can be a part of it, but please join us at mercury one.org or at glenbeck.com.
01:48:00.600
Also, uh, next week, new season, uh, new, all kinds of new stuff. Um, Pat and Jeffy are, uh, being, um,
01:48:11.120
reassigned Pat, a lot of people don't know this about Pat, but if you're a long time listener,
01:48:15.740
uh, Pat was, uh, you know, the number one guy in Houston on KPRC for years, he was, he is one of
01:48:23.360
the best talk show hosts in America. Really? Uh, it's hard to believe. I know. They say,
01:48:27.380
I mean, it's hard to believe. Everybody's saying it. Um, so am I to deny it? I mean,
01:48:31.840
I bow to their better judgment. Yeah, right. I have, uh, I've asked Pat, big man. I've asked Pat
01:48:38.100
if we could do, uh, the Pat show. We're not sure that's the name. I was also going for,
01:48:43.020
uh, boxy, but good. Yeah. It's just kind of strange, but, but, uh, he's going to be doing
01:48:48.380
that at following this program on the blaze radio network and on the blaze TV network. Uh,
01:48:53.060
you'll be able to watch that. And that begins a week from Monday. Originally, I was going to
01:48:58.800
leave, uh, to sell facial cream. Didn't work out. It didn't work out. I thought it always worked
01:49:06.280
out. No, no. Sheriff Clark beat him to the punch. I guess so many people. Sheriff Clark beat him to
01:49:12.240
the punch. Is that why he left? Cause it was a, it was a secret on why he left. I didn't realize
01:49:16.940
it was a facial cream thing. I saw on CMNBC a stat that 80% of people now work in the facial cream
01:49:21.820
industry. That's too many. You don't need that many people created many, you know, look at that.
01:49:27.320
Look at that. Uh, wow. There's quite a glut of celebrities that are going into that. And, uh,
01:49:33.920
Pat's not one of them. No, unfortunately, but that's because he's on TV every day and everyone's
01:49:38.600
like, if that's what the facial cream does, I don't want no part of that. Yeah. I'll get
01:49:43.800
forward to that. So that starts a week from a Monday. Yeah. Um, some new shows coming to
01:49:49.800
the blaze, uh, TV, uh, beginning next week and we'll be rolling some things out. We've been
01:49:55.960
working on them for a long time. I have not been talking to you about them because quite honestly,
01:49:59.260
I'm here. I'm sick of me talking about stuff. I just, just do it. Tell me what you're going
01:50:04.040
to do. Just do it. Yeah. We feel the same way. Thank you. Um, I wait, hold it just a
01:50:08.200
second. Uh, but you should know that, uh, also we're developing some new ways to write
01:50:13.040
things. So we have the whole writing crew, all of the journalists and everything that
01:50:17.400
work for the blaze coming in, not next week, but the week after I, we may be covering some
01:50:22.040
of this, uh, behind the scenes. Cause I think people should see how, how things really
01:50:28.680
work in the media and how we're trying to change things. Cause I think the media is
01:50:33.520
completely broken on all sides and there's a new front page, new story, uh, pages that
01:50:39.360
are coming to the blaze.com the week of September 18th that I think, um, are going to be helpful
01:50:46.180
to you. Really exciting. Um, so Pat's show starts a week from a Monday and, uh, and Jeff, he's
01:50:51.160
going to be working over at the blaze radio as well. And obviously we know the answer with
01:50:54.640
Jeffy, but can we still bring Pat back on the show? Uh, time to time, Pat, will you come
01:50:58.340
back on? It depends on how he treats me. I want to see what the kind of kickbacks I
01:51:02.240
get for, uh, you know, for his show. And Jeffy, will you come on, I guess, too, or
01:51:06.780
whatever? No, I'm not paying kickbacks or anything. I'll tell you that. Yeah. I had
01:51:09.700
a really good idea for, for Jeffy. It's a magic eight ball thing, but Pat there and
01:51:14.940
Stu reminded me, uh, this is radio and it won't work on radio. He wanted to paint his
01:51:19.320
head like a magic eight ball. I wanted to shave his head and then paint his head like a
01:51:23.940
magic eight ball. I don't have a problem shaving my head. Well, I had two issues
01:51:26.440
with it. Uh, we're, uh, it's a medium, uh, that, uh, communicates an audio, which I
01:51:30.180
thought was, uh, was, and also we basically have Jeffy in blackface, which I thought was
01:51:33.480
a bad thing to start a new show with. The other thing is you have to, you have to shake
01:51:37.700
a magic eight ball. There's nobody in the world. You can't shake him with, you can't get him
01:51:42.460
up and with a crane. So the shaking part would be impossible. Wow. I'm just saying right
01:51:50.240
there that you're, you know, overweight and oh, am I going to miss this? Uh, join us have
01:51:57.900
a safe weekend prayers for all in Houston. This is the Glenn Beck program. Mercury.