Best of the Program | 5⧸31⧸22
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Summary
In this episode of the Glenbeck Program, Dr. Pat Gray joins us to talk about the dangers of using a 9 millimeter gun in a crime scene, and how to deal with them. This episode is brought to you by Relief Factor, a drug-free, natural way to get your life back.
Transcript
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all right wow i think we have solved all of america's problems today don't you i mean i
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mean we started out with a lot of problems and if more people would listen to today's podcast
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all of them would be solved you'd be you'd be uh better off as a human being if you just paid
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attention yeah except we did we solved everything except what freaky condition is making it that
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tom cruise never ages yeah no that one we we have no answers for no answers for uh but today's show
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you do not want to miss it's great fun and you'll learn a lot i mean because i did because we well
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i did because i was listening to another show while we were doing this one here's today's podcast
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you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
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welcome to the glenbeck program just want to remind you it's tuesday
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ah feels good doesn't it uh it is uh tuesday pat gray is joining us from pat gray unleashed and we
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appreciate you making it in today oh it's hard it wasn't it was hard i was driving around lungs
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like crazy huge piles of lungs in the oh from the nine millimeters that just blow that organ right
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out yeah yeah and then when i got to work i had to climb over a 15 foot pile of lungs to get in the
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door see that's dedication that's yeah that's dedication by a bunch of lungs ain't no mountain
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of lungs high enough right to stop him thank you from coming in i don't know why they pile them like
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that they could spread them out over a block or two but now you gotta you know the lung the lung plows
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come out and they just need to just push them there's a supermarket uh you know you go into some
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of the supermarkets here in texas and they've just plowed all of the lungs at the back of the
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parking lot and it's huge oh yeah lung mountain huge well here in texas you know lungs uh outnumber
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people two to one really yeah that's two one no one talks about no one talks no one talks no one
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talks no one talks same kidneys you shot as joe biden says they'll blow that organ right through you
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with a nine millimeter yeah but if it's only a 22 it sticks right in there stays right in your lung
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and which is good it's really good yeah i mean it's good for the bullet to be jammed into your
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lung when booth shot uh lincoln uh you know that bullet stayed in his head didn't go clean through
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and he was fine and it gave the it gave the doctor an opportunity to stick his finger in the hole and
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try to dig it out oh that's true he did and yeah and i thought of that when i thought of very very
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hygienic oh yeah yeah he didn't wash his hands um but i thought of that today when i read this from
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from joe biden where he's like and it gets us you know an opportunity to get in there and take that
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bullet out well wait what does anybody believe that conversation actually took place with a doctor
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because i frankly i'm having a hard time well when you remember that you remember that his wife
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is a doctor right i'm a doctor well yes that's true could have been any doctor could have been
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any and it could have been any hospital because he doesn't remember it was some trauma hospital
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the biggest one there yeah then or now i'm not sure the biggest trauma hospital i really thought he
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had made a mistake and like was talking about a different type of weapon and just said nine
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millimeter no he's no it's very dangerous because i i mean we've had a lot of military guys in here
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we've had a lot of you know high level security guys in here over the years yeah talking about
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preparedness and they all make fun of me for my nine millimeter they say like i feel like the nine
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millimeters this is the thing they look down on it is like it's not really going to work in one of
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these situations yeah they've all said yeah nine millimeter is like a 380 it's the minimum to do the
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job and you might have to fire off a couple of rounds oh wow okay it's a 45 or a 357 will tear you up
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even even when it's blowing your lung out of your body well you have to you have to again you have
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to should this is just i'm throwing this out there but should we consider mandatory third lungs because
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there's so many shootings here in texas all of our lungs are all over the side we don't have a
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problem with fingers do we and fingers outnumber people 10 to 1 10 to 1 10 to 1 and you don't see a
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lot of fingers on the side of the highway do you no you know no no you don't where's the last gun
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battle you saw where they blew off 10 fingers it's rare i've never seen one never seen one
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never seen one so that's because we got rid of the really evil 10 millimeter which could blow off
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the fingers that's why they were called 10 millimeters because it would blow off all 10
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of your fingers at the same time yeah uh now we have to wait for 4th of july to be able to blow
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fingers off have you noticed that they've switched from the ar-15 now and now they're they're going
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after the handgun as well yeah this is i mean they're going after handguns we were just talking
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about canada before you came in and how they're going after this remember this is what nixon wanted
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yeah he and people think of it as hardcore conservative he wanted to ban handguns he was not
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conservative no he was not no i mean well he was he was certainly more conservative than john
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cornyn uh and uh and uh mitch mcconnell you know it's hard to know those guys are die hard
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conservatives all big time yeah john cornyn is like whoo all right second amendment is safe
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john cornyn's on it i i just hope and i don't know i hope that this is a an effort by the republicans to
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say that they they had some conversations and they were talking and uh that's all it comes to
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i mean there are some low hanging fruit things you could do in reality that we would actually agree
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with on mental health and things like that so it's not impossible they could come up with something
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that would make sense but would you favor uh i think the last loophole probably on the background
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check is person to person like if i want to sell glenn yeah a handgun very small percentage
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uh a background check in that instance this would be the universal background check bill i mean it's
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very very popular this is why they talk about it often yep um you don't like it but i i might
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i'd have to think about it the thing is if you give them an inch you're going to take a mile and that's
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true and you know and and that does that include family yeah the mansion to me uh bill exempt uh gave you
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an exemption for family transfers and a couple of other things um but i'm not going through with
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with my family no yeah to give it to your son my my daughters get my guns yeah we should also point
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out this would has absolutely nothing to do with the shooting the person went through a background
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check right so it has i don't know that there's ever unrelated to this whatsoever has there ever
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been a mass shooting that where the guns were obtained in that way i don't think so not that i know
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no i believe the um uh the guns that obama's administration smuggled over the border oh yeah
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did come back here and literally were used in in shootings in of a patrol agent and then they
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turned up in paris if you remember right yeah i think conservatives can look at this some
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conservatives like the red flag law thing especially if it's it's very narrowly crafted some people like
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the the 21 and older right we already have 21 and older for handguns maybe they should be ar-15s too
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again you can make legitimate arguments that there's some reasonable thing to approach until
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you see canada until you see what they will do with these inches as you point out pat they will
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take a mile they will turn it into what canada is doing now which is banning all firearms that is what
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they're in the middle of doing can you negotiate with somebody who says i want to kill you and your
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whole family no no why because i'll say okay so i only kill your daughter well you were overton
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windowing me before yeah or i i i just i get your backyard of your house you know what i mean you
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can't negotiate because their ultimate goal is to kill your family they haven't changed that goal
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these guys are saying they're going to take all the they want to leave you with 22s that's almost a
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cap gun you you can kill a squirrel with that literally you can kill a squirrel with a 22
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so no i don't think so that they won't leave you with the 22 they are talking about taking
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nine millimeter guns off that is the most popular handgun in america and they're talking about taking
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that away no i don't i don't i can't negotiate with you and they know they just can't be honest
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in this country the country has a gun culture uh people generally speaking love to the the idea of
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being able to defend themselves they did a a poll recently that was not about repealing the second
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amendment which is obviously what their goal is here by the way i mean it's a hundred percent what
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they want when you hear them talk about it they talk about you know turning around violence in these
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incidents you can't do it with the things they're proposing they're just giving you a small step on
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the way to eventually overturning the second amendment and taking away your gun and like when you when the
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american people were pulled just on handguns should there be a law not a constitutional amendment but just
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a law that would would restrict you from being able to buy a handgun it was 80 to 15 against
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they have no they know they are so against the american people they have to lie to them yeah and
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they do and do these things like oh well we only want common sense gun control well none of those
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things that they're suggesting that are common sense gun control would do the things that they're saying
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they would yeah even they keep citing australia none of the proposals that they're actually
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admitting they want or anywhere close to what australia did in this country implementing australia
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would be taking a hundred million guns off the streets they're not even they're not even proposing
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those things yeah so i mean these are just lies and they're trying to get to where canada is going
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let me give you where we what we should be talking about i don't know if you read what happened in
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charleston west virginia uh this over the weekend but uh a family was having a big graduation party at an
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apartment complex and uh a guy is speeding through the complex he stopped by police so he drives to his
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apartment he gets uh a semi-automatic rifle and he goes and he's going to fire you know into that
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crowd of people he's firing uh doesn't hit anybody um two police officers same one that pulled him over
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they arrive they confront him uh he fired a shotgun at them wounded both of them and took them out of
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action and then what happened a woman who was carrying a concealed uh gun and a concealed carry
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permit she takes it out of her purse and shoots him dead so end of that one she saved 40 people from
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being killed now my question is if the gun was the villain last week why isn't the media holding up
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the gun this week and showing a picture of that very brave gun that saved 40 people
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because it's obviously the gun that did it doesn't quite fit the narrative no it doesn't they'd rather
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just keep lying about uh the first the second amendment that it's not absolute that you couldn't
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buy a cannon uh when the constitution was ratified which you could and people did and and then the
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other thing he loves to talk about is that there's no no kevlar with on deer as they're running through
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so so according to the over and over my gosh according to the journal for quantitative criminology
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armed citizens use guns to defend themselves at least 989 883 times every year oh wow according to
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the journal journal of criminal law and criminology wow um they say gun owners uh defend themselves
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on an average of 1 million 884 348 times a year a study by the cdc wow estimates that an annual
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defensive gun use range from 500 000 to more than 3 million every year that's incredible how come we don't
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hear any of those stats think about the number of deaths think of the number of deaths think of the number
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of rapes robberies criminals that aren't caught think about all of that when the cdc says between 500 000
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and more than 3 million every year why don't you hear that as pat said earlier doesn't really fit their
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this is the best of the glenn beck program and don't forget rate us on itunes
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i know what you're thinking glenn you seem more confident today yes well my friends that started
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dot com promo code beck or at amazon hello america hey i've got good news it's tuesday right right
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who's not for that four day work week yeah i mean we'll become italy where you know you mail something
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off and long after your death some guy comes and says this was just delivered to you it's written back
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in in 2022 you're like wow on paper they haven't had paper for 40 years it'll be like that but four
00:16:24.380
day work week i'm into anyway um i'd like to play b or not the b uh and you tell me because i can't tell
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anymore what a real story is and what a b story from the babylon b is okay so still i'll give you the
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headlines um fda official in charge of evaluating new drugs hospitalized for mental disorder
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be or not the b headline number two san francisco schools to drop the word chief from job titles to
00:17:05.860
avoid offending native americans that seems so obvious that it has to be a real one um that one
00:17:13.620
has to be not to be southwest passenger who asked for permission and got it to masturbate on a
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flight gets 48 days in prison that seems like a high too high a punishment for a real story i feel
00:17:32.280
like to 48 days no way in this society yeah um democrats propose replacing memorial day with day
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honoring those who have been misgendered how can that possibly be a real story irs irs squanders nearly
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one billion dollars in erroneous pandemic credits even though they have a 100 million dollar uh
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uh bonus to hire more people say they are too short staffed to track down that billion dollars
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stolen from us incredible be or not to be i honestly i'm not sure if any of these are babylon b
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stories you could you could make the argument to me that all of them are real which i guess is why the
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babylon b is good or all of them are babylon b yeah they should i mean they should they should be
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babylon b stories right they should be so let me let me give you uh top federal official in charge of
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evaluating the safety of drugs think covid has been hospitalized against his will uh this month for
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an unspecified mental disorder prompting concern over his fitness prompting concern over fitness for his
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roles which includes making major decisions that impact public health
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that's a real story just happened this weekend while there are many options on the matter next
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story our leaders uh and leadership team have agreed that given the number of native americans in our
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community we have that have expressed concerns over the use of the title chief we're no longer going to
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use it real story southwest airlines passenger 34 years old antonio mcgarity was sentenced to one year of
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probation after pleading guilty last week to uh self-gratifying himself during a southwest flight
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from seattle making more sense okay to phoenix uh apparently he was sitting next to a woman on the
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flight when he exposed himself shortly after takeoff he then said uh you know to the woman do you mind
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and uh according to another witness she put her hands in the air and says it doesn't matter does it
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i think that's just surrender you know that's just like that's not permission you can't if you've
00:20:18.320
pulled it out already you don't get to ask for permission at that point well he thought her answer
00:20:24.320
was kind of quote kinky end quote i think this is just her not wanting to get murdered yeah like and
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just saying you know really does i mean common sense if you're asking that with your wiener in your hand
00:20:39.740
does it really matter right does it matter like we say learn then vote the order is important right
00:20:46.140
the same thing here right okay you know like you have to get the permission in advance that was
00:20:53.060
beginning the procedure that was a real story um of course it was the irs um despite getting a
00:21:00.340
6 percent budget increase and an addition of 10 000 new irs agents the irs claims it just can't spare
00:21:10.660
the resources to recover almost a billion dollars in forgery and forged payments uh just can't where
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did i put that billion dollars yeah they'll be harassing tons of people in this audience for audits
00:21:26.900
this year by the way real story and then there's this democrats have unveiled an official proposal
00:21:34.240
to replace memorial day which they are calling a problematic holiday honoring white supremacist
00:21:41.260
soldiers who died for a racist country with a more inclusive day misgendered misgender or
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misgender or real day wait what was it misgender or real a day this see it looks wait who is proposing
00:21:58.960
this democrats no this important day really this important day will allow us to honor the true
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heroes those brave non-binary individuals who have been called he instead of all right you got me this
00:22:14.380
this is a babylon b story this is this is it finally the true heroes are getting their day of
00:22:20.700
recognition said nancy pelosi presidential medal of heroism will be awarded to one brave misgendered
00:22:27.880
person each year the first one is to be given to justin trudeau who has often mistakenly been referred
00:22:34.980
to as a he and that is the that one is actually babylon b though thank god at least one of them was
00:22:43.200
because the rest of them i rest of them no absolutely could be what is going on
00:22:50.160
i i honestly and if you want to if you want to convince me it was a democrat not nancy pelosi
00:22:56.900
who is super aware of if i said aoc if you said aoc or if you said you know ilana omar or uh you know
00:23:05.940
iliana presley yeah like i might have believed it yeah it's just you know the only thing is pelosi just
00:23:12.200
is too too public facing to be the face of that particular movement now of course she'll advocate
00:23:20.080
for uh kids being aborted seconds before birth and that have no qualms about that whatsoever
00:23:25.160
but i don't think she'd go that far today next year today absolutely yeah today today no one other
00:23:32.040
thing just to bring you back to reality let me give you a couple of uh good stories uh florida's a
00:23:38.940
sheriff the law and order sheriff carmine marcino which i love a share carmine you know i got some
00:23:47.660
friends i'm just saying we'll take care of business you know i mean uh carmine sheriff carmine
00:23:54.000
marcino uh responded to um the texas school shooting saying you don't get to shoot our children
00:24:03.140
you bring deadly force into this county and we are going to kill you end quote
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i take that from you carmine you know i'm saying hey i love it i love it uh and then tommy mass
00:24:18.320
uh tommy tommy tommy massie had uh i think we should start calling him tommy massie i like that
00:24:24.560
little tommy massie he's so cute um by the way he is like uh i mean he is a a little mini uh tesla
00:24:33.300
he's got so many patents to his name do you know this yeah he went to mit yeah he's like
00:24:38.420
we did one right somehow or another a smart guy got in there
00:24:43.960
don't worry we'll drive him he'll be in a straight jacket in a week um he said uh what's
00:24:51.240
the number of murderers who have been deterred by the federal gun free school zone act number of
00:24:59.140
people that have been i could get i could guarantee this number yeah zero zero zero the federal gun
00:25:07.300
free school zone act uh he says was a knee-jerk reaction in 1990 that has cost more lives than it
00:25:14.560
is saved repeal it now let the bad guys know that unceremonious death awaits them if they target your
00:25:24.280
kids i am all for that you know i've seen these stories this weekend about you know dads who were
00:25:30.980
soldiers who are now there you know with the ar standing in front of the school i'm all for that
00:25:38.520
i'm all for that even in my house with my kids like no your dad's serious you are going to clean
00:25:44.340
your room i'm for i'm for a show of force i think it's good i mean look it makes sense to harden these
00:25:51.540
schools you know you go through the evidence and you see that over the years violence has generally
00:25:55.980
gone down uh even violence in schools have gone down we went over those numbers uh earlier this
00:26:01.640
or last week but there is a thing that's going on with these sort of spectacle shootings this you know
00:26:10.520
i want attention for myself i want to be famous or infamous and i want to do these things and you know
00:26:16.480
it hasn't just been schools we should remember that most of these mass shootings do not occur in
00:26:20.800
schools they occur in other areas but like hardening schools seems to be a really basic
00:26:27.040
step we could take to deter that particular crime that doesn't mean that it doesn't happen
00:26:31.340
two hours later at baseball practice sadly we don't know but you hardening schools seems to be a pretty
00:26:38.120
basic step you could take to to to to uh to push back on this a little bit you know the the left
00:26:45.560
jumped to well security doesn't do anything when we got those initial reports that security
00:26:50.620
officers were on site right when it happened and we found out they weren't that that that wasn't
00:26:56.440
true and at the very least we all know that every mass shooting ends every one of them all of them end
00:27:03.960
with armed security it's just a matter of whether they're on site or not whether they show up 20
00:27:09.160
minutes after it started or not you can get them there at the beginning and that seems to be the best
00:27:14.780
approach shouldn't we all remember that it was jimmy carter that gave us the phrase first responders
00:27:22.160
it was jimmy freaking carter now maybe the peanut thing worked out well but other than that i can't
00:27:32.880
think of one thing that jimmy carter did that we should hold on to not one not one habitat for humanity
00:27:40.360
him yeah that wasn't i thought that was he was involved in that right yeah he went and built
00:27:44.620
houses okay that was that was it i thought he had a some sort of no i don't foundational role
00:27:49.580
think so maybe he made a foundation of a house yeah he helped maybe i think he was just swinging a
00:27:55.320
hammer which you know i don't want to tear those houses down right so there you go that's good you
00:27:59.660
got that you know but uh yeah other than that no he was the guy who said hey america wear a sweater
00:28:05.640
which is that what they're telling us now they're blaming the gas prices we'll play the audio for
00:28:11.800
you blaming the gas prices now on you because americans just won't stop driving no we won't yeah
00:28:23.080
you're right we won't that's weird you know we were the ones that kind of put the assembly line
00:28:29.640
together so we could all have cars and i don't know if you've noticed this this isn't like you
00:28:37.840
know uh france where you can walk across the whole country in a day you know it's not germany it's not
00:28:45.660
switzerland and even switzerland has mountains well so do we i don't know if you know this i mean the
00:28:51.660
people who are really hurting are the people who live in the rural parts of our country which is the
00:28:57.320
majority of our country by the way that have to drive their farmers or whatever they drive a truck
00:29:05.060
they drive 30 miles in to go to the work at the factory or wherever they work that's not unusual
00:29:11.720
in america to drive 30 30 miles how are you afford it at some point you can't afford to drive in
00:29:19.640
and that's what they would say at the white house is the point
00:29:25.700
you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:29:32.760
so remember stew when i talked to you about four
00:29:55.640
four weeks ago about p ads and neither of us had ever heard of it and was it p ads it was it was
00:30:02.700
uh presidential emergency action directives okay and we had not even heard of it at the time
00:30:12.480
yeah the new york times reports today until now public knowledge of what the government put
00:30:21.960
into classified presidential directives which invoke emergency and wartime powers granted by congress and
00:30:30.940
otherwise claimed by presidents have been limited to declassified descriptions of those developed in the early
00:30:38.820
cold war in that era they included steps like imposing martial law rounding up people deemed dangerous
00:30:49.520
and censoring news from abroad what could possibly go wrong
00:30:56.020
now this was uh first started by eisenhower in the atomic age when we were afraid of nuclear weapons
00:31:06.580
if we would go to a nuclear war there wouldn't be enough time for them to sit around you know the cabinet
00:31:12.080
go okay so what do we do they pushed a button and everything had to go so they would make these
00:31:18.540
directives beforehand and they would say this is for an emergency in case of a nuclear war and the president
00:31:26.620
would sign it and then it would be held so you couldn't congress doesn't have a right to look at
00:31:34.680
these things because they're not actually enforced it's kind of like our advice until the emergency happens
00:31:43.180
and then it becomes the law of the land how does it become the law of the land what process gives the
00:31:49.320
president the right to emergency orders if there's an emergency the president has all kinds of powers
00:31:58.900
now i can't think of an emergency that might be on the horizon you know sure there's the economic
00:32:06.180
emergency that could happen you know there's the the energy shortage that might happen there's a
00:32:13.100
lawlessness emergency on the streets that could happen uh but other than that can you think of
00:32:20.240
anything no no there's the monkey pox emergency i left that one left that one out um there's the
00:32:27.900
cheating at an election one that you know would be really there's the war emergency action that could
00:32:35.280
be declared but uh other than that again nothing to see here so it's not been clear what the modern
00:32:43.600
directives have been um known presidential emergency action documents those are called p ads
00:32:52.460
um they've never been made public or shown to congress but the new york times has been looking into george w bush
00:33:03.420
now why would you stop there i think we all know why am i right several of the files provided to the new
00:33:14.160
york times by the brennan center for justice shows that the bush era effort partly partly focused on a law
00:33:22.360
that permits the president to take over or shut down communications networks in wartime remember that one
00:33:31.020
and people like your local radio hosts and your hosts on talk radio said hey for the first time in my career
00:33:40.280
uh the emergency broadcast system is being taken out of our hands what the emergency broadcast system
00:33:49.360
used to be is the white house would alert the radio stations and i think it was
00:33:57.200
i think it was wmal in washington would get the first alert and then wmal would hear the tones
00:34:06.980
and they would say this is a test or this is an emergency if it was an emergency they'd pass it on
00:34:15.720
to another station and that station would pass it on now it would take like an hour to get all the way
00:34:21.200
across the country to the west so the west had already been wiped out okay but it's seattle who
00:34:28.160
cares uh anyway so so that was their opinion at the time it was like yeah i remember i because i worked
00:34:35.700
in seattle i remember doing those tests going if it's real we're all dead anyway so hey everybody in
00:34:44.080
seattle you've got about 90 seconds to prepare um but uh so that so that's the way the test used to
00:34:51.820
work then back in the george bush era they changed it he now can push a button in the oval office or
00:35:00.220
wherever and it immediately overrides all signals so he's on television and every radio station
00:35:10.000
there is no other information that is coming out except from the information from the white house
00:35:15.820
didn't this happen in austin powers wasn't that his plan where he could just press a button and
00:35:21.440
would overtake all broadcast probably okay probably i didn't see it but yeah we're probably taking
00:35:28.740
directives from austin powers and that's probably the thing that will make the most sense all day to
00:35:35.280
you uh so uh apparently uh lawmakers cannot interfere with these another file from the summer of 2008
00:35:45.500
mentioned that the justice department lawyers were revising an unidentified draft order in light of
00:35:53.060
recent supreme court opinions the memo doesn't specify the ruling but the court had just issued the
00:35:59.880
landmark decision on topics that relate to government actions in an emergency one about gun rights in the
00:36:07.260
united states and another about the rights of guantanamo detainees in court hearings well that could
00:36:14.540
be any any one of those or all of those now here's the thing we got these uh through uh foia but we
00:36:25.020
didn't foia the government we foia'd the uh george w bush library now no one knows why they didn't foia
00:36:35.260
the obama administration's records other than he doesn't have a library and nobody's building one yet
00:36:43.420
because graph i mean uh they're looking for the right play
00:36:52.080
so we don't know uh what happened uh with the the p ads they are still enforceable if the president
00:37:05.140
would say hey you know nuclear launch what do you have and it's the eisenhower one he could still
00:37:11.680
have that we don't know what's in effect and what's not in effect um many of them are classified in fact all
00:37:19.520
of them are classified except for this group that has just been released apparently they had i'm looking
00:37:27.240
for it here um i think 9 000 pages were uh not released because they're still classified and i think
00:37:41.540
they released 2 000 pages so there's another nine but i'm sure i'm sure there's almost nothing on those
00:37:49.140
other nine that remain probably everything's fine yeah yeah it's the best way to always assume
00:37:56.520
we've learned that lately just assume everything's going to be fine that frightening yeah it's truly
00:38:01.160
frightening um by the way uh there's a couple of things here um only half of evangelical pastors
00:38:08.860
hold a biblical worldview now this might be a little shocking for people who go to church
00:38:17.820
a study released tuesday builds on an other report from american worldview inventory 2022
00:38:24.420
which shows that 37 percent of christian pastors bring a biblical worldview with them to the pulpits
00:38:32.780
now a biblical worldview is um do you it does every person have a purpose and a calling do you have a
00:38:43.500
purpose for being here and can god call you to something i'm asking you stew why are you asking me
00:38:51.220
without the echo on your voice because i don't want you to feel damned immediately oh okay so do you
00:38:59.880
believe that purpose and calling sure family and value of life those come from god yes do you believe
00:39:08.080
in god this is a tough one i know the previous two but yes do you believe in creation and this is weird
00:39:15.440
creation and history i don't believe in history i just believe in me okay right i believe in creation
00:39:22.620
do you yeah i mean i've intelligent design i don't know how he creates yeah i don't i don't find that
00:39:28.540
question to be as riveting as some do yeah i don't really care how he did it honestly but like
00:39:35.080
it's it's on him oh i got we got you there so you're saying dinosaurs aren't real yeah i don't really
00:39:43.900
i don't know all the details to it wasn't there i will say i also don't know how an iphone works
00:39:48.040
exactly but i'm glad the texts go through but i don't believe in steve jobs no they never existed
00:39:53.820
um that just all of a sudden appeared on a beach somewhere um uh let's see you believe in sin
00:40:02.560
salvation and relationship with god um do you believe in behavior and relationships the bible
00:40:10.300
and its truth and morals i think yeah okay i i think those are all pretty easy uh only 37 percent
00:40:19.280
of pastors believe in that i mean you might want to put that on the front sign you know what i mean
00:40:27.580
like hey come in try our donuts and we don't really believe what you think we believe well you this
00:40:33.800
happened to you right when you were doing your church tour oh yeah back in the day oh back in the
00:40:38.100
day we went to every every church every religion because my wife wouldn't marry me without a common
00:40:44.940
religion and i'm like oh i love god and everything but religion i this is a long time ago this was not
00:40:52.300
you at the time though you were not this this church tour happened in what i don't remember what
00:40:57.400
year it was 99 wow it was a long time ago so long time you're finding your way and mainly because your
00:41:02.320
wife wouldn't marry you if you didn't right i mean you're forced into it right i was forced into it
00:41:07.720
and she and she wouldn't she didn't believe in premarital sex either and i'm like okay chickaboo
00:41:13.520
what's it gonna take and she's like god and i'm like here i am i'm practically a god look at me
00:41:20.940
uh no and a greek god a greek god she vomited uh and then i went to church and so we tried everything
00:41:29.320
i mean we uh you know i really liked uh the jewish uh synagogue that we went to you know uh except
00:41:38.880
you couldn't eat a lot of good things that i liked and i don't speak a word of hebrew but it was in
00:41:44.000
and out on saturday and it was pretty good i've since then learned there's more than that but i went
00:41:52.240
to this i went to this church and it was a uh what do they call those churches congregational right
00:41:57.560
the the white churches on the greens in is it i don't remember i think it's congregational churches
00:42:02.820
um and they're non-denominational and uh so i'm sitting there in the pew and tanya and i were
00:42:09.340
listening we're like it's okay you know it's a church and uh during the sermon the uh pastor said
00:42:16.080
now you all know that i don't believe in god but if there is a god we should serve him and i'm like
00:42:27.360
hey that doesn't make any sense at all okay uh wow uh and that should be on the front door
00:42:36.140
someplace that should be before you go and sit down you should just know our pastor doesn't
00:42:41.180
believe in god but if there is a god maybe we should serve him uh you know good safety tip there
00:42:51.920
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00:42:52.100
na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na
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na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na
00:43:04.980
opa na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na
00:43:05.000
na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na naaaaaa na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na intimed na na na na na na na