The Glenn Beck Program - July 05, 2023


Best of the Program | 7⧸5⧸23


Episode Stats

Length

38 minutes

Words per Minute

144.41289

Word Count

5,543

Sentence Count

1

Misogynist Sentences

1

Hate Speech Sentences

6


Summary

In honor of Independence Day, we take the day to go through the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. What does it mean to be a day of reparations? And who's doing coke in the White House?


Transcript

00:00:00.000 welcome to the podcast hope you had a great july 4th uh independence day of course is what we're
00:00:04.820 supposed to call that um we actually spend some time going over this because i think if you had a
00:00:08.880 you know typical backyard barbecue or picnic or whatever you did for july 4th not a lot of thought
00:00:14.940 about what the holiday is supposed to mean from a lot of people so today we take july 5th to go
00:00:20.860 through the declaration of independence the constitution some of our founding documents
00:00:24.320 what do they actually mean what are the attacks against it are they real uh and go through with
00:00:29.000 the real documents so we don't have to speculate we know exactly what the founders said unlike
00:00:34.660 someone like cory bush who was tweeting about how we need to think about this day as a day of
00:00:40.440 reparations uh we're gonna look at the real meaning of the 4th of july and also we'll talk about cocaine
00:00:47.660 in the white house because that's the type of story we're supposed to be talking about in 2023
00:00:52.500 who's doing coke inside the white house it's all on today's podcast
00:00:57.340 you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:01:08.620 so we wrapped up uh yesterday i think what 10 days uh here in saint george it was uh oversold
00:01:20.720 um every single day it was really an amazing thing so many people were deeply deeply moved and um
00:01:30.080 broke down at different places all the way through broke down um some of them broke down with the
00:01:39.120 pilgrims others with the declaration of independence and the first draft others deeply moved by the black
00:01:47.220 heroes in america for the um american revolution george washington lincoln slavery was very powerful
00:01:56.780 section and of course the red pill room um we had um we had about 13 000 people come through
00:02:05.060 we stopped yesterday afternoon i think at three o'clock and then immediately began breaking down
00:02:11.180 and we open again not tomorrow is it tomorrow no no it's i think it is no it's thursday i'm so so
00:02:21.100 screwed up like in case you get lost track of time it's wednesday today so yeah i guess thursday we open
00:02:27.720 up um so we're moving it and the trucks are going to be on the road today two massive 18 wheelers
00:02:34.460 and uh we're going to be up in idaho and everything is sold out but roll the dice roll the dice i mean
00:02:41.480 i don't know um but anyway i thought today is a great day to go through some of our documents
00:02:50.160 because people stood at the declaration of independence for quite some time and read the whole
00:02:55.940 thing and we don't do that enough you know how many times have you read come on be honest
00:03:03.500 the constitution yeah me too uh so i think we should go through these because the constitution
00:03:15.100 and the bill of rights it is the reason we're having all of the problems that we have today
00:03:21.620 we're not following it nobody knows it and how can you protect your rights if you don't know what they
00:03:28.480 are so i thought i would start at the beginning you know all of these rights that are talked about
00:03:35.600 come from the pulpits the pulpits in the 1750s 60s and 70s were on fire and they were talking about
00:03:46.820 you know kings being tyrants and you answer to god and you go directly to him and so when thomas
00:03:54.100 paine wrote common sense these things were common sense and i never you know i i always thought yeah
00:04:01.820 freedom is common sense when i was you know younger and a kid i thought common sense yeah we should all
00:04:07.220 be free you could go to china and go to the rice patty and say shouldn't you be free and they would
00:04:13.020 say of course it's common sense no it wouldn't be it would not be you have to noodle it out you have
00:04:20.160 to be you have to see that there is opportunity that comes way before the government all of these
00:04:29.940 rights that you have as an individual so it was common sense in america because they were preached in
00:04:37.420 all of the pulpits all of these things it's where we get a lot of our lines from our declaration of
00:04:44.620 independence and so thomas paine pushes us into uh the revolutionary era it's his it's his pamphlet or
00:04:57.320 his book called common sense that i think about 70 percent of the country had read and had a copy of
00:05:05.920 which is i think it was a third of the households had a copy of it and 70 75 percent read it put that
00:05:14.340 into perspective now can you think of anything that 75 percent of this population has read anything
00:05:23.860 so they read it and they they realize yeah we should be free we should separate from um uh from the uh
00:05:37.480 uh from the king so i want to go through uh some of this with you and let me see if i can get it here we
00:05:48.160 are so so the summer of 76 there are five guys that are chosen and there is this uh vote that goes on
00:05:58.520 and john hancock the guy with a big signature at the bottom he said he signed his name that large
00:06:04.620 because he wanted to be able to have king george read his name without his glasses on that's a pretty
00:06:11.740 bold statement because it was a death sentence and he knew it and so before they selected the people to
00:06:20.060 write the declaration they all had to vote on are we going to do this do we want to break away
00:06:25.060 from england and everybody voted and it had to be unanimous there couldn't be anybody on the fence
00:06:33.880 you had to be dedicated to it because as he said this is a death sentence we will most likely hang
00:06:41.760 uh we will lose our fortunes we will lose maybe maybe even our family and our family's lives and we
00:06:49.580 will definitely be dead this is treason so everybody raise a hand if you want to commit treason with me
00:06:57.560 and everybody raised their hand then he said i think every word of this should be voted on
00:07:05.580 because if there is one colony that is not in step if we don't all agree on every word
00:07:15.660 then the king he's got his people everywhere and spies everywhere and he will find out where we
00:07:25.180 we don't agree and his people will worm their way in and break us apart so we have to stay united so
00:07:33.520 another vote do you think it all should be read and voted on separately line by line or paragraph by
00:07:40.360 paragraph and uh be unanimous everybody raise their hand then they picked five people
00:07:47.460 john adams was one uh benjamin franklin was one and john adams was actually selected to write it
00:07:57.660 and john adams he was like i don't know well i was gonna say jeffy but no he had so much more credibility
00:08:06.460 never he had never done anything with drugs or hookers so he was not like jeffy but
00:08:13.300 um he was absolutely unlikable and uh and i think that's like jeffy don't you think stew just an
00:08:21.580 unlikable human being yeah i mean that this is what science has said it's not us yeah you thank you
00:08:28.040 when you argue with us on that you are arguing against science against the science so yes so he said i can't
00:08:37.540 write this nobody will vote for anything that i write because i'm unlikable and benjamin franklin
00:08:43.960 said you see that kid over there with the red hair um i hear he's a great writer let's ask him
00:08:50.140 thomas jefferson had red hair he was from virginia he wasn't even supposed to be there that day
00:08:57.640 so they approach him and uh and ask him if he would write the declaration of independence
00:09:04.780 so he did we have the first draft of the declaration of independence in our museum
00:09:11.360 it is absolutely amazing amazing and it's like a word document you can see who changed what there'd be
00:09:20.580 a line through a sentence and then something written over that line and then off into the column it will
00:09:27.780 say be franklin and the date it's amazing amazing
00:09:32.800 this is the best of the glenn beck program and we really want to thank you for listening
00:09:40.000 so i want to go through um some things that uh you might find on wikipedia and some things you might
00:09:48.940 not find on wikipedia so on wikipedia you will find that the united states
00:09:57.060 uh began slavery the institution of slavery was established in north america in the 16th century
00:10:05.660 under the spanish colonization now where is that that's cuba and florida and they began in the late
00:10:15.080 1500s early 1600s then british colonization where is that that's not with the pilgrims that is with
00:10:24.380 jamestown the french also brought slavery where haiti and new orleans and the dutch colonialization
00:10:34.240 that is up north in the new york area so
00:10:38.800 we see that it's happening all over the world by the way the majority of slaves uh that were imported
00:10:47.260 from africa went down to south america mainly brazil um they took a lot more slaves in so
00:10:56.600 i i am not excusing slavery in america i am looking at it from a historic perspective you cannot take
00:11:04.000 something out of the context of the time so let me just tell you a couple of things first of all
00:11:10.440 um the i won't make an excuse for jamestown jamestown became a nightmare jamestown if you go to our
00:11:19.160 museum you'll see um we have pictures of a skull because it ended in cannibalism uh and the skull
00:11:27.580 has knife marks on the head from where they were carving the flesh off of the body it turned into a
00:11:35.540 nightmare and i think it always does when you come to this country or you focus on money and you make
00:11:43.720 god or gold your uh or i mean you make gold your god um when you do that everything goes wrong because
00:11:53.920 you'll do anything because your god is money so how can i make more money well i can certainly do that by
00:12:01.640 enslaving people so slavery um was a part of jamestown however it was not a part of the plymouth colony
00:12:13.900 it is really important to understand and this is something that we went through in the um between 1850
00:12:22.080 and 1870 we had this same discussion are we jamestown or are we
00:12:30.580 the mayflower and plymouth which one because one was really super bad and led to slavery and
00:12:41.320 eventually sedition and treason and the civil war the other led to the declaration of independence
00:12:50.200 and a god-minded people who were trying to do decent honorable and freeing things for all mankind
00:13:00.180 no nobody was perfect jamestown was worse now when it comes to slavery with our pilgrims
00:13:07.580 let me give you a couple of uh facts the pilgrims when they came over they made slavery illegal
00:13:14.680 from i think day one they called it man stealing no man stealing that's what it is called in the bible
00:13:22.400 you can't steal a man from his home and where he is and just enslave him
00:13:28.280 it's why the indians broke the longest running treaty in the united states that treaty with
00:13:35.460 the pilgrims because war with some tribes but the tribes that the pilgrims made treaties with
00:13:43.880 the wars between the tribes was really vicious just vicious and the native americans some tribes
00:13:53.500 would actually um torture the people that they would capture the men they would they would fillet them
00:14:02.960 they would peel their skin off of them while they were alive i mean it was nasty and they did this
00:14:09.900 to frighten the other side to make sure that the other side knew do not pick a war with us
00:14:16.000 so they were they were doing that um to frighten the other tribe and the other tribe would do the same
00:14:24.860 they would also take their women and children and they would make them into slaves
00:14:29.240 when the pilgrims arrived the native americans were curious about the white man's god and we were eager to
00:14:38.060 share it and made the bible and we had a copy of it in the museum made the bible wrote the bible in
00:14:45.460 the native american tongue so they could read it the reason why that treaty was broken not by us but by
00:14:53.080 the native americans is too many christianized indians were saying wait we got to go to war but we can't
00:15:01.380 torture we can't enslave people this was such a big deal man's uh stealing that a storm uh reared its
00:15:12.140 ugly head on the east coast and it blew a slave ship into port at the plymouth colony the slave ship
00:15:21.240 comes in and you could smell a slave ship from a mile away so they knew exactly what had blown into port
00:15:28.980 the pilgrims boarded and arrested the captain and the first mate of that uh ship because man stealing was
00:15:38.220 illegal then this is a poor group of people who are giving 50 percent of everything they own
00:15:47.000 to the king just so they can stay alive uh and they take up a collection among themselves
00:15:54.580 to be able to hire another crew put provisions on that ship and send it back to africa to free them
00:16:03.860 that's quite a different story that we don't have to reimagine that's very different than jamestown
00:16:12.820 so which country are we are we the country that is trying to liberate and free people and see all
00:16:23.040 people the same or are we jamestown that and in cannibalism i i suggest that we pick the pilgrims
00:16:33.160 and that's what we did um during the civil war and in 1870 the uh or i think it was 1870 or 1880
00:16:41.780 congress printed a map that shows the tree of sedition coming from jamestown or the street uh tree that gives you
00:16:52.240 all kinds of blessings the tree of liberty that came from the pilgrims in massachusetts so we start to
00:17:02.080 abolish slavery um mainly in the north really early if you would look at um new england as a country
00:17:12.440 it would have abolished uh slavery like a hundred years ahead of everybody else but they were colonies so
00:17:20.280 it's not a country um during and and after the american revolution
00:17:27.640 the abolition of slavery became uh a big deal and abolitionists uh popped up i just told you in the
00:17:38.140 declaration of independence there was a paragraph written by thomas jefferson that only two colonies
00:17:44.400 voted voted against and it had to be unanimous so it's not all 13 colonies in fact virginia voted for
00:17:51.180 the abolition of slavery to be put into the declaration of independence and that was thomas jefferson who
00:17:57.120 wrote it and voted in virginia it was south carolina and georgia those were the two so we wanted to end it
00:18:06.940 11 out of the 13 colonies immediately we couldn't so when we become a country george washington lays out
00:18:17.560 the northwest ordinance that's 1787 we're under the articles of confederation where the federal government
00:18:24.900 is very weak but in the northwest ordinance we it's it's quite an amazing document in the northwest
00:18:34.080 ordinance george washington uh lays out a couple of things that we have to have um the fundamental
00:18:43.220 principles of civil and religious liberty in all the territories um that are uh above what was it
00:18:54.640 uh nor i mean uh louisiana i think or kentucky it's basically the mason dixon line uh someone
00:19:04.040 and so everything new that we're going to bring out in territories up in the north um from iowa all the
00:19:12.680 way to the coast cannot have slavery and they must have religious freedom and um for the good government
00:19:24.800 and the happiness of mankind schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged
00:19:30.580 the utmost good faith shall always be observed towards the indians their lands and their property
00:19:37.400 shall never be taken from them without their consent this is washington do we live up to these things
00:19:44.060 absolutely not did we mean them george washington did and in their property rights and their liberty
00:19:51.540 they shall never be invaded or disturbed unless in just and lawful wars authorized authorized by congress
00:19:58.940 but laws founded in justice and humanity shall from time to time be made for preventing wrongs from being done to them
00:20:06.980 and preserving peace and friendship with the native americans again this is the idea that all comes from
00:20:14.900 the pilgrims not from the people of jamestown that eventually uh just start taking everything from
00:20:23.080 from everyone so the articles of confederation uh are in play the northwest ordinance is in play
00:20:32.620 if you don't know what the articles of confederation are you should read them sometime it is crazy
00:20:38.580 um it is the first constitution of the united states the articles of confederation is so weak
00:20:46.620 it's actually in this first constitution it establishes are you ready a league of friendship
00:20:56.680 that that's how incredibly weak the association was with the states the government was like hey neighbor
00:21:09.160 how are you doing isn't it great to be alive today a league of friendship obviously that didn't work but the northwest
00:21:20.340 ordinance comes from that and then what happens then where do we go from there how is slavery uh changed
00:21:30.280 from there so we have a lot of things that uh come about um after the northwest ordinance we have the gradual
00:21:40.740 emancipation in new york starting in 1799 um we have uh in the constitution that we write in and is uh done i think in
00:21:52.680 1780 what no 91 is the bill of rights and the final constitution and that abolishes the slave trade i believe in uh 1807
00:22:05.960 so we can't stop it entirely but what we do is we say we're no longer going to import slaves now why would
00:22:16.700 they do this well let me ask you progressives why haven't you just taken all the guns from americans
00:22:25.740 if you believe you're so right why haven't you just gone door to door and taken the guns
00:22:33.240 because you're going to be judged right that's what you would believe this is causing the death of all of
00:22:40.180 these children so you're trying to change it in laws but then it never seems to happen it never really is
00:22:48.200 fully implemented why don't you just take the guns for the same reason the founders didn't abolish
00:22:58.820 slavery immediately at first for the declaration of independence it was two states but it was allowed
00:23:08.240 to fester and it spread into the southern states because it's evil and pernicious
00:23:13.160 the government was trying to stop it like progressives try to stop things one step at a time because if you
00:23:26.140 would have just said no more slavery we would have gone to war if you would say we're coming to pick up
00:23:34.320 all the guns america would go to war back then and now we chose no war let's just try to keep working
00:23:45.920 on it so really we're doing the same thing and i think we're doing that on abortion on the right
00:23:53.960 you're doing that with guns or communism or whatever it is you want on the left
00:23:59.720 it's progressiveness progressivism it's taking one step at a time
00:24:06.900 this is the best of the glenn beck program welcome to the glenn beck program
00:24:14.480 so here's something a talk show host doesn't say every day in fact here's something a talk show host
00:24:25.100 has never said uh before um at the white house uh on sunday uh secret service agents discovered a white
00:24:35.380 powder uh and evacuated the white house until they found out that white powder was simply cocaine
00:24:44.600 uh uh yeah it's uh okay uh so it wasn't there to blow up but it was blow uh and so we got that going
00:24:58.500 for us now uh i'm not gonna tie this to hunter biden i think it is unfair there are a lot of creeps in
00:25:05.900 the white house that might be doing cocaine they say that it was most likely dropped and i think most
00:25:13.820 likely might be a stretch um let's actually look at all of the facts before we decide on who it was
00:25:21.900 could have been somebody that was visiting could have been a family member could have been a million
00:25:28.460 things could have been the aliens that they have hinted at and told us but haven't told us are visiting
00:25:36.480 the white house with cocaine don't know but uh earlier they said that uh hunter biden was at the
00:25:45.960 white house until friday they found it on sunday and they say the white house is thoroughly searched
00:25:54.320 every day and so they didn't see the white powder and they said they think it's most likely that it was
00:26:03.240 dropped by a tourist and i know in my drug years uh i was so sloppy with my really expensive cocaine
00:26:15.720 baggie what do i really drop okay maybe maybe somebody dropped it they also said it's possibility
00:26:22.600 somebody planted it okay uh that would be weird um you know maybe we could dust it for prints
00:26:31.400 because maybe there's fingerprints on it i don't know uh especially if somebody just dropped it and
00:26:40.080 weren't trying to plant it let's see if it had any prints on it um but now three minutes ago now five
00:26:47.480 minutes ago i guess abc news just said that they cannot confirm it was in a public place at the white
00:26:55.060 house they said their investigation is going on and we can't confirm nor deny that it was in the
00:27:02.060 library with a candlestick well if you remember glenn uh when the kids were touring willie wonka's
00:27:09.200 chocolate factory they did go to see fizzy lifting drinks in an area they were not actually allowed
00:27:14.420 inside of so i think the most likely outcome here is a tourist was on a tour and just went to another
00:27:20.760 part of the white house they weren't allowed to check out to see if they had fizzy lifting drinks
00:27:24.680 and this is the fizzy lifting drink they found and who who can't hear joe biden right now saying
00:27:31.480 and you stole fizzy lifting drinks you stole so you lose yes i could definitely see that who can't hear
00:27:42.540 that i have many questions here glenn um many many questions um now you had mentioned you thought it
00:27:48.920 might be a family member and i what i mean something no no i said speculation right has
00:27:56.040 been i'm not suggesting that i don't know let's wait for the fact you kept it you were very careful
00:28:01.580 there you were so careful that you eliminated no one because every person is a family member
00:28:06.800 of some family so you've eliminated no one there did you did you jump to the hunter biding conclusion
00:28:13.980 immediately uh because i sort of did i you know i look there could i've watched this white house
00:28:20.740 closely lots of people there are definitely on cocaine but i did think just from the sloppiness
00:28:26.360 of the operation hunter had to be involved in some way this would be the perfect statement for him to
00:28:31.900 make right after being getting a deal for all of his crimes they are still looking into it and they
00:28:39.740 won't divulge all of the details because of their investigation which will take probably 12 years
00:28:46.000 um but i wouldn't be surprised if we found out 12 years from now that they knew the cocaine came from
00:28:55.520 somebody because the cocaine was found on the belly of a hooker uh in one of the you know
00:29:03.060 you know in the library right kitchen or right they're not gonna tell public place let's be
00:29:09.220 honest about it they're gonna come up with an excuse immediately these people lie all the time
00:29:13.100 if hunter was doing it uh off of the counter they all got they caught him and they kicked him out
00:29:18.300 because they couldn't believe what he was doing they would come up with this exact excuse there's
00:29:21.800 no reason to believe anything this white house says about this topic at all it very well could have
00:29:27.640 been hunters they very well already might know it but also glenn isn't the white house like
00:29:32.540 the most secure environment yes in america yes we all there has to be a camera pointed at the place
00:29:43.640 where no this cocaine was found rewind the footage and look about who look at who put it there
00:29:49.780 no in public places in the white house you think they put cameras come on stew they're not invading
00:29:59.200 people's privacy by putting a camera no in the places of the white house where the tours go through all
00:30:06.460 the time why would you have a camera there now could there be an open laptop of hunters and he happened to
00:30:16.020 be recording at the time sure maybe maybe but a camera put in by our government to watch places where
00:30:24.660 americans tour no way especially after you've made the last three years about the ongoing insurrection
00:30:31.840 against our public buildings in russian dc we saw how many cameras they had inside the capitol building
00:30:37.960 pretty much every single inch of that place has cameras you're telling me the white house doesn't have
00:30:42.740 similar surveillance of course they do especially in the public places they may not have it in the
00:30:50.840 upstairs you know in the white house but i bet you they have it in the stairwells you know they might even
00:30:57.020 have it in like the living room of the upstairs of the private residence you know just to make sure if
00:31:02.920 the president drops dead something happens i don't know but in the lower level of the white house
00:31:09.240 absolutely cameras everywhere everywhere so what of course i think we're getting from this is it was found
00:31:18.880 in a private area right because the public area there's no be no excuse and the fact that they're
00:31:24.060 leaking out the i don't know it may not have been oh in the public area after all we're all as
00:31:31.620 surprised as you all of this sort of nonsense that they're leaking out to me indicates they know it was
00:31:38.340 in the private area and they know it was something bigger than some tourist dropping it there they know
00:31:46.180 it was somebody you know could i mean like we've seen problems with the secret service recently
00:31:50.460 who knows you know god only knows what this could have been could have been there could have been
00:31:54.720 theirs it could have been uh it could have been it could have been joe could have been the head of
00:31:58.040 the secret service maybe this is why joe occasionally seems focused you know i mean i don't know maybe
00:32:03.120 occasionally joe does like one out of every 15 speeches he actually has energy maybe he is the one
00:32:09.420 doing the cocaine in the white house that might be the answer here no i don't think it is but
00:32:16.840 i mean i i'm not not saying it isn't you're not willing to rule it out i mean come on you can't
00:32:24.160 possibly rule it out have you seen how this guy is governed have you seen how you know most of the
00:32:29.580 time he's completely asleep and then every once in a while like in a debate or something he has energy
00:32:35.940 for 20 minutes especially right especially at night when he's like you know nine o'clock
00:32:42.040 eastern giving the uh state of the union address come on everybody knows he's asleep by 3 30 in the
00:32:49.340 afternoon he's having dinner at noon he's having breakfast at like 11 30 when he rolls out of bed
00:32:56.120 dinner at noon and he's in bed by one you know so i think what we're saying here is yeah we can
00:33:03.360 confirm now that joe biden is the one who did it so there you go uh analysis here from the glenn beck
00:33:08.380 program that's the name of the show the glenn beck you know and uh the the views of stuber gear which
00:33:16.040 may end up in a court of law and him in prison are not necessarily and in this case absolutely not
00:33:24.960 the views of this host it's not it's not a joke it's not a joke no joke no joke you can i mean just
00:33:35.100 think of the i mean this is really the difference and i'm not talking about all conservatives i'm
00:33:44.100 talking about people who revere our country our country and there's a lot of conservatives in
00:33:49.300 washington who are just they're all talk and all show and uh they they don't feel necessarily any
00:33:56.900 different than any progressive feels but i know a ton of people that are regular citizens
00:34:05.800 that would find that so abhorrent that i mean you go to the white house and it's it's the room
00:34:15.740 it's it's the building where all of the presidents except i think since thomas jefferson right all of
00:34:24.600 them no it was the first one it wasn't washington but it's been from the beginning and it is some
00:34:34.900 place that is just revered and special and sacred and there's so many people now that are just i i
00:34:41.940 remember that's that was my biggest problem with bill clinton and his shenanigans that were going on
00:34:50.200 it's like dude really i mean find a find a motel 16 it doesn't have to be a motel 8 or a motel 6
00:35:01.040 you can upgrade go to a motel 16 and do that not in the white house it's just shameful just shameful
00:35:09.580 we're getting to the point though in our country where i would say the motel 6 is definitely of
00:35:14.380 higher quality than our white house we heard that we're there i hope people recognize that
00:35:19.660 yeah we are there um one other thing um the um a lower court a judge came out on the louisiana case
00:35:30.560 where we've had the louisiana um attorney general on he's fantastic he came on and he said we
00:35:38.880 have done our investigation uh with missouri and we have filed a court case against the white house
00:35:47.960 for what they've done with social media and they used the white house uh talking about i think it
00:35:56.040 was was it jen saki that was originally talking about yeah i mean we we talked to social media and
00:36:01.600 tell them you know what they can and cannot say with covid and the judge excoriated them
00:36:08.620 yeah it just really ripped them apart uh if the allegations made by the plaintiffs are true the
00:36:13.660 present case arguably involves the most massive attack against free speech in united states history
00:36:19.060 in their attempts i mean that's quite a statement in their attempts to suppress alleged disinformation
00:36:24.900 the federal government and particularly the defendants named here are alleged to have blatantly
00:36:29.620 ignored the first amendment's right to speech the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits
00:36:36.060 in establishing the government has used its power to silence the opposition opposition to covid 19
00:36:41.680 vaccines opposition to covid 19 masking and lockdowns opposition to the lab leak theory of covid 19
00:36:48.440 opposition to the validity of the 2020 election opposition to president biden's policies statements that
00:36:54.920 the hunter biden laptop story was true and opposition to the policies of the government officials
00:36:59.420 in power all were suppressed it's quite telling that each example or category of suppressed speech
00:37:05.300 was conservative in nature this targeted suppression of conservative ideas is a perfect example
00:37:11.300 of viewpoint discrimination of political speech during the covid 19 pandemic a period perhaps best
00:37:18.280 characterized by widespread doubt and uncertainty the united states government seems to have soon
00:37:22.840 assumed a role similar to an orwellian ministry of truth it goes on and on and on and on
00:37:28.800 um and it talks specifically about people like you know corinne jean pierre um and other members of
00:37:36.480 the white house uh this goes to uh there's several states plus people like jay bodhacharya that are
00:37:41.200 involved in this uh website or this uh lawsuit it is a i mean it's a blistering ruling blistering
00:37:48.260 and i feel bad for um you know uh what's her face always in a new dress that's at the white house now i can
00:37:56.680 never remember her name kjp yeah she does such a poor job oh my gosh she's so bad um and i feel bad that
00:38:04.180 she's involved in this because she i could guarantee you only read what was given to her there was no
00:38:10.420 opinion there she said you might as well that's like involving the teleprompter and that teleprompter
00:38:17.620 was involved in this
00:38:18.980 you