The Glenn Beck Program - May 17, 2021


Best of The Program | Guest: David Barton | 5⧸17⧸21


Episode Stats

Length

43 minutes

Words per Minute

160.38724

Word Count

6,997

Sentence Count

582

Misogynist Sentences

5

Hate Speech Sentences

21


Summary


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Today in the podcast, we talk about Israel and the Palestinians and the ongoing violence there and the reaction from places like NPR, which are very concerned about the Palestinians sleep habits because of this battle.
00:00:12.220 We'll get into that today. Also, is the pandemic over? Is this it? Are we done with this?
00:00:18.320 Finally, we go into the details of how the numbers look, why they look that way and the crazy ramblings of Anthony Fauci and also UFOs.
00:00:29.100 The government's just basically blurting out that, yeah, this is happening all over the place and no one's noticing that they've said it.
00:00:35.020 We'll get into that as well. Make sure to subscribe to the podcast right here on the podcast app, as well as Stu Does America.
00:00:41.920 It's my show. Airs every night at 8 p.m. Eastern, but you can get the podcast like even beforehand right here on your podcast app.
00:00:48.380 Make sure to go subscribe to it and you can subscribe at BlazeTV.com slash Glenn.
00:00:52.640 Promo code is Glenn for 10 bucks off your subscription to Blaze TV to get not only a Stu Does America and Glenn Beck radio and TV, but then all of the other great Blaze TV personalities.
00:01:04.180 Don't miss it. BlazeTV.com slash Glenn. Here's the podcast.
00:01:07.240 You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:01:20.800 Holy cow. Holy cow. Look at what them Jews have done now.
00:01:26.980 If you look at the stories today, you're going to see that the Associated Press has come under fire.
00:01:36.100 Yep. Yep.
00:01:39.440 Apparently, the Israelis bombed the AP building.
00:01:45.080 I mean, what will they do next?
00:01:48.900 Now, they claimed that Hamas militants in Gaza were sharing office space with the Associated Press, but that would be something the Associated Press would report.
00:02:03.140 Wouldn't it, Stu?
00:02:04.800 I mean, you would.
00:02:06.220 I mean, if they were if they had, you know, militants in their office building, they know it.
00:02:12.740 And of course, they would report it.
00:02:14.960 Same with Al Jazeera, which is also in the same building.
00:02:19.160 Yeah, it would be really shocking if they didn't turn that information over to their viewers, their listeners.
00:02:26.600 I mean, it would just be stunning if they just didn't do anything about it.
00:02:31.620 Well, in 2014, now they say they had no idea, no idea.
00:02:38.220 And they think this is an attack on the press.
00:02:41.120 But in a 2014 piece from The Atlantic written by a reporter in the region, they detailed a long and questionable history between the AP and the jihadist group.
00:02:51.960 Quote, when Hamas leaders surveyed their assets before this summer's round of fighting.
00:02:56.980 This is 2014.
00:02:58.500 Remember when there was fighting between Israel and the Gaza Strip?
00:03:03.460 Remember that?
00:03:04.200 That was before Trump.
00:03:05.460 And then, strangely, immediately after Trump.
00:03:08.120 When Hamas leaders surveyed their assets before this summer's round of fighting, they knew that among those assets was the international press.
00:03:17.500 The AP staff in Gaza City would witness a rocket launch right outside of their office, endangering reporters and other civilians nearby.
00:03:27.200 And the AP wouldn't report it.
00:03:30.040 Again, this is from the oh, so very conservative Atlantic.
00:03:35.280 The journalist at the time claimed that Hamas fighters would regularly, and I'm quoting, burst into AP Gaza Bureau and threaten the staff and the AP wouldn't report it, end quote.
00:03:50.440 So, wait a minute.
00:03:52.420 The AP didn't know they were sharing a building with Hamas for 15 years, even though in 2014, the Atlantic reported on it and was quoting people from the AP?
00:04:08.000 Wow, that seems weird.
00:04:10.520 Now, it doesn't give a lot of credit to the AP.
00:04:14.640 You know, it kind of hurts their credibility a bit, you know, if they were able to miss Hamas, you know, Hamas staging right there, you know, like a sweet 203.
00:04:31.180 It would be kind of hard to take them as a credible source, wouldn't it?
00:04:37.120 Maybe just a little bit?
00:04:38.340 Yeah, maybe.
00:04:38.920 I mean, it would be an odd building Christmas party, I would feel like, when, you know, Hamas shows up.
00:04:46.780 Right.
00:04:46.940 But I do feel like it's...
00:04:48.320 Well, you might not want to have a Christmas party.
00:04:50.500 No?
00:04:50.760 Or a Hanukkah party.
00:04:51.860 No, I mean...
00:04:52.840 No.
00:04:53.380 Probably not real...
00:04:55.200 No.
00:04:56.180 So, it's an odd way to confess that you're completely incompetent.
00:05:02.240 But, hey, the AP's, you know, not opposed to it.
00:05:05.580 Well, I don't think you have to confess it if you blame the Jews for lying about it.
00:05:09.440 You could just say it's not true and then just say those Jews are lying once again.
00:05:14.160 We all know how shifty they are, you know.
00:05:17.240 And then you just kind of pop that out there and everyone goes along with it immediately.
00:05:22.440 I mean, that's...
00:05:22.820 Because you're pointing at...
00:05:24.060 You're making it sound like they've admitted this was true.
00:05:27.320 I mean, they're not.
00:05:28.020 They're just saying it's not.
00:05:29.100 Well, they did.
00:05:29.120 No, no, no.
00:05:29.600 They did in 2014.
00:05:31.480 Well, sure.
00:05:32.000 Yeah, I mean, in 2014, they were very well aware, you know, when their reporters talked
00:05:39.360 to the Atlantic, which, oh, my gosh, that is a liberal magazine, isn't it?
00:05:46.080 I was thinking that it was a really, really, really conservative magazine.
00:05:50.100 But I just remembered it's not, is it, Stu?
00:05:53.860 It's pretty much Breitbart, Glenn.
00:05:55.260 I think I'm pretty sure it's very...
00:05:57.040 Okay, okay.
00:05:57.580 All right.
00:05:58.120 Okay.
00:05:58.460 Yeah, so in 2014, they knew about it, but maybe it was one of those damn Israeli rockets
00:06:04.320 that gave them amnesia, and now they can't remember it at all.
00:06:08.740 What did you have for lunch on this day in 2014?
00:06:11.920 You're not going to remember it.
00:06:13.420 I don't remember it.
00:06:14.280 So a terrorist comes in and threatens your staff in the middle of writing a report.
00:06:19.760 Right.
00:06:20.320 You forget.
00:06:21.320 It's easy to forget those things.
00:06:24.040 Right, right, right.
00:06:25.440 Now, I did listen to NPR this morning because I want to know what all the news is,
00:06:33.740 and I am sure that I'm going to get great news coverage from NPR.
00:06:39.680 And, boy, they didn't disappoint today.
00:06:42.260 Listen to the report about Israel.
00:06:45.720 Let's go now to NPR's Daniel Astrin, who is in Jerusalem.
00:06:48.380 Hey there, Daniel.
00:06:49.500 Hi, Steve.
00:06:50.120 How widespread is the destruction in Gaza?
00:06:52.680 Well, these Israeli attacks happened overnight, and every night seems to be more intense than the one before.
00:07:01.160 Stop for a second.
00:07:02.180 Stop for a second.
00:07:02.920 I just want to reiterate this because it's going to become important.
00:07:09.080 Well, these Israeli attacks have gotten worse, and each night is bigger than the night before.
00:07:17.660 So, remember, last week was horrible.
00:07:22.040 I mean, just horrible.
00:07:22.920 People were dying in the AP building.
00:07:25.260 Oh, no, that was this weekend?
00:07:26.600 Yeah.
00:07:27.500 And so it was just, and nobody died in the AP building?
00:07:31.280 Why is that?
00:07:33.320 They gave a warning?
00:07:35.300 Yeah, they warned them in advance.
00:07:36.580 They have video of them all collecting their belongings before they could get out of the building.
00:07:40.660 That's weird.
00:07:41.020 They gave them an hour.
00:07:42.080 I'm being told just now in my era.
00:07:43.540 They gave them an hour, Stu, to get out.
00:07:46.620 So, huh, that's weird.
00:07:49.380 Okay.
00:07:50.120 All right.
00:07:50.460 Anyway, so he says every day they are getting worse and worse.
00:07:57.460 Hey, go ahead.
00:07:58.600 Israel says scores of warplanes again attacked another part of what Israel calls the underground metro.
00:08:05.440 That is what they call underground tunnels.
00:08:07.700 They say Hamas has dug under Gaza to move its fighters and rockets from one place to another.
00:08:12.500 It says it bombed about nine miles of those tunnels overnight.
00:08:15.960 We don't have any word of casualties from that, but these strikes have been keeping Palestinians up all night terrified.
00:08:23.180 I just got off the phone with a 65-year-old woman, Kifaya Abu-Jayyab.
00:08:27.620 Let's listen.
00:08:30.580 She says, we didn't sleep at night at all.
00:08:34.660 We felt like, I felt like my heart stopped.
00:08:36.560 And she is one of the tens of thousands of Palestinians, not only facing fear, but facing short water supply.
00:08:41.960 She says she fills up her buckets to use water to bathe and clean when she does get water.
00:08:46.720 She has just a few hours of electricity a day.
00:08:50.180 And that was just last night.
00:08:52.220 The biggest, deadliest Israeli strike so far in this fighting was Sunday.
00:08:57.040 Several multi-story residential homes collapsed.
00:08:59.540 42 people, including very young children, were killed.
00:09:02.240 Well, has Israel provided evidence to justify one particular strike over the weekend, Daniel?
00:09:08.140 I'm talking about the destruction of a large building that housed the Associated Press Gaza Bureau.
00:09:13.940 Yeah.
00:09:14.340 That's right.
00:09:14.760 That building completely collapsed in the Israeli strike.
00:09:17.300 Israel says Hamas' military intelligence was using the building as well.
00:09:21.880 And that destroying the building had crippled Hamas' command and control capabilities.
00:09:26.940 Israel has not published evidence of that.
00:09:29.860 And although Israel warned the building an hour before there were no casualties, people escaped.
00:09:34.980 We don't know why Israel didn't tell the Associated Press.
00:09:38.180 Stop.
00:09:38.900 Stop.
00:09:39.980 Uh-huh.
00:09:40.580 Mm-hmm.
00:09:42.040 So, wait.
00:09:43.260 So, deadly attacks, yes.
00:09:46.240 But they lead with this crime against humanity.
00:09:50.740 These bombs are keeping people awake.
00:09:54.620 People are losing sleep over this.
00:09:57.880 Now, I have to tell you, I think that's a little out of balance.
00:10:03.680 Are the, is Hamas keeping Israelis awake?
00:10:06.540 No.
00:10:07.780 No.
00:10:09.380 You know, I had a similar situation at my home this weekend where my wife is always cold and she refuses to put the air conditioning on when we sleep.
00:10:19.440 And I woke up in the middle of the night too warm to sleep.
00:10:22.820 Too warm.
00:10:24.060 Too warm to sleep?
00:10:25.500 Mm-hmm.
00:10:26.380 Is there a Jew in your neighborhood?
00:10:27.880 There, I don't know the answer to that.
00:10:30.880 I don't typically.
00:10:31.500 Is she Jewish?
00:10:32.080 Does she have any Jewish blood?
00:10:33.880 Get a spit test.
00:10:34.960 Get a spit test.
00:10:35.740 Mm-hmm.
00:10:36.100 Because, oh my gosh.
00:10:38.100 I've been feeling her head for horns.
00:10:39.260 We've got to do something about that.
00:10:40.080 And so far I've not come up with any.
00:10:41.160 Have you really?
00:10:42.020 Yes.
00:10:42.560 Really?
00:10:43.080 Uh-huh.
00:10:43.280 Yeah.
00:10:44.020 It's, it's.
00:10:44.460 Well, you know what I tell you?
00:10:46.500 You know what the world needs now, according to the CNN contributor, the world needs now a, let me just get this quote, the world today needs a Hitler.
00:10:58.540 So, that was from a, hmm?
00:11:01.600 Just, uh.
00:11:02.180 That's from a CNN contributor there.
00:11:04.920 It's, uh.
00:11:05.360 To be fair, he never mentioned what member of the Hitler family.
00:11:09.300 He just said any, I mean, could have easily been one of the nice ones.
00:11:12.060 I mean, who knows?
00:11:13.660 Yeah.
00:11:13.800 Judith.
00:11:14.220 Francis was great.
00:11:15.880 Judith Hitler.
00:11:17.480 Sweetheart.
00:11:18.180 I mean.
00:11:18.460 A sweetheart.
00:11:20.080 You know.
00:11:20.820 She could knit.
00:11:21.700 She made throw blankets for the whole family.
00:11:24.600 Maybe that's what.
00:11:25.460 But, I mean, not all the Hitlers are bad.
00:11:28.960 Right.
00:11:29.100 So, maybe he, that's what he meant.
00:11:31.260 Maybe that's what he meant.
00:11:32.880 It needs a Hitler.
00:11:34.320 Right.
00:11:34.540 Not the Hitler.
00:11:36.020 I'm the one you keep thinking of.
00:11:37.280 Oh my gosh.
00:11:38.040 What a misunderstanding.
00:11:38.660 We're talking about Scott.
00:11:40.140 We're talking about Scott Hitler.
00:11:42.840 Scott.
00:11:43.580 He is.
00:11:44.740 What did Scott Hitler do?
00:11:45.640 What a sweetheart of a guy.
00:11:47.520 What was, what is Scott Hitler?
00:11:48.620 Yeah, what's he known for?
00:11:50.300 Uh, Scott was a mechanic on Long Island.
00:11:53.000 Really?
00:11:53.540 And, uh.
00:11:54.240 Scott Hitler.
00:11:55.460 Yeah.
00:11:56.140 And, you know, the world we don't have, you know, with the, I'm, I'm just, I'm trying
00:12:02.300 to think about a deal Raja and what he meant by this.
00:12:06.280 And Scott probably, cause he's a sweetheart of a guy.
00:12:09.260 He used to go to the Knights of Columbus and he would play bingo and sometimes he'd let
00:12:13.680 the old ladies win.
00:12:14.800 It was really sweet.
00:12:16.100 Gosh.
00:12:16.400 Uh, but he also was a mechanic and, you know, we have a lack of, uh, of Silicon chips
00:12:21.720 now and I'm sure Scott can help out.
00:12:25.140 Well, you know, well, but I guess my, one of my questions, I, cause I have several, but
00:12:29.040 one would be if you're going to set up a business and your last name is Hitler, do
00:12:35.400 you choose Long Island where there's a generally a higher population of Jewish people who might
00:12:41.400 not be enticed to go to a Hitler's mechanic just because, you know, just because one
00:12:50.160 Hitler hated the Jews.
00:12:52.000 Right.
00:12:52.340 Don't pass that on to Scott or Julia or Francis.
00:12:55.860 Right.
00:12:56.160 That's true.
00:12:56.660 Okay.
00:12:58.020 Don't, they can't, you know, we don't condemn people for their, you know, for their ancestry,
00:13:05.480 you know, just because one of yours was one of the biggest killers of all time.
00:13:10.160 Doesn't mean you are right.
00:13:12.940 Right.
00:13:13.520 That's it.
00:13:14.520 You're not the same as your brother or sister.
00:13:17.040 Just like I'm sure the Hitler.
00:13:18.980 I just feel like there'd be a risk there.
00:13:21.060 A risk factor.
00:13:23.500 Maybe he didn't mean Scott.
00:13:25.060 I don't know, but he did, he did tweet the world today needs a Hitler when, when CNN was
00:13:32.720 asked to respond, they said, we've never heard of a deal Raja.
00:13:36.840 They never, never heard of him.
00:13:39.340 And then later they were like, Oh, Oh, he'll never work.
00:13:44.080 He'll never work here again.
00:13:45.820 I'll tell you that right now.
00:13:48.060 Okay.
00:13:49.060 So we got that going for us.
00:13:50.800 Thank you very much.
00:13:51.840 Uh, and our apologies to Scott for even bringing your name into any of this, uh, by the way,
00:13:58.660 uh, there was a, uh, pro Palestinian, uh, uh, group in London that were marching in the
00:14:08.240 street.
00:14:09.100 Uh, and you gotta love them.
00:14:11.400 You gotta love them.
00:14:12.340 I mean, you know, you're on the right side when, uh, the people, uh, that, you know,
00:14:18.480 you agree with their stance are chanting F the Jews, F their daughters, uh, F their mothers
00:14:27.220 rape their daughters.
00:14:28.660 I think that's good.
00:14:29.600 I think that's good.
00:14:30.380 It's interesting too.
00:14:31.300 It seems in some ways repetitive.
00:14:33.400 If you're saying you're going to rape their daughters, you've already already insinuated
00:14:38.160 what you're the F your daughter is part of it.
00:14:40.520 You're just repeating yourself at that point.
00:14:42.600 And why be so vulgar?
00:14:43.880 Why not just use the word rape?
00:14:45.480 You know what I mean?
00:14:46.560 That is the big problem here.
00:14:48.120 Why assault our sensibilities and, and, and, and really bring civil civilization down to that
00:14:54.940 level by using profanity like that.
00:14:57.920 And to be clear, I think the associated press would probably agree with me on this.
00:15:02.760 This is probably the Jews fault in some way, uh, that, Oh, I think the associated press
00:15:08.100 is working on that story right now.
00:15:09.880 And maybe CNN, maybe the CNN contributor is working on that story now, you know, Hey,
00:15:15.940 by the way, the world needs a Hitler.
00:15:18.760 Yeah.
00:15:19.280 That wasn't pulled down by, uh, by Twitter.
00:15:21.660 That was, uh, surprisingly three hours later, that was pulled down by a Jill Raja.
00:15:27.920 Uh, yeah, he thought, man, I should pull that one down, but Twitter didn't, uh, Twitter
00:15:33.260 didn't pull it down.
00:15:34.180 Well, well, cause what he, you know, people didn't understand that he was saying the world
00:15:38.660 needs a good mechanic.
00:15:41.320 Right.
00:15:41.940 That's exactly right.
00:15:43.060 They just need a good long Island mechanic.
00:15:46.380 Um, by the way, you can, you can still call, uh, you can still find a Bollywood actress
00:15:52.220 Vina Malik, who I love.
00:15:55.720 She's your, she's your favorite.
00:15:57.240 I remember you, you got that whole box set, right?
00:15:59.800 Yeah.
00:16:00.080 Oh yeah.
00:16:00.800 Yeah.
00:16:01.420 Yeah.
00:16:01.720 Dancing on the, um, the, um, the, what's the, there's the big thing where they, where
00:16:10.980 they go to wash the cows, the river, the, yeah, right.
00:16:15.420 I remember dancing on that river.
00:16:17.140 That was a great movie.
00:16:18.140 Anyway, anyway, uh, she, she posted last week.
00:16:21.880 I would have killed all the Jews of the world, but I kept some to show the world why I killed
00:16:26.240 them.
00:16:26.960 Uh, Adolf Hitler.
00:16:28.220 That's, uh, she did that, uh, last week.
00:16:30.600 You still find that.
00:16:32.420 Um, oh no, she's just deleted it too.
00:16:35.660 She, you're kidding.
00:16:37.480 Deleted it.
00:16:38.220 Yeah.
00:16:38.640 Well, she was very, she did not, she was not talking about Scott Hitler.
00:16:41.920 She specifically said she was talking about Adolf.
00:16:44.660 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:16:45.880 So she was like, probably Scott called her and said, Hey, I fixed your car.
00:16:50.760 You know, when nobody else would, why are you doing this to my family?
00:16:54.880 Adolf's dead.
00:16:55.820 Okay.
00:16:56.680 Adolf's dead.
00:16:57.620 I get to blame now.
00:16:58.820 My business is hurt every time somebody drives by Hitler's garage and they're like, what?
00:17:04.880 Well, it's gotta be tough when you've got the garage and you're trying to, you know,
00:17:07.800 hopefully people don't associate you with Adolf, but then like the slogan is never forget.
00:17:12.600 So it's really hard to get past that.
00:17:15.220 Like, like the goal is not to forget it.
00:17:17.920 And every time they go by your side, they're thinking I'm remembering it again.
00:17:21.740 Yeah.
00:17:22.360 Right.
00:17:22.820 It's kind of bad.
00:17:23.660 It's kind of bad.
00:17:28.060 The best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:17:30.160 David Barton, the founder of Wall Builders, the author of the book, The American Story,
00:17:47.860 The Beginnings, which is just the best short story read of the American founding that you
00:17:55.640 will, you'll ever, you'll ever read.
00:17:58.000 It is such a great book that tells our story in short little stories that, you know, are
00:18:04.960 not focused on, uh, the, uh, the place and the bridge and the, the date, but actually the
00:18:12.460 story and the names of the people that you've never heard of the heroes that built this country.
00:18:19.060 Um, it's a great book, the American story, the beginnings, you should go online now and
00:18:24.200 order it.
00:18:24.840 This is a must for every serious person's library and not that it's a, you know, serious
00:18:31.920 book.
00:18:32.200 It is a serious scholarly book, but it is one you can read and anyone in the family could
00:18:38.120 read and get a real handle on America quickly.
00:18:41.620 All right.
00:18:43.020 He is also, uh, the, what is your title over at the American journey experience and Mercury
00:18:49.520 one, David, you're the chairman of the board.
00:18:52.500 Yes, sir.
00:18:53.140 I'm the chairman of the board, but I'm also whatever we need, need over there.
00:18:56.180 So I know you're also a little bit of a, a painter, a little bit of a carpet layer when
00:19:02.500 we need it from time to time.
00:19:03.680 Uh, David, uh, David Barton has been by my side for many, many years and we have been
00:19:10.600 building the American journey experience and also something that, uh, an education, uh,
00:19:18.320 series that we have been building for, uh, the people who follow him at wall builders and
00:19:24.740 also the people at Mercury one that want to come in and, uh, and learn.
00:19:31.880 So let's start with this week, David, let's start with what's happening over the American
00:19:38.800 journey experience Tuesday tomorrow is the ribbon cutting of the actual building.
00:19:45.760 We finally, because of COVID, this was supposed to happen last fall, but we finally have it,
00:19:50.260 uh, ribbon cutting tomorrow.
00:19:52.180 And what is the American journey experience?
00:19:55.260 The American journey experience really is a documentary truth.
00:19:59.920 If you want to say about what America really is, as opposed to the 1,432,000 narratives that
00:20:07.360 are out there, there aren't accurate.
00:20:08.840 So it's a collection of things that you and I have put together over the years.
00:20:12.660 Um, literally the good, the bad, the ugly of American history, whatever the era, whatever
00:20:17.860 the period, if it's the American founding, it's the founding fathers of, if it's slavery,
00:20:22.240 if it's free market or socialism, if it's pandemic shutdowns, whatever it is, it's documented in
00:20:28.780 American history.
00:20:29.540 And we have original documents from every one of those arrows and every other area you
00:20:34.700 can think of that, that allow people to actually see what happened as opposed to the many narratives
00:20:41.340 that are being pushed.
00:20:42.480 So I was, I was over there, uh, Friday and, uh, we were talking about the pandemic and you
00:20:50.380 said, Oh, we have something on that.
00:20:52.820 And, uh, ran over to the vault and pulled something out from 1875.
00:20:58.900 Is that right?
00:20:59.800 18, 1873, 1873.
00:21:02.980 Okay.
00:21:03.540 And it was from the city of Baltimore.
00:21:06.020 Explain what it was.
00:21:07.820 Baltimore was requiring everyone to get a vaccination.
00:21:12.180 Uh, at that time it was a, a vaccination for smallpox, but you're required to get it.
00:21:18.100 If you don't get it, you're fined by the city.
00:21:20.380 Uh, the city paid for you to get it, but you had to have the receipt and show that you'd
00:21:24.400 been vaccinated and they went in and inspected and make sure that you had the vaccination.
00:21:29.240 Same kind of stuff that we're hearing right now.
00:21:32.120 Uh, we're hearing back then.
00:21:33.780 And by the way, also over the weekend, uh, another interesting piece came up and we found
00:21:39.280 that the election recount of 1800, uh, the States were talking about how they needed to
00:21:44.100 send state militias to the U S Capitol to protect the Capitol during the recount.
00:21:49.200 Uh, I mean, there's just very few things that we deal with a day that we don't have some
00:21:53.620 clue to already having been done in history, uh, but certainly the pandemic thing.
00:21:58.140 I mean, right in the middle of that debate there, we see it going on in large blue cities,
00:22:01.940 even back in that day.
00:22:03.060 Uh, right.
00:22:04.000 And it was, uh, it, but it was city.
00:22:06.760 It wasn't federal.
00:22:08.060 So the city said, right.
00:22:10.340 And the city, uh, and, and I have less of a problem with that.
00:22:13.960 Uh, and the city was paying for it.
00:22:15.960 And those vaccines were really expensive.
00:22:19.000 That was a, a receipt from the city of Baltimore that given to a, a black woman, right?
00:22:27.260 It was, it was a receipt for vaccination.
00:22:30.020 Sarah Ayers, uh, black woman is 10 bucks.
00:22:33.440 And back in 1873, that is a ton of money.
00:22:37.640 Uh, 10 bucks was the cost of vaccine.
00:22:40.080 That's right.
00:22:40.620 It was a fortune.
00:22:41.300 Yeah.
00:22:41.480 And you remember the gold coin was $20.
00:22:45.320 So that's, that's like in today's inflation, that's like $2,000.
00:22:51.720 I mean, that's, that's a crazy amount of money.
00:22:54.820 It would have been about a, under a thousand dollars in the money back then.
00:23:01.040 It would, it would, but it, it was still really high, really expensive.
00:23:05.360 Um, and it's, you know, again, the fact the city is doing it and paying for it.
00:23:10.380 And the fact that it was for black communities and white communities, um, there's just a
00:23:15.380 lot of fun lessons from even that incident and that one single receipt.
00:23:19.920 And of course we have tens of thousands of historical documents like that single receipt,
00:23:25.800 and they all have a story with them.
00:23:27.840 They all do some, some really good stuff of just helping us understand who we are and
00:23:32.380 where we've been and the decisions we've made previously.
00:23:35.480 It is unlike everything else that your family encounters today.
00:23:39.820 Your kids encounter in school.
00:23:41.380 We're not re-imagining, uh, American history.
00:23:45.600 We're proving American history with the documents, uh, with the artifacts from the past that, that
00:23:53.220 show us even the history.
00:23:54.460 We don't want to remember a history.
00:23:57.020 We don't like, it is important that we, we learn it so we can imagine our lives and imagine
00:24:04.640 the American dream for ourself.
00:24:06.920 We don't re-imagine history.
00:24:10.140 History should make us re-imagine our lives and our goals and our rights and responsibilities.
00:24:17.660 Okay, so this weekend, uh, we have the American Journey Experience Seminar.
00:24:24.160 It is a two-day conference designed for families and people of all ages.
00:24:30.060 Uh, we have a few slots still open and you can register at mercuryone.com.
00:24:38.020 Uh, we're, we are still trying to figure out how the best way we can get people to, uh, come.
00:24:45.860 We did this a couple of months ago, uh, and we didn't charge anything.
00:24:50.520 And all of the people from Texas, I shouldn't say all, most of the people from Texas in the
00:24:56.320 immediate area didn't show up.
00:24:58.720 Um, and I think that happens when you just makes the things free.
00:25:02.180 People are like, ah, I was going to go, but oh, well, so we're having to charge now for it.
00:25:07.680 So we don't have an empty seat, uh, because this is a really important, uh, lesson.
00:25:13.420 It's over two days, David, his son, and I teach the class.
00:25:18.500 I mean, they teach the class.
00:25:19.760 I kind of, I kind of, I'm, I'm there for, I guess I'm like the, the puppet show that happens
00:25:25.480 in between, uh, for comedic relief.
00:25:28.340 Uh, uh, but we take from the, the, the Mayflower, actually a little before the Mayflower to about
00:25:37.640 what 1960, David?
00:25:40.760 Yeah, we go up through really kind of the modern era, the space age, what happened in the space
00:25:45.880 age.
00:25:46.480 And we moved to that timeframe and it's really kind of interesting how this came about.
00:25:51.280 And by the way, we were just talking about all the documents.
00:25:53.940 That's one of the cool things about being part of the seminar is as we talk about each of these
00:25:59.700 eras, and we will cover from, as you said, uh, from before the pilgrims, um, we really
00:26:05.360 kind of blow up the 1619 narrative real quickly because 1619 is not when slavery came to North
00:26:11.840 America.
00:26:12.200 You got to go to 1526 when the Spanish brought slaves to North and South Carolina.
00:26:17.220 But nonetheless, there's that kind of documentation and we go forward for really the better part
00:26:23.280 of four and a half centuries.
00:26:25.160 And as we talk about the stuff, we will actually bring the originals out and people will get
00:26:30.200 to see and experience the originals.
00:26:32.640 Uh, they will get to go through the vault and get to go through the other areas where
00:26:36.160 this stuff happens.
00:26:37.340 So it's, it's an intriguing experience because you actually get to see and experience truth.
00:26:43.960 It's not narrative.
00:26:45.360 It's, it's truth.
00:26:46.280 You get to see what truth is built on.
00:26:47.980 And that is so transformative.
00:26:50.200 And we've now done this for a few years with young people and the summer Institute.
00:26:55.260 And so many of the parents said, wait a minute, we've seen such a change in our young people.
00:27:01.040 We want to see some of this stuff too.
00:27:03.100 And that's really how this came about was there was a real high demand from parents.
00:27:08.200 So you can bring your family, uh, probably not appropriate for little, little kids,
00:27:13.060 just because it's a lot of sitting and listening.
00:27:15.880 Um, but, uh, it's really for all ages, anybody that, uh, you know, can sit and, and listen.
00:27:22.420 Um, and you can take notes and you will learn more on the story arc of America.
00:27:29.600 That's what this is.
00:27:30.820 We tell you the high points and low points of America.
00:27:34.540 So you understand where we started, where we are and how we got there.
00:27:41.060 How did we go off track?
00:27:43.120 How do we get back on track?
00:27:45.140 What have we lost along the way?
00:27:46.880 What do we need to restore?
00:27:48.680 What are the bad things that we should be looking to jettison now in, uh, in the way we are as,
00:27:55.400 as America.
00:27:56.500 So register now.
00:27:57.960 It is this weekend, mercury one.com.
00:28:01.760 There will also be summer dates, uh, that you will be able to, uh, sign up for if you can't
00:28:06.800 make it this weekend, but really just sign up for this weekend, mercury one.com.
00:28:11.400 Find out all the information there.
00:28:12.800 Now, also we have something where we are very, very selective on who comes because the classes
00:28:20.160 are so limited.
00:28:21.460 Uh, we have the American journey summer Institute.
00:28:24.980 This was our leadership training seminar.
00:28:27.200 Uh, it's a two week conference for students between 18 and 25 year olds.
00:28:33.280 Uh, it's two weeks of nonstop projects, research, lectures, outings.
00:28:39.200 Uh, anybody wants to learn the truth on American history.
00:28:42.480 I will tell you if your kid is going into college, this is something you should require them to do
00:28:50.720 before they leave the house.
00:28:52.920 Uh, it is, it's quite, uh, intensive.
00:28:57.560 Uh, and it happens here again in, in Irving or Dallas, Texas at the, uh, at the American
00:29:03.640 journey experience, uh, as well as with wall builders.
00:29:07.060 Tell us, tell us a little bit about this one, David.
00:29:10.100 Yeah, this two week, um, session that we do.
00:29:13.780 And by the way, Glenn, not to diminish your part in this, because nobody I know in the
00:29:18.340 country has a better grasp of when things turn wrong.
00:29:23.100 And when they first turn wrong than you do, I mean, what you do and being able to point
00:29:27.880 out what progressives did and when they did it, it is invaluable and understanding where
00:29:32.900 we are today and how to get out of where we are.
00:29:35.060 So you are a key part of this as well.
00:29:37.620 And two week session and the family, um, the family seminar, all of that.
00:29:42.460 So what we did in the two week session is we really take all the narratives, um, that,
00:29:47.100 that we're faced with today, whether it be the narratives over is America exceptional
00:29:51.280 or are we socialistic or should we be, or how we've been or Marxism, you name the issue
00:29:57.220 that's out there and we will take on that issue and take it back to its root base so
00:30:02.960 that everyone understands those who come will understand exactly how to deal with that.
00:30:07.700 And whatever a professor says, whatever a peer or colleague says, whatever a friend
00:30:11.800 or enemy says, you'll know exactly how to deal with it.
00:30:14.980 And so it really is the apologetics is getting your feet down into all of these areas so
00:30:20.980 that you really know what truth is and you can defend truth and you can persuade others
00:30:25.460 to the truth.
00:30:26.460 So it is one of the most grounding, grounding programs that we do.
00:30:30.320 And it is literally transformative.
00:30:32.860 Uh, on the website, uh, a lot of young people have testimonials.
00:30:38.100 Go ahead.
00:30:38.360 No, no, no, no.
00:30:39.260 I was just going to say I've, I've, I've witnessed it myself.
00:30:43.640 And, uh, you know, if you're, if your child has, uh, an open mind and is a serious individual,
00:30:51.880 they need to attend this because I have seen them change in a two week period.
00:30:59.000 It is, they understand their responsibilities.
00:31:02.360 They understand, uh, what is happening in their world and their eyes are open to what
00:31:09.040 they've been taught.
00:31:10.080 Uh, and it's, and they know how to research and find original sources.
00:31:15.600 We've had a student actually teach their teacher, their history professor set wrote on a, an essay
00:31:23.700 that they wrote and wrote in red ink, not a score just said, you're either a bold, audacious
00:31:31.400 liar, or, you know, something I don't and ended up teaching that professor weekly for the rest
00:31:38.000 of the semester.
00:31:38.700 Uh, it is, it's game changing because they access original documents.
00:31:44.200 Uh, one more thing that is a problem and I want to just hint at it here.
00:31:49.900 And David will talk about it in, in one minute, but we're also this year doing a teacher's
00:31:55.300 conference, three day conference for teachers.
00:31:58.940 This is so wildly important because our teachers are going awry because of the unions and everything
00:32:06.520 else from wall builders.com is, uh, David Barton and it is.com or is it.org David?
00:32:13.240 Uh, it's wall builders.com and.org. And the same with mercury one is.com or.org.
00:32:18.900 Okay, good. So tell me about the teacher's conference.
00:32:22.280 Yeah. The teacher's conference is a lot of fun because we have so many good teachers across the
00:32:26.500 country, but in a lot of ways, they handicap themselves by not knowing the right pedagogy.
00:32:31.580 And I just mean the teaching method. Um, there is a reason that until 1920, nobody went to school
00:32:38.480 past the eighth grade in America. Once you got to eighth grade, you went to college, you got a career,
00:32:42.540 but that was when school ended. And it was, it was usually only a few months a year that you went
00:32:47.400 to school. Uh, it was not based on the formula we have today that if you're a certain age, you have
00:32:52.320 a certain knowledge. It's totally different. And so what we do is we go back and show, here's how it
00:32:57.220 used to work for hundreds of years. Here's how you get the best results. Here's some of the best
00:33:01.940 teaching methods. And by the way, here's the content, uh, because the content is simply not
00:33:07.440 there in most textbooks anymore. And again, just like everything else with American journey,
00:33:11.720 we take you into the vault. You get to see the actual original educational documents, how we did
00:33:17.040 this, what worked for centuries. Uh, why it was that you can have someone like Benjamin Franklin,
00:33:22.140 who's a elementary school dropout, be one of the most brilliant guys in America. It's because of
00:33:27.580 the way we taught and what we knew. So that's what we do for teachers. It's a very transformative
00:33:31.980 event for teachers. We give college students, 20, 20, 24 year old college students, the eighth grade
00:33:40.440 test. And most of them don't even know what it's even talking about. And it's, it's not that it's,
00:33:46.760 it's not that it's, uh, you know, old fashioned language. It's just extraordinarily difficult.
00:33:53.360 Eighth grade. Yeah. That eighth grade X exam that you had in America, you couldn't get your
00:33:58.780 diploma if you couldn't pass this eighth grade X exam. We have never had a college student pass
00:34:03.540 that exam since we've given it. That is truly remarkable. All right. So for teachers, also for
00:34:10.560 students in the summer, both of those are in the summer, go to wallbuilders.com and mercuryone.com
00:34:18.000 or.org. You can go there now and sign up for this weekend, the American history story arc. We will
00:34:26.360 give you in two days, all of the touch points that you need with the original documents and evidence
00:34:33.780 from our vault. It happens here at the mercury studios and the American journey experience.
00:34:40.560 You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:34:54.300 On, on what happened on 60 minutes last night, did you happen to catch any of that?
00:34:58.700 I did. I watched the whole UFO segment. If that's what you're talking about.
00:35:01.700 What did you think? It's pretty amazing. We've talked about this for a while. This would be the
00:35:08.020 biggest story in the world. I feel like any other time we were doing the show and they can any other
00:35:13.200 time in the history of the world. There was a moment they were talking to the, to the guy,
00:35:19.520 one of the guys who was running this sort of program, um, related to UFOs. Uh, and they asked
00:35:26.640 him, they said, you know, what do you think about these, uh, you know, UFOs? Are you saying that these
00:35:30.980 are possible? He goes, it's not me saying it. He's like, we're well beyond that. The U S government
00:35:35.100 is telling you that it's happening. Yeah. I'm not saying it's not me saying it anymore. It's the
00:35:39.880 government telling you the question is what are these things? Okay. So cut one pilot on UFO. It
00:35:46.500 was aware. Listen, it was November, 2004. And the USS Nimitz carrier strike group was training about
00:35:54.280 100 miles southwest of San Diego. For a week, the advanced new radar on a nearby ship, the USS
00:36:01.600 Princeton, had detected what operators called multiple anomalous aerial vehicles over the
00:36:07.640 horizon, descending 80,000 feet in less than a second. On November 14th, Fravor and Dietrich,
00:36:16.240 each with a weapons system officer in the back seat, were diverted to investigate. They found an area
00:36:23.140 of roiling whitewater the size of a 737 in an otherwise calm blue sea. So as we're looking at
00:36:31.540 this, her backseater says, hey, Skipper, do you? And about that got out. I said, dude, do you, do you
00:36:38.840 see that thing down there? And we saw this little white tic-tac looking object. And it's just kind of
00:36:44.460 moving above the whitewater area. As Dietrich circled above, Fravor went in for a closer look.
00:36:50.780 So you're sort of spiraling down? Yep. The tic-tac's still pointing north-south. It goes
00:36:54.740 and just turns abruptly and starts mirroring me. So as I'm coming down, it starts coming up.
00:37:01.060 So it's mimicking your moves. Yeah, it was aware we were there.
00:37:04.620 He said it was about the size of his F-18, with no markings, no wings, no exhaust plumes.
00:37:11.180 I'll see how close I can get. So I go like this, and it's climbing still.
00:37:15.140 And when it gets right in front of me, it just disappears.
00:37:19.080 Disappears? Disappears. Like gone.
00:37:21.820 It had sped off. What are you thinking?
00:37:24.940 So your mind tries to make sense of it. I'm going to categorize this as
00:37:28.440 maybe a helicopter or maybe a drone. And when it disappeared, I mean, it was just...
00:37:35.040 Did your backseaters see this too? Yeah.
00:37:37.720 Oh yeah. There was four of us in the airplanes literally watching this thing for roughly about
00:37:42.060 five minutes. Seconds later, the Princeton reacquired
00:37:45.480 the target, 60 miles away. Another crew managed to briefly lock onto it with a targeting camera
00:37:52.300 before it zipped off again. You know, I think that over beers, we've sort of said,
00:37:57.200 hey man, if I saw this solo, I don't know that I would have come back and said anything,
00:38:02.460 because it sounds so crazy when I say it. You understand that reaction?
00:38:07.000 I do. We've had some people tell me, you know, when you say that, you can sound crazy.
00:38:10.960 And I'll be honest, I'm not a UFO guy.
00:38:13.600 But from what I hear you guys saying, there's something.
00:38:19.300 Yes.
00:38:19.660 There's definitely something that, I don't know who's building it, who's got the technology,
00:38:24.580 who's got the brains, but there's something out there that was better than our airplane.
00:38:30.160 So, you know, when they tracked it, it's 60 miles away.
00:38:36.560 They believe it can pull 6,000 G's.
00:38:43.460 So, you understand that 10 G's is what the space shuttle launch pilot has to take.
00:38:51.360 10 G's is right in the area between 9 and 11, you pass out as a human.
00:38:58.620 What can withstand, what metal, what device, what anything could stand 60,000 G's?
00:39:08.460 Nothing we know of.
00:39:13.300 Now, they're saying this could be Russian or Chinese, but I don't think so.
00:39:21.000 Here, play pilot on UFO, could be Russian-Chinese tech.
00:39:26.000 What do you think when you see something like this?
00:39:28.620 This is a difficult one to explain.
00:39:30.780 You have rotation, you have high altitudes, you have propulsion, right?
00:39:34.500 I don't know. I don't know what it is, frankly.
00:39:37.740 He told us pilots speculate they are one of three things.
00:39:42.060 Secret U.S. technology, an adversary spy vehicle, or something otherworldly.
00:39:48.860 I would say, you know, the highest probability is it's a threat observation program.
00:39:53.440 Could it be Russian or Chinese technology?
00:39:56.680 I don't see why not.
00:39:58.260 Are you alarmed?
00:39:59.500 I am worried, frankly.
00:40:01.540 You know, if these were tactical jets from another country that were hanging out up there,
00:40:04.660 it would be a massive issue.
00:40:06.340 But because it looks slightly different, we're not willing to actually look at the problem in the face.
00:40:11.240 We're happy to just ignore the fact that these are out there watching us every day.
00:40:16.740 That's not entirely true.
00:40:18.380 If you want to go back, you want to really go in-depth on this,
00:40:22.420 I did a show with the guy that has partnered, who was with the Pentagon.
00:40:27.060 Actually, Petraeus was the one who selected him because he was not a UFO guy.
00:40:33.020 And he did the initial investigations for the Pentagon that you're now seeing released.
00:40:39.800 He's now in a public-private partnership with the United States government and the military.
00:40:46.140 And he explains what they found and the danger that it is posing.
00:40:54.900 Last night on 60 Minutes, they only talked about one place.
00:40:58.840 It's up, is it over, it wasn't Norfolk, Virginia.
00:41:05.680 I can't remember.
00:41:06.700 It's one of the bases right around Washington, D.C.
00:41:09.020 I thought it was near Annapolis in Maryland, but there is this restricted airspace and they are in it every day.
00:41:21.560 They are monitoring them that we're monitoring them and they seem to be monitoring us every single day.
00:41:31.420 They said they've tracked them every day for the last two years.
00:41:35.160 Somebody is monitoring, as you will hear on my Friday podcast.
00:41:42.120 I don't remember what episode it was.
00:41:44.360 Can you see if you can alert the Blaze and see if they can mark this podcast so people know exactly which podcast it is?
00:41:55.820 But we did a podcast about a year ago now, and it will chill you to the bone because something is monitoring all of our nuclear bases.
00:42:09.440 And I haven't heard if they're doing them to anyone else.
00:42:14.460 I know they're doing them to our allies.
00:42:16.620 I don't know if they're doing it to our enemies.
00:42:19.220 Is it is it foreign technology?
00:42:23.500 The answer to that was answered on my Friday exclusive, the UFO show that we did.
00:42:30.060 It would be this technology is so far advanced that no no country on Earth, they believe, could even be close to this technology without it changing everything that they do.
00:42:44.120 Because it's completely different technology than anything we've ever seen.
00:42:50.460 I think it's it may be episode number 43 Blaze TV Glenn Beck Friday exclusive episode 43 strange things.
00:43:00.900 New evidence may indicate UFOs a possible national security threat.
00:43:05.860 That was on a Friday show about a year ago.
00:43:08.440 You can find that it's it is worth the price of subscription at the Blaze just for this one episode.
00:43:14.920 It's amazing.
00:43:16.880 And you can find it at Blaze TV dot com slash Glenn.
00:43:20.680 If you use the promo code Glenn, you'll get a discount on your year subscription.
00:43:25.460 Just make sure you join us.
00:43:26.640 We need you to stand by our side, but we also want to give you information that you can't get any place else.
00:43:32.560 Amazing on Blaze TV dot com slash Glenn promo code Glenn.