The Glenn Beck Program - June 28, 2021


Best of The Program | Guest: Dr. Robert Malone | 6⧸28⧸21


Episode Stats

Length

43 minutes

Words per Minute

143.80652

Word Count

6,261

Sentence Count

7

Misogynist Sentences

6

Hate Speech Sentences

12


Summary

Today on the podcast, we have Dr. Robert Malone back on the program with us to discuss his concerns about vaccines and universal basic income. Dr. Malone is a doctor and inventor of the original MRNA vaccine technology, and was one of the inventor's of the first modern vaccines. He's also the inventor of a new kind of vaccine, and has some interesting stories about the U.S. Olympic hammer thrower, Gwen Berry.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 welcome to the podcast in case you just don't have enough to listen to here today you can always
00:00:04.560 click over to stew does america and subscribe there as well and don't forget to subscribe
00:00:08.480 rate and review to this podcast if you haven't already five stars is the appropriate number of
00:00:13.920 stars and it's right whatever for the review it's great whatever fantastic uh today on the podcast
00:00:19.660 we have glenn's interaction with thousands of buffalo quite an interesting story from glenn
00:00:29.140 on that one uh we have uh dr robert malone back on the program with us he's a doctor one of the
00:00:34.360 inventors of the original mrna vaccine technology to explain to us his concerns and what's what he
00:00:42.340 thinks is promising about vaccines and where we're going from here uh he's a voice you're not he's
00:00:48.560 getting banned all over the internet uh so we'll see uh you know if you're actually able to get this
00:00:53.620 and today is your last day to opt out of a very new government benefit 100 beneficial no problems
00:01:01.520 whatsoever but today is the last day to opt out of it you're already getting it unless you opt out
00:01:06.620 a brand new way to deal with taxes and uh tax credits uh fantastic news and certainly not
00:01:13.800 at all an indoctrination for universal basic income here's the podcast
00:01:18.900 you're listening to the best of the glenn beck program
00:01:30.220 joined by the one and only mr pat gray from pat gray unleashed the outrageously funny and provocative
00:01:40.420 if i may say usually because he's wearing something low cut yeah uh it is uh it is uh pat gray welcome
00:01:47.540 pat uh thank you glenn good to be here um i'm very excited i have some uh i have some crazy stories i would
00:01:57.120 just like you to comment on okay um the olympic hammer thrower uh gwen berry turns her back to the u.s flag
00:02:07.560 uh during the ceremonies where she got bronze and uh uh they started playing the national anthem and
00:02:14.440 she turned her back on it she was very upset she said that she felt that was a setup for her yeah
00:02:20.460 because when was the last time they played the national anthem at a sporting event i mean come on
00:02:26.440 i've never seen he just did that to her uh it's so ridiculous shut up yeah see this is the part that i
00:02:34.980 think everybody is focusing on i i just would like to focus just for a second on
00:02:39.800 hammer throwing is a sport yeah it's not a real hammer you know hammer throwing it's not an actual
00:02:46.800 hammer you know that right it's not not a hammer no yeah but it's just a hammer what is it well it's a
00:02:53.280 oh what is it it's all on a chain yeah it's like kind of like a ball on a really long thing that they
00:02:58.760 swing around their head and then they throw it a good distance down the field yeah it's but it's not
00:03:04.000 okay okay so then let me let me let me rephrase a ball and chain throwing thing is a sport yes
00:03:13.300 been around for a while i will say it's not exactly yeah it does it's it sounds like maybe medieval
00:03:20.900 times you know and uh if you want to see that you get a dinner with it for like i don't know 25 bucks
00:03:28.640 at medieval times 25 bucks what what downstream medieval times are you going to
00:03:36.180 how much are those things oh a lot uh let's see i took like four people there once so a couple years
00:03:45.940 ago for about 175 bucks so what is that uh you know it's probably about 50 bucks almost
00:03:51.900 wow wow uh well i will tell you that uh it's been a while since uh my kids were like i want to go to
00:03:59.040 medieval times because the prince will throw a flower at me oh my gosh also i will point out
00:04:06.120 a flower at you a hammer throw what what is this bronze this is the united states of america bronze
00:04:13.240 in the hammer throw i expect gold we should be turning the flag away from her
00:04:17.900 well it's not the olympics so this was a an american competition and uh all americans medaled
00:04:27.540 all that medaled were americans however i'm going to be rooting against her come of the olympics that's
00:04:33.020 for sure how embarrassing would it be if she got up on the podium during the olympics turned her back
00:04:38.100 on the on the american flag oh and she'll do it she was gonna someone's gonna do it for sure
00:04:43.360 absolutely it's gonna happen yeah it's gonna happen yeah all right um next story i'd like to
00:04:49.720 hear your comments the next story i'd like to hear your comment on is uh downtown springfield
00:04:56.200 a crowd of people gathered uh for the birds aren't real rally yeah yeah yeah which uh-huh
00:05:04.440 i was surprised how many people showed up for the birds aren't real rally there's
00:05:08.700 there's quite a crowd there they were having some fun so i'm not sure yeah i'm not sure i mean
00:05:15.320 it sounds almost like a rally i know nothing about it but it sounds like a rally that my son and i would
00:05:21.740 go to you know because we've often talked about how they are they're clearly robotic that's why
00:05:28.020 they're sitting on the power lines they're recharging right that's what's happening there exactly it's
00:05:33.220 birds aren't real uh it's actually sounds kind of fun but i'll bet it has some political meaning
00:05:38.880 uh behind it am i wrong on that or you know i i think it has a sarcastic meaning behind it i mean
00:05:47.280 they claim that okay well i'm good with that yeah yeah they claim they're there for surveillance all 12
00:05:52.220 billion birds are really just surveillance devices and i think there might be some tongue-in-cheekness
00:05:59.680 there going on so yeah whoa they're not serious that birds aren't real no holy cow okay well i'm off
00:06:07.720 that bandwagon um by the way pat i just wanted to let you know today that a trans feminist activist
00:06:16.760 has come out to say that gendering animals is very wrong it's very wrong um so you could get milk
00:06:28.340 equally from a cow as you could a bull uh just be as easy as yes yeah it's well it's not you
00:06:36.240 couldn't get it as easily it's harder to talk a bull yeah right but but go go for it i invite her to
00:06:43.900 try it uh and uh and have a big swig of that um and then in the craziest story of the weekend
00:06:51.860 mitt romney said i take joe biden at his word when it comes to his budget proposals
00:07:00.880 i think actually romney may uh may not be real uh he may just be a surveillance
00:07:11.540 vehicle of some sort i i i don't i don't get it with him why why why is he okay with everything
00:07:21.740 the democrats do why is he okay with the psychotic democrats but the republicans he's got to take
00:07:28.980 issue with all the time he has to bash and bring them down but joe biden let's take him at his word
00:07:36.260 based on what based on what the guy lies continually he's uh he's out to lunch and he's not coming home
00:07:45.180 for dinner he uh has serious serious degeneration problems uh and and this is the guy you're going
00:07:54.460 to take at your word wow i mean mitt romney should be impeached i'll say too that like i think you can
00:08:02.560 take mitt uh joe biden at his word when he says if i don't get this multiple you know three to five
00:08:10.600 trillion dollar extra bill i'm not going to sign this bipartisan thing that's what he blurted out
00:08:15.860 then he had to walk that back in a blatant lie i mean he's obviously lying when he's walking it back
00:08:23.040 he said the opposite in front of everyone when he was having to please the progressives and so he's
00:08:29.080 blatantly lying in the walk back taking him at his word it makes sense when when he blurts out
00:08:34.500 something off the top of his head uh admitting the truth but that's not what romney means yeah he
00:08:41.400 means the opposite he means believe the walk back who believes the walk back that's the you know when
00:08:48.800 when a when a politician says that the the uh crime surge uh is all about guns and not about blm not about
00:09:02.960 the lawlessness in this country um but it's but it's really because there are more guns on the street
00:09:09.620 and then says also the republicans were the ones that wanted to defund the police how do you take
00:09:17.160 that man seriously how do you take him at his word if you're willing to say crazy crazy stuff that the
00:09:25.320 vast i would hope i can't even say this anymore that a lot of people in this country know is false
00:09:32.960 they know that that is false that's like that's like biden saying you know what it was george
00:09:40.900 washington that ran up all these bills i mean it wasn't me i'll tell you that right now and expecting
00:09:47.100 people to believe it they just they are so insulting the way they talk to minorities the way they talk
00:09:54.780 about minorities they are it's so insulting it's so insulting when they just they expect
00:10:02.960 you to sit quietly with all of these lies i just don't i i don't know why people aren't um
00:10:12.460 aren't more that i'm surprised that he has a 45 approval rating oh it's higher you know donald trump
00:10:20.800 you could say it's higher than that you could say donald trump was it is it really yeah like 52 54
00:10:27.220 somewhere in there holy cow you could say that donald trump was you know a a liar you could say
00:10:34.740 that he was pt barnum which he was uh he said things that you know he really thought was true he convinced
00:10:43.860 himself of these things and you know some of them were not true okay i got it but we knew that one
00:10:51.240 going in we knew that going in this guy has changed everything everything he said he was oh i'm a
00:11:00.120 moderate i'm not going to comment on that i'm not going to do those things he's now doing them
00:11:05.600 right and it's so i think i'd rather have pt barnum it's it's oh for sure and it's so bad that even
00:11:15.040 uh politifact fact checked him on his yes on his uh speech last week about guns and they said what
00:11:24.580 we all said that it's a total lie that the second amendment from the very beginning limited uh the
00:11:32.080 guns and the weapons we could use even politifact said that's an outright lie it's it's false it's
00:11:38.200 malarkey to coin a phrase from joe himself and and that it takes a lot for politifact to fact check
00:11:47.920 joe biden uh so so wait a minute you could you could own a cannon yes you could actually yes the
00:11:57.720 private tears owned cannons uh who were private citizens thus private tears yeah well the good
00:12:06.580 thing is you can't own a tank today oh no wait you can own a tank today you can actually buy a tank
00:12:16.120 you can buy a u.s tank now it's not going to have like the firing the big tank firing pin in it but
00:12:24.020 you can own a tank today i and you could have a cannon back then i want to i want a tank yeah why
00:12:31.120 don't i have a tank really be cool that's the thing that's bothering me about this whole conversation
00:12:34.760 where do i buy it so there's a guy here in texas that has a tank uh that a friend of a friend knows
00:12:41.600 and uh yeah of course it's in texas but he said um that this guy bought his tank
00:12:49.020 and it made some of his liberal neighbors mad and so he parked it on his front lawn
00:12:55.680 just to make sure that they knew he had a tank that says texas thank god thank god for texas
00:13:04.620 this does oh by the way um the uh i mean this is the greg abbott we elected did you see what
00:13:11.920 happened over the weekend i don't think so oh he said you remember he was on the air with us a
00:13:18.780 couple of weeks ago and said i'm not paying the democrats the democrats didn't show up for work
00:13:23.600 oh yeah i'm docking their salary they're not going to get paid he went through with it that's good he's
00:13:28.780 he docked the pay of any democrat or any republican but there were none anybody who didn't show up
00:13:36.040 for the sessions he's not paying and they're all upset now that's the greg abbott so we came to
00:13:42.620 know and love right he's yes yes thank you you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:13:52.540 dr robert malone i could go on and on and on about all of the things that he has done let's just say
00:14:08.060 expert uh is is really underselling this man he is the inventor of the mrna vaccine technology
00:14:19.280 dr robert malone uh joins us again and i want to get into uh the censorship but there's a couple
00:14:27.340 of new stories that are out today the fda has added a warning to covid 19 m nr nra vaccines
00:14:35.600 uh or rna vaccines um can you tell me about this they're talking about enlargement of the heart
00:14:43.520 clinics welcome doctor thanks glenn and thanks for having me back and uh for the opportunity to talk
00:14:51.620 with you and and your audience i'm really grateful for that so thank you um what what's been buried in
00:14:59.940 the data and i think we might have touched on this the other day we we have a body of safety data that
00:15:07.820 are coming into the cdc and coming into other databases safety databases in other governments
00:15:14.760 and frankly the the analysis of that has been lagging quite a bit so things that we
00:15:20.560 had signals about months ago now we're finally being verified and the whole kind of cascade of how
00:15:28.600 the government reacts has been triggered as you know the cdc came out with the acip meeting
00:15:34.400 and uh acknowledged that there is a problem with uh cardiotoxicity so toxicity of the heart
00:15:42.960 in uh young people children adolescents and uh that has now triggered uh finally the fda to
00:15:53.620 acknowledge that this is with the rna vaccines that are genetic that comes on top of the prior reports
00:16:02.620 and acknowledgement that the adenovirus vector vaccines related technology both based on gene
00:16:09.580 therapy were causing blood clots i suspect that you're going to have a similar announcement sometime
00:16:16.980 from fda and cdc about the risks associated with blood clotting with the rna vaccines what i find really
00:16:25.100 fascinating about this is that i got fact checked by thompson reuters and by politifact
00:16:29.940 um and the fda put out a press announcement that there was no evidence of clinical toxicity associated
00:16:36.580 with these mrna vaccines at the time they did it i knew that that was not true because i have the
00:16:42.520 connections within the fda and it's there's there is a somewhat of a satisfaction that perhaps it's a
00:16:48.780 little twisted to have the fda finally fessing up that in fact i was right um i don't take pleasure in
00:16:55.000 that uh absolutely but my core point and thank you for letting me put it out is that the government
00:17:04.300 isn't being fully transparent with us regarding the risks i'm not saying that you shouldn't take
00:17:10.020 vaccine or it doesn't save lives i'm saying that i these are currently experimental and the government
00:17:16.600 owes us to be transparent about the risks over i want to i want to repeat or have you repeat what
00:17:24.820 you said on friday because i thought it was i think this is really important you're the guy who invented
00:17:31.560 this technology so you're clearly not anti-vaccine and you're not even anti this vaccine what you're
00:17:39.780 saying is you know hey the little blue pill can cause uh you know something to go on for three
00:17:46.200 hours and uh you know if that happens to you you should go see the hospital um we know that because
00:17:53.600 all of the things you know you can die of a heart attack you can die of this and die of that
00:17:59.520 and they sound scary as hell on the commercials but those are low risk for a few people and you should
00:18:08.560 know that it could happen that's all you're asking for you're not saying don't take the vaccine you're
00:18:14.340 saying we should just have some transparency so we know what possible effects are happening
00:18:22.220 thank you and thanks for saying that we can dive a little deeper underneath that if if you have time
00:18:29.680 but uh absolutely it's actually federal law these remain experimental vaccines whatever spin you may
00:18:38.160 hear from the media they're not yet licensed and therefore all of us that are taking it fall under
00:18:44.780 what's called the common rule that's coded in federal law that goes all the way back to the
00:18:50.220 helsinki accords etc the fundamental bedrock of bioethics and that requires that people those those rules
00:18:59.180 that are in federal law required that there be transparency about risks that those risks have to be
00:19:05.660 understood by anybody that's going to take an experimental product and that that taking of
00:19:10.840 an experimental product like this vaccine accepting vaccine has to be entirely voluntary it can't be
00:19:17.200 coerced they can't incentivize you these are are are breaking federal law and fundamental principles
00:19:25.680 of bioethics so you said a minute ago you take a little satisfaction and um you know back in 20 i don't know
00:19:35.340 11 2010 2010 maybe um i was beating the drum that everybody was missing that a caliphate was coming
00:19:44.100 and that's what was really going on in syria and and with the arab spring that a caliphate wanted to be
00:19:52.240 formed and it was coming and i got mocked and ridiculed and you name it from all sides and when the
00:20:00.120 caliphate came sadly i took a little satisfaction of being right but i didn't want to be right but the
00:20:07.460 problem was um that i really didn't have any satisfaction because no one admitted that they
00:20:15.220 were wrong before and so nothing was learned they just went on and that's kind of what i think is
00:20:22.880 happening with you right dead on and and glenn please uh for your audience this is not my first
00:20:31.280 outbreak i've been doing this my whole life uh starting with aids i was very involved in the
00:20:37.780 ebola what's now the merc vaccine development in zika etc this for me being at the tip of the spear is
00:20:45.120 kind of what i do i'm a little bit of an outbreak junkie um i i work uh a lot supporting the dod and
00:20:53.260 biodefense and have ever since the anthrax attacks i i i get this space i know how things go wrong what
00:21:01.160 is a little bit surprising to me and many of my peers that are insiders like this is we just don't
00:21:09.100 seem to be learning we as a system as a country um as a public health service as as and the who i've
00:21:17.660 spoken at the who multiple times been there many times i know what makes that place tick good bad and
00:21:23.840 ugly but um we just don't seem to be learning the lessons each time we repeat them again and again
00:21:30.980 so why why is this what's changed i i don't know one of the things that's different there are some
00:21:41.860 things that my colleagues and i talk about with this outbreak uh the and we're perplexed about that
00:21:48.200 are very different one of them is the censorship that's that's quite different um and we the censorship
00:21:56.440 extends all the way down into the academic literature it's wicked hard to for instance
00:22:02.400 publish anything that has to do with drug repurposing so just to to get on a thread that
00:22:08.620 your listenership probably is familiar with in the ivermectin story uh and i don't i i i'm of the opinion
00:22:18.280 that ivermectin appears to have prophylactic and therapeutic activity but it's not a silver bullet so
00:22:25.000 i'm not one of the uh swallowed the kool-aid crowd on ivermectin but right uh there's no question
00:22:31.860 in my mind that this argument that all of these ivermectin studies haven't been peer reviewed and
00:22:38.500 published therefore they have no value uh that's spurious that's that is not a valid argument because
00:22:46.020 for whatever reason it has become wicked hard to to get through peer review and publish anything
00:22:53.180 involving a repurposed drug and as brett weinstein put out in that dark horse podcast it's just gone
00:23:00.560 crazy viral towards the end if you listen to him uh there's some sort of emergent phenomena going here
00:23:09.900 that is is hard it's hard to wrap your arms around and his his comment was this whole systemic
00:23:19.380 breakdown doesn't necessarily require some central conspiracy where everybody got together
00:23:25.360 at you know the white house or whatever and and and cook the books for everybody it's it's a series of
00:23:32.800 of compromises and arrangements we've made and one of them that i find particularly shocking is this
00:23:40.320 trusted news initiative i'm sure it was set up in the best of intentions but it has become
00:23:45.880 orwellian in the extreme i i can't oh as i read it and i experience it i can't believe it so
00:23:54.300 explain what is going on first let me give you the new news i don't know if you have heard this yet
00:23:59.940 congressman thomas massey um uh has has just revealed facebook's so-called third party fact checker
00:24:09.080 factcheck.org is funded by the robert wood johnson foundation and they have two billion dollars of
00:24:19.140 stock in johnson and johnson and so factcheck.org doesn't want to do anything that's going to hurt
00:24:27.960 their funding as they have two billion dollars in stock from johnson and johnson that helps fund them
00:24:36.940 uh that seems like maybe uh a problem when they're fact checking on johnson and johnson products am i
00:24:46.600 wrong uh it it this is another one of those looks like a duck it walks like a duck and it quacks like
00:24:53.400 yeah uh i would call that journalistic conflict of interest and this uh this business about uh the
00:25:00.440 ceo of uh reuters uh sitting on the board of pfizer is another one um and so i'm i i just pulled that up
00:25:10.100 this morning thanks to my wife pulled it out and uh posted it on twitter and i'm getting blasted with
00:25:16.560 people saying of course this is a conflict of interest and it explains why reuters is running all
00:25:23.000 these hit pieces against j and j and astrazeneca that the capture here that has happened this fusion
00:25:29.760 between mainstream media and pharmaceutical industry blows my mind i mean we already have
00:25:35.240 this fusion between the pharmaceutical industry and congress uh and we have the regulatory capture of the
00:25:42.060 fda and like i said a lot of us you know my peers uh you know so-called experts right those of us
00:25:50.080 that do this for a living have just been scratching our heads going what is going on with all this
00:25:55.380 censorship and i don't want to go down the you know 4chan q anon world but good for you good for
00:26:07.920 you you're way out on the edge on that one i'm with you i'm with you they're proud of this stuff
00:26:13.740 they're they're touting that and and here's the origin of this it's bizarre trusted news initiative
00:26:19.580 it was set up initially to counter disinformation political disinformation and uh a year ago they
00:26:29.720 decided well let's now that we've got all ourselves together let's turn it on censoring any information
00:26:35.560 that we determine to be disinformation relating to covid and covid vaccines so they have no no qualms
00:26:44.020 about censoring any um censoring other scientists censoring patients you know the the 200 000 patients
00:26:52.160 that had a a group on facebook sharing their stories about their own adverse events facebook just kills
00:26:59.720 that you know drops them off deletes it uh this is the this is you know i i read 1984 as a school kid
00:27:06.960 and and then it was science fiction this is pretty overt
00:27:11.940 have you have you read 1984 lately no um i i got it drilled honestly fourth grade or something
00:27:22.660 uh so same with me and i thought i remembered it all you should read it it is astounding how accurate
00:27:30.520 it is today i mean astounding like i read i reread it about a year ago and it was crazy that that was
00:27:38.780 orwell's response to what he saw in fascist authoritarianism okay that that was that was what
00:27:46.500 he was writing from was a warning to the future saying this this can happen i'll tell you the people that
00:27:53.700 that i run into now because i this brett weinstein podcast went viral globally i'm getting a lot of
00:28:02.040 traffic from europeans and uh they're really alarmed these are people that are very sensitive to what
00:28:09.480 happened in europe in the 1940s uh intellectuals that think deep thoughts about this stuff and
00:28:16.680 you know they the the term slippery slope is often used we're there this this is not okay we've got
00:28:24.920 organizations that are cross-linked between mainstream media and uh and the pharmaceutical industry
00:28:33.460 and uh public health organizations that uh seem to feel that it's okay to substitute opinion for fact
00:28:46.680 you're listening to the best of the glenbeck program
00:28:49.440 hey there was a excuse me a report that was just issued from the national archives
00:29:11.460 now the report came from the national archives task force when i say task force stew what kind of
00:29:20.760 comes to your it's a task force hmm i mean like almost like a military operation you know swooping
00:29:27.940 yeah military operation yeah they're grappling into the national archives well they've got their own
00:29:33.460 task force going on hey do we have that cnn race music do you remember that sarah that might be
00:29:39.920 kind of a task forcey kind of uh music is cnn said at one point they've got a cnn uh uh race team
00:29:48.820 that's going to be out there like a task force and the race team's going to be out there and they're
00:29:53.240 going to jump into action yeah so here it is the national archives task force on racism
00:30:01.740 well they just issued their first report and you will never guess what they said it's crazy they say
00:30:12.220 where america's founding documents are displayed in the national archives was really an example of
00:30:21.260 structural racism well this race team is great they suggested major changes on how the constitution
00:30:30.400 and other notable records are presented in order to provide context now
00:30:36.700 if i remember the uh national archives and i do very well uh you walk in and it's a big
00:30:47.200 limestone building big pillars and everything else there's a flag to one side
00:30:54.060 uh there's a flag on the side of the constitution and the bill of rights and the declaration of
00:31:02.700 independence and here's how here's how racist this is they have when you walk in they have this big gate
00:31:11.000 that says oh this is important then you walk past that gate and up these stairs and they're hanging on
00:31:19.020 the wall in in a in really what is can only be described as an amazing vault behind all this
00:31:28.780 bomb-proof glass is the constitution and the declaration of independence and when i say it's a
00:31:35.740 vault i say that because it can take a ground zero missile hit and within a fraction of a second it drops
00:31:43.380 down and is sealed in a vault so nothing can ever happen to it structural racism you know what i'm saying
00:31:51.040 you know what i'm saying do they do they do that uh for you know the the bullhorn of al sharpton
00:31:58.960 because that is also an american icon that should be preserved no just our founding documents
00:32:06.820 now they also pointed out the fact and i forgot about this they have a giant mural up on the wall
00:32:16.540 they have two of them one is for all of the signers of the declaration of independence
00:32:21.560 and the other one is for all the signers of the constitution and they didn't include any of the black signers
00:32:30.920 i mean there weren't there weren't any but can't we throw a few black people in there that is oppressive
00:32:38.840 when you see the actual faces of these monsters all of them white without anyone in the archive saying
00:32:49.460 hey let's let's sprinkle in some black people maybe a couple of hispanics how about a chinese guy
00:32:57.840 maybe maybe the chinese guy can be right next to george washington can we not reimagine history a little
00:33:06.600 bit so they said also in the national archive you got to be ready for this sarah the national archives
00:33:14.980 race task force yeah uh they all they also said that the national archives portrays the individual
00:33:27.660 founding fathers in a much too positive way
00:33:31.540 oh my gosh you know can i tell you something about ben franklin he was fat he's a fat fat fatty
00:33:43.860 and i think our national archives need to yeah yeah yeah i know he was one of the you know real
00:33:51.080 leaders of the abolitionist movement but he was fat fat fat fat fat fat fat ben ben's a big fat fatty
00:33:59.200 that's what should be in the national archives the group claimed in a little noticed report i noticed it
00:34:08.460 to the u.s top librarian that the archives own rotunda which houses the declaration of independence
00:34:16.880 and the u.s constitution and the bill of rights is an example of structural racism and that the
00:34:22.940 founding fathers and other white historic impactful americans are prepared to positively
00:34:28.920 the national archives race task force
00:34:33.760 also said that the legacy descriptions that use racial slurs and harmful language to describe
00:34:46.000 people of color in communities are like racial slurs but also they use terms like elderly
00:34:55.240 and handicapped and illegal alien so as bad as this is i don't know if we're going to be able to i mean
00:35:05.620 those frescoes they're in there i mean we got to dynamite those things out um because think of the
00:35:12.080 stop with your white privilege think of the pain that that is causing yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah i got it
00:35:20.060 it's the truth but whose truth really a bunch of white people they were the signers of the declaration
00:35:27.860 of independence oh and that did good right thanks whitey anyway uh a lot of people of color uh come
00:35:38.220 through that rotunda and so the task force uh would like to have the national archives put into context
00:35:47.820 these documents
00:35:49.060 and their see their suggestions
00:35:59.960 are that
00:36:03.060 perhaps we can provide context
00:36:07.160 uh of these documents
00:36:10.780 in the rotunda
00:36:12.440 uh through
00:36:14.680 dance
00:36:15.980 and performance art
00:36:18.060 in the space
00:36:19.460 so you might go there and you're like i just want to see the declaration of independence
00:36:24.500 no no no
00:36:25.500 maybe you should see some
00:36:28.240 interpretive dance routine
00:36:31.060 uh that will quote invite dialogue
00:36:34.760 about the ways that the united states has
00:36:37.780 mythologized
00:36:39.260 the
00:36:39.940 founding era
00:36:41.060 uh we
00:36:44.680 why
00:36:45.400 first of all
00:36:48.100 you know me stew and
00:36:50.420 i think you can verify if there is anybody that is bigger in the interpretive dance world
00:36:56.340 uh than me
00:36:58.920 i mean name them
00:37:00.460 well i am a huge advocate of interpreted dance
00:37:04.800 you are and that's why of course you were
00:37:07.120 named the number three overall advocate of interpreted dance uh in interpretive dance magazine uh that being said well i would that was politics that kept me they kept me out of number one that was a political thing with the magazine but uh you know i was in auschwitz and i was standing there i was standing in the shower room and i said you know what would bring this home
00:37:31.260 interpretive dance really and uh see are you one of those people that thinks that would be offensive yeah
00:37:40.220 you don't get the interpretive dance yeah a tad yeah well probably you would say more offensive than the interpretive dance in front of you know the uh the founding documents and the interpretive dance is basically because see you know i saw auschwitz and i thought
00:38:01.100 it's being portrayed the germans are being portrayed in a very negative way
00:38:06.680 and if we could just have some interpretive dance about the good soldiers that were there
00:38:13.340 i don't can we balance that out a bit no you don't think so under no circumstances should that be balanced out
00:38:21.540 all right strangely the number three guy for interpretive dance agrees with you
00:38:27.680 whoa bad idea yeah bad idea now um i guess we could reinvent history and we could say
00:38:37.140 gee some of those soldiers you know that were working in the camps they weren't so bad
00:38:42.880 or we could also reimagine history and say you know uh there were a lot of hispanics that signed the
00:38:53.520 declaration of independence so i'm just going to put them into that portrait
00:38:56.980 that doesn't mean that only white people could come up with it it just means that at the time
00:39:04.140 it was white people that did do it and that you can talk about all of the bad things that you want
00:39:12.520 that have come from the signing of the declaration of independence but nothing will ever get me to
00:39:19.080 believe no dance believe it or not no interpretive dance will convince me that the united states
00:39:26.900 of america the signing of the declaration of independence has done more to keep people
00:39:33.060 slaves or to keep people to keep people under the thumb and not bring more freedom and more good to
00:39:42.480 the world than bad now lately you could make that case lately we are when france let me say this again
00:39:52.060 when france says the french president says don't buy into any of the crap that is coming out of
00:40:02.120 of washington and the united states don't buy into all of this crap when france takes a stand that is
00:40:11.800 correct about us the world's upside down world's upside down well it's just like you to say the
00:40:19.600 world's upside down that's because you've been looking at it with north america at the top how do we
00:40:25.360 know what the top is and what the bottom is it's a three-dimensional space we don't know what the top of
00:40:33.440 the universe is and the bottom of the universe you talk about the world upside down it's you white people
00:40:39.920 and you you north american people and you europeans that made all the globes oh dear god i i will say
00:40:47.940 glenn i mean it's a good point but it would probably be made better with interpretive dance and i assume
00:40:53.460 you'll be doing that later on your instagram page or something from the ranch uh oh don't tempt me
00:40:59.960 because i just might don't that tempt that sentence was specifically designed to tempt you
00:41:07.700 yeah this is this this should bother people deeply these documents i believe are sacred documents
00:41:19.320 these documents have are the the key to end slavery they are the key that's not me saying that
00:41:29.780 that's frederick freaking douglas that said that what did martin luther king quote in his i dream of
00:41:39.740 and i i i have a dream speech he challenged us to live up to the words that he quoted in the
00:41:48.520 declaration of independence live up to those words the problem is not those documents or those men
00:41:55.380 the problem is we don't read those documents anymore we're not even trying to live those
00:42:01.160 documents anymore we haven't tried for at least a hundred years and every time we make a mistake
00:42:08.560 it's because we go off these documents oh the trail of tears yeah yeah why was that wrong because you were
00:42:17.840 taking property you were taking it you were breaking your own word and breaking promises
00:42:24.780 you were treating one group of people like they're not all men i don't know maybe we should start
00:42:34.760 living those words and understanding those words because that will make us a more perfect nation
00:42:41.560 not doing some stupid freaking dance and i gotta tell you it's a good thing that the declaration of
00:42:51.520 independence and all those documents are behind bomb proof uh glass because if i walk into the
00:42:59.040 national archives and i see interpretive dance telling me how bad it is my head will explode
00:43:07.260 and all of those documents they'll have pieces of glen head on them so please national archives
00:43:16.180 please please keep them safe because i have a feeling i'm not the only one whose head would pop
00:43:24.620 if i see interpretive dance in front of those documents
00:43:30.260 you